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3 min read National Report

Outbreak Outlook - National - Mar 31

The end of flu season is in sight

Outbreak Outlook - National - Mar 31

Respiratory Diseases

Influenza-like illness

Outpatient influenza-like illness (ILI) has dipped to 3.3%, edging closer to the 3% threshold that marks the end of flu season. I expect we’ll get there next week or the week after.

One thing to watch: an increasing proportion (now 6.4%) of specimens are influenza B. This pattern is typical for this time of year, but it does sometimes cause a late-season rise in outpatient ILI activity. Flu B is typically thought of milder compared to flu A, but having recently recovered myself, I have doubts!

All ages are seeing continuing declines in activity. Children ages 0 to 4 have finally dropped below the 10% mark for outpatient ILI, now at 9.3%. School-age children are seeing improvements as well, now at 5.4%. The older age groups are all below 3% and improving.

Most of the country is now registering low or minimal levels of flu activity—with a few exceptions. The Northeastern region is still experiencing high levels of outpatient activity in some places, as are Louisiana and Oregon. However, the Northeast’s emergency department visits for influenza are low and falling (see below).

I expect we will see improvements in the weeks ahead in the remaining hotspots. But for now, continued caution is warranted.


COVID-19

Covid-19 is stable. Wastewater activity is moderate in the South but has fallen to low levels in the other regions. Trends are pretty steady at this point, with no major increases or decreases evident in any region.

I do suspect that given the relatively quiet Covid-19 winter season, we are in for a significant summer wave. The timing is highly uncertain, but in previous years, June has been the earliest start. I'll keep an eye on things and let you know when activity begins to rise.

Trips to the emergency department continue to decline very slowly, down to 0.6% of all ED visits last week. Hospitalizations have declined to a low 2.3 hospitalizations per 100,000 people.


RSV & Other Bugs

RSV activity is low and declining, which is typical this time of year. We are in the off-season.

However, a bunch of those pesky bugs that cause cold- and flu-like symptoms are spreading widely or picking up steam right now.


Norovirus

Norovirus persists at very high levels, but is declining ever so slowly. Rates have decreased each week for the past week, landing at 17.5% test positivity this past week. Rates are highest in the Midwest and lowest in the Northeast.

Norovirus tends to persist well into the spring, so while relief is getting closer, it is likely that we still have several more weeks of elevated rates ahead of us.

Source: CDC

Food recalls

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

New:

Previously reported:


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