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As flu cases spike, late rush for vaccinations

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Local pharmacists agree.

"I can tell you one day last week we did more flu shots in one day than we did in the whole month of January last year," said Nancy Davis, pharmacy manager for a Walgreens in Glencoe. "I think that people are finally figuring out that the flu this year means business."

Morita chalked up the local rush to a headline-grabbing season that has been "highly motivational" for otherwise reluctant patients. On Friday, the CDC said the seasonal illness has reached epidemic levels across the country, which means that more than 7 percent of the deaths across the country are connected to the flu.

Still, officials are touting the effectiveness of this year's flu vaccination, which they say is 62 percent effective. The effectiveness rate is typically between 50 and 70 percent, CDC spokesman Curtis Allen said.

"That means that if you got vaccinated, you're about 60 percent less likely to get the flu that requires you to go to your doctor," CDC Director Dr. Thomas Frieden said during a conference call Friday. "So what we have known for a long time is that the flu vaccine is far from perfect. But it's still by far the best tool we have to prevent the flu."

Right now, the vaccine targets what scientists hope are the three most common strains of the flu. But CDC officials said vaccines in the near future, perhaps a year or two, may target four strains, reducing the chances that someone who's vaccinated still may get sick.

But those just now heading to get vaccinated should take heed: The flu shot typically takes two weeks to hit maximum effectiveness, Davis said.

While the CDC won't be able to say how much of the total percentage of the population got vaccinated until spring — it takes the measure in November, and again in March — the agency keeps track of how many doses of the flu vaccine are distributed across the country on a weekly basis.

As of Jan. 4, 128 million doses of vaccine have been distributed. Since the swine flu pandemic of 2009, that number has remained fairly high compared with earlier seasons, Allen said. A decade ago, as few as 110 million doses may have been handed out for the entire season.

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