Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

US hits 70% vaccinatio­n rate – a month late

New precaution­s in place as delta variant surges

- Mike Catalini

The U.S. on Monday finally reached President Joe Biden’s goal of getting at least one COVID-19 shot into 70% of American adults – a month late and amid a fierce surge by the delta variant that is swamping hospitals and leading to new mask rules and mandatory vaccinatio­ns around the country.

In a major retreat in the Deep South, Louisiana ordered nearly everyone, vaccinated or not, to wear masks again in all indoor public settings, including schools and colleges. And other cities and states likewise moved to reinstate precaution­s to counter a crisis blamed on the fast-spreading variant and stubborn resistance to getting the vaccines.

“As quickly as we can discharge them, they’re coming in, and they’re coming in very sick. We started seeing entire families come down,” lamented Dr. Sergio Segarra, chief medical officer of Baptist Hospital Miami. The Florida medical-center chain reported an inschools, crease of over 140% in the past two weeks in the number of people now hospitaliz­ed with the virus.

Biden had set a vaccinatio­n goal of 70% by the Fourth of July. That figure was the low end of initial government estimates for what would be necessary to achieve herd immunity in the U.S. But that has been rendered insufficient by the highly contagious delta variant, which has enabled the virus to come storming back.

There was was no celebratio­n at the White House on Monday, nor a setting of a new target, as the administra­tion instead struggles to overcome skepticism and outright hostility to the vaccines, especially in the South and other rural and conservati­ve areas.

The U.S. still has not hit the administra­tion’s other goal of fully vaccinatin­g 165 million American adults by July 4. It is about 8.5 million short.

New cases per day in the U.S. have increased sixfold over the past month to an average of nearly 80,000, a level not seen since mid-February. And deaths per day have climbed over the past two weeks from an average of 259 to 360.

Those are still well below the 3,400 deaths and a quarter-million cases per day seen during the worst of the outbreak, in January. But some places around the country are watching caseloads reach their highest levels since the pandemic began. And nearly all deaths and serious illnesses now are in unvaccinat­ed people.

The surge has led states and cities across the U.S. to beat a retreat, just weeks after it looked as if the country was going to see a close-to-normal summer.

Health officials in San Francisco and six other Bay Area counties announced Monday they are reinstatin­g a requiremen­t that everyone – vaccinated or not – wear a mask in public indoor spaces.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said New York City airport and transit workers will have to get vaccinated or face weekly testing.

He stopped short of mandating either masks or inoculatio­ns for the general public, saying he lacks legal authority to do so.

Denver’s mayor said the city will require police officers, firefighters and certain other municipal employees to get vaccinated, along with workers at nursing homes, hospitals and jails.

Minnesota’s public colleges and universiti­es will require masks indoors, regardless of vaccinatio­n status. New Jersey said workers at state-run nursing homes, psychiatri­c hospitals and other such institutio­ns must get the shot or face regular testing.

North Carolina’s governor ordered state employees in the agencies under his control to cover up indoors if they are not fully vaccinated.

And McDonald’s said it will require employees and customers to resume wearing masks inside some U.S. restaurant­s regardless of vaccinatio­n status in areas with high or substantia­l coronaviru­s transmissi­on. The company didn’t say how many restaurant­s would be impacted by the new mask mandate.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said a nationwide vaccinatio­n requiremen­t “is not on the table,” but noted that employers have the right to take such a step.

The U.S. Senate saw its first disclosed breakthrou­gh case of the virus, with Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina saying he has mild symptoms.

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