Bloomberg
US health officials are trying to increase the rate of flu vaccinations this year after a severe outbreak last season killed a record number of children and led to spot shortages of antiviral medications like Tamiflu.
In a panel hosted by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Washington, US Surgeon General Jerome Adams took a nasal vaccine — an effort, he said, to make flu prevention “go viral.†The lighthearted demonstration was accompanied by grim statistics from the 2017-18 flu season: 80,000 deaths overall, including 180 children.
“I’m tired of hearing people say, ‘Well, I didn’t get sick and I didn’t get the flu shot.’ Or, ‘I don’t like it, my arm hurts,’†said Adams. “Those 80,000 people who died last year from the flu, guess what? They got the flu from someone. So it’s critically important that we impress upon folks that it is not just for them. It’s their social responsibility to get vaccinated.â€
The vaccine is expected to be more accurate this season, and influenza activity in the Southern Hemisphere has been unremarkable so far — a good sign for the US and Canada. But health officials at the briefing said it was too early to make a prediction. “I would get the vaccine now and you don’t have to worry about whether it’s a mild or a severe season,†said William Schaffner, NFID medical director.
Vulnerability Exposed
The US faced the most severe seasonal flu outbreak across all age groups since at least 2003 last season, according to CDC data. It led to 900,000 confirmed hospitalisations. So many people caught the flu that some hospitals and pharmacies across the US ran out of antiviral drugs, Alabama declared a state of emergency and a school district in Arkansas closed all 10 of its schools.
“It really exposed how vulnerable we are,†said Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security. “It seems like we’re in a better position this year. But it’s the flu and it can do a lot of tricky things, so we won’t know for sure until the season begins in earnest.â€
Each year, vaccines are produced in accordance with the CDC’s predictions for the types of viruses most likely to circulate during flu season. Those predictions can be wrong, of course, but even when they are right vaccines can be mismatched to circulating viruses. Last winter, the US vaccine was only 25 percent effective against the unexpected emergence of the H3N2 strain, or 36 percent effective overall, according to the CDC.
About 40 percent of US residents received a seasonal flu vaccination last year and 80 percent of the children killed hadn’t received a shot. Vaccines reduce a person’s chances of catching the flu and spreading it to the most vulnerable people around them, such as the elderly. Even if someone does catch the flu after getting the vaccine, symptoms are likely to be less severe.
Still, vaccine science is flawed. Drugmakers still grow vaccines in chicken eggs — a technique developed in the 1940s. Eggs don’t support all virus types and allow for mutations in the ones they do. The process takes at least six months, allowing time for circulating viruses to change and adapt. Medicago Inc., a Canadian biotechnology company, owns the first plant-based seasonal flu vaccine to reach late-stage clinical trials.