Canada News

Get the latest new in Candada

Calgary

Alberta seeing deadliest flu season in recent memory; experts point to low vaccination rates

Alberta’s flu season has yet to end, but it’s already ranking as the deadliest in recent memory since the mid-1990s when reliable stats were first tracked.

So far, 148 Albertans have died of influenza in the 2023 to 2024 season, which is an increase from the 123 deaths last season.

According to provincial data, there have been 2,189 Albertans hospitalized for the flu this season, which includes 223 admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU).

“Certainly, we’re seeing a high hospital burden this year in terms of admissions and also deaths and an interesting thing that we’re noticing is that there’s a lot of cases in the 18 to 65-year-old age group in Alberta,” said infectious disease expert Dr. Lynora Saxinger.

“We see that sometimes with H1N1 years and this wasn’t an H1N1 year, but the severe disease in that group is actually very striking with a lot of hospital admissions and that group also had very little vaccine uptake as well.”

More than one-third of Alberta’s flu deaths so far have been in people under the age of 70, including two deaths in children under the age of 19.

The most recent data shows there have been 12,053 cases of influenza in the 2023-24 season so far, compared to 9,784 last year.

Proportionally, the number of deaths over the past two seasons remained the same when compared to case numbers, with roughly 1.2 per cent of all flu cases resulting in death.

Mother mourns death of daughter

Three-year-old Latezia Veronica Cinco is described by her family as a little girl who loved to sing and make people smile any chance she could get.

On Nov. 25, 2023, she died after she was diagnosed with an influenza virus that affected the functioning of her brain.

“We were just standing there seeing the doctors putting a tube in Latezia’s mouth and that was the last time I saw her and she didn’t wake up anymore,” said Merthyl Cinco, Latezia’s mother.

“She was very sweet, she kept telling me I love you, mama, she always hugged me and she was my only daughter.”

Three-year-old Latezia Veronica Cinco was diagnosed with an influenza virus that affected the functioning of her brain. (Courtesy: Merthyl Cinco)

Cinco, who arrived in Canada from the Philippines in July of 2023 on a student visa with three kids says she is absolutely devastated.

She says Latezia spent six days in an Edmonton ICU before her death, calling it the most heartbreaking moment for any mother to ever experience.

“I just miss her presence,” she said.

“Latezia did not get a flu vaccine before arriving in Canada, but she was such a healthy kid and the doctors still don’t know what happened.”

Experts call for better vaccine messaging

Alberta has the highest flu death count documented since standardized reporting first began in 2009, but the province has also changed how it reports flu deaths.

In the 2014-15 season, for example, there were 114 deaths amongst Albertans hospitalized for the flu, but at that time, the province did not track influenza deaths outside of a hospital setting.

Community deaths outside of hospital settings including those reported by paramedics, firefighters or police officers first became reportable in the 2020-21 season, according to Alberta Health.

Despite the discrepancy in reporting, this influenza season certainly does stand out with the bulk of Alberta’s cases accumulating between October and January under the H3N2 strain, a subtype of influenza A.

Dr. Craig Jenne, associate professor of microbiology, immunology and infectious diseases at the University of Calgary, says there’s a definite causation to why this year’s flu deaths have increased, but he says vaccination in Alberta ranks as amongst the lowest in Canada.

“We do know that there’s a lower vaccine uptake in the community and this not only reduces personal protection but prevents or reduces the ability to prevent transmission to at-risk people,” said Jenne.

“So the more people vaccinated, the less the virus circulates, but we’ve also seen with other viruses, the impact of infection and people that previously had COVID. So, there is some impact of previously having COVID on your immune system responding to later challenges and we’re not sure yet if that’s contributing to flu severity this year.”

According to provincial data, less than one-quarter of Albertans – 24.1 per cent – have received their annual flu shot so far this respiratory virus season.

That’s a slight decrease from the 28 per cent vaccination rate in the 2022 to 2023 season and a dramatic drop from the high of 37 per cent in 2020-21.

The last time the province saw an influenza vaccine rate this low was when uptake hit 24 per cent all the way back in the 2012-13 flu season.

CTV News has reached out to the office of Alberta Health Minister Adriana LaGrange. We are waiting for a response and will update this story once an answer is received.

View original article here Source