INDIANAPOLIS — "We have been very very busy with RSV," Taquita Taylor said.
Taylor is a family nurse practitioner at Children Express Care Clinic on 56th and Emerson Way.
She says respiratory illnesses are running rampant in the community.
"We are seeing around 30-40 patients a day. However, more than 75% of those are due to respiratory cases, RSV and peak RSV time doesn't happen until January or February so it started early," she said.
The clinic tests children five and under.
RSV isn't the only illness Taylor is diagnosing.
They're also seeing patients with asthma, bronchitis, the flu and COVID-19.
"Our wait time is 30 to 50 minutes. We definitely can get you in and out. We are focused on quality express but these ER waits times have been four to five hours," Taylor said.
Riley Children's Health tells WRTV 93 patients on Friday, were told to isolate due to respiratory illnesses including RSV, the flu and COVID-19.
Douglas Harvey says it's not just the children being impacted.
"In my facility, we have a lot of flu and we have covid that is kinda staying steady and that is with staffing and the patients," said Harvey.
To protect you and your family, especially after the holiday, Taylor says, monitor yourself and your children for these symptoms.
"You will have runny nose, cough, congestion, wheezing, in our younger population in infants, decrease in appetite, fever, fatigue," Taylor said.
She encourages frequent hand washing, avoiding kissing children and monitoring symptoms.
-
Siakam helps Pacers beat Knicks 116-103 in Game 6
Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle challenged his team to play more physically and more tenaciously Friday night.Multi-vehicle crash in Hamilton County seriously injures 2
Deputies with the Hamilton County Sheriff's Office responded to the area of State Road 38 and Springmill Road on reports of a serious crash just after 4:45 p.m.Indianapolis reduces number of beds for low barrier homeless shelter
Originally, the city was planning on having 250 beds available. Now, the shelter will have 150 instead.CDC: Overdose deaths across the state of Indiana decreasing
As hundreds across Indiana die from overdoses, more than 24,000 individual dosage units of the overdose reversal drug, Naloxone, is being pumped into communities per month.