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From Flu to Food Policy This Week 🍽️

It's not too late to get a flu shot, other strains of bird flu concerning experts, and new federal dietary guidelines hit.

January 13, 2026

Flu News:

  • Influenza-like illness is the highest it has been since 1997-1998. (YLE)

  • Flu is particularly hard on kids this season, with the second-highest hospitalization rate in 15 years for this point in the season. (NBC)

  • For the first time in 10 years, North Dakota reported two flu deaths in children. (CIDRAP)

Health News:

  • Measles is continuing to skyrocket in South Carolina, with 99 new cases and 200 people in quarantine. (ABC)

  • The death toll from the California wild mushroom poisonings is now up to 3. (NY Times)

  • Beef tallow, long a health pariah, is an unexpected breakout star of the new federal dietary guidelines. (NY Times)

  • Some parents say the new federal dietary guidelines’ advice to cut added sugar until kids are 11 years old is unrealistic. (Politico)

  • Supplements are a $70 billion dollar industry, and RFK Jr. is good for business. (WSJ)

  • Other strains of bird flu, H9N2 and H5N2, both different from the one on American farms, are concerning scientists as some cases rise around the world. (NY Times) 

  • Deaths from heart failure have accelerated since the pandemic. (Bloomberg)

  • Food additives are being targeted in state legislatures across the country as the MAHA movement picks up steam in statehouses. (KFF Health News)

  • Spring & Mulberry recalled a chocolate bar due to potential Salmonella contamination. (FDA)

  • The EPA will stop considering lives saved and calculate only the cost to industry when setting air pollution rules. (NY Times)

Best Question: 

Does getting a flu shot still matter at this point in the season? 

Yes! It’s not too late, because flu hasn’t actually peaked in the U.S. yet, so there’s still a lot of flu going around. There are still over a million new cases of flu each week!

This year’s flu vaccine isn’t a particularly great match for the new flu strain (subclade K) that is dominant right now – but that doesn’t mean that getting the vaccine is useless. Even a poorly matched flu shot still gives us some protection, because it contains 3 strains, including H3N2, which is the strain du jour. Per YLE, preliminary data from the U.K. this year shows that flu vaccination helps cut hospitalizations by about a third or more in adults, and that number is even higher in kids at 70-75%. And even with a less-than-ideal match, it can still shorten duration and severity if you do catch the flu. 

But if you haven’t, it’s not too late to get the flu shot this year since flu is still going strong. It takes about two weeks for the vaccine to ramp up to full protection, but the season doesn’t end until March or even April, so you may save yourself a headache (literally…and fever, and chills, etc.) if you go get a dose. 

Other actions you can take to help reduce your chances of getting the flu include wearing a mask in crowded indoor spaces, improving ventilation (crack a window at that family gathering!), and staying home when sick. 

If you do get sick with the flu, you can start antivirals, like Tamiflu, in the first 48 hours, which can usually shave about a day off the length of your illness. Importantly, if someone else in your household is sick and you start Tamiflu, that can help prevent you from getting it if your doctor prescribes it for you. 

Sources: YLE, NIH

Best Read:

H5N1 is the strain of bird flu that’s wreaking havoc on wild birds and mammals, and that tore through dairy farms over the last few years in the U.S. But there are other strains of avian flu, including H9N2 and H5N2, that are concerning scientists as some cases rise around the world.

Bird Flu Viruses Raise Mounting Concerns Among Scientists - The New York Times