Czech Republic on brink of nationwide flu epidemic as vaccine proves largely ineffective
The Czech Republic is on the brink of a nationwide flu epidemic with all 14 regions severely affected. This year’s strain of flu is reported to be exceptionally aggressive and due to a mutation of the virus it has made the vaccine largely ineffective. The Bruntál region moreover reports four cases of swine flu with one patient in critical condition.
Hospitals and old people’s homes in the worst affected regions have closed their doors to visitors and some schools have declared flu holidays in an effort to prevent the flu spreading further. Doctors predict that it will be another three weeks before it peaks and have appealed to the public for people to act responsibly and not expose others to the disease by refusing to take time off from work and even going to social events while they are still sick.
Bruntál moreover reports a more serious threat, the hospital in Krnov has already admitted four patients with the dreaded swine flu, one of whom is in critical condition. The first incidence of the swine flu was registered in the Czech Republic in 2009 and although the vaccine applied in recent years protects against this particular strain only a small segment of the population gets vaccinated. With the flu barely making an appearance in 2014 only around five percent of Czechs bothered to get vaccinated this year.