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September 29, 2020 // -- What happens when COVID-19 and influenza become both endemic in the United States this fall? We all don't know, and wearing masks, washing our hands, and keeping distance from others can effectively surface COVID-19, and these measures also help protect us from influenza infection; Clinicians and public health experts can't predict what will happen in the coming months, so they recommend that individuals get the flu shot, even if you've never been vaccinated, this year;
1) It can help avoid overburdening the health system caused by influenza and COVID-19; even without COVID-19, the flu can strain hospital beds every year, and researchers are doing a lot of work to respond to the epidemic in the community and figure out how to meet the current patients' If the infection rate of influenza or coronavirus increases by 10%, it will affect the way health care workers need to react; avoiding the flu also protects many people, and the flu is contagious 48 hours before the infected person begins to develop symptoms, so we can know that the virus may have spread to others before we had the flu.
Photo Source: CC0 Public Domain2 The flu vaccine may help ease the confusion of disease symptoms; flu and COVID-19 have many common symptoms, and if you're troubled with these symptoms, you can call your doctor at any time, but if you've got the flu vaccine, it may be easier to figure out what those symptoms mean. Effectively distinguishing the symptoms of these diseases will be a huge challenge for researchers, and while flu vaccination does not mean that some people do not have the flu, determining whether a patient has been vaccinated against the flu during an influenza pandemic is a very important message. both the
flu virus and SARS-CoV-2 can cause symptoms from very mild to severe, which can cause symptoms such as fever or feeling cold/hot, coughing, fatigue, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, throat, and sore throat, according to the CDC. Pain, runny nose or competition, muscle pain, headaches, and some people may also experience vomiting and diarrhea, but this is more common in children than in adults, but it is important to note that loss of taste and smell is a symptom of COVID-19 and does not occur with influenza.
3) You may get more protection and avoid the worst; preventive measures such as preventing the social alienation of the COVID-19 epidemic can help prevent influenza effectively, and researchers know from years of experience in influenza prevention and control that some measures can effectively stop the spread of influenza, such as wearing a mask to reduce it. The main means of transmission in hospitals, followed by absorption, but influenza vaccines are considered to be the most important measure to prevent influenza, and they are also an important indirect way to prevent the spread of COVID-19 infections, as they keep people away from emergency rooms, which are places where SARS-CoV-2 is likely to be exposed.
Flu vaccine may also protect people from COVID-19 in other ways, and clinicians are not sure what would happen if the flu made some people more susceptible to COVID-19, or even though they knew the flu would make many people more susceptible to bacterial infections, such as pneumonia. Researchers don't know, but it's conceivable that the two viruses will work together to make patients sicker.
4) Severe influenza can be life-threatening Despite shocking statistics on diseases and deaths from COVID-19, the number of people severely affected by influenza alone is terrible, with some 35.5 million people suffering from it in the 2018-2019 season Many people are so ill that they can heal themselves at home, according to the CDC, 16.5 million people have consulted health care providers, 490.6 million have been admitted to hospital and 342,000 have died.
Like COVID-19, older people are at the highest risk of flu complications, but young people also experience severe complications from influenza, and sometimes we see that perfectly healthy adolescents and young people have very serious flu symptoms, and clinicians often use ventilators to treat patients.
5) Even if it's not 100% effective, vaccines can help; every year the flu vaccine does have a different effect, with studies showing that when the flu vaccine is very effective, it can help reduce the risk of influenza by 40%-60%, but if a person is still sick after vaccination, their risk of getting the flu is significantly reduced and the risk of hospitalization is lower.
Contrary to what some people think, although some people have a mild flu-like reaction (such as pain and fever) after getting the flu vaccine, the flu vaccine does not cause them to get the flu; 35 potential new coronavirus vaccines, they hope to find a safe and effective potential vaccine; due to the flu pandemic, the way and place to get the flu vaccine this year may change, and if you're not sure where to get vaccinated, you'll need to call your doctor or go to a vaccination site to retrieve it to choose the nearest vaccination point to your home.
() Reference: Five reasons to get the flu shot-especially this yearby Kathy Katella, Yale University.