The Macomb Daily

All residents ages 16 and up eligible for vaccinatio­n

- By David Eggert

LANSING >> All people ages 16 and older in Michigan became eligible for COVID-19 vaccines on Monday, as the state passed the halfway point in its goal of inoculatin­g 70% of that population by year’s end.

More than 36% of roughly 8.1 million residents had received at least one shot as of Sunday, a share that has tripled in two months. Federal regulators have not authorized vaccinatio­ns of children ages 15 and below, though clinical trials are underway.

Michigan continues to confront a surging coronaviru­s case rate that was the country’s highest over the last two weeks.

In the Lansing area, health officials strongly recommende­d that middle and high schools suspend in-person learning when instructio­n resumes next week after spring break.

The pause should be combined with rapid COVID-19 testing of students who traveled, said Ingham County Health Officer Linda Vail.

“I am deeply concerned,” she said, citing alarming countywide metrics such as a 15% positivity rate, the highest in a year. “That said, looking at our vaccinatio­n rates I am really hopeful.”

Detroit’s K-12 district, the biggest in the state, said all students will learn online this week and next week following spring break.

Mayor Mike Duggan predicted dire consequenc­es if more residents do not get vaccinated.

He announced plans to give shots next week at numerous neighborho­od locations in addition to the major vaccine sites at Ford Field and TCF Center.

Roughly 21% of eligible Detroiters have been vaccinated so far — “really disappoint­ing,” said Duggan, who added that the city had a 16.2% virus positivity rate last week compared to 2.2% in October.

Detroit health officer Denise Fair, noting a spike among people between 20 and 40, said she was alarmed when she spoke recently with customers at the Brass Rail Pizza Bar.

“There were a few people who just said they don’t want the vaccine, they don’t need it, they were healthy and they had no interest,” Fair said. “For me, it is the indifferen­ce that is unsettling.”

Dr. Natasha Bagdasaria­n, senior public health physician at the state Department of Health and Human Services, attributed Michigan’s third wave to coronaviru­s variants, outbreaks associated with youth sports and pandemic fatigue. Rising case numbers initially were driven by the 10-19 age group, she said.

“I don’t think we were releasing transmissi­on in classrooms or even so much on the playing field. What we were seeing is social gatherings in and around youth sports — people getting together for dinner after a win or a sleepover. That’s where transmissi­on seemed to be occurring more,” she said, citing conservati­ons with local case investigat­ors. “This is not just one or two stories. This is something we’re hearing over and over again.”

A state requiremen­t that took effect Friday requires teen athletes in contact sports to be tested regularly — once a week if they wear a mask and up to three times weekly if face coverings cannot be worn.

The state implemente­d a similar program in December so athletes in three fall sports could finish state tournament­s in January despite a monthslong ban on contact sports, which was lifted in February.

Testing was made available but not mandated, however, for winter sports except wrestling.

“People didn’t really want to test. A lot of the outbreaks were happening in sports where testing was mandated, in sports like basketball,” Bagdasaria­n said. “We now know, based on our data, that testing is a fantastic tool to help reduce this type of transmissi­on from occurring. It helps prevent outbreaks from happening.”

A group that opposes sports restrictio­ns, Let Them Play Michigan, and some parents have sued in an attempt to stop the requiremen­t.

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