Flu Season Is Just Around the Corner – Here's What You Can Do to Get Ahead of It

After months of battling COVID-19, it’s exhausting to think ahead to flu season – but it’ll be here before we know it. “While influenza can technically circulate year-round, in the United States, we generally begin to experience an outbreak beginning in the early fall (late September or early October), with some variability year-to-year,” Michael Devine, MD, dual-board certified internist and geriatrician and co-founder of Devine Concierge Medicine, told POPSUGAR. Typically, cases continue “through the winter and into mid-to-late spring.”

So, as in past years, expect flu cases to begin ticking up with the advent of pumpkin spice season, and be prepared for the virus to linger well into the spring, though cases should top out somewhere in between. “The heaviest burden of new cases – or ‘peak season’ – generally occurs between December and March each year,” Dr. Devine explained. “The Centers For Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has been tracking this closely over the past four decades and, with minimal variability, the month of February almost always seems to be the most active month for new cases.”

A little bit stressful, huh? Fortunately, there are plenty of things you can do to prevent the flu, and you’re probably doing most of them already.

Related: 7 Fall Superfoods That May Help Boost Your Immunity During Cold and Flu Season

What You Can Do to Prepare For Flu Season

You have a lot of tools at your disposal, and 2020 has been a viral outbreak training ground, so you’re a pro now!

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