JASON KENDLER, MD: That's correct.
DAVID MARKS, MD: Tell me a little bit about this type of virus.
JASON KENDLER, MD: The influenza virus is an RNA virus.
DAVID MARKS, MD: What does that mean?
JASON KENDLER, MD: It means that is the type of genetic material that it has. All viruses need to replicate themselves in order to cause infections and to spread infection from one host to another. The influenza virus in particular is spread by airborne spread, so that a patient who is infected with influenza will cough or sneeze, and can therefore transmit this to another host.
DAVID MARKS, MD: It comes up kind of cyclically during different seasons. Is it around all the time?
ADAM STRACHER, MD: Actually, here in our continent, and in this environment, it's around mostly in the wintertime. Actually between the late fall, around November, until March or April, basically in the winter. And that's, in the Southern climates, it's actually the opposite. It's there in their winter, which is opposite to ours. And in tropical climates, it is actually around all the time.
DAVID MARKS, MD: Why is it here in the winter?
ADAM STRACHER, MD: It's a little unclear. It probably has to do partly with crowding. People are all together often in the winter time, and so the virus is much more easily able to spread because of that. And it also probably lives better in cold, dry environments than it does in the summer time, in more humid environments.