The Corner Cubicle: Don’t Be a Josh – Get a Flu Shot!

Jan. 7, 2014
Alternate title: “I’m Not Joshin’ – Get a Flu Shot!”

I’ll let you in on a little secret about blogging/column writing: It’s not always easy coming up with something to write about on a weekly or even monthly basis. This time around, though, the inspiration came to me like a punch to the gut. It’s pretty straightforward: Get a flu shot.

I wrote much of this column (in my head) while flopping and flailing in bed on a Thursday afternoon in December, a sweaty mess, trying to muster up the energy to go downstairs and supplicate to the porcelain god. At the time that I imagined this piece, my multiyear no-vomiting streak was still in tact, but I already had resigned myself to the fact that the streak was in serious jeopardy (and yes, the streak came to an end that afternoon).

Irony of ironies, as I was in the midst of assembling some best practices for coping with cold and flu season, I came down with the flu.

When you’re in a hospital or a doctor’s office, sometimes the nurse will ask you if you’re experiencing any pain, and if so, can you quantify it with a number between 1 and 10. If someone were to have asked me that question during my recent bout with the flu, I might have said, “I feel like someone beat me all over my body with a bag of quarters.” Or: “I feel like a bus ran over me, and then the driver stopped the bus and put it in reverse so he could run over me again.”

Well wouldn’t you know it that the CDC’s top recommendation to maximize your chances of staying healthy during cold and flu season is to get a flu vaccination? I mean, they aren’t the least bit ambivalent out it: They flat-out urge people (especially vulnerable populations such as the elderly) to get a flu shot.

And wouldn’t you know it that I decided I didn’t need a flu shot this year? This despite the fact that I was in the midst of writing an article that, among other things, emphasizes the importance of employees getting flu shots. (“Do as I say, not as I do,” right?)

Why? Well I made it through the last cold and flu season without much of a problem (just a few instances of having the sniffles for a day or two). And maybe I’ve developed a false confidence about my health in the past year or so. During that time, I’ve made a conscious effort to develop healthy lifestyle habits such as yoga, meditation, eating more fruits and vegetables, drinking plenty of water – those best practices that seem to be recommended in every article about wellness.

To make a long story short, I guess I thought that I was above all of this flu-shot stuff. Sure, I’ll recommend it to my readers, as sort of a public service, but I don’t need it, right?

I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Yes, good hygiene is absolutely important. Thanks to my OCD tendencies, I never go anywhere without hand sanitizer (especially airports and airplanes), and I like to think that’s helped me stay well. The hands are a key delivery mechanism for pathogens, because we touch our faces so much.

But you can’t kill every germ. And while the CDC considers hand hygiene an important prevention strategy, there’s a reason that the agency says, in no uncertain terms: “The best way to prevent the flu is by getting vaccinated each year.” (I didn’t add the emphasis.)

The CDC, of course, acknowledges that the effectiveness of flu shots varies from season to season and from person to person. Getting a flu shot doesn’t guarantee that you’ll avoid contracting the flu. But it certainly gives you far better odds of getting through cold and flu season in one piece.

Consider that the agency, in a recent report, estimated that flu vaccinations kept 80,000 people out of the hospital last year and prevented 6.6 million influenza-associated illnesses. Yet the agency also noted that only 40 percent of Americans 6 months and older had reported getting a flu shot as of early November. Regrettably, that 40 percent included me.

Don’t learn your lesson the hard way (like I did). Don’t be a Josh – get a flu shot!

How’s that for a new CDC slogan?

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