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Kane County residents fight the flu, get vaccinated

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Marilyn Stamp of the Visiting Nurse Association of the Fox Valley administers a flu shot Monday to Geneva resident Susan Bertaux during a visit to the Geneva Township Senior Center. (Sandy Bressner - sbressner@shawmedia.com)

With leaves starting to fall and a chill in the air, Geneva resident Ed Banks said he knows flu season has arrived.

That’s why Banks stood in line at the Geneva Township Senior Center this week to get a flu shot, which was administered by VNA Health Care.

“I haven’t gotten the flu since I’ve been getting flu shots,” Banks said. “I do it every year to protect my health.”

Oct. 1 marked the beginning of flu season. Since September, VNA Health Care has been providing flu shots at clinics throughout the region. It’s too early to tell how bad this flu season will be.

“We just started flu surveillance,” said Chris Hoff, Kane County Health Department’s assistant director for community health resources. “We do collect data from schools and emergency rooms. Schools are a good area for transmission to happen.”

Typically, the flu season starts around the beginning of October and lasts until late April, Hoff said. He urged residents not to put off getting a flu shot.

“Obviously, we want to remind people to get their flu shots now, before it shows up in the community,” Hoff said.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1.1 percent of patient visits reported in the United States through the week of Sept. 29 – the latest data available – were because of flu-like illness, defined as a fever of 100 degrees or more and cough or sore throat. This percentage is below the national baseline of 2.4 percent.

The CDC recommends everyone 6 months and older get a flu vaccine every year. Flu vaccines work by causing antibodies to develop in the body about two weeks after vaccination. These antibodies provide protection against infection with the viruses that are in the vaccine.

While the flu season typically ends in April, hospital officials at Provena Mercy Medical Center in Aurora were seeing flu cases well into May this year.

“It was unusual that we had the flu last longer because we had a warm spring,” said Barb Douglas, director of emergency and trauma services for Provena Mercy Medical Center. “In the warmer weather, people are outside more.”

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