Action Steps to Protect Your Child and Family from the Flu
Click here for a Parent's Guide to the Flu.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends four main ways you and your family may keep from getting sick with the flu at school and at home:

1.      Practice good hand hygiene by washing your hands often with soap and water, especially after coughing or sneezing.

2.      Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue when you cough or sneeze. If you don’t have a tissue, cough or sneeze into your elbow or shoulder, not into your hands.

3.      Stay home if you or your child is sick for at least 24 hours after there is no longer a fever or signs of a fever (without the use of fever-reducing medicine). Keep­ing sick students at home means that they keep their viruses to themselves rather than sharing them with others. 

4.      Get your family vaccinated for seasonal flu and 2009 H1N1 flu when vaccines are available.

If flu conditions become more severe, parents should consider the following steps:

Extend the time sick children stay home for at least 7 days, even if they feel better sooner. People who are still sick after 7 days should continue to stay home until at least 24 hours after symptoms have completely gone away.

If a household member is sick, keep any school-aged brothers or sisters home for 5 days from the time the household member became sick. Parents should monitor their health and the health of other school-aged children for fever and other flu symptoms.

Follow these steps to prepare for the flu during the 2009-10 school year:

• Plan for child care at home if your child gets sick or their school is dismissed.

• Plan to monitor the health of the sick child and any other children in the household by checking for fever and other symptoms of flu.

• Identify if you have children who are at higher risk of serious disease from the flu and talk to your health care provider about a plan to protect them during flu season. Children at high risk of serious disease from the flu include children under 5 and those children with chronic medical conditions, such as asthma and diabetes.

• Identify a separate room in the house for the care of sick family members.

• Update emergency contact lists with your child’s school.

• Contact your child’s school to obtain classroom work if your child must stay home.

For more information visit www.flu.gov or send an e-mail to cdcinfo@cdc.gov. You also can contact the CDC 24 hours a day, 7 days a week at 1-800-CDC-INFO (232-4636).

Click here for a Parent's Guide to the Flu.