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CDC Fudges FLU Data
Hoping that more people now see the misreported death rates are a scare tactic.  And interestingly, the CDC has so far lumped ALL respiratory illnesses in a single category so FLU data is not specifically reported based ONLY on FLU deaths.Figures on flu deaths are misleading, usually too high, CDC says 
In a typical season, about 36,000 deaths are reported, but that  number is too high and grossly misleading, analysts say. Depending on  the influenza strain, actual rates vary widely from year to year.
By Thomas H. Maugh II, Los Angeles Times
August 27, 2010
Most reports about seasonal influenza cite an average of about  36,000 deaths in a typical season, but that number is too high and  grossly misleading, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said  Thursday.
The actual average is a little more than 23,000, the agency reported in its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.  But even that figure is misleading, the report added, because the  numbers have ranged from as low as 3,300 deaths to nearly 50,000 over  the last 30 years. The period in the analysis covers up to 2007 and does  not include last year's H1N1 influenza pandemic.
"There is no  average flu season," lead author Dr. David Shay of the CDC's National  Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases said in a news  conference. The number of deaths "can vary dramatically" from year to  year, he said.
The number of deaths in a given year depends on a  variety of factors, including how long the flu season lasts, how many  people get sick and who gets sick. But by far, the most important factor  is the strain of flu that predominates in a given season.
When an  H3N2 strain predominates, the number of deaths typically is about 2.7  times higher than in years when an H1N1 strain predominates. Researchers  are not sure why that is, but it occurs at least in part because the  H3N2 virus mutates more rapidly.
"Even if you have been sick with  it in the past, you are more likely to get a subsequent infection," Shay  said. It also tends to make more older people ill.
Shay noted  that the 36,000 figure that is frequently quoted was an average for the  decade of the 1990s, when H3N2 predominated in most years.
During  the 30 years covered by the study, nearly 90% of flu-related deaths  occurred in people over the age of 65, about 10% in those ages 19 to 64  and about 1% in those younger than 19. One thing that was dismaying  about the recent swine flu outbreak: The majority of deaths linked to it  occurred in the two younger age groups.
Shay noted that there is  no way to tell before a flu season begins — or even a few weeks into the  start of the season — which strain will predominate. "Flu really is  unpredictable," he said. The best way to protect yourself, he added, is  to follow the CDC's recommendation and get vaccinated every year.
thomas.maugh@latimes.com                                                    latimes.com/health/la-sci-flu-deaths-20100827,0,7767551.story
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
  
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