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Flu infects thousands in Massachusetts
Flu infects thousands in Massachusetts

Axios

time20-02-2025

  • Health
  • Axios

Flu infects thousands in Massachusetts

The worst flu season in 15 years has left hundreds of thousands of Americans hospitalized while straining physicians' offices and emergency departments. Why it matters: The virus is causing more severe complications and hitting young children especially hard. Driving the news: The U.S. is seeing a "high-severity" season, with estimates of at least 29 million cases, according to the latest Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. That's the highest number since the 2009-10 flu season. By the numbers: Massachusetts has reported more than 48,000 flu cases since October, per state data. At least 16,000 people nationwide have died from the flu as of Feb. 8, including 139 people from Massachusetts, per the CDC and state data. Threat level: The two predominant strains circulating are known to be more severe, especially in high-risk patients, says Carol McLay, president of the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology. "It's really clogging up our ERs and our outpatient facilities. And for the first time, we've seen cases of influenza that have surpassed COVID-19 in hospitalizations and deaths, since the COVID pandemic began," she said. The spread has raised concerns about the impact on children. At least 68 children have died from the flu, including six children in Massachusetts. Pediatric flu deaths hit a record 200 last year, and this season is shaping up to be worse, said Matthew Cook, president and CEO of the Children's Hospital Association. There have also been reports of a limited number of pediatric cases with serious neurological complications associated with the flu. Between the lines: This flu season may be made more severe because rates of seasonal flu vaccination have been falling in recent years for some groups, including children. Compounding the problem is the fact that this year's flu vaccine was a bit less effective (35%) than in a typical year (45%). People have also had much less exposure to flu in recent years amid the COVID-19 pandemic. "We think because people were social distancing and using masks for so long during COVID that we have reduced immunity to it," McLay said. What we're watching: Public health officials say they are increasingly flying blind since they can't interact with or get flu data from global sharing platforms FluNet and FluID after the Trump administration announced the U.S. exit from the World Health Organization. That also has ramifications for next year's vaccine, since the global body helps determine the composition of seasonal shots.

Drone program helps Burlington police rescue missing man
Drone program helps Burlington police rescue missing man

Yahoo

time14-02-2025

  • Yahoo

Drone program helps Burlington police rescue missing man

BURLINGTON, N.C. (WGHP) — A high-tech police drone helped Burlington officers find an 81-year-old man who had gone missing from his care facility last week. After more than an hour of searching, it wasn't officers on the ground who spotted him first. It was a heat signature detected by the drone's thermal imaging camera, leading officers to find him cold and disoriented in a creek. Police say the man, who had dementia, wandered away from a care facility. Officers began searching but had no clear direction of travel. That's when Matthew Cook, a drone pilot stationed at the department's Real Time Crime Center, deployed the drone, which quickly identified a heat signature in a creek bed about a block away. 'I was definitely stressed. I was definitely worried for his well-being, considering he had been missing for over an hour,' Cook said. 'Didn't know how long he'd been in the creek. It was fairly chilly out, and the water should be a lot colder than the air temperature. I was worried about hypothermia or any kind of injuries he may have sustained falling into the creek … I was glad that we could get him out.' While officers searched on foot, Cook was piloting the drone remotely using a modified Xbox controller from the Real Time Crime Center. Unlike most police drones, which must remain within an operator's line of sight, Burlington police have FAA approval to fly beyond visual range, allowing them to cover greater distances faster. 'I started scanning the area using the drone's thermal imaging,' Cook said. 'That's when I saw a heat signature near an embankment inside a creek. I zoomed in, confirmed it was a person, and it appeared to be the man we were looking for.' Even after officers arrived, they couldn't immediately see the man from the road. Cook, watching the live drone feed, guided them step by step until they located him, pulled him to safety and provided life-saving aid. The man was taken to a hospital for treatment and has since recovered. Currently, Cook is the department's only full-time drone pilot, and the drones operate five days a week. Police hope to expand to seven-day-a-week coverage by adding more pilots, making sure drones can respond to emergencies at all times. 'This technology is already making a difference,' Cook said. 'If we didn't have it, we might not have found him in time.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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