"As of right now, H1N1 has nothing on the regular yearly flu season. If there is tested, proven, scientific data out there to prove that H1N1 is worth me worrying about, I'd like to see it."

First, it all about you. Getting immunized also helps protect others and while it may not be "worth [you] worrying about" just about everyone has friends and relatives and part of living in a civilized society is protecting others.

Second while the overall rate of death from H1N1 is not greater than the average seasonal flu it has some unique characteristics. In addition to attacking the normal risk group it also seems to disproportionately effect young adults and overweight people. Interestingly it doesn't seem to have as much effect as is typical of flu on people with HIV.

But that is just half, or a quarter of, the story. Because while while half of the people ending up in ICUs are in the expected vulnerable group for this strain; half are not. Half of those who end up in the ICU with it have no known risk factors. In a few cases people who appeared perfectly healthy and with no known risk factors essentially keeled over and died in a few hours. Too rare to track effectively the question as to how and why some people react this way remain unanswered.

Worth worrying about?

Depends on how much you value those around you, any sense of duty you may have toward the surrounding society ... and, perhaps, how much you value your life and health.