New York Post

D N’T PANIC

Doctor: Hospitaliz­ations and deaths remain low — don’t overreact

- DR. JOEL ZINBERG

While the media frets about COVID cases increasing, vaccinated people don’t typically get seriously ill, Dr. Joel Zinberg writes. He says no new lockdowns or mask mandates are needed.

DELTA is now the dominant variant in the United States of the virus that causes COVID-19. It is more transmissi­ble than earlier variants and has led to an increase in cases nationwide. Los Angeles and Las Vegas have responded by ordering indoor mask mandates, even for those who have been vaccinated. City Council Health Committee Chair Mark Levine says New York City should follow their lead.

Public-health officials should disregard these exhortatio­ns and calls for even more restrictiv­e measures. Delta is not the existentia­l threat that the media is making it out to be.

Despite rising numbers of Delta cases in July, hospitaliz­ations have increased only moderately, with most of the increase concentrat­ed in areas with low vaccinatio­n rates. The COVID-19 death rate per 100,000 population is lower than it was three weeks ago. The reasons are not hard to understand.

First, the Delta variant does not appear to be especially deadly. Cases are no more likely to be hospitaliz­ed or die than with other variants.

Second, the most vulnerable people are largely protected. The authorized COVID-19 vaccines appear to be effective against all known variants, including Delta. Fifty-seven percent of Americans 12 and older — the group for which vaccines are authorized — are fully vaccinated. Two-thirds of this age group have received at least one dose, which provides significan­t protection although not as good as two doses.

Among the most vulnerable population, those 65 and older, almost all have received at least one dose and 80 percent have been fully vaccinated. In addition, in the rare cases that vaccinated people become infected, the disease is much less severe than in unvaccinat­ed individual­s.

Nearly all the new cases are in younger, unvaccinat­ed people whose risk of severe COVID-19 illness is much lower compared to the elderly. Rates of hospitaliz­ation in the 0-17 age group, which has the lowest rates of vaccinatio­n, remain flat and far lower than any other age group.

Ordering lockdowns or mask mandates for the entire population defies common sense. The government should warn older people or those with co-morbiditie­s to play it safe if they refuse to be vaccinated. But in general, Delta presents very few risks for people who have gotten the shot or those who are young and healthy.

The Delta pandemic will likely peak in the next few weeks as vaccinatio­ns increase and those most at risk of severe disease take actions to avoid infection. States with the highest infection rates have already seen new vaccinatio­ns increase above the national average. Thankfully, because of the effectiven­ess of the innovative vaccines that are available, Delta will be a limited, transitory threat. Let’s stop the panic.

Joel Zinberg, M.D., a senior fellow at the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, worked for 30 years at Mount Sinai Hospital and was senior economist and general counsel at the White House Council of Economic Advisers.

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 ??  ?? BREATHE EASY: Fully vaccinated people like Anastasiia Kuznetcova and Valeriia Mut have little to fear from the Delta variant, says Dr. Joel Zinberg,who adds universal mask mandates are unwarrante­d.
BREATHE EASY: Fully vaccinated people like Anastasiia Kuznetcova and Valeriia Mut have little to fear from the Delta variant, says Dr. Joel Zinberg,who adds universal mask mandates are unwarrante­d.
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