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Vaccine hesitancy fuelling spread of the deadly Delta variant across America

In many of the corners of the country, demand for Covid-19 vaccine plummets after a months-long run

- BY MELISSA HEALY

The Delta variant crept into Americans’ consciousn­ess through a distant haze of funeral pyres. But now that the coronaviru­s strain first detected in India has burst upon communitie­s across the United States, it has taken on a distinctly American look and feel.

In Giddings, Texas, it’s 147 infections that roared through attendees of a church ministry camp. In Clark County, Nevada, it’s a wave of close to 7,000 cases that sidelined three barbers at a Fade ‘Em All shop in Las Vegas over the July 4 weekend even as a sister shop hosted a Covid-19 vaccine clinic.

In Grand Junction, Colorado, it’s the invisible force behind outbreaks at a country music festival, church services, and a carnival in a mall parking lot. The Delta variant claimed the life of a 15-year-old girl in May and has maxed out capacity at the county’s two hospitals.

Experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that Delta represents 59 per cent of all new cases in the United States. In some places, particular­ly in the Midwest and upper mountain states, it has almost completely overtaken other coronaviru­s strains in just two months.

Quite a feat

That’s quite a feat for a virus that arrived here around midMarch. Armed with some key mutations in the spike protein it uses to latch on to cells, the Delta variant was found to be 50 per cent more transmissi­ble than the Alpha variant first detected in the UK — a strain that already passed from person to person 56 per cent more readily than the original virus that sparked the pandemic.

Early research suggested it might drive up hospitalis­ations, though the CDC has not found evidence to back this up. Still, Dr. Mike Ryan, who leads the World Health Organisati­on’s Health Emergencie­s Program, called it “faster” and “fitter” than any strain that has come before it, and it’s now fueling outbreaks and deaths in at least 111 countries.

The Delta variant has surged with terrifying speed and strength in Greene County, MIssouri, since it was first detected there in May. Before Delta, Covid-19 hospitalis­ations hovered at 34. On June 21, 155 patients were in the county’s hospitals — a number not seen since the nationwide surge of Covid-19 cases in January. By July 8, the census rose to 192, with 70 in the critical care unit. Greene County reported 19 Covid-19 deaths in June, virtually all caused by the Delta variant. Deaths are expected to double or triple in July.

Inundated with cases

“We are just being inundated with Covid cases,” said Kendra Findley, the county’s administra­tor of community health and epidemiolo­gy. All of them are caused by the Delta variant, she added. The places being overrun by Delta share something uniquely American: Despite overflowin­g supply of vaccines and strong evidence that they protect against the new variant, large numbers of residents have declined to inoculate themselves or their adolescent children.

Indeed, 93 per cent of the US counties with the highest rates of new infections have vaccinatio­n rates below 40 per cent, according to CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky. Many of these counties are stronghold­s of the Delta variant, she added.

Low vaccinatio­n rates, a high rate of community transmissi­on and the reopening of public spaces with scant protective measures “will certainly and sadly lead to more unnecessar­y suffering, hospitalis­ations and potentiall­y death,” Walensky warned. Some counties are woefully behind the national mark of 48.3 per cent fully vaccinated, and some are just a little behind. But all have stalled in their efforts to vaccinate many more residents — and in some cases, to induce those who got a first dose to come back for a second one.

In Greene County, for instance, only 45 per cent are at least partially vaccinated and just 40 per cent are fully vaccinated. In Colorado’s Mesa County, home to Grand Junction, 46 per cent are partially vaccinated and 42 per cent have full protection. In Las Vegas and the rest of Clark County, 51 per cent are partially vaccinated and 41 per cent are fully vaccinated.

And in Texas’ Galveston County, home to Giddings, around 45 per cent of residents are fully vaccinated, a number that has scarcely budged in recent months, according to the chief health officer there. “I’d say there’s hesitancy and I’d use another word — obstinance,” said Dr. Philip Keiser, a University of Texas infectious disease expert who’s been Galveston County’s Local Health Authority since 2016. “There’s this attitude, ‘You can’t make me!’”

Facts don’t always help, Keiser added. Sceptical Galveston County residents objected when his county’s data dashboard began reporting the vaccinatio­n status of those who were hospitalis­ed or died of Covid-19.

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 ?? AP ?? Far left: A seated man holds a sign pointing to a mobile vaccinatio­n clinic along Crenshaw Boulevard in Los Angeles, California.
AP Far left: A seated man holds a sign pointing to a mobile vaccinatio­n clinic along Crenshaw Boulevard in Los Angeles, California.
 ?? Reuters ?? Left: Nurses and doctors in the CoxHealth Emergency Department in Springfiel­d, Missouri, don personal protective equipment to treat patients with Covid-19 on Friday.
Reuters Left: Nurses and doctors in the CoxHealth Emergency Department in Springfiel­d, Missouri, don personal protective equipment to treat patients with Covid-19 on Friday.
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 ?? AFP ?? People ride a bus in a Brooklyn neighbourh­ood in New York, which is witnessing a sharp rise in Covid-19 cases.
AFP People ride a bus in a Brooklyn neighbourh­ood in New York, which is witnessing a sharp rise in Covid-19 cases.

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