Mortality from pneumonia and risk conditions during influenza epidemics. High influenza morbidity during nonepidemic years
A. B. Sabin
Increases in mortality from pneumonia and high-risk chronic diseases have
not occurred during recent influenza epidemics. Excess mortality during the
past four influenza epidemics in the United States is attributable to
influenza reported as a primary cause of death, and the average excess was
only about 4,000 deaths per epidemic. Most clinical influenza severe enough
to cause hundreds of millions of days of bed disability during nonepidemic
as well as epidemic years is not caused by the influenza viruses. During
the nonepidemic year of 1973 to 1974, there were 61,841,000 episodes of
clinical influenza severe enough to put people to bed for an average of 3.6
days. In my judgment there is now no basis for recommending annual
administration of influenza vaccines to so-called high-risk groups and
persons over 64 years of age.