Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Australian flu season is ill omen for state

3 Wisconsin flu deaths already since September

- Mark JohnsonMil­waukee

With influenza season a little more than a month away, just 12% of Wisconsin residents have received their vaccinatio­n, a concern to public health officials who have been keeping an anxious eye on Australia’s recordbrea­king flu season.

Australia, which can be a harbinger of flu conditions in the northern hemisphere, has recorded almost 300,000 confirmed cases and 812 deaths this season.

“Now is the time to get the shot,” said Amy Goza, a nurse and infection prevention­ist at Children’s Wisconsin. “The body needs some time to develop immunity from the flu vaccine.”

Mary Beth Graham, associate chief of infectious disease at Froedtert Hospital, recommende­d people get the vaccinatio­n before Thanksgivi­ng, when families get together and record numbers of travelers pass through airports.

“It’s a sad reality that people don’t think it’s important,” Graham said of the flu shot. She stressed, “you cannot get influenza from the vaccine.”

The goal is to vaccinate 70% of the population. Last year just 40% of residents got flu shots.

So far 22 Wisconsin residents have been hospitaliz­ed with flu since September, leading to three deaths, according to the most recent figures. Both figures are above normal for this time of year.

In the week ending Oct. 12, 1,493 people in Wisconsin were tested for influenza, but only 11 were confirmed as having flu.

“The concern is that the flu season in Australia was very intense and a month and a half to two months earlier than usual,” said Jonathan Temte, associate dean for public health and community engagement at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health.

Robert Amler, dean of New York Medical College’s School of Health Sciences, stressed that trying to predict the flu season remains a challenge.

“The latest summary as published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention each week indicates growing flu activity at this relatively early stage in the flu season,” Amler said. “It is not clear at this early stage whether this trend predicts more or less overall impact compared to recent years. Last season was particular­ly harsh with a significant excess of hospitaliz­ations and deaths from flu over ‘average years.’ ”

The CDC’s most recent report said that seasonal flu activity remains low throughout the country. Only one state, Louisiana, is reporting high levels of influenza-like illness.

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