Plummeting cases in U.S. show a path to crushing COVID-19
COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are dropping dramatically across the U.S., suggesting that measures to interrupt transmission are working, at least for now. More than 27.6 million Americans have tested positive, likely giving them some degree of immunity. A rising number — 11.8% of the population — has now received at least one dose of a vaccine. And data gathered from mobile phones suggest people are being more cautious day-to-day. If cases keep falling, it could buy time for the vaccination effort to take hold in the warm summer months ahead, potentially underpinning a long-sought economic recovery.
Health experts, though, anticipate challenges. Inoculations need to outpace highly contagious variants from the U.K. and South Africa that are now in the U.S. And the upcoming holidays — spring break, Easter and Mother’s Day included — hold the threat of group gatherings that can swiftly boost the virus’s spread.
“The history of surges is they do come down,” said Robert Wachter, chair of the department of medicine at the University of CaliforniaSan Francisco. “They generally come down from some combination of changes in behavior, changes in government policy and the impact of immunity.”
Infectious-disease experts agree it’s far too early to call an end to the pandemic. The declines follow a surge tied to the Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday season, and infection levels remain roughly on par with trends from last fall at around 91,000 new cases confirmed daily.
Rochelle Walensky, head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, on Sunday rang a warning bell. “We are nowhere out of the woods,” she said on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” adding that “now is the time to double down” on mitigation efforts.
If those efforts are relaxed “with increasingly transmissible variants out there,” she said, “we could be in a much more difficult spot.”
Walensky’s warning comes as some states, including Iowa and Montana, ease mandates on maskwearing and as the CDC emphasizes that tamping down community spread is key to safely reopening schools — a priority of the Biden administration.
Early on, the country experienced regional surges in the northeast last spring, Sun Belt states in the summer and Midwest and Western states through the fall. The latest surge worsened nearly everywhere in January, producing the deadliest month so far. Since then, the numbers have leveled off or declined. Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics at the University of Washington’s Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation, said that after the holiday surge, Americans began to behave much more cautiously.
“If you look at our data, the week after Thanksgiving, the week after Christmas, it was dead silence,” Mokdad said. “People stayed at home; even cellphone calls went down.”
The country is still far short of herd immunity, the time when the country has so much protection from the dominant strain that it can no longer spread effectively. That will likely require 70% to 85% of the 330 million Americans be either vaccinated or have natural protection, experts say.