14 states now reporting meningitis cases
WASHINGTON Federal health officials are reporting the number of cases of fungal meningitis has risen to 205.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the number of deaths stands at 15.
Fourteen states are now reporting cases. The latest is New Hampshire. Others include Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.
The outbreak has been linked to steroid shots used for back pain made by a specialty pharmacy in Massachusetts. The medication has been recalled.
In Tennessee, the worst-hit state in the outbreak, health officials say the number of meningitis cases in the state have increased by three since Friday.
The Health Department said on its website Sunday that there are now 53 cases, with an unchanged number of six deaths reported.
On Friday, health officials determined that a June shipment of epidural steroids was not part of a recalled batch that has been linked to the deadly fungal meningitis outbreak.
Pharmacy linked to meningitis outbreak operated illegally
The department had said on Friday that it became aware of the batch and officials were trying to determine whether it was part of the massive recall issued by the New England Compounding Center after the shots were linked to the outbreak.
Tennessee health officials said they don't think any shipments of the injections arrived there until June 27.
At the main campus of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, officials say dozens of people are working day and night to bring a meningitis outbreak under control.
Dr. John Jernigan is a medical epidemiologist at the CDC leading the clinical investigation team for the outbreak response. He says this infection, which is caused by a fungus, is very unusual.
Meningitis is typically caused by a virus or bacteria. The fungus linked to this outbreak is common in dirt and grasses, but it is making people sick because it found its way into a steroid injected into people with back pain.
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- The link did not work but it is http://******/MIMalpracticeLawyers
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- The Buckfire & Buckfire, P.C. medical malpractice lawyers in Michigan recently created an infographic on the recent United States meningitis outbreak linked to steroid injections. The infographic was created to aid those victims who are currently suffering from meningitis due to the injection, as well as make others who have also received the injection aware of the symptoms of this disease, and how it spreads throughout the body. Buckfire & Buckfire, P.C. is a Southfield law firm that is actively investigating the legal rights of patients who have been injured or died due to the meningitis outbreak due to steroid injection. To view the infographic visit http://******/MIMalpracticeLawyers
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- the center for disease control is the kind of agency that would suffer in a romney budget
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- At least we're being protected from medications from Canada ...
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