Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised by all these people that get tested as soon as they get sick. Why? Whether it's flu or covid there's not much they can do. I wait until there's some secondary issue (usually there's none) like bronchitis and then I get antibiotics which treat the secondary.
I'm asking because I see all these people running around and it's spreading sickness more. We're all pretty sure we got sick from DH who caught it from urgent care where he was having his toe splinted (it was a bad break). What's crazy is that my veterinarian has us wait in our car until we're called in. Why can't they do that at urgent care?
Anonymous wrote:I’m feeling anxious about flu A now that we’re all back to school and work and everyone will be back together after traveling, gathering etc. We’re all vaxxed but my social media is full of reports about how this flu causes staph pneumonia and extremely high fevers, especially in kids. I am not usually one to freak out about viruses but this one is spooking me and other than locking ourselves up, we’re just at the mercy of others to stay home when sick. Is anyone else feeling anxious? There’s a lot to feel anxious about right now but this one is really upping it for me.
Anonymous wrote:I’m feeling anxious about flu A now that we’re all back to school and work and everyone will be back together after traveling, gathering etc. We’re all vaxxed but my social media is full of reports about how this flu causes staph pneumonia and extremely high fevers, especially in kids. I am not usually one to freak out about viruses but this one is spooking me and other than locking ourselves up, we’re just at the mercy of others to stay home when sick. Is anyone else feeling anxious? There’s a lot to feel anxious about right now but this one is really upping it for me.
Anonymous wrote:I’m feeling anxious about flu A now that we’re all back to school and work and everyone will be back together after traveling, gathering etc. We’re all vaxxed but my social media is full of reports about how this flu causes staph pneumonia and extremely high fevers, especially in kids. I am not usually one to freak out about viruses but this one is spooking me and other than locking ourselves up, we’re just at the mercy of others to stay home when sick. Is anyone else feeling anxious? There’s a lot to feel anxious about right now but this one is really upping it for me.
Anonymous wrote:I have significant reactions to the flu shots that knock me down for 2-3 days. I’ve had the flu and been bedridden for 2-3 days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here’s the link:
https://www.aha.org/news/headline/2025-07-28-pediatric-flu-deaths-reach-266-2024-2025-season
Digging a few links deep, this comes with a lot of caveats: "Among children who were eligible for influenza vaccination and with known vaccine status, 90% of reported pediatric deaths this season (compared to 82% during the 2023-2024 season) have occurred in children who were not fully vaccinated against influenza."
So at first glance you would expect something like 270 unvaccinated deaths based on the 90%, but it looks like the number would actually be much smaller. How much smaller, we don't actually know since the raw data is nowhere to be found.
Vaccination status is not even an option on their dashboards: https://gis.cdc.gov/GRASP/Fluview/PedFluDeath.html
But what the dashboard does show, is that 154 of the deaths were in a high risk underlying conditions group.
So at the end of the day, its unlikely we even have triple-digit healthy, unvaccinated kids dying of the flu even in a bad year.
I stand by the fact that the flu vaccine, like most vaccines, only nets out for the sickest and oldest tenth of society or so.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s the link:
https://www.aha.org/news/headline/2025-07-28-pediatric-flu-deaths-reach-266-2024-2025-season
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sometimes let myself think the DCUM set is more intelligent than average, but then a thread like this brings me back to reality. Get your flu shot every year. Even a poorly matched shot offers protection. This isn’t new information.
You do realize there is scant evidence for the flu shot’s effectiveness right? There is little statistical or anecdotal evidence despite this thing being given to hundreds of millions of people over 45 years.
It’s only people like you still supporting it. People who are particularly susceptible to marketing and think themselves smarter than they actually are. If they couldn’t advertise the shot anymore, people like you would never take it again.
Even a quick Google search pulls up any number of peer reviewed studies that show you're full of something. Hint: it's not knowledge.
In the realm of vaccines, the flu shot is not very effective.
But it's better than nothing.
One wonders how you define “effective” - effective in terms of preventing hospitalizations and death? Effective in terms of not being infected despite exposure? Effective in terms of turning your hair blue?
It matters.
The CDC reports that “early estimates of 2025–26 influenza vaccine effectiveness in England against influenza-associated hospitalization remained within expected ranges of 70%–75% for children and 30%–40% for adults, suggesting that influenza vaccination remains an effective tool in preventing influenza-related hospitalizations this season.”
So it’s definitely worth it.
It’s always estimates and never raw numbers. One of the vaccine makers favorite tricks.
Anonymous wrote:We totally screwed up this year and got 4 of our 5 family members vaccinated. This year, dad and two kids went on one day in October. I was at an appointment with the other kid that day and for some reason I kept telling myself, DH got him the shot later. I don’t know why I didn’t even check because I was so certain but seeing all the news, I decided to double check their records and they didn’t get it.
I have health anxiety and made an appointment to take them to the CVS tomorrow. Will it still be helpful? They had to do a 5 day course of antibiotics for a cut and that ended on Tuesday so I’m a little nervous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another child has died from the flu.
Influencer Paul J. Kim’s 5-year-old son, Micah, died on Dec. 31, 2025, after contracting a severe case of the flu.
https://people.com/influencer-paul-j-kim-son-micah-dies-after-severe-case-of-flu-11877386
I came here to ask if anyone knows if he was vaccinated?
I can’t find any reliable source of information on that. Last year, 90% of the nearly 300 children who died from the flu were not vaccinated.