Flu season is upon us
Dr. Taraneh Ravazi, M.D., Staff
Doctor
It's official: flu season — in the northern hemisphere, where
flu hits between October to May — has begun. (In the southern
hemisphere, of course, it's the other half of the year, and in
the tropics, one can catch the flu year-round.) Today I'll
focus on the northern hemisphere, but the same ideas apply at
different times in other locales.
Please note that this is general information, and not a substitute
for medical advice; contact your own doctor with questions about
your health.
The sources for the information below are:
href="www.medicalletter.org" >Medical Letter,
href="www.uptodate.com" >Up To Date, the
href="www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/" >NIH's MedLine Plus, the
Centers for Disease
Control, and Lung USA.
Who should get a flu
shot?
Generally, those wanting to reduce their chance of getting sick.
It's especially recommended for the following high-risk
groups:
- People aged 50 and older
- Women who are or will be pregnant during the flu season
- Adults and children 6 months and older with chronic heart, or
lung conditions including asthma, metabolic diseases such as
diabetes, chronic kidney disease, or weakened immune system such as
with HIV or with medications, and any kind of brain or spinal cord
disorders
- Children 6 months to 18 years who are on long term aspirin
therapy
- All children 6-23 months of age
- All the contacts of people in these high-risk groups
Other than your doctor's office, try
href="http://www.lungusa.org/site/pp.asp?c=aqKGLXOAIlH&b=1015035" >
Flu Clinic Locator to see where you might be able to get a
shot.
Who shouldn't get
one?
- People with severe allergy to eggs
- People who currently have a fever
- Children less than 6 months old
- People who have had Guillane Barre syndrome (a paralytic
condition) within 6 weeks of getting a flu shot in the past
When's best to get
one?
It's optimal to get a shot in October or November (especially
for the high-risk groups noted above), but you can also benefit in
December or later.
Types of vaccines
- A flu shot, made from an inactivated vaccine, which contrary to
popular belief cannot give you the flu.
- A flu nasal spray, an attenuated live vaccine. Because this can
at least theoretically cause transmission, it should only be given
to healthy people ages 5-49 who are not pregnant, not healthcare
workers, or contacts of anyone who is immuno-suppressed.
Effectiveness
Within about 2 weeks, the shot is fully effective, and usually the
effect lasts for 6 months or longer. A protection rate of 50-80
percent is the norm.
Recognizable flu
symptoms
These are usually more severe than cold symptoms, and include
sudden onset of high fever (101 or higher), severe muscle aches,
headache, cough, sore throat, and a general miserable feeling.
Symptoms may last 2-7 days, but if complications such as pnuemonia
occur, the course may be longer.
How to treat the flu
Treatment is mainly designed to reduce the symptoms with
- rest
- fluids
- acetominophen (like Tylenol) — not aspirin, especially in those
under 18, to avoid Reyes Syndrome, which is a serious neurological
disease
- antiviral medications (most effective if started within the first
2 days of onset of symptoms)
Unless there is a secondary complication (e.g. ear infection,
sinusitis), antibiotics are not typically prescribed. And the jury
is out on alternatives such as Vitamin C or herbal products.
(Recently, echinacea was shown to be ineffective for cold
treatment.)
Here's hoping you can stay healthy this winter!
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