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Archive for Thursday, November 25, 2004

Flu season off to slow start

November 25, 2004

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— The flu season in the United States is off to a slow start, with only Delaware and New York reporting significant outbreaks -- a relief to government health authorities, given the U.S. vaccine shortage.

Even so, the "widespread" flu activity in Delaware -- the first state to be classified at the nation's highest flu level -- is a little misleading. The state meets the designation because confirmed cases of the flu had been found in every county of that state. But the state has only three counties -- and six cases in all.

"From the data that we see, things haven't really taken off -- it's continued flu activity at low levels in a lot of places," said Lynnette Bramer, a flu epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "It looks like New York, the mid-Atlantic area is where things are starting to pick up, but it's early. At this point, you can't tell how the season's going to progress."

Nursing home outbreaks in New York prompted the CDC to classify that state as having "regional" flu activity -- one step below "widespread." Most other states listed "sporadic" flu cases.

Although the flu season can begin as early as October and last through April, most flu seasons do not peak until January.

Each year, the flu hospitalizes about 200,000 people and kills on average 36,000 people in the United States, according to the CDC.

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