Next Course? COVID ‘Surge Superimposed Upon a Surge’
The CDC warns that it’s possible that the number of hospitalizations due to COVID-19 are likely to rise every day for the next 4 to 10 weeks, further straining an already strained healthcare system.
Infection preventionists and other healthcare professionals have good reason to feel overwhelmed these days, as the number of hospitalizations due to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) keeps breaking records this month. According to the COVID Tracking Project over 83,000 people were hospitalized for COVID-19 yesterday, and the record for hospitalizations has been broken every day since November 10.
The infection rate won’t slow down any time soon, especially with Thanksgiving coming this week and people interacting indoors. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
We might be about to see a “surge superimposed upon a surge,” says Anthony Fauci, MD, director of the CDC’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. In an interview yesterday with the Washington Post, Fauci urged Americans to stay home for Thanksgiving. Fauci told the Post that “we are in a very steep escalation of cases right now in the mid-fall season. If in fact, you’re in a situation when you do the things that are increasing the risk—the travel, the congregate settings, not wearing masks—the chances are you will see a surge superimposed upon a surge.”
The message might be getting through, at least to some extent, according to a
Just how much of a scaling back on Thanksgiving will occur remains to be seen. As
People who do travel for Thanksgiving may feel they are less at risk, even if they do catch COVID. As ICT® has been
In North Dakota and Illinois those hospitals are already overburdened, and hospital officials in Utah say that they’ve been forced to ration care.
And while it appears that many Americans have indeed scaled back on their plans for Thanksgiving, heeding the CDC’s recommendation that celebrations should be limited to only household members (people who’ve lived under the same roof for at least the last 14 days), too many have not.
The US could possibly double the number of COVID cases by January 20, according to forecasters at Washington University in St. Louis. Not all of those projected 20 million COVID cases will wind up in the hospital, but many will.
The United States recorded 169,190 confirmed cases of COVID-19 yesterday, while 889 people died of the novel coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University. Overall, in the United States, there have been about 12.5 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 and about 258,000 people have died from the disease.
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