Arab Times

Young adults endanger old

‘Not worth it’

-

ST. PETERSBURG, Florida, June 25, (AP): Coronaviru­s cases are climbing rapidly among young adults in a number of states where bars, stores and restaurant­s have reopened — a disturbing generation­al shift that not only puts them in greater peril than many realize but poses an even bigger danger to older people who cross their paths.

In Oxford, Mississipp­i, summer fraternity parties sparked outbreaks. In Oklahoma City, church activities, fitness classes, weddings and funerals seeded infections among people in their 20s, 30s and 40s. In Iowa college towns, surges followed the reopening of bars. A cluster of hangouts near Louisiana State University led to at least 100 customers and employees testing positive. In East Lansing, Michigan, an outbreak tied to a brew pub spread to 34 people ages 18 to 23.

There and in states like Florida, Texas and Arizona, young people have started going out again, many without masks, in what health experts see as irresponsi­ble behavior.

“The virus hasn’t changed. We have changed our behaviors,” said Ali Mokdad, professor of health metrics sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle. “Younger people are more likely to be out and taking a risk.”

In Florida, young people aged 15 to 34 now make up 31 percent of all cases, up from 25 percent in early June. Last week, more than 8,000 new cases were reported in that age group, compared with about 2,000 among people 55 to 64 years old. And experts say the phenomenon cannot be explained away as simply the result of more testing.

Elected officials such as Florida’s governor have argued against reimposing restrictio­ns, saying many of the newly infected are young and otherwise healthy. But younger people, too, face the possibilit­y of severe infection and death. In the past week, two 17-year-olds in Florida died of the virus.

And authoritie­s worry that older, more vulnerable people are next.

In Florida, where many restaurant­s and bars reopened in early May, 32-yearold Kristen Kowall of Clearwater dined out with her fiancé in early June. Like others in the restaurant, she didn’t wear a mask. She tested positive over the weekend.

“I just feel really groggy and tired. It hurts to walk. Especially my ankles and knees, it feels like my bones are going to fall apart,” she said. “I definitely would advise people from going out. It’s not worth it.”

 ??  ?? Kowall
Kowall

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait