Chattanooga Times Free Press

Virus cases high, health officer says

- BY ALANDER ROCHA

The Alabama Department of Public Health said respirator­y virus cases hit a seasonal high in the first week of January but remain manageable.

“We are still in the midst of respirator­y virus season. The flu numbers look a little bit better now in Alabama over the past week,” State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris said to state committee board members of the Public Health Department on Thursday.

Harris said he’s most concerned with RSV numbers, which have declined from a peak late last year but remain elevated in Alabama and across the nation.

RSV often gives people mild cold-like symptoms. Most recover within a week or two, but the infection can be severe, especially for infants and older adults.

According to data reported Jan. 13, the percentage of RSV tests that detected the virus via an antigen, or rapid, test was 6.3%, significan­tly down from a high of 20.4% reported in November.

“The most issues with hospitals across the country, particular­ly in the Southeast, have to do with pediatric beds. That’s more of an issue than adult beds,” Harris said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends the new RSV vaccine for adults over 60 and children under 2 years old, as well as people who are 32-36 weeks pregnant to protect their babies from severe RSV. High risk children getting a first dose of the vaccine should get a second a year later.

Besides the RSV vaccine, there is a monoclonal treatment for those who get infected.

The CDC said numbers for respirator­y virus activity levels — measuring illnesses with flu-like symptoms, including COVID-19 — dropped from Level 13, the highest level, the week of Jan. 1 to Level 12 the week of Jan. 8. Alabama experience­d similar levels of reported respirator­y virus activity in November 2022.

Only 8% of Alabamians are upto-date on their COVID-19 vaccines, meaning they received the bivalent COVID-19 booster, according to the CDC. The national average is about 17%, according to CDC’s final report on vaccinatio­n status published in October.

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