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Flu cases down in some areas; child deaths up

Posted at 11:45 AM, Jan 11, 2013
and last updated 2013-01-11 13:45:59-05

By Elizabeth Cohen and Ashley Hayes

ATLANTA (CNN) — The spread of the flu across the United States appears to have slowed in some areas, but officials won’t know for weeks whether the cases have peaked, the CDC director said Friday.

Twenty-four states and New York City were reporting high levels of flu activity, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s flu advisory report for December 30 through January 5. That’s down from 29 states the previous week, said Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the CDC.

The number of states reporting widespread activity, however, increased to 47 from 40, according to the CDC’s flu advisory report.

However, “The only area of the country that’s still relatively unaffected … is the far West Coast,” although plenty of cases have been reported there, Dr. Joseph Bresee, chief of the Epidemiology and Prevention Branch of CDC’s Influenza Division, said Friday.

The number of pediatric deaths associated with influenza rose by two, according to the CDC.

There have been 20 deaths of people under the age of 18 since the flu outbreak began. While the CDC does not count the number of adult deaths related to the flu, some states do, and that data suggests dozens have died.

According to the latest CDC activity map, flu levels dropped in Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, Arkansas and Kentucky.

“Bottom line: It’s flu season,” Frieden told reporters. Flu activity is “elevated” in most of the United States, he said, and “it may be decreasing in some areas, but that’s hard to predict … influenza activity ebbs and flows.”

Officials will know in the next couple of weeks whether the season has peaked, he said. “The only thing predictable about the flu is, it’s unpredictable.”

“… We are into what would classically be described as a flu epidemic,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Thursday.

“It’s still on the uptick,” he said.

“Remember, once it peaks, you still have a considerable amount of time where there is a lot of flu activity, and right now it may have peaked in some places, but for the most part, it has not yet peaked,” Fauci said.

Early flu season

The flu came early this season, and cases are more severe than last year, health officials say.

In Massachusetts, one of the 29 states that the CDC identified as having high activity of influenza-like illness, Boston Mayor Thomas Menino declared a public health emergency in the city Wednesday because of the flu.

Since October 1, there have been 700 confirmed influenza cases among Boston residents, according to Menino’s office; that’s 10 times more than were seen in all of last year’s flu season.

There have been 18 flu-related deaths this season in Massachusetts, CNN affiliate WCVB reported. Hospitalization rates are higher than in the last two years, Kevin Cranston of the state’s Bureau of Infectious Diseases told WCVB. Most deaths have been in older patients, he said.

Menino is collaborating with the Boston Public Health Commission and community health centers to offer free vaccination clinics this weekend. The mayor urged residents to stay home from work or school if they are sick, and to get flu shots.

“This is the worst flu season we’ve seen since 2009, and people should take the threat of flu seriously,” Menino said in a statement. More than 4% of emergency department visits at Boston hospitals are from flu cases, up from 1% during non-flu season.

Massachusetts General Hospital has already counted 532 cases of flu among patients, which is more than the Boston hospital saw in any of the previous three flu seasons, spokeswoman Kristen Stanton said Wednesday.

Signs posted throughout the hospital discourage anyone from visiting who has a cough or fever, she said, and anyone who does visit with those symptoms must wear a mask and perform hand hygiene. All staff must wear a mask when caring for possible flu patients, and staff members who have not been vaccinated must wear a mask while caring for any patient.

Deaths in other states

The Oklahoma Department of Health said Thursday the state has had eight influenza-linked deaths since September 30, while the Minnesota Department of Health has recorded 27 flu-related deaths.

“We are clearly at a high level of influenza activity in the state,” Minnesota Health Commissioner Dr. Edward Ehlinger said in a statement. “But it’s important to keep this year in perspective: What is occurring has happened before.”

The number of flu-related deaths elsewhere, according to state health officials:

— Pennsylvania has had 22 deaths. Most of the deaths were among people older than 65.

— Indiana has 13 confirmed adult deaths and two pediatric deaths.

— Arkansas has seven confirmed flu fatalities.

— South Carolina has counted 22 deaths.

— In Illinois, there have been six deaths.

— In Michigan, there have been four pediatric deaths.

Type of flu

The type of flu that is going around is called H3N2, which is often linked to more serious disease, compared with some other flu varieties, Fauci said.

That type of flu matches up well to the vaccine that is being distributed and given out throughout the United States.

People may get more complications from this particular strain of H3N2, “which may make them ill for a longer period of time,” Dr. Michael Jhung, medical epidemiologist in the influenza division at the CDC, told CNN’s Mary Snow.

Symptoms typically last up to seven days for a normal infection, he said.

CNN’s Maggie Schneider and Elizabeth Landau contributed to this report.

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