CDPH Urges Public to Take Preventative Measures to Stay Healthy this Winter

Press release from the CDPH:

As we enter winter and the holiday season, the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) urges Californians to protect themselves and their families against many circulating viruses this holiday season, including the flu, COVID-19, and Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV).

“Our winter virus season is here early, especially for our kids. We are seeing stress on our clinics and hospitals that care for kids, especially infants and kids under 12,” said State Public Health Officer and CDPH Director Dr. Tomás Aragón. “It’s important to remember that kids get infected from other kids and adults, so everyone needs to do their part. As we head into the holiday season with more indoor gatherings and travel, there are five easy steps that can help keep you and your family healthy.”

Dr. Aragón’s five tips to protect yourself and others from severe illness and hospitalization include:

  1. Get Vaccinated, Boosted (and Treated)
    Flu and COVID-19 vaccines continue to be your best defense to limit severe illness and death – and you can get both at the same time. If you test positive for COVID-19, contact your doctor or a test-to-treat site immediately to seek treatment. Treatments work best when started right after symptoms begin.
  2. Stay Home if You’re Sick!
    It’s crucial to stay home if you are feeling ill. Avoid close contact with others to protect them, and take the time you need to heal. This is especially important for respiratory viruses like the flu, RSV and COVID-19, which can lead to more severe illness.
  3. Wear a Mask
    There is no vaccine for RSV, so wearing a mask can significantly slow the spread and protect babies and young children who do not yet have immunity and are too young to wear a mask themselves. Wearing a mask in indoor public places is a good way to limit the spread of germs.
  4. Wash Your Hands
    Your mom was right: frequent handwashing, with soap and warm water – for at least 20 seconds, is an easy way to prevent getting sick and spreading germs.
  5. Cover Your Cough or Sneeze
    Remember to cough or sneeze into your elbow, your arm, or a disposable tissue to help prevent the spread of winter viruses. Just make sure to wash your hands or sanitize and dispose of your tissue after.

VIDEO: Stay Healthy this Winter: Tips to Protect Yourself and Family

CDPH continues to monitor hospitalizations related to winter respiratory viruses, including flu, COVID-19, and RSV, as well as trends across the country and state. With many viruses already circulating at high levels in California, it is important to take these measures to ensure our hospitals have capacity to care for all vulnerable Californians, including babies and children, who need lifesaving treatment.

www.cdph.ca.gov

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13 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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grey fox
Member
3 years ago

Taking health professionals advice is always a good thing…

COVID, flu, RSV – how this triple threat of respiratory viruses could collide this winter

https://theconversation.com/amp/covid-flu-rsv-how-this-triple-threat-of-respiratory-viruses-could-collide-this-winter-191822

F8358246-9BEE-45A7-B237-44BAD4538830.jpeg
Last edited 3 years ago
Just Sayin
Guest
Just Sayin
3 years ago

Maybe try #1 practice a healthy lifestyle, get vitamin d, exercise, eat little processed food. I mean seriously though wtf are these “health experts” even going on about here!

lol
Guest
lol
3 years ago
Reply to  Just Sayin

You dont understand the value of #2 – #5?

Canyon oak
Guest
Canyon oak
3 years ago

Everybody has to do their part to obey the masters of puppets

Nooo
Guest
Nooo
3 years ago
Reply to  Canyon oak

Damn cruel masters they are… Wash hands? A travesty! Cover your cough? Oh the indignity! D recommend getting vaccinated, wearing a mask or stay home if sick!?! “They”must really hate us all… And all this after asking people to stay on the correct side of the double yellow line! The tyranny!!!!!!!

Akbar
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  Canyon oak

Yeah, I agree- time for the puppets to wake up! Who’s afraid of stupid old diseases like polio anyway?

Lone Ranger
Guest
Lone Ranger
3 years ago
Reply to  Akbar

Haven’t ever been to the doctor, disease free as far as I know. Kind of like having free health care, but actually health care free. Drugs and doctors cause as many problems as they fix, may as well play the lotto on your way to the doc.

Skitty
Guest
Skitty
3 years ago
Reply to  Lone Ranger

Didn’t you drive 140 mph on Highway 36 as a kid also ? You’re my hero LonerAnger. Crack me up ?
How much did you pay in taxes last year? What did you claim a million dollars. Too funny!!

grey fox
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  Lone Ranger

That is not even close to being true..

Crack me up…

HotCoffee
Guest
HotCoffee
3 years ago
Reply to  Akbar

I’m more afraid of my family’s experiences with inept doctors and cheap lab tests than I am of acquiring polio.

Last edited 3 years ago
grey fox
Member
3 years ago
Reply to  HotCoffee

Again, your experiences are not an indication of the good doctors do…

HotCoffee
Guest
HotCoffee
3 years ago
Reply to  grey fox

They are for me.
Each person decides for themselves.

Last edited 3 years ago
grey fox
Member
3 years ago

Chances of finding COVID-virus ancestor ‘almost nil’, say virologists
Genome analysis finds SARS-CoV-2 and bat coronaviruses shared an ancestor just a few years ago, but extensive recombination has muddied the picture.

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-03611-w

Last edited 3 years ago