Short rains will come with pneumonia, flu and asthma

Health & Science
By Ayoki Onyango | Oct 17, 2022
Flu can stay for weeks and if not prevented through vaccination and can lead to serious conditions like pneumonia. [iStockphoto]

Many Kenyans are not aware that there is a vaccine for flu that offers protection for a year.

Weather patterns, affected by climate change in Kenya and other parts of the world, come with severe infections from communicable diseases.

The short rains that have been predicted for November often come with flu, pneumonia, cholera, and typhoid, which are both air and water-borne diseases.

Areas likely to suffer flu due to the short rains and attendant cold weather include Nairobi, Central Kenya, and highland areas of the Rift Valley and western Kenya.

The medics are therefore calling for control mechanisms including vaccinations/immunization.

Dr Mohan Lumba, a paediatrician, and medical consultant says "the changing weather will result in cases of respiratory diseases like asthma, pneumonia, flu, and common cold which are expected to be on the rise due to coldness."

Cold weather also causes sore throats, coughs, aches, pains, tiredness, and headaches.

"So, if you wake up sneezing, coughing, feeling all achy, feverish and like you cannot move a muscle, you may have caught a common cold and even worse, it could be the flu," explains Dr Evans Amukoye, a respiratory disease researcher at Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI).

Dr Amukoye notes that most people confuse flu with common cold, yet the two are different since common cold is a milder respiratory illness.

While common cold symptoms can make one feel bad for a few days, flu can stay for weeks and if not prevented through vaccination and can lead to serious conditions like pneumonia.

A 2019 study on flu at the Department of Medical Physiology, University of Nairobi, which was published in the Pan Africa Medical Journal in 2020, revealed a close link with pneumonia-which affected mostly children aged below five and the elderly aged 65 years and above.

Dr Lumba lists other risk groups as healthcare workers, refugees in camps, prisoners, and residents of informal settlements.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) thus recommends vaccination as the best option against flu.

Share this story
Shujaa name squad for Hong Kong SVNS World Series Championship
Kenya 7s Technical Bench has unveiled the Shujaa squad for the first leg of the HSBC World Championship opener in Hong Kong, set for April 17-19, 2026.
Stage set for Football Mums tournament in Kibera
Preparations are in top gear ahead of the third edition of the Football Mums Tournament slated for April 19, 2026, at Kibera DC Grounds, Nairobi.
School games: St Anthony's Kitale to renew rivalry with Kamusinga in hockey finals
Rift Valley giants St Anthony’s Boys Kitale will renew their rivalry with Western Region giants Friends School Kamusinga in the Brookside National Secondary School hockey finals.
School games: It's Kamusinga vs JOGA, Musingu vs JOBO in handball finals
Moi Girls Kamusinga will face off with St Joseph Girls Kitale (JOGA) in the finals of the 2026 Brookside National Secondary School handball finals in Kisumu on Saturday.
School games: Butere Girls to face Kaya Tiwi in basketball finals
Butere Girls will renew rivalry with Kaya Tiwi in the finals of the Brookside National Secondary School basketball girl’s finals after cruising through the semifinals
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS