COVID-19 Isn’t Done with Us Yet, Medical Experts Warn
The pandemic could leave in its wake a “tsunami” of chronic health conditions in younger people, including serious heart problems.
The glass is half empty. But the trope used to determine whether someone’s an optimist or a pessimist, actually leans into a third category when it comes to what the United States faces with COVID-19: realist. Realistically speaking, the glass is in indeed half empty with fewer than half (48.6%) of Americans being fully vaccinated against the coronavirus, according to the
And that’s why public health officials can’t let their guard down against COVID-19, as the Delta variant spreads among the unvaccinated in the U.S.
Surgeon General Vivek Murthy tells
According to the Johns Hopkins
Nonetheless, things have gotten worrisome enough that yesterday the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended that all children over the age of 2, regardless of vaccination status, wear masks in
It comes down to this: If you’re unvaccinated, you’re vulnerable, said CDC Director
Kevin Kavanagh, MD, a member of Infection Control Today®’s (ICT®) Editorial Advisory Board, worries that the unvaccinated put others at risk, if not of death from COVID-19, but from long COVID. Kavanagh worries that far from being a return to pre-COVID normal, when the pandemic finally recedes it will leave a destructive overload of disabilities behind.
“We need to have as much diligence in preventing chronic disability in the young as we do in preventing deaths in the elderly,” Kavanagh tells ICT®. Kavanagh’s concern dovetails with those of the author of a
Robert M. Califf, MD, of Duke University School of Medicine, wrote that “during the past year, clinicians and the public have been focused on the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and its associated societal and economic effects. However, once the acute phase of this crisis has passed, we will face an enormous wave of death and disability as a result of common chronic diseases (CCDs), with cardiometabolic diseases at the crest.” On a more hopeful note, Califf adds that “although the pandemic has created additional impetus that unless heeded will amplify the consequences of this burden, the rapid adaptations and innovations in care and research prompted by the urgent response to it may also offer us the means to stem this flood.”
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