Just because many people seem more than ready to put the COVID-19 pandemic behind us doesn't mean it's really over. In fact, case numbers are rising again – with new infections reported in about 95,000 Americans each day – and hospitalizations are up 20% as well.
It's yet another reminder of the dangers that remain from a virus that has now killed more than 1 million Americans.
"There needs to be clear communication to the public for people to understand that the virus is still a threat," former CDC Director Tom Frieden, MD, said in an email interview. "We are in an infection surge right now."
"How many people will die is very much up to us and our ability to stay up to date on vaccinations, mask up when in a high-risk area, get people who need it rapidly diagnosed and treated, and implement public health and social measures when needed," he said.
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The Department of Health and Human Services, meanwhile, is reacting to the new COVID-19 picture by extending its emergency order beyond its expiration date of July 15. The order allows Americans to access medications, vaccines, and more with no out-of-pocket costs part of an emergency use authorization.
The daily average of hospitalizations has reached 3,000, an increase of 19% over last week, and daily deaths are hovering at 275.
CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD, acknowledged that while these numbers are far lower than those seen during the first Omicron spike, “Nearly 300 deaths a day is still far too many,” she said during a White House media briefing Wednesday.
Concern in Europe
It's not just the U.S. on high alert. The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control recently designated Omicron subvariants BA.4 and BA.5 “variants of concern.”
In Portugal – a country that has seen climbing COVID-19 case numbers in recent weeks – BA.5 made up around 37% of positive cases as of May 8, according to the Portuguese National Institute of Health.
First identified in South Africa early this year, BA.4 and BA.5 are now the dominant variants in the country.
Because BA.4 and BA.5’s daily growth advantage over Omicron strain BA.2 in Portugal (13%) is similar to what was previously reported in South Africa (around 12%), European officials predict BA.5 will be Portugal’s dominant variant in the coming days.
The organization says the high growth rate is due to the variants’ “ability to evade immune protection induced by prior infection and/or vaccination, particularly if this has waned over time.”
While the presence of BA.4 and BA.5 in most parts of Europe remains low, the European CDC predicts the variants could cause a spike in COVID-19 case numbers and could ultimately become the dominant variants in Europe in coming months.
But early research does not suggest that BA.4 and BA.5 are more dangerous, compared to other Omicron strains.
It remains to be seen whether BA.4/BA.5 can outcompete BA.2.12.1, which is nearly dominant in the U.S., says Eric Topol, MD, a practicing cardiologist at Scripps in La Jolla, CA, and Medscape editor-in-chief. (Medscape is a part of the WebMD network.)
Regardless, these variants can pose a further challenge to our immune systems, which may not recognize them fully, given the minimal cross-immunity provided by BA.1, the original Omicron strain, he says.
“That is especially noteworthy since 40% to 50% of Americans were infected with BA.1 [or BA.1.1], and without added protection from vaccination, they will be vulnerable to BA.2.12.1 infections.”
The Case of the Missing Numbers
The U.S. is now in a new wave driven by Omicron variants BA.2 and BA.2.12.2, Topol says.
The 95,000 new daily cases reported by the CDC do not reflect "the real toll of the current wave, since most people with symptoms are testing at home or not testing at all."
Also, there is pretty much no testing among people who don’t have symptoms, Topol says.
The actual number of cases is likely at least 500,000 per day, he says, "far greater than any of the U.S. prior waves except Omicron."
Frieden agrees that Omicron and its sub-lineages remain a threat. For example, BA.2.12.1, which is nearly predominant in the U.S., and BA.4 and BA.5, which are predominant in South Africa, "are highly transmissible, even to people who are previously infected, and to a lesser extent, those previously infected and vaccinated."
"This can contribute to quick and dramatic surges in infections," says Frieden, the president and CEO of Resolve to Save Lives, an organization that aims to prevent 100 million deaths from heart disease worldwide and to make the world safer from epidemics.
“As difficult as it is to mentally confront, we must plan on something worse than Omicron in the months ahead,” Topol says.
Seven things add to this “highly unfavorable picture” of the near future, he says:
- The evolution of the coronavirus is speeding up.
- Variants are more able to evade immunity.
- Transmissibility and infectiousness are higher.
- Vaccines and boosters offer less protection against transmission.
- There has been some reduction of vaccine or booster protection against hospitalization or death.
- People with immunity who haven’t been vaccinated are highly vulnerable.
- It’s likely that more dangerous variants are emerging.
Paxlovid and Other Reasons for Hope
Frieden offered several reasons for optimism as well. For many in the United States, summer offers the chance to gather outdoors instead of indoors, and extra ventilation cuts down on transmission risk, he says.
In addition, “the more people stay up-to-date on their vaccines, the fewer deaths there will be.”
Another positive to consider is the antiviral agent Paxlovid, Frieden says, which “provides further protection against severe illness or death if taken soon after infection.”
Topol also talked about Paxlovid, although he was more cautious. (See continued story below)
SLIDESHOW
Top Vaccine-Preventable Diseases
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1. COVID-19
What it is: An infectious disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
How you get it: COVID-19 spreads when an infected person coughs, sneezes, or talks. Droplets and particles fly out, and other people can breathe them in. The disease can also spread when those droplets land on a surface, then someone else touches the surface and puts their hands on their face.
Why it’s serious: Most people who get COVID have only mild to moderate symptoms. But some can become seriously ill, especially those with medical conditions like heart disease, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease, or cancer.
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2. Measles
What it is: A highly contagious viral infection that involves the respiratory system, including the lungs and breathing tubes.
How you get it: The measles virus gets into the air when someone who has it coughs or sneezes. It can also last for up to 2 hours on something they touched. Most people who aren't immune -- 90% -- will get it if they are near an infected person.
Why it’s serious: Measles can cause pneumonia, brain swelling, and death. Before the vaccine, 3 million to 4 million people in the U.S. got measles each year, 48,000 were hospitalized, and 400-500 died.
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3. Whooping Cough (Pertussis)
What it is: A lung infection that makes it hard to breathe due to severe coughing.
How you get it: People can breathe in the pertussis bacteria when someone who has whooping cough coughs or sneezes.
Why it’s serious: It can be life-threatening, especially in babies less than 1 year old. Whooping cough can lead to pneumonia, seizures, and slowed or stopped breathing.
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4. Flu
What it is: A viral infection of the nose, lungs, and throat.
How you get it: When someone with the flu coughs, sneezes, or talks, droplets can spread up to 6 feet away. People get the virus from the air or by touching something the sick person touched and then touching their own nose or mouth.
Why it’s serious: Up to 61,000 Americans die from the flu each year. The flu can create severe complications for people with asthma or diabetes.
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5. Polio
What it is: A viral disease that affects the muscles.
How you get it: The polio virus lives in the intestines. You can get infected by coming into contact with a sick person’s feces.
Why it’s serious: Most people get no symptoms or flu-like symptoms that last a few days, but polio can cause brain infection, paralysis, and death. It was one of the most feared and devastating diseases of the 20th century. Polio cases are down sharply thanks to vaccination, but the disease is not gone from the world.
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6. Pneumococcal Disease
What it is: A bacterial disease that can cause many types of illness, including pneumonia, ear and blood infections, and meningitis (which affects the brain and spinal cord).
How you get it: By coming into contact with an infected person’s mucus or saliva.
Why it’s serious: Complications can be serious and fatal. As pneumonia, it's especially deadly in people older than 65. If it causes meningitis or infects the blood, these can be life-threatening.
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7. Tetanus
What it is: A bacterial disease that causes lockjaw, breathing problems, muscle spasms, paralysis, and death.
How you get it: The bacteria that causes tetanus is found in soil, dust, and manure. It can get in your body through a cut or open sore.
Why it’s serious: 10% to 20% of tetanus cases are fatal. Deaths are more common in people who are older than 60 or who have diabetes.
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8. Meningococcal Disease
What it is: A bacterial disease that can cause meningitis, an infection and swelling of the brain and spinal cord. It can also infect the blood.
How you get it: It's caused by bacteria that live in the back of an infected person' nose and throat. It can spread through kissing or just living with someone who is infected. Symptoms are usually fever that starts suddenly, headache, and stiff neck. Getting diagnosed and treated ASAP is key.
Why it’s serious: Between 1,000-1,200 people in the U.S. get meningococcal disease each year. Even with antibiotics, as many as 15% die.
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9. Hepatitis B
What it is: A chronic liver disease caused by the hepatitis B virus.
How you get it: People with hepatitis B have the virus in their blood and other bodily fluids. Adults usually spread it through sex or sharing needles. A pregnant woman can pass it to their baby. Hepatitis B is 100 times more infectious than HIV, the disease that causes AIDS.
Why it’s serious: It can lead to liver cancer and other long-lasting liver diseases, which can be deadly.
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10. Mumps
What it is: A disease caused by a virus that gives people swollen salivary glands, a fever, headache, and muscle aches. It also makes you feel tired and curbs your appetite.
How you get it: When someone with mumps coughs or sneezes, the virus gets into the air, and other people can breathe it in.
Why it’s serious: It can lead to meningitis and cause long-lasting health problems, including deafness and sterility in men. Mumps is now rare in the U.S., thanks to the MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccine. But outbreaks still happen, usually among people spending time close together, like living in a dorm.
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11. Hib (Haemophilus Influenzae Type B)
What it is: A bacterial disease that infects the lungs (pneumonia), brain or spinal cord (meningitis), blood, bone, or joints.
How you get it: Some people have Hib bacteria in their nose or throat but are not ill. When they cough or sneeze, the bacteria go airborne. Babies and young children are especially at risk because their immune systems are weak.
Why it’s serious: Before the Hib vaccine, about 20,000 U.S. children younger than 5 got Hib each year. About 3% to 6% of them died.
Continued story:
“Our backstop to infections in people at increased risk has turned to Paxlovid,” but unfortunately, evidence is showing that some people get sick again after taking the drug for 5 days, he says.
“Not only does this unanticipated problem urgently need to be sorted out, but we may confront mounting resistance to Paxlovid in the months ahead as it continues to gain wide-scale use,” Topol says.
“We absolutely need an aggressive stance to get ahead of the virus – for the first time since the pandemic began – instead of surrendering,” he says. “That means setting priorities, funding, and the realization, unfortunately, that the pandemic is far from over.”
As for funding, White House coronavirus response coordinator Ashish Jha, MD, said Wednesday that the lack of congressional action on more money for the pandemic has the country poised for more problems.
Without more money, “we will find ourselves in a fall or winter with people getting infected and no treatments available for them because we will have run out.”
When asked about a return to masking, Frieden cited the big picture. “The discourse around masking and public health tools more broadly needs to be reframed. Masking is a low-cost, lifesaving tool that can help control the spread of other infectious diseases, not just COVID.”
“Wearing a mask doesn’t just have to be a pandemic practice,” he says. “We can use many of the healthy practices that we’ve learned, developed, and normalized during the pandemic to control the spread of diseases ongoing and keep the world healthier.”
Reporter Lindsay Kalter contributed to this report.