Flu activity is low, but experts worry about a new strain and
vaccination rates
[November 22, 2025]
By MIKE STOBBE and NICKY FORSTER
NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. flu season is starting slowly, and it's unclear
if it will be as bad as last winter's, but some health experts are
worried as U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data posted
Friday shows a new version of the virus has emerged.
An early analysis suggests current vaccines may still be somewhat
effective against the new version of the flu, which has been the main
driver of recent infections, CDC data shows.
Some scientists and medical professionals are more worried about
disappointing vaccination rates, a main reason why flu hospitalizations
and deaths were unusually bad during last year's flu season — one of the
deadliest this century.
“I think we’re going to see a really severe season," said Asefeh Faraz
Covelli of the George Washington University School of Nursing.
Last winter, the overall flu hospitalization rate was the highest seen
since the H1N1 flu pandemic 15 years ago. Flu was the underlying or a
contributing cause of more than 18,000 deaths, and one seven-day stretch
early this year saw more than 1,800 deaths — the highest one-week spike
in at least a decade. Child flu deaths also were far higher than usual.
CDC data posted Friday showed low flu activity so far, with only one
state — Louisiana — reporting moderate activity. Most of the reported
infections have been in children, said the CDC's Alicia Budd, who tracks
flu infections for the Atlanta-based agency.

Most also have been a new version of the type A H3N2 virus that
historically has caused the most hospitalizations and deaths in older
people. That type is responsible for most flu infections so far this
year, and more than half have been a new subclade K variant that is
different from the strain this year's flu shots were built to fight.
A preliminary analysis from the United Kingdom suggests the shots do
provide at least partial protection, although it will take some time for
scientists to know exactly how effective they are. Experts say any
protection that softens the blow of a flu infection is important to get.
Flu seasons tend to get bad between December and February, and illnesses
likely will accelerate as people travel and gather for Thanksgiving,
Covelli said.
“I think it’s going to start picking up here,” she said. “This is the
ideal time to get vaccinated.”
Researchers this year have been facing an unusual struggle to get a
handle on how respiratory infection and vaccination rates have been
trending.
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This April 1, 2025 photo shows the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention building in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Ben Gray, file)
 They usually rely on the CDC for
data, but a recent government shutdown halted data collection and
reporting just as respiratory infections started ramping up.
Meanwhile, government efforts to promote disease-preventing shots
have been more limited since U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy
Jr. was put in charge of the CDC and other federal health agencies.
Kennedy, a leading anti-vaccine activist, has fostered uncertainty
about the safety of vaccines, including flu shots that contained a
preservative called thimerosal.
Indeed, vaccination rates against COVID-19 clearly
continue to plummet, with about 6% of children and 14% of adults up
to date on their shots, according to other CDC data posted Friday.
Each figure is about 3 percentage points less than it was at this
point last fall.
For the flu, vaccination trends are a little muddier. Some sources
have suggested flu vaccinations are down. Over two million fewer flu
shots were given at U.S. pharmacies through the end of October
compared to last year, according to data from IQVIA, a health
information and research company.
But the latest CDC data indicates that for children, the vaccination
rate this year is about the same as it was at this point last fall,
at 34%. And the vaccination rate for adults is up a few percentage
points to about 37%, according to the CDC data, which relies on
survey information.
It is early in the season and too early to know if the increase will
be sustained or what is causing it, CDC officials said.
As of the beginning of November, the U.S. flu hospitalization rate
is about the same as it was at the same point in 2024.
Hospitalization rates for COVID-19 and another respiratory virus,
RSV, are lower so far this season, according to another set of CDC
data.
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