
All available Covid-19 data in the U.S. suggest that the country is at the high point of an intense winter surge. The JN.1 variant, the latest fast-spreading offshoot of Omicron, has intensified the spread from holiday travel and gatherings. Hospitalizations are currently following similar trends to last winter, but could rise more in the coming…

This winter’s Covid-19 surge continues in the U.S. While data aren’t yet available for the weeks after Christmas and New Years, wastewater surveillance suggests there could be more SARS-CoV-2 going around right now than reported at this time last year — with variant JN.1 fueling the spread from holiday travel and gatherings.

Covid-19 spread continues to increase across the country — along with the spread of other respiratory viruses — as the U.S. heads into our busiest period of travel and holiday gatherings. Despite this winter following the same disease trends as we saw the last three years, public health institutions have failed to prepare any better;…

Both Covid-19 and respiratory virus season metrics point to ongoing increases in disease spread across the country, though some regions (particularly the Midwest) are seeing more SARS-CoV-2 infections than others right now. The federal government continues to take insufficient responses to Covid-19 and other common diseases.

As I anticipated last week, major metrics for Covid-19 and other respiratory viruses show increased disease spread during the week of Thanksgiving. This trend will likely continue through December (if not longer) as Americans continue to travel and gather for the holidays with relatively few precautions.

Most Covid-19 data sources point to a continued slow increase in the coronavirus’ spread across the country. Due to reporting delays, our most recent numbers are from the week before Thanksgiving; I expect that next week’s data will show a sharper uptick driven by holiday travel and gatherings with few widespread safety measures.

All major Covid-19 metrics currently point to slow-but-steady increases in coronavirus transmission at the national level. Travel and gatherings for Thanksgiving are likely to accelerate the virus’ spread, contributing to a potential winter surge.

Over the last three years, Covid-19 has followed a similar pattern during the fall and winter months in the U.S.: after an increase in cases over the summer, disease spread has waned in the early fall — then returned with a new surge around Thanksgiving. While the holiday surge was supercharged in 2021 thanks to…





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