Marin Independent Journal

States reopen even as experts warn against COVID-19 variants

- By Marion Renault

NEW YORK » As states lift mask rules and ease restrictio­ns on restaurant­s and other businesses because of falling case numbers, public health officials say authoritie­s are overlookin­g potentiall­y more dangerous COVID-19 variants that are quietly spreading through the U.S.

Scientists widely agree that the U.S. simply doesn’t have enough of a handle on the variants to roll back public health measures and is at risk of fumbling yet another phase of the pandemic after letting the virus rage through the country over the last year and kill nearly 500,000 people.

“Now is not the time to fully open up,” said Karthik Gangavarap­u, a researcher at Scripps Research Institute whose team works closely with San Diego health officials to watch for mutant versions of the coronaviru­s. “We need to still be vigilant.”

Positive numbers

Over the past two weeks, the daily averages for both coronaviru­s cases and deaths have dropped by about half in the U.S., according to data from Johns Hopkins University. And as of Wednesday, over 40 million people — about 12% of the population — had received at least one dose of a vaccine.

But experts including Dr. Anthony Fauci and CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky say the downward trend could reverse itself if new variants take hold.

The problem, as experts see it, is that the U.S. has been slow to ramp up a rigorous genetic surveillan­ce system for tracking the variants’ spread and measuring how much of a foothold

they have gained here.

“The fact of the matter is we’re kind of in the dark,” said Dr. Diane Griffin, who studies infectious diseases at Johns Hopkins. She said the variants are “probably widespread even if we don’t know it.”

On Wednesday, the Biden administra­tion announced it will spend $200 million for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to triple its levels of genetic sequencing to identify mutations that might make the coronaviru­s more infectious or more deadly. Separately, Congress is considerin­g a bill that would provide $1.75 billion for such work.

A more contagious and possibly more deadly variant that was first identified in Britain has been found in at least 42 states. Other variants first detected in South Africa and Brazil have been been reported across the U.S. in low numbers. The South Africa one is especially worrisome because of evidence it may diminish

the effectiven­ess of the vaccines.

“We’re chasing a moving target. It’s changing a little too fast for comfort,” said Dr. Lucio Miele a geneticist at LSU Health Sciences in New Orleans. “We need to be proactive. We’re not invulnerab­le.”

Tracking variants

Detecting variants and knowing where and how widely they are spreading could be critical to preventing another deadly wave of COVID-19 like the one that overwhelme­d hospitals this winter.

In Europe in late 2020, once surveillan­ce began flagging variants like the one that was causing cases to rage out of control and overwhelm hospitals in England, government­s across the continent responded by imposing strict travel restrictio­ns and lockdowns.

But in the U.S., the emergence of variants has been met with a shrug among

many state and local officials amid the overall dropoff in confirmed infections.

Florida, for example, has the country’s highest tally of cases of the British variant, according to the CDC. But state leaders seem to have already moved on from the coronaviru­s, including Gov. Ron DeSantis.

When asked about the rise of new strains last week, DeSantis told reporters, “The media is worried about that, obviously. You guys really love that.”

Florida has repealed many restrictio­ns and hosted 25,000 fans for the Super Bowl in Tampa and 30,000 spectators at the Daytona 500 a week later in what was the largest sporting event in the nation since the start of the pandemic.

Elsewhere, states such as North Dakota, Montana, and Iowa have lifted mask mandates in recent weeks, and many more have eased restrictio­ns on businesses like restaurant­s, bars and stores.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A patient adjusts his face mask as he leaves a COVID-19vaccinat­ion site inside the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A patient adjusts his face mask as he leaves a COVID-19vaccinat­ion site inside the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York.

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