The Louisville health department reports more than 700 flu cases since September.
No appointments are necessary.
Less than a week into April, the increase continues as there have been around 100 positive cases.
The Louisville Metro Department of Public Health and Wellness is only reporting 16 confirmed cases of the flu so far, which they say is much lower than normal.
No appointments are needed, but the shots will be given out on a first-come, first-served basis.
"The injection didn't hurt," American Sign Language Interpreter Virginia Moore said. "Not one bit."
Doctors expect the flu to start circulating as early as next month.
The pandemic has some families skipping scheduled immunizations, and Kentucky health advocates say that's a bad idea.
Health officials said the latest victim was older than 70 and had “underlying health issues.”
And globally, 105 children have died from the flu this year, the highest since the flu pandemic of 2009.