"The coronavirus pandemic hasn’t
prompted most Americans to take influenza more seriously. Instead, more people
are likely to think of Covid the way they think of flu, experts say.
When Dr. Arnold Monto, a public
health researcher at the University of Michigan, lectures about influenza, he
starts by saying: “Flu is bad.”
“You don’t have to start a lecture
about hypertension by saying, ‘Hypertension is bad,’” he noted. It’s
self-evident.
But he has to convince his audiences
that flu is, in fact, bad.
In good years, it kills Americans in
the low tens of thousands and sickens many times more. Yet even in the time of
Covid, flu, the other respiratory killer caused by a virus, is underestimated.
Almost half of American adults don’t bother to get vaccinated against it.
Despite the ongoing Covid experience, researchers and historians don’t expect Americans’
attitudes toward flu to change much.
“Statistics on flu have been given
to the public; the public has been beaten to death with them for decades,” said
Dr. David Morens, a flu researcher and senior adviser to the director of the
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “And they just don’t
care.”
Some researchers and historians are
examining attitudes toward flu for clues about how Americans will deal with
Covid in the years to come. Will Covid, like flu, be a serious infectious disease
that the public shrugs off even as it continues to cause large numbers of
deaths each year?
Public attitudes toward flu,
historians and public health experts say, are revelatory — and illustrate the
paradoxical thinking about risks and diseases.
“It’s a story of how we get used to
living with the toll of a virus and don’t count it or see it or care or fear it
too much,” said Dr. Robert Aronowitz, a historian of science at the University
of Pennsylvania.
Americans have taken flu’s toll for
granted, Dr. Morens said, despite the fact that it’s “not so far behind heart
disease and cancer.”
“People get excited about acute
things, shocking things that happen all at once,” he said, citing Covid or
Ebola or, when the disease first emerged in the 1980s, AIDS.
Just over half of Americans get
vaccinated against influenza. And despite the fear of respiratory viruses that
Covid might have instilled, the percentage of all Americans vaccinated during
this latest flu season was about the same
as it was in the 2019-2020 season. It was only because of lockdowns and the
avoidance of crowds and other gatherings that flu nearly disappeared last year.
Rapid tests for flu are widely
available, but sick patients are not often tested. Antiviral drugs help if
taken soon after symptoms begin, but they are taken infrequently.
“I think, for the public, ‘flu’
means minor illness,” Dr. Monto said. But in bad flu years, hospitals are
filled, and elective surgeries are postponed. “People forget that,” he said.
In typical flu seasons, the virus
kills mostly older people and babies. But when new strains emerged, flu killed
an estimated 70,000 Americans in 1957 and an estimated 100,000 in 1968. More than half of those who died in those two pandemics were
under 65.
Yet flu almost never shows up on
death certificates, even when it is the proximate cause of death. And with
little testing, the federal government is forced to use statistical
manipulations to make estimates of infections and deaths that have wide error
bounds.
Even with those uncertainties, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that at least 24,000 to
36,000 Americans die of flu in an average year, and nearly 100,000 die in
really bad years. Most recently, in 2018, the year before the coronavirus
emerged, 380,000 Americans were hospitalized with flu and an estimated 28,000
died.
And that is just the tip of an
iceberg. As with Covid, many get a mild respiratory disease that they do not
recognize as flu or they get a symptomless flu. Unaware that they are infected,
they can then spread the virus.
In years like this one, when the flu
vaccine was at best minimally effective, many are skeptical about getting the
shots, which are widely available. Dr. Monto said there are efforts underway to
produce much better flu vaccines. But, he said, because Congress is not very
interested in seasonal flu, the National Institutes of Health had to tie
requests for funds for flu vaccine research to pandemic preparedness.
Historians say a nonchalance about
flu dates back to at least the 19th century.
Nancy Bristow, chair of the history
department at the University of Puget Sound, looked at newspaper articles and
other sources from the end of the 19th century and into the 20th century and
found “a perennial refusal to pay attention to flu as a serious illness.”
Flu was not frightening, Dr. Bristow
said, “because it was so familiar.” It was not even a reportable disease until
the 1918 pandemic.
People made light of the flu in
advertisements. One published in the Atlanta Constitution in 1890 said:
“Kerchew! Achew!-Hew!!! Most every one has the Grippe in some form, and we
would like to get Our Grip on your purchase of Furniture, Carpets, Mantels,
Etc.” (Flu was once referred to as Grip or Grippe — the French word for
influenza.)
An ad from the Golden Eagle Clothing
Company suggested a “doctor’s prescription” for a “poorly-clad boy” who “was
suffering from la grippe,” writing, “The doctor has influenz-ed his mother to
purchase one of those $2.50 all wool boys’ suits.”
Occasionally, public health
officials issued warnings. One that Dr. Bristow found
was published in 1916 in the Journal of the American Medical Association. It
said: “Don’t laugh at the grip. It is a deadly and dangerous thing.”
The laughter stopped in 1918, when a
new influenza strain caused a pandemic with a frightening mortality rate. But
when that pandemic ended, Dr. Bristow said, complacency resumed. People wanted
to put that awful period behind them.
Margaret O’Mara, a professor of
history at the University of Washington, said that even though masks were
common and mandatory during the pandemic, when she looked at photographs from
1920, nobody was wearing one.
Attitudes toward serious diseases
are so unpredictable and inconsistent, said Tom Ewing, a flu historian at
Virginia Tech.
“From the perspective of a
historian, this question of when diseases become noticeably significant really
varies,” he said.
“Why do we become fascinated and
obsessed by certain diseases that are seemingly out of proportion to their
effects?” Dr. Ewing asked.
He does not think today’s fears of
Covid will spill over into similar concern about flu. Instead, he said,
attitudes toward Covid will become more like attitudes toward flu.
“Historians hate to prognosticate
about the future,” Dr. Bristow said. But, she said, she sees a shift in views
about Covid taking place already.
President Biden told the nation in his State of the Union
address this month, “COVID-19 no longer need control our lives.”
“It’s fascinating,” Dr. Bristow
said. “We are in the process of being told how to live with something we were
told to be afraid of.”
He added, “We are watching the
culture trying to teach us not to be terrified.”"
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