Pandemic has never been worse in Mississippi: doctor
Mississippi’s top health official concluded Wednesday that the state with the nation’s second-lowest vaccination rate is now suffering through “the worst part of the pandemic,” in a week in which more than 20,000 students have been quarantined for exposure to coronavirus.
Thomas Dobbs acknowledged the severity of the state’s health crisis, which has seen a surge in cases among the unvaccinated population overwhelm hospitals, leaving only a handful of intensive care unit beds still available for dozens of patients who need them.
“We are clearly at the worst part of the pandemic that we’ve seen throughout, and it’s continued to worsen,” Dobbs said at a news briefing.
“We’re seeing higher and higher numbers of not just cases but hospitalizations, people in intensive care units, life support. And sadly, as we’ve seen, additional deaths are going to follow. Without a doubt we have surpassed our previous peaks by a substantial margin, and we expect to see that continue.”
Mississippi recorded more than 4,000 new cases Wednesday, bringing its seven-day average for new infections to 3,526, according to data compiled by The Washington Post.
The infection numbers this week in Mississippi, including Monday’s record-breaking 7,839 cases in a single day, are higher than at any point of the pandemic. Nearly 1,700 people are hospitalized and 467 ICU beds are occupied in the state.
At the University of Mississippi Medical Center, a second field hospital was installed to help treat COVID patients in Jackson. The first field hospital was opened last week.
“It’s unbelievable that we’re doing this again within what? Six days?” University of Mississippi Medical Center spokesperson Marc Rolph told the Associated Press on the second field hospital. “Heartbreaking.”
About 36 per cent of Mississippi is fully vaccinated, the second-worst vaccination rate in the country, above only Alabama. While Dobbs said he was encouraged by the recent increase of residents getting their first shots, he noted that 89 per cent of hospitalizations and 86 per cent of deaths in the state were among unvaccinated people. The state’s top doctor, who has likened this latest surge in Mississippi to a “tsunami,” has repeatedly stressed that vaccination remains “our best way out of this pandemic.”
“It’s effective and extremely safe,” Dobbs said of the vaccines. “COVID has killed almost 8,000 Mississippians, but we’ve seen very few side effects from the vaccine.”
The state’s worsening situation is playing out at its schools, where tens of thousands of students are in quarantine for possible exposure after just one week of classes.
Data submitted by about 800 schools to the Mississippi State Department of Health last week shows that 20,334 students have already been affected in the early days of the school year.
More than 4,500 students and 948 teachers and staff contracted the virus between Aug. 9 and Friday, according to the health department.
“When you look at a number like 20,000 students that are on quarantine in any given week, that exceeds what we’ve experienced ... when we were at our previous peak for the impact on the schools,” Mississippi State Epidemiologist Paul Byers said in a call with state pediatricians, according to NBC News. “These disruptions ... are going to continue for a while.”
Republican Gov. Tate Reeves, who has denounced mask mandates as “foolish” and “harmful,” recently said he has “entrusted” schools districts to decide whether students and teachers should wear masks.
The Republican governor told reporters last week that it’s “very rare that kids under the age of 12 have anything other than the sniffles” when they contract COVID.
But the concerns of parents and school officials over masking in schools were amplified more when 13-year-old Mkayla Robinson died of COVID on Saturday, just hours after she tested positive for the virus.