Don't let Facebook control your access to local news!

Instead, get the latest stories from the San Fernando Valley Sun delivered directly to your inbox!

Keep Local News Thriving in the San Fernando Valley.

Support the San Fernando Valley Sun Today!

Donate Here

  • Sections
    • News
    • E-Editions
      • The Weekly Latest Edition
        • Archive
      • El Sol Ultima Edicion
        • Archivo
    • Classifieds
    • Public Notices
    • Opinion
    • Calendar
      • Calendar of Events
      • Submit an Event
  • Advertise
    • Media Kit
    • Best of The San Fernando Valley 2026
    • Legals & Public Notices
    • Obituary Announcement
    • Place a Classified Ad
  • DBA Filing and Publishing
    • Payment Processing
  • Public Notices
    • DBA Filing and Publishing
    • Publish Legals & Public Notices
    • Public Notices
    • Place Columns Legals and DBAs
  • Obituaries
    • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
  • Donate
  • Subscribe to the newsletter
  • Best of The San Fernando Valley
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • YouTube
Skip to content
  • Donate
  • Subscribe to the newsletter
  • Best of The San Fernando Valley
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • YouTube
SF Sun logo

The San Fernando Valley Sun

Your Bilingual Community Newspaper for the Entire San Fernando Valley

  • Sections
    • News
    • E-Editions
      • The Weekly Latest Edition
        • Archive
      • El Sol Ultima Edicion
        • Archivo
    • Classifieds
    • Public Notices
    • Opinion
    • Calendar
      • Calendar of Events
      • Submit an Event
  • Advertise
    • Media Kit
    • Best of The San Fernando Valley 2026
    • Legals & Public Notices
    • Obituary Announcement
    • Place a Classified Ad
  • DBA Filing and Publishing
    • Payment Processing
  • Public Notices
    • DBA Filing and Publishing
    • Publish Legals & Public Notices
    • Public Notices
    • Place Columns Legals and DBAs
  • Obituaries
    • Obituaries
    • Submit an Obituary
El Sol
Posted innews/local

Weathering the Omicron Surge, Explaining “Flurona”

by SFVS Staff January 5, 2022January 5, 2022

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Nextdoor (Opens in new window) Nextdoor

By Cedars-Sinai News

Los Angeles County is reporting record numbers of COVID-19 cases as the omicron variant continues to spread. To help the community navigate this current pandemic surge, Cedars-Sinai experts shared updates on the most important things Angelenos need to know.

First on the list: Get vaccinated and get a booster shot if you qualify.

Top Stories

Pilot Who Crash-Landed in Pacoima Reportedly Recovering 

Pilot Who Crash-Landed in Pacoima Reportedly Recovering 

April 22, 2026April 23, 2026
Proposed Legislation Introduced to Help Police De-Escalate High-Speed Pursuits

Proposed Legislation Introduced to Help Police De-Escalate High-Speed Pursuits

April 15, 2026April 15, 2026
Youth Hockey Families Speak Out Against Planned Demolition of Valley Ice Rink

Youth Hockey Families Speak Out Against Planned Demolition of Valley Ice Rink

April 8, 2026April 9, 2026

“Just as we saw this past summer, most of the patients being admitted to our hospital are unvaccinated,” said Caroline Goldzweig, MD, chief medical officer of the Cedars-Sinai Medical Network. “Our best defense against this relentless virus remains vaccination.”

YouTube video

A handful of children also are being hospitalized with COVID-19, said infectious disease specialist Priya Soni, MD, assistant professor of Pediatrics. These children are primarily unvaccinated, either because they are too young or because their families chose not to vaccinate, and some have underlying health conditions such as asthma or obesity.

“The best defense is the vaccine, and we at Cedars-Sinai strongly, strongly recommend vaccinating children ages 5 and up,” Soni said.

Get the latest news from San Fernando delivered directly to your inbox!

Rare cases of myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, have occurred in ages 12 and up, but the condition is actually more common among those infected with COVID-19 than among those receiving the vaccine, said Soni.

What Do We Need To Know

The media has recently been reporting on something they are calling “flurona,” a new term for someone who has COVID-19 and flu at the same time. Jonathan Grein, MD, director of Hospital Epidemiology at Cedars-Sinai, stressed that this is not a new variant of COVID-19.

Grein said that it is possible to be infected with both viruses at the same time, and Cedars-Sinai has seen at least one mild case among its patients.

“It’s obviously not good to be infected with two viruses rather than one, but there’s no clear indication that this is a particularly bad combination,” Grein said. Treatment for mild combination symptoms would be the same as home treatment for either virus individually.

Grein also stressed that, as with COVID-19, we have a vaccine against influenza, and that getting a flu shot is the best way to prevent infection.

What About Booster Shots

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently extended Pfizer-BioNTech booster recommendations to ages 12 to 15, meaning they are now recommended for everyone ages 12 and up, Goldzweig said. (Ages 5 and up can receive two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, but no booster is yet recommended for ages 5-11.)

Booster timing for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine has also changed, with the CDC now recommending it be given five months after the two-dose series is complete. Timing remains six months for those receiving the Moderna vaccine, and two months after the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

“Anyone eligible should get a booster,” Goldzweig said. “We know that immunity from the vaccines starts to decrease over time, but studies show that the boosters are preventing hospitalizations and deaths.”

Who Should Get Tested

Because even those who are vaccinated can develop COVID-19, anyone in unmasked, close contact with someone infected with COVID-19 for 15 minutes or longer should get tested five to seven days after that exposure-even if they don’t have symptoms, Goldzweig said.

“Influenza and other viruses are circulating, but the likelihood right now is that anyone with symptoms has COVID-19, particularly in Los Angeles, where it’s estimated that 1 in 5 people are infected,” Goldzweig said. “Treat yourself as if you have COVID until you get those test results.”

Testing appointments are available throughout LA County via the county COVID-19 testing website. Pharmacies and other locations also offer testing, and Goldzweig stressed the importance of visiting one of these, or using an at-home test kit, rather than visiting an urgent care center or emergency department, as many are at full capacity caring for ill patients.

Latest News

Horvath Seeking To Strengthen Safety Around Whiteman Airport Following Crash

Go Metro to Five Free Cinco de Mayo celebrations in LA

Youth Soccer Coach Pleads Not Guilty in Teen’s Death

Últimas Noticias

Piloto Involucrado en un Accidente Aéreo en Pacoima se Encuentra Recuperándose

Miembros de la Coalición del Aeropuerto Whiteman Abordan Preocupaciones sobre el Aeropuerto en Medio de un Estudio de Cierre

Horóscopo

EVENTOS Locales – Semana de 23 de abril, 2026 

Those who test positive might qualify for one of the newly available COVID-19 treatments. “A positive result also gives you an extra push to isolate yourself and make sure that you protect others from getting COVID-19,” said Goldzweig, adding that with so much virus circulating, any positive test result should be considered accurate.

Who Should Stay Home

Anyone with COVID-19 symptoms or a positive test result should isolate, and CDC guidelines on that have recently changed. For everyone except healthcare workers, the isolation period is now five days.

“The five days begins the day after you first experience symptoms, or the day after your positive testing date” Goldzweig said. “Your fever and other symptoms should be gone or greatly improved before you end your isolation, and you still need to wear a mask at all times around other people for a full 10 days.”

This advice to isolate and mask extends to everyone in the household, because if one person has COVID-19, everyone else was exposed. “The person who has COVID-19 should isolate, in their own bedroom with their own bathroom, if possible, until they are completely recovered,” Goldzweig said.

As schools reopen after winter break, it’s uncertain how the new CDC guidance will play out in children, as some campuses are allowing students who are exposed to COVID-19 but test negative to return to classes right away.

“Our local health departments have provided more detailed guidance prior to schools reopening, and some schools have already adjusted protocols in preparation,” Soni said. “We want kids to be able to attend school without having long periods of quarantine. And we hope that, as with the delta variant, younger children will not be the big drivers of this pandemic.”

How COVID-19 Should Be Treated at Home

Because the omicron variant now accounts for most cases of COVID-19, and because the variant seems to cause milder illness-particularly in vaccinated and boosted patients —Goldzweig said most people who develop symptoms can care for themselves at home.

“If you have relatively mild symptoms and aren’t high-risk because of your age, a chronic illness or impaired immune system, you can take an over-the-counter medication like Tylenol or Motrin for fever and muscle aches, and push fluids the way you would with any other viral illness,” Goldzweig said.

This advice also applies to children, and Soni said children with COVID-19 shouldn’t need antibiotics or any additional medication unless their pediatrician is concerned that they also have a concurrent ear infection or pneumonia.

Who Should Go to the Hospital

For more serious symptoms, Goldzweig and Soni recommend seeking medical care right away.

“If you’re feeling very short of breath, have a persistent fever, you’re very weak, you can’t keep up with fluids, or you’re getting dizzy when you stand up, that would be a time to seek help,” said Goldzweig.

In older children and teens, the virus seems to behave much as it does in adults, but for infants, parents should watch closely for signs of trouble, Soni said.

“They might be feeding poorly or not waking up to feed at their usual times. You might see them breathing faster than normal or appear to be working harder to breathe, and those are signs your baby may be in trouble,” she said.

Goldzweig added that a video visit might be a good place to start for someone who wants guidance about their or their child’s relatively mild symptoms, and that the best way to keep the whole family out of the hospital is for everyone eligible to get a booster.

“The booster is important to rev your immune system back up and give you protection from these newer variants,” she said. “You might still get COVID-19, because we know that even boosted people are getting omicron, but you will have far fewer symptoms and you’re much less likely to be hospitalized. You also will clear the virus faster, so your period of being infectious to others is greatly reduced.”

How Else Can We Protect Ourselves

Along with vaccination and boosting, the other health habits we’ve adopted throughout the pandemic-masking indoors, frequent and careful hand-washing-offer an added layer of protection against all variants of COVID-19 and other winter viruses circulating, Goldzweig said.

She also offered a reminder that large gatherings put everyone at risk.

“Be smart,”she said. “Right n ow, we’re in this surge. When we’re in a surge, don’t go get a COVID-19 test just so you can go to a big party or go to a club. We’re all tired of staying home, but these are the things we have to do to protect ourselves and others from this virus.”

Related

Tagged: b stories, no-byline

RSS Latest News

  • Horvath Seeking To Strengthen Safety Around Whiteman Airport Following Crash
  • Go Metro to Five Free Cinco de Mayo celebrations in LA
  • Youth Soccer Coach Pleads Not Guilty in Teen’s Death
  • Pilot Who Crash-Landed in Pacoima Reportedly Recovering 
  • Whiteman Coalition Members Address Concerns About Airport Amid Closure Study

SF Sun logo
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • YouTube

About Us

A newspaper of historical dimensions, the San Fernando Sun has been publishing continuously since 1904 reflecting the valley’s historical and cultural development. Today, as in those pioneering days, the weekly San Fernando Sun leads the valley residents with insightful editorial, community involvement and valuable consumer information.

Contact Us

sanfernandosun.com
1150 San Fernando Road Suite 100
San Fernando, CA 91340
Phone: (818) 365-3111
Email: production@sanfernandosun.com

 

© 2026 Your Bilingual Community Newspaper for the Entire San Fernando Valley Powered by Newspack

Gift this article