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‘covid-19 Poses A Relatively Low Risk If..’: What New Cdc Data Says About Covid-19 Pandemic

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Frieden took to Twitter to share that, “we’re in a much different place now than two years ago. Now, the virus is more contagious but less virulent, we have a wall of immunity from vaccination and previous infection, and better tests, treatments and disease surveillance.”

Two years ago, Covid hospitalized and killed a higher proportion of people it infected. Nearly all people who tested positive in hospitals were there because the virus was making them sick—after all, there was NO immunity to it, and, also, the virus was more lethal than Omicron, he tweeted.

With 90% of Americans likely have some level of immunity to Covid—from vaccinations, prior infection, or both. “The virus itself has evolved, becoming more contagious (Alpha), more contagious AND more virulent (Delta) and MUCH more contagious but less virulent (Omicron). It could—and almost certainly will—change again, unpredictably,” he said.

Even though many at-home Covid test results aren’t being reported, actual case rates now are without doubt a lot lower than they were a few months ago, and many people feel more comfortable traveling, gathering indoors and shedding their masks. “If you’re healthy and up-to-date with your vaccination, that’s a reasonable approach. Covid poses a relatively low risk of severe illness to you, especially compared with other daily risks we willingly accept,” he tweeted.

The flu versus Covid-19:

It is crucial to spend a moment on the charged issue of flu versus Covid. It’s worth using comparisons with flu as a guide to understand how much Covid has changed.

“First, let’s be clear: We vastly UNDER-react to flu. Flu kills tens of thousands of people a year, sends hundreds of thousands to the hospital and results in a big hit to our economy, schools & productivity. So comparing Covid to flu isn’t like comparing Covid to, say, a cold,” he wrote.

For most of the pandemic, it was clear that Covid was significantly deadlier than flu. Today, there are probably fewer people hospitalized in US from Covid than hospitalized for flu during an average flu year. BUT hospitalizations have started to rise and have nearly doubled in some places in past 6 weeks, though are still a small fraction of recent peaks, he tweeted.

It’s challenging to explain, but the fact is that a higher proportion of the people hospitalized today who test positive for Covid are in the hospital for other reasons than was the case two years ago, when we didn’t have any immunity, and the strain was deadlier, he said.

“New data from CDC show Covid was the third leading cause of death in 2021. About half of US Covid deaths in 2020 were preventable through better public health action, and more than half of 2021 deaths were preventable through improved vaccination,” he said noting that with vaccines, our wall of immunity and new highly effective treatment.

And with vaccine like Paxlovid, “we can now likely keep severe disease caused by Omicron variants at or under that caused by flu. A measured approach to both can prevent deaths while limiting disruption to our lives,” he wrote.

But Omicron can still be dangerous, especially in people who are older, immunosuppressed or not up-to-date with their vaccination, as we tragically saw in Hong Kong. And long Covid is a serious risk that we can’t dismiss or take lightly. A new meta-analysis reported that HALF of people infected with Covid have symptoms at least four months later.

What to do next:

Frieden said that “we need to speed up therapeutic trials for long Covid patients—a lot of people are suffering. ACT UP showed us that we can and must move science fast.”

Weighing all of the above is no easy task, and each of us may come to different conclusions about what activities we’re comfortable doing given factors such as our vaccination status, risk tolerance, age, underlying health and who we could potentially spread the virus to.

“If you’re immunosuppressed, older or medically vulnerable—or live with someone who is—you’ll likely want to continue to mask up, and, in fact, up your mask game to an N95 and make sure you’re up-to-date with vaccination and seek prompt treatment if you do get sick,” he xeplained.

Frieden highlights that even if we personally don’t feel at risk from Covid, people around us might be, “we have a responsibility to protect those among us who are most vulnerable by taking reasonable precautions, including masking up in higher-risk environments or when community spread is high.”

Lastly, he notified that there is a need to bolster public health, not undermine its budgetary stability and legal authority. Covid didn’t have to kill most of the people in the US and globally who died from it. “If we heed the lessons of this pandemic, we can have safer, healthier, more stable societies,” he said.

 

 

 

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Frieden took to Twitter to share that, “we’re in a much different place now than two years ago. Now, the virus is more contagious but less virulent, we have a wall of immunity from vaccination and previous infection, and better tests, treatments and disease surveillance.”

Two years ago, Covid hospitalized and killed a higher proportion of people it infected. Nearly all people who tested positive in hospitals were there because the virus was making them sick—after all, there was NO immunity to it, and, also, the virus was more lethal than Omicron, he tweeted.

With 90% of Americans likely have some level of immunity to Covid—from vaccinations, prior infection, or both. “The virus itself has evolved, becoming more contagious (Alpha), more contagious AND more virulent (Delta) and MUCH more contagious but less virulent (Omicron). It could—and almost certainly will—change again, unpredictably,” he said.

Even though many at-home Covid test results aren’t being reported, actual case rates now are without doubt a lot lower than they were a few months ago, and many people feel more comfortable traveling, gathering indoors and shedding their masks. “If you’re healthy and up-to-date with your vaccination, that’s a reasonable approach. Covid poses a relatively low risk of severe illness to you, especially compared with other daily risks we willingly accept,” he tweeted.

The flu versus Covid-19:

It is crucial to spend a moment on the charged issue of flu versus Covid. It’s worth using comparisons with flu as a guide to understand how much Covid has changed.

“First, let’s be clear: We vastly UNDER-react to flu. Flu kills tens of thousands of people a year, sends hundreds of thousands to the hospital and results in a big hit to our economy, schools & productivity. So comparing Covid to flu isn’t like comparing Covid to, say, a cold,” he wrote.

For most of the pandemic, it was clear that Covid was significantly deadlier than flu. Today, there are probably fewer people hospitalized in US from Covid than hospitalized for flu during an average flu year. BUT hospitalizations have started to rise and have nearly doubled in some places in past 6 weeks, though are still a small fraction of recent peaks, he tweeted.

It’s challenging to explain, but the fact is that a higher proportion of the people hospitalized today who test positive for Covid are in the hospital for other reasons than was the case two years ago, when we didn’t have any immunity, and the strain was deadlier, he said.

“New data from CDC show Covid was the third leading cause of death in 2021. About half of US Covid deaths in 2020 were preventable through better public health action, and more than half of 2021 deaths were preventable through improved vaccination,” he said noting that with vaccines, our wall of immunity and new highly effective treatment.

And with vaccine like Paxlovid, “we can now likely keep severe disease caused by Omicron variants at or under that caused by flu. A measured approach to both can prevent deaths while limiting disruption to our lives,” he wrote.

But Omicron can still be dangerous, especially in people who are older, immunosuppressed or not up-to-date with their vaccination, as we tragically saw in Hong Kong. And long Covid is a serious risk that we can’t dismiss or take lightly. A new meta-analysis reported that HALF of people infected with Covid have symptoms at least four months later.

What to do next:

Frieden said that “we need to speed up therapeutic trials for long Covid patients—a lot of people are suffering. ACT UP showed us that we can and must move science fast.”

Weighing all of the above is no easy task, and each of us may come to different conclusions about what activities we’re comfortable doing given factors such as our vaccination status, risk tolerance, age, underlying health and who we could potentially spread the virus to.

“If you’re immunosuppressed, older or medically vulnerable—or live with someone who is—you’ll likely want to continue to mask up, and, in fact, up your mask game to an N95 and make sure you’re up-to-date with vaccination and seek prompt treatment if you do get sick,” he xeplained.

Frieden highlights that even if we personally don’t feel at risk from Covid, people around us might be, “we have a responsibility to protect those among us who are most vulnerable by taking reasonable precautions, including masking up in higher-risk environments or when community spread is high.”

Lastly, he notified that there is a need to bolster public health, not undermine its budgetary stability and legal authority. Covid didn’t have to kill most of the people in the US and globally who died from it. “If we heed the lessons of this pandemic, we can have safer, healthier, more stable societies,” he said.

 

 

 

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