Why the flu shot this year may not protect you
WATCH This year's flu season may be a bad one, some medical experts warn
The upcoming flu season may be a particularly severe one in the U.S., some medical experts warned today, citing preliminary data from the Southern Hemisphere's waning flu season.
The flu vaccine used this year in Australia — which has the same composition as the vaccine used in the U.S. — was only 10 percent effective, according to a preliminary estimate, at preventing the strain of the virus that predominately circulated during the country's flu season, experts wrote in a perspective published today in the New England Journal of Medicine.
"However imperfect, though, current influenza vaccines remain a valuable public health tool, and it is always better to get vaccinated than not to get vaccinated," the same international team of medical experts emphasized, however, in the perspective.
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The researchers suggested that the especially harsh flu season that the Southern Hemisphere sustained during its winter months this year may be an indication of what's to come as flu season gets underway in the Northern Hemisphere.
"Reports from Australia have caused mounting concern, with record-high numbers of laboratory-confirmed influenza notifications and outbreaks and higher-than-average numbers of hospitalizations and deaths," the medical professionals wrote.
One reason for the severe flu season may be that this year's currently made vaccine may have mismatched to the flu strains that ended up circulating, making the vaccinations ineffective at preventing the outbreak. Researchers said this points to a potential inherent flaw in the way flu vaccines are made.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institutes of Health's National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, co-authored the perspective, along with other researchers from the NIAID and experts at the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Reference and Research on Influenza in Melbourne, Australia.
The perspective called for more research to be done in developing a "universal" flu vaccine, which could potentially protect against all seasonal flu variants and strains, and would also eliminate the need for people to get new flu shots each year.
Finally, while most flu vaccines are manufactured using chicken eggs, the experts recommended that scientists explore different manufacturing strategies in order to increase the effectiveness of flu vaccines.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says that an annual flu vaccine is the "the first and most important step in protecting against flu viruses."
In addition, the CDC recommends avoiding close contact with sick people and limiting your own contact with others when you feel sick as well as covering your nose and mouth with a tissue when coughing or sneezing in order to prevent the spread of germs.
Other preventative actions the CDC recommend to stop the spread of the seasonal flu include washing your hands often with soap and water, and avoiding touching your eyes, nose and mouth, and disinfecting surfaces that may have been contaminated with flu germs.
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