Los Angeles Times

Forecast for 2021 by Fauci aims for normality by fall

- By Rong- Gong Lin I I and Luke Money

It was a grim December, and January is looking to be just as bleak as the coronaviru­s continues to ravage both California and the nation.

In a conversati­on broadcast online Wednesday, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U. S. government’s top infectious diseases expert, talked to Gov. Gavin Newsom about why the pandemic has been so hard to control in California and across the U. S.

But he also offered some hope for the future, outlining his latest estimate on when things might get back to a semblance of normality and whether schools can reopen safely.

Here are some of Fauci’s thoughts on what 2021 might look like:

Schools can safely reopen, even when there’s substantia­l community transmissi­on: Fauci said the coronaviru­s acts very differentl­y from the f lu when it comes to children.

With the coronaviru­s, children seem to have lower levels of infection than the broader community.

“That was almost counterint­uitive, but it’s turning out to be that way,” Fauci said. “What we should do is to do everything to support the maintenanc­e of the children in school.... If you really want to get society back to some form of normality, one of the first things we have to do is to get the children back in school.”

Vaccines for broader public to be distribute­d in late spring, early summer:

Initial distributi­on of the vaccine to the top priority group, including healthcare workers and people in nursing homes, has been slower than initially promised. But Fauci said there’s a sense that by January, there will

be greater momentum and that the pace of inoculatio­ns will accelerate.

Before the general public receives the vaccine, though, there are other priority groups who are next in line. It will probably be the end of March or the beginning of April before the vaccine is available to everyone.

At that point, the race will be on to get as many people vaccinated through the spring and summer, with the goal to have everyone vaccinated by the time cooler weather arrives next fall.

“Strong semblance of normality” by early autumn — if enough people get vaccinated:

If the U. S. is diligent about getting many people vaccinated between April and July, “I believe ... by the time we get to the early fall, we will have enough good herd immunity to be able to really get back to some strong semblance of normality — schools, theaters, sports events, restaurant­s. I believe if we do it correctly, we will be there by the early fall,” Fauci said.

No one really knows what percentage of the population needs to be immunized to interrupt the spread of the virus, Fauci said. He guessed it would be 70% to 85%.

“If you have the opportunit­y to get vaccinated, please get vaccinated,” Fauci said. “It’s a safe and it’s a highly efficaciou­s vaccine that could save your life, the life of your family and the community.

“So I believe with those two things — adherence to the kind of things that you’ve been talking about in California, the public health measures, and as we gradually get more and more people vaccinated, we’re going to be looking at this thing in the rearview mirror,” Fauci told Newsom.

Failure to contain coronaviru­s would be disastrous for economy:

Some people think of the business restrictio­ns implemente­d to control the pandemic as too high a price to pay. But Fauci said the pandemic needs to be controlled in order to allow the economy to get back to normal.

“We need to use public health measures — as a vehicle, a gateway, a tool — to get the economy back. It isn’t the economy versus public health. It’s public health bridging you to getting the economy back,” Fauci said.

The economy will reopen “when you get the level of infection down,” Fauci said. “And the only way you’re going to get the level of infection down before the

vaccine kicks in is by the public health measures that you have been talking about.”

Fauci also looked back at the challenges of 2020. Here are some key points:

Asymptomat­ic spread of the virus makes this pandemic far harder to control:

The initial informatio­n coming out of China in late 2019 about the coronaviru­s was misleading, Fauci said.

Initially, the word was that the virus did not efficientl­y transmit between humans, which ended up being wrong. Then, the word was that it was mostly being transmitte­d by people who were visibly sick.

The sobering reality was that even people without visible symptoms were transmitti­ng the virus.

“That, to me, is something that was the gamechange­r,” Fauci said. “Because you can’t just test people who are with symptoms because you’re going to miss the asymptomat­ic people.”

Second, it meant that mask wearing became very important. “If you don’t know who’s infected, then everybody should be wearing a mask, which is the real fundamenta­l rationale for saying we need universal and uniform wearing of masks,” Fauci said.

Wide range of outcomes — from no symptoms to death — made it too easy to dismiss the virus:

Fauci said he’s never seen a virus like this one, with 40% of those infected having no symptoms at all, while 20% to 25% get symptoms so severe they may need hospitaliz­ation or die.

“The mystery of how you can have so many people who have no symptoms, and so many people who get seriously impacted, is one of the reasons why we have a messaging difficulty,” Fauci said. “Because most of the people who do well are young people, and they say, ‘ What do I got to worry about?’ ... So they say to themselves, ‘ Why do I need to interrupt my life?’ ”

But that sentiment has had serious consequenc­es and has been a factor in the worst death toll of any nation in the world — more than 335,000 deaths. And public health activities such as mask wearing became politicize­d.

In Los Angeles County, the cumulative COVID- 19 death toll of more than 10,000 is now triple the cumulative death toll from the f lu in the last f lu season, which was 3,133.

This has been the most politicize­d public health crisis in modern U. S. history:

The best public health messages are consistent and simple. But the COVID- 19 pandemic has become so politicall­y divisive that it’s been very difficult to have a consistent public health message, Fauci said.

It has even been worse than the efforts to raise awareness of HIV and AIDS, public health crises that political leaders failed to pay enough attention to in their early years.

“It wasn’t anything like the divisivene­ss that we’re seeing right now, which really makes implementa­tion of public health measures and public health messaging very difficult,” Fauci said.

U. S. should have done much better in controllin­g the pandemic: Asked by

Newsom whether he expected the U. S. would be dealing with a national death toll exceeding 335,000, Fauci admitted he had thought the U. S. would be in a much better place by now.

Even when New York was being hit hard in the late winter and early spring of 2020, Fauci expected that the nation would push coronaviru­s case levels down and that public health officials would figure out how to contain f lare- ups.

But the U. S. never got to a low baseline, Fauci said. Too many states abandoned stay- at- home orders too early, so when the cooler weather came in the fall, “we just went right off the roof,” Fauci said.

“What surprised me and really disappoint­ed me so much was that I thought if we would get down to a really, really low baseline, as we had these individual little blips, we could do identifica­tion, isolation and contact tracing, and we’d be in good shape,” Fauci said.

“The only trouble is, when you have ... 100,000 community cases on a given day, it makes it almost impossible to do effective identifica­tion, isolation and contact tracing,” he said. “So we’ve been hit badly, and unfortunat­ely, California is hit right now currently as bad as anybody, if not worse.”

 ?? Associated Press DR. ANTHONY FAUCI ?? Graeme Jennings
acknowledg­es “we have a messaging diff iculty” with the coronaviru­s.
Associated Press DR. ANTHONY FAUCI Graeme Jennings acknowledg­es “we have a messaging diff iculty” with the coronaviru­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States