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xocetaceans

(4,438 posts)
Mon Mar 30, 2026, 02:24 AM 7 hrs ago

Beyond the Noise #100: The return of Hib?



This episode discusses a bacterium (Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib)), and the potential return of diseases caused by it in spite of the fact that there is a Hib vaccine. They also mention that childhood vaccination rates are decreasing.

They discuss the various diseases which this bacterium causes.

A pair of severe cases occurred in Florida in a relatively short time frame: it is noted that the two cases were seemingly not reported by the CDC, but instead were reported by a paper. The question is whether Hib is being well-tracked and whether the CDC has cut the reporting of this disease among other things.



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Beyond the Noise #100: The return of Hib? (Original Post) xocetaceans 7 hrs ago OP
This video is an excellent summary of the harm Hib used to do... 3catwoman3 3 hrs ago #1

3catwoman3

(29,387 posts)
1. This video is an excellent summary of the harm Hib used to do...
Mon Mar 30, 2026, 05:39 AM
3 hrs ago

…and the terror is caused in pediatricians and peds NP like me. It left out one important scenario.

Epiglottitis presents similarly to croup, with a sore throat and hoarseness. Unlike bacterial Hib, croup is viral and affects the vocal cords, not the epiglottis. The hoarseness of a child with croup sounds terrible, but they are generally not dangerously ill.

Dr. Offit discusses how carefully a child with suspected epiglottitis was handled. The reason for that exquisite caution was that examining a child with an infected epiglottis could cause respiratory obstruction. The routine act of looking in the throat with a tongue blade could result in the infected epiglottis slamming shut, so to speak, over the airway and rendering the child unable to breathe, making intubation impossible, and a tracheotomy necessary.

After the introduction of the Hib vaccine, epiglottitis became pretty much a thing of the past, and it was such a relief to be able to examine a child thoroughly without fearing that using a tongue blade might either kill them or lead to an emergency tracheotomy.

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