As flu season rolls on, many people wonder: is this year's shot doing its job? Health officials in California have shared their first look at how the 2025-26 flu vaccine is performing from October through January. They call these 'interim estimates,' which means they're checking in partway through the season to see how things are shaping up.
The report covers residents across California, but it doesn't give us the key numbers we usually want to see. We don't know how much protection the vaccine might be offering, or how confident researchers are in that estimate. This is common for early reports—they're giving us a snapshot, not the full picture.
It's important to remember this type of study can only show an association between getting the vaccine and the outcome; it can't prove the shot directly caused any protection. The findings are also observational, meaning researchers watched what happened in the real world rather than controlling conditions in a trial. Since these are interim estimates, the final results could look different. For now, this early report tells us that tracking is underway, but we'll need to wait for more complete data to understand the vaccine's true effectiveness this season.