Comparatively low numbers of respiratory viruses so far this year follows the worst influenza season in Australia on record in 2025, which saw more than 500,000 confirmed infections

Australia began the year grappling with an unseasonably high rate of influenza infections, driven by a mutation of the H3N2 strain of the influenza A virus that emerged in 2025.

While no more severe than other strains, subclade K – which some dubbed “Super-K” because of its infectiousness and subsequent rapid spread – saw thousands of summer flu cases.

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