ATLANTA, Apr 28, 2009 (UPI via COMTEX) -- There have been no U.S swine flu
fatalities so far, but since January more than 13,000 people have died of
complications from seasonal flu, officials said.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's weekly report said no fewer
than 800 flu-related deaths were reported in any week between Jan. 1-April 18,
the most recent week for which figures were available, CNN reported Tuesday.
Seasonal flu is expected to keep killing hundreds of people every week for the
rest of the year.
The researchers looked at deaths in the 122 largest U.S. cities with about 9 out
of 10 of the deaths among people age 65 or older, the reports said.
Dr. Brian Currie, medical director at Montefiore Medical Center in New York,
said most times the elderly already have health problems that the flu makes
worse.
"Regular influenza can be taxing," Currie told CNN. "It causes their underlying
disease to decompensate and then they don't have the reserves to get through it.
While it may not be the direct cause listed on the death certificate, it
certainly contributed."
Worldwide annual death from seasonal flu is estimated between 250,000 and
500,000, the CDC report said.
One of the reasons medical experts are concerned about swine flu is that many of
the more than 150 who died in Mexico have been young and otherwise healthy.
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Copyright 2009 by United Press International