Winter cold and flu season is here. What to know about the sick surge
If it seems like you and everyone you know is sick right now, you are not imagining things.–
And yes, it may have something to do with the fact that many people have been wearing masks and avoiding others for the past two-plus years.
But that’s far from the whole story.
Researchers say there are a host of factors influencing the current misery, including chance, the specifics of the immune system and direct and indirect effects of the pandemic.
Why are so many people sick right now?
Viral outbreaks naturally vary, with some years worse than others, but COVID-19 certainly effected the natural patterns, said Dr. Ofer Levy, a pediatric infectious disease specialist who directs the Precision Vaccines Program at Boston Children’s Hospital.
“It seems very likely to me that everything that happened with the pandemic with travel, etc., has altered some of these patterns,” he said.
The peak of respiratory syncytial virus, more commonly known as RSV seems to have passed – though it’s not clear whether it arrived earlier than normal this year, as it did in 2021, when it peaked in the summer, or whether there will be another spike later in the season.
America’s flu outbreak also might simply be earlier this year rather than harsher, as happened in Australia over the summer, said Michael Osterholm, an epidemiologist who directs the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.
The flu may already have topped out in a few places, with hospitalizations falling last week from the week before.
Although the flu vaccine appears to be a good match for the circulating strains this year, the most commonly circulating strain, H3N2, is known to cause more serious disease.
And “vaccine fatigue” has kept flu vaccination rates below average this year. Only 26% of American adults and 42.5% of children had gotten a flu shot as of Dec. 9.
“The dynamics are really complicated, so it’s not surprising that we see something different this year,” said Al Ozonoff, a pediatric infectious disease researcher at Boston Children’s Hospital and the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT. “COVID really threw all of the standard relationships between viruses out of whack and it will take a little bit of time for them to recalibrate and fall into a stable equilibrium.”
Are we done with COVID-19?
Unfortunately, the pandemic isn’t over yet and it’s not clear when it will be.
“We’re seeing an unusual increase,” Osterholm said, with deaths from COVID-19 up 71% over the last three weeks and related hospital and ICU bed usage up 22%. “The bottom line is this is not done,” he said.
Although the virus continues to evolve, so far, researchers aren’t worried about the newer variants.
Booster shots are targeted to both the original virus and the BA.5 variant that circulated this year, but current variants aren’t that distant, said Dr. Jeremy Luban, who studies pathogens at the UMass Chan Medical School.
Otherwise healthy people who have been vaccinated or infected over the past year should have good protection against severe disease, he said. “There is no evidence that the virus is evolving away from this immune protection.”
Masking may be having a…
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