Though US flu activity is still low, markers such as test positivity and emergency department (ED) visits show more rises, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today in its latest weekly update.
In its monitoring of outpatient visits for flulike illness, Louisiana and the District of Columbia are at the high and very high level, respectively, with Georgia and Arizona at the lower tier of the high level. Most detections are influenza A, and subtyping last week at public health labs shows nearly 62% of influenza A viruses were H3N2 and 36% were 2009 H1N1. Nationally, outpatient visits are highest in the youngest children, followed by patients ages 5 to 24 years old.
No pediatric flu deaths were reported this week, keeping the season’s total at two.
Overall respiratory activity rises to moderate level
In its overall respiratory virus snapshot today, the CDC upgraded the overall situation from low to moderate, noting that flu activity continues to slowly increase and that it expects COVID activity to rise in the coming weeks. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) activity is moderate and continues to rise across most of the country, and illnesses caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae (“walking pneumonia”) remain elevated in young children.
In COVID-specific updates, the CDC said COVID activity remains low. Wastewater SARS-CoV-2 detections, considered an early indicator, remain low but are highest and gradually rising in the Midwest.
In its latest variant proportion estimates today, the CDC said levels of the XEC variant, now at 44%, continue to rise and are now outpacing the KP.3.1.1 variant, which had been dominant the last several months. XEC is a hybrid of two JN.1 variants.