Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘The world needs a reality check’

Health experts fear battle with pandemic is at dangerous stage

- By Joel Achenbach

Maria Van Kerkhove, a World Health Organizati­on epidemiolo­gist, was in her Geneva office last weekend preparing for a keynote address when a simple phrase came to mind. She had been pondering the dismaying rise in coronaviru­s infections globally during the previous three weeks, reversing promising trends of late spring. The surge came as people across much of the Northern Hemisphere were moving around again in a suddenly freewheeli­ng summer — as if the pandemic were over.

She wrote in her notebook: “The world needs a reality check.”

Van Kerkhove’s subsequent comments on Twitter pointing out the lack of social distancing drew predictabl­e flak from the social media trolls, something she has gotten used to in the past year and a half. But she is not an outlier. Around the world, scientists and public health officials fear that the world’s protracted battle against the coronaviru­s is at a delicate and dangerous moment.

Reality checks abound. Coronaviru­s infections are surging in places with low vaccinatio­n rates. SARSCoV-2 is continuing to mutate. Researcher­s have confirmed the delta variant is far more transmissi­ble than earlier strains. Although the vaccines remain remarkably effective, the virus has bountiful opportunit­ies to find new ways to evade immunity. Most of the world remains unvaccinat­ed.

‘In a bad place’

And so the end of the pandemic remains somewhere over the horizon.

“We’re getting further away from the end than we should be. We’re in a bad place right now globally,” Van Kerkhove said.

Similarly dismayed is Francis S. Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health. Last summer, he watched cases in the United States spike, particular­ly in the Sun Belt, after what he felt was a premature end to spring restrictio­ns. This summer, he is not surprised by the rise in infections across a country where many people haven’t gotten their shots and have returned to prepandemi­c behavior.

“It’s like we’ve been to this movie several times in the last year and half, and it doesn’t end well. Somehow, we’re running the tape again. It’s all predictabl­e,” Collins said.

Coronaviru­s infections in the United States rose nearly 70 percent in a single week, officials reported Friday, and hospitaliz­ations and deaths rose 36 percent and 26 percent, respective­ly. Almost every state has experience­d a rise in cases. Florida, populous and not highly vaccinated, is seeing a surge in cases. In hotspots such as Arkansas and Missouri, covid wards are opening up again in hospitals.

Los Angeles County this past week announced that it had to reinstate indoor mask requiremen­ts for everyone, regardless of vaccinatio­n status. Breakthrou­gh infections among vaccinated people provide another reality check. Thursday night’s primetime baseball game between the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox was canceled when six Yankees players — most of them vaccinated — tested positive for the virus.

Many breakthrou­gh infections will produce no symptoms. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention decided in May to track only breakthrou­gh infections leading to hospitaliz­ation.

The vaccines, though marvels of basic and applied science, do not form an impenetrab­le shield against SARS-CoV-2. They work as advertised, meaning they usually prevent severe illness and death, but they do not deliver what is known as “sterilizin­g immunity.”

The CDC issued a statement Friday saying the agency has multiple programs, working with state and local partners, to track vaccine effectiven­ess.

“COVID-19 vaccines are effective and are a critical tool to help bring the pandemic under control. However, no vaccines are 100 percent effective at preventing illness in vaccinated people. There will be a small percentage of fully vaccinated people who still get sick, be hospitaliz­ed, or die from COVID-19. As with other vaccines, this is expected. As the number of people who are vaccinated goes up, the number of breakthrou­gh cases is also expected to increase,” the CDC said.

Virus keeps mutating

The next reality check comes from the virus itself. The delta variant has mutations that significan­tly enhance transmissi­bility, and it is responsibl­e for a majority of new infections in the United States as it outcompete­s other strains. Mutations in the virus are inevitable and complicate forecasts of how the pandemic will play out. The world is in the midst of a global experiment in which a single virus is turning into a full Greek alphabet of distinct strains, each with its own suite of mutations.

“They’re evolving. Even the delta variant, we have two sublineage­s we are monitoring,” Van Kerkhove said. “Everyone is fixated on the delta, but we should be prepared for more.”

Amid these concerns are positive signs of long-term progress against COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus. That’s a reality check on the positive side of the ledger. This isn’t 2020. The increase in hospitaliz­ations has been less dramatic than the increase in reported infections. That’s because the vaccines — a tool the world lacked a year ago — usually prevent severe illness.

“The game changer is if and when we see large numbers of vaccinated individual­s returning to hospitals. But we are not seeing that,” said David Rubin, director of PolicyLab at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia.

This hints at how the pandemic may eventually play out: The virus would become endemic. It would not be eradicated — and would still cause occasional clusters of infection — but it would not ignite runaway outbreaks nor be nearly as lethal as when it emerged into the human population. That drop in lethality will be driven less by changes in the virus itself than by the changed immunologi­cal landscape.

For people with at least partial immunity, COVID-19 could become more like influenza or even a cold, which are caused by viruses that are at least somewhat familiar to our immune systems. Four other coronaviru­ses are endemic in humans and are responsibl­e for a significan­t fraction of colds.

This scenario — call it Scenario A — has been the general assumption or hope of many infectious­disease experts since the start of the pandemic. The dialing down of the lethality of the disease would be an example of history repeating itself: The 1918 influenza pandemic was caused by a virus that never vanished, but instead became the cause of the seasonal flu.

SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 are often referred to as if they were interchang­eable. But the trajectory of the virus increasing­ly is distinct from the trajectory of the disease. As time goes on, more people will have immunity from a previous natural infection or from vaccinatio­n, and SARSCoV-2 will pose less of a threat to them than it will to people unvaccinat­ed or never previously infected.

“We’re really teasing apart SARS-CoV-2 the virus from COVID-19, the disease,” said Jennie Lavine, an Emory University researcher and lead author of a paper in Science earlier this year showing how the virus may become endemic. There won’t be a single moment when the virus becomes endemic, she said. It will happen gradually, as the virus loses its virulence. In Scenario A, the pandemic as we know it comes to an end.

“That’s not saying you won’t get infected again, it’s saying that you won’t get really sick from it,” she said.

Millions not vaccinated

Janis Orlowski, chief health care officer of the Associatio­n of American Medical Colleges, offers one version of Scenario B: “Delta goes on to epsilon which goes on to lambda, and that becomes another ugly virus. … The virus mutates to a strain that we are not effectivel­y vaccinated against — and that leads us into another ugly year.”

(For the record: There already is an epsilon and a lambda.)

Orlowski adds, “I think Scenario B is less likely, but is still a concern because we are not vaccinated at the rate we should be.”

The bigger question for public health officials is whether they can persuade millions more people to get jabbed in the arm. Roughly one-third of adults in the United States remain unvaccinat­ed. Vaccine uptake is lowest among younger age groups that are also at lower risk of severe illness from COVID-19, but they represent a growing percentage of cases in hospitals.

Misinforma­tion has run rampant. The vaccines are not, contrary to one rumor, “gene therapy.” They do not implant microchips. They are not part of a plot.

And although they can cause side-effects — and on rare occasions, dangerous ones — the vaccines have passed rigorous safety reviews.

‘They’re killing people’

Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy released a report Thursday decrying the epidemic of misinforma­tion. On Friday, he called out “technology companies” that he said enabled misinforma­tion “to poison our informatio­n environmen­t with little accountabi­lity to their users.” President Joe Biden doubled down on that Friday as he boarded the Marine One helicopter for a trip to Camp David: “They’re killing people,” he said of the social media platforms that spread misinforma­tion.

Even if, through vaccinatio­n and prudent behavior, the virus is brought under control, the rattling psychologi­cal effects of the pandemic could persist.

As Lavine points out, people have been told repeatedly for a year and a half that this virus is a potential killer. For many of those people, it will be difficult to let go of COVID-19 fears. The many unknowns about COVID-19 will make risk tolerance calculatio­ns difficult. This remains a new virus and a new disease, and scientists and doctors are still trying to understand what they’re looking at.

“Nobody has had COVID for 10 years. So there’s an unknown factor, and that is going to make it scary for a while because people are scared of the unknown,” said David W. Dowdy, an epidemiolo­gist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Meanwhile, many people are not scared at all, don’t feel vulnerable, or simply are done - done, done, done - with the pandemic. Van Kerkhove, the WHO epidemiolo­gist, was upset last Sunday at the sight of unmasked people across Europe crowding into bars to watch the European championsh­ip soccer match between Italy and England.

“It’s really dishearten­ing, and it’s really devastatin­g to see situations where we can facilitate spread,” she said. “I want to go to those football matches, too. I want to go to the bar and have a drink. I want to go out to dinner.”

But she’s not ready. She knows too much.

“The situation globally is so dynamic, it’s so uncertain, and is so fragile,” she said.

 ?? Christophe­r Smith / Washington Post ?? Nurse Susan Hinck gives Richard Thornton the vaccine on July 10 in Springfiel­d, Mo., where hospital wards have been filling up with COVID-19 patients. Cases are rising in areas with low vaccinatio­n rates.
Christophe­r Smith / Washington Post Nurse Susan Hinck gives Richard Thornton the vaccine on July 10 in Springfiel­d, Mo., where hospital wards have been filling up with COVID-19 patients. Cases are rising in areas with low vaccinatio­n rates.

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