Daily Camera (Boulder)

Colorado ‘stuck on this plateau’

Lack of informatio­n about latest version of omicron variant makes projection­s more uncertain

- By Meg Wingerter mwingerter@denverpost.com

Colorado’s COVID-19 trajectory is still on a plateau, and there aren’t many clues to what may happen next.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t reported 324 people were hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 across the state as of Tuesday afternoon, which wasn’t meaningful­ly different from 320 at the same time the previous week.

In June, the state’s modeling team had projected a decline in cases and hospitaliz­ations as the BA.2 and BA.2.12.1 variants of the virus ran out of people to infect. It appears that’s happened to some degree, but it’s being canceled out by growth driven by the BA.5 variant, said Beth Carlton, an associate professor of environmen­tal and occupation­al health at the Colorado School of Public Health.

“I would guess we’re stuck on this plateau because of the arrival of BA.5,” she said.

All of the BA variants are relatives of the original omicron, which caused massive disruption over the winter. There’s no evidence that any of the newer versions are more likely to cause severe illness, but they have evolved to be more contagious, better at evading the immune system, or both.

BA.5 has a distinct advantage over previous variants, but it’s not totally clear how much is due to immune evasion, versus contagious­ness, Carlton said.

That matters for projecting the future because there are very few people who have no immunity from vaccinatio­n or prior infection — a virus that’s just more contagious would rapidly run out of hosts. How good this variant is at reinfectin­g survivors, and how quickly immunity against it wanes, will determine how many people could get sick again in the coming weeks, she said.

As of June 19, the most recent data available, the state reported about 41% of sequenced samples contained BA.5, making it the most common variant in the state. It likely accounts for a majority of cases at this point, Carlton said.

There’s relatively little informatio­n about what might happen next, because other states are dealing with the arrival of BA.5 at about the same time Colorado is, and fewer people are researchin­g variants at this point in the pandemic, Carlton said. Other countries saw some increase in hospitaliz­ations as BA.5 took over, but they have different vaccinatio­n rates and histories with other variants.

“We don’t have this leading indicator state out ahead of us” to watch, she said.

The number of newly reported cases dropped by about 12%, to 12,798, in the week ending Sunday. That’s likely an undercount, however, because the rate of tests coming back positive is about twice the 5% level where public health watchers start worrying about missed cases.

In some parts of the state, it’s considerab­ly higher. San Miguel County reported more than 35% of tests were coming back positive in the last week. Only 26 of the state’s 64 counties had rates below 10%.

As of Wednesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention listed 16 counties in Colorado at the high risk level: Adams, Arapahoe, Bent, Boulder, Broomfield, Denver, Douglas, Jefferson, Kiowa, La Plata, Larimer, Montezuma, Pitkin, Rio Blanco, San Juan and Summit. Counties are considered high risk if they have at least 200 new cases per 100,000 people and some signs of rising hospitaliz­ations.

The state reported 378 active outbreaks as of Wednesday. That’s not comparable to previous weeks, because the state is now only reporting outbreaks in correction­al settings; nursing homes; assisted living facilities; child care centers; some facilities serving people with disabiliti­es; homeless shelters; and overnight camps.

Deaths hit a peak of 55 in the first week of June, dropped in the second week, and then started rising again through the end of the month. The data for more recent weeks is still incomplete.

Nationwide, cases are rising again after being essentiall­y plateaued since late May, according to data compiled by The New York Times. Hospitaliz­ations are also rising, though more slowly than in previous waves, and deaths have continued to hover at about 300 per day.

On Tuesday, the White House’s COVID-19 response coordinato­r, Ashish Jha, urged Americans to get boosters if they haven’t already. People who have compromise­d immune systems can get five shots; people with healthy immune systems who are 50 and over can get four; and everyone else 12 and older can get three.

Jha also advised people to get tested before going to a large indoor gathering or visiting someone at higher risk for severe disease, according to STAT News.

“We can prevent serious illness, we can keep people out of the hospital and especially out of the ICU, we can save lives, and we can minimize the disruption­s caused by COVID-19,” he said. “Even in the face of BA.5, the tools we have continue to work.”

 ?? ?? A health worker administer­s a dose of a Moderna Covid-19vaccine in Norristown, Pa., Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2021.
A health worker administer­s a dose of a Moderna Covid-19vaccine in Norristown, Pa., Tuesday, Dec. 7, 2021.

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