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Medicine

Flu Has Disappeared Worldwide During the COVID Pandemic (scientificamerican.com) 307

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Scientific American: Since the novel coronavirus began its global spread, influenza cases reported to the World Health Organization have dropped to minuscule levels. The reason, epidemiologists think, is that the public health measures taken to keep the coronavirus from spreading also stop the flu. Influenza viruses are transmitted in much the same way as SARS-CoV-2, but they are less effective at jumping from host to host. As Scientific American reported last fall, the drop-off in flu numbers was both swift and universal. Since then, cases have stayed remarkably low. "There's just no flu circulating," says Greg Poland, who has studied the disease at the Mayo Clinic for decades. The U.S. saw about 600 deaths from influenza during the 2020-2021 flu season. In comparison, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated there were roughly 22,000 deaths in the prior season and 34,000 two seasons ago.

Because each year's flu vaccine is based on strains that have been circulating during the past year, it is unclear how next year's vaccine will fare, should the typical patterns of the disease return. [...] Public health experts are grateful for the reprieve. Some are also worried about a lost immune response, however. If influenza subsides for several years, today's toddlers could miss a chance to have an early-age response imprinted on their immune system. That could be good or bad, depending on what strains circulate during the rest of their life. For now, future flu transmission remains a roll of the dice.

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Flu Has Disappeared Worldwide During the COVID Pandemic

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  • We simply did not have a flu season last year in Australia, unsurprisingly.
    I did not bother vaccinating then, but "winter is coming", and people are a lot more relaxed about hygiene than a year ago, since we have mostly avoided the pandemic so far. (One case escaped quarantine, and the whole city went into partial lockdown for 3 days). I no longer see many people using the hand sanitiser at the supermarket.

    So I recently got the flu-vax . A whole $15 at the chemist (drugstore). Even in

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      My colony and I got hit hard by an out of country flu virus hard early in in the end of hot August 2019 before we could get our annual shots.

      I ranked this as my #2 worst flu ever over #1 during my high school days (had bumps on my fingers, skins peeling, vomiting, diarrhea, etc.). They took about a couple weeks for me to finally get better too. I easily get sick and slow to recover too due to my weak defected body. :(

  • by stikves ( 127823 ) on Thursday April 29, 2021 @10:54PM (#61330598) Homepage

    Of course airborne contagions would be affected as the entire world is at a mass quarantine. I would not be surprised other diseases like hepatitis or aids would be on decline as well.

    The problem is our current method of fighting is not very sustainable. COVID was a real risk, flu, as bad as it is, does not warrant a year long lockdown.

    • What current method of fighting it? Since the vaccines came out, the US has nearly dropped all methods of fighting it except vaccination. I'm hopeful the mRNA breakthroughs prompted by Covid will be a major blow against all these other endemic diseases we've always had to live with, and die from.
    • It's important to understand that flu is not airborne. Covid is passed on through the air. Flu reproduction factor is around 1.5 while covid's is over 3 .
      Measures that are insufficient to bring covid under control are overkill for bringing flu under control. That means that we can feel a lot safer about this big pandemic fear of another spanish flu (Kansas flu really). We'd be able to contain it while we prepare the flu shots. As long as everything keeps working of course.

  • by Excelcia ( 906188 ) <slashdot@excelcia.ca> on Thursday April 29, 2021 @11:13PM (#61330666) Homepage Journal

    Why doesn't this make me happy? Because I'm honestly worried that the same bleeding hearts who wouldn't let us just allow COVID to run its course will want to keep up the COVID measures to keep the flu at its current level ev en after we all have COVID vaccinations.

    It's been too long since the Spanish Flu. It's been too long since Polio and Diptheria. People aren't used to infectious diseases actually being serious. Remember when it was that when one kid in a family got measles that they all were brought home to get it too? We haven't had a serious disease in almost two generations now and we've got soft. Oh my GOD, it might kill 3% of those it infects! Two generations ago, influenza itself was as fatal as COVID is today and we just got on with life. The disease burden of COVID being left to run its course is less than the economic burden of trying to mitigate it.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm strongly pro vax. We should have isolated the elderly and let it run its course in the young. Instead the media flouts tales of a 13 year old dying of COVID, a one in a million outcome and forgets that flu used to do that to the occasional kid too, but nobody reported it. It was just normal.

    • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Thursday April 29, 2021 @11:54PM (#61330766) Homepage

      The disease burden of COVID being left to run its course is less than the economic burden of trying to mitigate it.

      The economy waxes and wanes on its own even without a pandemic. Letting people die as figurative sacrifices on the altar of capitalism is barbaric, and it might not have even resulted in any economic improvement. You're also making the assumption that no one close to you, or who was important to someone you care about, would've died. It's all well and good to look at 3% as a just a cold hard statistic, and not imagine that it might've been a family member or good friend that became part of that statistic.

      Economies can rebound. You can't bring the dead back to life.

      • by ghoul ( 157158 )
        Its more complicated than that. if you are upper middle class and can do your job from home a lockdown doesnt threaten your survival but if you are a poor third world daily wager who literally buys their food everyday from what they earn that day and have no savings to fall back on, you can starve to death from a Covid lockdown. Starvation kills 100% of those who dont have food whereas Covid only kills 3% of those who get infected. Lockdowns are OK as a temporary measure till you get a vaccine. They are not
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by sinij ( 911942 )

        Economies can rebound. You can't bring the dead back to life.

        This is fallacy of false choice. You presenting it as "we do everything we can to minimize deaths" vs. "do nothing", when in reality both choices have deaths associated with it. This is because lockdowns also kill people - deaths of despair, postponed pregnancies, overdoses and poverty-inflicting job losses cannot be excluded form consideration.

        Read this study: Covid Lockdown Cost/Benefits: A Critical Assessment of the Literature [PDF] [www.sfu.ca]

        An examination of over 80 Covid-19 studies reveals that many relied on assumptions that were false, and which tended to over-estimate the benefits and under-estimate the costs of lockdown. As a result, most of the early cost/benefit studies arrived at conclusions that were refuted later by data, and which rendered their cost/benefit findings incorrect. Research done over the past six months has shown that lockdowns have had, at best, a marginal effect on the number of Covid-19 deaths. Generally speaking, the ineffectiveness of lockdown stems from voluntary changes in behavior. Lockdown jurisdictions were not able to prevent non- compliance, and non-lockdown jurisdictions benefited from voluntary changes in behavior that mimicked lockdowns. The limited effectiveness of lockdowns ex-plains why, after one year, the unconditional cumulative deaths per million, and the pattern of daily deaths per million, is not negatively correlated with the stringency of lockdown across countries.

        • by StevenMaurer ( 115071 ) on Friday April 30, 2021 @02:14PM (#61333142) Homepage

          Thank you. I did read it. I have the following issues:

          • This isn't a "Study". It's a non-peer reviewed "Report", which is the scientific version of a "Op-Ed" you find in your local newspaper.
          • It makes a large number of breezy citations, and assertions, but fails to connect any of them.
          • Just as an example, it claims that "Lockdowns disrupt illegal drug channels, often resulting in a more contaminated drug supply", which it then concludes will lead to more deaths. It provides no statistics or even a reference to back this idea up. Nor does it address the idea that disrupted illegal drug channels might reduce the flow of illegal drugs, which might lower drug addiction, resulting in lives saved.
          • It makes at least 20 additional assertions not even remotely backed up by any fact.
          • It presents a laughable assertion about the inefficacy of lockdowns that is absolutely false on its face. It's especially ironic to try to claim that lockdowns have no effect on disease in a thread about flu going away because of them.
          • The sloppy non-scientific nature of this paper may be due to the fact that the author of this paper isn't an epidemiologist, but an economist - writing about things that are clearly far from his area of expertise.
          • I looked up the author of this paper, and found that he is considered a notable right-wing crank, who testified in a US court of law that as far as he was concerned "gays are going to hell" "unless they repent". This provides additional evidence that this paper is merely an exercise in motivated reasoning, whose conclusions were settled upon long before it was even written.

          I'm sure that an economic case could be made for a cost/benefit analysis of lockdowns vs premature death, but this paper sure ain't it. A real paper discussing the tradeoffs would have to try to figure out all the costs/benefits of lockdowns (lack of flu being one), differences in work habits (working from home considered a benefit for many - see google), and tease out the differences between "depression caused by lockdown" vs "depression caused by grandma dying of COVID". I'm sure that plenty such papers will be written some time in the future. But anyone who relies on this one is as much a crank as the author of this childish pseudo-science.

    • by Actually, I do RTFA ( 1058596 ) on Thursday April 29, 2021 @11:55PM (#61330772)

      I'm honestly worried that the same bleeding hearts who wouldn't let us just allow COVID to run its course

      Yeah, that was a dumb idea. It fails under its own criteria for success because natural immunity doesn't last long enough. It also fails because a lot of people aren't willing to go out in a pandemic. Controlling the pandemic is the only way to save the economy. Plus, that leads to more (localized) variants, dragging out the pandemic and causing more travel restrictions. Literally there's no good that comes from "letting it run its course"

      It's been too long since the Spanish Flu.

      I mean, I get that the latest Spanish flu epidemic was all of like 12 years ago under Obama, but what's your point?

      ! Two generations ago, influenza itself was as fatal as COVID is today and we just got on with life.

      It wasn't. But if you mean during the first round of Spanish flu, people masked up then too.

      we've got soft

      Does this argument ever work for you? Don't most people over the age of eleven go "I'm not going to do something stupid just because you call me names". The fact is, I don't want to get sick and I don't want to get other people sick. So I won't go out while a pandemic is going on that I don't have a vaccine for.

      • ! Two generations ago, influenza itself was as fatal as COVID is today and we just got on with life.

        It wasn't.

        Two generations ago, my grandfather fought in WW2. The 1940s - 1960s saw some rather horrific years dealing with influenza as we fought to vaccinate against the variants. Quite honestly, we have no damn idea just how deadly COVID-19 is. More on that later.

        But if you mean during the first round of Spanish flu, people masked up then too.

        Yeah, and with about as much efficacy. Much like India is dealing with right now, the second wave of the Spanish Flu, was far more deadly. New York City, suffered through a fourth wave towards the end in 1920. Sure as hell hope they're not facing tha

  • by smap77 ( 1022907 ) on Thursday April 29, 2021 @11:40PM (#61330732)

    Since when are fringe theories being presented as fact a the top of the feed? Gee whiz, folks. For all the uninitiated out there: FLU TESTS ARE EASY.
    https://www.cdc.gov/flu/sympto... [cdc.gov]

    And the US does flu surveillance:
    https://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly... [cdc.gov]

    And don't forget the folks who last year were looking for flu but found COVID-19 in the wild:
    https://seattleflu.org/ [seattleflu.org]

    The network still looks for and tests for influenza. So don't go around giving no-citation BS answers conflating COVID-19 and influenza that came from your gut feelings about things. OK? Flu had a terrible year last year: outperformed by SARS-Cov-2 and outfoxed by masking, distancing, and quarantining.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Or it just shows how well those measures worked. Flu tests are common, but only if a person gets tested - often people would just bear it out and be sick a few days.

      So even if only 1 in 10 cases of the flu gets to a doctor and recorded, it really means there was barely a flu season.

      In Canada, there was something like 40 reported cases in total, not even enough to declare start of flu season.

      And with people working from home, social distancing, not going out when sick, no big surprise that the flu didn't sta

  • by Vegan Cyclist ( 1650427 ) on Thursday April 29, 2021 @11:43PM (#61330740) Homepage

    "If influenza subsides for several years, today's toddlers could miss a chance to have an early-age response imprinted on their immune system."

    So if everyone were to get a flu shot, why isn't it this wouldn't have the same effect?

    Honestly I've been quite happy not to get sick in the last year. On the bright side maybe a bunch of these flu strains will go extinct if we keep this up.

    • Honestly I've been quite happy not to get sick in the last year. On the bright side maybe a bunch of these flu strains will go extinct if we keep this up.

      Yeah, but some of our alcohol consumption has quadrupled so we spend more time hungover. I love it when I call some company that has changed to "work from home" and the bastard is toasted. At least they aren't driving. And they created a boom in the economy involving alcohol delivery services which have popped up all over the place in the last year.

    • So if everyone were to get a flu shot, why isn't it this wouldn't have the same effect?

      The flu shot only protects against the worst variants in any given year. There will be enough exposure with the shots. The annual shots are for the different variants, not because your body forgets.

      • I'm not sure about the rest of the world, but AFAIK, for at least the past few years, the US formulation has inevitably repeated 2 or 3 of the same strains year after year, and hit "peak uselessness" (to people with normal functioning immune systems who were vaccinated annually) about 5 years ago(*). Now that influenza vaccine includes 4 strains, it's a tiny bit less useless to normal people, because in theory, one of the 4 strains is now officially supposed to be for a strain that's likely to be the most w

    • On the bright side maybe a bunch of these flu strains will go extinct if we keep this up.

      I wouldn't exactly label replacing them, with COVID variants, a "bright side".

  • If COVID precautions have basically driven flu infections down to zero, is it wise to continue with influenza vaccinations -- especially of the elderly?

    There is a correlation between flu vaccination and Covid lethality - see link [sourceforge.net].

    Dataset here [sourceforge.net] (in 'data.xlsx')

    An complication is co-infection with both the flu and COVID seems to worsen the risk of death -- so the rate of co-infection matters. A British study [bmj.com] had 0.25% of COVID patients infected by the flu, while this Indian study had 8% with a much smaller sam [theunion.org]

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      If COVID precautions have basically driven flu infections down to zero, is it wise to continue with influenza vaccinations -- especially of the elderly?

      There is a correlation between flu vaccination and Covid lethality - see link [sourceforge.net].

      Who here immediately sees the reason for that spurious correlation? No? Hint: More developed countries with higher rates of vaccination also tend to have higher population density and thus higher lethality.

  • The flu is nowhere near as contagious as the covid coronavirus .. therefore even simple measures were likely enough to eliminate it. No need to get too depressed though, Iâ(TM)m sure it will be back.

  • where people don't wash their hands or cover their mouth when they cough.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I'm not going back to normal. Going to keep wearing a mask even after I've been vaccinated and infection rates have died down.

  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Friday April 30, 2021 @04:33AM (#61331258)

    And I mean a *complete* lockdown. No leaving the house. Food delivered by a special team that goes into a separate lockdown after the 14 days. Any emergency services or people forced to break the lockdown go into that second quarantine too. Borders stay closed to any country that fails to implement it flawlessly too. (Otherwise it would all be pointless.)

    People could still work from home during that time, where possible.

    It would completely kill off most infectious diseases, an save us trillions in healthcare spendings.
    (It is implied that the lockdown food delivery will be at a price equal to or lower than home cooking with equal or better quality, so you can afford it when poor. This should be doable since it's always cheaper to cook for many people than to cook for just a few. E.g. a pot of ragout for 100 people still just takes one person to stir.)

    I want to see that studied, to see if it would be worth it.

    • by Corbets ( 169101 )

      Not quite that simple, I’m afraid.

      People live together. So even after the 2 week lockdown, some family members will have just caught the disease. Those people will then go out and spread it.

      And of course, there are those who stay ill longer than others (e.g. pregnant women, who’s immune systems are weaker). Same net effect.

      I’m sure a 14 day annual lockdown would have an impact, but it’d be a far cry from killing off most infectious diseases.

      • Yes, I agree.
        That is why I said we should studiy it.
        To see if we can buff out those complications or if they are simply too much. (I'm the can-do type who sees it as a challenge and doesn't easily give up. I know other people are generally much ....well, I don't wanna be rude but I do not k ow a more fitting word ... lazier.)

        So your input would be exactly the sort of thing that's useful here.

        And I also think it would be quite hard to get right.
        I think I could do it... Because basically my entire life was tr

    • And I mean a *complete* lockdown. No leaving the house.

      Well you're dreaming because people in the US wont even wear a dinky mask to help people not die from Covid-19. The refrain they use is "it's just the flu!". You need to understand that there is a significant contingent of human population that is composed of selfish children in adult form.

    • Translation: I'm irrationally scared to death, and you should all suffer for it.

A committee takes root and grows, it flowers, wilts and dies, scattering the seed from which other committees will bloom. -- Parkinson

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