• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

The Feared Post-COVID “Disease Rebound” Of Rampaging Infections Never Really Happened

November 4, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

The COVID-19 pandemic and the measures that were put in place to control it had far-reaching consequences for humanity. This once-in-a-generation event affected education, the world economy, and – most obviously – physical and mental health. But there was one projected consequence that didn’t actually come to fruition, according to new analysis.

With lockdowns and stay-at-home orders keeping people across the world from mixing and socializing for many months, experts feared that there could be a negative side-effect for our immune systems. This could, they theorized, cause a “disease rebound” when lockdowns were lifted, whereby we would have seen a boom in other infectious disease. However, a new study has found that the rebound didn’t happen in quite the way people were concerned about. 

“Early in the pandemic, there was some concern raised in the scientific community that lockdowns would disrupt the circulation of other diseases, such as influenza, and this would lead to what are called ‘gaps in immunity’,” explained Tobias Brett, a senior research associate at the University of Georgia and lead author of the study, in a statement. 

COVID-19 control measures like masking and social distancing didn’t only help people dodge the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Seasonal flu all but disappeared as a public health issue during 2020-21; a report from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control found that no European Union/European Economic Area country recorded a single hospitalization or death from flu that season. 

As Brett and co-author Pejman Rohani explain in their paper, the idea that such a period of calm could be followed by a storm of infections after these control measures were removed was reasonable, and grounded in established epidemiological theory. There were also some real-world hints of a rebound, such as the “tripledemics” of COVID-19, RSV, and flu that began to be forecast in 2022-23. 

To investigate, Brett and Rohani looked at US-wide data for 26 different pathogens in three groups: airborne diseases; sexually transmitted infections (STIs); and environmentally transmitted diseases, such as tick- or foodborne pathogens. 

The mode of transmission was found to be a major factor in whether a disease rebounded or not. Airborne diseases were found to be at greatest risk of a post-COVID surge – that includes viruses like flu and bacterial infections like pertussis (whooping cough). 

On the flip side, cases of STIs tanked during the pandemic and have remained at lower levels, particularly gonorrhea and chlamydia. “Notifications of those sexually transmitted diseases flatlined, and we don’t know why,” said Brett. “Explanations could include improved treatment practices post-COVID or a greater investment in public health after the COVID pandemic.”

“Another explanation could be changing behavior. It’s definitely a subject for further study.”

Rohani agreed, saying, “More broadly, this study highlights the important unanticipated effects of public health measures targeted at one infectious disease for other diseases. This points to a need to think holistically about the community of infectious diseases.”

For the diseases that did see a rebound effect, this doesn’t seem to have been as bad as people feared. For many diseases, including mumps, pertussis, and invasive Hib, transmission remained below expected levels even in 2021 and 2022, when people were mixing enough to rapidly spread the latest COVID variants and influenza A. 

By 2025, Brett and Rohani write, “notifications of the [airborne diseases] largely rebounded to prepandemic levels as expected.” However, in most US states, these notifications “remained at a net deficit compared with counterfactual projections at the start of 2024.”

“It means that the fears of a rebound were valid, but the rebound didn’t cancel out the deficit,” said Brett. “Obviously, there were negative consequences associated with the lockdowns, but in terms of other infectious diseases, the effect wasn’t negative and was, in fact, a net positive.”

The study is published in the journal Science.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Puppet makes cross-Europe trek to support child refugees
  2. Record-Breaking Deepest Fish Ever Caught On Camera 8,330 Meters Down
  3. Hybrid Pythons Are Taking Over The Florida Everglades, Adults With ADHD At Risk Of Dementia, And Much More This Week
  4. A “La Niña Watch” Warning Has Been Issued By Australia’s Bureau Of Meteorology

Source Link: The Feared Post-COVID “Disease Rebound” Of Rampaging Infections Never Really Happened

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • What Is Glaze Ice? The Strange (And Deadly) Frozen Phenomenon That Locks Plants Inside Icicles
  • Has Anyone Ever Actually Been Swallowed By A Whale?
  • First-Known Instance Of Bees Laying Eggs In Fossilized Tooth Sockets Discovered In 20,000-Year-Old Bones
  • Polar Bear Mom Adopts Cub – Only The 13th Known Case Of Adoption In 45 Years Of Study At Hudson Bay
  • The Longest-Running Evolution Experiment Has Been Going For 80,000 Generations
  • From Shrink Rays And Simulated Universes To Medical Mishaps And More: The Stories That Made The Vault In 2025
  • Fastest Cretaceous Theropod Yet Discovered In 120-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Trackway
  • What’s The Moon Made Of?
  • First Hubble View Of The Crab Nebula In 24 Years Is A Thing Of Beauty… With Mysterious “Knots”
  • “Orbital House Of Cards”: One Solar Storm And 2.8 Days Could End In Disaster For Earth And Its Satellites
  • Astronomical Winter Vs. Meteorological Winter: What’s The Difference?
  • Do Any Animal Species Actively Hunt Humans As Prey?
  • “What The Heck Is This?”: JWST Reveals Bizarre Exoplanet With Inexplicable Composition
  • The Animal With The Strongest Bite Chomps Down With A Force Of Over 16,000 Newtons
  • The Eschatian Hypothesis: Why Our First Contact From Aliens May Be Particularly Bleak, And Nothing Like The Movies
  • The Great Mountain Meltdown Is Coming: We Could Reach “Peak Glacier Extinction” By 2041
  • Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Experiencing A Non-Gravitational Acceleration – What Does That Mean?
  • The First Human Ancestor To Leave Africa Wasn’t Who We Thought It Was
  • Why Do Warm Hugs Make Us Feel So Good? Here’s The Science
  • “Unidentified Human Relative”: Little Foot, One Of Most Complete Early Hominin Fossils, May Be New Species
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version