For the past three years, COVID-19 has been on everyone’s minds. Between the mask-wearing, quarantining, and social distancing performed over this time frame, it is understandable that the spread of other viruses was also curtailed by these measures. However, people are increasingly returning to pre-pandemic activities, and often unmasked – the potential for other viruses to spread rapidly and easily is back.

San Francisco COVID social distancing poster

This winter, influenza is a threat as always – the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention estimate that 2,100-6,200 Americans have already died this year – and fewer Americans have received flu shots this year compared to past pre-pandemic years. but the Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) has the potential to be incredibly deadly this year too.

RSV primarily threatens children and infants, who lack protection with their weaker immune systems. Furthermore, there is currently no vaccine available for RSV. Experts suggest this season to be particularly dangerous because a generation of children have not had frequent exposure to various infections in their lifetime due to the social distancing required by the pandemic, combined with the gradual return of normal activity. When infected, the body’s innate immunity responds. If it fails to stop the virus from spreading, the adaptive immune response begins. Once the infection, in this case RSV, COVID-19, or Influenza are successfully fought off, T-memory cells and B-memory cells continue circulating to prevent serious reinfection. If reinfected, the secondary immune response that occurs will provide better long-term protection.

Children are typically exposed to RSV at least once before the age of two; that number has dropped drastically since the COVID-19 pandemic (not to say that these precautions were not vital and instrumental in controlling the spread of COVID-19). Therefore, they lack this immunity. Unfortunately, there is not much for medical professionals to currently do about this without a vaccine – simply wait for exposure to the virus to rise again. However, the effective vaccines developed for both COVID-19 and Influenza are capable of slowing the spread of both of these viruses – and have been doing so. Through consistent vaccination, we may be able to escape the “tripledemic” experts have been warning of this year.

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