Flying Blind as COVID-19 Rates Increase: The Eris Variant
What is a COVID-19 infection? With the definition not consistent, the answer is far from simple.
Few people doubt COVID-19 will stay around, and it is starting to increase again in August 2023. Daily hospital admissions are on the rise,
All of this sounds dire, but at the peak of the Omicron surge, there were
Some of the best data is being compiled
Finally, what exactly is a COVID-19 infection is still in flux. Unless one is admitted with severe pulmonary involvement, requiring steroid administration, a positive COVID-19 test may just be considered incidental. A better estimation of acute hospitalizations would be comparing the incidence of COVID-19-positive patients in the hospital with that in the community. There is ample evidence that the virus can damage the cardiovascular system, causing cardiac damage, arrhythmias, and thromboembolisms. The answer to the question, “Would you count a patient admitted for a heart attack with a positive COVID-19 test as a COVID-19 admission?” is a resounding yes.
Our current increase in infections has been
Of additional concern is that the delayed effects of the virus can cause long COVID and even death. A recent article published in the
The CDC has an ongoing
In at least some patients, COVID-19 symptoms can persist.
At this point in the pandemic, we should have solid numbers on both the short- and long-term risks of COVID-19 and the incidence of long COVID, but there is still just a patchwork of independent studies and a dearth of solid data. We no longer have an accurate accounting of acute infections, and the exact incidence and duration of long COVID is unknown. Presently, EPIC and Walgreens data greatly aid in our tracking of the pandemic.
COVID-19 infections will not go away and will have a lasting impact on our resources. We must be able to accurately calculate and project the societal and workforce impact of COVID-19. We should have the data to calculate the percentage of the population disabled by COVID-19 and project this into the future. But at this point, we appear to still have our heads in the sand, hoping that if we do not measure and report the virus
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