The News-Times

White House launches ‘surge response’ teams to COVID delta variant hot spots

- By Dan Diamond

The Biden administra­tion on Thursday announced the formation of “surge response” teams intended to combat the fast-moving delta variant of the coronaviru­s by deploying additional expertise and supplies to hot spots.

“These are dedicated teams working with communitie­s at higher risk for, or already experienci­ng, outbreaks due to the spread of the delta variant and their low vaccinatio­n rate,” White House coronaviru­s coordinato­r Jeff Zients told reporters at a news briefing.

The delta variant now represents about one-quarter of all confirmed coronaviru­s cases in the United States, and is now the predominan­t variant in Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri and Utah, say public health experts. “In some regions of the country, nearly one in two sequences is the delta variant,” said Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky.

The highly transmissi­ble variant, first identified in India, is the “greatest threat” to ending the U.S. outbreak, posing special risk to unvaccinat­ed people, the nation’s top infectious-disease expert, Anthony Fauci, said last week. Los Angeles County public health authoritie­s this week urged vaccinated as well as unvaccinat­ed people to wear masks again inside restaurant­s, stores and other public indoor spaces.

The White House-coordinate­d teams will include a mix of virtual support and on-the-ground personnel, helping deploy additional supplies as requested by local officials, such as testing or therapeuti­cs. Staff will come from the CDC, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedne­ss and Response in the Department of Health and Human Services. The White House also may ramp up paid promotions about the benefits of vaccinatio­n in areas that officials deem high risk.

All the vaccines authorized in the United States have been shown to be highly protective against the virus, preventing severe illness and death from delta.

CDC already has deployed a response team to Mesa County, Colo., which has seen a surge of cases linked to the delta variant. That team is helping support state officials’ efforts to investigat­e the spread of the outbreak. Another team is preparing to deploy to Missouri.

White House officials on Thursday reiterated their concern about the significan­t variation in local vaccinatio­n rates, with Walensky warning that fewer than 30% of residents have been vaccinated in about 1,000 counties. “These communitie­s, primarily in the Southeast and Midwest, are our most vulnerable,” she said.

Walensky also cited preliminar­y data indicating that 99.5% of coronaviru­s deaths in the past six months were in unvaccinat­ed people.

Biden administra­tion officials said they would continue to pursue tactics to boost immunizati­ons, including arranging popup vaccinatio­n sites and deploying mobile vaccinatio­n clinics. Biden had called for 70% of adults to have received one shot of vaccine by July 4, a goal that the nation will narrowly miss. About 66% of adults have received at least one shot so far.

“We’ll double down on these efforts as we continue to vaccinate millions of people across the summer months,” added Zients. “This whole-of-government, wartime response continues.”

Ahead of the holiday weekend, public health experts said they are concerned about the delta variant’s rapid spread but continue to tailor their advice to local conditions.

“In Palo Alto, California, I think there is a high degree of safety vis-a-vis covid-19 transmissi­on in outdoor settings, and I have no qualms about joining gatherings,” said Stanley Deresinski, an infectious-disease doctor at Stanford Medicine. “In Modoc County, California, where only [about 30] percent of the population has been fully vaccinated and where, despite its rural nature, cases continue to occur, I think I would be careful in the presence of others.”

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