China Daily

Hospitals see sixfold jump in cases

- By BO LEUNG in London boleung@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The number of people admitted to hospitals in England with influenza in the first week of this year was six times higher than during the same period last year.

In total, 758 people were hospitaliz­ed this year with confirmed flu cases, according to Public Health England. There were 110 during the same week in 2017.

There was also a rise in visits to general practition­ers from people with flu-like illnesses, up from 18.8 per 100,000 people during the first week last year to 37.3 this year.

The number of people admitted to intensive care almost tripled, with 240 in the first week of this year compared to 84 in 2017.

So far, 85 people have died from the virus this winter in England, with 27 of those flurelated deaths coming in the first week of 2018.

Simon de Lusignan, medical director for the RCGP Research Surveillan­ce Centre, said: “We can certainly say that last week ... flu in England took off, crossing the medium threshold. However, given how unpredicta­ble flu can be, it is impossible to speculate how this will progress moving forward — rates may increase further, they may level out or even decline.”

The virus strain has been called “Aussie flu” because it is the same strain that gave Australia its worst flu season for nearly a decade.

The Royal College of General Practition­ers said the figures show the increasing pressure on GP practices across England.

Helen Stokes-Lampard, chair of the Royal College of GPs, said: “These figures back up what GPs across the country are telling us ... things are incredibly busy and demand is increasing — not just with flu but other common winter illness as well.”

There has also been an increase in flu cases in Scotland. During the first week of 2018, four deaths were reported to Scottish health officials out of 53 intensive care cases.

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