Flu Has Disappeared Worldwide during the COVID Pandemic

Authored by scientificamerican.com and submitted by SillyCubensis
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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. The WHO made its flu strain recommendations for vaccines in late February as usual, but they were based on far fewer cases than in a common year. At the same time, with fewer virus particles circulating in the world, there is less chance of an upcoming mutation, so it is possible the 2021–2022 vaccine will prove extra effective.

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.

The World Health Organization tracks influenza transmission in 18 zones. Three of those regions appear here. Only people who get tested for influenzalike illnesses—typically about 5 percent of individuals who fall ill—are tallied.

khan9813 on April 30th, 2021 at 05:16 UTC »

Not forever though, flu has a large animal reservoir.

Imposter24 on April 30th, 2021 at 04:17 UTC »

Fun fact: An additional contributing factor to no flu this year (besides the obvious masks and social distancing) is that the flu mutates effectively by traveling along with humans to the southern hemisphere during the north's summer. There it mutates and spreads then the new strain/ variant travels back up to start a new flu season for the North's winter. Because no one was traveling we didn't have this viral exchange that normal accelerates mutation which helped contribute to the non-existent flu season.

Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-03519-3

codeoffthemap on April 30th, 2021 at 00:18 UTC »

34000 US deaths in 2018/2019, 22000 in 2019/2020, and 600 in 2020/2021. That's impressively substantial.