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			 There’s no vaccine yet for coronavirus, which so far has infected 12 
			people and resulted in no deaths in the United States. 
 But two Springfield doctors say flu shots offer useful – though not 
			perfect – protection against influenza, which has caused at least 22 
			million flu illnesses this season and 12,000 deaths nationwide.
 
 Promoting awareness about the coronavirus is a good idea, especially 
			as new information emerges in Asia, said Dr. Steven O’Marro, a 
			Springfield Clinic infectious-disease specialist. But influenza, 
			which appears to be peaking in central Illinois as it normally does 
			in February, poses a “much more immediate threat,” he said.
 
 Dr. Janak Koirala, chief of infectious diseases at Southern Illinois 
			University School of Medicine in Springfield, said flu “causes a lot 
			more mortality in the United States than I think the coronavirus is 
			going to cause.”
 
			
			 
			
 With more than half of American adults not getting a flu shot each 
			year, and four in 10 children going unvaccinated, the doctors said 
			they wish flu shots and other measures to cut down on transmission 
			would receive as much attention in the news media as the new Chinese 
			coronavirus.
 
 “This coronavirus is mysterious and scary, so it captures people’s 
			attention,” said O’Marro, medical director of infection prevention 
			at Memorial Medical Center.
 
 O’Marro said he and other medical experts aren’t discounting the 
			coronavirus, which originated in the city of Wuhan in central China.
 
 More than 43,000 people, most of them in mainland China — a country 
			of 1.4 billion people — have tested positive for the respiratory 
			virus, and there have been at least 1,100 deaths worldwide.
 
 In the United States, 12 people have tested positive for the 
			coronavirus, while results are pending for approximately 70 other 
			people, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and 
			Prevention. The positive cases include two in Illinois – a 
			Chicago-area man in his 60s who is the spouse of the first confirmed 
			travel-related case in the state.
 
 It appears the coronavirus in Asia is causing the worst 
			complications for people with reduced immune systems, such as the 
			elderly, and the death rate among infected people may be as high as 
			2% to 3%, according to news reports and the latest estimates.
 
 That death rate would be several times higher than the death rate 
			for influenza, which is less than 1%, but experts disagree on the 
			coronavirus’ fatality rate as more information emerges on the total 
			number of infected individuals.
 
 The risk of infection by coronavirus remains low in Illinois, said 
			Gina Carnduff, Memorial Health System’s director of infection 
			prevention.
 
 Meanwhile, flu activity is considered high in Illinois, one of 48 
			states with that designation for the week ending Feb. 1, according 
			to the CDC.
 
			Positive flu tests since early October for patients of Memorial 
			Medical Center and at Memorial ExpressCare clinics and Memorial 
			Physician Services offices in Sangamon County rose from 154 cases on 
			Jan. 25 to 429 cases on Feb. 1 and 639 cases on Feb. 8. 
			
			 
			
 Thirty-six of this season’s positive cases have resulted in hospital 
			admissions, Carnduff said.
 
 In Illinois and Springfield, this flu season appears to be worse 
			than last year’s season and more like the 2017-18 season, though 
			there were more hospitalizations in 2017-18, she said.
 
 Elderly people and others with reduced immune systems were the 
			hardest hit by flu-related medical complications, she said.
 
			
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It’s unknown so far whether this season’s flu vaccine formula is less effective 
than usual, Carnduff said, but Memorial has seen more children and young adults 
testing positive for flu this season than in typical years.
 The Type A flu strain that appears to be causing the most severe illnesses this 
year is more aggressive than what doctors usually see in patients, Koirala said.
 
 The effectiveness of the flu vaccine – its ability to prevent infection – can 
range from 30% to 70%, while vaccines for other illnesses such as measles, mumps 
and polio are successful more than 90% of the time, he said.
 
 People often overlook the flu vaccine’s ability to reduce the severity of 
flu-related illness, or they falsely believe it can cause flu, Koirala said. 
That may be because viruses other than influenza can cause flu-like symptoms, he 
said.
 
 The CDC says 45.3% of American adults received flu shots in the 2018-19 season. 
The nationwide figure represented an increase of 8 percentage points from the 
previous season.
 
 In Illinois, 41.3% of adults got shots in 2018-19 – the eight-worst rate among 
the states – though 67.4% of Illinoisans 65 and older got shots, based on CDC 
statistics.
 
 O’Marro said many of the hospitalized patients he has treated for the flu this 
season weren’t vaccinated.
 
 
Some of them have “listened to people who are famous” who have criticized 
vaccines in general because of unwarranted concerns that vaccines cause autism, 
he said. “And some people are just anti-vaccination,” he said.
 Most people don’t realize the value of vaccines over the decades, he said.
 
 “These people don’t live with their relatives, who have since died, who had to 
deal with typhoid fever and tetanus and diphtheria and smallpox, polio, measles 
and mumps,” O’Marro said. “The influenza vaccination saves lives.”
 
 Carnduff said it’s not too late to get a flu shot and added that it takes two 
weeks for the flu vaccine to ramp up a person’s immune system.
 
 “The vaccine is not the end-all-be-all,” she said. “It’s coupled with those 
general protection measures, as well: Practicing good hand hygiene, avoiding 
those people who are sick, and not touching your eyes, nose or mouth with 
unwashed hands.”
 
 Springfield resident Lindsay Faulker, a divorced mother of six, one of whom is 
deceased, said she and her children have come down with the flu after getting 
flu shots in the past, but she suspects they didn’t get as sick as they would 
have without the shots.
 
 After waking up with a fever of almost 104 degrees at 1 a.m. Feb. 3, Faulkner’s 
1-year-old daughter, January Horn, was diagnosed with the flu but was feeling 
better later in the week after several oral doses of the anti-viral drug Tamiflu 
prescribed by Dr. Nicole Florence of Memorial Physician Services.
 
 January received the recommended two-dose regimen of influenza vaccine for young 
children in the fall, her mother said.
 
 “The statistics really amaze me on how many people don’t get the flu vaccine,” 
said Faulkner, 40, a manager at the Illinois Department of Transportation. “It’s 
a precaution. It’s an extra step to protect yourself.”
 
 Faulkner said her advice to other parents is: “Do what you feel is right for 
your family. I don’t tell people to be vaccinated. More than anything, wash your 
hands and cover your cough.”
 
				 
			[Memorial Health Systems] |