Los Angeles Times

Leprosy is confirmed in elementary student

Riverside County child is expected to recover. No threat to others is seen.

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a soumya.karlamangl­a@latimes.com

Riverside County health officials confirmed Friday that an elementary schoolchil­d has Hansen’s disease, also known as leprosy.

The child appears to have contracted the rare disease from “someone that had been diagnosed with Hansen’s disease who had prolonged, close contact with the child,” said Barbara Cole, director for disease control for the Riverside County Department of Public Health.

Leprosy is spread through coughing and sneezing, but requires that people spend long periods of time together, such as living in the same household, experts say.

Cole could not provide details about how the child became infected, but said the child lives in Jurupa Valley, in west Riverside County, and the patient who spread the disease does not live in the county.

Cole said she expected the child to recover.

Earlier this month, health officials were notified that two children who attend Indian Hills Elementary School in Jurupa Valley might have Hansen’s disease, but only one case was confirmed, Cole said. “There’s no indication that the second child has Hansen’s disease.”

Jurupa Unified School District officials sent a letter home to inform parents about the possible cases and also disinfecte­d a few classrooms, but the district is taking no further precaution­s, officials said. “We don’t feel there’s a risk at the school, and it’s safe for children to attend,” Cole said.

Cole said national health guidelines don’t consider schools or workplaces the types of environmen­ts where leprosy is likely to be transmitte­d.

If patients go untreated, leprosy can be a devastatin­g disease that causes nerve damage as well as skin lesions. Despite the stigma around the disease, experts say patients don’t need to be isolated and are easily treatable with antibiotic­s.

Approximat­ely 95% of the population is naturally immune to the bacterium that causes leprosy. If someone is taking the recommende­d antibiotic­s, the bacterium stops being transmissi­ble after just a few doses, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“None of our recommenda­tions to the school or parents have changed,” Dr. Cameron Kaiser, Riverside County’s public health officer, said in a statement. “It is incredibly difficult to contract leprosy. The school was safe before this case arose, and it still is.”

 ?? Kurt Miller Associated Press ?? OFFICIALS say the Jurupa Valley school attended by the child is perfectly safe. A second child thought to have been affected does not have Hansen’s disease.
Kurt Miller Associated Press OFFICIALS say the Jurupa Valley school attended by the child is perfectly safe. A second child thought to have been affected does not have Hansen’s disease.

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