Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Flu Season Is Off To A Later Start This Year, And Experts See Signs That It May Be Milder

The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2015 12:54 PM
    NEW YORK — This year's flu season seems like old times.
     
    There's not much flu going around so far — unlike the last three seasons when doctors' offices were filled with patients before Christmas and illnesses peaked by late December.
     
    "It really is off to sort of a slow start" compared to that recent history, said Lynnette Brammer of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
     
    The CDC released its weekly flu count Friday. Only South Carolina is showing significant flu-related traffic at doctor's offices and clinics.
     
    Traditionally, most flu seasons don't really get going until around Christmas — possibly triggered by holiday gatherings that bring together people and viruses. Infected kids then go back to school, mingle with classmates, and flu season takes off.
     
    Using mathematical modeling, scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory this week predicted there's a 57 per cent chance this flu season will peak in February, and a 67 per cent chance it will be mild.
     
    Experts are still puzzling about why flu became epidemic so early the last few years. Factors might include the weather and what kind of flu bug was spreading the most, said Dr. John Treanor, a flu vaccine researcher at the University of Rochester School of Medicine.
     
    The CDC's Brammer said so far this year there's a mix of flu viruses making people sick. In bad seasons, one nasty strain dominates. And last year, the flu vaccine didn't work very well for the bug that caused most of the illnesses. This year's version was changed.
     
    The delayed season means there's more time for people to get vaccinated, Brammer said.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    India-Born Scientist's Team Develops Blood Test For Early Cancer Detection

    India-Born Scientist's Team Develops Blood Test For Early Cancer Detection
    Researchers in the US, led by an India-born physician scientist, have said they have developed a new blood test that has the potential to detect cancers in their earliest stages.

    India-Born Scientist's Team Develops Blood Test For Early Cancer Detection

    IUDs, Hormone Implants Rise In Use As Birth Control Among Us Women; Pills Still Most Popular

    IUDs, Hormone Implants Rise In Use As Birth Control Among Us Women; Pills Still Most Popular
    CHICAGO — Long-acting but reversible methods of birth control are becoming increasingly popular among U.S. women, with IUDs redesigned after safety scares and the development of under-the-skin hormone implants, a government report shows.

    IUDs, Hormone Implants Rise In Use As Birth Control Among Us Women; Pills Still Most Popular

    Long, Hot Saunas May Boost Survival, Reduce Fatal Heart Problems, Finnish Research In Men Says

    Long, Hot Saunas May Boost Survival, Reduce Fatal Heart Problems, Finnish Research In Men Says
    CHICAGO — Frequent sauna baths may help you live longer, a study of Finnish men suggests. It would be welcome news if proven true — in Finland where hot, dry saunas are commonplace, and for Americans shivering in a snowy Nordic-like winter.

    Long, Hot Saunas May Boost Survival, Reduce Fatal Heart Problems, Finnish Research In Men Says

    Canadian Doctor Recalls Toll Measles Took On Kids Before MMR Vaccine

    Canadian Doctor Recalls Toll Measles Took On Kids Before MMR Vaccine
    TORONTO — Dr. Frank Jagdis knows measles. As a medical student in the pre-vaccination 1960s and later as a practising pediatrician in Victoria, he saw the toll that measles took on children who came down with the viral infection.

    Canadian Doctor Recalls Toll Measles Took On Kids Before MMR Vaccine

    Healthy? No Thanks: Diets Of People Worldwide Are Worsening Despite More Healthy Food

    Healthy? No Thanks: Diets Of People Worldwide Are Worsening Despite More Healthy Food
    LONDON — There may be more fruit, vegetables and healthy options available than ever before, but the world is mostly hungry for junk food, according to a study of eating habits in nearly 190 countries.

    Healthy? No Thanks: Diets Of People Worldwide Are Worsening Despite More Healthy Food

    University Of Alberta Professor Announces Breakthrough On Liver Disease

    University Of Alberta Professor Announces Breakthrough On Liver Disease
    EDMONTON — A professor of medicine at the University of Alberta says he has discovered proof of a connection between human betaretrovirus infection (HBRV) and an autoimmune liver disease called primary biliary cirrhosis.

    University Of Alberta Professor Announces Breakthrough On Liver Disease