Covid, flu and bronchiolitis kept at bay by high temperatures in Spain
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Now that the Spanish winter is setting in, health experts expect respiratory illnesses to increase
It’s less than two months until we say goodbye to 2023 but the epidemic season, which usually heralds a huge upsurge in respiratory illnesses, has barely begun. This is largely because the temperatures have only started to drop in the last few days, and most of the usual complaints, such as coronavirus, influenza and bronchiolitis, are exacerbated by the cold.
A report from the National Epidemiological Surveillance Network shows that in the last three weeks, the positivity rate of Covid has hit 13.3%, flu stands at 2.1% and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), which causes a range of bronchial complaints, has reached just 0.7%.
However, now that the temperatures are starting to drop, primary care physicians expect to see and increase in all of these illnesses.
“Cases of flu and RSV are increasing, but very slightly. At the moment we are seeing very little and, of flu, especially type A,” explained Rodrigo Abad, a family doctor in Asturias and member of the infectious diseases group of the Spanish Society of Primary Care Physicians (Semergen).
Paediatric consultations, he said, are typically very seasonal but because autumn came so late this year, infections didn’t begin to increase until the end of October – almost a month later than normal.
This is all likely to change over the coming days and weeks though with an uptick in RSV illnesses, which start to circulate in earnest when the weather changes.
“These symptoms begin with cough, runny nose and sometimes even fever and, after two or three days, they evolve with some type of respiratory difficulty,” Mr Abad said. RSV is most active in very young children and babies, as well as the elderly, and frequently results in a hospital stay.
This is the first year the Spanish government has decided to immunise all infants under six months against RSV and although cases of bronchiolitis have picked up since the beginning of November, this infection doesn’t usually reach its peak until mid-December.
On the other hand, the flu season will take hold in the middle of next month and last until February or March.
According to the Spanish Vaccinology Association, last year respiratory diseases were the third leading cause of death in Spain, resulting in 42,979 fatalities. To prevent such worrying numbers in 2023, the organisation has launched ‘The best plan for this winter’ campaign to raise awareness of the importance of vaccination in people over 60 years of age and younger people with more vulnerable health.
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