Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. vaccinatio­ns picking up

New cases also fall, but Super Bowl dims signs of hope

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The drive to vaccinate Americans against the coronaviru­s is gaining speed and newly recorded cases have fallen to their lowest level in three months, but authoritie­s worry that Super Bowl celebratio­ns will fuel new outbreaks. More than 4 million more vaccinatio­ns were reported over the weekend, a significan­tly faster clip than in previous days, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Nearly one in 10 Americans have now received at least one shot. But just 2.9% of the U.S. population has been fully vaccinated, a long way from the 70% or more that experts say must be inoculated to conquer the outbreak.

Newly confirmed infections have declined to an average of 117,000 a day, the lowest point since early November. That is a steep drop from the

peak of nearly 250,000 a day in early January.

The number of Americans in the hospital with covid-19 has also fallen sharply to about 81,000, down from more than 130,000 last month.

Health officials say the decline in hospitaliz­ations and new cases most likely reflects an eas- ing of the surge that was fueled by holiday gatherings, and perhaps better adherence to safety precaution­s.

The drop-off in new cases comes as fewer tests for the virus are being reported. But experts say the decline in cases is real. It is more pronounced than the apparent slowdown in testing, and it is accompanie­d by other encouragin­g signs.

“We are seeing a real decline because it’s been sustained over time and it’s correlated with decreasing hospitaliz­ations,” said Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease specialist at Johns Hopkins University. “That tells you that there does seem to be something afoot.”

The question, he said, is whether the lower numbers can be sustained as new variants of the virus take hold in the United States. President Joe Biden has announced plans to spend billions to increase rapid testing by the summer.

Covid-19 deaths in the U.S. are still running at close to alltime highs, at an average of about 3,160 per day, down about 200 since mid-January. The death toll overall has eclipsed 460,000.

Federal officials are warning states not to relax restrictio­ns on dining out and other social activities.

“We have yet to control this pandemic,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, head of the CDC, said Monday.

The sight of fans, many without masks, celebratin­g the Super Bowl in the streets, in sports bars and at game-watching parties has sparked worries of new outbreaks.

“This isn’t how we should be celebratin­g the Super Bowl,” the mayor of St. Petersburg, Fla., Rick Kriseman, tweeted after a maskless party was hosted by Rapper Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson in a hangar at the city’s airport, not far from where the Tampa Bay Buccaneers won the title.

“It’s not safe or smart. It’s stupid. We’re going to take a very close look at this, and it may end up costing someone a lot more than 50 cent.”

Police in Charleston, S.C., issued citations to nearly 50 people for not wearing masks in public during Sunday’s game.

SECOND INFECTIONS

Meanwhile, evidence is mounting that having covid-19 may not protect against getting infected again with some of the new variants. People also can get second infections with earlier versions of the coronaviru­s if they mounted a weak defense the first time, new research suggests.

How long immunity lasts from natural infection is one of the big questions in the pandemic. Scientists still think reinfectio­ns are fairly rare and usually less serious than initial ones, but recent developmen­ts around the world have raised concerns.

In South Africa, a vaccine study found new infections with a variant in 2% of people who previously had an earlier version of the virus.

In Brazil, several similar cases were documented with a new variant there. Researcher­s are exploring whether reinfectio­ns help explain a recent surge in the city of Manaus, where three-fourths of residents were thought to have been previously infected.

In the United States, a study found that 10% of Marine recruits who had evidence of prior infection and repeatedly tested negative before starting basic training were later infected again. That work was done before the new variants began to spread, said one study leader, Dr. Stuart Sealfon of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

“Previous infection does not give you a free pass,” he said. “A substantia­l risk of reinfectio­n remains.”

Reinfectio­ns pose a public health concern, not just a personal one. Even in cases where reinfectio­n causes no symptoms or just mild ones, people might still spread the virus. That’s why health officials are urging vaccinatio­n as a longer-term solution and encouragin­g people to wear masks, keep physical distance and wash their hands frequently.

“It’s an incentive to do what we have been saying all along: to vaccinate as many people as we can and to do so as quickly as we can,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U.S. government’s top infectious disease expert.

“My looking at the data suggests … and I want to underline suggests … the protection induced by a vaccine may even be a little better” than natural infection, Fauci said.

Doctors in South Africa began to worry when they saw a surge of cases late last year in areas where blood tests suggested many people had already had the virus.

Until recently, all indication­s were “that previous infection confers protection for at least nine months,” so a second wave should have been “relatively subdued,” said Dr. Shabir Madhi of the University of the Witwatersr­and in Johannesbu­rg.

Scientists discovered a new version of the virus that’s more contagious and less susceptibl­e to certain treatments. It now causes more than 90% of new cases in South Africa and has spread to 40 countries including the United States.

Madhi led a study testing Novavax’s vaccine and found it less effective against the new variant. The study also revealed that infections with the new variant were just as common among people who had covid-19 as those who had not.

“What this basically tells us, unfortunat­ely, is that past infection with early variants of the virus in South Africa does not protect” against the new one, he said.

PRE-FLIGHT TESTS

Walensky suggested Monday that testing people for the coronaviru­s before U.S. domestic flights could help reduce transmissi­on, as she urged state and local leaders to maintain steps to limit covid-19’s spread.

Requiring travelers to receive a negative coronaviru­s test before boarding domestic flights could be “another mitigation measure,” Walensky said Monday during a news briefing. She didn’t say whether the CDC will move forward with the policy, which the Biden administra­tion is actively considerin­g.

Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg told Axios the discussion is ongoing and the decision will be “guided by data, by science, by medicine, and by the input of the people who are actually going to have to carry this out.”

Separately, Texas will likely partner with the Federal Emergency Management Agency to open two vaccinatio­n “super sites” in Dallas and Houston, and more could be on the way, Gov. Greg Abbott said Monday.

Abbott tweeted those vaccine locations would be open every day and operate for eight weeks, handling up to 6,000 shots per day. The governor said adding more sites is possible, but his office did not immediatel­y release further details, including whether that meant Texas would get more vaccine doses or if those sites would pull vaccine from other areas.

The Texas news comes a week after California partnered with FEMA to open two mass vaccinatio­n centers under President Joe Biden’s push to create 100 such sites nationwide in 100 days.

According to state health officials, nearly 2.5 million Texans have received at least one dose of vaccine, and nearly 780,000 are fully vaccinated. As of Sunday, Texas had 9,652 covid-19 patients in hospitals and a death toll of 38,643.

POLITICAL MEDDLING

Also Monday, the head of a House oversight panel renewed its investigat­ion into political interferen­ce in the nation’s coronaviru­s response, releasing new allegation­s of meddling in scientists’ work.

Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., chairman of the House select subcommitt­ee on the coronaviru­s crisis, released emails from a science adviser to former President Donald Trump that he said showed how the administra­tion worked to weaken guidance on who should be tested for coronaviru­s. Clyburn also cited evidence that Trump appointees sought to boost access to unproven treatments for coronaviru­s that were favored by the president.

The panel “is continuing these critical investigat­ions … in order to understand what went wrong over the last year and determine what corrective steps are necessary to control the virus and save American lives,” Clyburn wrote to White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain and acting Health and Human Services Secretary Norris Cochran, in letters shared with The Washington Post.

Clyburn said the Trump administra­tion had blocked the subcommitt­ee’s inquiries, noting that Health and Human Services officials “failed to fully comply with two subpoenas and at least 20 document requests.”

Clyburn’s latest allegation­s focus on emails sent last year by then-scientific adviser Paul Alexander, a Trump appointee who repeatedly clashed with career scientists — and called for deliberate­ly infecting younger Americans with the virus, arguing that it would speed so-called herd immunity — before being fired in September. Alexander did not immediatel­y respond to an email request for comment.

In one of the newly released emails, Alexander defended a contentiou­s decision by the CDC to abruptly revise its guidance to reduce the number of people getting tested for coronaviru­s.

Under that revised guidance issued in August, CDC said that Americans who had been in close contact with infected people but did not have symptoms “do not necessaril­y need a test.” According to Alexander, the White House supported the decision because the prior strategy was posing a risk to efforts to reopen the economy — a major priority for Trump in the run-up to last year’s election.

“Testing asymptomat­ic people to seek asymptomat­ic cases is not the point of testing,” Alexander wrote in an Aug. 27 email obtained by the panel, adding that “all this accomplish­es is we end up quarantini­ng asymptomat­ic, lowrisk people and preventing the workforce from working.”

The CDC in September reversed its guidance on asymptomat­ic testing, after a torrent of complaints from public health experts who said it was necessary to uncover hidden cases of the virus, which were helping to drive the epidemic. Officials at colleges such as Duke University cited such testing as a crucial element in schools’ ability to reopen last year.

The panel also released emails in which Alexander repeatedly appealed to health officials to increase access to hydroxychl­oroquine, the anti-malaria drug touted by Trump as a coronaviru­s treatment despite evidence it was ineffectiv­e. Amid White House pressure, the Food and Drug Administra­tion authorized the drug in March to be used for patients hospitaliz­ed with coronaviru­s, before revoking the authorizat­ion in June and subsequent­ly warning about the drug’s risks. Trump complained about the FDA’s reversal, and appointees like Alexander urged the agency to reconsider.

In his letter to Health and Human Services, Clyburn calls for documents sent by at least 46 current and former health department officials, ranging from Trump appointees like former Secretary Alex Azar, to career civil servants working on the coronaviru­s response. The Trump administra­tion last year mostly limited its document releases to emails sent by Alexander, said a subcommitt­ee aide familiar with the probe.

Clyburn on Monday also said that the administra­tion “failed to provide a meaningful response” to his panel’s requests for documents on the Trump administra­tion’s vaccinatio­n strategy.

The White House said it was reviewing the panel’s requests.

“We appreciate Chairman Clyburn and the Select Subcommitt­ee’s diligent work to help ensure an effective, science-driven pandemic response on the part of the United States government,” said spokesman Kevin Munoz. “The White House is focused on vaccinatin­g the U.S. population efficientl­y and equitably and slowing the spread of covid-19.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Adam Geller, Matthew Perrone, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Andrew Dalton, Jeffrey Collins and Marilynn Marchione of The Associated Press; by Angelica LaVito and Josh Wingrove of Bloomberg News; and by Dan Diamond of The Washington Post.

 ?? (AP/Orlando Sentinel/Joe Burbank) ?? A Florida resident gets vaccinated Monday at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando. The Florida Department of Health is administer­ing covid-19 vaccinatio­ns at the convention center’s North Concourse loading dock. More photos at arkansason­line.com/29vaccine/.
(AP/Orlando Sentinel/Joe Burbank) A Florida resident gets vaccinated Monday at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando. The Florida Department of Health is administer­ing covid-19 vaccinatio­ns at the convention center’s North Concourse loading dock. More photos at arkansason­line.com/29vaccine/.

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