Los Angeles Times

Flu deaths rise in California

Emergency rooms are crowded with patients facing long wait times, health officials say.

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a

Inf luenza has killed 42 people younger than 65 so far this season, compared with nine this time last year.

The number of California­ns younger than 65 who have died of the flu has jumped to 42, compared with nine at the same time last year, state officials said Friday.

The flu season, which runs from October through May, typically peaks in February. Public health officials say they don’t yet know whether the flu season is peaking earlier than normal, or if this year will be a particular­ly tough one.

“We are still early in the season but … the number of deaths so far is significan­tly higher than at the same time in the previous several influenza seasons,” said Dr. James Watt, chief of the division of communicab­le disease control with the California Department of Public Health, in a media call with reporters this week.

Thousands of people in California started showing up at doctors’ offices and hospitals in December with the flu. Since then, emergency rooms have been crowded, with long wait times, and patients have struggled to get doctor appointmen­ts as well as flu medication­s.

Most people in California and nationwide are catching a strain of influenza A known as H3N2, which tends to be deadlier than other strains. H3N2 was to blame for Australia’s most recent, brutal flu season, which led to record numbers of sick people as well as the nickname “Aussie flu.”

In California, state officials collect flu death data only among people younger

than 65. So many older people die of the flu each year that monitoring deaths of patients younger than 65 reveals more about the severity of the f lu season, they say.

Among people of all ages, 36 people have died in Los Angeles County this flu season and 91 in San Diego County, officials say.

“Influenza is widespread,” said L.A. County public health department director Dr. Barbara Ferrer in a news conference this week. “There’s almost no area in the county that’s seen no influenza activity at this point.”

Officials say visits to L.A. County emergency rooms for influenza symptoms are more than twice as high as they were at the same time last year.

This month, Kaiser Permanente members received texts and calls warning them of long wait times in urgent care and ERs. Kaiser’s phone line that fields patient calls has also seen a big increase in activity recently, said Dr. Gunter Rieg, regional infection control officer for Kaiser Permanente in Southern California.

“It’s a huge surge of influenza this year,” he said.

Officials say it’s not too late to get the flu shot. The vaccine is recommende­d for everyone 6 months or older, and is especially important for pregnant women, children younger than 5, adults older than 65 and others who are at high-risk for complicati­ons from the flu.

Experts say the flu shot may be only 30% effective this year, but can still reduce the severity of symptoms for people who get the flu. It takes about two weeks for the shot to take effect.

“At this time, it’s the best tool we have,” Ferrer said.

Flu activity varies across the state. Silicon Valley’s Camino Hospital has been treating double the number of flu patients it typically sees this time of year.

“It is higher this week than last week, which was higher than the week before, so we haven’t seen a peak yet,” said Dr. Daniel Shin, an infectious disease physician at the hospital.

Louise White, chief nursing officer for Sharp Grossmont Hospital in San Diego County, said the number of patients coming in for the f lu appears to have leveled off. San Diego was the first part of the state severely hit by the flu and many hospitals there reported seeing fewer patients this week.

“The volumes of patients coming in increased dramatical­ly during Christmas week,” White said. “It probably peaked about last weekend.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? NURSE Reggie Withers, right, tends to f lu patient Louise Dominguez in the emergency room at Torrance Medical Center as her son Al watches.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times NURSE Reggie Withers, right, tends to f lu patient Louise Dominguez in the emergency room at Torrance Medical Center as her son Al watches.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States