About CDC’s Flu Forecasting Efforts

What is Flu Forecasting?

Influenza (flu) places a significant disease burden on the U.S. population each year, but the magnitude and timing varies from season to season, making the annual impact uncertain at the beginning of each season. Flu forecasting can change that by predicting in advance when the start, peak, and increases in flu activity will occur. Unlike CDC’s traditional influenza surveillance systems, which measure influenza activity after it has occurred, flu forecasting offers the possibility to look into the future and better plan ahead, potentially reducing the impact of flu.

CDC’s Flu Forecasting Efforts

CDC’s efforts with forecasting began in 2013 with the “Predict the Influenza Season Challenge”, a competition that encouraged outside academic and private industry researchers to forecast the timing, peak, and intensity of flu season. Each influenza season since then, flu experts within CDC’s Influenza Division have worked with CDC’s Epidemic Prediction Initiative (EPI) and external researchers to advance flu forecasting. CDC provides forecasting teams data, relevant public health forecasting targets, and forecast accuracy metrics evaluated against actual flu activity while each team submits their forecasts based on a variety of methods and data sources each week. During the 2019–20 season, CDC expects forecasting teams to provide more than 30 national-level forecasts each week.

While significant progress has been made in the years following the initial competition, forecasting flu remains challenging. Flu viruses are constantly changing, and every flu season tends to be different from the one before it. CDC and participating teams continue to collaborate to identify the best data, methods, and practices for forecasting in order to support the advancement of the science of flu forecasting, improving its ability to inform future public health action.

“FluSight” Flu Forecasting Website

As part of the forecasting initiative, CDC has developed, through EPI, the “FluSight” flu forecasting website, which facilitates the real-time sharing and visualization of weekly flu forecasts. Visitors to the site can view current and past forecasts throughout flu season for the start and peak week, peak intensity, and the near-term activity at the national, regional, and state level. Influenza surveillance data from ILINet are generally updated every Friday, and forecasts are generally available by the following Tuesday. This site also hosts the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) Military Treatment Facility (MTF) Influenza Forecasting Challenge and CDC’s Aedes Forecasting Challenge. Implementation of the FluSight website was funded by the HHS Idea Lab Ignite Acceleratorexternal icon, which supports new governmental projects with resources and other forms of assistance, and CDC’s Center for Preparedness and Response.