Flu's "first kiss": Remembered forever

Compulsory mask, brought in to combat the flu epidemic after the World War, 1918-1919 / Sam Hood by State Library of New South Wales collection
License (according to Flickr): No known copyright restrictions
License (according to Flickr): No known copyright restrictions
An elderly person is administered a complimentary flu chance at New York-Presyterian Hospital's Allen Pavilion October 10, 2005 in New York City. New research recommends elderly people might already be secured against influenza through earlier exposures to the infection. / Getty A brand-new worldwide study of a century's worth of flu pandemics gives new meaning to that "first kiss." Influenza's first kiss, that is. "Your first kiss by the influenza virus produces original antigenic sins," the study's lead author, Dr. Thomas Reichert of the Entropy Research Institute in Lincoln, Mass. , tells CBS News. "We remember our first kiss forever.". The study, published Dec. 12 in the peer-reviewed BMC Medicine, considers all 5 influenza pandemics of the previous 100 years. It discovers a variable however often multitude of elderly %%PRO9%% were immune to influenza since their bodies had been contaminated with a comparable infection in the past.
Keywords:
flu Reichert influenza flu shots study coverage after 1980 with declining mortality rates in pandemic seasons people Dr. Thomas severe flu pandemic CBS News new research younger people previous flu viruses Dr. Thomas Reichert 2009 influenza pandemic flu pandemics free flu new global study kiss New York-Presyterian Hospital New York City Entropy Research Institute original antigenic sins peer-reviewed BMC Medicine Dr. Thomas Tallman elderly people flu shot emergency medicine physician influenza pandemics immunity elderly individuals influenza virus new meaning earlier exposures senior citizen Allen Pavilion lead author large number similar virus tremendous resource past experience American businesses important implications Cleveland Clinic age group factory risks repiratory diseases huge advantage Internal MedicinePeople:
Dr. Thomas Reichert
Overall Sentiment: -0.0322224
Relevance: 0.651163
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-0.0434055 | "If your factory risks being down for a year because so many workers are stricken, the immune elderly could be a tremendous resource," says Reichert. |
-0.0307228 | "If your factory risks being down for a year because so many workers are stricken, the immune elderly could be a tremendous resource," says Reichert. "Any employer who motivated his retirees could bring them in and only a few would get sick." |
-0.126329 | Reichert adds, "We can now see that mortality rates declined in younger people -- most of whom were not vaccinated -- but not at all in the elderly (an increasing fraction of whom were vaccinated)." |
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Dr. Thomas Tallman
Overall Sentiment: -0.107868
Relevance: 0.25936
Sentiment | Quote |
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-0.409122 | "The measure of how much immunity there is extremely unpredictable," said Tallman. |
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Additional Info:
HealthCondition: Influenza
Overall Sentiment: -0.114051
Relevance: 0.81971
Disambiguation: DiseaseOrMedicalCondition | CauseOfDeath | InfectiousDisease | RiskFactor | DiseaseReferences:
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Source URL: feeds.cbsnews.com
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Study found during 2009 influenza pandemic, adults over 62 were immune to disease -- trends also seen in previous pandemics
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Flu's "first kiss": Remembered forever
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- bmc medicine
- dpst coldflucenter
- elderly
- entropy
- influenza
- thomas reichert
- vaccine
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