Covid-19’s numbers are on the decline
• New daily recorded cases in the US are falling. Health experts had warned that the November-December holiday, with an increase in travel and indoor meetings, would skyrocket the cases of Covid-19.
And they did, according to data from Johns Hopkins University on Jan. 10, a pandemic record averaging more than 249,200 cases per day for a week.
The increase has slowed: the average was down to about 166,380 cases per day for a week from Tuesday – a decrease of more than 33% from the peak.
And the country has reported fewer than 200,000 new cases per day for 10 consecutive days – the longest period since before Thanksgiving.
• Hospital admissions are declining: About 108,950 Covid-19 patients were in U.S. hospitals Tuesday – a number generally declining since a pandemic peak of 132,474 patients registered Jan. 6.
According to the COVID Tracking Project, the statistic is now roughly where it was just before mid-December.
• Fatalities reported per day are just below a record: The country counts an average of 3,349 Covid-19 deaths per day for a week as of Tuesday.
That’s very close to a pandemic peak average of 3,355 that was reached on January 13 – and well above the averages of around 1,000 just in mid-November.
Experts have said that movements in the number of deaths can lag the number of cases and hospital admissions for weeks, because those who succumb to the disease can be sick for weeks at first.
That’s partly due to seasonality, said institute director Dr. Christopher Murray Monday – meaning warmer weather could mean less chance of spreading, with more social opportunities outdoors.
But vaccinations “will also prevent many deaths,” Murray said.
About those variants
Dr. Emergency physician and former Baltimore health commissioner, Leana Wen, is one of the experts concerned that more transferable variants could lead to more spikes in the cases if they snag.
“We saw what is happening in other countries that have actually had the coronavirus under relatively good control, then these variants took over and they had an explosive spread of the virus and then overwhelmed hospitals,” Wen told CNN Monday.
‘Get as many people as possible vaccinated as soon as possible’
An obvious way to combat these variants – and to reduce the likelihood of more dangerous mutations occurring – Fauci has said is to get vaccinated.
“The best way to prevent the evolution of mutants is to suppress the amount of virus circulating in the population. And the best way to do that is to get as many people vaccinated as soon as possible,” Fauci told Monday. CNN. .
There is some evidence that the effectiveness of vaccine-induced antibodies could be diminished against the mutant first seen in South Africa, but “it is still within the range of an effective vaccine,” Fauci said.
The World Health Organization, meanwhile, has emphasized that rich countries must do more to ensure vaccines are available worldwide. That’s not just for moral reasons, but also because dangerous mutations can develop in places where people aren’t vaccinated in sufficient numbers – eventually becoming pathogenic people who have already been vaccinated.
“A I-first approach puts the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people at risk. It’s also self-destructive,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday.
Keep masking, experts say
The steps people should take to combat variants and bring the country closer to normal while waiting for vaccines follow the now well-known roadmap of pandemic precautions, from wearing masks to avoiding crowds to simply washing hands .
New species are “putting a lot of pressure on us to try () do everything we can to reduce transmission,” said Dr. Richard Besser, former acting director of the CDC, Tuesday.
Vaccines are part of that, but the bulk of it is trying to come together as a nation and see: Can we get those people who don’t wear masks to do that? Can we get people socially distant and crowded indoors? avoid places? ”he said
“If we can do those things, we can mitigate the effects of the pandemic this winter.”
These preventive measures coupled with the vaccine rollout – even over several months – should bring increasing relief, Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health, told CNN late last week.
“I’m hopeful that by the end of spring to early summer, life will feel really meaningfully different and better,” he said.
CNN’s Amanda Watts, Elizabeth Cohen, John Bonifield, Andrea Diaz, Maggie Fox, Naomi Thomas, Sandee LaMotte, Deidre McPhillips and Jen Christensen contributed to this report.