Flu vaccine lowered risk of hospitalization in Southern Hemisphere by 35%: CDC
This year’s flu vaccine significantly reduced the risk of hospitalization in the Southern Hemisphere but wasn’t as effective as the vaccine used in the prior season, according to an early study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published Thursday. This often provides a glimpse as to what the upcoming flu season may potentially look like for the Northern Hemisphere, though it is not fully predictive of what may occur in each individual country, health officials said. Researchers found the seasonal flu vaccine reduced the risk of hospitalization from flu by 35% across five Southern Hemisphere countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay. “Northern Hemisphere countries may experience similar levels of protection if similar influenza viruses predominate during the upcoming 2024-2025 flu season,” the authors wrote. While the vaccine did offer protection, it was lower than the 2023 flu vaccine, which cut flu-related hospitalizations in the Southern Hemisphere by half, according to the CDC. In seasons where the flu vaccine matches circulating strains, the flu shot has historically been shown to reduce the risk of going to the doctor by 40% to 60% in seasons, according to the CDC. Recent CDC estimates indicate the upcoming respiratory disease season will likely have a similar or lower number of combined peak hospitalizations due to COVID-19, influenza and RSV compared to last season. Everyone over the age of 6 months is recommended to get a flu shot each season – ideally before the end of October, according to the CDC. The CDC study said that although South American countries prioritized vaccinating young children, people with comorbidities, and older adults, influenza vaccination coverage levels were below pre-COVID-19 norms. – This Summarize was created by Neural News AI (V1). Source: https://abcnews.go.com/Health/flu-vaccine-lowered-risk-hospitalization-southern-hemisphere-35/story?id=114470697