COVID-19 Case Counts Surge in 46 States
New COVID-19 cases in the country are at least 10% higher this week than they were last week. They’ve risen in 46 states, and in 31 states, new cases of SARS-CoV-2 are at least 50% higher.
The race between getting as many Americans as possible vaccinated against COVID-19 and the spread of the highly infectious Delta variant seems to have dramatically shifted, as case counts rise across the United States. According to
Medical experts have been warning for weeks that this could happen. Kevin Kavanagh, MD, a member of Infection Control Today®’s (ICT®) Editorial Advisory Board,
The words “overwhelming the system” have an ominous ring to them, as
The rates of new COVID-19 cases in the country are at least 10% higher this week than they were last week, according to Johns Hopkins. They’ve risen in 46 states, and in 31 states, new cases of SARS-CoV-2 are at least 50% higher.
There’s a definite cause and effect dynamic taking place. If you’re unvaccinated, you’re vulnerable.
Things are particularly bad in Missouri, which has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the country and—not coincidentally—one of the worst outbreaks of the Delta variant. The White House
Kavanagh has
Howard Jarvis, MD, is an emergency physician in Springfield, Missouri. He
Jarvis tells CNN: “If they’re sick enough to be admitted to the hospital, they are unvaccinated. That is the absolute common denominator amongst those patients. Earlier in the pandemic, and certainly before we had vaccinations, we were seeing a much older patient population in the emergency department and getting admitted to the hospital…. In recent weeks, we’ve been seeing a much younger population. We're seeing a lot of people in their 30s, 40s, early 50s. We're seeing some teenagers and some pediatric patients as well.”
Health care experts have been concerned about vaccine hesitancy even before there were COVID-19 vaccines. That hesitancy exists even among
The issue came to a head sooner than most expected when Houston Methodist Hospital
Pettis continued: “Low health care staff vaccination rates put vulnerable populations at risk of contracting COVID-19. As health care professionals, we have an ethical responsibility to protect those individuals entrusted to our care.”
The joint statement noted that compliance among health care workers mandated to get the flu vaccine was 94.4% in the 2019-2020 season. For health care workers who did not have to get the flu vaccine, compliance was 69.9%.
“While vaccinations represent one of the most effective strategies to mitigate risk of transmission of communicable diseases, vaccination of HCP with ACIP-recommended vaccines prior to the COVID-19 pandemic has been suboptimal, with approximately 50% of surveyed HCP [health care professionals] in March 2021 remaining unvaccinated,” the statement reads.
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