Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Identifyin­g weak spots seen as test of vaccine plans

- EMMA COURT Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jonathan Levin and Jill R. Shah of Bloomberg News.

The U.S. has spent months trying to vaccinate those most at risk of severe illness from covid-19, from health care providers and the elderly to essential workers and those with underlying medical conditions.

In the weeks ahead, data on covid hospitaliz­ations and deaths will show whether that strategy is working.

Spikes in case numbers have typically translated weeks later to increasing hospitaliz­ations and fatalities, a dynamic that should abate after the most vulnerable are immunized. While there are early signs that’s happening in places like nursing homes, whether it will hold true with other at-risk groups and younger people remains to be seen. And the moment of truth is arriving just as infections are rising again in many states.

“It’ll be a test of the effectiven­ess of our vaccinatio­n campaigns to reach at-risk population­s,” said Josh Michaud, an associate director for global health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation, an independen­t nonprofit. All states have at least made those age 65 and older eligible, which means “you’re cutting out something like 80% of the population most at risk of dying.”

The expanding share of Americans who have received covid-19 vaccines — about 26%, or more than 87 million people, have gotten at least one dose — represents an inflection point in the pandemic’s trajectory and a watershed moment for the U.S., where the virus has sickened 30.2 million people and killed almost 550,000.

Yet most people in the U.S. still aren’t protected. And there are major roadblocks in the U.S. race to stay ahead of the virus, including vaccine hesitancy and barriers to access, declines in testing and the emergence of more-contagious variants.

While the numbers of new cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths will remain important indicators of the state of the pandemic, there’s a glaring need for more precise ways of measuring covid-19, public-health experts say.

“Knowing where we have a problem by community and by source is very important to handle the pandemic as we move forward,” said Ali Mokdad, a professor at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation in Seattle, which produces influentia­l covid-19 projection­s. “Otherwise, we are flying blind.”

At least for some groups, vaccines are reaching their target audience and doing what they’re supposed to. Among those 65 and older, an early demographi­c to qualify for inoculatio­n, about 71% have received at least one dose, according to Centers for

Disease Control and Prevention data.

In nursing homes, where inhabitant­s were also prioritize­d early for shots, covid cases among residents have dropped by nearly 98% since mid-December, and deaths by 88%, according CDC data, something industry officials have linked to immunizati­ons.

What that means is that new covid cases are likely to emerge in younger age groups. That occurred in Israel, where infections were recently plateauing despite the country’s world-leading immunizati­on program.

It turned out that cases among young people were surging, even as infections dropped in the 50-and-older crowd.

Younger people, though they’re thought to be less likely to have symptoms, can still spread the virus and contract severe cases themselves. In a handful of states, for instance, those with underlying medical conditions don’t yet qualify for shots.

While it’s “extraordin­arily good news that our death rate is declining in those who have been vaccinated, there is still a death rate among those who are over 20,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said at a White House briefing last week. “As those cases continue to increase in that demographi­c, we will see death rates in that demographi­c as well.”

Those risks are top-ofmind in West Virginia, which widened eligibilit­y last week in an effort to interrupt transmissi­on among young people.

“We think that will buy us more time,” said Clay Marsh, West Virginia’s covid-19 coordinato­r and executive dean for health sciences at West Virginia University. “We’d love to hold the variants at bay and try to get a lot of the rest of the population vaccinated.”

In Michigan, where covid infections are rising again, the ratio of hospitaliz­ations to cases is significan­tly lower than it was in October, the last time the state saw a surge of this magnitude. About 69% of its 65-and-over cohort — which has typically accounted for half of all covid hospitaliz­ations and about 4 in 5 deaths — has now had at least one dose of a vaccine.

Still, the Michigan Health & Hospital Associatio­n raised alarms last week about hospitaliz­ations spiking among younger age groups: Since early March, they rose 633% among those in their 30s and 800% among those in their 40s. The data show the vaccines are working but also “that adults of any age are vulnerable to complicati­ons from the disease,” the group said.

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