The Denver Post

This flu season was one of deadliest for U.S. kids

- By Mike Stobbe

NEW YORK» The past flu season was the deadliest for U.S. children in nearly a decade, health officials said Friday.

Officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said they had received reports of 172 pediatric flu deaths since October. That surpasses the 2012-13 flu season, when there were 171. An average season sees about 110.

There were more deaths in 2009-10, but that was when a rare flu pandemic occurred involving a new strain. More than 300 children died that season.

Besides that pandemic year, this past winter had the most pediatric flu deaths since the CDC started counting them in 2004.

The past flu season wasn’t a pandemic, but it was long — 19 weeks. It also was unusually intense, with high levels of illness reported in nearly every state for weeks on end.

The season peaked in early February. It was mostly over by the end of March, although some flu continued to circulate. The most recent pediatric death occurred in late May.

The season was driven by a kind of flu that tends to put more people in the hospital and cause more deaths, particular­ly among young children and the elderly.

Making a bad year worse, the flu vaccine didn’t work very well.

Flu vaccinatio­ns are recommende­d annually for all Americans who are 6 months old or older.

Some of the children who died this past season were too young for the shots.

The CDC has vaccinatio­n informatio­n on only about 140 of the children who died who were old enough to be vaccinated.

Of those, only about one in five received the vaccine before they became ill, CDC officials said.

About half the children who died previously were healthy — they didn’t have a diagnosed health condition that might have made them more vulnerable to the flu, the CDC said.

Flu is a contagious respirator­y illness, spread by a virus. It can cause a miserable but relatively mild illness in many people but more a more severe illness in others. Young children and the elderly are at greatest risk from flu and its complicati­ons.

The CDC doesn’t keep an exact count of adult flu-related deaths, but it has estimated there were 12,000 to 56,000 in recent seasons.

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