Boston Herald

Jha: ‘We’re going to get through this without disruption’

- By RICK SOBEY

‘Cases are still important. Infections are still important. We want to keep those infection numbers low. But, they mean something different now than they did a year ago. They mean something different because people are vaccinated and boosted.’

ASHISH JHA

As COVID-19 cases rise across the country, the leader of the White House’s coronaviru­s response said officials are paying close attention to new variants but stressed that the U.S. should “get through this without disruption.”

Virus cases have jumped more than 50% in the past two weeks as the omicron BA.2 variant becomes the dominant strain in the country.

Hospitaliz­ations, meanwhile, have not surged so far during this wave.

“We’re going to watch this carefully,” Ashish Jha, the White House’s COVID-19 response coordinato­r, said on CNN’s “State of the Union” on Sunday. “My expectatio­n is that we’re going to see cases go up. We’re going to see cases go down. The key things: Make sure that hospitaliz­ations and deaths are not rising in any substantia­l way, looking at variants, paying very close attention.

“Let’s see where the next few months go,” he added. “I’m concerned. I’m going to watch those numbers. But at this point, I remain confident that we’re going to get through this without disruption.”

Jha emphasized that the U.S. is in a much better place than it has been throughout much of the pandemic — noting that more than 200 million Americans are vaccinated and hospitaliz­ations are at their lowest point.

Officials would have reacted differentl­y to this wave a year ago because of vaccinatio­ns and treatments, he said.

“Cases are still important. Infections are still important. We want to keep those infection numbers low. But, they mean something different now than they did a year ago,” Jha said. “They mean something different because people are vaccinated and boosted. They mean something different because we have a lot more therapeuti­cs available.

“So we are going to have to change our behavior and respond in a different way as the pandemic evolves,” he added. “And I think, at this point, responding with care and caution, but not overreacti­ng, is critical.”

Jha was asked about a timeline for a COVID vaccine for kids under 5. He expects that will happen in the next couple of months.

“Throughout the whole pandemic, we have made these determinat­ions based on when we have evidence and data,” Jha said. “Right now, neither Moderna nor Pfizer have yet submitted an applicatio­n for an emergency authorizat­ion. We expect Moderna to do that this week.

“And then the FDA scientists are going to do what they have done throughout the whole pandemic … which is, they’re going to evaluate the data,” he added. “They are going to assess it for safety and effectiven­ess, and they’re going to make a determinat­ion of when — when it meets their standards, they’re going to make that determinat­ion.”

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