Site icon Healthier, Happy Lives Blog

Respiratory Syncytial Virus: What You Should Know About RSV

RSV is a highly contagious, seasonal virus that causes symptoms such as trouble breathing and other more severe disease in infants.

Like many children’s hospitals across the country, Stanford Medicine Children’s Health is experiencing an increased number of pediatric patients hospitalized with respiratory viruses such as influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV).

Anticipating that the number of respiratory cases was going to be higher than in prior seasons, as many children avoided these viruses during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Stanford Children’s providers have prepared to manage the volume of young patients coming into our hospital, Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford, and clinics.

In a continued effort to educate parents about RSV and its symptoms, David Cornfield, MD, chief of Pulmonary, Asthma, and Sleep Medicine, and medical director of Respiratory Therapy, answers frequently asked questions about RSV, vaccines, and how wellness visits can help in the future.

As we navigate through the respiratory illness season, it’s important to continue practicing good hand hygiene, cover coughs and sneezes, and get vaccinated. Those are best tools we have to get through the respiratory virus season together.

Exit mobile version