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People who catch COVID with flu this winter ‘twice as likely to die’ – warns British expert

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For the first time in history, COVID-19 and flu are co-circulating this year, and people who contract both are twice as likely to die, early research reveals, raising fears of a “twindemic.”

Jenny Harries, CEO of the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), has cautioned that multiple flu viruses could emerge ahead of an uncertain winter.

On Sunday, she told Sky’s Trevor Phillips that what makes this year distinct is that COVID and flu are co-circulating – increasing the danger of serious sickness and death.

Asked how worried the public should be about flu this winter, she said:

“We should be worried about flu each winter. I think people still don’t realise it can be a fatal disease. Recent studies suggest that about 25% of us don’t actually understand that. On average, over the last five years, about 11,000 people have died with flu-related conditions.

“But I think the important thing about this winter is, we are likely to see flu, for the first time in any real numbers, co-circulating with COVID.”

She added: “So the risks of catching both together still remain. And if you do that, then early evidence suggests that you are twice as likely to die from having two together, than just having COVID alone.

“So I think it’s an uncertain winter ahead – that’s not a prediction it’s an uncertain feature – but we do know that flu cases have been lower in the previous year so immunity and the strain types are a little more uncertain.”

Ms Harries stated that it is probable that we would see “multi-strain flu” this winter, following the pandemic’s record-low flu cases.

She said there are four strains in the flu vaccine this year, “so we’ve got a pretty big array in our toolbox to hit whichever one becomes dominant, but it could be more than one this year, and people’s immunity will be lower”.

“The real trick here is to get vaccinated in both COVID and flu and continue to do those good hygiene behaviours that we’ve been practising all through COVID,” she said.

It comes as medics in the US encourage people to get both a COVID and flu shot to avoid a “twindemic” this winter.

Researchers from the Public Health Dynamics Laboratory said: “Given the limited spread of influenza in the general US population last year, our research suggests that the US could see a large epidemic of flu this season. Paired with the existing threat of the highly infectious Delta variant, this could result in a dangerous combination of infectious diseases, or a “twindemic”.

Professor Martin Marshall, council chair of the Royal College of GPs, also told Sky News thatif the flu virus has a number of different mutations, there is a risk that the vaccination might not be as effective as we would have expected in the past.

“Having said that, it’s still far away from the most effective thing that we have against flu and the last thing that we can cope with this year is a serious infection as well as a serious COVID infection, as well as other viral infections like RSV (Respiratory Syncytial Virus) in children,” he said.

On average, over the past five years, about 11,000 people have died with flu-related conditions, however, the Academy of Medical Scientists have predicted that up to 60,000 could die with flu this year.

While the elderly are more vulnerable to infection and hospitalisation, Ms Harries encourages young people to take up the vaccine.

“Our highest rates of COVID at the moment are in the 11 to 14-year-olds, though that does look to be stabilising now.

“And we need to bear in mind we are proactively preventing infections in young people by offering testing to try and reduce the likelihood of infection.”

On the dominance of the Delta variant globally, Ms Harries said it has led to other strains “becoming extinct”, but warned we still need to “stay alert”.

She later told The Andrew Marr Show on BBC One: “With the dominance of Delta, it does look as though many of the other variants which have been detected are becoming extinct, and a number of variants under investigation have risen slightly, we’ve seen cases, and they’ve become extinct.

“Now, while that holds, I think that’s right, but I don’t think it means we should be reducing our overall surveillance systems. We do need to stay alert to see.

“It’s still very early days of a new virus.”

She has also advised workers to avoid the traditional approach of “grinning and bearing illness” and instead stay away from the office if they are feeling unwell this winter.

On the subject of many people no longer working from home, she said it’s “likely we would see more cases over a short period of time” depending on what precautions people were taking like face coverings.

Image Credit: Getty

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