We Might Ignore the Delta Variant, but It’s Not Ignoring the U.S.
Far too few have been fully vaccinated in the U.S.to ward off a run on our hospitals, and avoiding hospitalizations is an extremely low bar for public health, since 10% to 30% of the patients even with mild to moderate disease will develop long COVID.
It has been two weeks since Infection Control Today® sounded the alarm that the Delta variant (B1617.2, Double Mutation Indian Variant) was spreading rapidly in the
England has postponed its full reopening and in areas where the Delta variant is prevalent, recommending that everyone (and I mean everyone) be tested
According to President Biden the Delta variant “is more easily transmissible, potentially deadlier and particularly
According to Outbreak.info, the Delta Variant is rapidly spreading. A seven-day rolling average currently has this variant at 29% of newly sequenced cases. One must keep in mind this data has wide error bars, since we are sequencing far too few cases and those that we do sequence are often reinfections or vaccine breakthroughs. But what is clear is that the numbers are rapidly increasing. In the United Kingdom the Delta variant now comprises 99% of the
Unfortunately, far too few have been fully vaccinated to ward off a run on our hospitals. As of June 20, 2021, the U.S. has 45.1% of its population fully vaccinated with 53.5% of its population having at
Stating that the vaccines are 90% effective is somewhat misleading, since with the wild type (original virus) this was defined as not having symptomatic disease. With the Delta variant, “effective” means
The need to avoid developing long COVID-19 has been made even more of an imperative with two recent publications. A study out of the United Kingdom by Douaud G, et al., evaluated 394 brain scans from COVID-19 patients who also had a pre-COVID scan, and matched them with
In other words, this study found brain scan evidence of loss of grey matter which may represent viral entry into the CNS and explain the symptoms of “brain fog” and “memory” problems so many long COVID-19 patients are experiencing.
The second paper was published in
And there is now a Delta Plus variant (AY.1 & AY.2) which has emerged in India which is more resistant to monoclonal antibodies, including
As
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