News from the FDA/CDC

Flu activity ticks up for second week in a row


 

Influenza activity increased for a second straight week after a 2-week drop and by one measure has topped the high reached in late December, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For the week ending Jan. 26, 2019, there were 16 states at level 10 on the CDC’s 1-10 scale of influenza-like illness (ILI) activity, compared with 12 states during the week ending Dec. 29. With another seven states at levels 8 and 9, that makes 23 in the high range for the week ending Jan. 26, again putting it above the 19 reported for Dec. 29, the CDC’s influenza division reported Feb. 1.

Influenza-like illness activity level, week ending Jan. 26, 2019

By another measure, however, that December peak in activity remains the seasonal high. The proportion of outpatient visits for ILI that week was 4.0%, compared with the 3.8% reported for Jan. 26. That’s up from 3.3% the week before and 3.1% the week before that, which in turn was the second week of a 2-week decline in activity in early January, CDC data show.

Two flu-related pediatric deaths were reported during the week ending Jan. 26, but both occurred the previous week. For the 2018-2019 flu season so far, a total of 24 pediatric flu deaths have been reported, the CDC said. At the same point in the 2017-2018 flu season, there had been 84 such deaths, according to the CDC’s Influenza-Associated Pediatric Mortality Surveillance System.

There were 143 overall flu-related deaths during the week of Jan. 19, which is the most recent week available. That is down from 189 the week before, but the Jan. 19 reporting is only 75% complete, data from the National Center for Health Statistics show.

Recommended Reading

Majority of influenza-related deaths among hospitalized patients occur after discharge
Clinician Reviews
Don’t give up on influenza vaccine
Clinician Reviews
U.S. influenza activity widespread to start 2018
Clinician Reviews
Common infections are potent risk factor for MI, stroke
Clinician Reviews
CDC: Trivalent adjuvanted influenza vaccine aIIV3 safe in elderly adults
Clinician Reviews
Vaccine protects against flu-related hospitalizations in pregnancy
Clinician Reviews
Full-dose quadrivalent flu vaccine shows increased efficacy in children
Clinician Reviews
Pregnant women commonly refuse the influenza vaccine
Clinician Reviews
New study determines factors that can send flu patients to the ICU
Clinician Reviews
Flu activity increases after 2 weeks of declines
Clinician Reviews

Related Articles