The Morning Call

US flu season gets off to a fast start as other viruses spread

- By Mike Stobbe and Don Babwin

NEW YORK — The U.S. flu season is off to an unusually fast start, adding to an autumn mix of viruses that have been filling hospitals and doctor waiting rooms.

Reports of flu are already high in 17 states, and the hospitaliz­ation rate hasn’t been this high this early since the 2009 swine flu pandemic, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

So far, there have been an estimated 730 flu deaths, including at least two children.

The winter flu season usually flu ramps up in December or January.

“We are seeing more cases than we would expect at this time,” the CDC’s Dr. Jose Romero said Friday.

A busy flu season is not unexpected. The nation saw two mild seasons during the pandemic, and experts have worried that flu might come back strong as a COVID-19weary public has moved away from masks and other measures that tamp the spread of respirator­y viruses.

Community Montessori school in New Albany, Indiana, switched to virtual teaching at the end of the week because so many students were out sick with the flu. Beginning Monday, the school’s 500 students will go back to wearing masks.

“Everybody just wants kids on campus, that is for sure,” said the school’s director, Burke Fondren. “We will do what we need to do.”

There may be some good news: COVID-19 cases have been trending downward and leveled off in the last three weeks, Romero said.

And in a few parts of the country, health officials think they may be seeing early signs that a wave of another respirator­y virus may be starting to wane. RSV, or respirator­y syncytial virus, is a common cause in kids of coldlike symptoms such as runny nose, cough and fever.

While RSV continues to rise nationally, preliminar­y data suggest a decline in the Southeast, Southwest, and in an area that includes Rocky Mountain states and the Dakotas, CDC officials said.

This season, there have been an estimated 1.6 million flu illnesses and 13,000 hospitaliz­ations. Flu activity is most intense in some areas where RSV is fading, according to CDC data.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL/AP ?? A flu vaccine dose is prepared on Oct. 28 at a community resource center in Lynwood, Calif.
MARK J. TERRILL/AP A flu vaccine dose is prepared on Oct. 28 at a community resource center in Lynwood, Calif.

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