Protect Your Community From the Flu – Get Your Flu Shot Today
Posted November 20, 2019 by Michael Hokanson
National Influenza Vaccination Week is Dec. 1-7
December means plenty of holiday parties and family gatherings; don’t let the flu hold you back from the festivities this season. National Influenza Vaccination Week is Dec. 1-7 and the Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) encourages all Georgians to get their flu vaccine.
“Flu season can begin as early as October and even last through May,” said Judy McChargue, North Central Health District Nursing Director. “The flu vaccine is the best defense we have against the flu. Everyone 6 months and older should get a flu vaccine every year before flu activity begins in their community.”
What is new this flu season?
- Flu vaccines have been updated to better match circulating flu viruses
- All regular-dose flu shots will be quadrivalent
- All four of the vaccine viruses used to produce cell-grown flu vaccine will have been grown in cells, not eggs
- In January 2019, the FDA approved a change in dose volume for Fluzone Quadrivalent, a quadrivalent inactivated influenza vaccine
- The nasal spray flu vaccine (LAIV) is a vaccine option. Ask your health care provider about what vaccine is right for you
Influenza can be a serious disease that leads to hospitalization and sometimes death. Regardless of race, age, gender or ethnicity, anyone can get sick from the flu. Those especially at risk are adults 65 years of age and older, adults living in nursing home or other long-term care facilities, children younger than age 5, pregnant women, and people with certain chronic diseases such as asthma, diabetes, heart disease or other long-term medical conditions. Preventative actions such as simply washing your hands and covering your nose and mouth when sneezing or coughing can guard against the flu. In the 2018-2019 influenza season, Georgia saw 44 deaths and 1,582 hospitalizations in the metro Atlanta area due to influenza infection.
Getting a flu vaccine is more convenient than ever before. Vaccines are available at your doctor or local health department, and at many retail pharmacies. Many employers, schools, colleges and universities also offer flu vaccines. CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) have approved that live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV), also known as the “nasal spray” flu vaccine, as an option during the 2019-2020 flu season.
National Influenza Vaccination Week emphasizes the importance of receiving an annual flu vaccination. Even healthy children and adults can get very sick from the flu. This winter, Georgia Department of Public Health encourages all Georgians to call your doctor’s office, local health department or pharmacy and get immunized.
For more information on immunization, visit http://dph.georgia.gov/influenza-what-you-need-know. To find your local health department, visit NCHD52.org/Locations.