A total of 11% of RSV patients experienced a cardiac event, abnormal heart rhythm, heart failure, or ischemic heart disease.
The loss of activity is equivalent to 15% of the US population becoming completely immobile for 1 day.
Adult COVID-19 patients also infected with the flu are 4 times more likely to need mechanical ventilation and 2.4 times more likely to die.
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The US, Canada, and Mexico confirm high flu levels, and 9 European countries are reporting widespread activity.
As the holidays approach, the flu surge continues, and tracking shows a fresh spike in COVID-19 markers.
Amid rising flu activity causing decade-high hospitalization rates, COVID-19 markers are also climbing.
As hospitalizations almost double, most states are experiencing high or very high flu levels.
Global flu activity rose in the first half of November, mainly due to rising levels in North America and parts of Europe.
Flu activity is very high or high across most of the continental United States.
The early flu surge is adding to pressure on health systems as they face other respiratory diseases like RSV.
In some nations in the Americas, 3 viral diseases are straining hospitals.
Flu activity in the Northern Hemisphere is rising, with levels up sharply over the past few weeks in North America, the World Health Organization (WHO) said yesterday in its latest global flu update, which roughly covers the last half of October.
A flu surges comes as RSV continues to overwhelm pediatric hospitals in some states.