Friday, April 2, 2010

Severe H1N1 Swine Flu Up in South

March 29, 2010 -- H1N1 swine flu hospitalizations in Georgia have returned
to October levels, triggering a nationwide CDC warning that too many at-risk
people have not been vaccinated.
The Georgia findings today spurred the CDC to hold its first national news
teleconference in weeks. During the height of the pandemic, the CDC scheduled
two or three such news conferences weekly.
"Georgia had more than 40 hospitalizations from lab-confirmed H1N1 influenza
this past week, and for the third week in a row had more of these than anywhere
in the country," Anne Schuchat, MD, director of the CDC's respiratory disease
center, said at the news conference.
Two other Deep South states bordering Georgia -- Alabama and South Carolina
-- are still seeing regional outbreaks of H1N1 swine flu. Eight other states,
six of them in the South, and Puerto Rico are still experiencing localized
outbreaks. Most of the rest of the country is seeing only sporadic cases as of
the March 20 surveillance report.
Most of Georgia's severe H1N1 swine flu cases involve people at highest
risk: people with diabetes, heart disease, lung disease, asthma, and pregnant
women.
As far as scientists can tell, there's been no change in the virus. That
means that all of these severely ill patients could have avoided the flu if
they'd gotten the H1N1 swine flu vaccine, which has been widely available --
and free -- for months.
"The clinical pattern of illness seems the same," Schuchat said. "What we
see now are cases severe enough to require hospitalization in people for whom
there are indications for vaccination, but who unfortunately had not taken
advantage of the vaccine yet."
To date, the CDC estimates that about 12,000 Americans have died in the H1N1
swine flu pandemic. On first glance, that's a lot fewer than the 36,000 people
who die during an average flu season.
But this hasn't been an average flu season. Most years, more than 90%
of people who died of flu were elderly. This year, 90% of deaths have been in
people under age 65.
"We estimate the death rate in young people is five times higher than is
typical for seasonal influenza," Schuchat said.
Do the Georgia hospitalizations represent the much-talked-about "third wave"
of the pandemic? Schuchat doesn't think so, although she stops short of ruling
it out.
"I can't say whether we'll see another wave," Schuchat said. "But I am
worried about another possibility: that additional cases will happen day in and
day out among people who don't think they need the vaccine any more."
Surgeon General Regina M. Benjamin, MD, MBA, addressed those people during
the teleconference.
"We are at a critical moment in our national response to this virus, and we
need to get people vaccinated, especially those at high risk," Benjamin
said.




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http://www .webmd.com/cold-and-flu/news/20100329/severe-h1n1-swine-flu-up-in-south?src=RSS_PUBLIC

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