CDC: There’s No Place Like Zoom for the Holidays
As rates of infection, hospitalization, and deaths from COVID-19 plummet, we’re reminded that we’ve been here before. Too many Americans remain unvaccinated and too many questions about SARS-CoV-2 remain unanswered.
UPDATED October 6, 2021, at 1:30 p.m.
Various news outlets report that the content on holiday guidance has been removed from the the CDC website. CDC spokeswoman reportedly said in a statement that “the content is in the process of being updated by CDC to reflect current guidance ahead of this holiday season. The page had a technical update on Friday, but doesn’t reflect the CDC’s guidance ahead of this upcoming holiday season. CDC will share additional guidance soon."
ORIGINAL POST:
Every silver lining has its cloud, unfortunately. So, while the rates of infections, hospitalizations, and deaths have plummeted in recent weeks and medical experts express cautious optimism that the worst may be over, there’s still a lot we don’t know about COVID-19. And to use the phrase planted in the zeitgeist by Game of Thrones, “winter is coming.”
The holiday season last year caused a huge COVID-19 surge, one that had been
So, even though Anthony Fauci, MD, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, indicated to CBS’s
Still, there’s plenty to feel hopeful about.
Since late August, COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations have declined about 30%. The United States has averaged 110,232 daily cases as of September 27, as opposed to 159,515 as of August 27,
Another phrase in the zeitgeist is “I’ll be Home for Christmas,” made famous by Bing Crosby. Fauci was asked yesterday on Face the Nation if that should be the case this year, to which he responded that “it’s just too soon to tell. We’ve just got to [be] concentrating on continuing to get those numbers down and not try to jump ahead by weeks or months and say what we’re going to do at a particular time.”
Fauci’s comments came just 2 days after the CDC
Another reminder about just how much of a toll COVID-19 has taken on Americans came yesterday, after Reuters
A question hanging over the data supplied by CDC and all the other agencies and organizations tracking COVID-19 was raised by the Washington Post yesterday: Just how much can those data be trusted? The headline on the Washington Post
The newspaper reports that “critically important data on vaccinations, infections, hospitalizations and deaths are scattered among local health departments, often out of date, hard to aggregate at the national level—and simply not up to the job of battling a highly transmissible and stealthy pathogen.”
The article then quotes Ali Mokdad, an epidemiologist at the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, who, readers are told, worked 2 decades for the CDC.
“We are flying blind,” Mokdad tells the newspaper. “With all our money, with all our know-how, we have dropped the ball. … We don’t have the data. We don’t have the good surveillance system to keep us informed.”
In fact, we still don’t know exactly where SARS-CoV-2 originated. The theory that a lab leak in Wuhan, China, had for months been discounted out of hand but recently has gained
The WHO
In its summation of the story, Axios this morning offers this
Newsletter
Related Articles
- Bug of the Month: I'm Older Than Empires
September 16th 2025
- Top 5 Infection Prevention Articles of Summer 2025
September 16th 2025
- From Outbreak to Zoopocalypse: 11 More Must-Watch Viral Thrillers
September 15th 2025
- Debunking the Mistruths and Misinformation About COVID-19
September 15th 2025
- Bug of the Month: I Like to Hitch a Ride
September 12th 2025