Global Influenza Programme
We provide Member States with strategic guidance, technical support and coordination of activities essential to make their health systems better prepared against seasonal, zoonotic and pandemic influenza threats to populations and individuals.
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Featured meeting report | 24 September 2025
Influenza Update N° 545
In this update, in addition to the influenza surveillance information, that of the SARS-CoV-2 surveillance by the Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System (GISRS) through its associated sentinel and non-sentinel surveillance systems and reported...
Published 24 September 2025 | For reporting Week 37, ending 14 September 2025
Influenza
- Globally, influenza activity remained low, with influenza A viruses continuing to predominate. Different patterns were observed across hemispheres and transmission zones.
- In the Southern hemisphere, influenza activity remained low and stable in most reporting countries with elevated positivity (>10%) observed in Eastern Africa, South-East Asia and Oceania.
- In the Northern hemisphere, over the past few weeks, influenza activity remained low and stable in most transmission zones. Influenza positivity was elevated in Central America and the Caribbean, Western and Middle Africa, Western, Southern and South-East Asia and percent positivity was over 30% in a few countries. An increase in activity was observed in Western and Middle Africa, Western and South-East Asia.
- In the transmission zones with elevated positivity, influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 predominated in Central America and the Caribbean, Western and Middle Africa, and Oceania whilst influenza A(H3N2) was the predominant circulating subtype in Western, Southern and South-East Asia.
SARS-CoV-2
- Globally, SARS-CoV-2 positivity remained at low levels but increased, with reporting elevated positivity (>10%) observed in Central America and the Caribbean, Tropical South America, Europe, Western and Eastern Asia. Small increases in activity were reported some countries in Central America and the Caribbean, Tropical South America, Eastern Europe and Western Asia.
Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV)
- RSV positivity remained elevated in some countries in Central America and the Caribbean, Tropical and Temperate South America and Western Africa. RSV positivity remained stable across the majority of reporting countries, with a small increase in activity reported in one country in Western Africa where positivity rates remained above 30%.
Starting with report #501, the Global Respiratory Virus Activity Weekly Update included data from sentinel surveillance and other types of systematically conducted virologic surveillance. Countries, areas, and territories use a variety of approaches to monitor respiratory virus activity and data in this report may vary from surveillance reports posted elsewhere. Analyses stratified by source of surveillance is available through Respimart.