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18 min read National Report

Flu and RSV begin to stir

Week 5 of the disease surveillance data gap

Flu and RSV begin to stir

November often marks a turning point for respiratory viruses. This is the month when RSV typically gains momentum in young children, when influenza begins circulating more widely, and when we get an early sense of what the season ahead might look like.

The federal government shutdown has now entered its fifth week, which means five weeks without the CDC’s respiratory virus surveillance dashboards. The timing is unfortunate, because we’re heading into winter without our usual national data resources, making it more difficult to understand what’s circulating. Team Force of Infection has been visiting all 50 state health department websites plus D.C. to compile the national picture. You’ll find detailed state-by-state information below.

If you’re just joining this newsletter, Force of Infection publishes a weekly report on seasonal respiratory virus activity, food recalls, and other public health updates. I share detailed data and analysis year-round, including state by state information during the winter months in regional editions.

Since the shutdown has made it harder to get high quality information, all reports will be free until the government reopens.


National Updates

Influenza activity remains low nationwide but is showing early signs of movement in several regions. Overall, influenza-like illness accounts for roughly 1-2% of outpatient and emergency department visits. However, young children are seeing early increases, which is typical at the start of the season. For instance, Indiana reports marked increases in the 0-4 age group (rising from 4.9% to 6.2% of ED visits). Michigan shows increases specifically in the under-18 population. I expect additional increases in the weeks ahead.

If you’ve been waiting until closer to flu season to get your shot, consider this your signal.

COVID-19 activity remains low across nearly all regions following the late summer wave. The virus accounts for less than 1% of emergency department visits in most states, with wastewater surveillance showing low or very low concentrations in the majority of monitoring sites. Hospitalizations have declined substantially from September peaks, and test positivity continues to trend downward. I expect activity to begin rising again as we head deeper into winter, but the good news is we are starting from a low baseline.

RSV is making the most definitive moves of the three respiratory viruses, with clear increases in children across multiple regions. Activity remains minimal in older adults and the general population, but among children under 5 there are clear increases in emergency department visits for RSV.

Stomach bugs (norovirus) is moderate nationally. Wastewater activity is moderate and rising steadily in the South. In contrast, wastewater activity remains low and quite stable in the Midwest, Northeast, and West.


Food Recalls

The following foods are being recalled because they are contaminated. Please check your cupboards and throw out any of these items:

New:


In Other News


State Data

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