Last year, more than 35 million people in the U.S. came down with the flu. They suffered symptoms like fever, body aches, a cough, and a runny nose. About 30,000 of those individuals died from serious complications caused by the illness. Scientists worry that flu season, which peaks between December and February, could be even more deadly this year. That’s because it will coincide with the coronavirus pandemic, leading to what some call a “twindemic.”
“Influenza and Covid-19 could happen at the same time this year, in the fall and winter months,” says Dr. Sumon Chakrabarti, an infectious-diseases physician from Trillium Hospital in Toronto, Canada. “Right now, we are much more prepared for Covid-19 than we were in March. But if you have a bunch of cases happening at the same time, there is the chance that hospitals could get overwhelmed with patients.” That’s why it’s important for everyone to get a yearly flu vaccine, which helps prevent people from getting infected with the influenza virus. (To learn more, check out “Battling the Flu,” Science World, November 19, 2018)