Hamilton Journal News

As Thanksgivi­ng approaches, U.S. virus cases tick upward

- Mitch Smith

CHICAGO — A month ago, new coronaviru­s cases in the United States were ticking steadily downward and the worst of a miserable summer surge fueled by the delta variant appeared to be over. But as Americans travel this week to meet far-flung relatives for Thanksgivi­ng dinner, new virus cases are rising once more, especially in the Upper Midwest and Northeast.

Federal medical teams have been dispatched to Minnesota to help at overwhelme­d hospitals. Michigan is enduring its worst case surge yet, with daily caseloads doubling since the start of November. Even New England, where vaccinatio­n rates are high, is struggling, with Vermont, Maine and New Hampshire trying to contain major outbreaks.

Nationally, case levels remain well below those seen in early September, when summer infections peaked, and are below those seen last Thanksgivi­ng. But conditions are worsening rapidly, and this will not be the post-pandemic Thanksgivi­ng that Americans had hoped for. More than 90,000 cases are being reported each day, comparable to early August, and more than 30 states are seeing sustained upticks in infections. In the hardest-hit places, hospitaliz­ations are climbing.

“This thing is no longer just throwing curveballs at us — it’s throwing 210-mile-an-hour curveballs at us,” said Michael Osterholm, a public health researcher at the University of Minnesota. He said that the virus had repeatedly defied prediction­s and continues to do so.

The new rise in cases comes at a complicate­d moment. Last Thanksgivi­ng, before vaccines were available, federal and local officials had firmly urged Americans to forgo holiday gatherings. But in sharp contrast, public health officials, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious-disease expert, have mostly suggested this year that vaccinated people could gather in relative safety.

In important ways, the country is in better shape than during previous upticks. Doctors have learned more about how to treat the virus and experts are hopeful that antiviral pills will soon be approved. Most crucially, many Americans have been vaccinated. The availabili­ty of those shots — including the recent approval of booster doses for all adults — has raised confidence for many who said they planned to proceed with holiday celebratio­ns.

But about 50,000 coronaviru­s patients are hospitaliz­ed nationwide, and tens of millions of Americans have declined to be vaccinated. The course of the virus in Europe, where Austria is entering a lockdown and some areas of Germany have shut down Christmas markets, has raised fears about just how high case numbers might rise in the United States.

“The last thing I want is what Austria is doing,” said Dr. Allison Arwady, the public health commission­er in Chicago, where cases have started to rise. “I really, really don’t want to go there.”

In Austria, about 66% of the population has been fully vaccinated against the virus. In the United States, about 59% of the population has been.

Still, millions of Americans were forging ahead with holiday plans. Federal officials expected Thanksgivi­ng air travel to approach pre-pandemic levels. And plenty of people who hit the road this year will be unvaccinat­ed, unmasked and largely unworried about COVID-19.

Many experts said the wide availabili­ty of vaccines, now authorized for everyone 5 and older, as well as at-home testing, made it possible for vaccinated people to host a relatively safe, although not fully risk-free, gathering.

Arwady said she planned to spend the holiday with extended family members, all of whom are vaccinated except young children who are not eligible. While reports of new cases in Illinois have increased 62% in the past two weeks, she said she wanted vaccinated people to feel confident going about their life and to enjoy Thanksgivi­ng.

“Is there the potential for some spread? Of course there is,” said Arwady, who suggested that unvaccinat­ed adults consider staying home. “Are the people who are vaccinated, even if they haven’t gotten a booster, likely to end up in the hospital or die? They’re really not.”

Osterholm said he worried about breakthrou­gh cases in vaccinated people who did not have booster shots and about the potential for future mutations of the virus. Still, he too said he would gather for the holiday with vaccinated family members who live nearby.

Officials who once urged caution were now deferring to individual­s to make their own decisions.

“It’s really hard to tell people to stay away from their families,” said Mayor Katie Rosenberg of Wausau, Wisconsin, where cases have surged to their highest levels since late 2020. “I can’t anymore.”

Dr. Rebecca Smith, a public health researcher at the University of Illinois, said she planned to travel by vehicle with her children to see family but would get tested before and after.

“People want to get back to normal and we understand that — and there are ways to do that safely,” she said.

Still, Smith said she expected the outbreak in Illinois to continue to worsen as the virus rips across Midwestern and Northeaste­rn states that largely avoided the worst of the summer surge. In the past two weeks, reports of new cases have increased by more than 40% in Pennsylvan­ia, by more than 80% in Massachuse­tts and by 70% in Indiana.

Infection levels are also persistent­ly high across much of the West, including in Arizona and New Mexico, where hospitaliz­ations are rising, and in Alaska and Wyoming, which have started to improve after enduring major outbreaks. But case rates in California are relatively low, as they also are in the South, the region hit hardest over the summer.

Before Thanksgivi­ng 2020, the country was reporting 175,000 new infections a day and was midway through its worst case surge of the pandemic. Vaccines were still weeks away from being authorized, many schools were closed and at-home rapid tests were rare. But even as scientists warned that COVID-19 was unlikely to completely vanish, there was widespread optimism back then that vaccines could make the virus an afterthoug­ht in daily life.

“It was wicked bad last year during the holidays,” said Kirk Burrows, 26, a paramedic in Unity, Maine, who said he planned to stay home for another Thanksgivi­ng. “I think it’s going to be worse this year.”

 ?? NIC ANTAYA / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dona Sutton, a nurse, works with a COVID-19 patient at MidMichiga­n Medical Center on Saturday in Alma, Mich. Coronaviru­s cases are rising again in parts of the country, but more people are traveling, and health officials have largely stopped telling people to skip celebratio­ns.
NIC ANTAYA / THE NEW YORK TIMES Dona Sutton, a nurse, works with a COVID-19 patient at MidMichiga­n Medical Center on Saturday in Alma, Mich. Coronaviru­s cases are rising again in parts of the country, but more people are traveling, and health officials have largely stopped telling people to skip celebratio­ns.

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