Seasonal flu | Pandemic flu |
---|---|
Outbreaks follow predictable seasonal patterns; occurs annually, usually in winter, in temperate climates. | Occurs rarely (three times in 20th century—last in 1968). |
Usually some immunity built up from previous exposure. | No previous exposure; little or no preexisting 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 complications. | Healthy children and adults, along with other seasonal high risk groups, may be at increased risk for serious complications. |
Health systems can usually meet public and patient needs. | Health systems may be overwhelmed. |
Vaccine developed based on circulating flu strains and available for annual flu season. | Vaccine probably would not be available in the early stages of a pandemic. |
Adequate supplies of antivirals usually available. | Effective antivirals may be in limited supply. |
Average U.S. deaths approximately 36,000/year. | Number of deaths could be quite high (e.g., U.S. 1918 death toll approximately 675,000). |
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) | Severe pandemic 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 economy. | Potential for severe impact on domestic and world economy. |
Source: http://www.pandemicflu.gov