CDC: Flu strain doesn’t match this year’s vaccine

Federal health officials are warning that this year’s flu vaccine will do little to stop about half of influenza cases in the United States.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) alerted doctors Wednesday night that the predominant strain of flu this year — H3N2 — has mutated substantially enough not to match the vaccine.

{mosads}While the shot protects against three of four strains of influenza, including H3N2, roughly half of cases are now caused by mutations that don’t match the treatment, according to NBC News.

The CDC is still encouraging people to get the flu shot in case they come down with a non-mutated strain. The agency suggested the vaccine could also help prevent “severe outcomes, such as hospitalization and death.”

Influenza activity has increased in most parts of the country as of late November, the alert stated. Flu season typically peaks in the early part of the year.

CDC Director Tom Frieden said Thursday that it is too late to manufacture vaccines that could beat the mutations. The process takes about four months, he said.

Tags

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Regular the hill posts

Main Area Top ↴

Daily News

Hunter Biden's SECOND TRIAL Set To Begin, Prosecutors Look To Bring Addiction Back Into Spotlight

Hunter Biden's SECOND TRIAL Set To Begin, Prosecutors ...
RFK Jr tells Roseanne Barr he staged dead bear cub ...
Kamala Harris's VP shortlist narrows
Harris, Trump court voters in Georgia as they stand ...
More Videos

More Health Care News

See All
Main Area Middle ↴
See all Hill.TV See all Video
Main Area Bottom ↴

Most Popular

Load more