Updated
Updated · Women's Health · Jun 11
U.S. Norovirus Cases Rise as 20-Second Handwashing Urged Before Summer Gatherings
Updated
Updated · Women's Health · Jun 11

U.S. Norovirus Cases Rise as 20-Second Handwashing Urged Before Summer Gatherings

1 articles · Updated · Women's Health · Jun 11

Summary

  • Wastewater data show norovirus levels are high across the U.S. heading into summer, signaling a nationwide uptick rather than an isolated outbreak.
  • Warmer-weather gatherings—from picnics to weddings—are seen as a likely driver because the virus spreads easily through sick people, contaminated food or drinks, and touched surfaces.
  • Up to 3 days of sudden vomiting and diarrhea can follow infection, with dehydration the main medical risk; treatment is largely limited to fluids, and severe cases may need IV rehydration.
  • Soap-and-water handwashing for at least 20 seconds remains the key prevention step because hand sanitizer does not reliably kill norovirus; avoiding people who are actively vomiting also helps.
  • Doctors say the virus circulates year-round and current levels are still below typical winter peaks, with activity expected to ease as summer progresses.

Insights

Norovirus can survive for weeks on surfaces. Are summer travel hotspots truly prepared for this resilient and unseasonal threat?
Why is the 'winter vomiting bug' surging this summer, and is our reliance on hand sanitizer leaving us vulnerable?
As new norovirus strains evade immunity, can a vaccine be developed before the next major outbreak occurs?