Home / Health / New Flu Variant Fuels Early, Aggressive Flu Season
New Flu Variant Fuels Early, Aggressive Flu Season
16 Dec
Summary
- Flu activity surpasses epidemic threshold nationwide due to new H3N2 variant.
- New York City reports very high flu activity, hospitalizations doubling weekly.
- Vaccination offers 30-75% protection, but new variant wasn't in initial vaccines.

The United States is experiencing an unusually early and aggressive flu season, marked by a significant increase in activity driven by a new variant of influenza A(H3N2), subclade K. Data from the CDC reveals that outpatient visits for flu-like symptoms have surpassed the epidemic threshold, confirming the season's official onset. This surge coincides with increased holiday travel and gatherings, facilitating rapid virus transmission.
Several regions, notably the Northeast, are reporting moderate to very high levels of flu activity. New York City is particularly affected, experiencing very high levels and a doubling of flu-related hospitalizations weekly. Public health officials are closely monitoring subclade K, a strain previously observed to cause busy flu seasons in other parts of the world. This variant was not directly included in this season's vaccines, though related strains offer some protection.




