Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Flu season worsens; 44 states report high activity

Medical visits as high as peak of 2017-18 season

- Mike Stobbe The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educationa­l Media Group. The AP is solely responsibl­e for content.

NEW YORK – The U.S. flu season keeps getting worse.

Health officials said Friday that 7.5% of outpatient medical visits last week were due to flu-like illnesses. That’s as high as the peak of the 2017-2018 flu season and higher than any season since.

The annual winter flu season usually doesn’t get going until December or January, but this one began early and has been complicate­d by the simultaneo­us spread of other viruses.

The measure of traffic in doctor’s offices is based on reports of symptoms like coughs and sore throats, not on lab-confirmed diagnoses. So it may include other respirator­y illnesses.

That makes it hard to compare to flu seasons from before the COVID-19 pandemic. Other years also didn’t have this year’s unusually strong wave of RSV, or respirator­y syncytial virus, a common cause of cold-like symptoms that can be serious for infants and the elderly.

Meanwhile, 44 states reported high or very high flu activity last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday.

That may not bode well for the near future. It’s likely there was more spread of respirator­y viruses during Thanksgivi­ng gatherings and at crowded airports, experts say.

The dominant flu strain so far is the kind typically associated with higher rates of hospitaliz­ations and deaths, particular­ly in people 65 and older.

The CDC estimates there have been at least 78,000 hospitaliz­ations and 4,500 deaths from flu so far this season. The deaths include at least 14 children.

Flu shots are recommende­d for nearly all Americans who are at least 6 months old.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/AP FILE ?? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates there have been at least 78,000 hospitaliz­ations and 4,500 deaths from flu so far this season. The deaths include at least 14 children.
MARK J. TERRILL/AP FILE The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates there have been at least 78,000 hospitaliz­ations and 4,500 deaths from flu so far this season. The deaths include at least 14 children.

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