Season’s Greetings: Welcome to Influenza Season

The air is crisp, the days are shortening, Starbucks is hocking their pumpkin spice creations, and I see people sneezing into their hands everywhere I go. Although we often think of there being only four seasons, many cultures recognise more than just those four. In Bangladesh, there are 6 in total and autumn is broken into shorotkal (early autumn) and hemontokal (late autumn). For public health practitioners, we also acknowledge a special season: Influenza Season.

Public Health measures the calendar year broken into what we call CDC or Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) weeks. They run Sunday-Saturday and Week 1 begins the first Sunday of each year. Influenza Season (in the Northern Hemisphere) is generally considered to be between Week 40 (around the first week of October) through Week 20 (the end of May).

Unfortunately, just as cold, dry air makes our noses more hospitable to the virus entering our bodies and and poorer weather keeps us indoors, school also begins and large numbers of children spend whole days sneezing on each other and refusing to wash their hands. It’s an annual recipe for disaster.

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Medicines and Vaccines Part 3: Is it the Water or the Vaccines?

In this last part of our medicines and vaccines series, we’re going to talk about how vaccines work and how we know they do. I know that vaccines are a contentious topic and I want to start by acknowledging that sometimes delaying or forgoing a vaccine is the evidence-based decision. If someone is pregnant, they shouldn’t have the varicella (chickenpox) vaccine. A child with leukemia probably shouldn’t get the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine. Those conditions which make vaccines temporarily or permanently unsafe for an individual are, thankfully, very, very rare. For most humans, following the CDC vaccine schedule is safe and will provide both them and their contacts with protection against those diseases.

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