Think You Don’t Need A Flu Shot? Here Are 5 Reasons To Change Your Mind

There are a lot of misconceptions out there about the flu shot.

But following a winter in which more than 80,000 people died from flu-related illnesses in the U.S. — the highest death toll in more than 40 years — infectious disease experts are ramping up efforts to get the word out.

“Flu vaccinations save lives,” Surgeon General Jerome Adams told the crowd at an event to kick off flu vaccine awareness last week at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. “That’s why it’s so important for everyone 6 months and older to get a flu vaccine every year.”

But many Americans ignore this advice. The U.S. vaccination rate hovers at about 47 percent a year. This is far below the 70 percent target. And college students are among the least vaccinated.

“We have long known that college students are at a particularly high risk of getting and spreading flu viruses,” says Lisa Ipp, an adolescent medicine specialist at Weill Cornell Medicine. “Yet, on U.S. college campuses, flu vaccination rates remain strikingly low,” she writes in a 2017 post published by the National Foundation for Infectious Disease. The group sponsored a survey of college students and found that only between 8 and 39 percent of students get the vaccine.

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