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Home » Flu, Covid, RSV Transmission Increasing “In Every Category,” Per State Health Officials

Flu, Covid, RSV Transmission Increasing “In Every Category,” Per State Health Officials

by CLAYCORD.com
8 comments

Transmission of the flu, COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus is increasing statewide simultaneously and could lead to overwhelmed hospitals this winter, one of the state’s top health officials said Thursday.

COVID test positivity and case rates have climbed by roughly 25 percent over the last two weeks along with evidence of increase transmission in the state’s wastewater systems, according to state Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly.

Cases of flu and RSV, which causes infections in the respiratory tract, have also increased sharply in recent weeks and have already led to increased hospital populations across the state.

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“In every category that we track, whether it’s test positivity, case rate numbers, wastewater surveillance, clinical surveillance, hospitalizations, we’re seeing increases for RSV, flu and COVID,” Ghaly said.

The state has also already seen levels of RSV among young children that rival previous years’ peaks, which usually occur in late January, February and March.

While most children infected with RSV will only deal with common cold symptoms like a fever, cough and runny nose, young children are at greater risk because their respiratory and immune systems are still developing.

“Certainly, if that’s all it were, we’d be a lot less concerned,” he said of the common cold symptoms.

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“But for infants and young toddlers in particular, RSV can cause a much worse experience.”

There is not currently a vaccine that prevents infection of RSV of serious illness, but Ghaly urged state residents to get a flu vaccine and a COVID booster vaccine, if eligible.

As of Nov. 3, just 13.3 percent of state residents have received an updated COVID booster, which targets two subvariants of the omicron variant as well as the original strain of the virus.

The booster is currently available to everyone ages 5 and up who received their last vaccine dose at least five months prior.

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Ghaly also noted that it is not too late to get a flu or COVID vaccine and that it will still protect those who have yet to get either shot ahead of the winter holidays.

“We can’t always prevent you from getting an infection, but we do have some tools that can make more likely that you don’t have severe disease,” Ghaly said. “And that severe disease is exactly what leads you to be hospitalized and … even lose your life.”

8 comments


Exit 12A November 18, 2022 - 4:10 PM - 4:10 PM

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What happened to monkey pox?
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Red, alarmist flags for nothing? A big fizzle?
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Good job mass media! FAKE NEWS!

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WC Resident November 18, 2022 - 11:15 PM - 11:15 PM

Monkey pox is covered at https://cchealth.org/mpx/ which says it’s a rare disease. Thus, I would not expect to see it mentioned often. The county also has a data dashboard at https://cchealth.org/mpx/dashboard.php but does not seem to be publishing the number of cases over time, other than saying there was 1 case in the last 28 days, meaning we can’t tell if the case rate is going up or down. The case numbers are only updated once a week.

Googlar November 19, 2022 - 10:38 AM - 10:38 AM

When kids and dogs started catching monkey pox after being raped monkeypox coverage ended.

Sancho Panza November 18, 2022 - 4:32 PM - 4:32 PM

Well, this is to he expected when you keep the populace locked up, then commingle…immune systems need to reboot. Also, if you can contribute to the wastewater surveillance data—you’re still alive! Keep your ‘eyes wide open’ folks, let’s not fall for the experts’ take on science, ever again…

Angry American November 18, 2022 - 5:40 PM - 5:40 PM

Oh no! OMG! everyone run for cover!!!!!! no….just life, get sick as we all do It will make us stronger. Sorry for the ones that don’t survive “might be me someday” but this is life. Imagine if the news focused on every name of every cold out there!!!!! we would never leave the house.
Take a breath, this world is wonderful.

Jeff (the other one) November 18, 2022 - 5:41 PM - 5:41 PM

Back when the average American citizen was not so beholden to the “guiding” hand of (tyrannical) government, this was called “flu season.” We went about our business, without constant reminders from government departments and media (but I repeat myself) to wash our hands, cover our mouths, etc. Now we have pages of warnings from an unelected bureaucracy about the flu and common cold. How did we as a people ever survive?

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Captain Bebops November 18, 2022 - 5:49 PM - 5:49 PM

Of course, it’s cold and flu season. Been happening for centuries. What else is new?

Captain Bebops November 20, 2022 - 5:33 PM - 5:33 PM

Interesting article about changes the pandemic brought us with changes in personality traits:
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/covid-19-pandemic-changes-in-personality-traits

Also seeing if this new site format can handle URL wrap effectively.


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