Times Colonist

Rise in flu cases suggests peak of infections hasn’t hit

- SHERYL UBELACKER

TORONTO — The number of flu cases is continuing to rise across Canada, suggesting the peak of infections with one of the dominant circulatin­g strains could come within a few weeks — or even sooner, say infectious diseases experts, who describe this influenza season as “unusual.”

“We really haven’t seen a season quite like this in a little while,” said Dr. Michelle Murti of Public Health Ontario, referring to the mix of two primary strains making people sick during this year’s epidemic.

The dominant influenza A strain is H3N2, a nasty virus that tends to infect the elderly in greater numbers, with concurrent circulatio­n of a B strain, a type that typically causes less severe illness. Influenza B can also affect older people and is the strain that most often infects children.

“Normally in a season, we’ll see a peak of influenza A happening some time towards the end of December or through January,” Murti said. “And as that is coming down toward the end of February, that’s when we start to see that peak of influenza B activity into the spring and later season.”

But this year’s B strain, known as B/Yamagata, began circulatin­g in the fall, much earlier than is usually the case.

British Columbia, for example, is seeing an atypical 50-50 mix of H3N2 and B/Yamagata, although other regions in Canada may have different ratios of the two strains affecting their population­s, Dr. Danuta Skowronski of the B.C. Centre for Disease Control said from Vancouver.

“The spike in influenza activity that we’re experienci­ng now is not unusual,” she said. “In fact, such a sharp increase in activity is a signature feature of influenza that distinguis­hes it from other respirator­y viruses that have a more prolonged, grumbling activity through the winter period.”

Skowronski described graphs illustrati­ng flu activity as looking like a church steeple — with a sudden rise, a peak and then a sharp decline.

“We are currently spiking, but whether we have passed the peak or are continuing to rise, it’s still too early to tell,” she said, adding that peaks may arrive at varying times across the country as regions and communitie­s experience major upticks in cases at different points in the epidemic.

In its weekly FluWatch report, the Public Health Agency of Canada says there were 11,277 laboratory-confirmed cases of flu across the country as of Dec. 30 — about 70 per cent attributed to H3N2 — with more than 1,000 influenza-related hospitaliz­ations and 34 deaths.

However, Murti said those figures are an underestim­ate of the actual number of cases, as most people don’t seek medical attention for flu and, therefore, aren’t tested. As well, not all provinces and territorie­s keep track of hospitaliz­ations due to influenza.

Murti predicts Ontario’s peak — for H3N2 cases, at least — will likely come in the next few weeks. “But you really don’t know the peak until you’re coming down the other side,” she said.

 ?? VANCOUVER SUN ?? Dr. Danuta Skowronski of the B.C. Centre for Disease Control says British Columbia is seeing an atypical 50-50 mix of H3N2 and B/Yamagata flu strains.
VANCOUVER SUN Dr. Danuta Skowronski of the B.C. Centre for Disease Control says British Columbia is seeing an atypical 50-50 mix of H3N2 and B/Yamagata flu strains.

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