The H1N1 flu outbreak appears to be less severe than earlier feared, according to a new study by US health experts.
The H1N1 flu outbreak appears to be less severe than earlier feared, according to a new study by US health experts who found fewer than expected hospitalizations or severe complications from the virus.
The British and US-funded study by researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH), which appears online in the journal PLoS Medicine, said the swine flu pandemic appears far "milder" than anticipated."Our work shows that the severity of the H1N1 flu may be less than initially feared," Marc Lipsitch, professor of epidemiology at HSPH and the study's senior author.
"Early on, it was difficult to measure the flu's impact and it was crucial to plan for the full range of possible outcomes," he said.
"Fortunately, the virus now appears to be near the milder end," said Lipsitch, who heads the Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics at the HSPH, which focuses on mathematical modeling and analysis of data of pandemic and drug resistant infections.
But he stressed that it remains important to continue to vaccinate against the swine flu virus.
"This is a serious disease," said Lipsitch.
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"Even for people outside these high-risk groups, vaccination is an important way to reduce the risk of what can be a serious illness."
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If the virus does not mutate into a more lethal illness, researchers estimate that the autumn-winter pandemic wave of H1N1 flu will probably cause a far smaller death toll than the estimated 36,000 killed in the average flu season.
The study was jointly funded by the UK Medical Research Council, the UK Health Protection Agency, the US National Institutes of Health and the US Department of Homeland Security.
Source-AFP
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