Duke Medicine: It's not too late to get the flu shot
The flu season is just getting started, and it's shaping up to be nasty.
Posted — UpdatedThe flu season is just getting started, and it’s shaping up to be nasty. About 36,000 Americans die annually from the flu, which is why doctors like Monica Barnes-Durity, MD, a family practitioner with Duke Primary Care Morrisville, are urging people who haven’t already gotten the flu vaccine to do so now.
“It is definitely not too late,” she says. “A lot of people haven’t gotten the vaccine yet because they think the flu season hasn’t started, or they think the vaccine will give them the flu but that’s just not true.”
Others may not realize they need a new vaccination each year.
Experts prepare a new flu vaccine each year based on their scientific predictions of the virus strains that will strike. This year’s vaccine closely mimics the strains that have already been identified in many states across the country.
However, because the vaccine takes up to two weeks for the body to develop an immune response, the sooner you get the vaccine, the more protected you will be.
“People say, ‘Last time I got the flu vaccine, I got the flu,” says Barnes-Durity. “In actuality, you didn’t give your body time to arm itself. You can get the flu shot on Saturday, be in contact with someone who has the flu on Sunday, and you will get the flu or a flu-like illness.”
It’s also important to know that the vaccine is not 100 percent effective. Rather, it should keep the most severe flu symptoms at bay. “If you get any symptoms at all it will be mild but you should not get a full-blown case of the flu,” Barnes-Durity says.
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