US Records Sharp Summer Increase in Covid-19 Infections

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Covid 19 virus. man in a mask

New York: The media reported that recent weeks have witnessed a substantial wave of COVID-19 infections across the US, primarily driven by the emergence of new variants and exacerbated by the hot summer weather.

Xinhua news agency reported that, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)’s wastewater dashboard, the viral activity levels in wastewater reached their highest point since July 2022.

This tracking method, which provides a more comprehensive picture of viral spread than traditional testing methods, indicated that nationally, Covid’s wastewater viral activity level is currently “very high,” noted the CDC’s latest monitoring report last week.

According to the CDC, the situation was particularly dire in the Western US, which has been identified as having “the highest wastewater viral activity level” for Covid.

The surge has not only led to increased emergency room visits and hospitalisations due to COVID-19 infections across the country but has also significantly strained the healthcare system.

In May, the hospitalisation rate was about one person per 100,000 people. However, by August 3, the figure had steadily risen to 4.2 per 100,000, according to the CDC’s surveillance system, which comprises over 300 acute-care hospitals in 13 states.

The current surge has surpassed last summer’s heights and continues to increase. Extreme heat forces people to stay indoors, where the virus spreads more easily, and many precautions have largely been abandoned.

California and Arizona emerged as focal points of concern in the summer surge. Both states are experiencing a substantial rise in infection rates. In California, data from 43 wastewater reporting sites showed that Covid levels were high, comparable to the peak of the winter surge earlier this year, the report said.

The situation in Arizona is equally concerning. A recent AZ Mirror report indicated that the KP.3 variant had become the dominant strain, accounting for more than 50 percent of all positive cases in the state.

Public health experts attributed this latest surge to a group of FLiRT sub-variants, which are proving to be the most infectious strains since the pandemic began in 2020.

According to a recent Yale Medicine report, these FLiRT strains, sub-variants of Omicron, accounted for the majority of COVID-19 cases in the US at the beginning of July.

One of the predominant FLiRT sub-variants, KP.3.1.1, has demonstrated increased transmissibility compared to its predecessors. The CDC data showed that this variant caused 27.8 percent of the infections in the country, up from 14.4 percent over a mere two-week period.

Other factors contributing to the surge included increased human mobility during the summer and hot weather. The Western states, in particular, are grappling with what experts call a “summertime surge” in Covid cases.

The surge was driven by this year’s record high temperatures and increased use of air conditioning, which can facilitate viral spread by drying out the air. High temperatures drove people indoors, where the virus spread more quickly, contributing significantly to the summer surge in those regions suffering from extreme heat.

A recent report from Johns Hopkins University highlighted that every summer since 2020 there has been a rise in Covid rates during July and August. The hot weather, combined with human behaviour patterns and an easily mutating virus, creates “the perfect recipe” for Covid’s peak in the summer, it said.

As the country is already witnessing a rise in Covid cases, the imminent start of the school year could potentially exacerbate the summer surge. This presents a significant challenge for public health officials and school administrators, underscoring the need for thorough preparedness and preventive measures.

In response to the surge, the CDC recommended that everyone over the age of six months should get the updated Covid booster, which is expected in the coming weeks. However, the effectiveness of current vaccines against the KP.3 variant remains uncertain.

Preliminary findings suggested that this variant, like its relative KP.2, exhibits some resistance to antibodies generated by the most recent Covid vaccines.

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–IANS

 

 

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