“I am worried about this variant — the B.1.1.7 variant (first found in the UK),” said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine.
“If that takes over, the numbers are going to start to spiral up again. There’s no end to what the death toll will look like unless we can vaccinate ahead of it.”
Where we stand with vaccinations
US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
the estimated 70% to 85% of Americans who would need to be immune to reach
herd immunity.
weather walloped much of the country last week.
But the US will likely be caught up by the middle of this week, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
“Obviously it is a setback because you’d like to see the steady flow of vaccine getting out there to get into people’s arms, but we can play pretty good catch-up,” Fauci told NBC on Sunday.
delaying second vaccine doses to get more first doses into people’s arms.
Both vaccines on the US market — developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna — require two doses, the second of which are intended to be administered 21 days and 28 days after the first, respectively.
Fauci told CNN Sunday the US is currently sticking with the vaccine schedule that is backed up by data from clinical trials.
“The science points directly towards continuing with what we know … from the clinical trial,” he said.
Good news (for now) on cases and hospitalizations
Nationwide, the rates of new Covid-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths are declining.
The number of patients hospitalized with Covid-19 has fallen for the 40th day in a row, according to the COVID Tracking Project.
Daily deaths have declined 24% this past week compared to the previous week, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
And daily new cases have dropped 23% over the same time period, according to Johns Hopkins. (But testing is also down by 17%, according to the COVID Tracking Project.)
“I’m very hopeful about where we are,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health. “Now we have a couple road bumps ahead.”
coronavirus variants.
About 1,700 cases of variant strains first spotted in the UK, South Africa and Brazil have been reported in the US, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
the US has lagged behind dozens of other countries in genome sequencing per 1,000 Covid-19 cases.
the US has ramped up sequencing to find variants and will keep doing so.
The vast majority of variant cases so far involve the highly contagious B.1.1.7 variant first detected in the UK.
over the weekend that while the B.1.1.7 strain likely accounts for less than 20% of current infections in the US,
that number will likely soar to 80% by late April.
‘Now is not the time to let your guard down’
the IHME team said
.
the team wrote.
The American Medical Association, the American Hospital Association and the American Nurses Association also pleaded for Americans to help quash the pandemic.
“With new, more contagious variants of the virus circulating throughout the U.S., now is not the time to let your guard down and scale back on the measures that we know will work to prevent further illness and deaths — wearing masks, practicing physical distancing, and washing hands,” a joint statement said.
Why we could be wearing masks next winter, too
Some Americans have discovered an unexpected perk to wearing masks in the winter — they protect against brutally cold air, not just against coronavirus.
And Americans might be wearing them next winter, when some health experts say Covid-19 might flare up again.
it’s “possible” people may be wearing masks in 2022.
There may be other ways everyday life will be different from the past, said infectious disease specialist and epidemiologist Dr. Celine Gounder.
“I do think we’re looking at some new normals. I think the handshake, for example, is probably going away,” she said.
“I do think masks in the cough/cold/flu season in the winter months would make a lot of sense. That clearly, really insulated the Southeast Asian countries from some of the worst of this, understanding the importance of wearing masks.”
you should keep wearing a mask. That’s because it takes weeks for vaccines to fully kick in and because vaccines don’t guarantee you won’t pass coronavirus on to others.
“It’s estimated that about 70% of Americans must be vaccinated before we get to herd immunity through vaccination,” CNN medical analyst Dr. Leana Wen said. “That’s the point where enough people have the immune protection that the virus won’t spread anymore.”
And slowing the transmission of coronavirus also hinders the chances of the virus mutating further.
“The evidence was pretty compelling by last March or April that uniform wearing of masks would reduce transmission of this disease,” National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins told Axios on HBO on Sunday.
The politicization of face masks probably led to many unnecessary deaths, he said.
“A mask is nothing more than a life-saving medical device, and yet it got categorized in all sorts of other ways that were not factual, not scientific and frankly, dangerous,” he added. “And I think you can make a case that tens of thousands of people died as a result.”
CNN’s Amanda Watts, Keith Allen, Jessica Firger, Naomi Thomas, Michael Nedelman and Paul Vercammen contributed to this report.