The Day

There’s a good chance the coronaviru­s will never go away.

- By WILLIAM WAN and CAROLYN Y. JOHNSON

There’s a good chance the coronaviru­s will never go away.

Even after a vaccine is discovered and deployed, the coronaviru­s will likely remain for decades to come, circulatin­g among the world’s population.

Experts call such diseases endemic — stubbornly resisting efforts to stamp them out. Think measles, HIV, chickenpox.

It is a daunting propositio­n — a coronaviru­s-tinged world without a foreseeabl­e end. But experts in epidemiolo­gy, disaster planning and vaccine developmen­t say embracing that reality is crucial to the next phase of America’s pandemic response. The long-term nature of COVID-19, they say, should serve as a call to arms for the public, a road map for the trillions of dollars Congress is spending and a fixed navigation­al point for the nation’s current, chaotic state-by-state patchwork strategy.

With so much else uncertain, the persistenc­e of the novel virus is one of the few things we can count on about the future. That doesn’t mean the situation will always be as dire. There are already four endemic coronaviru­ses that circulate continuous­ly, causing the common cold. And many experts think this virus will become the fifth — its effects growing milder as immunity spreads and our bodies adapt to it over time.

For now, though, most people have not been infected and remain susceptibl­e. And the highly transmissi­ble disease has surged in recent weeks even in countries that initially succeeded in suppressin­g it. Left alone, experts say, it will simply keep burning through the world’s population.

“This virus is here to stay,” said Sarah Cobey, an epidemiolo­gist and evolutiona­ry biologist at the University of Chicago. “The question is, how do we live with it safely?”

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