Covid Update – Complacency WIll Get The Better of Us

Covid Update – Complacency WIll Get The Better of Us

Andrew Chuma No Comment
General Wellness

Despite what people may think, this pandemic is not over, and there is the potential for things to get much worse before they get better.

Watching what is going on around us these days, one would think that nothing is going on. People going about their daily lives, with an occasional masked person, today looked upon as odd rather than the norm, as it had been for over 2 years. But this attitude of complacency is allowing this pandemic to continue to simmer.

Presently, we have just under 300 deaths a day from Covid in the US. It is significantly higher in other places around the world where the Ba 4 and 5 variants are more common. At the height of the Delta wave, we had about 10x that amount, but 300 deaths a day is still significant. It’s more than how many die from diabetes or Alzheimer’s complications every day, and it seems to have hit a plateau. It’s hard to have an accurate number of daily new infections since so many of them are going unreported and are not requiring hospitalization or doctors visits but in many places in the US, hospitalizations are on the rise. Why? Again, it is about the numbers. As I have said before, a small percentage of a big number is still a big number.

In my office, I am seeing more and more people who have had Covid recently, and not surprisingly, more and more people with long-haul Covid symptoms. Loss of smell and taste, distorted taste, brain fog, weird mouth symptoms, ringing…

Presently, the main variant in the US is the Omicron Ba 1.2 1.2 variant (that is not a typo, it is just 1.2 x 2). But, just like everywhere else in the world, the Ba 4 and 5 sub variants are on the rise. Ba4 and 5 represented 5 and 8% of new cases 2 weeks ago. This week, they represent 11 and 25% of new cases, a clear and significant jump.

Although it is not definitively clear if Ba 4 and 5 cause more or less significant disease than its predecessor, it is definitely more infectious and even more concerning, it evades previous immune protection from vaccination and infection to a much greater degree. Even if one had a recent infection with one of the previous Omicron variants, there appears to be little protection against 4 and 5. Recurrent infections are becoming more and more common, and in many cases, recurrent infections are more severe.

It also appears that prior vaccination or infection is providing less and less reduction in death rate with recurrent infections. Disease severity seems to be still reduced overall, but death rates are only slightly reduced. In one study from Minnesota, whereas full vaccination and boosting reduced death rates by as much as 20x compared with those unvaccinated with previous versions of SARS-Cov-2, the rates with Omicron are barely above 1.5x risk reduction of death.

Although I am still a vaccine advocate, vaccines are not a panacea and will not save us. We need to shift our mindset from eradicating this virus to dealing with it. But dealing with it does not mean ignoring it and hoping for the best. I think that dealing with this virus will be a combination of changes in human behavior, people getting healthier in order to deal with the disease better and improvement in therapeutics, including updated vaccines, antivirals as well as other treatment modalities.

We can hope for more therapeutics, but ultimately, we know what works. Proper masking, distancing and responsible social behavior. I’m not saying we need to isolate and be hermits, wear a mask while riding a bike or keep a wide berth of all people at all locations! But reasonable, situational decisions are imperative.

  1. If you are sick (or had a positive test, even if asymptomatic), stay home. Don’t get anyone else sick. It’s just responsible behavior. Don’t rely on negative tests since there are many false negatives, especially with the new variants, and few false positives. I also do not subscribe to the 5 day isolation rule. It simply does not clear that quickly. If you do mingle with people before the 10 days, wear an N95 mask to protect them. Lastly, a negative COvid test may mean you don;t have COvid, but if you have symptoms which make you concerned enough to test, you probably have some other kind of viral infection, so stay home, hydrate, eat your fruits and veggies and be responsible.
  2. Mask appropriately. Wear a good one (N or KN95, thick or multilayer cloth, surgical or double surgical). Wear it correctly. And wear it where it makes sense. A small grocery store in the morning with few people is probably safe. A Friday afternoon at Wegmans is a Sh&* Show! Wear a mask. Or choose better shopping times. Being at an open air restaurant is probably fine. Being on the beach is fine. Riding a bike is fine. Being on the Boardwalk, shoulder to shoulder with the sweaty, screaming masses, maybe skip that one! Lastly, a recent study of many thousands of people showed that masking on planes reduces infection rates. So if you travel, be smart.
  3. Get healthy so you are resilient. Stop making excuses and eat better, eat less, move more, stress less, sleep better. Just do it already. It’s cute to say you put on the “Covid-19”, like the “Freshman 20”… but once again the most significant risk factor for getting Covid and having a worse outcome is being overweight.

If I don’t post again before next weekend, have a great July 4th. We don’t need to make America great again. It already is great. We just need to appreciate all that we have and be a little less selfish.

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Stay safe and be well.

AC

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