O’Donnell said that before the pandemic, flu cases would typically increase in December and peak in January.
Main Line Health has also seen a lot more patients who are sick with flu, said Chief Medical Officer Jonathan Stallkamp.
He added that the flu usually kills tens of thousands of people in the U.S. per year, so it is not a disease to be taken lightly.
“If you’ve ever had flu, it is like getting hit by a truck,” he said. “You feel horrible. It is not like your … typical nose cold where you’re blowing your nose for … a couple days and maybe I’ll just be better the next day. You can be out … for days.”
Fortunately, so far, the situation is not as bad as it was last winter, when there were record numbers of COVID-19, RSV or respiratory syncytial virus, and flu patients at the same time, said Dr. Ericka Hayes, senior medical director of infection, prevention, and control at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
“COVID-19 remains an unpredictable wild card,” she said. “It may do nothing or we may see … a surge in January not unlike what we saw in January of ’22 with the omicron surge. So I think the thing that worries and concerns me the most is the fact that we can’t know.”
Hayes said the number of RSV cases at CHOP peaked in late November, and is starting to decrease. While the CDC alerted health care providers about low vaccination rates for COVID-19, flu, and RSV, she noted that there was also an issue with the supply of RSV vaccines earlier this year.
So far, the biggest concern is that the number of flu and COVID-19 patients in hospitals could peak at around the same time and strain capacity, said Dr. Cheryl Bettigole, Philadelphia’s health commissioner.
“The newer variants that are circulating don’t appear to be worse. They don’t appear to be more likely to put people in the hospital,” she said. “But … you get enough virus circulating, you’re going to see large enough numbers that hospitalization rates could go up. And … staffing for hospitals can be a challenge as these viruses circulate because … the hospital personnel can’t work if they themselves are sick.”