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  • Is it COVID, RSV, or the flu? How to tell the difference amid surge in cases

    Is it COVID, RSV, or the flu? How to tell the difference amid surge in cases

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    Is it COVID, RSV, or the flu? How to tell the difference amid surge in cases – CBS News


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    Health care professionals are bracing for a surge in flu, RSV and COVID-19 cases. CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook explains why it’s important to know what you are sick with.

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  • U.S. Flu Activity Already at Mid-Season Levels

    U.S. Flu Activity Already at Mid-Season Levels

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    Nov. 29, 2022 – Reports of respiratory illness continued to rise as the 2022-23 flu season maintained its early surge through mid-November, according to the CDC. 

    Nationally, 6% of all outpatient visits were because of flu or flu-like illness for the week of Nov. 13-19, up from 5.8% the previous week, the CDC’s Influenza Division said in its weekly FluView report.

    Those figures are the highest recorded in November since 2009, but the peak of the 2009-10 flu season occurred even earlier – the week of Oct. 18-24 – and the rate of flu-like illness had already dropped to just over 4.0% by Nov. 15-21 that year and continued to drop thereafter.

    Although COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are included in the data from the CDC’s Outpatient Influenza-like Illness Surveillance Network, the agency did note that “seasonal influenza activity is elevated across the country” and estimated that “there have been at least 6.2 million illnesses, 53,000 hospitalizations, and 2,900 deaths from flu” during the 2022-23 season.

    Total flu deaths include 11 reported in children as of Nov. 19, and children ages 0-4 had a higher proportion of visits for flu like-illness than other age groups.

    The agency also said the cumulative hospitalization rate of 11.3 per 100,000 population “is higher than the rate observed in [the corresponding week of] every previous season since 2010-2011.” Adults 65 years and older have the highest cumulative rate, 25.9 per 100,000, for this year, compared with 20.7 for children 0-4; 11.1 for adults 50-64; 10.3 for children 5-17; and 5.6 for adults 18-49 years old, the CDC said.

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  • Will Flu and RSV Always Be This Bad?

    Will Flu and RSV Always Be This Bad?

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    In the Northern Hemisphere, this year’s winter hasn’t yet begun. But Melissa J. Sacco, a pediatric-intensive-care specialist at UVA Health, is already dreading the arrival of the one that could follow.

    For months, the ICU where Sacco works has been overflowing with children amid an early-arriving surge of respiratory infections. Across the country, viruses such as RSV and flu, once brought to near-record lows by pandemic mitigations, have now returned in force, all while COVID-19 continues to churn and the health-care workforce remains threadbare. Most nights since September, Sacco told me, her ICU has been so packed that she’s had to turn kids away “or come up with creative ways to manage patients in emergency rooms or emergency departments,” where her colleagues are already overwhelmed and children more easily slip through the cracks. The team has no choice: There’s nowhere else for critically ill kids to go.

    Similar stories have been pouring in from around the nation for weeks. I recently spoke with a physician in Connecticut who called this “by far the worst spike in illness I’ve seen in 20 years”; another in Maryland told me, “There have been days when there is not an ICU bed to be found anywhere in the mid-Atlantic.” About three-quarters of the country’s pediatric hospital beds are full; to accommodate overflow, some hospitals have set up tents outside their emergency department or contemplated calling in the National Guard. Last week, the Children’s Hospital Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics asked the Biden administration to declare a national emergency. And experts say there’s no end to the crisis in sight. When Sacco imagines a similar wave slamming her team again next fall, “I get that burning tear feeling in the back of my eyes,” she told me. “This is not sustainable.”

    The experts I spoke with are mostly optimistic that these cataclysmic infection rates won’t become an autumn norm. But they also don’t yet fully understand the factors that have been driving this year’s surge, making it tough to know with certainty whether we’re due for an encore.

    One way or another, COVID has certainly thrown the typical end-of-year schedule out of whack. Respiratory viruses typically pick up speed in late fall, peak in mid-to-late winter, and then bow out by the spring; they often run in relay, with one microbe surging a bit before another. This year, though, nearly every pathogen arrived early, cresting in overlapping waves. “Everything is happening at once,” says Kathryn Edwards, a pediatrician and vaccinologist at Vanderbilt University. November isn’t yet through, and RSV has already sent infant hospitalizations soaring past pre-pandemic norms. Flu-hospitalization rates are also at their worst in more than a decade; about 30 states, plus D.C. and Puerto Rico, are reporting high or very high levels of the virus weeks before it usually begins its countrywide climb. And the country’s late-summer surge in rhinovirus and enterovirus has yet to fully abate. “We just haven’t had a break,” says Asuncion Mejias, a pediatrician at Nationwide Children’s Hospital.

    Previous pandemics have had similar knock-on effects. The H1N1-flu pandemic of 2009, for example, seems to have pushed back the start of the two RSV seasons that followed; seasonal flu also took a couple of years to settle back into its usual rhythms, Mejias told me. But that wonky timetable wasn’t permanent. If the viral calendar is even a little more regular next year, Mejias said, “that will make our lives easier.”

    This year, flu and RSV have also exploited Americans’ higher-than-average vulnerability. Initial encounters with RSV in particular can be rough, especially in infants, whose airways are still tiny; the sickness tempers with age as the body develops and immunity builds, leaving most children well protected by toddlerhood. But this fall, the pool of undefended kids is larger than usual. Children born just before the pandemic, or during the phases of the crisis when mitigations aplenty were still in place, may be meeting influenza or RSV for the first time. And many of them were born to mothers who had themselves experienced fewer infections and thus passed fewer antibodies to their baby while pregnant or breastfeeding. Some of the consequences may already have unfurled elsewhere in the world: Australia’s most recent flu season hit kids hard and early, and Nicaragua’s wave at the start of 2022 infected children at rates “higher than what we saw during the 2009 pandemic,” says Aubree Gordon, an epidemiologist at the University of Michigan.

    In the U.S., many hospitals are now admitting far more toddlers and older children for respiratory illnesses than they normally do, says Mari Nakamura, a pediatric-infectious-disease specialist at Boston Children’s Hospital. The problem is worsened by the fact that many adults and school-age kids avoided their usual brushes with flu and RSV while those viruses were in exile, making it easier for the pathogens to spread once crowds flocked back together. “I wouldn’t be surprised,” Gordon told me, “if we see 50 to 60 percent of kids get infected with flu this year”—double the estimated typical rate of 20 to 30 percent. Caregivers too are falling sick; when I called Edwards, I could hear her husband and grandson coughing in the background.

    By next year, more people’s bodies should be clued back in to the season’s circulating strains, says Helen Chu, a physician and an epidemiologist at the University of Washington. Experts are also hopeful that the toolkit for fighting RSV will soon be much improved. Right now, there are no vaccines for the virus, and only one preventive drug is available in the U.S.: a tough-to-administer monoclonal antibody that’s available only to high-risk kids. But at least one RSV vaccine and another, less cumbersome antibody therapy (already being used in Europe) are expected to have the FDA’s green light by next fall.

    Even with the addition of better tech, though, falls and winters may be grueling for many years to come. SARS-CoV-2 is here to stay, and it will likely compound the respiratory burden by infecting people on its own or raising the risk of co-infections that can worsen and prolong disease. Even nonoverlapping illnesses might cause issues if they manifest in rapid sequence: Very serious bouts of COVID, for instance, can batter the respiratory tract, making it easier for other microbes to colonize.

    A few experts have begun to wonder if even milder tussles with SARS-CoV-2 might leave people more susceptible to other infections in the short or long term. Given the coronavirus’s widespread effects on the body, “we can’t be cavalier” about that possibility, says Flor Muñoz Rivas, a pediatrician at Baylor College of Medicine. Mejias and Octavio Ramilo, also at Nationwide, recently found that among a small group of infants, those with recent SARS-CoV-2 infections seemed to have a rougher go with a subsequent bout of RSV. The trend needs more study, though; it’s not clear which kids might be at higher risk, and Mejias doubts that the effect would last more than a few months.

    Gordon points out that some people may actually benefit from the opposite scenario: A recent brush with SARS-CoV-2 could bolster the body’s immune defenses against a second respiratory invader for a few days or weeks. This phenomenon, called viral interference, wouldn’t halt an outbreak by itself, but it’s thought to be part of the reason waves of respiratory disease don’t usually spike simultaneously: The presence of one microbe can sometimes crowd others out. Some experts think last year’s record-breaking Omicron spike helped punt a would-be winter flu epidemic to the spring.

    Even if all of these variables were better understood, the vagaries of viral evolution could introduce a plot twist. A new variant of SARS-CoV-2 may yet emerge; a novel strain of flu could cause a pandemic of its own. RSV, for its part, is not thought to be as quick to shape-shift, but the virus’s genetics are not well studied. Mejias and Ramilo’s data suggest that the arrival of a gnarly RSV strain in 2019 may have pushed local hospitalizations past their usual highs.

    Behavioral and infrastructural factors could cloud the forecast as well. Health-care workers vacated their posts in droves during the pandemic, and many hospitals’ pediatric-bed capacity has shrunk, leaving supply grossly inadequate to address current demand. COVID-vaccination rates in little kids also remain abysmal, and many pediatricians are worried that anti-vaccine sentiment could stymie the delivery of other routine immunizations, including those against flu. Even temporary delays in vaccination can have an effect: Muñoz Rivas points out that the flu’s early arrival this year, ahead of when many people signed up for their shot, may now be aiding the virus’s spread. The new treatments and vaccines for RSV “could really, really help,” Nakamura told me, but “only if we use them.”

    Next fall comes with few guarantees: The seasonal schedule may not rectify itself; viruses may not give us an evolutionary pass. Our immune system will likely be better-prepared to fend off flu, RSV, rhinovirus, enterovirus, and more—but that may not be enough on its own. What we can control, though, is how we choose to arm ourselves. The past few years proved that the world does know how to drive down rates of respiratory disease. “We had so little contagion during the time we were trying to keep COVID at bay,” Edwards told me. “Is there something to be learned?”

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    Katherine J. Wu

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  • Pediatric ICUs face bed shortage amid RSV surge

    Pediatric ICUs face bed shortage amid RSV surge

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    Pediatric ICUs face bed shortage amid RSV surge – CBS News


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    Hospitals across the U.S. are facing a shortage of pediatric beds amid a surge in RSV cases. Despite the challenges, parents are still urged to bring their child in at the first sign of respiratory distress. Norah O’Donnell reports.

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  • Pediatric ICUs face bed shortage amid RSV surge: “It’s not hyperbole to call it a crisis”

    Pediatric ICUs face bed shortage amid RSV surge: “It’s not hyperbole to call it a crisis”

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    Boston — For every patient discharged from the pediatric intensive care unit at Mass General for Children in Boston, three more are waiting for that bed. A surge in cases of respiratory syncytial virus, also known as RSV, has hospitals nationwide struggling to treat patients. 

    “I’ve never seen, in my 26 years, the capacity issues. There’s no PICU beds in the Northeast,” said Kimberly Whalen, the nursing director of the 14-bed unit. 

    When Gabriella Boulting saw her 1-month-old gasping for air, she called a pediatrician who sent her to the local hospital. The baby, Alma, was then transferred to Mass General. 

    “She went from breastfeeding to being intubated in just one day. And I was so shocked at how fast that change happened,” Boulting said. “It was certainly a concern whether or not we were going to be able to find a bed. My husband and I even started calling everyone we know who we could think of, who had any affiliation with the hospitals.” 

    Alma did get a bed, but had to wait more than six hours for it and for an ambulance to be ready. 

    Dr. Paul Biddinger, who oversees Mass General’s emergency preparedness, says the hospital has been forced to move some children into the adult ICU. 

    “It’s not hyperbole to call it a crisis,” he said. “In the last three years, the health care system has shown extraordinary flexibility in creating critical care spaces when they’re needed.” 

    Across the country, 36 states are seeing elevated levels of RSV cases compared to this time last year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Hospitals in 10 states are at or above 80% capacity, according to the Health and Human Services Department. 

    Many hospitals converted pediatric beds to adult beds during the pandemic, and some have not switched them back, contributing to the shortage. 

    Despite the challenges, Biddinger urges parents to bring their child in at the first sign of respiratory distress. 

    “They should know that all of us in health care are doing everything we can so that when a child is sick, we can deliver the care immediately in a timely fashion,” he said. “We will find a hospital bed for that patient.”

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  • Is It a Surge? Flu Season Gains Strength Before Holidays

    Is It a Surge? Flu Season Gains Strength Before Holidays

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    Editor’s note: See cold and flu activity in your location with the WebMD tracker. 

    Nov. 21, 2022 — The 2022-2023 flu season continues its early start as respiratory illness activity climbed to levels typically seen in January or February, according to a new report from the CDC. 

    One important measure of the season’s severity, the proportion of outpatient visits involving influenza-like illness (ILI), rose to 5.8% for the week of Nov. 6-12. The last flu season to have such high activity so early was 2009-10, when visits for flu-like illness hit 7.7% in mid-October, the CDC’s data shows. That same season, visit levels quickly dropped and were back to normal by the beginning of January.

    As with so many other things, however, the emergence of COVID-19 has brought about changes in how flu activity is measured. 

    About a year ago, the CDC changed the definition of flu-like illness to exclude specific mention of flu itself, which has brought COVID-19 and RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) into play, since with both patients often have fever plus cough or sore throat. All three viruses are being monitored by the CDC’s Outpatient Influenza-like Illness Surveillance Network, which monitors outpatient visits for respiratory illness.

    As the CDC monitors flu-like illness, a potential wild card is emerging research showing these viruses don’t play well together. 

    Researchers in Canada reported in February that the flu virus interferes with the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 and helps prevent the coronavirus from replicating itself. The opposite is true, as well, where the coronavirus can interfere with the flu virus, the researchers reported in a study published in the journal Viruses.

    Likewise, there is evidence that rhinoviruses, which cause the common cold, may interfere with the coronavirus. 

    What this means, some experts believe, is that it’s unlikely all three viruses would peak at the same time, overwhelming the health care system. 

    Despite the change in the CDC’s tracking definitions, activity during the 2021-22 flu season was below average: The national flu-like illness rate never reached 5% and fell below the current national baseline (an average of the last three non-COVID flu seasons plus 2021-22 and selected weeks of 2019-20) by the end of January.

    That does not seem to be the case in 2022-23. 

    “So far this season, there have been at least 4.4 million illnesses, 38,000 hospitalizations, and 2,100 deaths from flu,” the CDC said in the weekly report from its Influenza Division, while also noting that the rate of hospital admissions “is higher than the rate observed [at the same point] during every previous season since 2010-2011.”

    Among those 2,100 influenza-associated deaths this season are seven children. That is more than occurred through 6 weeks of the 2021-22 season, when the first of 44 total deaths didn’t occur until week 8, and through the entire 2020-21 season, when there was only one. In the three flu seasons before that, there were 199 (2019-20), 144 (2018-19), and 188 (2017-18) children who died from the flu, the CDC said.

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  • Record number of parents take off work amid

    Record number of parents take off work amid

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    The U.S. is facing a “tripledemic” with cases of the flu, COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) rising simultaneously as winter approaches. 

    Increasing cases of the three viruses are causing a record number of parents to miss days of work in order to take care of their sick children, data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows

    Last month, 104,000 workers didn’t show up because they had child care issues, according to the data. 

    “We’ve seen a big spike in RSV, in flu, COVID has yet to really hit this season. And a lot of kids are getting really sick,” Dr. Celine Gounder told CBS News.

    Parents with sick kids at home must then figure out how to take care of them. 

    “If you can’t send your child to school, a lot of parents are stuck having to stay home with their child and that really takes a hit on people’s pocketbooks,” Dr. Gounder added. 

    Employees who have to physically show up for work as well as those whose employers don’t provide paid sick leave suffer the most. Numbers of parents taking time off from work to care for sick children are only expected to increase as flu season intensifies and winter weather rolls in, public health officials say. 

    “We’re getting sicker”

    Parents with no other options may end up sending their children to child care even with they’re sick. “This is very common and unfortunately what it does is it promotes more spread of the virus in the community,” Dr. Gounder said. “We’re all getting sicker.” 

    Her advice to parents and children? 

    “If you’re sick, stay home if you can afford to. That’s definitely one of the most important things. If somebody else in your child’s play group, for example, is sick, you might want to be cancelling some of those play dates,” she said.

    The pandemic has also introduced a new tool for preventing the spread of illnesses: face masks. 

    “I think we would benefit [from wearing them.] Whether people are willing to do it, I don’t know,” Dr. Gounder said. 

    And everyone who is eligible should get vaccinated against the flu and COVID-19, she added. 

    “That’s a really good solution to prevent some of these [illnesses], is to get your kid vaccinated for the flu, for COVID. You can at least prevent those two if not RSV,” Dr. Gounder said. 

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  • Symptoms as Clues: Is It RSV, COVID, the Flu or the Common Cold?

    Symptoms as Clues: Is It RSV, COVID, the Flu or the Common Cold?

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    Editor’s note: See cold and flu activity in your location with the WebMD tracker. 

    Nov. 17, 2022 – The overlapping symptoms of respiratory viruses with household names – COVID-19, the flu, the common cold, and RSV (respiratory syncytial virus) – can make it challenging to tell them apart. 

    But how quickly the symptoms come on, how long they last, and even which symptom(s) you have can be important clues. Some treatments are available, and they’re most effective when taken early, so it’s worth figuring out which infection is hitting you, a friend, or a loved one. 

    The American Academy of Pediatrics came up with a helpful chart of which symptoms are most likely with which respiratory illnesses. “I think that’s a really good chart. And I do think that It is mostly the same for children and adults,” says Patricia (Patsy) A. Stinchfield, a registered nurse and president of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID).

    One exception she offered is that children with COVID-19 report less loss of taste and smell, compared to adults. 

    “It is extremely, extremely difficult to differentiate our symptoms between influenza, RSV, and COVID-19 … for parents and physicians for that matter,” says Mobeen Rathore, MD, a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Committee on Infectious Diseases.

    Stinchfield agrees that these viruses cause many of the same symptoms, such as congestion, coughing, and the potential for fever. But that does not mean it’s impossible to tell them apart. 

    The Fast and the Furious

    “After 44 years as an infectious disease nurse practitioner, one of the things I would ask people trying to figure out how sick they are is about the onset.” For both children and adults, the flu often comes on very quickly. “It’s like one minute a child is playing or an adult is working and the next minute … it’s that feeling like you got hit by a Mack truck.”

    In contrast, the other viral illnesses tend to come on more slowly, she says. “People will say they feel like they’re coming down with something, they have chills, a sore throat, or feel ‘blah.’” 

    GI symptoms can be another clue. Vomiting and diarrhea are more common with COVID-19, and to some extent the flu, compared to RSV. This happens in part because the COVID-19 virus attaches to ACE2 receptors found in both the lungs and the gut, so it can affect both parts of the body.

    In addition, it is well accepted that loss of taste and smell is a unique sign of COVID-19 infection. So that can help you tell COVID-19 from other viral illnesses.

    Symptoms That Point to RSV

    More sneezing, “copious amounts” of nasal mucus – snot coming from a runny nose, and wheezing are some hallmark symptoms of RSV. Wheezing is when a child or adult makes a whistling sound while breathing. Stinchfield says, “You don’t see wheezing as much in COVID or influenza as you do with RSV.”

    “With RSV, it’s more of the upper respiratory type of infection, and people tend to have more of what we call bronchiolitis,” Rathore says. Bronchiolitis is inflammation and congestion in the small airways of the lungs, which in turn can cause the wheezing sound.

    In addition, some people with RSV have so much trouble breathing normally that they recruit other muscles to help, including muscles right above and below the breastbone. 

    The Common Cold Is Still Around

    “People are talking a lot about RSV right now and rightly so but at least what we are seeing is quite different,” Rathore says. The latest internal figures from the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Committee on Infectious Diseases suggest that the common cold is predominant virus at the moment, followed by influenza, RSV, and COVID-19. 

    Rathore estimates that about 35% of patients coming in with a viral illness test positive for the rhino enterovirus causing the common cold. 

    “So it is probably much more common than any of the other infections we are talking about,” he says. And yes, the cold is more common, “but it’s also relatively less likely to cause more severe illness.”

    Testing Remains Essential

    Stinchfield shared two main messages. Testing is the only reliable way to diagnose a viral illness. “So if someone says: ‘This is definitely RSV’ and your child hasn’t been tested, you really don’t know.”

    Testing very young children is important because they cannot describe their aches and pains, says Rathore, who is also chief of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases and Immunology at the University of Florida in Jacksonville. 

    Testing can also confirm flu or COVID. “The nice thing is that there are some combination rapid tests that we use in clinics that can look at COVID-19, the flu, and RSV all in one,” Stinchfield says. She hopes that similar combination home tests will be available in the future.

    Another reason to test is “there’s treatment for COVID-19 and there’s treatment for influenza, so it is important to know what is it that you have so that you could potentially benefit from early treatment.”

    Stinchfield also says there are effective vaccines for COVID-19 and influenza, and a vaccine to protect against RSV is in development. 

    Don’t Hesitate to Get Help

    Trust your instinct if you feel a viral illness is getting worse, Stinchfield says. “Just listen to your gut. If you are afraid, if you’re like, ‘This is not right,’ ‘my husband doesn’t look good,’ ‘my baby doesn’t look good,’” get medical help.

    “That’s what we’re here for,” she says. 

    Stinchfield acknowledges there can be longer than usual waits to see a pediatrician or infectious disease doctor because of the RSV outbreak. Also, consider a virtual appointment if you are concerned about exposure to other people in a medical setting, she says. 

    Are We in for a Worrisome Winter?

    With multiple noteworthy viruses in circulation, some experts are warning about a “twindemic” or “tripledemic” this coming winter. Rathore took it a step further. “I’m actually calling a possibility of a quaternary-demic.” In addition to COVID-19, RSV, and the flu, the common cold virus is widespread as well. 

    In fact, in his area of northeast Florida, RSV rates seem to be going down, flu is going up, and with COVID-19, “there is a concern that it may come back as it did in previous seasons.” At the same time, rates for the common cold are holding steady. 

    “There is nothing you can say for sure” about which viruses will dominate over the coming winter,” Rathore says. But the flu season in the Southern Hemisphere was relatively severe, and that often predicts what happens in the United States and other parts of the Northern Hemisphere, he says. 

    On a positive note, the flu vaccine this past season was a good match for protecting against the flu strain that circulated in Australia and elsewhere, which could be reassuring here. “So that is one more reason that all those eligible for the influenza vaccine should get it.”

     

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  • A robust booster campaign could prevent millions of missed school days among children ages 5 to 17, report finds

    A robust booster campaign could prevent millions of missed school days among children ages 5 to 17, report finds

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    If 80% of children ages 5 and older get their COVID booster shots by the end of 2022, it could prevent about 29 million missed days of school and almost 51,000 hospitalizations, according to a new report.

    And if COVID booster coverage simply matches 2020-21 flu-vaccination levels by year’s end, it would prevent about 22 million missed school days, said the report published by the Commonwealth Fund.

    “We expand our previous analysis to include the impact on pediatric hospitalizations, pediatric isolation days, and school absenteeism (among children ages 5 to 17), demonstrating both the health benefits of vaccination and the importance of vaccination uptake for maintaining uninterrupted in-school education,” the authors wrote in the report.

    The number of days absent from school was calculated based on five days of required isolation for children in that age group who experience mild symptomatic illness and 10 days for children who have severe illness or require hospitalization.


    Source: Commonwealth Fund

    An effective booster campaign would considerably reduce the strain on pediatric hospitals this winter, many of which are currently seeing high numbers of children with respiratory syncytial virus, known as RSV, and the flu, the authors wrote.

    “Throughout the pandemic, children have experienced direct health burdens as well as enormous upheaval in their personal and educational lives,” the report said. “Accelerated vaccination campaigns that achieve high coverage across all ages have the potential to prevent a possible imminent surge in COVID-19, protecting children both directly and indirectly and providing them with additional stability in terms of school attendance and other social engagement.”

    Now read: A strong fall COVID booster campaign could save 90,000 U.S. lives and avoid more than 936,000 hospitalizations, study finds

    The report comes as known U.S. cases of COVID are climbing again for the first time in a few months. The daily average for new cases stood at 39,459 on Monday, according to a New York Times tracker, up 4% versus two weeks ago.

    Cases are rising the most in the Southwest, led by Arizona, Colorado, Nevada and New Mexico — states that are also seeing hospitalization numbers climb by more than 30% in the last two weeks.

    The daily average for U.S. hospitalizations was up 1% at 27,662.

    On a brighter note, the daily death tally continues to fall and is down 13% to 302 from two weeks ago.

    Physicians are reporting high numbers of respiratory illnesses like RSV and the flu earlier than the typical winter peak. WSJ’s Brianna Abbott explains what the early surge means for the winter months. Photo illustration: Kaitlyn Wang

    Coronavirus Update: MarketWatch’s daily roundup has been curating and reporting all the latest developments every weekday since the coronavirus pandemic began

    Other COVID-19 news you should know about:

    • China’s ruling party called for strict adherence to its hard-line “zero-COVID” policy Tuesday in an apparent attempt to guide public perceptions after regulations were eased slightly in places, the Associated Press reported. The news may disappoint Chinese citizens who have clashed with police and COVID workers to show their frustration over lockdowns and restrictions on movement. The People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s flagship newspaper, said in an editorial that China must “unswervingly implement” the policy that requires mass obligatory testing and places millions under lockdown in an attempt to eliminate the coronavirus from the nation of 1.4 billion people.

    • Japan will lift a ban on international cruise ships that has lasted more than two and half years, transport officials said Tuesday, the AP reported separately. The ban was imposed following a deadly coronavirus outbreak on the cruise ship Diamond Princess at the beginning of the pandemic. The Transport Ministry said cruise-ship operators and port authorities associations have adopted antivirus guidelines and that Japan is now ready to resume its international cruise operations and to receive foreign ships at its ports.

    The new bivalent vaccine might be the first step in developing annual COVID shots, which could follow a similar process to the one used to update flu vaccines every year. Here’s what that process looks like, and why applying it to COVID could be challenging. Illustration: Ryan Trefes

    • Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen tested positive for COVID-19 after meeting with world leaders, including President Joe Biden, at a summit of Southeast Asian nations last week, the Wall Street Journal reported. Mr. Hun Sen held one-on-one talks with Biden on Saturday on the sidelines of the regional discussions in Phnom Penh. Biden — who is on a five-day trip to Asia to attend a series of summits — then traveled to Bali, Indonesia, where he sat down on Monday with Chinese leader Xi Jinping for a face-to-face meeting that stretched over three hours.

    • Australia will overturn a three-year ban on tennis player Novak Djokovic entering the country, paving the way for the former top-ranked player to take part in the 2023 Australian Open, CNN reported, citing a source with direct knowledge of the matter. Australian Immigration Minister Andrew Giles will lift the ban, the source said.

    Here’s what the numbers say:

    The global tally of confirmed cases of COVID-19 topped 635.6 million on Monday, while the death toll rose above 6.61 million, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University.

    The U.S. leads the world with 98 million cases and 1,074,691 fatalities.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s tracker shows that 227.8 million people living in the U.S., equal to 68.6% of the total population, are fully vaccinated, meaning they have had their primary shots.

    So far, just 31.4 million Americans have had the updated COVID booster that targets the original virus and the omicron variants, equal to 10.1% of the overall population.

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  • ‘It’s so scary’: Mother remains traumatized a year after baby’s RSV diagnosis

    ‘It’s so scary’: Mother remains traumatized a year after baby’s RSV diagnosis

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    BOSTON – Beautiful Charlotte is a happy, smiley, 14-month-old baby. She lights up watching Cocomelon on TV. Mom Emily says she’s always like this; a dream come true. But protecting this precious baby from rampant RSV this season has been a nightmare for the mother.

    “I’m literally traumatized. There’s not a time that goes by I don’t think about that. It’s so scary,” said Emily Sauro, emotionally.

    Charlotte was only seven weeks old last October, when the respiratory virus brought them to the emergency department. Emily knew what to look for after her older son suffered RSV in the past. With Charlotte, the mother said they were about to be discharged, when her baby stopped breathing.

    “I just remember looking down and seeing her like that and screaming. Then there were just a million people everywhere,” she recalled.

    Charlotte spent two and a half weeks in the pediatric ICU at UMass Memorial Medical Center.

    “They’re hooked up to a million machines. That breathing sounds like taking their last breath, it’s the only way I can describe it,” Emily said sadly.

    In the year since, Charlotte still requires a nebulizer treatment or inhaler twice daily. She can’t go to daycare, and the family still takes a lot of precautions at their home in Grafton.

    “When your newborn is not breathing in your arms, it feels like forever,” the mother added.

    As cases surge heading into the holidays, she urges new parents to stay vigilant. Be the squeaky wheel if you suspect something isn’t right. No one knows your baby like you.

    Emily said, “It can be all OK one second and furthest thing from it the next.” 

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  • Health officials urge vaccinations before holidays

    Health officials urge vaccinations before holidays

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    Health officials urge vaccinations before holidays – CBS News


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    Doctors are urging people to get vaccinated against the flu and COVID-19, especially ahead of the holiday season. Flu cases are on the rise in 22 states and Washington, D.C. Omar Villafranca

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  • Doctors urge COVID-19 and flu vaccines ahead of holidays, as flu cases surge

    Doctors urge COVID-19 and flu vaccines ahead of holidays, as flu cases surge

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    As hospitals and emergency rooms fill up amid a surge of flu cases, doctors are warning people to get vaccinated for that and COVID-19, especially ahead of the holiday season. The flu is already hitting hard, with 22 states and Washington, D.C., reporting high levels of activity, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The CDC also said the hospitalization rate for flu is at the highest for this early in the season in a decade.

    Dr. Daniel Guzman, of Cook Children’s Medical Center in Fort Worth, said the one-two punch of RSV — a respiratory illness common in children — and flu cases has filled up his emergency room. He added that the rate of cases in the hospital nearly doubled in the last week from 172 to almost 338 flu patients.

    It’s why doctors are urging people to get vaccinated. Andrew Talbot, a Massachusetts teacher, said he got his COVID-19 booster before he travels to see his immunocompromised mother for the holidays.

    “I’m aware of the fact that there is, you know, COVID that comes and goes in waves,” he told CBS News. “And especially with her being on immunosuppression drugs, I didn’t want to risk bringing anything home.”

    But, only 10% of people age 5 and older have received the updated COVID-19 vaccine and just 21% of adults say they’ve been vaccinated against the flu, according to the CDC.

    “You’re protecting your entire bubble of your family members,” Guzman said about getting vaccinated. “You know, those that are really old to those that are really young. And so it’s really important that we do as much as we can to help protect them.”

    To stay safe this holiday season, experts advise to get vaccinated, consider a “mini-quarantine” the week before traveling, testing before gathering and staying home if you feel sick.

    “Never too late to get a flu shot,” Guzman said. “I think we have to stress it’s an important thing to help protect yourself as well as everyone around you, that everyone goes out and get a flu shot.”

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  • What Parents Should Know About RSV

    What Parents Should Know About RSV

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    Nov. 11, 2022 – A sick child from Northern California had to go to Portland, OR, to find an ICU bed. A child in Oregon was flown to Nevada last week due to a shortage of hospital beds. The culprit? Respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV. 

    “These stories are not unique and are happening across the country,” says Wendy Hasson, MD, a spokesperson for the American Academy of Pediatrics and medical director of the pediatric ICU at Randall Children’s Hospital in Portland. “This has been an unprecedented respiratory viral season, both in the timing and the number of children affected.” 

    Most children get RSV before their second birthday. Those with the highly contagious respiratory tract infection usually have the same symptoms as a cold, but can develop complications that can turn life-threatening – particularly for infants, those with weakened immune systems, and older adults.    

    Hasson says the formerly predictable illness, which usually peaks in January, has moved up its timeline. She’s now seeing an “overwhelming spike” 2 months early. About 80% of the patients in her ICU have RSV. In previous years, the average age for children admitted to the hospital with the virus was under 2. Now, Hasson says she routinely sees 3- to 5-year-olds on the ward. 

    The recent surge in RSV cases prompted the CDC on Nov. 4 to issue a health advisory alerting the public to the spiking illness. 

    Pediatrician offices are booked, and right now, many parents can’t get in for a sick child visit. If you can’t go the outpatient route, it’s important to know when it’s OK to watch and wait at home, or when it’s time to head to urgent care or the emergency room.  Read on for what parents should know as they navigate the recent RSV surge.

    Educate Yourself About Concerning Symptoms

    Hasson says parents should monitor three things in their children to decide whether it’s safe to keep them at home, or if they need to see a doctor: Breathing, hydration level, and alertness.

    It’s important to seek medical care if:

    • A child is breathing faster or harder than normal
    • The child is pulling around their neck or ribcage, or using their belly to breathe, which you can observe by taking off their clothes and watching
    • Babies are grunting or making a little sound at the end of each breath 
    • Babies aren’t drinking enough and are having fewer than three to four wet diapers per day
    • If a child is blue or purple, call 911

    These symptoms of RSV are often worse on days 4 to 6 of the infection.

    How to Help Your Child at Home 

    Coughs, fevers for up to 5 days, runny noses, decreased appetite, and chills are among many normal and overlapping symptoms of multiple viruses, including RSV, according to Samira Armin, MD, a pediatrician in the Houston area. But fever alone is not a reason to seek immediate medical care. 

    “Viruses need to run their course, and antibiotics and prescriptions don’t tend to work on viruses, so doctors often recommend home care,” Armin says. 

    She warns against using cough suppressants for children, and instead recommends helping them hydrate and rest, and not sending them back to school or day care too early. 

    Parents also can prepare for treating mild RSV at home, says Anita Patel, MD, a pediatric critical care doctor at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, DC. 

    She suggests caregivers stock up on acetaminophen and ibuprofen (for children over 6 months old) for pain and fever. They should also have on hand a nasal suctioning bulb with saline drops, a reliable thermometer, a humidifier, as well as phone numbers of their pediatrician, an after-hours line, and nearby urgent care centers. 

    Practice Prevention Techniques 

    The COVID-19 pandemic made most of us experts at illness prevention, so put those skills to work to prevent children from getting RSV or other illnesses  during this surge. 

    Although no vaccine for RSV has been approved in this country yet, doctors recommend staying up to date with other vaccines, including those for flu and COVID-19, to prevent the spread and severity of these viruses. Encourage your children to wash their hands frequently, to cover their mouth or nose while sneezing or coughing, and to mask up when in public. 

    “Masks work very well against flu and RSV,” Patel says. “A simple surgical mask has saved me from catching both while taking care of thousands of kids.”

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  • Respiratory illness forces KCK school to close for the rest of the week

    Respiratory illness forces KCK school to close for the rest of the week

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    A surge in an upper respiratory illness has shut down a Kansas City, Kansas, school and is filling pediatric wards around the metro area.Micah Nelson turned 9 months old on Wednesday. He’s being treated at the University of Kansas Health System for RSV and has been in and out of the pediatric ward of the hospital for about a week.”He was grunting and making a lot of noises when he was breathing. So, we knew he was having some trouble,” said Melody Nelson, Micah’s mother.”The shifts have been long. There have been a lot of admissions and bed shuffling to make sure we take care of the ill children,” said Dr. Shawn Sood, pediatric critical care physician at the University of Kansas Health System.Respiratory illnesses have shut down Christ the King School in Kansas City, Kansas, for the rest of the week. A custodial crew spent Wednesday spraying disinfectant and wiping down surfaces at the school.According to principal Cathy Fithian, 50 to 60 of the 250 students were out sick and seven of her 21 teachers have flu, RSV or COVID-19.”It was a tough decision because the protocol is not so much how many students are out when the school might close, it is how many faculty and staff. If you can’t staff your building and have teachers in the classrooms, you just can’t have school,” she said.Overland Park Regional Medical Center is reporting a 100% increase in patient volume with up to 60 children treated daily in the pediatric ER over the past few weeks with viral infections, mostly RSV.The Kansas City, Missouri Health Department reported from Oct. 23 to Oct. 30, there was an average of 90 ER visits per day for children under 18 to the emergency room for problems with flu-like symptoms, including RSV.That same week has far outpaced any other previous year since at least 2017.The Kansas City Health Department reports that children under 18 are 10 times more likely to be seen in emergency rooms for those respiratory infections than adults.Centers for Disease Control Data for the Midwest Region, which includes Kansas and Missouri, shows a significant spike in RSV cases since Oct. 1.According to the Unified Government Public Health Department, in addition to increased hospitalizations for RSV and flu, COVID-19 is still circulating in our area and is likely to increase this winter.The health department also encourages people to get flu and COVID-19 vaccines if they haven’t already done it.RSV is especially troublesome for children and infants under 2 years old.”The main treatment is supportive care, oxygen therapy and IV fluids if they need it,” Sood said.If children that young are having trouble breathing, Sood recommended seeking medical attention for them as quickly as possible. He also recommended hand washing and disinfecting surfaces to prevent the spread of respiratory illnesses like RSV.

    A surge in an upper respiratory illness has shut down a Kansas City, Kansas, school and is filling pediatric wards around the metro area.

    Micah Nelson turned 9 months old on Wednesday. He’s being treated at the University of Kansas Health System for RSV and has been in and out of the pediatric ward of the hospital for about a week.

    “He was grunting and making a lot of noises when he was breathing. So, we knew he was having some trouble,” said Melody Nelson, Micah’s mother.

    “The shifts have been long. There have been a lot of admissions and bed shuffling to make sure we take care of the ill children,” said Dr. Shawn Sood, pediatric critical care physician at the University of Kansas Health System.

    Respiratory illnesses have shut down Christ the King School in Kansas City, Kansas, for the rest of the week. A custodial crew spent Wednesday spraying disinfectant and wiping down surfaces at the school.

    According to principal Cathy Fithian, 50 to 60 of the 250 students were out sick and seven of her 21 teachers have flu, RSV or COVID-19.

    “It was a tough decision because the protocol is not so much how many students are out when the school might close, it is how many faculty and staff. If you can’t staff your building and have teachers in the classrooms, you just can’t have school,” she said.

    Overland Park Regional Medical Center is reporting a 100% increase in patient volume with up to 60 children treated daily in the pediatric ER over the past few weeks with viral infections, mostly RSV.

    The Kansas City, Missouri Health Department reported from Oct. 23 to Oct. 30, there was an average of 90 ER visits per day for children under 18 to the emergency room for problems with flu-like symptoms, including RSV.

    That same week has far outpaced any other previous year since at least 2017.

    The Kansas City Health Department reports that children under 18 are 10 times more likely to be seen in emergency rooms for those respiratory infections than adults.

    Centers for Disease Control Data for the Midwest Region, which includes Kansas and Missouri, shows a significant spike in RSV cases since Oct. 1.

    According to the Unified Government Public Health Department, in addition to increased hospitalizations for RSV and flu, COVID-19 is still circulating in our area and is likely to increase this winter.

    The health department also encourages people to get flu and COVID-19 vaccines if they haven’t already done it.

    RSV is especially troublesome for children and infants under 2 years old.

    “The main treatment is supportive care, oxygen therapy and IV fluids if they need it,” Sood said.

    If children that young are having trouble breathing, Sood recommended seeking medical attention for them as quickly as possible. He also recommended hand washing and disinfecting surfaces to prevent the spread of respiratory illnesses like RSV.

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  • Officers save baby with RSV who stopped breathing

    Officers save baby with RSV who stopped breathing

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    Officers save baby with RSV who stopped breathing – CBS News


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    Two Kansas City police officers saved the life of an infant after receiving a call that the baby who was suffering from RSV was not breathing.

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  • All eyes on China as Apple and Foxconn outline zero-COVID issues. Meanwhile, cases are rising again in the U.S.

    All eyes on China as Apple and Foxconn outline zero-COVID issues. Meanwhile, cases are rising again in the U.S.

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    China’s strict zero-COVID policy was making headlines Monday after Apple and iPhone manufacturer Foxconn said over the weekend that restrictions are crimping production and will delay shipments of the high-end iPhone 14.

    “We continue to see strong demand for iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max models,” Apple
    AAPL,
    -0.82%

    announced in a Sunday evening press release. “However, we now expect lower iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max shipments than we previously anticipated and customers will experience longer wait times to receive their new products.” 

    Also read: Will Apple’s latest production issues destroy demand?

    Foxconn, meanwhile, which trades as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co.
    2317,
    -0.50%
    ,
    lowered its fourth-quarter guidance and said anti-COVID measures were affecting some of its operations in Zhengzhou, China, as Dow Jones Newswires reported.

    Foxconn said that the Henan provincial government had made it clear that it would fully support the company. Foxconn’s most advanced iPhone plant, located in the provincial capital of Zhengzhou, has been battling a COVID outbreak.

    Foxconn said it is working with the government to halt the outbreak and resume production at full capacity as quickly as possible.

    Workers at the world’s biggest assembly site for Apple’s iPhones walked out last week as Foxconn struggled to contain a COVID-19 outbreak. The chaos highlighted the tension between Beijing’s rigid pandemic controls and the need to keep production on track. Photo: Hangpai Xinyang/Associated Press

    Investors have been closely watching China for signs that its government would start to lift the tough pandemic restrictions that have been in place for almost three years. The Wall Street Journal reported Monday that the country’s leaders are considering steps but have not yet set a timeline.

    Chinese  officials have become concerned about the costs of their zero-tolerance approach to COVID, which has resulted in lockdowns of cities and whole provinces, crushing business activity and confining hundreds of millions of people to their homes for weeks and sometimes months on end.

    But they are weighing those concerns against the potential costs of reopening on public health and on support for the Communist Party. On Saturday, officials from China’s National Health Commission again reaffirmed their commitment to a firm zero-COVID strategy, which they described as essential to “protect people’s lives.”

    Still, there are plans in Beijing to further cut the number of days incoming travelers must quarantine in hotels from 10 to seven, followed by three days of home monitoring, the paper reported, citing people involved in the discussions.

    And officials have told retail businesses that they intend to reduce the frequency of PCR testing as soon as this month, partly because of the cost.

    In the U.S., known cases of COVID and hospitalizations are climbing again for the first time in a few months.

    The daily average for new cases stood at 39,954 on Sunday, according to a New York Times tracker, up 6% compared with two weeks ago. But cases are sharply higher in several states, led by Nevada, where they are up 96% from two weeks ago, followed by Tennessee, where they are up 69%; Louisiana, where they are up 68%; Utah, where they have climbed 61%; and New Mexico, where they are up 56%.

    Cases are climbing in 30 states and in Washington, D.C.

    The daily average for hospitalizations was up 2% to 27,419, while the daily average for deaths was down 11% to 320.

    Physicians are reporting high numbers of respiratory illnesses like RSV and the flu earlier than the typical winter peak. WSJ’s Brianna Abbott explains what the early surge means for the winter months. Photo illustration: Kaitlyn Wang

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 variants accounted for 35.3% of new cases in the week through Nov. 5, up from 27.1% a week ago.

    The two variants accounted for 52.3% of all cases in the New York region, which includes New Jersey, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, up from 42.5% the previous week. That was more than the BA.5 omicron subvariant, which accounted for 24.9% of new cases in the New York area in the latest week.

    The BA.5 omicron subvariant accounted for 39.2% of all U.S. cases, the data show.

    BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 were still lumped in with BA.5 variant data as recently as three weeks ago, because at that time, their numbers were too small to break out. BQ.1 was first identified by researchers in early September and has been found in the U.K. and Germany, among other places. 

    Coronavirus Update: MarketWatch’s daily roundup has been curating and reporting all the latest developments every weekday since the coronavirus pandemic began

    Other COVID-19 news you should know about:

    • BioNTEch SE
    BNTX,
    +2.84%
    ,
    the German biotech that has partnered with Pfizer
    PFE,
    -0.53%

    on a COVID vaccine, posted earnings early Monday, showing a roughly 50% drop in profit that sent its stock lower, despite beating consensus estimates. The Mainz-based company said it had invoiced about 300 million doses of its bivalent vaccine, which targets the omicron variant as well as the original virus. The company chalked up €564.5 million ($563.9 million) in direct COVID vaccine sales in the quarter, down from €1.351 billion a year ago. BioNTech raised the lower end of its full-year COVID vaccine revenue range to €16 billion to €17 billion, from a previous €13 billion to €17 billion.

    • Thousands of runners took to the streets of the Chinese capital on Sunday for the return of Beijing’s annual marathon after a two-year hiatus, the Associated Press reported. However, the good news was offset by anger about another death related to COVID restrictions, this time of a 55-year-old woman in a sealed building. An investigation report released Sunday in Hohhot, the capital of China’s Inner Mongolia region, blamed property management and community staff for not acting quickly enough to prevent the death of the woman after being told she had suicidal tendencies.

    • The U.S. flu season is off to an unusually fast start, contributing to an autumn mix of viruses that have patients filling hospitals’ and physicians’ waiting rooms, the AP reported separately. Reports of flu are already high in 17 states, and the hospitalization rate hasn’t been this high this early since the 2009 swine flu pandemic, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. So far, there have been an estimated 730 flu deaths, including at least two children. The winter flu season usually ramps up in December or January.

    Here’s what the numbers say:

    The global tally of confirmed cases of COVID-19 topped 632.6 million on Monday, while the death toll rose above 6.60 million, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University.

    The U.S. leads the world with 97.7 million cases and 1,072,598 fatalities.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s tracker shows that 227.3 million people living in the U.S., equal to 68.5% of the total population, are fully vaccinated, meaning they have had their primary shots.

    So far, just 26.3 million Americans have had the updated COVID booster that targets the original virus and the omicron variants, equal to 8.4% of the overall population.

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  • Tampa family shares experience with son’s case of RSV

    Tampa family shares experience with son’s case of RSV

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    HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY, Fla. — As RSV cases spike across the country, a Tampa family is warning other parents how serious the highly contagious virus can be.

    To his family, he’s Zane the Hurricane, but recently, the four-year-old’s parents realized something was off.

    Trevor Hale said he noticed his son was wheezing badly.

    “Overnight, his wheezing got a lot worse, and he even said, ‘Daddy, I’m struggling,” said Hale.

    First thing in the morning, they went to urgent care.

    Hale Family

    “The nurse looked at his stomach and saw his breathing and saw that his kind of chest was concave, looked at it and said if he doesn’t get better after this nebulizer, we’re going straight to the ER where they have a level 1 trauma center,” said Hale.

    Zane caught RSV, a virus affecting the lungs, respiratory system, and breathing. RSV cases are on the rise across the country.

    Symptoms include fever, coughing, and runny nose. Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital explained if your child seems to have a mild case of RSV, keep them hydrated, suction their nose with saline solution to help with congestion, and use pain relievers like acetaminophen if needed.

    Tampa family shares experience with son's case of RSV

    Hale Family

    “If a child is starting to have a bluish or grayish discoloration around their lips, that suggests that they’re not getting enough oxygen and that warrants a visit to the emergency room,” said Dr. Juan Dumois, a Pediatric Infectious Diseases physician.

    Doctors suggest you should also talk to your pediatrician or bring your child into the ER if their ribs look like they’re sucking in or they’re dehydrated.

    Fortunately, Hale said Zane bounced back and has since recovered.

    “He’s bouncing off the walls like a normal four-year-old,” said Hale.

    A huge relief for his family, with a reminder for all parents to keep an eye out for any symptoms that seem out of the ordinary.

    Tampa family shares experience with son's case of RSV

    Hale Family

    “I had no idea it was that severe or it could be that serious or that we might need to go to the ER, so if your child is wheezing and really the chest is not really doing what it should be doing, go to urgent care immediately,” said Hale.

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  • Simple Nose Swab Test Might Gauge Severity of Child’s RSV

    Simple Nose Swab Test Might Gauge Severity of Child’s RSV

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    By Cara Murez 

    HealthDay Reporter

    FRIDAY, Nov. 4, 2022 (HealthDay News) — While it isn’t possible to tell parents how long their child will need to remain in intensive care with a serious case of RSV, new research has unearthed clues that may make it easier to predict which kids will require a longer stay.

    To study the issue, researchers from the Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago used nose swabs from children with RSV in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) within a few days after hospital admission.

    The team examined what genes turn on in response to RSV, also called respiratory syncytial virus.

    Despite the same quantity of RSV and the same clinical presentation, some children showed signs of greater damage to the cells lining the inside of the nostrils. This, researchers found, correlated to longer PICU stays.

    “We were excited to find that the severity of a child’s illness related to the different sets of genes turned on in their body’s response to RSV,” said senior study author Dr. Bria Coates, a critical care physician at Lurie Children’s. “The ability to identify which infants with RSV in intensive care will recover quickly and which patients will require a longer stay would provide invaluable information to parents and medical providers.”

    While exciting, these findings will need to be validated in a larger group of children before they can be used clinically, Coates noted.

    “At this stage, we saw that more injury in the nasal mucosal membranes of children with RSV may be a marker of a dysregulated response to the virus and predict more prolonged illness,” Coates said in a hospital news release. “These are promising findings that ultimately might offer better answers to parents and the care team.”

    The findings were published recently in the journal Frontiers in Immunology.

    More information

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on RSV.

     

    SOURCE: Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, news release, Nov. 2, 2022

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  • Amoxicillin shortage as child RSV cases surge

    Amoxicillin shortage as child RSV cases surge

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    Amoxicillin shortage as child RSV cases surge – CBS News


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    The Food and Drug Administration is sounding the alarm about a shortage of amoxicillin, a commonly prescribed antibiotic to treat secondary bacterial infections, as cases of RSV rise in children across the U.S. Roxana Saberi reports.

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  • Weekly tally of COVID cases and deaths continues to fall; Moderna lowers vaccine-sales outlook by as much as $3 billion

    Weekly tally of COVID cases and deaths continues to fall; Moderna lowers vaccine-sales outlook by as much as $3 billion

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    The global tally of COVID-19 cases fell 17% in the week through Oct. 30 from the previous week, while the death toll fell 5%, the World Health Organization said in its weekly update on the virus.

    The omicron variant BA.5 remained dominant globally, accounting for 74.9% of cases sent to a central database. WHO reiterated that newer sublineages of omicron, including BQ.1 and XBB, still appear no more lethal than earlier ones and do not warrant the designation of “variant of concern.”

    But BQ.1 rose in prevalence to 9.0% globally from 5.7% a week ago, while XBB rose to 1.5% from 1.0%.

    “WHO will continue to closely monitor the XBB and BQ.1 lineages as part of omicron and requests countries to continue to be vigilant, to monitor and report sequences, as well as to conduct independent and comparative
    analyses of the different omicron sublineages,” the agency wrote.

    WHO has cautioned that changes in testing and reduced surveillance of the virus are making some of the numbers unreliable and has urged leaders to renew efforts to monitor and track developments.

    In the U.S., known cases of COVID remain at their lowest level since mid-April, although the true tally is likely higher given how many people overall are testing at home, where data are not being collected.

    The daily average for new cases stood at 39,090 on Wednesday, according to a New York Times tracker, up 3% versus two weeks ago. The daily average for hospitalizations was up 2% to 27,161, while the daily average for deaths was down 6% to 345. 

    But cases are climbing in some states, raising concerns among health experts. In Nevada, cases are up 92% from two weeks ago, followed by Missouri, where they are up 75%, Tennessee, where they are up 69%, Louisiana, where they are up 68%, and New Mexico, where they have climbed 54%.

    Physicians are reporting high numbers of respiratory illnesses like RSV and the flu earlier than the typical winter peak. WSJ’s Brianna Abbott explains what the early surge means for the coming winter months. Photo illustration: Kaitlyn Wang

    Coronavirus Update: MarketWatch’s daily roundup has been curating and reporting all the latest developments every weekday since the coronavirus pandemic began

    Other COVID-19 news you should know about:

    • COVID vaccine maker Moderna
    MRNA,
    -2.21%

    posted far weaker-than-expected third-quarter earnings on Thursday and lowered full-year sales guidance by up to $3 billion. The Cambridge, Mass.-based biotech firm said advance purchase agreements, or APAs, for delivery this year are now expected to total $18 billion to $19 billion of product sales, down from guidance of $21 billion that it provided when it reported second-quarter earnings. The FactSet consensus is for full-year sales of $21.3 billion. For fiscal 2023, Moderna has APAs of $4.5 billion to $5.5 billion. The FactSet consensus for 2023 sales is for $9.4 billion.

    • Virax Biolabs Group Ltd.
    VRAX,
    +36.26%

    stock jumped after the biotechnology company said its triple-virus antigen rapid test kit, which tests for RSV, influenza and COVID, has been launched in the European Union, Dow Jones Newswires reported. The test kit, which can be used in both at-home and point-of-care settings, has also been launched in other markets that accept the CE mark, Virax Biolabs said.

    Testing sewage to track viruses has drawn renewed interest after recent outbreaks of diseases like monkeypox and polio. WSJ visited a wastewater facility to find out how the testing works and what it can tell us about public health. Photo illustration: Ryan Trefes

    • Royal Caribbean Group
    RCL,
    +4.11%

    posted its first quarterly profit since the start of the pandemic, but the cruise-line company said it expected a loss for the current quarter, sending its stock lower on Thursday. Load factors were 96% overall and booking volumes were “significantly higher” than in the same period of prepandemic 2019, as the easing of testing and vaccination protocols provided a boost. For the fourth quarter, the company expects adjusted per-share losses of $1.30 to $1.50, compared with the FactSet loss consensus of 71 cents, and projects revenue of “approximately” $2.6 billion, below the FactSet consensus of $2.7 billion. 

    • The death of a 3-year-old boy in northwestern China following a suspected gas leak at a locked-down residential compound has triggered a fresh wave of outrage at the country’s stringent zero-COVID policy, CNN reported. The boy’s father said in a social media post on Wednesday that COVID workers tried to prevent him from leaving their compound in Lanzhou, the capital of Gansu province, to seek treatment for his child, resulting in what he believes was a fatal delay. The post was met with an outpouring of public anger and grief, with several related hashtags racking up hundreds of millions of views over the following day on Weibo, China’s Twitter-like platform.

    Here’s what the numbers say:

    The global tally of confirmed cases of COVID-19 topped 631.4 million on Thursday, while the death toll rose above 6.59 million, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University.

    The U.S. leads the world with 97.6 million cases and 1,071,582 fatalities.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s tracker shows that 226.9 million people living in the U.S., equal to 68.4% of the total population, are fully vaccinated, meaning they have had their primary shots.

    So far, just 22.8 million Americans have had the updated COVID booster that targets the original virus and the omicron variants, equal to 7.3% of the overall population.

     

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