health
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RSV Cases Triple in Alabama ERs, Sparking Parental Alerts
National Desk
May 4, 2026
MOBILE, Ala. (Day.News) — Respiratory syncytial virus cases are surging across Alabama, with emergency room positivity rates jumping from 4.2% to 14.8% over the past two weeks, according to Dr. Sehgal, a local physician warning parents at Providence Hospital. The spike, mirroring trends reported by mynbc15.com, threatens children under five most acutely, where RSV often escalates to bronchiolitis or pneumonia in high-risk cases. Officials echo initial reports from WAKA Action 8 News of a 25% statewide increase, stressing handwashing, isolating sick children from daycare and avoiding crowded spaces as immediate defenses.[1]
Vaccine shortages complicate the response, prioritizing at-risk groups like children with underlying conditions and adults over 65 battling heart disease or diabetes, Dr. Sehgal noted. At Providence Hospital in Mobile, supplies are limited, pushing healthy families toward prevention protocols: keep feverish kids home until they're eating, drinking and fever-free before returning to daycare. Alabama's public health officials reinforce these measures, aligning with broader calls for vigilance amid rising flu and RSV activity statewide.[1][4]
While national studies, such as a 2024 Clinical Infectious Diseases analysis, attribute some post-pandemic pediatric RSV upticks to increased testing rather than true viral surges, Alabama's ER data signals a tangible local burden. A Mississippi State University review underscores RSV's heavy toll in the region, advocating nurse-led education and surveillance to curb transmission in communities like Mobile and Montgomery. As cases climb into late spring 2026, state health leaders prepare for potential peaks, urging vaccinations where available to protect the state's youngest residents.[2][3]


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