Current:Home > StocksFlu hangs on in US, fading in some areas and intensifying in others -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
Flu hangs on in US, fading in some areas and intensifying in others
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-09 13:14:43
NEW YORK (AP) — The flu virus is hanging on in the U.S., intensifying in some areas of the country after weeks of an apparent national decline.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data released Friday showed a continued national drop in flu hospitalizations, but other indicators were up — including the number of states with high or very high levels for respiratory illnesses.
“Nationally, we can say we’ve peaked, but on a regional level it varies,” said the CDC’s Alicia Budd. “A couple of regions haven’t peaked yet.”
Patient traffic has eased a bit in the Southeast and parts of the West Coast, but flu-like illnesses seem to be proliferating in the Midwest and have even rebounded a bit in some places. Last week, reports were at high levels in 23 states — up from 18 the week before, CDC officials said.
Flu generally peaks in the U.S. between December and February. National data suggests this season’s peak came around late December, but a second surge is always possible. That’s happened in other flu seasons, with the second peak often — but not always — lower than the first, Budd said.
So far, the season has been relatively typical, Budd said. According to CDC estimates, since the beginning of October, there have been at least 22 million illnesses, 250,000 hospitalizations, and 15,000 deaths from flu. The agency said 74 children have died of flu.
COVID-19 illnesses seem to have peaked at around he same time as flu. CDC data indicates coronavirus-caused hospitalizations haven’t hit the same levels they did at the same point during the last three winters. COVID-19 is putting more people in the hospital than flu, CDC data shows.
The national trends have played out in Chapel Hill, said Dr. David Weber, an infectious diseases expert at the University of North Carolina.
Weber is also medical director of infection prevention at UNC Medical Center, where about a month ago more than 1O0 of the hospital’s 1,000 beds were filled with people with COVID-19, flu or the respiratory virus RSV.
That’s not as bad as some previous winters — at one point during the pandemic, 250 beds were filled with COVID-19 patients. But it was bad enough that the hospital had to declare a capacity emergency so that it could temporarily bring some additional beds into use, Weber said.
Now, about 35 beds are filled with patients suffering from one of those viruses, most of them COVID-19, he added.
“I think in general it’s been a pretty typical year,” he said, adding that what’s normal has changed to include COVID-19, making everything a little busier than it was before the pandemic.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (34877)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Jazz legend Louis Armstrong's connection to Queens on full display at house museum in Corona
- Democratic Rep. Jared Golden reverses course, now in favor of assault weapons ban after Maine mass shootings
- Jewish and Muslim chaplains navigate US campus tensions and help students roiled by Israel-Hamas war
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Zillow, The Knot find more couples using wedding registries to ask for help buying a home
- Judge denies Bryan Kohberger's motion to dismiss indictment on grounds of error in grand jury instructions
- Youngkin administration says 3,400 voters removed from rolls in error, but nearly all now reinstated
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Andy Cohen Details Weird Interview With Britney Spears During Her Conservatorship
Ranking
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Probe finds ‘serious failings’ in way British politician Nigel Farage had his bank account closed
- Taylor Swift becomes a billionaire with new re-recording of 1989 album
- U2's free Zoo Station exhibit in Las Vegas recalls Zoo TV tour, offers 'something different'
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Rush hour earthquake jolts San Francisco, second in region in 10 days
- Power to the people? Only half have the right to propose and pass laws
- World Series 2023: How to watch and what to look for in Diamondbacks vs Rangers
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
2 Korn Ferry Tour golfers become latest professional athletes to be suspended for sports betting
Inmate suspected in prison attack on Kristin Smart’s killer previously murdered ‘I-5 Strangler’
Huntington Mayor Steve Williams files paperwork to raise money for West Virginia governor’s race
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
House Speaker Mike Johnson once referred to abortion as a holocaust
War-weary mothers, wives and children of Ukrainian soldiers demand a cap on military service time
NASA works to recover 4.5-billion-year-old asteroid sample from seven-year mission