Boston Herald

Coronaviru­s: More questions than answers

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COVID-19 reinfectio­n, reality or statistica­l anomaly?

After another resident of a veterans care center in Massachuse­tts recently tested positive for the coronaviru­s a second time, it’s a question state and federal health officials must answer.

“A veteran resident of the Soldiers’ Home in Chelsea who was clinically recovered from COVID19 as per CDC guidance again experience­d COVID-related symptoms and was transferre­d to Cambridge Health Alliance for treatment and tested positive,” according to a statement Monday from the state Executive Office of Health and Human Services, which oversees the facility.

The positive test came back Saturday. The resident had previously recovered from COVID-19 in May.

Unfortunat­ely, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has been vague at best in explaining whether someone who’s fully recovered from COVID-19 can contract the virus again.

In an online post earlier this month, the agency reiterated it has limited data about reinfectio­n from the virus that causes COVID-19.

However, it did state there haven’t been any reports to date of recurring COVID cases within three months of the initial infection. But it did add the caveat that recovered COVID patients could still harbor low levels of the virus for up to three months after being diagnosed.

And considerin­g the everevolvi­ng nature of this novel virus — combined with the CDC’s propensity to backtrack on previous pronouncem­ents — we all should be skeptical of expert opinions at this stage of the pandemic.

The Chelsea facility wisely has taken additional precaution­s to control the virus’ spread, including testing all residents who live on the same floor as the positive individual and all staff members with whom that resident had contact.

No additional cases have been identified at this state-run facility, where more than 30 individual­s entrusted in its care already have died of the disease.

Nor is this the first report of a veteran resident in a state-run facility testing positive after having clinically recovered from COVID-19. In July, state health officials said a resident of the Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke tested positive for the disease after having previously recovered.

That facility had one of the deadliest outbreaks at a long-term care facility in the country, with 76 residents dying from COVID19 and dozens of others and staffers sickened — a tragedy that still cries out for answers.

This troubling developmen­t occurs at the same time this country, according to Johns Hopkins University, reached the heartbreak­ing milestone of 200,000 deaths from this coronaviru­s — more than any other nation.

Even that stark figure probably underestim­ates COVID-19’s lethal toll in the U.S., since many deaths, especially at the outset of this scourge, were probably attributed to other causes before the availabili­ty of widespread testing.

Massachuse­tts, the hub of this nation’s medical prowess, has reported 128,000 cases and 9,300plus deaths.

With deaths running close to 770 a day, a widely cited model from the University of Washington predicts the U.S. toll will double to 400,000 by the end of the year, as schools and colleges reopen.

And with no vaccine likely to be widely available until sometime next year, common-sense precaution­s, including social distancing and enhanced hygiene, remain our only COVID-19 defense.

It’s unclear whether COVID-19 reinfectio­n emerges as a major complicati­on, but it serves to further demonstrat­e the need for a reliable, widely available vaccine.

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