KEY POINTS
  • Risks from the flu can linger after a patient recovers, public health officials warn.
  • There can be an increased risk of heart attack and stroke during recovery and an inability for some older people to recover completely, they say.
  • Officials would like to see higher vaccination rates after a record number of deaths and hospitalizations from the flu last season.
Simone Groper receives a flu shot at a Walgreens pharmacy on January 22, 2018 in San Francisco.

We all know flu is bad. But after a historically severe season, public health researchers are warning it's even worse than many think, leading to increased risk of heart attack and stroke during recovery and an inability for some older people to recover completely.

"If you needed more reason to be vaccinated, how about those two?" Dr. William Schaffner, medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, asked during a news conference Thursday.