Sentinel & Enterprise

Vaccine worked well in fast season, CDC says

- By Mike Stobbe

Early estimates suggest the flu vaccine performed well in a U.S. winter flu season that has already dissipated.

The vaccines were more than 40% effective in preventing adults from getting sick enough from the flu that they had to go to a doctor’s office, clinic or hospital, health officials said during a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccines meeting Wednesday. Officials generally are pleased if a flu vaccine is 40% to 60% effective.

One reason is the vaccine was a good match against the strains that spread over the fall and winter, officials say.

But one expert at the meeting was underwhelm­ed and said it points out the need for better flu vaccines.

“It is still disappoint­ing” that the vaccine was a good match and yet effectiven­ess was still modest, said Dr. Sarah Long of Drexel University.

Annual flu vaccines are recommende­d for everyone 6 months and older in the U.S. About half of eligible kids and just under half of adults got flu shots in the last several months, according to CDC data. Vaccinatio­n rates were up compared with 2021-2022 but below what they were before the COVID-19 pandemic hit in 2020, said the CDC’S Brendan Flannery.

Initially, it looked like it might be a bad flu season. The virus took off in early November as COVID-19 and another respirator­y virus, RSV, roiled emergency department­s. Among kids, flurelated hospitaliz­ation rates in November and December were as high as any seen in recent years, Flannery said. At least 111 flu deaths have been reported in children, the most since the 199 reported in the 2019-2020 season.

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