Time for Hepatitis A Shot if you ate at North Carolina Burger King

 If you ate at the Siler City Burger King on Aug. 2 or 3, make time for a shot in your weekend plans.

The Chatham County Public Health Department issued a statement late Friday urging patrons of the restaurant, at 1712 E. 11th St., to be vaccinated for hepatitis A after an employee there tested positive for the virus.

Immunizations will be offered for free at the health department, at 1000 S. 10th Ave., Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. and Monday and Tuesday between 8:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.

The vaccine can prevent infection up to 14 days after exposure, so those who ate at the Burger King should get an injection by Aug. 17, the health department said.

The hepatitis A virus is usually spread when a person ingests fecal matter – even in microscopic amounts – from contact with objects, food, or drinks contaminated by feces or stool of an infected person.

Comments (1)

Read through and enter the discussion by using the form at the end
siler city resident - August 15, 2010 10:57 AM

Please note that this warning came out almost two weeks after the initial exposure, and the treatment/vaccine is only good for two weeks. Why was this information sat on? Siler City officials are very reluctant to show "racial profiling" on an establishment run almost exclusivly by hispanics. Just check out the local poultry plant. Last year it was drug resistant whoping cough, brought in by illegal imigrants, who refused to get vaccinated.

Post a comment

Fill out this form to add a comment to the discussion
I'd like to leave a comment. is
,
is
,
is
is