The Gold Coast Bulletin

Huge drop in flu numbers

Cases plummet during Covid crisis

- LUKE MORTIMER AND JANELLE MILES

FLU cases and deaths have plummeted on the Gold Coast this year during the COVID-19 pandemic which forced social distancing and better hygiene.

So far this year, Gold Coast Health has recorded 729 influenza cases as part of notifiable conditions reporting. It was almost 10 times higher at 7070 cases at the same time in 2019 – an 89.6 per cent drop in 2020.

This year’s figures also mark a 40.3 per cent drop compared to the 1222 cases recorded during the same time in 2018.

In total, there were 7301 flu cases recorded on the Gold Coast in 2019 and 2095 in 2018.

Queensland Health also revealed the number of flu deaths nosedived from 18 last year to four in 2020 – a 77.7 per cent reduction.

“The number of influenza cases on the Gold Coast this year are reflective of statewide and national influenza trends for 2020,” a Gold Coast Health spokespers­on said. “Good hand and respirator­y hygiene are highly effective measures for preventing the spread of diseases like influenza.

“Physical distancing and hand and respirator­y hygiene have been integral to the COVID-19 response and we need Gold Coasters to keep up their excellent efforts to ensure we maintain our healthy position into the future and protect our most vulnerable.”

The health service reminded Coast residents the flu can be especially serious for babies, young children and people aged over 65 and urged the community to vaccinate.

A Queensland Health spokespers­on said: “We have experience­d a significan­t decrease in both the prevalence of influenza in the wider community, and instances of death associated with the virus, throughout 2020.

“This is likely due to restrictio­ns and health recommenda­tions put in place to control the spread of COVID-19, such as social distancing, hand hygiene and masks. Despite the decrease, it is still critical all members of the community stay up to date with their influenza vaccinatio­ns.

“Whilst the influenza vaccine will not prevent COVID-19 transmissi­on, it can reduce the severity and spread of influenza, which may make a person more susceptibl­e to other respirator­y illnesses like COVID-19.”

Queensland has recorded 5918 laboratory-confirmed cases of the flu in 2020, compared with 36,874 for the same period in 2019. Cases of rotavirus, mumps and measles, all viruses, and whooping cough are also significan­tly down on the fiveyear average.

University of Queensland virologist Ian Mackay said physical distancing and limited internatio­nal travel reduced the infectious diseases.

“There aren’t many silver linings to this pandemic but the lives saved and illness prevented is one of them,” Associate Professor Mackay said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia