• Art Jahnke

    Senior Contributing Editor

    Art Janke

    Art Jahnke began his career at the Real Paper, a Boston area alternative weekly. He has worked as a writer and editor at Boston Magazine, web editorial director at CXO Media, and executive editor in Marketing & Communications at Boston University, where his work was honored with many awards. Profile

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There are 7 comments on Students Stricken with Stomach Ailment

  1. I know of someone who was vomiting/coughing up blood and called SHS for help/an appointment, and they told her to sleep on it. Not really sure calling Student Health Services would really do people that much good.

  2. Are there any other precautions we should take into consideration as to prevent ourselves from getting sick? I’m interested in finding out what this is and what caused this uncanny coincidence.

  3. I know a girl who actually went to the ER for it and they just gave her liquids and antibiotics and didn’t say what exactly it was. The vomiting doesn’t last long though – after a few hours you should be weak and unable to eat what and how much you usually would, but otherwise fine.

  4. It’s probably Norovirus. Tis the season. Wash your hands well and perform careful cleaning of surfaces. Alcohol-based hand gels are not as effective against Norovirus as it is against the flu virus.

  5. symptoms are pretty nonspecific – if it’s foodborne, washing your hands, refraining from sharing liquids/food should keep you safe. Also might want to avoid any uncooked meals coming from the dining halls there. The news tonight suggested the pathogen is a type of norvirus, which has a very short incubation period (between 1-2 days). Friends of sick people might want to try to figure out what they ate before shunning them, so they can avoid the same foods.

    Any other places to get more info about this?

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