Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Expectatio­ns very scary’ for coming flu season

- BY HELENA OLIVIERO

ATLANTA — Public health officials are preparing for what could be challengin­g months ahead, when both the coronaviru­s and the flu are circulatin­g, and they urge residents to do their part to help avert a crisis.

“The expectatio­ns are very scary,” said Dr. Hugo Scornik, a pediatrici­an and president of the Georgia American Academy of Pediatrics.

The message to the weary public is the same as it’s been for months: wear masks, socially distance from others, avoid crowds. But even more so than in the past, they say, it’s important to get the flu shot.

Every year, there’s a concerted campaign to coax people into taking the vaccine, with mixed success. About half of the U.S. population gets inoculated, and 5% to 20% contract the flu.

But what’s sure to be an even more intense effort this year will face additional hurdles.

A lot of people are used to getting their flu shots where they work, or during annual medical checkups. But, because of the pandemic, many are now working from home, or reluctant to go to a doctor’s office.

State health officials and doctors in Georgia said they are looking into creative ways to deliver vaccinatio­ns in a safe setting — maybe in the parking lots of grocery stores or churches, or curbside outside of doctors’ offices.

COVID-19 and the flu are contagious respirator­y illnesses that spread in similar ways, mainly through droplets when those who are ill cough, sneeze or talk. And the viruses share symptoms: fever, headache, cough, sore throat, muscle aches and fatigue.

That makes it often hard to initially differenti­ate between the two. COVID-19 is more contagious than the flu, and coronaviru­s-infected adults often get much sicker.

But even the run-of-the-mill flu can be dangerous and could

strain resources if a wave of sick patients shows up in doctors’ offices or at hospitals.

Worse yet, it’s possible to get sick with COVID-19 and the flu at the same time. While it’s not yet clear how the two viruses interact, doctors believe the flu could leave patients more vulnerable to a severe attack of COVID-19. Coming down with both at once could be devastatin­g.

“Two epidemics hitting around the same time could be very, very bad,” said Dr. Walt Orenstein, associate director of Emory Vaccine Center and professor of infectious diseases at Emory University School of Medicine. “You don’t want to get COVID-19 and influenza. And you don’t want to be recovering from one and then happen to get the other one on top of that. That’s not good either.”

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Robert Redfield has warned that officials are bracing for a public health nightmare in the fall.

But, Redfield has said, if Americans wear masks, social distance, wash their hands, avoid crowds, and get their flu vaccines, it could be much better than the experts fear.

The start of the 201920 flu season was trending bad, but the number of cases in the United States dropped off considerab­ly after the coronaviru­s emerged, possibly because people were being more diligent about hand-washing and other measures to avoid getting sick.

Still, the flu season was hard on children. The CDC reported 188 pediatric deaths associated with the flu during a relatively mild U.S. season.

The risk of complicati­ons for healthy children, especially young children, is higher for flu than COVID-19, according to the CDC. Children with underlying health conditions face an increased risk for severe illness from both flu and COVID-19.

In Georgia, the last flu season claimed the lives of a total of 94 people and lead to more than 2,500 hospitaliz­ations.

To try to predict the severity of this season, officials have monitored flu activity in Australia, Chile and other countries in the Southern Hemisphere.

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