Two New York
campuses are on high alert after three cases of three cases of possible
bacterial meningitis.
Bacterial meningitis, an infection in the fluid lining of
the brain and spinal cord, can be spread by direct contact with saliva, such as
kissing, sharing eating utensils, drinks or cigarettes. Symptoms of the disease
include fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, rash and stiff neck.
Craig Schiesser, 18, a freshman at SUNY
College at Oswego,
was found unconscious in his dormitory room Friday and was later pronounced
dead at Oswego Hospital because of meningitis, Deborah
F. Stanley, the president of the school said in a statement according to the
New York Times.
Separately, two students at Cornell University,
a 21-year-old woman and a 19-year-old man, have been hospitalized in the span
of less than a week with the condition, health officials announced. The first case
was discovered on March 8, when the woman was hospitalized at Cayuga Medical
Center with symptoms of
the disease followed on Thursday by the man who arrived at the same hospital
and was presumed to have meningococcal meningitis, Simeon Moss, a
representative for Cornell said.
Health officials believe that these two students may have
been in contact with each other at one or more of three recent parties in Ithaca. “We know that
certainly they were in contact with folks who were at the same parties,” Moss
said.
Those parties all took place on or around the Cornell campus
in early March. One was at 124
Catherine Street on March 6, another the same day
at 118 Cook Street,
and the third on March 8 at 306
Highland Road, at a Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity
house.
Health authorities urged students who attended those parties
to get a preventive antibiotic at a medical clinic as soon as possible. Also, officials
at both SUNY College
and Cornell University sent out an alert to all
students warning them that they should seek medical attention if they had
contact with the infected ones in the past 10 days.
Between
1,400 and 2,800 people in the Unites States are struck by the disease each
year. Up to 14 percent of these people die and up to one in five survivors
suffer brain damage, amputation and/or hearing loss.
The
most exposed to this disease are infants younger than one year, but disease
incidence peaks again during the teen years.
Vaccines can protect against most types of meningococcal
meningitis, but there are cases when they do not cover all the strains.