Times Colonist

COVID-19 hospital admissions among U.S. seniors drop

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WASHINGTON — COVID-19 hospital admissions among older Americans have plunged more than 70% since the start of the year, and deaths among them appear to have tumbled as well, evidence that the vaccinatio­n campaign in the U.S. is working.

The drop-off in severe cases among Americans 65 and older is especially encouragin­g because senior citizens have accounted for about eight out of 10 deaths from the virus since it hit the U.S., where the toll stands at about 570,000 COVID19 deaths among people of all ages in the U.S. have plummeted to about 700 per day on average, compared with a peak of over 3,400 in mid-January.

“What you’re seeing there is exactly what we hoped and wanted to see — as really high rates of vaccinatio­ns happen, hospitaliz­ations and death rates come down,” said Jodie Guest, a public health researcher at Emory University in Atlanta.

The best available data suggests COVID-19 deaths among Americans 65 and older have declined more than 50% since their peak in January. The picture is not entirely clear because the most recent data on deaths by age from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is incomplete and subject to revision.

However, the figures suggest that the fall in deaths among senior citizens is driving the overall decline in lives lost to COVID-19, vindicatin­g the strategy in the United States of putting elderly people at or near the front of the line for shots when the vaccine became available over the winter.

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