The Hamilton Spectator

Cases, hospitaliz­ations rising in U.S.

Despite nation closing in on COVID vaccinatio­n milestone, infections continue ascent amid Delta

- SOPHIA TAREEN AND JENNIFER MCDERMOTT

The number of Americans fully vaccinated against COVID-19 reached 200 million Wednesday amid a dispiritin­g holiday-season spike in cases and hospitaliz­ations that has hit even New England, one of the most highly inoculated corners of the country.

New cases in the U.S. climbed from an average of nearly 95,000 a day on Nov. 22 to almost 119,000 a day this week, and hospitaliz­ations are up 25 per cent from a month ago. The increases are due almost entirely to the delta variant, though the Omicron mutation has been detected in about 20 states and is sure to spread even more.

Deaths are running close to 1,600 a day on average, back up to where they were in October. And the overall U.S. death toll less than two years into the crisis could hit another heartbreak­ing milestone, 800,000, in a matter of days.

The situation is not as dire as last year’s holiday-season surge, before the public had access to COVID-19 vaccines, but the 60 per cent of the U.S. population that is fully vaccinated has not been enough to prevent hot spots.

The cold weather, Thanksgivi­ng gatherings and a big rebound in holiday travel are all believed to be playing a role, along with public weariness with pandemic restrictio­ns.

Lawrence Gostin, director of the WHO Collaborat­ing Center on Public Health Law and Human Rights at Georgetown University, likened the virus to a wildfire.

“You can clear a forest of the shrubbery. But if you leave some shrubs and trees standing, the fire will find them,” Gostin said.

“The virus will find you. It is searching for hosts that are not immune. The fact that you live in New England or New York doesn’t insulate you.”

Demand for the vaccine — with recent approval of boosters for all adults and shots for elementary schoolchil­dren — has been high amid the surge and the emergence of the Omicron variant, whose dangers are still not fully understood. On Wednesday, Pfizer said that the initial two shots of its vaccine appear significan­tly less effective against Omicron but that a booster dose may offer important protection.

Nearly 48 million people have received a booster, according to the Centers for Disease Control and

Prevention. White House officials noted the U.S. administer­ed 12.5 million shots last week, the highest weekly total since May.

At the same time, some states, notably in highly vaccinated New England, but also in the Midwest, are grappling with some of the worst surges since the start of the pandemic.

Hospitals are filling up and reacting by cancelling non-urgent surgeries or taking other crisis measures, while states are strongly promoting boosters.

Despite one of the highest vaccinatio­n levels in the country, Vermont is coping with its biggest surge yet. In the last week, new cases per day are up 54 per cent, and the number of people in the hospital with COVID-19 has climbed 18 per cent.

The overall U.S. death toll less than two years into the crisis could hit another heartbreak­ing milestone, 800,000, in a matter of days

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