Health Team

NC flu update comes as cases spread

The flu is now widespread in all but seven states, and hospitalization rates match the dismal season two years ago. While health officials fear this will be an unusually bad year, it's too soon to say.

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NEW YORK — The N.C. Department of Health and Human Services' Division of Public Health will update the status of the flu across the state Tuesday in a news conference at noon.

Doctors discuss the number of cases and deaths each week, and the most recent report from the end of December showed a sharp spike in those deaths.

In all, 17 people have died in North Carolina of the flu this winter. Nine of those deaths were reported during the week of Christmas.

The flu is now widespread in all but seven states, and hospitalization rates match the dismal season two years ago. While health officials fear this will be an unusually bad year, it's too soon to say.

The latest figures released Monday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show the flu hitting hard in most of the 43 states where the illness was widespread. But the flu was not yet rampant in populous states like California and New York.

The report is for the week of Christmas, and it shows the flu season following a similar track as the last two, when flu activity peaked no later than mid-January. Perhaps that will happen this winter, too, the CDC's Dr. Michael Jhung said.

HOW BAD IS THIS FLU SEASON?

It's not clear yet. Experts are worried because the nasty bug that's making most people sick isn't included in this year's vaccine.

A strain of flu known as H3N2 evolved after this year's batch of vaccine was developed, and it has proven to cause especially severe symptoms in the very young and the very old.

Preliminary data on how well the vaccine is working is still weeks away. Among infectious diseases, flu is considered one of the nation's leading causes of death, killing roughly 24,000 a year, on average.

WHAT PRECAUTIONS ARE HOSPITALS TAKING?

Major hospitals and community clinics across the state have restrictions in place to keep people under 18 and those with flu symptoms – including a high fever, body aches and chills, cough or sore throat and a runny or stuffy nose – from visiting patient areas. 

HOW UNUSUAL IS FLU THIS YEAR?

The different flu strain makes predictions more difficult. The current season hit hard in December — earlier than usual. But the last two flu seasons hit early, too. So far, flu hospitalization rates are similar to the harsh season two years ago, which was dominated by a similar flu virus. Especially this year, health officials this year are urging doctors to treat flu patients promptly with antiviral medications.

HAS FLU BECOME EPIDEMIC?

Yes, but that's not unusual. "It's safe to say we have a flu epidemic every year," Jhung said Monday. Epidemics occur when a virus spreads quickly and affects many people at the same time. According to one CDC definition, flu is epidemic when a certain percentage of deaths in a given week are due to flu and pneumonia. By that measure, flu epidemics occurred in nine of the last dozen winters, including this one. Flu-related deaths surpassed the epidemic threshold three weeks ago, then dropped below that level the next week. But other measures indicate flu still is epidemic.

IS IT TOO LATE TO GET A FLU SHOT?

CDC officials say no. Even if the flu season peaks soon, it will still be around for months. Despite the new flu strain, the vaccine has been well matched in roughly a third of the flu cases seen so far. And it is considered to be effective against some other flu viruses that could surge in the late winter or spring. About 40 percent of the public was vaccinated against flu as of November, which is about normal in recent years, Jhung said. 

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