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18 min read National Report

Outbreak Outlook: Week 6 of DIY disease surveillance

Flu, COVID-19 and RSV activity remain low but are building momentum

Outbreak Outlook: Week 6 of DIY disease surveillance

We’re now six weeks into the federal government shutdown, which means six weeks without the CDC’s respiratory virus surveillance dashboards. In their absence, Team Force of Infection has been visiting all 50 state health department websites plus D.C. to piece together the national picture of what’s circulating.

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

The overall story is fairly consistent across the country: COVID-19 remains low nearly everywhere, influenza activity is low but rising, and RSV is arriving, particularly in young children. But there are notable regional differences in timing and intensity.

COVID-19 remains low nearly everywhere, but I do believe we’ve hit (or will soon hit) an inflection point, where activity begins to rise. For now, most states report ED visits under 0.5%, with wastewater activity minimal.

Influenza remains minimal or low nationally but is beginning to wake up, with the clearest activity in the South and some early stirring elsewhere. Hawaii has entered flu season with moderate activity (ED visits at 2.1%, test positivity at 13%), and Arizona has surpassed its seasonal baseline. In the Northeast, New York saw lab-confirmed cases jump 49% in the past week. Most states, however, remain well below their seasonal baselines, but with ongoing increases.

RSV is showing the most regional variation. The South is leading, with Florida reporting about 7% of pediatric ED visits for RSV and test positivity exceeding 20% in children under 5. Other areas in the South, including Virginia, Georgia, Tennessee, and Texas are also seeing notable increases in young children. The Northeast and West show only early signs of activity. The Midwest remains quietest, with minimal activity and limited signs of increase.

Nationally, norovirus wastewater activity is moderate and increasing. This is being driven by the South — where norovirus has been moderate for a few weeks and continues to rise — and the Northeast, where activity has shot up over the past week to moderate levels. Wastewater activity remains low in the Midwest, with notable decreases in the past week, and it remains low and fairly stable in the 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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