Covid cases in Georgia could soon see an uptick, CDC data show

A woman wearing a hospital mask over her face stands outside with a purse strapped around her shoulder.
Flu and RSV hospitalizations have decreased in Georgia recently, but Covid may soon be on the rise. (Image Courtesy of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

Public health, explained: Sign up to receive Healthbeat’s free Atlanta newsletter here.

While severe respiratory disease cases in Georgia have subsided significantly over the past few months, some early signs indicate the state could soon see a rise in Covid-19 infections.

Compared to the previous few winters, Georgia saw a relatively low number of hospitalizations and deaths related to the disease. But state wastewater data, which can help predict those two health outcomes, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show an uptick in Covid-19 levels that is nearing the highest estimates of this year.

The virus more responsible for hospitalizing Georgians over the past few months has been the flu. Since October, it’s hospitalized more state residents than Covid and respiratory syncytial virus combined, according to data from the CDC.

But unlike Covid, flu and RSV measures from the Atlanta-based health agency indicate that new cases of the respiratory viruses continue to decrease as the winter turns to spring. As of the first week of March, new Georgia hospitalizations for the flu have dropped about 70% since the beginning of February.

Although it’s been responsible for less hospitalization this year, Covid-19 continues to be more deadly than flu. Since December, the virus has killed over 200 state residents, according to the CDC. In contrast, the Georgia Department of Public Health reports there’ve been 124 Georgia flu deaths since October.

The most recent surveys from the CDC estimate that between 13% and 18% of Georgia adults have received an updated Covid-19 vaccine for the 2024-25 respiratory virus season. That’s lower than the national average, which the agency puts at around 23%.

Allen Siegler is a reporter covering public health in Atlanta for Healthbeat. Contact Allen at asiegler@healthbeat.org.

The Latest

A new Emory survey finds that Georgia parents continue to trust routine childhood vaccines — including the newborn hepatitis B shot — even as shifting federal guidance fuels confusion.

Trenton Daniel's reporting career has taken him from South Florida, to Haiti, to New York City. Here's what he's learned and how he'll cover public health for New Yorkers.

New York City has made incredible progress against HIV, but rising infection rates, persistent disparities, and looming federal funding cuts risk a backslide.

The Supreme Court wants a lower court to take a second look at New York’s school vaccine mandate in light of the Mahmoud decision. New York is among several states that removed religious exemptions in the face of disease outbreaks.

Many clinicians and epidemiologists fear abandoning the universal birth dose of the hepatitis B vaccine could reverse three decades of progress toward eliminating a disease that still infects as many as 2.4 million Americans and kills tens of thousands each year.

With subsidies ending Dec. 31, thousands may risk going without health insurance, which could raise costs for everyone, analysts said.