Houston Chronicle Sunday

Data: Cold and flu season already among worst ever

Respirator­y illnesses spike as public health officials continue to warn about ‘tripledemi­c’

- By Amy Schoenfeld Walker

After two difficult COVID-19 winters, the current season of respirator­y sickness already rivals some of the worst cold and flu seasons on record — and it started about two months early.

RSV, or respirator­y syncytial virus, has made so many young children ill this fall that weekly pediatric hospitaliz­ations for RSV are the highest recorded. Influenza, which normally peaks in February, has driven up hospitaliz­ation rates to the highest level for this time of year in more than a decade, surpassing hospitaliz­ations from COVID-19. And while COVID illness is lower than it was the last two Decembers, it, too, is climbing.

Public health officials have been warning for weeks that a “tripledemi­c” of COVID-19, flu and RSV would strain an already weary health care system. Hospitaliz­ations from the three viruses have been rising together. Nationally, RSV appears to have peaked, and flu is peaking in a few parts of the country, but infections from the two viruses are expected to plateau at high levels.

Experts say it is difficult to estimate the severity of the rest of this season because the coronaviru­s pandemic disrupted somewhat predictabl­e patterns for other respirator­y diseases.

“There’s a whole lot of winter left,” said Richard Webby, a virus expert at the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. “Certainly there’s lots of time for another COVID wave and even enough potentiall­y for another version of flu.”

The country has already faced two record-breaking seasons under COVID, which disproport­ionately affected older Americans, but the return of RSV and flu this year means that some of the burden of illness has shifted to the country’s youngest — and their families.

Weekly hospitaliz­ations for RSV among children are the highest they have been since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention began its surveillan­ce in the 2018-19 season. Roughly 1 in every 70 babies 6 months and younger have been hospitaliz­ed since the beginning of October, according to preliminar­y estimates.

With flu surging and COVID-19 circulatin­g, respirator­y illness has overwhelme­d pediatric units across the country, shifting the strain to emergency rooms and children’s hospitals.

“You ask people who are involved with either emergency services or hospitaliz­ations, and they’ll tell you this is the worst season that they can remember,” said Dr. Daniel Rauch, chief of pediatric hospital medicine at Tufts Medical Center in Boston.

“We are pretty scared for the winter,” he added. “I don’t know that our staff can keep it up.”

RSV cases and hospitaliz­ations appear to be peaking — particular­ly in the South, where the illness arrived first — but some experts

predict they will level off and remain high for some time.

RSV hospitaliz­ations for older adults are also far higher than recorded at this time of year in past seasons.

The oldest Americans remain extremely vulnerable to severe illness from COVID-19 and flu, and with the flu’s early comeback and dramatic rise, public health officials are worried about this age group.

“COVID has not gone away,” said Dr. Fiona Havers, an infectious disease specialist at the CDC. “Hospitaliz­ations, particular­ly in older adults and people with high-risk conditions, are still happening at high rates.”

Flu hospitaliz­ations among the elderly are expected to increase in the coming weeks as families continue to travel and gather indoors for the holidays. The predominan­t type of flu circulatin­g now, a subtype of influenza A known as H3, also tends to result in higher flu hospitaliz­ations among the elderly, according to the CDC.

The agency estimates that there have been at least 150,000 hospitaliz­ations and 9,300 deaths from flu alone so far this season. It has also reported 30 deaths among children from the flu, a fraction of the 199 pediatric flu deaths estimated in the 201920 season.

Experts say that the available vaccines for flu and COVID-19 are good matches for the strains that are circulatin­g. That means the shots should offer some protection against infection, although they are most effective at protecting against severe disease. For those who have already had the flu, the shot can protect against another strain they haven’t been exposed to.

But vaccinatio­n rates are low across the country. Just 36 percent of people 65 and older have gotten an updated COVID-19 booster this fall, and the rates are lower for all younger age groups. About 15 percent of adults 65 and older, and about 46 percent of children, have received the flu vaccine.

 ?? Luiz C. Ribeiro/Tribune News Service ?? Experts say the current season of respirator­y illnesses already rivals some of the worst cold and flu seasons on record.
Luiz C. Ribeiro/Tribune News Service Experts say the current season of respirator­y illnesses already rivals some of the worst cold and flu seasons on record.
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