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Big flu season may finally be leveling off in North Carolina

  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2012/11/29/18/35/46-WByV3.Em.156.jpeg|255
    Robert Willett - rwillett@newsobserver.com
    Two-year-old Jamian Sanders of Raleigh, N.C. is comforted by his father James Sanders as he prepares to receives a flu shot from Mary Tripp RN on Thursday November 29, 2012 at the Wake County Health Department in Raleigh, N.C.
  • http://media.charlotteobserver.com/smedia/2012/11/29/18/35/36-vqvLC.Em.156.jpeg|210
    Robert Willett - rwillett@newsobserver.com
    Mary Tripp RN prepares an syringe of flu vaccine for Sylvia Forbes of Raleigh on Thursday November 29, 2012 at the Wake County Health Department in Raleigh, N.C.

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  • Big flu season may finally be leveling off in North Carolina
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  • WakeMed’s restricted visitation policy

    WakeMed’s new policy takes effect Monday.

    • No visitors under the age of 18 are permitted without prior approval from a health care provider.

    • Each patient is limited to two adult visitors at a time.

    • WakeMed staff asks all visitors not to visit patients if they are ill. Symptoms of concern include fever, cough, sneezing, runny nose, sore throat, vomiting or diarrhea within the past 24 hours.

    • WakeMed staff will direct any ill family members or visitors to return home.

    • Restrictions apply to all WakeMed patient care facilities.

    • Also, WakeMed encourages family members and friends that are unable to visit patients due to age or illness to use alternative means of communication, including phone, email or social media (Facebook, Skype, etc.).



The flu season that came weeks early in North Carolina and quickly built to the worst level in a decade may now be starting to peak.

But even if it is, the number of new cases is likely to stay unusually high for weeks to come, state epidemiologist Dr. Megan Davies said Thursday, just before the state’s weekly update of its flu statistics.

“It’s always dangerous to try and give predictions about flu season, but we seem to be at about the peak, if it follows the traditional patterns,” she said. “That peak should last about two to four weeks, and then gradually things should start to taper off, which would take four to six weeks.”

So far, 14 people across the state have been killed.

The signs that the season may be leveling off come from the number of new cases reported in a statewide surveillance network of emergency rooms and doctors’ offices, she said.

The volume of extra work for doctors this represents can be huge. Across the WakeMed healthcare system, for example, about 30 percent of all visitors to emergency rooms are there for flu-like illnesses (ILI), said Dominique Godfrey-Johnson, a WakeMed public health epidemiologist. ILI is a term for illnesses involving fever, cough and perhaps sore throat, and may include patients with respiratory problems similar to flu.

WakeMed alone has tested more than 400 patients who were positive for flu since the official start of the season in early October, said Godfrey-Johnson.

With so many patients carrying flu, the WakeMed hospital system announced Thursday that it would restrict the number and age of visitors beginning Monday. Duke University Health System enacted a similar policy earlier this week, and a host of other hospital systems across the state have done the same.

These are normal precautions for flu season, Davies said.

Even if the number of new cases has finally started to flatten, so much of the flu season remains that it still is smart for anyone over the age of six months to get vaccinated if they haven’t, she said. It takes about two weeks after getting the vaccine for immunity to build to full strength, but flu could still be a serious problem into March.

Vaccination and the flu?

A common complaint this year has come from people who got the vaccination but still got flu.

There are several reasons, but the main one is simply that the vaccine isn’t fully effective on everyone, Davies said. If, say, 20 percent of those vaccinated aren’t fully protected, that’s still a large number of people left vulnerable.

“It’s a numbers game and this year, with so much flu activity around, those who don’t get a strong immunity have a better chance of getting flu than they would in a light year,” she said.

At least five of the people across the state who have died from flu-related complications had received the vaccination, Davies said. All of those were over age 88, and it’s well-known that the vaccination is much less effective in the very old.

“And unfortunately, the strain that is most common this year is particularly dangerous for the elderly,” Davies said.

Also, many of those who got sick after getting the shot actually contracted some other respiratory problem with symptoms similar to those of flu, she said.

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