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Flu season

Flu season is an annually recurring time period characterized by the prevalence of an outbreak of influenza (flu). The season occurs during the cold half of the year in each hemisphere. It takes approximately two days to show symptoms. Influenza activity can sometimes be predicted and even tracked geographically. While the beginning of major flu activity in each season varies by location, in any specific location these minor epidemics usually take about three weeks to reach its pinnacle, and another three weeks to significantly diminish.[1]

Annually, about 3 to 5 million cases of severe illness and 290,000 to 650,000 deaths from seasonal flu occur worldwide.[2]

Cause edit

Three virus families, Influenza virus A, B, and C are the main infective agents that cause influenza. During periods of cooler temperature, influenza cases increase roughly tenfold or more. Despite the higher incidence of manifestations of the flu during the season, the viruses are actually transmitted throughout populations all year round.[citation needed]

Each annual flu season is normally associated with a major influenza virus sub type. The associated sub type changes each year, due to development of immunological resistance to a previous year's strain (through exposure and vaccinations), and mutational changes in previously dormant viruses strains.

The exact mechanism behind the seasonal nature of influenza outbreaks is unknown. Some proposed explanations are:

  • People are indoors more often during the winter, they are in close contact more often, and this promotes transmission from person to person.
  • A seasonal decline in the amount of ultraviolet radiation may reduce the likelihood of the virus being damaged or killed by direct radiation damage or indirect effects (i. e. ozone concentration) increasing the probability of infection.
  • Cold temperatures lead to drier air, which may dehydrate mucous membranes, preventing the body from effectively defending against respiratory virus infections.[3][4][5]
  • Viruses are preserved in colder temperatures due to slower decomposition, so they linger longer on exposed surfaces (doorknobs, countertops, etc.).
  • In nations where children do not go to school in the summer, there is a more pronounced beginning to flu season, coinciding with the start of public school.[citation needed] It is thought that the day care environment is perfect for the spread of illness.
  • Vitamin D production from Ultraviolet-B in the skin changes with the seasons and affects the immune system.[6][7][8]

Research in guinea pigs has shown that the aerosol transmission of the virus is enhanced when the air is cold and dry.[3] The dependence on aridity appears to be due to degradation of the virus particles in moist air, while the dependence on cold appears to be due to infected hosts shedding the virus for a longer period of time. The researchers did not find that the cold impaired the immune response of the guinea pigs to the virus.[citation needed]

Research done by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) in 2008 found that the influenza virus has a butter-like coating. The coating melts when it enters the respiratory tract. In the winter, the coating becomes a hardened shell; therefore, it can survive in the cold weather similar to a spore. In the summer, the coating melts before the virus reaches the respiratory tract.[9]

Timing edit

 
Seasonal variation in deaths due to influenza or pneumonia in 122 U.S. cities, as a proportion of all causes.[10]

In the United States, the flu season is considered October through May.[11] It typically reaches an apex in February,[12] with a seasonal baseline varying between 6.1% and 7.7% of all deaths.[10] In Australia, the flu season is considered May to October. It usually peaks in August.[13] For other southern hemisphere countries such as Argentina, Chile, South Africa, and Paraguay also tend to start around June.[14] Brazil has a complex seasonality component for its flu season, due to part of its being in a tropical climate, but its further south latitudes have their flu peaks in June–July, during the southern hemisphere winters.[15]

Flu seasons also exist in the tropics and subtropics, with variability from region to region.[16] In Hong Kong, which has a humid subtropical climate, the flu season runs from December to March, in the winter and early spring.[17][18]

Flu vaccinations edit

Flu vaccinations are used to diminish the effects of the flu season and can lower an individual's risk of getting the flu by about half.[19] Since the Northern and Southern Hemisphere have winter at different times of the year, there are actually two flu seasons each year. Therefore, the World Health Organization (assisted by the National Influenza Centers) recommends two vaccine formulations every year; one for the Northern, and one for the Southern Hemisphere.[20]

According to the U.S. Department of Health, a growing number of large companies provide their employees with seasonal flu shots, either at a small cost to the employee or as a free service.[21]

The annually updated trivalent influenza vaccine consists of hemagglutinin (HA) surface glycoprotein components from influenza H3N2, H1N1, and B influenza viruses.[22] The dominant strain in January 2006 was H3N2. Measured resistance to the standard antiviral drugs amantadine and rimantadine in H3N2 has increased from 1% in 1994 to 12% in 2003 to 91% in 2005.[23][24]

Associated health complications edit

 
Pediatric deaths from influenza 2011–2014 - a small fraction of the overall number of flu deaths in the U.S. each year, most of which occur in elderly people.[needs update]

Medical conditions that compromise the immune system increase the risks from flu.[citation needed]

Diabetes edit

Millions of people have diabetes. When blood sugars are not well controlled, diabetics can quickly develop a wide range of complications. Diabetes results in elevated blood sugars in the body, and this environment allows viruses and bacteria to thrive.[citation needed]

If blood sugars are poorly controlled, a mild flu can quickly turn severe, leading to hospitalization and even death. Uncontrolled blood sugars suppresses the immune systems and generally lead to more severe cases of the common cold or influenza. Thus, it has been recommended that diabetics be vaccinated against flu, before the start of the flu season.[25][26]

Lung disease edit

The CDC recommends that people with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) be vaccinated against flu before the flu season. People with asthma can develop life-threatening complications from influenza and the common cold viruses. Some of these complications include pneumonias, acute bronchitis, and acute respiratory distress syndrome.[27]

Each year flu related complications in the USA affect close to 100,000 asthmatics, and millions more are seen in the emergency room because of severe shortness of breath. The CDC recommends that asthmatics are vaccinated between October and November, before the peak of the flu season. Flu vaccines take about two weeks to become effective.[28]

Cancer edit

People with cancer usually have a suppressed immune system. Moreover, many cancer patients undergo radiation therapy and potent immunosuppressive medications, which further suppresses the body's ability to fight off infections. Everyone with cancer is highly susceptible and is at risk for complications from flu. People with cancer or a history of cancer should receive the seasonal flu shot. Flu vaccination is also strict for lung cancer patients, as cancer leads to complications of pneumonia and bronchitis. People with cancer should not receive the nasal spray vaccine. The flu shot is made up of inactivated (killed) viruses, and the nasal spray vaccines are made up of live viruses. The flu shot is safer for those with a weakened immune system. Those who have received cancer treatment such as chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy within the last month, or have a blood or lymphatic form of cancer should call their doctor immediately if they suspect they may have flu.[29]

HIV/AIDS edit

Individuals who have HIV/AIDS are prone to a variety of infections. HIV weakens the body's immune system, leaving them vulnerable to viral, bacterial, fungal, and protozoa disorders. People with HIV are at an increased risk of serious flu-related complications. Many reports have shown that individuals with HIV can develop serious pneumonias that need hospitalization and aggressive antibiotic therapy. Moreover, people with HIV have a longer flu season and are at a high risk of death. Vaccination with the flu shot has been shown to boost the immune system and protect against the seasonal flu in some patients with HIV.[30]

Cost edit

 
During the 2011–2014 seasons, flu-like illnesses have typically accounted for 6% of outpatient visits at the peak of the season in the United States.

The cost of a flu season in lives lost, medical expenses and economic impact can be severe.

In 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimated that the seasonal flu causes 290,000 to 650,000 annual deaths worldwide.[31]

In 2003, the WHO estimated that the cost of flu epidemics in the United States was US$71–167 billion per year.[32] A 2007 study found that annual influenza epidemics in the US result in approximately 600,000 life-years lost, 3 million hospitalized days, and 30 million outpatient visits, resulting in medical costs of $10 billion annually. According to this study, lost earnings due to illness and loss of life amounted to over $15 billion annually and the total economic burden of annual influenza epidemics amounts to over $80 billion.[33] Also, in the US the flu season usually accounts for 200,000 hospitalizations and 41,000 deaths.[citation needed]

Because the mortality rate of the H1N1 swine flu is lower than that of common flu strains, this[clarification needed] number was actually lower in 2009. According to an article in Clinical Infectious Diseases, published in 2011, the estimated health burden of 2009 Pandemic Influenza A (H1N1), between April 2009 to April 2010, was "approximately 60.8 million cases (range: 43.3–89.3 million), 274,304 hospitalizations (195,086–402,719), and 12,469 deaths (8,868–18,306)" "in the United States due to pH1N1."[34][35]

Notable occurrences edit

Seasonal epidemics of influenza can be severe. Some can even rival pandemics in terms of excess mortality.[36][37] In fact, it is not so much mortality that distinguishes seasonal epidemics from pandemics but rather the extent to which the disease has spread,[38] though the reasons behind this distinction between epidemic and pandemic, as well as the geographic variability observed within individual flu seasons, remain poorly understood.[37][39] As such, some flu seasons are particularly notable in terms of severity. Others are notable due to other unique or unusual factors, as described below.

According to the United States Public Health Service, "The epidemic of 1928–1929 was the most important since that of 1920", itself considered to be the final wave, at least in the US, of the 1918 pandemic. There were approximately 50,000 excess influenza and pneumonia deaths in the country, or about half of the mortality attributed to the 1920 epidemic.[40]

The 1946–1947 flu season was characterized by a previously unheard of phenomenon. The first influenza vaccine came into use in the 1940s.[41][42] At this time, the vaccine contained a strain of H1N1 isolated in 1943, and this had been effective during the 1943–1944 and 1944–1945 seasons. During the 1946–1947 season, however, this once-effective vaccine totally failed to protect the military personnel who had received it.[43] A worldwide epidemic occurred, which for a time was considered to have been a pandemic due to its vast spread, albeit a mild one, with relatively low mortality.[44] Antigenetic analysis later revealed that the influenza A virus had undergone intrasubtypic reassortment, in which genes were swapped between two viruses of the same subtype (H1N1), resulting in an extreme drift variant but not an entirely new subtype.[45][43] The new strains were so different, however, that they were for a time classified into a distinct category, though this distinction has since been lost due to more recent analysis, which supports classifying both the older and the newer strains as influenza A/H1N1.[43] Nevertheless, this experience informed public health experts of the need to update vaccine composition periodically to account for variations in the influenza virus, even if there has been no complete shift in subtype.[46]

The 1950–1951 flu season was particularly severe in England and Wales and in Canada.[36][37] Influenza A predominated. The rates of excess pneumonia and influenza mortality in these places was higher than those which would later be experienced in both the 1957 and 1968 pandemics. Liverpool in particular experienced a peak in weekly mortality even higher than that of the 1918 pandemic.[37] Northern Europe also experienced severe epidemics this season.[47][48] By contrast, the United States experienced a relatively milder epidemic.[37] There was no observed shift in the viruses in circulation this flu season.[37]

During the 1952–1953 flu season, the Americas and Europe experienced widespread outbreaks of influenza A.[49] Beginning the first week of January, 1953, influenza in epidemic proportions emerged in various states in the US. Outbreaks soon developed around the country, with Texas experiencing particularly high activity, though the northeast mostly saw smaller, more localized outbreaks.[49] Schools were shuttered in many places due to the high incidence of disease among students and teachers.[49] After an initial attempt to minimize the threat of the outbreak and a resistance to describe it as an "epidemic",[50][51] the US Public Health Service eventually acknowledged it as such when deaths began to rise around the country.[52] By the end of January, activity was decreasing around the country.[49]

Around the time that the epidemic was peaking in the US, outbreaks developed in France, Germany, and southern England and later in Scandinavia, Switzerland, and Austria; sporadic activity was reported in other parts of Europe.[49] In the US, influenza and pneumonia mortality peaked in early February, earlier than in the three preceding flu seasons, in which mortality did not begin to rise until late February, and was the greatest out of the three preceding seasons, including 1951.[49] It was subsequently found that strains isolated during this season were influenza A but had shifted antigenically relative to previously isolated strains, further demonstrating the significance of antigenic variation in influenza viruses.[53]

The 1967–1968 flu season was the last to be dominated by H2N2 before the emergence of H3N2 in 1968 and the consequent "Hong Kong flu" pandemic that lasted until 1970. This season was particularly severe in England and France, in which pneumonia and influenza excess mortality was two to three times greater than in other countries.[54] By contrast, North America (the US and Canada) experienced a relatively milder epidemic than other places, with lower all-cause excess mortality and a lower increase in both pneumonia-influenza and all-cause excess mortality, both indicating that this season had a lesser impact in North America relative to other countries.[54] In Britain, this epidemic was the "largest" it had experienced in seven years, with an estimated two million cases occurring in the population as a whole.[55]

The 2012–2013 flu season was particularly harsh in the United States, where the majority of states were reporting high rates of influenza-like illness.[56][57][58] The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the available flu vaccine was 60% effective.[58][59] It further recommended that all persons over age 6 months get the vaccine.[58][59]

According to one source, the season 2014-2015 saw a particularly heavy prevalence of influenza in the United Kingdom.[60]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • CDC U.S. influenza season summary with weekly updates — Contains about a dozen charts and graphs with extensive text

External links edit

  • Health-EU portal EU response to influenza
  • European Commission - Public Health EU coordination on Pandemic (H1N1) 2009

season, influenza, epidemic, redirects, here, confused, with, influenza, pandemic, this, article, about, annual, period, when, becomes, prevalent, episode, season, parks, recreation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issue. Influenza epidemic redirects here Not to be confused with Influenza pandemic This article is about the annual period when flu becomes prevalent For the TV episode see Flu Season Parks and Recreation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Flu season is an annually recurring time period characterized by the prevalence of an outbreak of influenza flu The season occurs during the cold half of the year in each hemisphere It takes approximately two days to show symptoms Influenza activity can sometimes be predicted and even tracked geographically While the beginning of major flu activity in each season varies by location in any specific location these minor epidemics usually take about three weeks to reach its pinnacle and another three weeks to significantly diminish 1 Annually about 3 to 5 million cases of severe illness and 290 000 to 650 000 deaths from seasonal flu occur worldwide 2 Contents 1 Cause 2 Timing 3 Flu vaccinations 4 Associated health complications 4 1 Diabetes 4 2 Lung disease 4 3 Cancer 4 4 HIV AIDS 5 Cost 6 Notable occurrences 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksCause editMain article Influenza Three virus families Influenza virus A B and C are the main infective agents that cause influenza During periods of cooler temperature influenza cases increase roughly tenfold or more Despite the higher incidence of manifestations of the flu during the season the viruses are actually transmitted throughout populations all year round citation needed Each annual flu season is normally associated with a major influenza virus sub type The associated sub type changes each year due to development of immunological resistance to a previous year s strain through exposure and vaccinations and mutational changes in previously dormant viruses strains The exact mechanism behind the seasonal nature of influenza outbreaks is unknown Some proposed explanations are People are indoors more often during the winter they are in close contact more often and this promotes transmission from person to person A seasonal decline in the amount of ultraviolet radiation may reduce the likelihood of the virus being damaged or killed by direct radiation damage or indirect effects i e ozone concentration increasing the probability of infection Cold temperatures lead to drier air which may dehydrate mucous membranes preventing the body from effectively defending against respiratory virus infections 3 4 5 Viruses are preserved in colder temperatures due to slower decomposition so they linger longer on exposed surfaces doorknobs countertops etc In nations where children do not go to school in the summer there is a more pronounced beginning to flu season coinciding with the start of public school citation needed It is thought that the day care environment is perfect for the spread of illness Vitamin D production from Ultraviolet B in the skin changes with the seasons and affects the immune system 6 7 8 Research in guinea pigs has shown that the aerosol transmission of the virus is enhanced when the air is cold and dry 3 The dependence on aridity appears to be due to degradation of the virus particles in moist air while the dependence on cold appears to be due to infected hosts shedding the virus for a longer period of time The researchers did not find that the cold impaired the immune response of the guinea pigs to the virus citation needed Research done by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development NICHD in 2008 found that the influenza virus has a butter like coating The coating melts when it enters the respiratory tract In the winter the coating becomes a hardened shell therefore it can survive in the cold weather similar to a spore In the summer the coating melts before the virus reaches the respiratory tract 9 Timing edit nbsp Seasonal variation in deaths due to influenza or pneumonia in 122 U S cities as a proportion of all causes 10 In the United States the flu season is considered October through May 11 It typically reaches an apex in February 12 with a seasonal baseline varying between 6 1 and 7 7 of all deaths 10 In Australia the flu season is considered May to October It usually peaks in August 13 For other southern hemisphere countries such as Argentina Chile South Africa and Paraguay also tend to start around June 14 Brazil has a complex seasonality component for its flu season due to part of its being in a tropical climate but its further south latitudes have their flu peaks in June July during the southern hemisphere winters 15 Flu seasons also exist in the tropics and subtropics with variability from region to region 16 In Hong Kong which has a humid subtropical climate the flu season runs from December to March in the winter and early spring 17 18 Flu vaccinations editMain article Influenza vaccine Flu vaccinations are used to diminish the effects of the flu season and can lower an individual s risk of getting the flu by about half 19 Since the Northern and Southern Hemisphere have winter at different times of the year there are actually two flu seasons each year Therefore the World Health Organization assisted by the National Influenza Centers recommends two vaccine formulations every year one for the Northern and one for the Southern Hemisphere 20 According to the U S Department of Health a growing number of large companies provide their employees with seasonal flu shots either at a small cost to the employee or as a free service 21 The annually updated trivalent influenza vaccine consists of hemagglutinin HA surface glycoprotein components from influenza H3N2 H1N1 and B influenza viruses 22 The dominant strain in January 2006 was H3N2 Measured resistance to the standard antiviral drugs amantadine and rimantadine in H3N2 has increased from 1 in 1994 to 12 in 2003 to 91 in 2005 23 24 Associated health complications edit nbsp Pediatric deaths from influenza 2011 2014 a small fraction of the overall number of flu deaths in the U S each year most of which occur in elderly people needs update Medical conditions that compromise the immune system increase the risks from flu citation needed Diabetes edit Millions of people have diabetes When blood sugars are not well controlled diabetics can quickly develop a wide range of complications Diabetes results in elevated blood sugars in the body and this environment allows viruses and bacteria to thrive citation needed If blood sugars are poorly controlled a mild flu can quickly turn severe leading to hospitalization and even death Uncontrolled blood sugars suppresses the immune systems and generally lead to more severe cases of the common cold or influenza Thus it has been recommended that diabetics be vaccinated against flu before the start of the flu season 25 26 Lung disease edit The CDC recommends that people with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease COPD be vaccinated against flu before the flu season People with asthma can develop life threatening complications from influenza and the common cold viruses Some of these complications include pneumonias acute bronchitis and acute respiratory distress syndrome 27 Each year flu related complications in the USA affect close to 100 000 asthmatics and millions more are seen in the emergency room because of severe shortness of breath The CDC recommends that asthmatics are vaccinated between October and November before the peak of the flu season Flu vaccines take about two weeks to become effective 28 Cancer edit People with cancer usually have a suppressed immune system Moreover many cancer patients undergo radiation therapy and potent immunosuppressive medications which further suppresses the body s ability to fight off infections Everyone with cancer is highly susceptible and is at risk for complications from flu People with cancer or a history of cancer should receive the seasonal flu shot Flu vaccination is also strict for lung cancer patients as cancer leads to complications of pneumonia and bronchitis People with cancer should not receive the nasal spray vaccine The flu shot is made up of inactivated killed viruses and the nasal spray vaccines are made up of live viruses The flu shot is safer for those with a weakened immune system Those who have received cancer treatment such as chemotherapy and or radiation therapy within the last month or have a blood or lymphatic form of cancer should call their doctor immediately if they suspect they may have flu 29 HIV AIDS edit Individuals who have HIV AIDS are prone to a variety of infections HIV weakens the body s immune system leaving them vulnerable to viral bacterial fungal and protozoa disorders People with HIV are at an increased risk of serious flu related complications Many reports have shown that individuals with HIV can develop serious pneumonias that need hospitalization and aggressive antibiotic therapy Moreover people with HIV have a longer flu season and are at a high risk of death Vaccination with the flu shot has been shown to boost the immune system and protect against the seasonal flu in some patients with HIV 30 Cost edit nbsp During the 2011 2014 seasons flu like illnesses have typically accounted for 6 of outpatient visits at the peak of the season in the United States This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2021 The cost of a flu season in lives lost medical expenses and economic impact can be severe In 2017 the World Health Organization WHO estimated that the seasonal flu causes 290 000 to 650 000 annual deaths worldwide 31 In 2003 the WHO estimated that the cost of flu epidemics in the United States was US 71 167 billion per year 32 A 2007 study found that annual influenza epidemics in the US result in approximately 600 000 life years lost 3 million hospitalized days and 30 million outpatient visits resulting in medical costs of 10 billion annually According to this study lost earnings due to illness and loss of life amounted to over 15 billion annually and the total economic burden of annual influenza epidemics amounts to over 80 billion 33 Also in the US the flu season usually accounts for 200 000 hospitalizations and 41 000 deaths citation needed Because the mortality rate of the H1N1 swine flu is lower than that of common flu strains this clarification needed number was actually lower in 2009 According to an article in Clinical Infectious Diseases published in 2011 the estimated health burden of 2009 Pandemic Influenza A H1N1 between April 2009 to April 2010 was approximately 60 8 million cases range 43 3 89 3 million 274 304 hospitalizations 195 086 402 719 and 12 469 deaths 8 868 18 306 in the United States due to pH1N1 34 35 Notable occurrences editThis article appears to be slanted towards recent events Please help improve the article March 2020 This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2021 Seasonal epidemics of influenza can be severe Some can even rival pandemics in terms of excess mortality 36 37 In fact it is not so much mortality that distinguishes seasonal epidemics from pandemics but rather the extent to which the disease has spread 38 though the reasons behind this distinction between epidemic and pandemic as well as the geographic variability observed within individual flu seasons remain poorly understood 37 39 As such some flu seasons are particularly notable in terms of severity Others are notable due to other unique or unusual factors as described below According to the United States Public Health Service The epidemic of 1928 1929 was the most important since that of 1920 itself considered to be the final wave at least in the US of the 1918 pandemic There were approximately 50 000 excess influenza and pneumonia deaths in the country or about half of the mortality attributed to the 1920 epidemic 40 The 1946 1947 flu season was characterized by a previously unheard of phenomenon The first influenza vaccine came into use in the 1940s 41 42 At this time the vaccine contained a strain of H1N1 isolated in 1943 and this had been effective during the 1943 1944 and 1944 1945 seasons During the 1946 1947 season however this once effective vaccine totally failed to protect the military personnel who had received it 43 A worldwide epidemic occurred which for a time was considered to have been a pandemic due to its vast spread albeit a mild one with relatively low mortality 44 Antigenetic analysis later revealed that the influenza A virus had undergone intrasubtypic reassortment in which genes were swapped between two viruses of the same subtype H1N1 resulting in an extreme drift variant but not an entirely new subtype 45 43 The new strains were so different however that they were for a time classified into a distinct category though this distinction has since been lost due to more recent analysis which supports classifying both the older and the newer strains as influenza A H1N1 43 Nevertheless this experience informed public health experts of the need to update vaccine composition periodically to account for variations in the influenza virus even if there has been no complete shift in subtype 46 The 1950 1951 flu season was particularly severe in England and Wales and in Canada 36 37 Influenza A predominated The rates of excess pneumonia and influenza mortality in these places was higher than those which would later be experienced in both the 1957 and 1968 pandemics Liverpool in particular experienced a peak in weekly mortality even higher than that of the 1918 pandemic 37 Northern Europe also experienced severe epidemics this season 47 48 By contrast the United States experienced a relatively milder epidemic 37 There was no observed shift in the viruses in circulation this flu season 37 During the 1952 1953 flu season the Americas and Europe experienced widespread outbreaks of influenza A 49 Beginning the first week of January 1953 influenza in epidemic proportions emerged in various states in the US Outbreaks soon developed around the country with Texas experiencing particularly high activity though the northeast mostly saw smaller more localized outbreaks 49 Schools were shuttered in many places due to the high incidence of disease among students and teachers 49 After an initial attempt to minimize the threat of the outbreak and a resistance to describe it as an epidemic 50 51 the US Public Health Service eventually acknowledged it as such when deaths began to rise around the country 52 By the end of January activity was decreasing around the country 49 Around the time that the epidemic was peaking in the US outbreaks developed in France Germany and southern England and later in Scandinavia Switzerland and Austria sporadic activity was reported in other parts of Europe 49 In the US influenza and pneumonia mortality peaked in early February earlier than in the three preceding flu seasons in which mortality did not begin to rise until late February and was the greatest out of the three preceding seasons including 1951 49 It was subsequently found that strains isolated during this season were influenza A but had shifted antigenically relative to previously isolated strains further demonstrating the significance of antigenic variation in influenza viruses 53 The 1967 1968 flu season was the last to be dominated by H2N2 before the emergence of H3N2 in 1968 and the consequent Hong Kong flu pandemic that lasted until 1970 This season was particularly severe in England and France in which pneumonia and influenza excess mortality was two to three times greater than in other countries 54 By contrast North America the US and Canada experienced a relatively milder epidemic than other places with lower all cause excess mortality and a lower increase in both pneumonia influenza and all cause excess mortality both indicating that this season had a lesser impact in North America relative to other countries 54 In Britain this epidemic was the largest it had experienced in seven years with an estimated two million cases occurring in the population as a whole 55 The 2012 2013 flu season was particularly harsh in the United States where the majority of states were reporting high rates of influenza like illness 56 57 58 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that the available flu vaccine was 60 effective 58 59 It further recommended that all persons over age 6 months get the vaccine 58 59 According to one source the season 2014 2015 saw a particularly heavy prevalence of influenza in the United Kingdom 60 See also editBird flu Human flu Horse flu Dog flu Freshers flu 2012 2013 flu season 2017 2018 United States flu season 2019 2020 United States flu season United States influenza statistics by flu seasonReferences edit National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases NIAID Factsheet Archived from the original on 2005 10 13 Retrieved 2005 10 08 Influenza Seasonal World Health Organization WHO Retrieved 2021 05 10 a b Lowen A C Mubareka S Steel J Palese P October 2007 Influenza virus transmission is dependent on relative humidity and temperature PLOS Pathogens 3 10 1470 1496 doi 10 1371 journal ppat 0030151 PMC 2034399 PMID 17953482 Shaman J Kohn M March 2009 Absolute humidity modulates influenza survival transmission and seasonality Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 106 9 3243 3248 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 3243S doi 10 1073 pnas 0806852106 PMC 2651255 PMID 19204283 Shaman J Pitzer V E Viboud C Grenfell B T Lipsitch M February 2010 Ferguson Neil M ed Absolute humidity and the seasonal onset of influenza in the continental United States PLOS Biology 8 2 e1000316 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1000316 PMC 2826374 PMID 20186267 Cannell J J Vieth R Umhau J Holick M Grant W Madronich S Garland C Giovannucci E 2006 Epidemic influenza and vitamin D Epidemiology and Infection 134 6 1129 1140 doi 10 1017 S0950268806007175 PMC 2870528 PMID 16959053 Cannel J J Zasloff M Garland C F Scragg R Giovannucci E 2008 On the epidemiology of influenza Virology Journal 5 29 29 doi 10 1186 1743 422X 5 29 PMC 2279112 PMID 18298852 Adit G Mansbach J Camargo C 2009 Association Between Serum 25 Hydroxyvitamin D Level and Upper Respiratory Tract Infection in the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey Archives of Internal Medicine 169 4 384 390 doi 10 1001 archinternmed 2008 560 PMC 3447082 PMID 19237723 Polozov I V Bezrukov L Gawrisch K Zimmerberg J 2008 Progressive ordering with decreasing temperature of the phospholipids of influenza virus Nature Chemical Biology 4 4 248 255 doi 10 1038 nchembio 77 PMID 18311130 a b CDC U S influenza season summary with weekly updates See section Pneumonia and Influenza P amp I Mortality Surveillance www cdc gov accessed 30 September 2020 CDC Questions and Answers 2010 01 27 Archived from the original on 2017 11 21 Retrieved 2010 08 10 CDC The Flu Season Archived from the original on 2017 09 11 Retrieved 2017 09 09 Australian Department of Health and Ageing Australian influenza report 2011 Archived from the original on 2012 05 22 Retrieved 2012 06 03 Baumeister E Duque J Varela T Palekar R Couto P Savy V Giovacchini C Haynes AK Rha B Arriola CS Gerber SI Azziz Baumgartner E January 2019 Timing of respiratory syncytial virus and influenza epidemic activity in five regions of Argentina 2007 2016 Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 13 1 10 17 doi 10 1111 irv 12596 PMC 6304310 PMID 30051595 Alonso WJ Viboud C Simonsen L Hirano EW Daufenbach LZ Miller MA 2007 06 15 Seasonality of influenza in Brazil a traveling wave from the Amazon to the subtropics Am J Epidemiol 165 12 1434 1442 doi 10 1093 aje kwm012 PMID 17369609 Moura Fernanda E A October 2010 Influenza in the tropics Current Opinion in Infectious Diseases 23 5 415 420 doi 10 1097 QCO 0b013e32833cc955 ISSN 1473 6527 PMID 20644472 S2CID 206001415 Yap Florence H Y Ho Pak Leung et al June 2004 Excess hospital admissions for pneumonia chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and heart failure during influenza seasons in Hong Kong Journal of Medical Virology 73 4 617 623 doi 10 1002 jmv 20135 PMID 15221909 S2CID 35385523 Wong Chit Ming Chan King Pan Hedley Anthony Johnson Peiris J S Malik December 2004 Influenza associated mortality in Hong Kong Clinical Infectious Diseases 39 11 1611 1617 doi 10 1086 425315 PMID 15578360 Flu Influenza Vaccines www vaccines gov Retrieved 2020 04 30 WHO WHO recommendations on the composition of influenza virus vaccines WHO Archived from the original on 2011 11 12 Retrieved 2020 04 30 Knock Out Flu at Work Washington State Department of Health www doh wa gov accessed 5 October 2020 Daum L T Shaw M W Klimov A I Canas L C Macias E A Niemeyer D Chambers J P Renthal R Shrestha S K Acharya R P Huzdar S P Rimal N Myint K S Gould P August 2005 Influenza A H3N2 outbreak Nepal Emerging Infectious Diseases 11 10 1186 1191 doi 10 3201 eid1108 050302 PMC 3320503 PMID 16102305 Bailey Ronald 2005 10 19 Bird Flu Threat or Menace Why avian sniffles need not ruffle our feathers too much Archived from the original on 2006 10 26 Altman Lawrence K 2006 01 15 This Season s Flu Virus Is Resistant to 2 Standard Drugs The New York Times Archived from the original on 2013 05 11 Retrieved 2006 10 30 flu gov Diabetes and the Flu Archived from the original on 2009 10 25 Retrieved 2010 12 12 CDC brochure on flu vaccination for diabetics PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2017 05 15 Retrieved 2017 09 09 Flu Season Overview North Carolina Immunization portal Archived from the original on 2010 02 16 Retrieved 2010 02 09 HIV AIDS and the Flu Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2010 02 09 Archived from the original on 2018 12 03 Retrieved 2017 09 09 Cancer and the Flu Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Archived from the original on 2017 08 25 Retrieved 2012 11 05 Flu Season 2005 2006 Questions amp Answers MedicineNet Archived from the original on 2018 12 03 Retrieved 2010 02 09 Up to 650 000 people die of respiratory diseases linked to seasonal flu each year World Health Organization WHO 2017 12 13 Retrieved 2021 05 02 WHO Influenza Overview Archived from the original on 2009 05 05 Retrieved 2011 10 08 Molinari Ortega Sanchez Messonnier Thompson Wortley Weintraub Bridges 2007 The annual impact of seasonal influenza in the US Measuring disease burden and costs Vaccine 25 27 5086 5096 doi 10 1016 j vaccine 2007 03 046 PMID 17544181 Shrestha Sundar S Swerdlow David L Borse Rebekah H Prabhu Vimalanand S Finelli Lyn Atkins Charisma Y Owus Edusei Kwame Bell Beth Mead Paul S Biggerstaff Matthew Brammer Lynnette Davidson Heidi Jernigan Daniel Jhung Michael A Kamimoto Laurie A Merlin Toby L Nowell Mackenzie Redd Stephen C Reed Carrie Schuchat Anne Meltzer Martin I 2011 Estimating the Burden of 2009 Pandemic Influenza A H1N1 in the United States April 2009 April 2010 Clinical Infectious Diseases 52 suppl 1 S75 S82 doi 10 1093 cid ciq012 PMID 21342903 Flu Season Continues Severity Indicators Rise Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases NCIRD 2014 01 17 Archived from the original on 2014 01 21 Retrieved 2014 01 24 a b Viboud Cecile Tam Theresa Fleming Douglas Handel Andreas Miller Mark A Simonsen 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1141 1146 doi 10 2307 4588662 JSTOR 4588662 PMC 2024453 PMID 13121173 FLU SPREAD MINIMIZED The New York Times 1953 01 11 p 75 Retrieved 2022 06 08 U S FLU EPIDEMIC MILD The New York Times 1953 01 24 p 17 Retrieved 2022 06 08 U S NOTES FLU DEATHS The New York Times 1953 01 30 p 11 Retrieved 2022 06 08 Isaacs A Depoux R Fiset P 1954 The viruses of the 1952 3 influenza epidemic Bulletin of the World Health Organization 11 6 967 979 hdl 10665 265957 ISSN 0042 9686 PMC 2542214 PMID 14364180 a b Viboud Cecile Grais Rebecca F Lafont Bernard A P Miller Mark A Simonsen Lone 2005 07 15 Multinational Impact of the 1968 Hong Kong Influenza Pandemic Evidence for a Smoldering Pandemic The Journal of Infectious Diseases 192 2 233 248 doi 10 1086 431150 ISSN 0022 1899 PMID 15962218 Miller D L Lee J A 1969 Influenza in Britain 1967 68 Journal of Hygiene 67 3 559 572 doi 10 1017 S0022172400042005 PMC 2130729 PMID 5258229 Szabo Liz Vergano Dan Weise Elizabeth 2013 01 11 Flu widespread in 47 states USA Today McLean VA Gannett ISSN 0734 7456 Archived from the original on 2013 01 12 Retrieved 2013 01 11 Szabo Liz 2013 01 11 Questions and Answers Flu season hits U S USA Today McLean VA Gannett ISSN 0734 7456 Archived from the original on 2013 01 11 Retrieved 2013 01 11 a b c As the flu spreads across the country Boston declares an emergency Consumer Reports 2013 01 10 Archived from the original on 2013 01 13 Retrieved 2013 01 10 a b Early Estimates of Seasonal Influenza Vaccine Effectiveness United States January 2013 PDF cdc gov 2013 01 11 Archived PDF from the original on 2013 01 20 Retrieved 2013 01 11 Coronavirus How to understand the death toll BBC News 2020 04 16 Retrieved 2020 05 27 Further reading editCDC U S influenza season summary with weekly updates Contains about a dozen charts and graphs with extensive textExternal links editHealth EU portal EU response to influenza European Commission Public Health EU coordination on Pandemic H1N1 2009 Portals nbsp Viruses nbsp Medicine 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