Canada News
Why so many people in Canada seem to be sick right now
By Amina Zafar, CBC News, RCI

That suggests more people are sick with the flu and landing in the hospital compared to years past. (Pexels Photo)
Influenza widespread in many parts of the country, Public Health Agency of Canada says
You may be seeing and hearing a lot of people coughing and sneezing around you right now.
Why? Well, Canada’s winter respiratory virus season (new window) got off a late start and now it is in full swing, officials say. That suggests more people are sick with the flu and landing in the hospital compared to years past.
We haven’t seen this amount of influenza cases as well as severe illness in almost a decade,
said Dr. Karim Ali, medical director for infection prevention and control and head of services for infectious diseases at Niagara Health (new window) in Ontario.
In Quebec, Dr. Jesse Papenburg, an infectious disease specialist at Montreal Children’s Hospital and an associate professor of pediatrics at McGill University, says about one out of every three tests sent for influenza in the province currently comes back positive for flu, which reflects the intensity of this flu season.
I think this is influenza doing what influenza does, striking in the middle of winter with an intense epidemic,
said Papenburg.
For several years up until 2023, he says about 10 to 20 per cent of children admitted to pediatric hospitals for influenza needed intensive care. Back in 2006 (new window), Canadian researchers reported about 12 per cent of children hospitalized with influenza were admitted to intensive care. This season’s data isn’t yet broken down.
Papenburg also notes that the flu vaccine helps protect children from being infected. My recommendations for families is, it’s not too late to get vaccinated.
On Friday, the Public Health Agency of Canada noted flu activity was “widespread” (new window) in British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec. COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) were decreasing (new window), PHAC said. In Canada, flu season typically lasts from November to April.
Later peak, more illness?
Dawn Bowdish, a professor of medicine at Hamilton’s McMaster University, pointed to national goals of vaccinating 80 per cent of vulnerable people (new window), such as the youngest and oldest. The influenza vaccine uptake goal is meant to protect those at high risk of infection and complications from the respiratory illness, according to the Public Health Agency of Canada (new window).
WATCH | Keeping kids safe with respiratory illnesses on the rise:
How to keep children safe amid high cases of respiratory illness
B.C. Children’s Hospital says it is seeing an uptick in visits to the ER this month, and officials are asking parents with sick kids to take preliminary measures before a hospital visit. CBC medical columnist Dr. Melissa Lem joins us to discuss options parents can consider to avoid a visit to the hospital.
Bowdish, the executive director of the Firestone Institute for Respiratory Health, says Canada has never hit that target. The good news is that in people over 65, we’re starting to creep up over 70 per cent,
she said.
Influenza vaccines are also important during pregnancy, she noted, to prevent bad outcomes, as well as to pass on protection from the mother to baby to keep newborns out of the hospital.
Other priority groups for flu shots include those who have asthma, people with heart conditions, people who are immunocompromised and anyone planning to receive chemotherapy for cancer.
Bowdish says that as with COVID-19 vaccinations, waning immunity from fall flu shots could be playing a role now.
When the peak comes later, like February, most people are past that three months of protection, which could explain why we’re seeing so many admissions this year,
she said.
WATCH | Why coughs seem to last:
Lingering cough? Patience is often the best medicine, doctors say
A new report from three physicians says the persistent post-infectious cough that so many Canadians are experiencing this winter will most often be resolved with time.
Nationally, influenza vaccination coverage (new window) in 2023-2024 was 42 per cent, about the same as the previous season. The findings were published in December by the Public Health Agency of Canada.
Watch for transition season
Dr. Danuta Skowronski heads up epidemiology for influenza at BC Centre for Disease Control and leads an annual study into influenza vaccine effectiveness.
Skowronski says her team has found that the vaccine reduces the risk of flu illnesses that require a medical visit by about half
through mid-January.
Her team’s findings (new window) based on data from British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec as well as the National Microbiology Laboratory, were published Jan. 30 in the medical journal Eurosurveillance (new window).
Skowronski says, a mix of two Influenza A subtypes, H1 and H3, are circulating this season.
Last year, it was predominantly an H1 season for us, so to see a second season in a row of H1 is a little unusual,
she said. But to have both H1 and H3 suggests to me that this may be a transition season and we should be watching for emergence of a kind of a dominant variant that may take off.
On top of vaccination, Skowronski suggested people layer various precautions to avoid infection and illness. For instance, if a grandchild has a flu-like illness then it may be best to avoid visiting. Or a person at high-risk of complications may want to consider getting a prescription for an antiviral medication early on in their illness.
She says her team will continue to monitor flu vaccine effectiveness closely over the rest of the season because a small proportion of viruses tested showed variants that may influence deliberations about the composition of influenza vaccines for the Northern Hemisphere at the World Health Organization’s meeting (new window) in London later this month.
This article is republished from RCI.
