Published: 16:48, October 20, 2020 | Updated: 14:00, June 5, 2023
Record US flu shots on the way for winter
By BELINDA ROBINSON

In this file photo taken on August 19, 2020 a man walks past a free flu shot advertisement outside of a drugstore in New York. (PHOTO/AFP)

Millions of extra flu vaccine doses will be available in the Unit­ed States as the country seeks to avoid a simultaneous hit of a flu epidemic this winter with an increasing number of novel coro­navirus cases. 

Flu vaccine manufacturers estimate that they will supply a record 198 million doses of influenza vaccine for the 2020­-21 season. 

Flu vaccine manufacturers estimate that they will supply a record 198 million doses of influenza vaccine for the 2020­-21 season

The Centers for Disease Con­trol and Prevention, or CDC, usu­ally purchases 500,000 flu doses for uninsured adults, but this year ordered an additional 9.3 million doses. “This is a big move,” CDC Director Robert Red­field said. 

“Vaccine distribution is expect­ed to go on longer this season because a record number of doses are being produced.” 

There have been no delays in production among the private companies that manufacture the medicine, including Seqirus, GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals and Protein Sciences. Flu vac­cine shipments began earlier this year and will continue through November until all are distributed. 

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The 2019­-20 flu season in the US was mild, the CDC said, with between 39 million and 56 mil­lion infections, 740,000 hospitali­zations and 24,000 to 62,000 flu­-related deaths. 

In the 2018-­19 season, the flu vaccine prevented an estimated 4.4 million influenza illnesses, 2.3 million influenza-­associated medical visits, 58,000 influenza­-associated hospitalizations, and 3,500 influenza­-associated deaths, the CDC said. 

The advanced preparedness for the coming flu season comes as several states deal with a new wave of coronavirus cases, prompting fears cases of the flu and COVID-­19 could together strain emergency rooms. 

The coronavirus had infected more than 8.16 million people in the US as of Monday, with 219,600 dying of COVID­19, according to a tally kept by the Johns Hopkins University. 

Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the com­ing months could be tough due to the flu. 

Top doctor’s warning 

“We need to hunker down and get through this fall and winter because it’s not going to be easy,” Fauci told a panel of doctors from Harvard Medical School. “What I would like to see is keeping the lid on it, keeping the baseline down, until we get a vaccine.” 

David Weber, professor of med­icine at the division of infectious diseases at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said that especially the very old and young should get a flu vacci­nation quickly, as they are at increased risk. But he added that all adults are at risk, so they, too, should get the flu shot. 

“It doesn’t mean at any age you are safe,” he said. 

READ MORE: US study: Seasonal flu kills more globally than previously thought

William Schaffner, professor of preventive medicine and infec­tious diseases at Vanderbilt Uni­versity Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, said: “Any­one who is older and has any kind of chronic or underlying illness ought to be cautious.” 

Every year, about 2,000 New Yorkers die of seasonal flu and pneumonia, which can develop as a complication of the flu, accord­ing to the city’s health depart­ment. And this year the city’s hospitals are on high alert for “nightmare” scenarios that a del­uge of cases from both respiratory illnesses could cause. 

New York state’s health depart­ment advises that vaccinations should be prioritized for children under 5, adults over 50 and preg­nant women. Health officials will hold outdoor flu vaccination pop­-up events throughout the city this season.