You better watch out. Santa Claus doesn’t want to catch the H1N1 flu virus.
Some national Santa hiring companies are trying to reduce the risk that this white-bearded man of Christmas — and the children who sit on his lap — will not contract the H1N1 virus, commonly referred to as swine flu.
Companies that hire Santas at shopping malls in the Roanoke and New River valleys are issuing new guidelines to their employees that advise them to change their white gloves often, clean Santa suits every few days and use antibacterial hand sanitizer.
One Alabama nonprofit, Santa America, even has requested to a state legislator that its Santas, including those in Virginia, receive the H1N1 vaccine. The vaccine is targeted at high-risk groups, such as pregnant women, young children and health care workers, because supplies are limited nationwide.
Also, malls in this region are installing hand sanitizer pumps near some entrances and St. Nick’s chair.
“We’re being proactive,” said Mike Poldiak, general manager of New River Valley Mall in Christiansburg, which installed sanitizing lotion dispensers at three entrances a few weeks ago. There will be a dispenser at the mall’s Santa set when he arrives Friday.
St. Nick typically does not have to worry about catching the flu during the Christmas season. In Virginia, the seasonal flu peaks in late January to mid-February, said Dr. Jody Hershey, director of the New River Health District.
But the H1N1 flu outbreak began in April, sickening millions nationwide and killing thousands.
H1N1 passes from person to person through coughing and sneezing. It also can spread by touching an object with the virus and then touching your mouth or nose, Hershey said.
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