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Do you want to be influenza-free this winter? Then, you’d
better contact your health care provider and get vaccinated, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention recommended.
Whether you’re a pregnant woman, a 50-year-old or over this
age, an adult with chronic illnesses such as diabetes or asthma (that usually
increase your risk for complications once you contracted the flu), a
health-care worker or whether your job implies getting in touch with people around
you, then you are required to get a flu shot as soon as possible. Besides these
categories of people, the CDC urges parents to have their children vaccinated
and for the first time the agency has expanded its recommendations to include
kids aged 6 months to 18 years.
Overall, about 86 percent of Americans are supposed to get
the flu vaccine this year or 261 million people. The CDC said that US has 145
million doses of flu vaccine on hand this year which of course is far from
being enough but considering the fact that last year were used just 113 million
of 140 million flu shots available, the authorities have nothing to worry about
that the shots won’t be enough.
Also the CDC is confident that the vaccine available this
year would work much better than the one provided last year which was only 44
percent efficient. All three strains that make this year’s vaccine were changed.
In conclusion if you want to avoid fever, cough, flu
complications, headaches, workdays missed because you’re sick or your kid is
sick and hospitalization it’s better to get immunized before it’s too late.
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