By Noor Adatia – The Sacramento Bee (TNS)
SACRAMENTO, Calif. – A spike in flu cases across the country, along with the rise in COVID-19, is leaving other people who contract some form of illness, especially those who are not vaccinated, more vulnerable.
And the flu is not unusual in the fall and winter, other people remain vulnerable to the flu year-round, adding in June.
Is the flu increasing?
While the flu stops circulating towards the end of April, the U. S. UU. ” technically it’s still in flu season” this year, Dr. Brown said. Natacsha Tuznik, associate professor of infectious diseases at UC Davis.
In fact, the flu is experiencing “increased activity” in parts of the country, such as Nevada and New Mexico, according to the Centers for Disease Control. There is no transparent explanation for why this happens, he said.
“Over the next two weeks, it has to decrease, but in fact we’re seeing a prolonged duration of flu infections and subsequent spikes than in recent years,” Tuznik said.
People who travel abroad, he said, are more likely to get the flu. Tuznik strongly recommends that patients with plans to travel abroad get a flu shot.
Can I get my COVID booster and flu shot at that time?
A slight increase in COVID-19 cases and increased eligibility for withdrawal have led other people to receive more doses. The FDA authorized a momentary recall in March expired for adults 50 and older and immunocompromised Americans 12. and older, and Pfizer’s recall in May for healthy young people ages five to 11.
It’s “pretty good” for other people to get a flu shot or booster at the same time.
“There is no advice on any kind of period,” Tuznik said.
While there’s no medical explanation for why not getting any of the vaccines at the same visit, other people who react strongly to the COVID vaccine or flu vaccine may have to wait a few days in between, he said.
Most other people who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 are aware of the symptoms they have experienced in the afterlife and keep them in the brain before getting vaccinated, the doctor advised.
Some other people have reported physically stronger symptoms to COVID vaccines, experiencing high fever and pain that can make them unworthy for a few days.
“If patients know they’re going to have a more potent reaction to COVID withdrawal, they may not get them at the same time and wait until their withdrawal symptoms have subsided or disappeared,” he said.
People who receive the flu vaccine can expect pain around the injection and may have flu-like symptoms such as mild fever, muscle pain, and runny nose.
However, the injectable edition of the flu vaccine doesn’t give other people the flu, Tuznik said.
“If they’ve traditionally had a reaction to the flu shot, they may just need to get vaccinated, wait for symptoms to appear, and then move on to the COVID vaccine,” he said.
Which one to take first?
In short, it’s up to the patient which vaccine to get first, Tuznik said.
People assess the threat points they would possibly have for each, and they tend to overlap.
“Many of the threat points that exist for COVID are also threat points for getting the flu,” Tuznik said.
She recommends that other people get vaccinated against any of the diseases that cause them the disease, adding the COVID-19 booster and its additional doses if eligible.
The CDC’s advice for COVID-19 is for other people to “keep up” with their vaccinations, which only includes the first booster for other eligible people.
By Noor Adatia
The Sacramento Bee (TNS)
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