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Wednesday, 14 October 2009 14:54

Surviving Flu Season

Written by Marie

As we have all surely heard, the flu season has started extremely early this year and has hit particularly hard with the addition of the H1N1 virus.  The best defense is a good offense. Be prepared in advance for how you will deal with a possible outbreak of the flu or other emergency at your place of business, school, or within your family.  Conferencing is one of many ways to help reduce the spread of disease while allowing workers to remain productive.  Web and audio conferencing platforms allow workers to continue to work from home while recovering or caring for sick family members.

 

 

Below are 10 tips from the U.S. Center for Disease Control (CDC) that you can use to help protect the health of your employees.

  1. Develop policies that encourage ill workers to stay at home without fear of any reprisals.
  2. Develop other flexible policies to allow workers to telework (if feasible) and create other leave policies to allow workers to stay home to care for sick family members or care for children if schools close.
  3. Provide resources and a work environment that promotes personal hygiene. For example, provide tissues, no-touch trash cans, hand soap, hand sanitizer, disinfectants and disposable towels for workers to clean their work surfaces.
  4. Provide education and training materials in an easy-to- understand format and in the appropriate language and literacy level for all employees. See www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/business.
  5. Instruct employees who are well, but who have an ill family member at home with the flu, that they can go to work as usual. These employees should monitor their health every day, and notify their supervisor and stay home if they become ill. Employees who have a certain underlying medical condition or who are pregnant should promptly call their health care provider for advice if they become ill.
  6. Encourage workers to obtain a seasonal influenza vaccine, if it is appropriate for them according to CDC recommendations (http://www.cdc.gov/flu/protect/keyfacts.htm). This helps to prevent illness from seasonal influenza strains that may circulate at the same time as the 2009 H1N1 flu.
  7. Encourage employees to get the 2009 H1N1 vaccine when it becomes available if they are in a priority group according to CDC recommendations. For information on groups recommended for seasonal and H1N1 vaccines, please see www.flu.gov. Consider granting employees time off from work to get vaccinated when the vaccine is available in your community.
  8. Provide workers with up-to-date information on influenza risk factors, protective behaviors, and instruction on proper behaviors (for example, cough etiquette; avoid touching eyes, nose and mouth; and hand hygiene).
  9. Plan to implement practices to minimize face-to-face contact between workers if advised by the local health department. Consider the use of such strategies as extended use of e-mail, websites and teleconferences, and encourage flexible work arrangements (for example, telecommuting or flexible work hours) to reduce the number of workers who must be at the work site at the same time or in one specific location.
  10. If an employee does become sick while at work, place the employee in a separate room or area until they can go home, away from other workers. If the employee needs to go into a common area prior to leaving, he or she should cover coughs/sneezes with a tissue or wear a facemask if available and tolerable. Ask the employee to go home as soon as possible.

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