The flu, COVID-19, RSV: Why everyone is getting sick – LiveNOW from FOX
                            February 11, 2024
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        Health officials say the number of Americans receiving flu        shots and COVID-19 treatments are down (Credit: FOX        News/News Edge)      
    If youre feeling under the weather lately  youre not    alone.  
    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention    (CDC), seasonal influenza activity remains elevated    nationally, and more than 20,000 people were admitted to the    hospital for COVID-19 last week.  
    Despite data released Friday showing a continued drop in    flu hospitalizations, other indicators were    up  including the number of states with high or very high    levels of respiratory illnesses.  
    The agency said cases have ticked up 16.2% compared to last    week, and in some regions of the United States, the flu virus is intensifying after weeks    of an apparent national decline.  
        A sick woman lies in bed wearing a surgical mask.        (Credit: Ute Grabowsky/Photothek via Getty Images)              
    "Nationally, we can say we've peaked, but on a regional level    it varies," the CDCs Alicia Budd told the Associated Press. "A    couple of regions havent peaked yet."  
    Academic officials also recently cited concern over the high    number of school absences due to various illnesses.  
    But what is contributing to a higher number of hospitalizations    and respiratory illnesses?  
    Tracking during flu season relies in part on reports of    people with flu-like symptoms who go to doctors    offices or hospitals. But, many people with the flu are not    tested, so their infections arent lab-confirmed.  
    COVID-19 and other respiratory viruses can sometimes muddy the    picture, as well.  
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        RSV is a common respiratory virus that usually causes mild,        cold-like symptoms.      
    Alicia Budd, who leads the CDCs flu surveillance team, said    several indicators are showing "continued increases" in flu.  
    There are different kinds of flu viruses, and the version    thats been spreading the most so far this year usually leads    to a lesser amount of hospitalizations and deaths in the    elderly  the group on whom flu tends to take the largest toll.  
    Health experts also said that a growing number of people have    been abandoning pandemic-era safety measures  skipping out on    flu and COVID-19 vaccines this season  and    this could be contributing to the higher number of illnesses    they are seeing.  
    "Pandemic precautions those things are dwindling. And    hence we're being exposed to more respiratory viruses than we    have last year," Libby Richards, an associate professor at    Purdue University School of Nursing told FOX News.  
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        If you've been waiting to get an updated COVID-19 shot,        your wait could soon be over. The FDA cleared the way        Monday for two new shots, from Pfizer and Moderna, for        children as young as six months. A CDC panel is meeting        Tuesday to weigh in on the vaccines. (Credit: FOX 5        Atlanta)      
    The CDC has reported decreases in the number of Americans    rolling up their sleeves for the coronavirus shot. Richards    noted that roughly 10 million fewer children and adults    received the flu shot this year.  
    RELATED: Flu cases surge across US, CDC    reports  
    Despite this, flu vaccination rates still fare better than    rates for the other two main respiratory viruses  COVID-19 and    RSV. About 14% of adults and 5% of children    have gotten the currently recommended COVID-19 shot, and about    13.5% of adults 60 and older have gotten one of the RSV shots    that became available earlier this year.  
    And with so many different respiratory viruses going around,    Richards added that its likely that some people are becoming    infected with different viruses back to back.  
    "Compared to this time point last year, we are seeing a higher    rate of hospitalizations from the flu and RSV," she continued.  
    She said the best way to protect yourself from things like the    flu and COVID-19 is to get vaccinated. Doctors and other health    experts urge everyone 6 months and older to get an annual flu    vaccine.  
    Health experts said that there is still time to get a flu shot    if you havent gotten one yet, citing how a second surge is    always possible and cases can last until May.  
    FOX News, the Associated Press contributed to this    story.  
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The flu, COVID-19, RSV: Why everyone is getting sick - LiveNOW from FOX