Henry K. Lee
Updated 5:12 pm, Tuesday, January 14, 2014
There have been four flu deaths in
Santa Clara County, three each in Alameda and San Mateo counties, two
each in Marin and Sonoma counties, and one each in San Francisco, Solano
and Contra Costa counties.
Many of the deaths are attributable to a strain of influenza that has targeted the relatively young and healthy. One victim in Sonoma County, Matthew Walker, was only 23.
The vaccine is well-matched to this year's flu season and protects against all strains of influenza that have been identified in patients. The primary strain circulating this year is Type A, subtype H1N1 - also known as the "swine flu," which caused a global outbreak in 2009.
People age 65 and older appear to have some protection against H1N1, which tends to strike younger adults - even those who are otherwise healthy - harder than most influenza strains. Symptoms of the flu include high fever, body aches and a sudden onset of illness.
Even after people are vaccinated, it's important they take other steps like regularly washing their hands or covering coughs and sneezes to keep themselves, and others, healthy, public health officials say. Those who are sick should not go to work or school.
The flu vaccine takes about two weeks to become fully effective, so public health experts recommend people get it now if they haven't already. To get the vaccine, call your health care provider, or go to http://flushot.healthmap.org to find the nearest supplier.
Many of the deaths are attributable to a strain of influenza that has targeted the relatively young and healthy. One victim in Sonoma County, Matthew Walker, was only 23.
The vaccine is well-matched to this year's flu season and protects against all strains of influenza that have been identified in patients. The primary strain circulating this year is Type A, subtype H1N1 - also known as the "swine flu," which caused a global outbreak in 2009.
People age 65 and older appear to have some protection against H1N1, which tends to strike younger adults - even those who are otherwise healthy - harder than most influenza strains. Symptoms of the flu include high fever, body aches and a sudden onset of illness.
Even after people are vaccinated, it's important they take other steps like regularly washing their hands or covering coughs and sneezes to keep themselves, and others, healthy, public health officials say. Those who are sick should not go to work or school.
The flu vaccine takes about two weeks to become fully effective, so public health experts recommend people get it now if they haven't already. To get the vaccine, call your health care provider, or go to http://flushot.healthmap.org to find the nearest supplier.
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