US winter flu deaths outpace Covid-19 fatalities for first time in 5 years

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The CDC estimates the flu has made at least 29 million people sick, caused 370,000 hospitalisations and resulted in 16,000 deaths since October 2024.

The US CDC estimates the flu has made at least 29 million people sick, caused 370,000 hospitalisations and resulted in 16,000 deaths since October 2024.

PHOTO: UNSPLASH

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Influenza is overtaking Covid-19 as the deadlier virus in the US this winter – the first time in five years the seasonal illness has surpassed the pandemic pathogen.

Since Covid-19 began spreading widely in early 2020, it has killed almost 42 times more people in the US than the flu.

Yet preliminary mortality data from the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that 2025 is emerging as a pivotal year for influenza.

While fears about

growing bird flu outbreaks are dominating headlines

in the US, seasonal influenza has reached its highest levels in over 15 years and has now surpassed Covid-19 deaths for the past two months, according to Dr Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious diseases specialist and professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

The CDC estimates the flu has made at least 29 million people sick, caused 370,000 hospitalisations and resulted in 16,000 deaths since October 2024.

Meanwhile, mortality from Covid-19 has been declining, driven by immunity from vaccination and prior infections, as well as the evolution of the Sars-CoV-2 virus, which now causes less severe complications.

“Flu seasons fluctuate – some years are worse than others, and this is a particularly severe one,” said Dr Chin-Hong.

He pointed to a raft of factors behind the resurgence, from low vaccination rates to delayed treatment, particularly in groups not typically thought of as high-risk.

The season has been dominated by H1N1 and H3N2 strains, with the latter notorious for causing more severe illness.

Children have been hit especially hard due to poor vaccine uptake, while South America’s recent flu season points to the possibility of reduced efficacy of the shots, according to Dr Chin-Hong.

The vaccination rate for children aged six months to 17 years has dropped from 58 per cent in January 2020 to just 45 per cent by the end of January 2025. 

However, the most pressing concern is the delayed diagnosis and treatment of cases, particularly among those at risk of developing pneumonia and other severe complications.

“High hospitalisation and death rates suggest that at-risk people are not being diagnosed early enough for antivirals like oseltamivir to be effective in preventing severe illness,” Dr Chin-Hong said.

Barriers to prescribing oseltamivir, along with the need for better early detection, remain key challenges. 

“We need to change the narrative that respiratory viruses only cause serious illness in older adults, as we saw with Covid,” he said. “Flu targets the very young as well.” BLOOMBERG

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