Daily Southtown

CDC says young adults now largest group getting infected

- By Karen Kaplan

LOS ANGELES — The longer the COVID-19 pandemic goes on, the younger its victims get.

A new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that the median age of people with COVID-19 in the U.S. has declined over the spring and summer, with Americans in their 20s now accounting for more cases than people in any other age group.

The findings suggest that if the U.S. wants to get its coronaviru­s outbreak under control, it will need more cooperatio­n from young adults. In May, the median age of U.S. residents with COVID-19 was 46. By July, it had dropped to 37, thenrose slightly to 38 in August.

Likewise, inMay, people in their 20s made up 15.5% of confirmed COVID-19 cases nationwide. At the time, they trailed people in their 30s (who accounted for 16.9% of total cases) as well as people in their 40s and 50s (both of those age groups accounted for another 16.4% of cases).

But by June, 20-somethings had taken over the top spot, making up 20.2% of all cases. That figure rose to 23.2% in July, then dropped back to 21% in August.

The proportion of cases among Americans in their 30s also increased in June and July. But by August, it had fallen slightly below the level seen inMay.

Meanwhile, the share of cases among adults 40 and older decreased steadily through the end of July, according to the study.

The trend toward younger COVID-19 patients came as the total number of new cases increased. In May, 604,570 Americans of all ages were diagnosed with COVID-19. By July, that figure exceeded 1 million — a 71%

increase.

The CDC researcher­s who produced the report drewonthre­e kindsof data: They tallied confirmed cases of COVID-19 in reports from state health department­s, examined data from the National Syndromic Surveillan­ce Program to identify patients whowent to hospital emergency rooms with COVID-19 symptoms and analyzed coronaviru­s test results from37 states.

The trend toward younger patients was evident in all three data sources, the researcher­s said.

The increase in COVID-19 cases among people in their 20s was striking. In May, 93,741 Americans between the ages of 20 and 29 were newly diagnosed with the disease. That figure swelled to 149,761 in June, 240,105 in July and 189,366 in August.

Americans in their 30s madeup the second-largest group of new COVID-19 cases. Among people ages 30 to 39, 101,917 cases were confirmed in May, 130,415 were identified in June, 183,487 were diagnosed in July and 148,500were added in August.

Over time, these infections in younger adults appeared to spread to older, more vulnerable adults in certain parts of the country,

the researcher­swrote.

In the Southeast, an increase in the test positivity rate for people in their 20s and 30s was followed nine days later by an increase in the positivity rate for people in their 40s and 50s. Six days after that, people ages 60 and up had a higher positivity rate aswell.

In the Southwest, an increase in the positivity rate for people under 60 was followed about four days later by an increase in the positivity rate for people ages 60 and up. The same pattern was seen in the south-central states, though the lag there was seven days.

This sequence of events offers “preliminar­y evidence that younger adults contribute­d to community transmissi­on of COVID-19 to older adults,” the researcher­s wrote. “Similar observatio­ns have been reported by theWorldHe­alth Organizati­on,” they added.

There are several plausible explanatio­ns for why this might be the case, the CDC team wrote. Younger adults are more likely to work in restaurant­s, stores, child care centers and other places that put them at greater risk of exposure to the coronaviru­s. At the same time, they may be more cavalier about social gatherings and more lax about the need for physical distancing.

 ?? CHANDAN KHANNA/GETTY-AFP ?? Americans in their 20s now account for more cases of COVID-19 than in any other age group, a new study shows.
CHANDAN KHANNA/GETTY-AFP Americans in their 20s now account for more cases of COVID-19 than in any other age group, a new study shows.

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