The Oklahoman

COVID-19 likely to become ‘endemic’

Experts explain what this means for future

- Dana Branham

Even as the delta wave of COVID-19 appears to be subsiding, experts expect that COVID-19 will be with us — in some form or another — for a long time.

The disease will likely become “endemic,” experts say, as opposed to a pandemic or epidemic.

What’s the difference? A pandemic is when a disease spreads across multiple countries or even across the world and affects many people, like COVID-19 has. An epidemic is a sudden increase in cases of a disease, like when COVID-19 was first identified and began spreading in Wuhan, China.

When a disease is endemic, it “routinely rears its head on a regular or semi-regular basis, in a particular area,” Dr. Mary Clarke, the president of the Oklahoma State Medical Associatio­n, said Tuesday.

The idea that COVID-19 will become endemic means it won’t fully be eradicated, Clarke said.

New COVID-19 cases have fallen dramatical­ly over the past few weeks — the seven-day average of cases across Oklahoma was 1,222 on Tuesday, compared with more than 2,800 at the end of August.

Hospitaliz­ations are also declining, though COVID-19 deaths continue to mount. The statewide toll, having just surpassed 10,000 toward the end of September, is now hundreds higher at 10,723.

But it’s unclear whether the latest wave, fueled by the delta variant, will be the last major surge in the pandemic, Clarke said.

“Unfortunat­ely, we just can’t tell

yet,” she said. “As we’ve seen before, it can be difficult to predict COVID waves, especially as new variants arise.”

There’s still a lot we don’t know about what COVID-19 will look like post-pandemic, experts say.

“As COVID becomes endemic to our population­s, we don’t really know what the seasonalit­y is, what the pattern is going to be ... what a unique variant might produce in terms of morbidity and mortality that would crop up in that cycle,” Dr. David Kendrick, founder and CEO of MyHealth Access Network, a statewide health informatio­n exchange, said on a recent Healthier Oklahoma Coalition call.

It’s also unclear what endemic COVID-19 could mean for immunity provided by vaccinatio­ns, Clarke said. Observatio­ns in the years to come about when and how the virus will fluctuate will help guide future recommenda­tions about whether additional vaccinatio­ns are necessary.

“We now know almost two full years of what has happened with COVID-19, but we don’t know what’s going to happen next year,” she said. “We don’t know what’s going to happen four or five years down the road.”

To find a COVID-19 vaccine appointmen­t

Even as COVID-19 cases are declining, health officials have still stressed that COVID-19 vaccines are the best way to stay protected from severe illness and even death,

To arrange a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t near you, go to vaccines.gov or the state’s vaccine scheduling portal at vaccinate.oklahoma.gov. COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns are free and available at a number of locations, including local health department­s, pharmacies and grocery stores. Anyone 12 and older is eligible for one.

 ?? CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? A sample is sealed up as staff administer Covid test during an employee testing event at the Absentee Shawnee TribeÕs Little Axe Health Center on Wednesday, Aug. 4, in Norman, Okla.
CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN A sample is sealed up as staff administer Covid test during an employee testing event at the Absentee Shawnee TribeÕs Little Axe Health Center on Wednesday, Aug. 4, in Norman, Okla.

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