H1N1 flu has killed 10,000 Americans since April

"What we've seen for months is this is a flu that is much harder on younger people," Dr. Thomas Frieden, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told a media briefing.
He estimated that between April and November 14 there had been nearly 50 million cases of H1N1 influenza in the United States, mostly in younger adults and children. That was more than double the CDC's estimate in November of 22 million Americans.
Frieden said more than 200,000 Americans had been hospitalized -- about the same number who are affected by seasonal flu in an entire year.
"About 15 percent of the entire country has been infected with H1N1 influenza, or about one in six people," Frieden told a media briefing.
"That still leaves most people not having been infected and still remaining susceptible to H1N1 influenza," he said.
He said supplies of H1N1 vaccine had continued to improve, and some 85 million doses of the vaccine had been made available for distribution so far, with 12 million more doses added this week.
That is up from 73 million doses a week ago -- but still far fewer than had been hoped for by this week; Kazinform cites China Daily.
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