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East Coast medical officials see flu spreading 'like wildfires'

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Doctors said between 70 percent and 80 percent of the flu cases they’re seeing are type A (H3N2), which is usually more virulent than type B. This season’s vaccine protects against this strain as well as a type B and the swine flu, though some physicians are seeing a small number of sick patients who had been vaccinated.

For unknown reasons, the vaccine is sometimes ineffective. Experts speculate that it may sometimes take a season to respond completely to the vaccine and build antibodies, or that residents are exposed to the virus before the vaccine has enough time to take effect. In addition, often the elderly don’t make antibodies as well as younger adults or children.

Doctors still strongly urge everyone to get vaccinated, reporting that the patients they’re seeing who got a flu shot are experiencing milder symptoms and usually are sick for a shorter period of time than the typical run of the illness. Even with the two-week incubation period, the vaccine will still provide protection because the flu season is usually a six-week to two-month cycle.

Englewood Hospital and Medical Center has also been slammed with patients and confirmed 150 cases of influenza last week. These include tests conducted by physicians in private practice as well as patients who came to the emergency room, said Dr. Steven Weisholtz, chief of infectious disease.

“We’re seeing large numbers — it’s an epidemic,” Weisholtz said. “All ages are getting hit hard but the elderly are predominantly the patients being admitted.”

Still, this year’s numbers are not approaching the 2009-10 season, when flu levels hit pandemic levels and nearly 300 children died from influenza.

“There is a severity to influenza this season but it’s not unusual,” said Dr. Gary Munk, director of clinical virology at Hackensack University Medical Center. “What’s remarkable about this is the heightened levels we’re seeing this early.”

Dr. Shoshana Feiner, an internist at New Jersey Associates in Medicine in Fair Lawn, said about 25 percent of the approximately 60 patients a day they’re seeing are testing positive for the flu.

“We’re extremely busy and we’re getting lots of phone calls from patients that we’re trying to fit in,” Feiner said. “It’s been this busy since before the holidays and hasn’t slowed down.”

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