Chattanooga Times Free Press

COVID-19 hot spots offer sign

- BY CARLA K. JOHNSON

The contagious delta variant is driving up COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations in the Mountain West and fueling disruptive outbreaks in the North, a worrisome sign of what could be ahead this winter in the U.S.

While trends are improving in Florida, Texas and other Southern states that bore the worst of the summer surge, it’s clear that delta isn’t done with the United States. COVID-19 is moving north and west for the winter as people head indoors, close their windows and breathe stagnant air.

“We’re going to see a lot of outbreaks in unvaccinat­ed people that will result in serious illness, and it will be tragic,” said Dr. Donald Milton of the University of Maryland School of Public Health.

In recent days, a Vermont college suspended social gatherings after a spike in cases tied to Halloween parties. Boston officials shut down an elementary school to control an outbreak. Hospitals in New Mexico and Colorado are overwhelme­d.

In Michigan, the three-county metro Detroit area is again becoming a hot spot for transmissi­ons, with nearly 400 COVID-19 patients in hospitals. Mask-wearing in Michigan has declined to about 25% of people, according to a combinatio­n of surveys tracked by an influentia­l modeling group at the University of Washington.

“Concern over COVID in general is pretty much gone, which is unfortunat­e,” said Dr. Jennifer Morse, medical director at health department­s in 20 central and northern Michigan counties. “I feel strange going into a store masked. I’m a minority. It’s very different. It’s just a really unusual atmosphere right now.”

New Mexico is running out of intensive care beds despite the state’s above-average vaccinatio­n rate. Waning immunity may be playing a role. People who were vaccinated early and have not yet received booster shots may be driving up infection numbers, even if they still have some protection from the most dire consequenc­es of the virus.

“Delta and waning immunity — the combinatio­n of these two have set us back,” said Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics sciences at the University of Washington. “This virus is going to stick with us for a long, long time.”

The delta variant dominates infections across the U.S., accounting for more than 99% of the samples analyzed.

No state has achieved a high enough vaccinatio­n rate, even when combined with infection-induced immunity, to avoid the type of outbreaks happening now, Mokdad said.

Progress on vaccinatio­n continues, yet nearly 60 million Americans age 12 and older remain unvaccinat­ed. That’s an improvemen­t since July, when 100 million were unvaccinat­ed, said White House COVID-19 coordinato­r Jeff Zients.

First shots are averaging about 300,000 per day, and the effort to vaccinate children ages 5 to 11 is off to a strong start, Zients said at a briefing Wednesday.

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