Each flu season is unique, but it is estimated that, on average, approximately 5% to 20% of U.S. residents get the flu, and more than 200,000 persons are hospitalized for flu-related complications each year. About 36,000 Americans die on average per year from the complications of flu.
Flu deaths cannot be accurately counted, only estimated. Most people who die from seasonal flu-related complications are not tested for flu, and many seasonal flu-related deaths occur one to two weeks after the initial infection.
Even when people are tested, most flu tests will only detect flu in the first week, and some commonly used tests are less sensitive than that and can provide false negative results even in the first week.
A person with the flu may develop a secondary bacterial co-infection (such as bacterial pneumonia), and influenza can aggravate an existing chronic illness (such as congestive heart failure or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), leading to the reported cause of death not mentioning flu.
States are not required to report individual seasonal flu cases or deaths of people older than 18 years of age to CDC, and seasonal influenza is infrequently listed on death certificates of people who die from flu-related complications.
On average, influenza causes between 12,000 and 61,000 deaths and results in around 140,000 to 810,000 hospitalizations each year in the United States. These numbers can vary depending on the severity of the flu season and the effectiveness of the flu vaccine.
about so many ppl i cant count In a typical year, the flu deaths in the United States are about 23,000. It can range from 3300 to 48,000 deaths depending upon the kind of flu and if it is an epidemic or not. To put it in perspective, last year 8 people in the US died of "West Nile Virus". So flu should be renamed "The East African Lung Disease"!
Which subtype or strain of the flu can be a factor. The exact kind of flu virus infection, such as H1N1/09, is not being tracked, nor tested and counted any longer now that the pandemic is over. Therefore, this information is no longer available. Due to a good preventive vaccination program, many people are resistant now to H1N1/09 and the numbers would be expected to be significantly lower than the counts during the pandemic. In the US approximately 36,000 people die of one of the seasonal variants of flu viruses each year. The related question linked to this Q&A about deaths from swine flu during the pandemic may give a frame of reference.
On average, influenza causes about 12,000 to 60,000 deaths and 140,000 to 810,000 hospitalizations in the United States each year. The numbers can vary depending on the severity of the flu season and the effectiveness of the vaccine.
19 Comfimed cases 0 Comfirmed deaths
It is not known how many deaths are caused by artichokes every year. It is possible that artichokes do not cause any deaths.
In normal years (without pandemics) the US has approximately 30 million cases of the flu each year and approximately 36,000 deaths. Worldwide the estimates for annual flu infections is between 340,000,000 to one billion. Of those, death is the result in 250,000 to 500,000 cases.
There are two confirmed deaths. One was a child visiting a Texas family from Mexico. The other was a 33 year old female, whom recently went through childbirth.
There have been 123 cases of confirmed or probable cases of Novel H1N1 Flu in Pennsylvania as of 29 May 2009and no deaths.
what country has had the most deaths from swine flu h1n1?
Average of 8 deaths a year in American football.
20 to 500 deaths a year