Share and Follow
A formidable ‘super flu’ is currently wreaking havoc across the United States, with infection rates soaring to unprecedented levels in major metropolitan areas. Alarmingly, the illness has left some children so severely impacted that they require mechanical assistance to breathe.
This new strain, identified as subclade K, is a variant of the influenza A H3N2 subtype. What makes it particularly concerning is that it has never been observed circulating among humans before.
According to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for the week ending December 27, 32 states are now experiencing ‘very high’ flu activity, a significant increase from the 22 states reported the previous week.
The figures reveal a troubling trend, with one in three flu tests returning positive results—up 21 percent from the previous week’s one in four. This represents a staggering 76 percent jump compared to the same period last year. Notably, New York recorded just over 72,000 flu cases for the week of December 20, marking its highest tally on record.
The United States typically monitors flu activity in the southern hemisphere to predict the severity and dominant strains of its own upcoming flu season. Countries like Australia and New Zealand endure their viral peaks during winter months ahead of the US and Europe, often serving as early indicators of what might be expected.
The Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Australia said the country’s flu season ‘differed from what is typically observed.’ Flu activity was elevated for longer and extended beyond the typical winter season. It also shifted between different dominate strains.
The institute said toward the end of the season, a ‘fast-spreading H3N2 variant emerged and, in August, was a leading cause of respiratory related deaths in Australia.’
A study published last month in the journal Eurosurveillance found the H1N1 strain of influenza A was initially dominant in Australia, but in August and September, influenza A H3N2 began to rise and was dominant by October and November.
Pictured above is Sarah Lopez, 2, who was hospitalized and had to be placed on a feeding tube and ventilator after she caught the flu
There were 457,906 flu cases in Australia between January and November 2025, the most reported since flu became a reportable disease in 2001.
Meanwhile, New Zealand experienced a more moderate flu season but still prolonged, fueled by H3N2 K viruses, which were introduced from Australia, the study found.
Overall, subclade K viruses accounted for roughly half of the Australian viruses and more than two-thirds of the viruses in New Zealand.
In the US, 97 percent of flu samples since September have been influenza A; of those, 86 percent were H3N2; and of those, 91 percent belonged to subclade K.
In investigating where subclade K came from, researchers discovered that the first K influenza virus sequenced in June 2025 was actually from the US, more specifically, New York.
It was then detected in Wisconsin and Michigan in July 2025. The study noted: ‘This coincided with the first detections of clade K viruses in Australia.’
Despite the Australian season occurring before America’s, it appears the now-dominant flu strain actually originated in the US, then traveled across the globe and fueled a severe flu season in the southern hemisphere before returning to wreck havoc.
The study continued: ‘Based on this and the genomic analysis results, the authors hypothesize that A(H3N2) K viruses in Australia and New Zealand may have been imported or originated from the United States.’
Subclade K viruses have now been detected in at least 34 countries.
The researchers said: ‘Given the speed and size of the outbreaks of K viruses in Australia and New Zealand and the near global spread of these viruses already, it is likely that they will further expand during the northern hemisphere winter season and persist for the remainder of 2025 and into 2026.
‘Countries should be prepared for increased demands on their healthcare systems if this variant predominates, as one might expect it will, based on current global trends.’
The study also noted that because of subclade K’s novelty, the flu vaccine will likely be less effective against it.
Additionally, subclade K ‘could result in increased cases and hospitalizations compared with recent years.’
With the new strain, doctors said infections are commonly starting with an unusually high temperature, before shifting into a cough that is very phlegmy and extreme fatigue.
Dr Mark Loafman, a family doctor at Cook County Health in Illinois, warned there had been ‘more fever with the flu this year than people are accustomed to,’ which can last for five to seven days.
He added: ‘And that’s worrisome. You feel ill, you feel sick, and you worry that you’re not getting better.’
Noah Smothers is pictured here in the center. He died last month from influenza-related complications at just 14 years old
Dr Juanita Mora, national spokesperson for the American Lung Association, told NBC Chicago that the fevers may not always respond to usual over-the-counter treatments such as Tylenol and Ibuprofen.
She said in a statement: ‘This new strain has symptoms of really high fevers. It has a really bad cough that won’t go away, very phlegmy, and also vomiting and diarrhea and lots of joint aches as well as muscle aches.’
In serious cases, doctors warn that the symptoms can also leave patients struggling to breathe and needing a ventilator.
In one case, two-year-old Sarah Lopez from north Georgia has been hospitalized for weeks after she was infected with the flu.
Her mother Kenia, told WSB-TV 2: ‘When I would say come here, she wouldn’t do it either. She would just throw her upper torso.
‘Overnight, everything got worse. She couldn’t sit up on her own, she couldn’t talk, she couldn’t move pretty much anything, just her head a little bit.’
Lopez was hospitalized with the flu, but then developed transverse myelitis, a rare condition where a patient suffers from inflammation in part of the spinal cord. Symptoms include back pain, difficulty moving and temporary paralysis.
At the hospital, doctors put her on a ventilator to help her breathe and a feeding tube to give her nutrients.
Speaking on Wednesday, her mother said that Lopez has now recuperated some strength and movement in her legs, but still struggles to stand up.
She has been taken off the ventilator, and the hospital is now considering transferring her to a rehabilitation unit.
Her parents, who are caring for six other children, have been unable to work during this time. The family is asking for help to raise $11,000 to cover medical expenses.
It was not clear whether Lopez had received the flu vaccine. She tested positive for influenza A, the same type that includes the subclade K variant.
Of the nine child deaths so far this viral season, four have been reported in Massachusetts and one in Illinois. It is not clear where the others took place.
Overall, officials estimate there have been at least 11million illnesses, 120,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths from flu so far this year.
For comparison, at the same time last year, the CDC estimated there had been 5.3million illnesses, 63,000 hospitalizations and 2,700 deaths. There had also been 11 deaths among children.