When you walk into a busy emergency room, how many people are there because of COVID-19 or the flu? A new report from U.S. emergency departments is trying to answer that exact question by tracking what percentage of visits get these diagnoses. This kind of tracking matters because it shows us the real-time burden these viruses place on hospitals and healthcare workers. It's a snapshot of pressure in the system.
The report looked at emergency department visits across the United States. Its main goal was to measure the share of visits attributed to COVID-19 and influenza. However, the specific findings—the actual percentages—are not reported in this initial release. We don't know if the number is going up or down, or how COVID compares to flu right now.
Because this is an observational report and not a formal study, it simply describes what's happening without testing any treatments or interventions. The report doesn't discuss safety issues or patient outcomes. The biggest caveat is the lack of numbers; without them, we can't draw conclusions about trends or the current scale of the problem. This is a first look at the data being collected, not the full story.