Sac State student diagnosed with bacterial meningitis

Jimmy Spencer

A Sacramento State student was diagnosed with bacterial meningitis on Friday, according to an automated e-mail distributed by the university to all SacLink accounts.

According to the e-mail, the student was hospitalized early Friday morning.

Dr. Glennah Trochet, health officer for Sacramento County, said she is confident that those who may have been in close contact with the patient have been notified and treated.

According to the e-mail notice, “only a few people needed antibiotics as a precaution, and no other cases have been identified.”

Because bacterial meningitis is not spread through the air, but through saliva or droplets, Trochet said one would have had to come in very close contact with the patient to be infected.

“It would most likely be either a girlfriend, boyfriend or roommate,” Trochet said. “If the person shared lipstick or soda, then the people they shared with would be at risk.

“Sitting in the same classroom with this person is not a risk.”

The intent of the e-mail was “to provide as much information as possible and calm any concerns.”

In addition, the Student Health Center is working with the county to help treat anyone else who has been in close contact with the patient.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Web site, meningitis is a contagious infection that of the fluid of a person’s spinal cord and the fluid that surround the brain. Symptoms can develop over hours or from 1 to 2 days and include fever, headache, nausea, vomiting and stiff neck.

Trochet said that Sacramento County investigates meningitis about 15 times a year. She said last year the county had only eight cases, but had as many as 43 in 1996.

“Everytime it’s reported, we act immediately,” Trochet said.

There an estimated 100 cases on college campuses nationally every year according to the e-mail.

For more information, contact the Sacramento County Health Department at (916) 875-5881.