SHOOT: Levels of infection are higher in summer than for an ordinary winter season. That's troubling; it's portentous for when winter returns.
Confirmed cases of the new H1N1 virus, known as swine flu, in the British capital more than doubled to 1,794 yesterday from a week earlier, the Health Protection Agency said. The pandemic bug is transmitted more easily than seasonal flu among people younger than 50 because no one has natural immunity against it. In England and Wales, there were 29.6 cases of flu-like illnesses per 100,000 people last week, the college said. That compares with 11.4 per 100,000 the previous week and 6.5 the week before that. In the southern region, the incidence of flu-like illness last week was about four times higher than the 10-year average for summer, according to the college’s report. Flu typically peaks in England in January, and the rate reported for the southern region by the college’s flu surveillance network, comprising 420 doctors, was the highest in five months. |
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