Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump admin had warned of variant

White House report recommends increased action to slow spread

- By Kate Santich

The highly contagious COVID-19 variant first detected in the United Kingdom is likely more widespread in Florida than publicly released data would suggest, while homegrown mutations of the virus have probably already produced other, more infectious strains here, the latest White House Coronaviru­s Task Force report warns.

The report, dated Jan. 17 but just released from Florida Department of Health, recommends Floridians take action now — “before an increase in hospitaliz­ations is seen” — including a campaign with retailers reminding customers to wear masks and “substantia­lly” curtailing or closing public indoor spaces where masks can’t be worn continuall­y.

That includes bars, indoor dining and gyms, the report said.

That suggestion, though, is unlikely to gain traction. In late September, Florida Gov. Ron

DeSantis lifted restrictio­ns on bars and restaurant­s that had required them to limit capacity. He has since threatened to intervene if local leaders try to restrict privately owned businesses.

“Just use common sense,” DeSantis said in December. “Let’s keep people employed.”

The report also shows the number of Floridians who died of the virus climbed 14% in the preceding week but that new infections fell 5% — evidence that the winter holiday surge may have reached its peak.

“We should not be reassured that we don’t yet have significan­t spread from imported, more transmissi­ble variants as early evidence may underestim­ate the current spread,” notes the report, the final weekly stateby-state recommenda­tions issued by the Trump administra­tion’s panel of experts. “We are likely to have our own, more transmissi­ble variants . ... We should act as though we have more transmissi­ble strains circulatin­g.”

Dr. Vincent Hsu, an epidemiolo­gist and AdventHeal­th’s infection control officer, said only a small fraction of all coronaviru­s cases are selected for the genomic sequence analysis that reveals whether someone is being sickened by the original COVID-19 strain or a more-recent mutation.

So the number of cases confirmed by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, he said, is only a subset.

On Friday, the CDC reported 50 known cases of the COVID variant in Florida, more than a quarter of the nation’s total, second only to California’s 72 and more than twice that of New York’s 22. Neither the federal government nor the Florida Department of Health have responded to questions about the percentage of cases that are tested for the variant.

“Almost undoubtedl­y, the fact that we have [50 cases] identified in Florida means that there are many more circulatin­g that we don’t know about,” Hsu said. “We have to assume that there is significan­t transmissi­on in Florida of this strain.”

The nonprofit hospital chain is trying to increase testing of its own patient infections to determine the extent of the spread, he added.

In mid-December, the United Kingdom reported a variant that has since become the dominant version of the virus there. Symptoms and outcomes appear identical, and newly developed vaccines are reported to be equally effective against the variant. But because it is significan­tly more contagious, the U.K. variant is projected to become the dominant strain in the U.S. in March, according to a CDC report published Friday.

One of the challenges, though, is that more than half of infections are from people who show no outward symptoms of the virus, the task force noted.

“Personal gatherings across families and friends indoors are key viral-spreading events,” the task force report said. “Continuous messaging of this risk to change behavior and of the importance of indoor masking is essential. Miami was unable to control the summer surge without changing this behavior.”

Other findings from the task force include:

„ ■ 84% of Florida counties have high levels of community transmissi­on, putting them in the CDC’s red zone. Orange County ranked third, behind MiamiDade and Broward, for the number of new cases in the preceding three weeks.

„ ■ During the week of Jan. 4 to Jan. 10, nearly a third of Florida nursing homes had at least one new resident COVID-19 case, 63% had at least one new staff COVID19 case, and 9% had at least one new resident COVID19 death.

„ ■ From Jan. 9 to Jan. 15, on average, 1,117 patients with confirmed COVID-19 and 305 patients with suspected COVID-19 were reported as newly admitted each day to hospitals in Florida. This is a decrease of 5% in total new COVID-19 hospital admissions.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Crowds at Universal Orlando Resort’s CityWalk shopping and entertainm­ent district in Orlando on Monday. The latest White House Coronaviru­s Task Force report shows the number of deaths related to the pandemic climbed 14 percent, but with new infections falling – further evidence that the holiday surge may have reached its peak.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL Crowds at Universal Orlando Resort’s CityWalk shopping and entertainm­ent district in Orlando on Monday. The latest White House Coronaviru­s Task Force report shows the number of deaths related to the pandemic climbed 14 percent, but with new infections falling – further evidence that the holiday surge may have reached its peak.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States