New York Post

Stop the panic: Most are safe

- JOEL ZINBERG Joel Zinberg, M.D., J.D., is a senior fellow at the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute and an associate clinical professor of surgery at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

MORE than ever, COVID-19 is a pandemic of the unvaccinat­ed, the elderly, and those with preexistin­g conditions. Yet there’s a disturbing tendency by the administra­tion and the media to generalize and magnify the crisis rather than contextual­ize it based on wellknown data.

From the start of the pandemic, it has been clear that COVID-19 is particular­ly severe for well-defined groups — almost all deaths and most hospitaliz­ations have been among the people over 65 and/or people with underlying medical problems. People ages 65-74, 75-84, and 85 and older comprise 10 percent, 5 percent and 2 percent of the population, respective­ly. But they account for 22 percent, 27 percent and 30 percent of the total US COVID-19 deaths. One systematic review of age-specific infection fatality rates found they are very low for children and younger adults (0.002 percent at age 10 and 0.01 percent at age 25) but rise sharply with advancing age to 0.4 percent at age 55, 1.4 percent at age 65, 4.6 percent at age 75 and 15 percent at age 85.

Another review, conducted for the World Health Organizati­on by noted epidemiolo­gist John Ioannidis, found a median infection fatality rate of 0.27 percent but a median infection fatality rate of only 0.05 percent for people younger than 70.

Ninety-five percent of patients hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 had at least one underlying medical condition. The risk of death rose rapidly with the number of conditions. The relative risk of death compared with patients with no medical conditions was 1.53 times as high for patients with one condition, 2.55 times for patients with two to five conditions, and 3.29 times for patients with five to 10 conditions. These conditions become more common with increasing age.

The at-risk groups have not changed during the recent surge with the Delta variant, which began at around the beginning of July and started to decline about two months later. The elderly still account for the lion’s share of COVID-19 deaths during this time.

What has changed since the early days of the pandemic is that now more than 80 percent of the population is vaccinated or has natural immunity resulting from infection. Roughly two-thirds of the population eligible for vaccinatio­n (ages 12 and up) have been fully vaccinated. In the vulnerable 65-andolder group, 83 percent have been fully vaccinated, and another 10 percent have received at least one dose, which provides good protection albeit less than the full two doses.

The good news is that vaccines remain highly protective. COVID-19 vaccines substantia­lly lower the risk of infection, although not as much with the Delta variant as with earlier variants. But vaccines continue to provide strong protection against severe COVID-19 illness and death — even after Delta became the most common variant, unvaccinat­ed people were 10 times more likely than vaccinated people to be hospitaliz­ed or die. And studies indicate that natural immunity is as good or better than vaccine immunity.

COVID-19 remains a serious public health problem, but it is largely a crisis of those who lack vaccine or natural immunity and vulnerable groups. Generalize­d mandates and mitigation measures — such as masks and social distancing — need to be more narrowly targeted toward those who are truly at risk.

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