Last flu season nothing to sneeze at

Editors' Blog: Catching the flu
Editors' Blog: Catching the flu
Thankfully, it's safe to put away the Kleenex and the Nyquil. The flu season is winding to a close - and it goes down as the worst in recent years, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The flu vaccine was partly to blame, according to the CDC. Flu vaccines, which are usually 70% to 90% effective, contain three strains of the flu that researchers pick as the most likely to make people sick. This season, two of the three strains that infected the general population were not found in the vaccine, rendering it only 44% effective, the CDC said late last week.

A total 9% of all adult deaths in early March were a result of the virus, whose presence remained above an epidemic threshold for more than 13 weeks, according to the agency. The last such flu season was 2003-2004, which didn't last quite as long but resulted in more overall deaths.

Recent discoveries that track the global spread of the flu will hopefully allow doctors and scientists to more accurately predict which contagions to put in their vaccines. Those findings were published Friday in the journal Science.

More in News

SNFs could see 50% payment reduction for Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan claims

SNFs could see 50% payment reduction for Pre-Existing ...

The federal government's Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan will reduce its payments to skilled nursing facilities by 50% as of June 15, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. ...

Emeritus turns to high-profile law firm to appeal $23 million verdict ...

Emeritus Senior Living has engaged high-profile attorneys in its bid to overturn the verdict handed down by a jury in March, under which Emeritus would have to pay nearly $23 million in punitive damages related to the death of a resident who had pressure wounds.

Discovery could lead to faster, fuller healing of diabetic wounds, researcher says ...

Injecting a plasma protein called plasminogen around chronic diabetic wounds can lead to complete healing, according to new research from Umea University in Sweden.