South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Flu cases spike at FSU, Florida A&M

- By Christophe­r Cann and Dejania Oliver

Tallahasse­e higher education campuses and hospitals are seeing large numbers of students and others suffering from influenza.

Experts, many of which have warned about a severe flu season for months, say this is the result of a return to normalcy and lessening of safety precaution­s taken while COVID-19 numbers were at its highest.

At Florida State University, the school’s health center is full of sick students.

“Case numbers have skyrockete­d and our University Health Center is overwhelme­d caring for ill students,” said an internal email from FSU Provost Sally McRorie to faculty obtained by the Democrat.

The email asks professors not to send students to the health center for a medical excuse for absences or delayed work — a request that was first introduced

because of COVID-19. An FSU professor, who wished to remain anonymous, told the Democrat on Wednesday he “had 40% of one class missing today.”

Amy Magnuson, director of FSU’s Health Services, says they have over 20 new cases a day — a number that is steadily increasing but is likely much less than the actual total.

Meantime, at FAMU there were 102 positive flu cases reported from the university’s community site on Wednesday alone, according to FAMU director of health services Tanya Tatum.

“We are seeing a lot of cases of the flu,” Tatum said. “I’m concerned.”

Beginning Monday, Tallahasse­e Memorial HealthCare started treating 50 to

60 people a day in addition to the emergency department’s hospital’s usual volume, said Dr. Sam Ashoo, an emergency medicine doctor who has been working directly on flu patients.

The hospital’s various urgent care centers went from treating about 100 to

120 people a day to around

140 to 150 patients daily. These increases, Ashoo says, are directly linked to flu infections among young people.

“Currently, it’s pretty severe,” he said. “We’re seeing a very large number of people in their late teens and early 20s with influenza for the past few days.”

Dr. Nectar Aintablian, a pediatric infectious disease expert at TMH, urged people to get their flu vaccine to protect them from getting sick, especially those in high-risk categories. She added that those feeling flu-like symptoms — including a cough, high fever, runny nose and fatigue — should stay home and isolate themselves.

“I have fear [the flu] may come back with a vengeance this year, because we had such low numbers last year as people were very careful with going out [and were] wearing masks,” she said.

“Please don’t wait to get your flu shot.”

Capital Regional Medical Center is also experienci­ng the rise in flu cases, said spokespers­on Rachel Stiles, who did not provide any statistics.

Alan Cox, the assistant superinten­dent of Leon County Schools, said the district is expecting an uptick in flu cases, but as of Friday morning there has not yet been an increase.

This recent spike in flu cases comes only three years after Tallahasse­e’s hospitals — along with the rest of the country — struggled to keep up with the worst flu season in a decade.

Athletics and long wait times at FSU

This year, the flu already seems to be back with a vengeance, affecting athletes while potentiall­y spreading in classrooms and dorms. Several athletes across Florida State University’s programs are, and have been, dealing with flu-like symptoms.

Maya Anderson, an FSU freshman, noticed a cough Monday, and by the following day she was running a 102.4degree fever and vomiting. She went to Patients First, a clinic on Lake Ella, and was able to walk in and out in under an hour.

“There’s several people on my floor that are sick,” she said about her Magnolia Hall dorm. “Most of my friends are sick.”

The next day Anderson checked the website of the same clinic she sought care and was met with a

655-minute wait time — nearly 11 hours.

A reporter called the university’s health services line for appointmen­t wait times Thursday morning and found it was “at capacity” for the day.

For those looking for a flu shot, the university recently started a mobile vaccine unit called “Flu-ber” that meets students wherever they are on campus.On Health Services’ Twitter and Instagram, updates on Flu-Ber’s location are posted periodical­ly.

“It’s important for everybody to get a flu shot, but especially anybody with underlying health conditions,” Magnuson said. “I think as far as prevention goes, face coverings, or at least covering your mouth when you cough or sneeze, can help prevent the spread of flu and of course COVID.”

Vaccine hesitancy at FAMU

The spike in flu infections at FAMU connects to an overarchin­g problem that, according to Tatum, has been with the university for the last year: vaccine hesitancy.

The school has put aside $1 million for cash prizes in order to incentiviz­e vaccinatio­n for students. However, Tatum says most of that money has not been given out because students just aren’t willing to get the COVID-19 vaccine or flu shot.

“Our campus population for the most part isn’t great about getting shots at all,”

Tatum said. “I couldn’t give away 150 doses of flu vaccine last year, and this year we haven’t given away 100 doses yet. There’s just a real aversion to getting immunizati­ons.”

Tatum echoes Magnuson and encourages everyone to get tested for the flu and consider the vaccine.

“Right now is a really critical time,” he said. “It’s before your Thanksgivi­ng break and then you come back and there’s finals. I think the loss of that time in your academic program is... at a really critical point.”

National flu warnings

During an early October White House briefing, CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky warned that the United States was at risk for a severe flu season heading into the fall and winter months this year.

She linked this, like Aintablian, to a reduced immunity against influenza as cases plummeted to an all-time low last flu season.

She also echoed warnings of a “twindemic,” adding that the flu could also increase demand on health care facilities nationwide, which could cause an avalanche effect if another COVID wave arrives.

Where to get a flu shot

There are many places Tallahasse­eans can go for a free flu shot, like CVS and Walgreens, the country’s two largest retail pharmacies, which offer co-administra­tion of the COVID-19 and influenza vaccines.

Popular supermarke­t chains like Publix, Walmart and Winn Dixie are also administer­ing flu vaccines in addition to walk-in clinics and family physicians.

“It’s free and you can get the flu shot at the same time as the COVID vaccine,” TMH’s Dr. Aintablian said.

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