Summary: Week of 11/08/25
Biobot’s national wastewater network
shows that RSV continues to slowly pick up in the South through November 7 (week 45). We’re also starting to see some movement with influenza A, indicating the flu season is just beginning. Overall COVID activity is mostly holding steady nationally, though we’re starting to see some small upticks in the South and Midwest.
Due to the government shutdown, the CDC is still not updating their dashboards, so we don’t know the current hospitalization rates for any of the respiratory viruses. They haven’t been updated since September 20th.
The Bottom Line: RSV activity continues to pick up while flu A is showing early signs of activity. Thankfully, COVID is still down.
National Outlook
COVID-19
National SARS-CoV-2 concentrations are holding steady at low levels.

Influenza
National influenza A & B concentrations are slightly increasing.

RSV
National RSV concentrations are increasing.

Regional
The South
COVID-19: SARS-CoV-2 concentrations are slightly increasing in the South.
Influenza: Influenza A and B concentrations are slightly increasing in the South.
RSV: RSV concentrations are increasing in the South.
The Midwest
COVID-19: SARS-CoV-2 concentrations are increasing in the Midwest
Influenza: Influenza A concentrations are holding steady in the Midwest, while influenza B concentrations are slightly increasing.
RSV: RSV concentrations are holding steady at very low levels in the Midwest.
The Northeast
COVID-19: SARS-CoV-2 concentrations are decreasing in the Northeast.
Influenza: Influenza A and B concentrations are slightly increasing in the Northeast.
RSV: RSV concentrations are increasing in the Northeast.
The West
COVID-19: SARS-CoV-2 concentrations are decreasing in the West.
Influenza: Influenza A concentrations are slightly increasing in the West, while influenza B concentrations are holding steady.
RSV: RSV concentrations are holding steady at very low levels in the West.



Footnotes:
We continue to monitor the evolving H5N1 influenza virus situation, and can now test samples specifically for H5 (including H5N1) — see our blog here and please reach out to hello@biobot.io if interested. A quick reminder that Biobot’s influenza A assay described in this report includes the H5N1 influenza subtype, which is an influenza A virus, but does not distinguish between the different subtypes of influenza A (e.g. H5N1 vs H1N1). We will share any important updates as we have them via Bluesky and in the risk reports. Wastewater data from Biobot Analytics for RSV, influenza, and SARS-CoV-2 are through November 7, 2025 (MMWR week 45). Clinical data for RSV, influenza, and COVID-19 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have not been updated since September 20, 2025 (MMWR week 38) due to the government shutdown.