Hardly any Canadians caught the flu last year What can we expect this fall
Flu season didnât really happen last year in Canada.
Measurements of flu stayed so low all year that it actually never passed the threshold the Public Health Agency of Canada normally uses to declare the start of the season â" which usually happens in the fall.
PHAC recorded 69 influenza detections in the 2020-21 flu season, in its final FluWatch report on Aug. 28. Normally, around 52,000 cases are detected.
Flu had a quiet year because we were busy dealing with COVID-19, experts say. But what will happen this upcoming year is a little harder to say.
Looking southUsually, Canada can look to the Southern Hemisphere for clues as to what might happen here, said Dr. Gerald Evans, an infectious disease specialist at Queenâs University and Kingston Health Sciences Centre. Because their winter is during Canadaâs summer, he said, it can provide a preview of whatâs to come.
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Australia is currently reporting âhistorically low levelsâ of influenza, according to a report on the governmentâs website. Itâs not alone: the World Health Organization notes in a recent report that, âGlobally, despite continued or even increased testing for influenza in some countries, influenza activity remained at lower levels than expected for this time of the year.â

This could be for two reasons, says Angela Crawley, a scientist at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute and professor at the University of Ottawa. First, itâs possible that despite what the WHO report suggests, people in some countries just arenât testing for, or reporting, flu infection like they used to.
âThe pandemic closed us in and so people were not going to the doctor for their flu-like symptoms,â she said. And if they did go, they might have gotten a COVID-19 test and if it turned out negative, just been sent home, she added.
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âThey probably had the flu, possibly, but that wasnât being tested,â Crawley said.
Second, she says, the measures used to contain COVID-19 probably contained the flu as well.
âThe personal protective equipment, like the wearing of the masks and the significant effect of social distancing may have had (an effect) on the number or the prevalence of the virus in the community,â she said.
Flu this yearSo what does this mean as Canada heads into the fall? Evans isnât sure.
âThe closest prediction I can get is that I think weâre going to see more numbers than we saw last year,â he said. âBut thatâs not a hard prediction to make since we saw record-low numbers last year.â
Read more: How health measures aimed at COVID-19 routed the flu in Canada this season
Continuing to wear masks and improved handwashing and other hygiene measures will probably âtemperâ this yearâs flu season, he said, and lifting these measures could conversely, bring flu back.
International travel could have an impact too, Evans noted.
âJust recently, Canada allowed for fully vaccinated individuals from many countries around the world to come to Canada,â he said.
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Normally, some flu gets brought to Canada by travelers from the Southern Hemisphere, he said, and this didnât happen last year because of worldwide travel restrictions.
âNow that travelâs back up, maybe that will allow for that introduction, and we will see cases now because of the importation,â he added.
Read more: Will Canadaâs COVID-19 babies face âimmunity debtâ? Hereâs what experts say
Crawley isnât sure what will happen with the flu this year in Canada either, but she is sure that Canadians should still get their flu shot when itâs available.
âImmunologically, the body does not like to be infected by more than one thing at a time. And in fact, pathogens take advantage of this. So if youâre down and out with one infection, a co-infection is more likely to cause you significant disease,â she said.
Put another way, you donât want to catch COVID-19 and the flu at the same time.

And more broadly, keeping flu numbers low can help ease the burden on emergency rooms while weâre dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic, Crawley added.
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âIf thereâs ever any breakthroughs with COVID-19, which puts pressure on hospitalizations, if we were to also have a pressure of flu on top of that, it could be devastating to the health-care sector,â she said.
© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
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