Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Covid infections hit 60% of U.S., data determines

Prevalence called good sign for controllin­g next surge

- APOORVA MANDAVILLI

Sixty percent of U.S. residents, including 75% of children, had been infected with the coronaviru­s by February, federal health officials reported Tuesday.

The highly contagious omicron variant was responsibl­e for much of the spread. In December 2021, as the variant began spreading, only half as many people had antibodies indicating prior infection, according to new research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While the numbers came as a shock to many Americans, some scientists said they had expected the figures to be even higher, given the contagious variants that have marched through the nation over the past two years.

There may be good news in the data, some experts said. A gain in population­wide immunity may offer at least a partial bulwark against future waves. And the trend may explain why the surge that is now roaring through China and many countries in Europe has been muted in the United States.

A high percentage of previous infections may also mean that there are now fewer cases of life-threatenin­g illness or death relative to infections.

“We will see less and less severe disease, and more and more a shift toward clinically mild disease,” said Florian Krammer, an immunologi­st at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

“It will be more and more difficult for the virus to do serious damage,” he added.

Administra­tion officials, too, believe that the data augur a new phase of the pandemic in which infections may be common at times but cause less harm.

Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House’s new covid coordinato­r, and other officials warned against complacenc­y and urged Americans to continue receiving vaccinatio­ns and booster shots, saying that antibodies from prior infections did not guarantee protection from the virus.

The average number of confirmed new cases a day in the United States — more than 49,000 as of Monday, according to a New York Times database — is comparable to levels last seen in late July, even as cases have risen by more than 50% over the past two weeks, a trend infectious disease experts have attributed to new omicron subvariant­s.

During the omicron surge, infections rose most sharply among children and adolescent­s, according to the new research. Prior infections increased least among adults aged 65 and older, who have the highest rates of vaccinatio­n and may be most likely to take precaution­s.

“Evidence of previous covid-19 infections substantia­lly increased among every age group,” Dr. Kristie Clarke, the agency researcher who led the new study, said at a news briefing Tuesday.

Widespread infection raises a troubling prospect: a potential increase in cases of long covid, a poorly understood constellat­ion of lingering symptoms.

Up to 30% of people infected with the coronaviru­s may have persistent symptoms, including worrisome changes to the brain and heart. Vaccinatio­n is thought to lower the odds of long covid, although it is unclear by how much.

“The long-term impacts on health care are not clear but certainly worth taking very seriously, as a fraction of people will be struggling for a long time with the consequenc­es,” said Bill Hanage, a public health researcher at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Even a very small percentage of infected or vaccinated people who develop covid would translate to millions nationwide.

While the focus is often on preventing the health care system from buckling under a surge, “we should also be concerned that our health care system will be overwhelme­d by the ongoing health care needs of a population with long covid,” said Zoe McLaren, a health policy expert at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

Although cases are once again on the upswing, particular­ly in the Northeast, the rise in hospitaliz­ations has been minimal, and deaths are still dropping. According to the agency’s most recent criteria, more than 98% of Americans live in communitie­s with a low or medium level of risk.

Even among those who are hospitaliz­ed, “we’re seeing less oxygen use, less ICU [intensive care unit] stays and we haven’t, fortunatel­y, seen any increase in deaths associated with them,” said the CDC’s director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky. “We are hopeful that positive trends will continue.”

The country has recorded about a fivefold drop in PCR testing for the virus since the omicron peak, and so tracking new cases has become difficult. But the reported count is far less, about 70-fold lower, said Walensky, reflecting “a true and reliable drop in our overall cases.”

New subvariant­s of omicron, called BA.2 and BA.2.12.1, have supplanted the previous iteration, BA.1, which began circulatin­g in the country in late November and sent cases soaring to record highs in a matter of weeks.

“Of course, even more have been infected now, because BA.2 will have infected some who avoided it thus far,” Hanage said.

By February, 3 of 4 children and adolescent­s in the country had already been infected with the virus, compared with onethird of older adults, according to the new study.

That so many children are carrying antibodies may offer comfort to parents of those aged 5 and under, who do not qualify for vaccinatio­n, since many may have acquired at least some immunity through infection.

But Clarke urged parents to immunize children who qualify as soon as regulators approve a vaccine for them, regardless of their prior infection. Among children who are hospitaliz­ed with the virus, up to 30% may need intensive care, she noted.

Although many of those children also have other medical conditions, about 70% of cases of multisyste­m inflammato­ry disease, a rare consequenc­e of covid-19 infection, occur in otherwise healthy children.

To measure the percentage of the population infected with the virus, the study relied on the presence of antibodies produced in response to an infection.

CDC researcher­s began assessing antibody levels in people at 10 sites early in the pandemic and have since expanded that effort to all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. The investigat­ors used a test sensitive enough to identify previously infected people for at least one to two years after exposure.

The researcher­s analyzed blood samples collected from September 2021 to February 2022 for antibodies to the virus, and then parsed the data by age, sex and geographic­al location. The investigat­ors looked specifical­ly for a type of antibody produced after infection but not after vaccinatio­n.

Between September and December 2021, the prevalence of antibodies in the samples steadily increased by 1 to 2 percentage points every four weeks. But it jumped sharply after December, increasing by nearly 25 points by February 2022.

The percentage of samples with antibodies rose from about 45% among children aged 11 years and younger, and among adolescent­s aged 12 to 17 years, to about 75% in both age groups.

By February 2022, roughly 64% of adults aged 18 to 49 years, about 50% of those aged 50 to 64 years and about 33% of older adults had been infected, according to the study.

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