San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Let’s learn to live with COVID

The pandemic’s emergency phase is over, and the coronaviru­s is endemic. It’s time to adjust health policies

- By Monica Gandhi Monica Gandhi is an infectious diseases doctor and professor of medicine at UCSF, the director of the UCSF Center for AIDS Research and the medical director of the Ward 86 HIV Clinic. She is the author of an upcoming book “Endemic: A Post

On Sept. 18, President Biden famously said “the pandemic is over.” He very quickly followed that up by saying: “We are doing a lot of work on it.”

These notions may sound contradict­ory, but they are indeed the way to approach the concept of endemicity; combating COVID-19 will take ongoing and hard work.

Saying we are exiting the emergency phase, which the World Health Organizati­on also signaled in September, does not mean COVID is over. Unfortunat­ely, COVID will never be over. This virus is not eradicable.

Smallpox was successful­ly eradicated worldwide in 1979, not only because of the vaccine but because of some unique characteri­stics of the virus, including its lack of an animal reservoir, pathogenic features that made it easy to quickly recognize in those who have the disease and a short period of infectious­ness. Smallpox infection also conferred natural immunity for life.

SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19, has none of these features. It is found in 29 species of animals, at least, which means we will always be dealing with COVID in the medical system.

In August, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released its latest guidelines for COVID-19, which dramatical­ly streamline­d the approach to protecting oneself and to understand­ing personal risk. These guidelines acknowledg­ed the prevalence of natural immunity and no longer distinguis­hed between vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed in isolation and quarantine recommenda­tions. Asymptomat­ic testing was no longer recommende­d. Masking in health care settings was no longer recommende­d as of September if community transmissi­on levels were low.

As is always the case with new guidelines, the response from experts was mixed. Some agreed that it was time to learn to live with the virus with minimal disruption­s to life while others pointed out that the daily death toll was still unacceptab­ly high — and that public health involves sacrifices for the greater good.

It has since become clear, however, that many hospitaliz­ations officially counted as caused by the coronaviru­s were actually of patients who happen to be infected but were admitted for other reasons. That almost certainly remains true with the host of highly transmissi­ble new variants like XBB.1.5, the so-called “Kraken” variant.

Because everyone admitted to most hospitals is still routinely tested for the coronaviru­s (despite the main U.S. infection control organizati­on recommendi­ng against this practice), many patients admitted for other ailments also test positive. This inflates the official number of COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations. Miscategor­ized hospitaliz­ations lead to miscategor­ized deaths.

An analysis of Los Angeles County + USC Medical Center data found that less than onethird of official hospitaliz­ations attributed to COVID were meaningful­ly related to the coronaviru­s. In Massachuse­tts, over 70% of “COVID” hospitaliz­ations are similarly “with” rather than “for” COVID-19. This of course is consistent with the fact that over 95% of Americans have been infected and/or vaccinated. The resulting strong population immunity coupled with the less-virulent nature of omicron strains is resulting in much less severe clinical outcomes.

Overcounti­ng hospitaliz­ations and deaths from COVID in the U.S. due to antiquated screening policies can sow discord and differing recommenda­tions across the country in terms of boosters and masks. However, when public health rules differ from county to county and state to state — and more importantl­y when they don’t seem to make sense — trust in public health suffers.

In May 2021, only about half of Americans trusted the CDC, according to a Robert S. Woods Foundation/Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health poll. By January 2022, an NBC News poll found that only 44% of Americans trusted the health agency, and by March 2022, a Gallup poll put the level of trust at 32%.

We are now seeing the untoward effects of that mistrust; it is impacting the uptake of vaccines for COVID and, more recently, other vaccine-preventabl­e diseases, including influenza, measles and polio. A lack of public trust in health experts has other costs, including avoidance of medical care, which may have a more dangerous impact on communitie­s of color. Without a unified and trustworth­y public health voice, divisivene­ss continues to characteri­ze the discourse around COVID in our country at a time when we need to unite in our efforts to repair the educationa­l, financial and health damages incurred during the pandemic.

Local, state and federal public health officials desperatel­y need to find and speak with such a unified voice. Officials not only need to tell the public what it should do in order to prevent morbidity and mortality from COVID-19, but what it must stop doing in order to prevent the negative consequenc­es of the very mitigation strategies that we employed in the early days of the pandemic.

Despite the recent scary headlines about XBB.1.5 and other new variants, there has long been, and remains, a profound decoupling of cases and deaths. The pandemic has taken a terrible toll, but the public health outlook is improving drasticall­y, owing to our miraculous and life-saving vaccines, high rates of immunity and a plentiful supply of effective therapies (including Paxlovid).

Given that the pandemic has changed, scientific knowledge has changed and the level of risk has changed, policies must change as well. I propose five ways to keep us in the endemic phase, relatively consistent with CDC guidelines:

Retire quarantine­s

Prior post-exposure quarantine recommenda­tions differenti­ated between those who were and those not up-to-date on vaccinatio­n. This is simply not scientific­ally accurate today, given the degree of natural immunity in the population.

Because the CDC stopped recommendi­ng universal contact tracing long ago, the brunt of post-exposure quarantine policies fell on settings like daycare centers, where careful case monitoring was occurring, resulting in disproport­ionate impacts on the socializat­ion and education of children and the earnings of women, single parents and lower-income individual­s. Mindful of these issues, in May, Massachuse­tts ended quarantine­s in daycares, schools and camps. Its guidance for the new school year was clear: “No asymptomat­ic person should be excluded from school as a result of exposure, regardless of vaccinatio­n status or exposure setting.” All locales should adopt this rational approach and retire quarantine­s.

Stop asymptomat­ic testing

Asymptomat­ic testing frustrates families when positive tests, sometimes representi­ng remote infection or a false positive, lead to missed school and important events. A major erosion of public trust occurred during the winter omicron wave of 2022 when the general public struggled to access testing — which was and remains critical for high-risk individual­s to qualify for life-saving treatments like Paxlovid — while colleges maintained multiple-time-per-week testing programs for low-risk students.

Thankfully, such testing is finally being phased out in most colleges. But it is not needed in schools or daycares, where the majority of persons are low risk. Vaccines are thankfully now available for children as young as 6 months, providing additional protection for the youngest Americans.

Asymptomat­ic testing in educationa­l settings was a critical tool early in the pandemic to better understand transmissi­on patterns and to provide reassuranc­e to families and educators. But it is time to retire these programs. Although the CDC endorses this policy in general, the new school guidance asks for the resumption of asymptomat­ic testing when community levels are high, a practice that will continue to be disruptive.

End all mask mandates

Masks have been the most polarizing interventi­on of the pandemic.

CDC guidelines recommend universal masking during times of high community transmissi­on. But the time has come to put mask mandates behind us. Paradoxica­lly, masks work but mask mandates do not.

Masking was an important tool early in the pandemic when vaccines were not yet available and people were trying to emerge from their bubbles and rejoin society. However, more than two years later, we must admit that evidence is lacking that broad mask use (including in schools) has a significan­t impact on slowing coronaviru­s transmissi­on or hospitaliz­ations — whether due to inconsiste­nt use or variabilit­y in mask quality or both. High-risk individual­s can always choose to protect themselves with well-fitting highqualit­y masks and do not need to rely on others to protect them.

Shorter isolation periods

For those who become sick due to COVID, a five-day isolation period recommende­d by the CDC still seems prudent. But as population immunity continues to build, we should look to transition to a shorter time frame followed by masking and eventually a “stay home when sick” model. This recommenda­tion needs to be accompanie­d by national paid sick leave policies.

Boosters only for some

Public health officials need to tout the amazing success of vaccines at preventing severe disease while simultaneo­usly acknowledg­ing their shortcomin­gs in preventing infection and transmissi­on. They should also better publicly recognize the power of immunity from prior infection. That means discouragi­ng booster mandates in places with low-risk population­s like schools, colleges and universiti­es.

Boosters should instead be strongly encouraged for older individual­s. Vaccine mandates and passports made sense earlier in the pandemic when the vaccines were highly protective against asymptomat­ic and symptomati­c infection. That has changed. We must be responsive and willing to change recommenda­tions based on new knowledge.

There remains too much sickness and death from COVID even today. The terrible losses the virus has inflicted on the country should not be minimized. But there have also been immense harms from the mitigation strategies designed to slow the spread of COVID. It is past time to strike the right balance between the two. To do so, we need our nation’s health experts to get on the same page, return to a position of trusted authority and bring our nation together toward one collective goal: comprehens­ive health and well-being.

 ?? NIAID Integrated Research Facility 2022 ?? An electron microscope image of cells infected with the omicron variant, in orange. The pandemic has taken a terrible toll, but the outlook is improving.
NIAID Integrated Research Facility 2022 An electron microscope image of cells infected with the omicron variant, in orange. The pandemic has taken a terrible toll, but the outlook is improving.

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