The Denver Post

Health officials: It’s time to give vaccine for flu another shot

- By Lauran Neergaard

WA SHINGTON » The flu forecast is cloudy and it’s too soon to know if the U.S. is in for a third miserable season in a row, but health officials said Thursday not to delay vaccinatio­n.

While the vaccine didn’t offer much protection the past two years, specialist­s have fine-tuned the recipe in hopes it will better counter a nasty strain this time.

“Getting vaccinated is going to be the best way to prevent whatever happens,” Dr. Daniel Jernigan, flu chief at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told The Associated Press.

Last year’s flu brought double trouble: A new strain started a second wave of illnesses just as the first was winding down, making for one of the longest influenza seasons on record. The year before that marked flu’s highest death toll in recent decades.

So far, it doesn’t look like the flu season is getting an early start, Jernigan said. The CDC urges people to get their flu vaccine by the end of October. Typically, flu starts widely circulatin­g in November or December, and peaks by February.

“Painless,” Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar pronounced after getting his own flu shot at a news conference Thursday.

If people shrug at the risk, “it’s not just about you,” Azar said. “Vaccinatin­g yourself may also protect people around you,” such as how newborns have some flu protection if their mothers were vaccinated during pregnancy.

Scientists are hunting for better flu vaccines, and the Trump administra­tion last week urged a renewed effort to modernize production.

People who get vaccinated and still get sick can expect a milder illness — and a lower risk of pneumonia, hospitaliz­ation or death, stressed Dr. William Schaffner of Vanderbilt University and the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.

He’s been known to tell such patients, “I’m always glad to see you’re still here to complain.”

Some things to know: WHO NEEDS VACCINE? Everybody, starting at 6 months of age, according to the CDC. Flu is most dangerous for people over age 65, young children, pregnant women and people with certain health conditions such as heart disease, asthma or other lung disorders, even diabetes.

But it can kill the young and otherwise healthy.

HOW MANY GET VACCINATED?

Not enough, the CDC says. Because flu mutates rapidly, a new vaccine is needed every year. Last year, 45% of adults and 63% of children got vaccinated, according to figures released Thursday.

Some groups do a little better. Nearly three-quarters of children under age 5 were vaccinated last year, and just over two-thirds of seniors.

HOW BAD WILL THIS YEAR BE?

Flu is one of medicine’s most unpredicta­ble foes.

For example, last fall started off fairly mild. But in February, a strain notorious for more severe illness, called H3N2, suddenly popped up. Worse, even though each year’s vaccine contains protection against H3N2, the circulatin­g bug had mutated so it wasn’t a good match.

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