Daily Camera (Boulder)

COVID hospitaliz­ations down

- By Meg Wingerter mwingerter@denverpost.com

Colorado’s COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations this week dropped marginally for the first time in a month, but it’s too early to say if the state’s situation is improving.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t reported 304 people were hospitaliz­ed with the virus statewide as of Tuesday afternoon, down from 324 a week earlier.

But that number has bounced between 300 and 325 since mid-june, so it’s not clear if that’s a meaningful difference, said Dr. Jon Samet, dean of the Colorado School of Public Health.

Cases were down slightly, with 12,440 reported in the week ending Sunday — 557 fewer than the previous week. The percentage of tests coming back positive was also lower, though at 11.2%, it’s still high enough to suggest significan­t numbers of cases aren’t being found.

The number of outbreaks considered active in Colorado decreased to 369 on Wednesday. A week earlier, the state reported 378 outbreaks in residentia­l health care facilities, child care centers and other high-risk settings, such as jails and prisons. It has stopped reporting outbreaks in other settings, including schools.

Deaths from COVID-19 were rising as of the end of last month, with 61 reported in the week ending June 26. Data from more recent weeks is still incomplete, and deaths typically don’t start to fall until several weeks after other measures start to improve.

Seeing hospitaliz­ations and test positivity decline slightly is “perhaps encouragin­g,” Samet said, but next week’s data will show whether it’s the start of a trend or another blip in a long plateau. The virus’s transmissi­on was expected to go down as previous variants ran out of people to infect, but BA.5’S talent for evading the immune system threw that off.

“It’s somewhat remarkable that we continue to maintain this plateau and haven’t begun to deplete the susceptibl­es,” he said.

Nationwide, hospitaliz­ations have risen 20% in the last two weeks, with about 41,000 people receiving care on an average day, according to The New York Times. Deaths have increased by about onethird, but are still near record lows, with about 400 people dying from the virus on a typical day. Reported cases haven’t changed significan­tly, but that number isn’t especially reliable, since so many people rely on home tests they never report.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimated about 78% of cases nationwide are now caused by BA.5. The most recent data in Colorado is from June 26, but at that point, BA.5 was found in about 64% of specimens selected for genetic sequencing.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion recommende­d this fall’s shots should include the spike protein from the BA.4 and BA.5 variants, as well as the spike from the original version of the virus. Pfizer and Moderna said they can’t produce that before October, though, so health officials are still encouragin­g people who haven’t gotten a third dose of the original shots to do so.

Another new subvariant, BA.2.75, appears on track to become dominant in India, but it’s not clear what that might mean for the United States

It’s difficult to make projection­s now, either about the virus’s trajectory in the state or about which variants should be in the booster shots this fall, Samet said.

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