Thomas Madden said his 13-year-old son, Gabriel, was fighting back.
Madden brought Gabriel to the Lakeside Shopping Center in a New
Orleans suburb this week for a vaccine at a site run by Ochsner
Health System, Louisiana’s largest not-for-profit provider.
“This Delta variant has freaked my wife out,” Madden said as he
waited with Gabriel in the indoor mall just after he received his
shot. “But it was really up to him - he wanted to get it as he was
getting a little nervous about school starting soon.”
Many people were wearing masks at Lakeside Shopping Center. Last
week the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC) recommended
that Americans begin wearing masks indoors in areas of substantial
transmission, which now includes most of the country. The CDC cited
the quick spread of the Delta variant, which the agency said has
lead to COVID-19 likely being transmitted by fully vaccinated
people.
On Monday, Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards ordered residents to
mask again indoors. Wednesday, state officials said they had set a
record for hospitalized patients with COVID, at 2,247 people.
Coronavirus cases worldwide surpassed 200 million on Wednesday,
according to a Reuters tally. It took over a year for COVID-19 cases
to hit 100 million, while the next 100 million were reported in just
over six months, according to the Reuters tally. The United States
accounts for one in every seven infections, and surges are occurring
in Louisiana and other states with low vaccination rates.
Louisiana's vaccination rate ranked it 47th among U.S. states for
first doses given, according to a Reuters analysis of state and
county data. According to the most recent data, 43% of Louisianans
had received their first vaccine dose and just 37.1% were fully
vaccinated. The respective figures for all the United States were
57.9% and 49.7%. (Graphic on U.S. cases and vaccinations) https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR
(Reuters global vaccination tracker
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Dr. Joseph Kanter, the top medical official in Louisiana, said the
state, which was at the epicenter of an outbreak early in the
pandemic, was “in the worst place we’ve ever been in the pandemic.”
Staffing and hospital capacity are the most daunting challenges in
Louisiana now, Kanter said. Even before the Delta variant surge,
more than 6,000 nursing positions were open statewide.
[to top of second column] |
DEMORALIZED AND EXHAUSTED
Earlier in the pandemic, state officials could
count on federal help, or on nurses from other
states. Now the staffing hole is simply far too
large for the small federal teams available that
have arrived to make much of an impact. And
Delta is causing simultaneous surges around the
country, sucking up nursing resources.
“None of us imagined it could get this bad,” said Ecoee Rooney,
president of the Louisiana State Nurses Association.
Rooney said nursing staff are beyond exhaustion, and like those
across the country are deeply demoralized to be facing what they
know was a preventable surge.
“We have COVID patients who don’t believe they even have COVID,
because they refuse to believe it exists,” Rooney said. “We’re
feeling the brunt of the frustration and the anxiety about what our
future looks like if people don’t get vaccinated and wear masks.”
VACCINATION RATES VARY
Kevin Alexander, a sergeant with the Louisiana National Guard, helps
run a vaccination and testing site in Louis Armstrong Park in New
Orleans.
“It’s been up and down. Within the past two weeks, we’ve been
hitting 500 tests a day, compared to 250 a day a few weeks before,”
Alexander said.
Late on Tuesday afternoon, he stood guard over a deserted parking
lot where the vaccinations and testing take place. On Wednesday
morning he also saw little traffic.
Vaccination rates vary county by county and state by state across
the United States. Kaytlyn Byers, 32, was visiting New Orleans this
week from Pennsylvania, where 65.9% of the population had received
at least one vaccine dose and 52.6% were fully vaccinated.
Byers, who had been vaccinated months ago, said she had not realized
Louisiana was a Delta hot spot.
“We were shocked that they reinstated a mask mandate and that it
went into effect today,” Byers said while standing on Bourbon Street
with a drink in her hand. “We were sure the rules here in the South
would be more lax than back home in Pennsylvania.”
Festivities were at full tilt around her on Tuesday night on the Big
Easy's famed street, which eternally smells like yesterday’s party
baked in today’s hot sun.
Byers said she knows people who have been vaccinated and still
contracted a breakthrough COVID infection. She said she planned to
be careful and mostly stay outdoors for the remainder of her visit.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in New Orleans; Additional reporting by
Anurag Maan in Bengaluru; Editing by Donna Bryson and Matthew Lewis)
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