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Environmental & Emergency Management


Pandemic or Seasonal Influenza


What is the difference between Pandemic Flu and the Seasonal Flu?

Seasonal Flu
Pandemic Flu
Outbreaks follow predictable seasonal patterns; occurs annually, usually in winter, in temperate climatesOccurs rarely (three times in 20th century - last in 1968)
Usually some immunity built up from previous exposureNo previous exposure; little or no pre-existing immunity
Healthy adults usually not at risk for serious complications; the very young, the elderly and those with certain underlying health conditions at increased risk for serious complicationsHealthy people may be at increased risk for serious complications
Health systems can usually meet public and patient needsHealth systems may be overwhelmed
Vaccine developed based on known flu strains and available for annual flu seasonVaccine probably would not be available in the early stages of a pandemic
Adequate supplies of antiviral are usually available Effective antiviral may be in limited supply
Average U.S. deaths approximately 36,000/yrNumber of deaths could be quite high (e.g., U.S. 1918 death toll approximately 500,000)
Symptoms: fever, cough, runny nose, muscle pain. Deaths often caused by complications, such as pneumonia.Symptoms may be more severe and complications more frequent
Generally causes modest impact on society (e.g., some school closing, encouragement of people who are sick to stay home)May cause major impact on society (e.g. widespread restrictions on travel, closings of schools and businesses, cancellation of large public gatherings)
Manageable impact on domestic and world economyPotential for severe impact on domestic and world economy
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  January 9, 2009