Mumps case confirmed at Hilo school

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

HILO — An individual at Chiefess Kapiolani Elementary School in Hilo has been infected with the mumps virus, the school confirmed in a letter Monday.

Principal Gregg Yonemori sent the letter home to parents and staff notifying them the infected person attended school for at least one day during the infectious period. It wasn’t specified if that person was a student or staff member or when the infection occurred.

The individual wasn’t named in the letter because of Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act requirements.

Forty-two documented mumps cases in Hawaii County have been confirmed since Thursday, when the state Department of Health last updated its online registry.

It’s unclear how many of those documented cases have occurred in schools. At least one Naalehu Elementary School student was confirmed in August to have been infected with the virus.

State law does not require schools to notify parents when an infection occurs.

Under current privacy law, the DOH also does not release “the number of students or staff in at East Hawaii schools who are affected by mumps” or “the name of a school with confirmed mumps cases, unless that particular school or the Hawaii Department of Education provides them authority to do so,” DOH spokesman Dennis Galaro said in an email.

Galaro said the DOH works with affected schools — at their request — to send informational letters home to parents.

Email Kirsten Johnson at kjohnson@hawaiitribune-herald.com.