Twindemic andtripledemic (ortridemic) are terms used during theCOVID-19 pandemic, referring to the possibility of a severeflu season happening alongside an increase in cases ofCOVID-19 during the fall and winter of 2020 and 2021,[1][2][3][4][5] as well asrespiratory syncytial virus in the winter of 2022. A consequence of a twindemic may be a mixture of two different infections in the same person at the same time.[6] The termtwindemic is aportmanteau of "twin" and "pandemic".[3]
The term was used by an August 2020 article fromThe New York Times written by Jan Hoffman.[1][2][3] In the article, Hoffman credited Dr. L.J. Tan of theImmunization Action Coalition as an "early promoter" of the possibility of a twindemic.[3] After the publication ofThe Times' article, several media outlets began to report on the possibility of a twindemic.[3] Health experts responded to the threat of a possible twindemic by encouraging more people to get theflu vaccine.[1][2]
A twindemic did not occur during the flu season in late 2020 due to cases of the seasonal flu being at historic lows in theUnited States and globally.[7] These low amount of flu cases were attributed to measures put in place to prevent COVID-19 from spreading, includingface masks,social distancing, andhand washing.[7]
Health experts renewed concerns of a possible twindemic happening during the fall and winter of 2021 due to loosening restrictions.[4][5] In April 2022,Apoorva Mandavilli ofThe New York Times speculated that a twindemic has not occurred because "exposure to one respiratory virus may put the body's immune defenses on high alert, barring other intruders from gaining entry into the airways. This biological phenomenon, calledviral interference, may cap the amount of respiratory virus circulating in a region at any given time."[8] In theUnited States, flu cases, hospitalizations and deaths were up from the previous flu season, but were still lower than the pre-pandemic average.[8]
In January 2022,Israel reported, for the first time, a mixture of COVID-19 and influenza infections, colloquially known as "flurona".[9][10][11][12] InBrazil, four cases of the double infection have been identified, including a 16-year-old male fromRio de Janeiro. InFortaleza ofCeará state, two children, including a one-year-old child tested positive without complications, and also a 52-year-old man who did not need hospitalization.[13] InSão Paulo, the Secretariat of Health announced that its state had 110 cases in 2021.[14]
Flurona infections have also been reported in the United States, thePhilippines,Hungary andRomania.[11]