Respiratory virus activity from flu, COVID-19, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) continues to decline across most of the country, with only two jurisdictions—North Dakota and Wyoming—reporting high activity, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said in updates today.
In its weekly FluView update, the CDC said key markers such as test positivity continue to fall, and only one region is above its regional baseline for outpatient visits for flulike illness: the northeast. All three viruses are circulating, with influenza A making up 62.4% of samples at public health labs. Of subtyped influenza A samples, about half were 2009 H1N1, and half were H3N2.
Hospitalizations continue to decline, but overall deaths were up slightly. The CDC received reports of 4 more pediatric flu deaths, raising the season's total to 142.
COVID wastewater detections minimal, highest in the Midwest
For COVID, the CDC's latest data updates show more declines for both severity indicators (hospitalizations and deaths) and early indicators (test positivity and emergency department visits). Wastewater SARS-CoV-2 detections, another early indicator, have declined to the minimal level and are currently highest in the Midwest.
In its weekly respiratory virus snapshot, the CDC said for RSV, all 10 regions are below the 3% epidemic threshold, suggesting that the season is ending. RSV hospitalizations remain low for all age-groups.