Seema Verma
Courtesy: Medicare
Getting vaccinated for the flu this fall is more important than ever. Not only will a flu shot help keep you and your family healthy, but it can reduce the strain on our healthcare system and keep hospital beds and other medical resources available for people with COVID-19.
This is no ordinary flu season; it’s a flu season amid a pandemic. With two dangerous viruses going around at once, we must protect our communities by getting the vaccine we already have: the flu vaccine.
A flu shot won’t protect you against COVID-19, but it has many other important benefits. Flu vaccines have been shown to reduce the risk of flu illness, hospitalization and death.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there’s no evidence that a flu vaccination increases your risk of getting sick from a coronavirus, like the one that causes COVID-19.
Those at high risk for flu complications include young children, pregnant women, people 65 years and older and people with certain chronic health conditions. Everyone six months old or older should get a yearly flu vaccine.
The CDC recommends getting vaccinated in September or October, but a flu shot anytime during the flu season can help protect you.
Flu season in North America rarely begins before early October and usually lasts from December to March. In the past two years, the peak activity has occurred around mid-to-late February. Your body needs two weeks after a shot to develop a protective response to the influenza virus, so your best bet is to get vaccinated before the flu rate begins to climb.
Workplaces and other settings that usually provide flu shots may not do so this season because of the challenges of maintaining social distancing. For more information on where you can get a flu vaccine, visit vaccinefinder.org.
When going to get a flu shot, please practice everyday preventive actions by following the CDC’s recommendations for running essential errands. Ask your doctor, pharmacist or health department if they are following the CDC’s vaccination pandemic guidance. Any vaccination location following CDC’s guidance should be a safe place for you to get a flu vaccine. For more information on CDC guidance and recommendations visit its website cdc.gov and enter keywords in the search box such as “essential errands” or “vaccination pandemic guidance.”
Medicare Part B covers one flu shot per flu season per beneficiary. You pay nothing for a flu shot if your doctor or other qualified healthcare provider accepts Medicare payment for giving the shot.
If you also have a child over six months old who qualifies for Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program, you may also qualify for a flu vaccination at no cost to you.
What’s the difference between the flu and COVID-19?
Influenza (the flu) and COVID-19 are both contagious respiratory illnesses, but they’re caused by different viruses. COVID-19 is caused by infection with a new coronavirus (called SARS-CoV-2), while the flu is caused by infection with influenza viruses. Because some symptoms of the flu and COVID-19 are similar, it may be hard to tell the difference between them based on symptoms alone, and testing may be needed to help confirm a diagnosis.
It is possible to have the flu and COVID-19 at the same time. Health experts are still studying how common this can be.
While it’s not possible to say with certainty what will happen in the fall and winter, the CDC believes it’s likely that flu viruses and the virus that causes COVID-19 will both be spreading.
The CDC has developed a test that will check for A and B type seasonal flu viruses and SARS CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 (cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/lab/multiplex.html). This test will be used by U.S. public health laboratories. Testing for these viruses at the same time will give public health officials important information about how the flu and COVID-19 are spreading and what preventive steps should be taken.
So please protect yourself, your family, and your community by getting a flu shot this fall.
Seema Verma is the administrator of the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.