This year’s influenza season, dubbed “moderately severe” by health care officials, has hit the United States hard, with the number of recorded cases of the disease in parts of the country up more than 500 percent.
Thirteen children have died from the flu since October, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with widespread flu activity being reported now in 46 states. California alone has seen 27 flu deaths this season, with 41,000 cases of flu confirmed in the United States as of the week of Dec. 27.
The level of flu could soon be classified at epidemic level, Dr. Daniel B. Jerigan from the CDC said on ABC’s “Good Morning America” this week.
“What we’re seeing this year the influenza season started earlier and seems to be peaking right about now,” Jerigan, who is director of the Influenza Division in the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases (NCIRD) at CDC, told “GMA.”
“That’s about a month earlier than it normally would be peaking,” he said, “so lots of cases [are] happening, in lots of states, all at the same time.”
Jerigan also addressed the talk of the flu’s effectiveness.
“We know that the influenza vaccine is the best way to prevent, but in this season it is not as effective as it is for the other viruses that circulate,” Jerigan said on “GMA.”
Jerigan explained that the vaccine is more effective in trying to prevent other flu strains circulating in the United States than it is for the main strain of flu that has hit the U.S. this year.
Here’s what there is to know about this year’s flu season.
What kind of flu is being seen the most?
The prominent strain in Australia’s flu season was the H3N2 form of influenza A. That strain is what doctors are seeing in this country as well. The strain is included in this year’s flu vaccine.
