Health & Fitness
Child Flu Vaccination Rates At Lowest In Years: What To Know In NJ
More than 200 U.S. children died of the flu last year, and experts are encouraging families to make sure kids in their home are protected.
NEW JERSEY— Only about 40 percent of kids in New Jersey have gotten seasonal influenza vaccinations, a worrisome national trend among health officials after a record 205 U.S. children — and likely many times more — died of the flu last year.
As of Nov. 30, just over a third (37 percent) of U.S. kids 17 and younger had gotten flu shots, compared with 43 percent at the same time last year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
In New Jersey, 54.7 percent of children had gotten flu shots by this time in 2023. The CDC recommends flu shots for everyone 6 months of age or older. Flu can be more dangerous than a common cold for children under 5, and especially so for kids under 2.
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The CDC expects hospitalizations for flu and COVID-19 to start increasing in the coming weeks, and says vaccinations are the best way to avoid severe illnesses. It takes about two weeks for the flu shot to take full effect.
Seasonal influenza rates are ticking up but remain low nationally, according to the CDC’s latest surveillance data. Activity is high in New Jersey, according to the CDC, and state Department of Health records show two children have died of the flu this year.
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The CDC said that while 200 pediatric deaths were confirmed for the 2023-2024 influenza season (a record for a non-pandemic flu season), as many as 724 children may have died of the flu. Not all children who die are tested for the flu, according to the government health agency.
Health officials said the low vaccination rates — only about 55 percent of kids ended up getting their shots last year — and an exceptionally long flu season combined to make it a particularly deadly one for children.
With adults included, about 28,000 people died from the flu during the 2023-2024 season. Flu vaccination rates among adults ticked up the first year of the pandemic, but have since declined. The last time vaccine coverage was this low among adults was the 2017-2018 season, according to the CDC.
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