'Living with COVID': Where the pandemic could go next
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[August 01, 2022]
By Jennifer Rigby and Julie Steenhuysen
LONDON/CHICAGO (Reuters) - As the third
winter of the coronavirus pandemic looms in the northern hemisphere,
scientists are warning weary governments and populations alike to brace
for more waves of COVID-19.
In the United States alone, there could be up to a million infections a
day this winter, Chris Murray, head of the Institute of Health Metrics
and Evaluation (IHME), an independent modeling group at the University
of Washington that has been tracking the pandemic, told Reuters. That
would be around double the current daily tally.
Across the United Kingdom and Europe, scientists predict a series of
COVID waves, as people spend more time indoors during the colder months,
this time with nearly no masking or social distancing restrictions in
place.
However, while cases may surge again in the coming months, deaths and
hospitalizations are unlikely to rise with the same intensity, the
experts said, helped by vaccination and booster drives, previous
infection, milder variants and the availability of highly effective
COVID treatments.
"The people who are at greatest risk are those who have never seen the
virus, and there's almost nobody left," said Murray.
These forecasts raise new questions about when countries will move out
of the COVID emergency phase and into a state of endemic disease, where
communities with high vaccination rates see smaller outbreaks, possibly
on a seasonal basis.
Many experts had predicted that transition would begin in early 2022,
but the arrival of the highly mutated Omicron variant of coronavirus
disrupted those expectations.
"We need to set aside the idea of 'is the pandemic over?'" said Adam
Kucharski, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine. He and others see COVID morphing into an endemic
threat that still causes a high burden of disease.
"Someone once told me the definition of endemicity is that life just
gets a bit worse," he added.
The potential wild card remains whether a new variant will emerge that
out-competes currently dominant Omicron subvariants.
If that variant also causes more severe disease and is better able to
evade prior immunity, that would be the "worst-case scenario," according
to a recent World Health Organization (WHO) Europe report.
"All scenarios (with new variants) indicate the potential for a large
future wave at a level that is as bad or worse than the 2020/2021
epidemic waves," said the report, based on a model from Imperial College
of London.
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Medical staff treat a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patient on the
Intensive Care Unit (ICU) at the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland,
Ohio, U.S., January 7, 2022. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
CONFOUNDING FACTORS
Many of the disease experts interviewed by Reuters said that making
forecasts for COVID has become much harder, as many people rely on
rapid at-home tests that are not reported to government health
officials, obscuring infection rates.
BA.5, the Omicron subvariant that is currently
causing infections to peak in many regions, is extremely
transmissible, meaning that many patients hospitalized for other
illnesses may test positive for it and be counted among severe
cases, even if COVID-19 is not the source of their distress.
Scientists said other unknowns complicating their forecasts include
whether a combination of vaccination and COVID infection – so-called
hybrid immunity – is providing greater protection for people, as
well as how effective booster campaigns may be.
"Anyone who says they can predict the future of this pandemic is
either overconfident or lying," said David Dowdy, an infectious
disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health.
Experts also are closely watching developments in Australia, where a
resurgent flu season combined with COVID is overwhelming hospitals.
They say it is possible that Western nations could see a similar
pattern after several quiet flu seasons.
"If it happens there, it can happen here. Let's prepare for a proper
flu season," said John McCauley, director of the Worldwide Influenza
Centre at the Francis Crick Institute in London.
The WHO has said each country still needs to approach new waves with
all the tools in the pandemic armory – from vaccinations to
interventions, such as testing and social distancing or masking.
Israel's government recently halted routine COVID testing of
travelers at its international airport, but is ready to resume the
practice "within days" if faced with a major surge, said Sharon
Alroy-Preis, head of the country's public health service.
"When there is a wave of infections, we need to put masks on, we
need to test ourselves," she said. "That's living with COVID."
(Reporting by Jennifer Rigby and Julie Steenhuysen; Additional
reporting by Maayan Lubell; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Bill
Berkrot)
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