A Howard County
teenager died of flu this week, health officials said. It was the latest of
nine pediatric flu deaths nationally this year. Five of those deaths occurred since
Jan. 25, according to a report released by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
“This tragic death is highly unusual,” the
county health officer, Dr. Peter L. Beilenson, said in a news release. “Most
people who get the flu recover after a few days, but getting a flu shot and
following common hygiene precautions can greatly reduce the risk of contracting
the flu.”
According to a spokesperson from the health
department, the victim died this week after becoming “ill with flu symptoms
that got progressively worse.” She said the boy had no underlying health
problems.
Most people recover from influenza after a
few days, but for those with a weakened immune system the condition could
become fatal.
According to data from the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, one in five Americans get the flu every year.
Of these, 200,000 are hospitalized and about 36,000 die from influenza-related
complications. Last year, 86 children between the ages of 15 and 17 died of
influenza. Seniors present a high risk of complications from the flu. That’s
why the majority of flu deaths occur among this category of age.
Children should be the first to get
vaccinated and the CDC is urging all parents to pay special attention to them.
Although there are rare complications in this age group, vaccinating children
can stop the spread of flu.
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