U.S. officials warn 'intense' flu season
to continue, urge shots
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[February 16, 2018]
(Reuters) - Adults who get a flu
shot are 36 percent less likely to get the disease, while for children
the figure was an unexpectedly high 59 percent, U.S. health officials
said on Thursday, predicting that the current "intense" season could
continue for weeks.
Anyone not already immunized should get a flu shot despite the lateness
of the season, because "some protection is better than none," one of the
officials told a news briefing.
A total of 63 children in the United States have died of influenza this
season, and three-quarters of them did not get a vaccine, said Anne
Schuchat, acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
"This flu season continues to be extremely challenging and intense, with
very high levels of office visits for flu and hospitalization rates, all
indications that flu activity is high and likely to continue for several
more weeks," Schuchat said.
Flu symptom rates are close to those seen in the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic
and for the past few weeks the whole country has been experiencing the
flu, she said.
The current vaccine's effectiveness rate is based on an interim study
conducted nationally through Feb. 3 covering thousands of people,
Schuchat said.
Effectiveness against the season's dominant strain, the H3N2 strain, was
lower at about 25 percent. It was better against the other viruses, at
67 percent against H1N1 and 42 percent against influenza B viruses, she
said.
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A box of masks is shown in the emergency room at Palomar Medical
Center in Escondido, California, U.S., January 18, 2018.
REUTERS/Mike Blake
Getting the shot can mean the difference between a mild illness and
a hospital stay, Schuchat said, particularly for people at higher
risk such as children and the aged.
"There's still plenty of time. Go get a flu shot. Do it for
yourself, your family and your community," Health and Human Services
Secretary Alex Azar told the briefing.
As many as 646,000 people are dying globally from seasonal influenza
each year, U.S. health officials said in December, a rise from
earlier assessments of the disease's death toll.
(Reporting by Eric Walsh in Washington and Stephanie Kelly in New
York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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