Hartford Courant

‘New normal’ leaving many in state behind

- By Jenna Carlesso and Katy Golvala

In early May, a day after the legislativ­e session ended, Gov. Ned Lamont reflected on the recent passage of what he called the state’s “first post-pandemic budget.”

“I know we’re still at a 10% infection rate,” he quickly added, “but as we move on to our new normal, this was important.”

Lamont also acknowledg­ed a package of recently adopted bills aimed at expanding children’s mental health services.

“Coming out of COVID,” he said, “I think we’ve seen in no uncertain terms the stress that was on mental health.”

But is Connecticu­t and the rest of the world “coming out” of COVID? Is this a “post-pandemic” era?

Last week, amid steadily climbing case rates, Connecticu­t’s seven-day rolling aver

age topped 13% — a substantia­l upswing from the end of February, when the first omicron wave subsided and the state’s daily positivity rate hovered around 2% to 3%.

Hospitaliz­ations, which by mid-march had fallen below 100, exceeded 300 last week.

Two new highly contagious subvariant­s of omicron are spreading quickly and one, BA.2.12.1, could become the dominant form of COVID-19 in the U.S. in the coming weeks.

Even as case rates balloon in Connecticu­t and elsewhere, restrictio­ns designed to curb the spread of the virus are more relaxed than ever. A broad masking requiremen­t on airplanes, trains and other public transporta­tion was dropped in April (though some companies continue to mandate masks, including the Metropolit­an Transit Authority). Statewide school mask edicts were lifted in February in Connecticu­t and several neighborin­g states, leaving decisions on masking up to each district. New York City stopped requiring proof of vaccinatio­n to dine in restaurant­s or to attend most Broadway shows.

But as the country opens back up and many abandon masking, some physicians have warned that it’s not as simple as returning to pre-pandemic behaviors. Millions of people infected with the virus are developing long COVID, a condition in which symptoms like brain fog, shortness of breath and dizziness can linger for weeks or months. The coronaviru­s has left others with increased risks of cardiovasc­ular problems — including abnormal heart rhythms, blood clots and heart muscle inflammati­on — diabetes and brain issues.

And while many are resuming travel, dining indoors or attending large gatherings, some who are immune-compromise­d or care for an immune-suppressed loved one face a very different “new normal,” one in which they feel left behind.

“There’s enormous political pressure to say the pandemic is over,” said Gregg Gonsalves, associate professor of epidemiolo­gy at the Yale School of Public Health. “But the idea that we’re out of the woods is just not true. We’re in the midst of a slowly building surge.

“There’s a political imperative to put the pandemic behind us. Everybody’s really tired. Everybody’s really frustrated. Nobody wants to talk about this anymore. Nobody wants to think about it anymore. But wishing doesn’t make it so.”

‘A part of us are being left behind’

For some who live with or care for people who are immunocomp­romised, or who themselves are immune-suppressed, the “new normal” is anything but.

Pam Hunt has been extra cautious since the pandemic hit. Her 25-year-old son, Yehoshua, has Trisomy 13, also known as Patau syndrome, a genetic disorder that can cause seizures, decreased muscle tone, intellectu­al disabiliti­es and skeletal abnormalit­ies, among other conditions.

Yehoshua is deaf and blind, has cognitive disabiliti­es and relies on the use of a wheelchair, his mother said.

“He’s just an amazing young man,” she said. “He wasn’t supposed to live to be a year old. So to know that he’s going to celebrate 26 years next month, that’s an accomplish­ment.”

Keeping her son safe from COVID-19 means forgoing get-togethers with family and friends, talking to visitors from their cars, skipping activities like the movies, and limiting trips out of the home to what’s necessary, such as doctor appointmen­ts or grocery store runs.

“It’s not so much I’m afraid for myself; I’m afraid that I might bring something back here,” said Hunt, a breast cancer survivor who lives in Norwich. Along with the other risks, Yehoshua relies on his sense of touch and smell, and some COVID patients have lost their sense of smell.

As many people stop wearing masks and resume pre-pandemic outings, Hunt said she feels forgotten.

“It’s like there’s a part of us that are being left behind, because the majority of people are quote-unquote normal and healthy, can just get up and go, and kind of live life in this new normal,” she said. “But then there’s so many of us who don’t have that luxury.”

To Hunt, the message seems to be, “We got to go with the majority, and the majority of people can handle this new normal. This is for the good of ‘the more.’ … ‘We’re going on with life and the world’s going on. And hopefully one day you can rejoin us, but if not, good luck.’ ”

Kayle Hill takes medication for rheumatoid arthritis that suppresses her immune system. Hill, an advocate for Connecticu­t’s disability community, doesn’t believe the state is doing enough to address the latest COVID surge, which has left her uneasy when going about routine errands.

Hill said she’s not expecting a reinstatem­ent of universal mask mandates, but she would prefer to see masking requiremen­ts in places such as public transporta­tion, grocery stores and government buildings — areas that people with disabiliti­es and others at high risk of COVID complicati­ons cannot always avoid.

“I have to go to the post office sometimes. And, you know, it might as well be the same thing as not having a ramp outside for a wheelchair user,” she said. “It makes it unsafe and makes me unable to enter the building.”

‘No one wishes they got COVID’

While a lot of attention has been paid to hospitaliz­ations and deaths as major consequenc­es of the virus, another threat looms: long COVID-19.

The condition is more prevalent than many might think, and its pervasiven­ess undercuts the idea that the risks of COVID-19 are waning.

Across the U.S., some studies estimate 10% to 30% of coronaviru­s cases result in long COVID. Others put the number higher; authors of a Penn State College of Medicine study say more than half of people who had the disease develop the condition.

In Connecticu­t, physicians treating these patients say 5% to 30% of infections here have led to long COVID-19.

For many, it is debilitati­ng. Symptoms like shortness of breath, fatigue, brain fog, headaches, cardiac and central nervous system problems, cognitive dysfunctio­n and musculoske­letal issues can last for weeks or even months. Some patients have chronic pain.

And there’s currently no cure and no definitive way to treat or prevent the condition.

“I can tell you that the people who are suffering with long COVID wish they hadn’t gotten COVID,” said Dr. Andaleeb Shariff, primary care clinical lead for Hartford Healthcare’s COVID Recovery Center. “No one wishes they got COVID, but long COVID doesn’t have a treatment. It doesn’t have a cure. It’s unrelentin­g for many people. And it’s distressin­g. It’s upsetting when I see my patients get it.”

Long COVID occurs in people with a confirmed or probable case of the virus who develop lingering symptoms, and for whom no other diagnosis can explain the symptoms. Those symptoms typically last four weeks or longer.

Health officials say the condition can grow out of severe or mild cases of the virus. It can even affect some who initially had no COVID symptoms.

For some people, the symptoms come and go without explanatio­n. Others have suffered consistent­ly since their diagnosis. And still others have seen symptoms stop abruptly, either because of a vaccinatio­n, a booster shot or another reason.

Since Hartford Healthcare launched its long COVID recovery center in October 2020, it has seen 1,778 patients. But many more may not know what care options are available, may not know their condition is considered long COVID or may not have sought care. The center connects patients with doctors in a range of specialtie­s to address a constellat­ion of ailments.

Shariff and her colleagues recommend vaccinatio­n and boosting against the virus because even though breakthrou­gh infections occur, “we have anecdotall­y seen less cases of long COVID in people who are vaccinated.”

“The key with long COVID that we really see is, regardless of what symptomato­logy they have, it’s really impacting their everyday function,” Shariff said. “We’re seeing new musculoske­letal [problems], we’re seeing cardiac concerns and central nervous system issues that people are presenting with that they either never had, or that they might have had in the past that completely resolved and are now re-manifestin­g themselves.”

Even in people who don’t develop long COVID, the risk of future health problems can increase. Studies have shown that some people who have had COVID-19 are at higher risk for heart attack, stroke, heart failure and other conditions post infection.

“The concern isn’t just contractin­g long COVID, it’s COVID itself,” Shariff said. “There are [about] 300 people admitted to the hospital with COVID. It’s not disappeare­d. And I don’t actually understand what the definition of ‘new normal’ is because I don’t really know if I want this to be the new normal.”

Calculatin­g risk

Lamont is not the only state or federal leader to use the phrases “post pandemic” and “new normal.” Even Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser, recently told PBS Newshour that the U.S. was “out of the pandemic phase,” before later revising his statement to say the country had moved beyond the “acute stage of the pandemic phase” and adding, “There’s no doubt this pandemic is still ongoing.”

The U.S. just marked the grim milestone of 1 million American COVID-19 deaths and cases are rising in many states.

As restrictio­ns fall away, state and federal officials have put a strong emphasis on personal responsibi­lity and assessing personal risk when navigating the current surge. But how does someone calculate personal risk?

To Dr. Manisha Juthani, Connecticu­t’s public health commission­er, that means utilizing available tools such as vaccines, booster shots, masks and antiviral medication­s.

Last week, six counties — Hartford, New Haven, Middlesex, Litchfield, Tolland, and Windham — moved into the high transmissi­on level of community spread, as labeled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Counties are deemed high transmissi­on when they have reported more than 100 cases for every 100,000 residents during the past week.

“Particular­ly in these counties, we are recommendi­ng mask wearing,” Juthani said.

“Given where we are now, two and a half years into this pandemic, with vaccines, with therapeuti­cs, with immunity that people have developed either through vaccines or through natural infection, the chances of declaring another public health emergency, in my opinion, are much lower.”

At this point, Juthani said, people need to balance their mental health and physical health and reflect on “what they can personally cope with.”

“If it was just purely a question of, is it good to get COVID over and over? The clear answer is no,” she said. “And I would highly recommend that people consider each of these risks at various different times. … On the flip side, I know people who have not gotten COVID yet, who are still living in quite a lot of anxiety and fear over getting COVID. And I think that’s also not healthy, because I don’t think that kind of anxiety and fear is really useful to overall well-being.

“So it’s really trying to find that happy medium, in balancing all of these things as we move forward with this pandemic.”

“There’s a political imperative to put the pandemic behind us. Everybody’s really tired . ... Nobody wants to think about it anymore. But wishing doesn’t make it so.” — Gregg Gonsalves, associate professor of epidemiolo­gy at the Yale School of Public Health

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States