- Biden Will Move to Have Medicare, Medicaid Cover GLP-1 Weight-Loss Meds
- Cold Plunge or Hot Bath? What’s Best for Ailing Muscles?
- Concussions Slow Brain Activity in High School Football Players
- Study Finds GLP-1 Meds Can Also Help the Kidneys
- Long COVID Brain Fog: Could the Lungs Hold Clues?
- Scientists Spot Gene That Could Help Cause Miscarriages
- Preschoolers’ Tantrums Can Be Early Sign of ADHD
- Mom’s Healthy Diet in Pregnancy Pays Big Dividends for Baby
- There’s a Best Option for Patients With Head-and-Neck Cancer Who Can’t Take Cisplatin
- Program Tripled Number of Completed At-Home Colon Cancer Tests
Health Tip: Know the Risks of Chicken Pox
Chicken pox used to be a rite of passage for young children. But with the development of the chicken pox vaccine, the vast majority of kids avoid this itchy and painful illness.
While most people who develop chicken pox will recover completely without issue, it can be serious — and even deadly — for babies, teens, even adults, as well as pregnant women, and people with weak immune systems, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Receiving two doses of the chicken pox vaccine is the best way to prevent infection.
The CDC recommends that all children get the vaccine and warns of the following complications that can arise if you do develop chicken pox:
- Bacterial infections of the skin and soft tissues in children, including Group A streptococcal infections.
- Pneumonia.
- Infection or inflammation of the brain (encephalitis, cerebellar ataxia).
- Bleeding problems.
- Bloodstream infections (sepsis).
- Dehydration.
- Death.
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2024 HealthDay. All rights reserved.