New Delhi: Pediatric influenza hospitalisations have undergone a significant shift following the COVID-19 pandemic, with changes observed in seasonal timing, dominant virus strains and average hospital stay duration. A new retrospective study tracking influenza admissions in children between 2017 and 2025 highlights how pandemic-related disruptions reshaped flu trends in young patients.
Study Spanning Eight Influenza Seasons
The study reviewed medical records of 553 children aged 0–18 years who were hospitalised with laboratory-confirmed influenza at a specialised pediatric infectious disease centre in Bydgoszcz, Poland. Researchers divided the data into three phases: pre-pandemic, pandemic and post-pandemic periods.
They examined influenza seasonality, viral subtypes, patient demographics and length of hospital stay to understand how patterns evolved across these phases. The findings reveal a noticeable redistribution of influenza activity rather than a simple return to pre-2020 trends.
Seasonal Patterns No Longer Predictable
Before and after the pandemic, influenza hospitalisations typically peaked between January and March. However, during the pandemic, admissions followed a bimodal pattern, with spikes first in December and again between March and April.
The number of admissions fluctuated dramatically. The 2021/22 season recorded the lowest number of hospitalisations, with only 18 cases. In contrast, the 2024/25 season saw a sharp rebound, reaching 175 admissions the highest during the study period.
This shift suggests that public health measures, reduced viral exposure during lockdowns and subsequent immunity gaps may have influenced transmission dynamics in children.
Influenza A Remains Dominant but Declined During Pandemic
Influenza A remained the most common strain throughout the study. However, its proportion dropped significantly during the pandemic years, accounting for 56.7% of cases compared to 89.2% in the pre-pandemic period and 73.2% after restrictions eased.
Researchers also observed a modest reduction in median hospital stay. Before the pandemic, children stayed in hospital for a median of five days. During and after the pandemic, this reduced to four days, indicating a subtle shift in clinical course or hospital management practices.
Vaccination Gap Raises Concern
One of the most striking findings was that none of the hospitalised children had been vaccinated against influenza. This points to a significant prevention gap and reinforces the importance of routine flu immunisation in pediatric populations.
Public health experts stress that improved vaccine uptake can substantially reduce hospital admissions and complications, especially during seasons with high viral circulation.
Implications for Clinicians and Health Systems
For clinicians, the findings underline the need to remain alert to atypical influenza peaks. Post-pandemic respiratory virus activity may not fully align with historical seasonal expectations.
Local epidemiological monitoring can assist healthcare providers in adjusting diagnostic testing thresholds and preparing inpatient facilities during high-incidence periods. The post-pandemic surge seen in 2024/25 demonstrates how quickly pediatric bed demand can rise.
Although the study was conducted at a single centre and does not establish direct causation, the consistent changes observed across multiple seasons highlight the ongoing recalibration of respiratory virus transmission in children.
Need for Continued Surveillance
Experts emphasise sustained surveillance to track influenza subtype distribution and seasonal timing. As global mobility increases and immunity patterns shift, monitoring pediatric influenza trends remains critical for effective public health planning.
The post-COVID era has introduced new uncertainties in infectious disease patterns. Strengthening vaccination strategies and maintaining robust disease surveillance systems will be key to mitigating the pediatric influenza burden in the years ahead.
