Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Could coronaviru­s cause a better flu season? Maybe

Experts say it's still critical to get vaccinated

- By Marisa Kendall and Lisa Krieger

Flu season is approachin­g, but some medical experts say it’s possible this year’s may shape up to be milder than initially feared. The unlikely reason? The coronaviru­s pandemic.

As people in many parts of the country protect themselves from COVID-19 by wearing face masks, constantly washing and sanitizing their hands, and avoiding school, concerts and other types of indoor gatherings, they’re also inadverten­tly protecting themselves from influenza.

“I think that it is certainly possible that we’ll see a lighter flu season than usual, because people are hopefully taking a lot of precaution­s to prevent the spread of respirator­y viruses at large — so that includes flu as well as COVID,” said Dr. Allison Bond, an infectious disease and hospital medicine doctor at UCSF.

If this year’s flu season is mild, it will be a relief to doctors who have been bracing for the dreaded overlap of influenza and coronaviru­s. Fewer flu cases mean more hospital staff, beds and equipment will be available for COVID-19 patients.

But experts caution it’s too soon to tell which way the 2020 flu season will pan out — and it’s still critical to get vaccinated.

“These precaution­s help,” Bond said of mask-wearing and hand-washing, “but they’re not foolproof. And certainly, even people who are doing everything right are still getting COVID, so obviously the measures aren’t perfect. So that’s why it’s still important that everyone get the flu shot.”

California has seen more than 770,000 COVID-19 infections and more than 14,700 deaths so far, according to this news organizati­on’s analysis of countyrepo­rted data. That includes more than 98,000 infections and more than 1,300 deaths in the Bay Area. In 2018, nearly 7,000 people died of the flu or pneumonia in California, according to the most recent state-by-state informatio­n available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Every year, experts in the Northern Hemisphere look toward the Southern Hemisphere — where winter arrives during our summer — for clues as to which influenza viruses will make an appearance and how bad they will be. This year, flu season was mild in the southern half of the globe.

Western Pacific Region nations, in particular, reported lower numbers of cases to the FluNet monitoring system this year compared with previous years.

In Australia, for instance, the flu season started with 6,962 cases in January and 7,161 cases in February — but fell to only 229 in April, compared with 18,705 in April last year, as the nation shut its borders, banned large gatherings and closed on-campus education.

“If one looks at the flu as it has occurred in the Southern Hemisphere, it turned out not to be as bad as many past flus, in terms of how virulent it was and how transmitta­ble it was,” Dr. Barry Bloom, a professor in the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston, said during a press briefing earlier this week.

Experts say it’s logical to think COVID precaution­s helped cut the number of flu cases. Both viral respirator­y infections spread the same way — through droplets expelled when people talk, cough or sneeze.

“But the reality is, we don’t know what to expect,” cautioned Dr. Arthur Reingold, division head of epidemiolo­gy and biostatist­ics at UC Berkeley. “We don’t know which viruses for sure are going to be circulatin­g and how invasive they’ll be or how much illness they’ll cause.”

There’s no guarantee the U.S. will follow in the footsteps of countries in the Southern Hemisphere. Mask-wearing and socialdist­ancing practices differ greatly state by state and even county by county. Plus, rules may continue to ease up this fall and winter if coronaviru­s cases don’t spike, allowing schools or other gathering places to reopen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States