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Early outbreak has officials bracing for worst flu season in years

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(MCT) — LOS ANGELES — An early outbreak threatens to makes this year’s influenza season one of the most difficult in recent years as public health officials brace for the worst.

Hospitals in the Northeast, from New Jersey to Massachusetts, are reporting record numbers of emergency room visits related to flu-like illnesses, and Boston has declared a public health emergency.

At least 41 states have reported widespread flu outbreaks, more than 2,250 people have been hospitalized and 18 children have died, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. Updated national statistics are scheduled to be released Friday.

“It’s about five weeks ahead of the average flu season,” said Lyn Finelli, who monitors influenza for the CDC. “We haven’t seen such an early season since 2003 to 2004.”

The annual influenza misery brings fevers, sore throats, aches in the joints, fits of coughing and sometimes vomiting to as many as one in five people in the United States at some point from about October through spring. Health officials estimate that perhaps 24,000 people die each year from the illness or its complications such as pneumonia and severe dehydration. More than $10 billion is lost, primarily in wages, because of the illness.

True influenza, which has reached epidemic and even deadly pandemic proportions over the centuries, is often confused with other ailments. Colds are the usual culprits and are caused by a different virus, or a variant that mainly attacks the digestive system as the so-called stomach flu. Compared with a typical cold, symptoms from the flu, especially fever and lethargy, are fierce.

Officials began warning of the severity of this season’s flu early in December when Dr. Thomas Frieden, the director of the CDC, urged people to get a flu shot to minimize the disease’s spread. While publicizing National Influenza Vaccination Week, Frieden said a flu shot was the best tool available to stop the spread of the disease, along with covering your mouth when coughing and washing your hands.

That advice is still the best, health officials said. And public officials, including New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Thursday, urged their constituents to get vaccinated. It usually takes a couple of weeks for the vaccination to become effective, meaning that having an injection today will offer some protection through the upcoming peak season.

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