Flu Season Shaping Up to Be Nasty

We've reached the epidemic stage earlier than usual
By John Johnson,  Newser Staff
Posted Dec 31, 2014 2:45 PM CST
Flu Season Shaping Up to Be Nasty
Lindsay Parkinson gives a flu shot to a man in Victorville Calif.   (AP Photo/The Victor Valley Daily Press, James Quigg)

Brace yourself: All signs point to a particularly bad flu season, reports the Upshot blog at the New York Times. For one thing, the CDC says the nation has reached the epidemic stage, and while that designation usually arrives every year, it's earlier than normal. The Verge notes that we didn't hit epidemic level until mid-January in the last two flu seasons. Also not helping: The number of people getting flu shots is lower than normal, and the vaccine itself is a worse match than usual for this year's strain. The mismatch means that the shot is about one-third less effective than normal, reports CBS News.

“We’re already above the peak that we saw last year, and we’re increasing,” says a flu expert at the CDC, who predicts that this season's peak probably won't arrive for weeks. The agency says 22 states are now reporting high levels of the flu, up from 13 last week. Google Flu Trends reports much the same. One last piece of the puzzle: This year's most prevalent strain is H3N2, and H3 viruses in general tend to be the most dangerous, reports the Weather Channel. (More flu stories.)

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