Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Virus surging at record pace; Fauci sees Thanksgivi­ng peril

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

Coronaviru­s cases around the world have climbed to all- time highs of more than 330,000 per day as the scourge comes storming back across Europe and spreads with renewed speed in the U.S., forcing many places to reimpose tough restrictio­ns eased just months ago.

Well after Europe seemed to have largely tamed the virus that proved so lethal last spring, newly confirmed infections are reaching unpreceden­ted levels in Germany, the Czech Republic, Italy and Poland. Most of the rest of the continent is seeing similar danger signs.

France announced a 9 p.m. curfew in Paris and other big cities. Londoners face new restrictio­ns on meeting with people indoors. The Netherland­s closed bars and restaurant­s this week. The Czech Republic and Northern Ireland shut schools. Poland limited restaurant hours and closed gyms and pools.

In the United States, new cases per day are on the rise in 44 states, with many of the biggest surges in the Midwest and Great Plains, where resistance to masks and other precaution­s has been running

high and the virus has often been seen as just a big-city problem. Deaths per day are climbing in 30 states.

“I see this as one of the toughest times in the epidemic,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, an infectious- disease specialist at the Baylor College of Medicine in Texas. “The numbers are going up pretty rapidly. We’re going to see a pretty large epidemic across the Northern Hemisphere.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U. S. government’s top infectious-disease expert, said Americans should think hard about whether to hold Thanksgivi­ng gatherings.

“Everyone has this traditiona­l, emotional, warm feeling about the holidays and bringing a group of people, friends and family, together in the house indoors,” he said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” “We really have to be careful this time that each individual family evaluates the risk-benefit of doing that.”

“It is unfortunat­e because that’s such a sacred part of American tradition, the family gathering around Thanksgivi­ng,” Fauci said. “You may have to bite the bullet and sacrifice that social gathering.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offered advice similar to Fauci’s.

This week, the CDC said people at elevated risk of a severe covid-19 illness — older people and those with chronic conditions — “should not attend in-person holiday celebratio­ns.”

CDC Director Robert Redfield said this week in a conference call with governors that Thanksgivi­ng celebratio­ns could spark high viral transmissi­on rates, according to a recording obtained by CNN. “What we’re seeing as the increasing threat right now is actually acquisitio­n of infection through small household gatherings,” Redfield said.

In his ABC interview, Fauci also criticized a declaratio­n by a group of scientists that supports the concept of “herd immunity.”

Fauci says backing herd immunity — the idea that a disease will stop spreading once nearly everybody has contracted it — is “total nonsense.”

“If you talk to anybody who has any experience in epidemiolo­gy and infectious diseases, they will tell you that that is risky and you’ll wind up with many more infections of vulnerable people, which will lead to hospitaliz­ations and death,” he said. “So I think that we’ve just got to look that square in the eye and say it’s nonsense.”

The U.S. leads the world with more than 7.9 million coronaviru­s cases and nearly 218,000 confirmed deaths. Globally, there have been over 38 million reported cases and 1.09 million confirmed deaths.

“Inevitably, we’re moving into a phase where there’s going to need to be restrictio­ns again,” said David Rubin, director of PolicyLab at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia.

SPREAD TO RURAL AREAS

For the first time since early August, the number of newly reported coronaviru­s infections in the United States on Thursday topped 60,000. More than 36,000 people are hospitaliz­ed nationally with covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, amid a long-feared autumnal rise of infections and serious illnesses.

Responses to the fall surge have varied in hard-hit states.

In North Dakota, Republican Gov. Doug Burgum raised the coronaviru­s risk level in 16 counties this week but issued no mandated restrictio­ns. In Wisconsin, a judge temporaril­y blocked an order from Democratic Gov. Tony Evers that would limit the number of people in bars and restaurant­s.

South Dakota on Wednesday broke its record for covid-19 hospitaliz­ations and new cases and has had more deaths from the disease less than halfway through October than in any other full month. Despite the grim figures, GOP Gov. Kristi Noem has resisted pressure to step up the state’s response to the disease.

Wisconsin hit a new daily high for confirmed infections for the second time this week. In Missouri, the number of people hospitaliz­ed with covid-19 reached nearly 1,450, another record.

“We know that this is going to get worse before it gets better,” Wisconsin Department of Health Services secretary-designee Andrea Palm said at a briefing Thursday. “Stay home. Wear a mask. Stay 6 feet apart. Wash your hands frequently.”

Dr. Marc Larsen, who oversees the covid-19 response at Kansas City, Mo.-based St. Luke’s Health System, said the system’s rural hospitals are seeing surges just as bad as in Kansas City.

“Early on in this pandemic, it was felt that this was a bigcity problem, and now this is stretching out into the rural communitie­s where I think there has not been as much emphasis on masking and distancing,” he said.

The reopening of many schools and colleges did not immediatel­y lead to a major spike in cases, as some experts had feared, but the numbers have steadily crept upward.

Worldwide, deaths have fallen slightly in recent weeks to about 5,200 a day, down from a peak of around 7,000 in April.

Dr. Hans Kluge, the head of the World Health Organizati­on’s Europe office, urged government­s to be “uncompromi­sing” in controllin­g the virus. He said most of the spread is happening because people aren’t complying with the safety rules.

EUROPE REELING

In France, which reported over 22,000 new infections Wednesday, President Emmanuel Macron put 18 million residents in nine regions, including Paris, under a curfew starting Saturday. The country will deploy 12,000 police officers to enforce it.

Italy set a one-day record for infections and recorded the highest daily death toll of this second wave, adding 83 victims to bring its count to nearly 36,400, the second-highest in Europe after Britain.

In Britain, London and seven other areas face restrictio­ns that will mean more than 11 million people will be barred from meeting with anyone indoors from outside their households and will be asked to

minimize travel starting this weekend.

European nations have seen nearly 230,000 confirmed deaths from the virus.

Kluge warned that even more drastic restrictiv­e measures might be needed in such “unpreceden­ted times.”

“These measures are meant to keep us all ahead of the curve and to flatten its course,” Kluge said, while wearing a dark-green mask. “It is therefore up to us to accept them while they are still relatively easy to follow instead of following the path of severity.”

So far in the new surges, deaths have not increased at the same pace as infections.

For one thing, it can take time for people to get sick and die of the virus. Also, many of the new cases involve young people, who are less likely than older ones to get seriously ill. Patients are benefiting from new drugs and other improvemen­ts in treating covid-19. And nursing homes, which were ravaged by the virus last spring, have gotten better at controllin­g infections.

But experts fear it is only a matter of time before deaths start rising in step with infections.

“All of this does not bode well,” said Josh Michaud, associate director of global health policy with the Kaiser Family Foundation in Washington. “Rapid increases in cases like we’re seeing now are always followed by increases in hospitaliz­ations and deaths, which is what is likely to occur across much of Europe and the U.S. in the coming weeks and months.”

VACCINE PRIORITIES

Separately, the World Health Organizati­on’s chief scientist said Wednesday that young, healthy people should be prepared to wait more than a year to be vaccinated against the virus.

Many people are under the misconcept­ion that they’ll be able to get a vaccine in early 2021, “and then things will be back to normal,” Soumya Swaminatha­n said in a question- and- answer session broadcast on YouTube.

In reality, she said, any vaccine that is ready next year will be available in limited quantities, with health care workers and others on the front lines having first priority, followed by “the elderly and so on.”

“There will be a lot of guidance coming out, but I think an average person, a healthy young person, might have to wait until 2022 to get a vaccine,” she predicted.

With an unpreceden­ted global demand for a vaccine, government­s will have to work so that people most at risk get immunized first. By 2022, it is hoped that mortality rates will have dropped and the most vulnerable people will be protected, Swaminatha­n said Thursday.

The United States has not joined the program, meaning that the U.S. timeline for vaccine distributi­on may differ from the one laid out by the WHO.

The CDC also said that a covid-19 vaccine may not be recommende­d for children when it first becomes available in the United States because the vaccine has not been tested on them. Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by David Crary, Carla K. Johnson, Maria Cheng, Samuel Petrequin and Geir Moulson of The Associated Press; and by Joel Achenbach, Jacqueline Dupree, Antonia Noori Farzan and Adam Taylor of The Washington Post.

 ?? (AP/Ebrahim Noroozi) ?? A woman ventures through the Tajrish traditiona­l Iranian bazaar Thursday in northern Tehran. Eight months after the coronaviru­s pandemic first stormed Iran, authoritie­s appear just as helpless to prevent its spread.
(AP/Ebrahim Noroozi) A woman ventures through the Tajrish traditiona­l Iranian bazaar Thursday in northern Tehran. Eight months after the coronaviru­s pandemic first stormed Iran, authoritie­s appear just as helpless to prevent its spread.
 ?? (AP/Eraldo Peres) ?? Medical workers celebrate Thursday in Brasilia, Brazil, as the last three covid-19 patients are released from a field hospital at the National Stadium Mane Garrincha.
(AP/Eraldo Peres) Medical workers celebrate Thursday in Brasilia, Brazil, as the last three covid-19 patients are released from a field hospital at the National Stadium Mane Garrincha.

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