Get a swine flu shot, CDC urges; U-M's Arnold Monto says some areas vulnerable
No other state has had such an increase in hospitalizations, and overall swine flu illnesses and deaths have been down for months. But in the past two weeks, 70 to 80 people in Georgia have been hospitalized with swine flu - the most since September, according to the Georgia Department of Community Health.
University of Michigan flu expert Arnold Monto said if a new wave of illness occurs it would likely be in areas, like Georgia, where infection rates had been low or few people got flu shots.
Federal officials said the Georgia cases were mostly among unvaccinated adults, and many had pre-existing conditions that made them more susceptible to swine flu.
Georgia has one of the lower vaccination rates for swine flu in the country, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, a flu expert with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, although she declined to elaborate.
The Georgia hospitalizations were in areas of the state that were not hard hit last year, Schuchat said.
Swine flu first was first identified last April and it hit the country in two waves - a smaller spring wave and then a larger fall wave. Flu activity has been declining since November, and health officials have had to push harder and harder to get people interested in getting some of the tens of millions of unused doses.
"Many Americans are still vulnerable because they haven't gotten vaccinated yet," said U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Regina Benjamin, who joined Schuchat in a Monday teleconference with reporters.
About 86 million Americans have been vaccinated in a campaign that began in October.
Swine flu has sickened about 60 million Americans, hospitalized 265,000 and killed about 12,000. The U.S. death toll from the new H1N1 virus, declared a global epidemic, is about one-third of the estimated deaths from a regular flu season. But it was a fearsome threat because children and teens are much more vulnerable to it than seasonal flu.
There's been no significant increase in deaths reported in Georgia or nationally, and reports of flu-like illness are at their lowest level since late 2008. And there's no evidence that the virus has mutated to a more dangerous form, health officials say.
New pandemic flu viruses usually don't change substantially in the first two or three years, Monto said.
The CDC has gathered swine flu vaccination rates for each state but has turned down repeated requests from The Associated Press for the rates. The CDC says it will release the information in a forthcoming article in one of its publications, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.