The pandemic is not over edition. Many Americans are acting as if the pandemic is over, and President Biden even said as much in a recent interview with 60 Minutes (although he later walked back his comments). And it is true that as of this moment, we are trending in the right direction – daily infection rates, hospitalizations, and deaths are all significantly down; in some cases, the metrics reflect the pre-Delta days of late spring and early summer 2021 (another time when some thought the pandemic was winding down.)
Still, the pandemic persists. The daily death rate is more than double that of a particularly severe flu season. Close to 30,000 hospitalizations mean acute hardship, both for individuals and, in some cases, for health systems. And there are warning signs. In Britain and parts of Europe, which have in the past foreshadowed what is to come in the U.S., both daily infection rates and hospitalizations have been rising over the past week or two. In Britain, two new worrisome Omicron subvariants have emerged – BA.2.75.2 and BQ.1.1 make up a tiny percentage of cases, but are rapidly increasing their “market share” of all COVID-19 cases. In the U.S., scientists are also watching the spread of BA.2.75.2 (and another subvariant, BF.7). BA.2.75.2 is particularly troubling. Its spike protein binds to human cells tightly – better than any other variant we’ve seen thus far. It has “extensive escape” ability, meaning it can evade antibodies caused by vaccination or previous infection, or both. It may be more transmissible.
Then there is the looming impact of long Covid – below, you’ll see a link to a study that shows as many as 18 million Americans have it and as many as 4 million Americans can’t work because of it. About 1 in 5 COVID-19 survivors in the U.S., including some who were never very sick as a result of their infection, develop long Covid, according to the CDC. Symptoms of long Covid include fatigue, fever, shortness of breath, chest pain, pounding heartbeat, headaches, difficulty thinking or concentrating, and joint pain. “We’re in the middle of the greatest mass-disability event in human history,” says long Covid patient and advocate Charlie McCone. So, no, the pandemic is not over, Americans’ attitudes and behaviors notwithstanding. And neither are the epidemic levels of substance use disorders and mental health problems that were worsened in the pandemic. That is why Congress must act – to keep up our response to the ever-shifting coronavirus, to improve preparedness for new public health threats, and to help people cope with the pandemic’s dangerous aftermath.
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