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LINK Your Local Epidemiologist 05/16/2022

Check out the link for charts

by Katelyn Jetelina

Global pandemic
Global deaths due to SARS-CoV-2 are continuing to plummet and closing in on levels we only saw at the beginning of the pandemic. Although we are hopeful this continues due to increased vaccination and infection-induced immunity, many eyes are on four specific areas across the globe:

South Africa. The BA.4/5 subvariant leader continues to report exponential growth in cases and hospitalizations, although decoupling between the two metrics continues to widen. Death counts are at their lowest levels since the beginning of the pandemic and, thus far, high levels of BA.1 Omicron immunity are keeping deaths down. It will be important to continue to watch, as death counts are lagged.

Australia and New Zealand. Two other Southern Hemisphere countries entering the winter season, Australia and New Zealand, are getting hammered with infections. Deaths have begun to increase, but thanks to their successful vaccine campaign during lockdown, cumulative deaths remain incomparably low. (Side note: We are seeing the comeback of flu down in Australia, which is always an early sign of what is to come in the fall for the U.S.)

North Korea. A humanitarian crisis is about to unfold in North Korea. On Saturday, state media reported 500,000 cases of unexplained fever in recent weeks and 26 deaths. Unfortunately, we expect mortality to skyrocket as they have one of the lowest vaccination rates in the world (due to refusal of vaccines offered by China) and a fragmented and underfunded hospital system. It will be tough to know the true toll in coming weeks due to limited testing capacity and what I will assume to be very little public reporting.

China is doubling down on their zero COVID policy. With only 30% of the older population fully vaccinated, the country recently went into lockdown in the face of Omicron. But they didn’t take this time to deploy a massive vaccination campaign. In fact, their vaccinations are decreasing. A recent Nature article found that if they lift their zero COVID policy without vaccinating, there will be over 1.5 million deaths and ICU demand 15 times greater than capacity. Together, this is making their long game unclear, disruptive, and dangerous.

United States epidemic
In the U.S., we are clearly in an infection surge right now, although you wouldn’t really know it due to underreporting, lack of communication, and pandemic fatigue. Using rough estimates, I plotted “true” case estimates against reported case numbers in the graph below. While we’re not close to the Omicron peak, we are already higher than the first two waves.

Figure created by Katelyn Jetelina/YLE using reported case data from CDC here. “True” estimates for under-reporting from here. Roughly, before Delta 60% cases were officially captured; Delta= 43%; Omicron=26%; Current =10%
Another perspective is the old CDC transmission map, in which we have “substantial” or “high” transmission (more than 50 reported cases per 100K) across 66% of counties. This strikingly contrasts with the new CDC community map, which shows only 4% of counties need to mask because hospitals will not reach capacity within 3 weeks.

(CDC)
Cases are increasing in all states. If we assume uniform testing behaviors (and thus underreporting) across states, our case leader is Puerto Rico, which is getting hammered with infections but recently reached their peak. This is followed by Rhode Island and Massachusetts. Interestingly, if we compare U.S. states to 195 countries, 18 of them would currently be among places with the highest new cases per capita in the world.

Case accelerations are not regional, but occurring across the country. The acceleration leader is Mississippi (+224%) followed by Missouri (+211%), Utah (+169%), South Carolina (+152%), Arizona (+134%), and Louisiana (+131%). To me, the lack of regional patterns is a sign of a true national wave.

The current surge is at least partially due an increase in reinfections, as Omicron is getting better and better at dodging our first line of defense. The CDC's last update on reinfections was in January, but the story is very clear among local jurisdictions tracking this data closely. In Colorado, for example, 82% of reinfections have occurred since Omicron with the majority among unvaccinated. Starting in March 2022, North Carolina reported an increase in reinfections. In Indiana and Idaho, reinfections account for 12-18% of reported cases.

Increasing case counts are reflected by wastewater surveillance systems across the nation (see first graph below). On a local scale, San Francisco wastewater levels are skyrocketing. In Boston, wastewater finally found a consistent pattern and is on the upswing due to BA.2.12.1.

Hospitalizations are also increasing with a +23% change in the past 14 days. It will be very interesting to see how the rate soon changes (or doesn’t change) as hot spots move to less vaccinated parts of the U.S. As seen in the graph below from New York City, there continues to be a large discrepancy between unvaccinated and vaccinated.

Unfortunately, severe disease is not the only outcome. While evidence continues to show that vaccinations reduce risk of long COVID by ~50%, the most recent UK Health Security report found even those boosted aren’t spared. Among the triple vaccinated, 8-9% of people report long COVID (at least 4 weeks) after their first infection; 5-6% are reporting activity-limiting symptoms. There doesn’t seem to be a statistical difference between variants.

Bottom line
We are in the middle of an infection surge. If you’re vaccinated and healthy, there is a very small chance of landing in the hospital, but severe disease isn’t the only outcome, vulnerable pockets around you may not be protected by their vaccine, and more cases means more variants. We don’t need to be alarmed, but we certainly can’t be complacent. We need the will and the heart to beat this virus, as it’s certainly not done with us.

Love, YLE

“Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE)” is written by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH PhD—an epidemiologist, biostatistician, wife, and mom of two little girls. During the day she works at a nonpartisan health policy think tank, and at night she writes this newsletter. Her main goal is to “translate” the ever-evolving public health science so that people will be well equipped to make evidence-based decisions. This newsletter is free thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members.

HippieChick58 9 May 16
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4 comments

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4

And some will still insist that this is a conspiracy by the world governments.

2

As long as some humans only care about being right on their ideological stance concerning vaccines,or,the government agencies attempting to ensure the health of the population,this will never end.

4

Unfortunately, in this county rates are accelerating. We had the lowest infection rate and highest vaccination rate in the state. We are one of the top tourist destination spots in the state and now is high season. Our infection rate has soared and from one week to the next it doubled. Some programs from the museum have been cancelled and more and more of us are wearing masks again while inside.

If N. Korea were to pay even a bit as much attention to the nations health as the dictator does to acquiring a deliverable nuclear weapon things would be much better. Focusing on power and personal projects is the sign of poor and reckless leadership. If the republicans take over again our country will start to see even more of a surge.

I had just noticed the up tic in your county and was quite surprised and disappointed.

@silverotter11 So was I. We had no death until just recently and then 2. This seems one thing the county commission seems to pay little attention to. To them it's about growth and money.

8

There is NO going back to whatever is considered "normal".
The reason we're still in this is because of ignorance and denial.

We are NEVER going to be in a place where this virus is gone.

Not only are we not going back to normal, it's clear the court wants to make sure we reexperience the roaring 20s and not in a good way.

There is no longer anything resembling “normal”. It is impossible for the virus to be “gone”; it could only be “controlled”, but as you say, ignorance prevents that. Protect yourself as best you can.

@MsKathleen I do.

Another reason is pure selfishness, not giving a fuck about others in society such as people with pre-existing conditions, advanced age, etc.

@MizJ You are 100% correct.

@KKGator In 2020 a family I know couldn't just stay the fuck home for Christmas. A few dozen of them were together, 3 weeks later the grandmother was dead and who the hell knows how many in the community and healthcare workers were put at risk. They weren't alone.

@MizJ People are stupid. We kill each other.
Passively or directly.
This whole pandemic has shown me that the passive method is far more effective.

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