The B.C. Centre for Disease Control is giving the green light that peak flu season has passed, but says it will take several weeks before the province is in the clear.
Risk of catching the influenza A virus is generally heightened through the winter season, which ends mid-March.
Symptoms often include chills, coughing, sneezing, and fatigue.
Since November, 90 per cent of the flu cases detected in B.C. patients were influenza A – the most common form.
More than 75 per cent of H1N1 flu cases, the most common strain, have been of children under 10 years old and non-elderly adults. Meanwhile, 67 per cent of all H3N2 cases involved elderly adults.
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