What is a Flu Epidemic?
Although the word “epidemic” sounds scary, it isn’t uncommon for the flu to reach epidemic levels. In fact, seasonal flu epidemics happen almost every year.
An epidemic is a rise in the number of cases of disease beyond what is normally expected in a specific geographic area. The increase in cases is sudden, the disease stays contained to a specific geographic area—like a city or region—and doesn’t spread across countries and continents. It may not even spread across an entire state.
Each week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) compares the percentage of flu-related deaths to an epidemic threshold value. If this number exceeds the threshold, the CDC declares the flu to be at epidemic levels. When the percentage of flu deaths drops below the threshold, the epidemic is over.
What is a Flu Pandemic?
Flu pandemics happen when a new strain of the flu A virus appears. A new viral strain quickly spreads because most people aren’t immune and a vaccine that offers immediate protection isn’t widely available. As a result, it spreads across several countries around the world, causing widespread illness.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says the following conditions can lead to a flu pandemic:
The virus is able to infect humansThe virus is able to spread easily from human to humanThe virus must cause serious illness or death in humans
While flu pandemics are rare, they do occur periodically. There have been four flu pandemics since the beginning of the 20th century, the most severe being the Spanish flu of 1918:
1918 Spanish flu pandemic: Killed approximately 675,000 in the U. S. 1957-1958 Asian flu pandemic: Caused an estimated 116,000 U. S. deaths1968 Hong Kong flu pandemic: Linked to around 100,000 deaths in the U. S. 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic: Responsible for an estimated 12,469 U. S. deaths
Just like with an epidemic, a flu pandemic is over when the number of cases is no longer above a defined threshold. However, the virus can continue to circulate in humans even after the pandemic is over. Take the 2009 H1N1 flu pandemic: Even though WHO declared an end to this pandemic in 2010, H1N1 continues to circulate as a seasonal flu virus, causing illness and hospitalization worldwide every year.
Differences Between a Flu Epidemic and a Flu Pandemic
A seasonal flu epidemic is usually caused by an existing flu strain that increases in a certain geographic area. A pandemic flu virus is a new flu strain that hasn’t circulated for a long time, if ever. Because of this, humans have little to no immunity against the virus and it spreads quickly and globally, causing widespread sickness and deaths.
A Word From Verywell
Flu vaccines are the best way to protect people during flu epidemics and pandemics. Seasonal flu vaccines are available every year before the flu season. These vaccines only protect against epidemic-causing flu viruses. Vaccines against pandemic flu strains typically aren’t available in the early stages of a pandemic.
Regardless of the epidemic status, the flu is a serious illness that everyone should take steps to avoid. By properly washing your hands, covering your nose and mouth when coughing or sneezing, and disinfecting hard surfaces, you can keep yourself and your family healthy throughout the flu season.