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South Shore Health sees 'unprecedented levels' of flu and RSV patients

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WEYMOUTH — South Shore Health officials say the system is grappling with ongoing staffing shortages and a full emergency room as people battle a trifecta of respiratory illnesses — COVID-19, RSV and the flu.

“We’re in a phase where we have the highest level of respiratory disease in decades, basically,” said Dr. Todd Ellerin, director of infectious diseases at South Shore Health. “We’ve only been dealing with COVID for three years, and now we have unprecedented levels of RSV and unprecedented levels of influenza for this start of the season. It’s not like we haven’t seen this in January, but in November and early “December is very early.”

All but seven states reported high or very high respiratory viral activity this week, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Massachusetts is ranked in the “very high” category, with about 6% of doctor visits and 3% of flu-related hospitalizations.

Dr. Todd Ellerin is Medical Director of Infectious Diseases at South Shore Hospital in Weymouth.

Rochelle Walensky, director of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said last week that flu-related hospitalizations this time of year are higher than the country has seen in a decade.

At South Shore Health’s Health Express Urgent Care Centers, Ellerin said about 32% of patients who were tested for the flu last week came back positive, compared to 7% for COVID-19.

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