Six young patients died and 12 others became sick following an outbreak of adenovirus at a rehabilitation centre in Haskell, New Jersey, the US state’s Health Department said on Tuesday.
Adenoviruses frequently cause mild illness, with cold-like symptoms, particularly in young children. But the children affected in this case have compromised immune systems, the health department said.
The 18 patients range in age from a toddler through young adulthood and most are under 18 years old, health department spokeswoman Nicole Kirgan said in an email. The department is not releasing exact ages of any patients because of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and privacy reasons, Kirgan said.
The Wanaque Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation, which includes a pediatrics centre, has been instructed not to admit any new patients until the outbreak ends, the department said.
“This strain of virus tends to cause outbreaks in centers of communal living and has... unfortunately led to deaths,” Dr. Shereef Elnahal, the state’s health department commissioner, said on Twitter. “We take this very seriously.”
Health department officials were at the centre on Tuesday and also on Sunday and found minor hand-washing deficiencies, the department said. Health officials are working with the centre on infection control issues.
The health department will continue an active on-site surveillance and has recommended measures to protect against the further spread of infection, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy said on Twitter.
“Heartbroken that several children have lost their lives in an adenovirus outbreak in Haskell,” Murphy said.
Haskell is located about 32 miles northwest of New York.