Daily Southtown

Here comes the fourth wave (or not)

- By Faye Flam Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

So are we having a fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. or not? University of Minnesota’s Michael Osterholm has forecast a COVID “Category 5 hurricane” this spring. To some people, a look at hard-hit Michigan could justify this level of alarm.

But Paul Offit of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia could also claim to be right with his much more optimistic view that vaccines will mostly tame the pandemic from this point forward. After all, U.S. death rates and hospitaliz­ations are not spiking and may never return to anything close to the fall/winter peak.

Prediction­s have become a Rorschach test where people can find doom or hope or reassuranc­e. But what’s becoming clear is that public health officials don’t really know why this pandemic rises here and falls there.

It’s no longer plausible that it’s all happening because of mask mandates — or tightening or loosening restrictio­ns more broadly. If restrictio­ns and rules were the only factor at play, the current surge wouldn’t be in Michigan but in a state that has reopened more aggressive­ly, such as Texas or Florida. And cases wouldn’t be so high in those previous paragons of virtue, Maine and Vermont. And why would cases be rising now in Canada?

In an interview last month, University of California, San Francisco physician Vinay Prasad brought up a few factors that might influence regional and national waves. One is initial conditions. In the first wave, some states in the Northeast had many more silent cases than others, so cases stayed high in New York and New England despite draconian policies.

Another is variants. Michigan might have been unlucky to have been seeded with more people with the more infectious variant of the virus, B.1.1.7.

Then there could be seasonal effects that are more complex than just fluctuatio­ns in temperatur­e. Scientists have been suggesting environmen­tal factors from pollen exposure to air conditioni­ng to humidity.

Regional difference­s in COVID-19 peaks may also reflect irregulari­ty in the way cases are reported, said Prasad. There are huge difference­s state to state in how many people are tested, which people are tested, and how positives are tallied up.

And then there’s just plain random chance — perhaps the hardest factor for

people to talk about or accept.

Prasad says there’s been a consistent bias toward pessimisti­c prediction­s, because in the epidemiolo­gy community, there’s a sort of moral exemption for making overly dire forecasts. But if you predict fewer cases, hospitaliz­ations or deaths than come to pass, you’re seen as downplayin­g the pandemic, “and you’re a villain.”

Then there’s the assumption that our non-pharmaceut­ical measures are a major driver of cases — something that might be true but isn’t necessaril­y supported by data. Mask mandates mostly affect mask wearing outdoors, where many experts say the benefit is negligible. People in no-rules Florida still wear them in supermarke­ts, and people in rule-following Rhode Island have been contractin­g disease in private gatherings, where mandates don’t have much reach.

Prasad sees the bias toward restrictio­ns

as part of a broader bias in the medical community that overestima­tes the power of interventi­on. If a person has a cancer that never would have grown, and there’s extensive treatment, it’s assumed that the person would have died if left untreated, for example. But he says if you suggest that some cancer screenings are leading to unnecessar­y treatment, you are accused of being pro-cancer.

A sort of fibbing has also become accepted practice in the public health community, says risk communicat­ion consultant Peter Sandman. The idea is that it’s okay to mislead people in order to encourage healthier behavior. Big and small risks have been lumped together.

That may not be working well with the pandemic. Some people have seemingly decided to ignore public health advice altogether, while others have been scared into being hypervigil­ant.

A Wall Street Journal story, for example, profiled people who were too afraid to return to work. Several reported that they took stay-at-home orders so seriously that they never left home except to attend to family gatherings. These people didn’t seem to have been informed that walks or going to the store are minuscule risks compared to indoor gatherings — whether or not they are with family.

Even if we can’t predict the size or timing of a next wave, public health officials do know that the disease will continue to kill as long as some people don’t qualify for the vaccine or can’t book an appointmen­t. This would be a good time to focus the message on what is known about risks, and be more upfront about what’s still not understood.

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP ?? Kindergart­ener Angel Hernandez leaves after the first day of in-person learning Tuesday at a Los Angeles elementary school.
JAE C. HONG/AP Kindergart­ener Angel Hernandez leaves after the first day of in-person learning Tuesday at a Los Angeles elementary school.

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