
The Health Ministry has said more than 1.5 million people have been vaccinated so far, about 15.7% of the population, with roughly half of Israelis aged 65+ vaccinated.
By Shmuli Volkin, Jewish Breaking News
Israel is moving fast to blunt an unusually aggressive flu season, rushing in roughly 485,000 additional vaccine doses that landed at Ben Gurion Airport and are slated for rapid distribution to the country’s health funds.
The Health Ministry is urging Israelis to get vaccinated as soon as possible, stressing that while the shot won’t block every infection, it “significantly reduces the risk of serious illness and complications” and is available free of charge through health insurance providers.
Hospitals are already feeling the pressure. Recent Health Ministry data cited by Israeli and international outlets points to a sharp rise in influenza A cases, with hundreds hospitalized and dozens in intensive care, including children.
The most alarming signal is the toll on kids: reporting windows differ, but multiple outlets citing the Health Ministry say four to five children have died from influenza in recent weeks, with most of the fatalities among unvaccinated children.
Why is this season hitting harder?
Health officials are linking the early surge to a new sub-variant of influenza A(H3N2), sometimes referenced as the “K” subvariant, which appears to be spreading earlier than expected and driving higher-than-average morbidity.
Vaccination is climbing, but coverage remains far from where health leaders want it.
The Health Ministry has said more than 1.5 million people have been vaccinated so far, about 15.7% of the population, with roughly half of Israelis aged 65+ vaccinated.
Behind the scenes, Israel is also trying to shield its most vulnerable settings.
Alongside the incoming vaccine supply, the Health Ministry has launched a targeted protection operation in nursing homes and geriatric institutions, distributing kits to 255 facilities with items that include masks, diagnostic tests, vaccines, and Tamiflu.
Mask guidance is back, but narrowly tailored: the ministry recommends that at-risk populations consider wearing masks in closed spaces and crowded public places, and it also advises masks for medical staff and visitors in geriatric institutions to protect residents.
The message from Israel’s health leadership is blunt: treat influenza like the serious respiratory threat it can become, especially for infants, seniors, pregnant women, and people with chronic illnesses.
The country’s rapid vaccine procurement and nursing-home protection push reflects a system trying to stay ahead of a wave before it overwhelms wards already strained by winter viruses.
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