Connecticut Post

Experts: ‘Twindemic’ could overload hospitals

- By Amanda Cuda

A flu shot can’t protect people against COVID-19 — but it could help shield them from the flu.

That could be nearly as important, as experts said the combinatio­n of the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic and the coming influenza season could have a catastroph­ic effect on hospitals.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has released its frequently asked questions list for the 2020-21 flu season, and it includes the difference­s and similariti­es between COVID-19 and flu, and how getting an influenza shot will be especially crucial this year.

“Getting a flu vaccine this fall will be more important than ever, not only to reduce your risk from flu, but also to help conserve potentiall­y scarce health care resources,” the document reads.

Connecticu­t health care experts agreed that getting the flu shot could help keep people out of hospitals and reduce the risk of coinfectio­n of both flu and COVID-19.

The co-infection, which many are referring to as the “twindemic” although the seasonal flu is not likely to be a pandemic, is a particular­ly scary prospect, said Dr. Zane Saul, chief of infectious disease at Bridgeport Hospital.

“We can’t imagine what would happen if you had both illnesses,” Saul said. “Influenza itself is bad enough.”

The CDC estimated there were between 24,000 and 62,000 flu deaths nationwide during the 201920 season. Though that’s a fraction of the nearly 170,000 people nationwide who are believed to have died with COVID-19, it’s still significan­t, experts said.

The double effect of flu season and another COVID-19 spike could be devastatin­g, said Michael Urban, director of occupation­al therapy at the University of New Haven.

“Our nation’s health care systems logistical supply chains were already significan­tly impacted by the current pandemic, and so adding thousands of flu cases to this mix, with what I expect to be a natural spike in COVID cases over the next few months, can lead to a crippling effect on our nation’s health care system capacity,” he said.

Urban said among his chief concerns is the overlappin­g symptoms — including fever, cough and shortness of breath — of the two illnesses. He fears this could result in people assuming they have the flu when they have the coronaviru­s.

Though the flu shot is never 100 percent effective at preventing influenza, Saul said it usually offers some protection and can at least lessen the severity of flu, which could mean fewer people in the hospital.

“Prevention as always is the key to success here,” Saul said. “Even people who don’t typically get a flu vaccine should be urged to get one this year. It mostly will help to keep people from getting sicker.”

One concern he has is that many people get their flu shots in large group settings, such as offices or health fairs. “Now people are staying away from group settings,” Saul said. That will make other providers of flu shots — including doctors’ offices, urgent care clinics and pharmacies — more crucial than ever, he said.

To encourage more people to get vaccinated, the CDC plans to purchase an additional 2 million doses of pediatric flu vaccine and 9.3 million doses of adult flu vaccine, as well as a variety of marketing and educationa­l efforts to highlight awareness about the importance of getting vaccinated.

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