CDC reports 14 more pediatric flu deaths, 115 total​

CDC reports 14 more pediatric flu deaths, 115 total​

CDC reports 14 more pediatric flu deaths, 115 total​

 

gorodenkoff / iStock

This week 14 US children were confirmed to have died of influenza, up from 11 in each of the previous two weeks, as overall flu activity remained elevated but declined in most parts of the country, with influenza A decreasing and influenza B trends varying by region, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported today in its FluView update for the week ending March 14. 

The new flu-related deaths in children bring the season’s total to 115, compared with 293 for all of last season.

Test positivity for flu was 12.7% last week, down from 15.3% the previous week and 15.8% the week before. Health care visits for respiratory illnesses dropped to 3.3% this week, down from 3.7% the previous week, and 7,348 people were hospitalized for flu, compared with 9,130 the week before. As a percentage of all deaths, flu deaths remained at 0.5% over the past two weeks. 

FluSurv-NET data show the cumulative influenza-associated hospitalization rate is the third highest since 2010-11, with children younger experiencing the second-highest rate for that age-group over the same period. 

Influenza A(H3N2) remains the predominant strain this season, with 92.7% of 1,754 collected virus samples that underwent additional genetic testing belonging to subclade K. 

The CDC estimates at least 28 million illnesses, 360,000 hospitalizations, and 22,000 deaths related to flu have occurred this season.

Influenza severity is currently classified as high in children and moderate in adults, including older adults.

COVID decreasing; RSV remains elevated

In a separate respiratory virus update today, the CDC reports that rates of health care visits for acute respiratory illness are low overall.

COVID-19 activity is decreasing in most areas across the country but remains elevated in some regions. Wastewater testing, which can be used to detect infectious diseases circulating in a community, shows very high levels in Michigan and Mississippi and high levels in the Upper Midwest and parts of the Mid-Atlantic. 

Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) activity remains elevated but has peaked in many areas, with national wastewater testing showing moderate levels across most of the country and very high levels in the Upper Midwest and Nevada.

Photo: CDC 

  • The University of Kent meningitis outbreak in Canterbury, England, has expanded to 29 confirmed or probable infections, prompting authorities to offer the meningitis B vaccine to the roughly 5,000 students previously offered preventive antibiotics, the government said in a news release yesterday. A case has also been confirmed at nearby Canterbury Christ Church University, per media reports. Two students have died. The outbreak is linked to the Club Chemistry nightclub, which temporarily closed after two staff members were hospitalized. Canterbury is located in southeast England. Antibiotics and vaccination have also been offered to students in years 12 and 13 in schools and in colleges in Kent where confirmed or probable cases are identified, as well as to nightclub visitors.
  • More than 1,000 confirmed and possible cases of shigellosis and other gastrointestinal infections have been diagnosed in travelers returning to Europe, the United Kingdom, and the United States from Cabo Verde, Africa, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control reports. The ongoing situation started in September 2022, tallying 766 shigellosis cases. More than 300 cases of other gastrointestinal infections, such as salmonellosis, cryptosporidiosis, and Escherichia coli infection, were also noted. The travelers all stayed at the same hotel chain on the island of Sal, although the source of infections hasn’t been pinpointed.
  • This week, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) reported one case of wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) in Afghanistan and circulating virus-derived poliovirus type 2 (cVDPV2) cases in Angola (one case), Nigeria (two), and Somalia (one). The Afghanistan patient, in Paktika, had a paralysis onset of November 13, 2025, while paralysis began in the patient from Huila, Angola, on January 20, 2026. The infections in Nigeria were in Kebbi and Zamfara, with respective paralysis onsets of February 5 and February 15, 2026. In Somalia, the patient, from Lower Juba, began to experience paralysis on February 3, 2026. Country totals are 21 for Afghanistan in 2025, one each in 2026 for Pakistan and Angola, nine so far this year for Nigeria, and two for Somalia.

  • Long-COVID prevalence may vary by COVID-19 variant, time since infection

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    Creator: Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP EU)

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