Science Editors’ Pick Pundits Are Predicting A Bad Flu Season. Here’s Why They Might Be Wrong John Drake Contributor Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. I’m a professor at the University of Georgia.
Following New! Follow this author to stay notified about their latest stories. Got it! Oct 17, 2022, 03:28pm EDT | New! Click on the conversation bubble to join the conversation Got it! Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to Linkedin Flu season is nearly upon us in the Northern Hemisphere. getty Flu season is nearly upon us in the Northern Hemisphere and pundits are predicting that we will have a bad one .
I’m not so sure. Three main arguments have been advanced. Let’s look at each in turn.
Misconception 1. Recent mild flu seasons mean that we have built up a large population of highly susceptible people. The Covid-19 pandemic has kept people apart for much of the past two flu seasons.
As a result, transmission has gone down and the number of seasonal flu cases has been much lower than average. According to this idea, the consequence is that immunity in the population resulting from prior infection with the influenza virus is likely to have waned. The CDC recommends that most Americans undergo routine annual vaccination against influenza.
Getty Images In fact, immunity to flu is not particularly durable. Estimates of the duration of immunity range from around one year to half a decade or so. Even more relevant is that the influenza virus itself evolves quite rapidly.
This is why the CDC recommends routine annual vaccination for most people. Last year’s mild flu season was a public health bonus, but it doesn’t mean that we’ll necessarily have a bad season this year. MORE FOR YOU Hiring Refugees: How One Big Factory Did It FTX-Voyager Deal Draws Objection, Investigation From Texas One Of Charleston’s Most Historic Hotel’s Has Been Reborn Into The City’s Latest Luxury Stay Misconception 2.
The relaxation of Covid-19 measures means that seasonal flu will rebound. Covid fatigue is real. People are tired of distancing and wearing masks.
This winter, people are less likely to engage in the protective behaviors that they have for the last two years. Those behaviors that protected people from SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes Covid-19) also protected them from the flu . Precautions against Covid-19 significantly reduced the burden of influenza during the last two .
. . [+] winters.
Relaxing precautions will allow influenza to rebound. Getty Images That much is true and we can expect seasonal flu to rebound. But, relaxing Covid-19 measures doesn’t mean that conditions for flu transmission will be worse than usual, but rather only that transmission will return to normal ( i.
e. , pre-Covid) levels. What’s more, some people will continue to take protective measures against Covid-19.
Even if it’s only a fraction of those who did during the last two years, that fraction will help to reduce transmission levels somewhat compared to pre-Covid levels. Misconception 3. A bad flu season in the Southern Hemisphere means a bad flu season for the North.
This idea has been written about recently in the New York Times and The Atlantic . The argument here is a little more complex. My recent post on the idea takes a deeper dive, but here’s a summary.
The main idea is that since flu alternates between the Southern and Northern Hemispheres, perhaps the severity of the flu season during the southern winter (June-August) is a leading indicator for what will happen in the north. Indeed, scientists have found that there is a statistical connection between the number of cases in Australia and the number of cases in the US 22 weeks later. The problem is that the connection is quite weak — not nearly strong enough to serve as a leading indicator.
The scientists who discovered this statistical connection themselves describe the effect as “marginal”. The alternating-hemispheres-leading-indicator hypothesis is an intriguing idea and I hope it receives more research. But, any usefulness for predicting the severity of seasonal flu will undoubtedly be mediated by complex statistical models.
You can’t just eyeball it. Just to be clear, I’m not saying that the upcoming flu season will be mild. I’m merely saying that we don’t know.
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From: forbes
URL: https://www.forbes.com/sites/johndrake/2022/10/17/pundits-are-predicting-a-bad-flu-season-heres-why-they-might-be-wrong/