Dispelling the Top 10 Meningitis Myths Painesville OH

You've probably read the tragic news stories about the college kid or the young athlete who died from meningitis. Or you've heard the rumors about how you can catch it by kissing someone. But how much do you really know about the disease? Get the truth behind the top 10 meningitis myths.

Monica Mary Urban
(216) 621-5600
5105 Som Center Road
Willoughby, OH
Thomas M Daniel, MD
216-844-3173
7459 Brigham Rd
Gates Mills, OH
Nashaat Sobhi Hamza, MD
216-844-2085
21851 Ball Ave
Cleveland, OH
Thomas Mc Donald File, MD
330-375-3894
75 Arch St Ste 105
Akron, OH
Barbara Dudzinski, MD
6770 Mayfield Rd
Cleveland, OH
Abdul Halawa
(440) 739-0420
13170 Ravenna Rd
Chardon, OH
Stanley Lowell Fox, MD
464 Richmond Rd
Cleveland, OH
Thomas Edward Herchline, MD
937-775-4580
27100 Chardon Rd
Richmond Hts, OH
John S Venglarcik III, MD
330-740-3993
500 Gypsy Ln
Youngstown, OH
Ronald Anthony Shubert
(330) 453-3099
3501 Tuscarawas St W
Canton, OH
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Dispelling the Top 10 Meningitis Myths

You've probably read the tragic news stories about the college kid or the young athlete who died from meningitis. Or you've heard the rumors about how you can catch it by kissing someone. But how much do you really know about the disease? Get the truth behind the top 10 meningitis myths.

Myth 1: There is only one type of meningitis.

Reality:

Meningitis is caused most commonly by a virus. Bacterial meningitis is more serious because it can be deadly if not treated soon enough. On very rare occasions, the disease is caused by a fungus. Meningitis is sometimes called spinal meningitis, regardless of the cause.

Myth 2: You can only get meningitis by kissing someone who has it.

Reality:

Although kissing is one way to spread the disease and kissing multiple partners will greatly increase your risk of contracting meningitis, it can be spread in other ways, such as by drinking out of the same glass, coughing, or sharing items like lipstick or cigarettes.


Myth 3:
Only teenagers and college students are at risk of contracting meningitis.

Reality:

Anyone can get meningitis. College students who live in dorms or group housing are at higher risk because of close contact and increased likelihood of sharing items, like drinking glasses and utensils, that could spread the disease. Before the introduction of the vaccine, meningitis posed a serious threat for young children...

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