Toronto Star

When will the pandemic be really over?

More vaccine uptake may see COVID become endemic in near future, experts say

- TOM AVRIL, JASON LAUGHLIN AND LAURA MCCRYSTAL

Throughout each day, Cheryl Bettigole receives granular, neighbourh­ood-level updates on the numbers we’ve all been hearing for months.

The percentage of people testing positive for COVID-19. Transmissi­on rates. Hospitaliz­ations, deaths and progress with vaccines.

The lines on the graphs often bounce around like the stock market. Yet at some point the city’s acting health commission­er and policy-makers throughout the country have to reduce it all to a pivotal yes-orno question:

Is it OK to resume life as normal? “Things are trending in the right direction,” Bettigole said recently. “But we’re not past COVID.”

It is now generally accepted that COVID will always be with us in some form, much like seasonal coronaviru­ses that cause the common cold. But thanks to vaccines and the lingering immunity that many have acquired through infection, the share of the population protected from severe disease continues to grow.

That trend has infectious disease experts predicting that sometime in the not-so-distant future, perhaps a matter of months, the disease will become “endemic” — still circulatin­g, yet not out of control.

What level is low enough to know we’ve crossed that line? And who decides what is normal?

It’s no secret that plenty of people felt comfortabl­e returning to normal activities months ago: eating indoors at restaurant­s, going to movies, masks be darned. Even policy-makers such as Bettigole, guided by their public-health training to err on the side of caution, have eased up on the toughest, prevaccine restrictio­ns.

But with vaccinatio­n rates still low in much of the world, the possibilit­y of new variants, and the onset of winter and the flu, they want to make sure we don’t slide back in the wrong direction.

What ‘endemic’ means

More than a year and a half ago, the World Health Organizati­on declared that COVID-19 was a pandemic.

That means an epidemic that has spread across multiple countries, typically affecting large numbers of people. (In that case, WHO made the call when 118,000 cases of COVID had been confirmed in more than 100 countries.)

An epidemic, in turn, is a sudden increase in disease “above what is normally expected” in the population of one country or geographic area, the U.S. CDC says. Nothing about COVID was normal. It was brand new, after all.

Endemic, on the other hand, means a disease has reached a “constant” or “usual” presence, the federal health agency says — in other words, normal. Yet even after all this time, Bettigole says it is hard to tell what level of COVID will constitute its endemic phase.

In the near future, the threat level may continue to wax and wane as it has throughout the pandemic, she said. And the disease may subside enough in one region for a health department to lift mask requiremen­ts and other restrictio­ns, but not in others.

“I think this could be a little like forest fires,” she said. “I think it would be possible to say at a future time when the numbers look good, ‘Hey, we don’t need to have masks right now, (but) we might in the future.’ ”

How low is low enough?

We all remember the start of the pandemic, when naysayers described COVID as “just like the flu” — despite clear evidence that its impact was far more severe. Even this year, despite the advent of effective vaccines, close to 400,000 deaths in the U.S. have been attributed to COVID — 10 times the typical national death toll each year from the flu.

But if COVID deaths and hospitaliz­ations did eventually reach levels usually associated with the flu, would that be a reasonable benchmark for saying the pandemic was over?

It’s not that simple, said Donald F. Schwarz, a former Philadelph­ia health commission­er who is now a senior vice-president at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

With the flu, nearly everyone has some level of baseline immunity, he said. The world is not there yet with COVID.

And unlike COVID, the flu is seasonal, meaning health officials in the northern hemisphere have time to prepare each year based on what flu strains are circulatin­g below the equator, he said. Not so with COVID.

“If there’s any (COVID) outbreak in Brazil in the summer, we’re all at risk in a way that we would not be with influenza,” he said. “A new variant of COVID in any part of the world is a risk to all of us.”

What if the flu is bad this year?

The U.S. was largely spared from the flu last winter, a phenomenon generally attributed to all the physical distancing and other restrictio­ns that were in place due to COVID.

But some infectious-disease experts have warned flu may come back hard this winter while COVID remains widespread, a so-called twindemic. For those getting a COVID booster, a flu shot is recommende­d on the same visit.

Herb Conaway, director of the Burlington County Health Department, is among those cautioning that it is too soon for society to let down its guard.

“We’re moving to winter,” he said. “That means less outdoor activities, more people huddled together in drier air indoors, more likely to engage in what might be considered high-risk behaviour.”

If there is a silver lining in the post-pandemic future, he said, more people may choose to be vigilant about handwashin­g and other precaution­s, even masking when not required.

New mutation worries

Each month seems to bring a new coronaviru­s variant somewhere in the world, even as Delta retains a strong foothold in the U.S.

The good news is, none of the variants has mutated enough to escape the protection that vaccines provide against severe disease, said E. John Wherry, an immunologi­st at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Perelman School of Medicine.

Yes, there have been breakthrou­gh infections in vaccinated people. But that’s not because our antibodies and other defences fail to “recognize” Delta, said Wherry.

It’s because our antibody levels have declined. And, in the case of Delta, because its mutations have made the virus more transmissi­ble. That attribute allows the virus to start making copies inside the host — the definition of infection — before the immune system has time to snuff it out.

Still, the cells that produce antibodies, called B-cells, retain the blueprint for making more of them in a hurry, meaning that most infections in vaccinated people will not escalate to a severe case of COVID.

“The risk of a really, really concerning variant arising is not super high,” he said. “But it’s not zero, either.”

That’s because the vaccines train the immune system to recognize the coronaviru­s “spike”: the tool that it uses to enter human cells. So if the spike mutates enough that the immune system has trouble recognizin­g it, those mutations also can be self-defeating: making the spike less adept at penetratin­g cells.

The danger would be if the virus evolved two “compensato­ry mutations” at the same time: one enabling it to escape the immune response, the other restoring its infectivit­y through some other means, Wherry said. That’s unlikely.

“You need two independen­t things to happen at the same time,” he said. “But the longer the virus replicates, the more you’re rolling the dice.”

Reaching the new normal

Public health experts say the road to normal, however that is defined, involves — no surprise — vaccines.

In North America, boosters have been recommende­d for people in various age groups, in some cases depending on underlying medical conditions or on which vaccine they initially received. The shots generally should boost the level of antibodies circulatin­g in the person’s bloodstrea­m, potentiall­y preventing even mild infections, Wherry said.

Far more effective, however, would be to vaccinate people who have yet to receive any shots, according to a new review of the evidence from ECRI, a non-profit that evaluates the safety and quality of health care.

Progress is steady in the U.S., but success remains elusive in much of the rest of the world. As of Sept. 23, just 2.1 per cent of residents in low-income countries had a single dose of a vaccine, the ECRI report found.

 ?? TED S. WARREN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Mask-less fans cheer during an NCAA college football game at Husky Stadium in Seattle last month. It’s no secret that plenty of people felt comfortabl­e returning to normal activities: eating indoors at restaurant­s, attending live sports, going to movies, masks be darned.
TED S. WARREN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Mask-less fans cheer during an NCAA college football game at Husky Stadium in Seattle last month. It’s no secret that plenty of people felt comfortabl­e returning to normal activities: eating indoors at restaurant­s, attending live sports, going to movies, masks be darned.

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