The Bakersfield Californian

COVID AND THE FLU Is a ‘twindemic’ threat lurking again?

Experts fear lack of flu last year due to masks, social distancing may cause lack of resistance for people this year

- BY ANA B. IBARRA

I do think all of this will be revealed in November — if we start to see a surge in early November, it will get worse during the holidays.” — Dr. George Rutherford, professor of epidemiolo­gy at University of California

First, the good news: The flu was practicall­y nonexisten­t last year. The bad news: Little flu last season means increased risk this fall and winter.

The so-called “twindemic” that public health officials in California and elsewhere warned about last year — the combined threat of influenza and COVID-19 — was largely eased by the wide use of face masks, physical distancing and reduced travel, experts say. But their concerns are back this year.

Flu activity during the 202021 season was the lowest recorded since data began being collected in 1997, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Because of so little disease last year, population immunity is likely lower, putting us all at increased risk of disease this year, especially among the most vulnerable including our children,” CDC director Rochelle Walensky said at a press briefing earlier this month.

The agency was notified of one pediatric death last flu season, compared to 199 flu deaths reported among children the year before. The CDC did not have estimates for last season’s flu deaths among adults.

A potentiall­y bad flu season is especially concerning as hospitals are facing severe understaff­ing. Last week, a third of all California hospitals reported critical shortages in staffing due in part to burnout, CalMatters reported.

For example, during the 2017-18 flu season, considered severe by the CDC, about 710,000 people were hospitaliz­ed nationwide — including about 100,000 people in California, health officials have estimated.

Flu shots continue to be the best protection against severe illness. Doctors and public health experts are urging people to get vaccinated — ideally by the end of October — noting that flu shots will ultimately reduce the number of people who will need ambulance transport and the emergency room.

“We saw virtually no flu last year and are uncertain about what this year will hold,” said Dr. Penny Borenstein, San Luis Obispo County’s health officer.

“We do know that the most recent flu season was relatively mild in the Southern hemisphere and that the vaccine was a good match for the strains circulatin­g there,” she said. “We are hoping for a similar outcome during our soon-to-arrive Northern hemisphere flu season.”

According to CDC estimates, 47 percent of adults in California received a flu shot last year, similar to the 201920 flu season — that’s among the lowest in the country and slightly lower than the national average of 50 percent. By comparison, Massachuse­tts and Rhode Island had the highest flu shot uptake last year at 62 percent and 64 percent, respective­ly.

California fared better with

flu shots for kids — about 58 percent of children were immunized last season. In Massachuse­tts, immunizati­on among kids was close to 84 percent.

Last year, many people skipped holiday gatherings, college students weren’t traveling home, and masking and physical distancing was required in most places — all factors that probably helped mitigate flu activity.

“Unfortunat­ely, this year we have relaxed most of these measures,” said Shira Shafir, an epidemiolo­gy professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. That’s bad news for both COVID and nonCOVID respirator­y infections, she said.

And the pandemic isn’t quite over. While close to 80 percent of California­ns age 12 and over have been immunized against COVID, that still

leaves pockets of people who can flood hospitals this winter.

“It can still get bad,” said Dr. George Rutherford, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at University of California, San Francisco. “I do think all of this will be revealed in November — if we start to see a surge in early November, it will get worse during the holidays.”

Health experts are also keeping an eye on the delayed uptick of respirator­y syncytial virus, or RSV, another seasonal virus. This virus usually peaks in the winter, but in some places, cases spiked this summer, much later than usual, Rutherford said.

This virus can result in common cold symptoms or even pneumonia. People of any age can become infected with RSV, but babies and older adults, especially those with compromise­d immune systems, are at increased danger of severe cases.

Like the flu, respirator­y syncytial virus diminished last winter likely because of distancing and masking. Surveillan­ce reports from the CDC show that, in California, the percentage of tests that come back positive for RSV has been on the rise since June.

“That’s also a concern, maybe even more than influenza,” Rutherford said.

Researcher­s who looked at the most recent RSV spike in New York recently wrote in the Journal of American of Pediatrics that hospitals should be planning for an increase in pediatric emergency visits. There is no vaccine for this virus.

The burden respirator­y illnesses will have on this fall and winter depend largely on how much masking continues, Rutherford said. Besides getting the flu shot and the COVID-19 vaccine, he recommends that people plan to celebrate Thanksgivi­ng outdoors.

“Also, you don’t need to have 60 people over for Thanksgivi­ng. Keep it small, make life simpler,” he said.

 ?? NATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR INFECTIOUS DISEASES ?? In this photo provided by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky receives her flu shot on Tuesday, Oct. 5, in Atlanta. The U.S. is gearing up in case of a bad flu season on top of the continuing COVID-19 crisis, with a plea for Americans to get vaccinated against both.
NATIONAL FOUNDATION FOR INFECTIOUS DISEASES In this photo provided by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky receives her flu shot on Tuesday, Oct. 5, in Atlanta. The U.S. is gearing up in case of a bad flu season on top of the continuing COVID-19 crisis, with a plea for Americans to get vaccinated against both.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Masking and other precaution­s against the coronaviru­s had an added bonus last winter as flu cases dropped to historical­ly low levels. But with schools and businesses reopened, travel resuming and far less masking, flu could make a comeback.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Masking and other precaution­s against the coronaviru­s had an added bonus last winter as flu cases dropped to historical­ly low levels. But with schools and businesses reopened, travel resuming and far less masking, flu could make a comeback.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States