From GMA/Yahoo:
“On 4-year anniversary of the
WHO declaring COVID a pandemic, a look at the virus by the numbers”
Monday marks the 4-year
anniversary of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaring the global
COVID-19 outbreak to be a pandemic. Over that period, millions of Americans
have been hospitalized and have died from the virus. Additionally, a high
percentage of adults have developed long COVID while the infections of
thousands of children have led to an inflammatory condition.
Here's a look at the COVID-19
pandemic in the U.S. by the numbers:
Hospitalizations As of the
week ending March 2, there were 15,141 weekly new hospital admissions for
COVID-19. according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). While this is on par with the number of weekly hospitalizations
at the beginning of April 2024, this is much lower than the peak of 150,650
weekly hospitalizations recorded the week of Jan. 22, 2022, during the omicron
wave. Over the course of the pandemic, more than 6 million Americans
have been hospitalized, CDC data shows. The CDC has said fewer people
are hospitalized due to the availability of vaccines and boosters as well as
the availability of antirural drugs that decrease the risk of severe illness
for those at-high risk, including molnupiravir and Paxlovid.
Deaths Since the pandemic
began, more than 1.18 million Americans have died from COVID-19, according to
CDC data. The U.S. crossed the 1 million mark on May 12, 2022. During
the week of March 2, there were 576 weekly deaths, which is the lowest number
recorded since summer 2023 and several times lower than the peak of 25,974
weekly deaths recorded the week ending Jan. 9, 2021. Experts have
previously said the U.S. is in a much better place than it was at the start of
the pandemic but some reasons hundreds of people may be dying every week
include not enough people accessing treatments or getting vaccinated as well as
waning immunity.
Vaccinations In early
fall, the federal government recommended an updated vaccine that is targeted
against variants that are currently circulating, which are related to XBB, an
offshoot of the omicron variant. There are formulations made by
Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna for those aged 6 months and older, and a
formulation made by Novavax for those aged 12 and older. However, as of
Friday, just 22.6% of adults aged 18 and older and 13.5% of children under age
18 have received the vaccine, according to CDC data. This is lower than
the nearly half of adults who said they planned to get the vaccine in a poll
conducted by the KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor in September. In some good
news, 42.4% of adults aged 65 and older, which is the group at highest risk of
severe illness and death, have gotten vaccinated.
MIS-C cases As of Feb. 26,
9,655 children in the U.S. have developed MIS-C, or multisystem inflammatory
syndrome in children, according to CDC data. MIS-C is an inflammatory
condition that is caused by infection with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes
COVID-19. It typically occurs between two to six weeks after infection
and presents a combination of symptoms, including inflammation of various parts
of the body along with gastrointestinal symptoms, rash and fever. Since
the start of the new year, just two cases of MIS-C have been reported, much
lower than the peak in winter 2021 when more than 200 cases were being reported
every week. Some children with MIS-C end up hospitalized and, if they
are sick enough, can spend time in intensive care units. Additionally, at least
79 children have died of MIS-C so far.
Long COVID Millions of
Americans say they've had long COVID, and many are still battling it, federal
data shows. Long COVID is a condition that occurs when patients still
have symptoms at least four weeks after they have cleared the infection. In
some cases, symptoms can be experienced for months or years. The WHO first
posted a clinical case definition of the condition in October 2021. According
to the most recent federal Household Pulse Survey, between Jan. 9, 2024 and
Feb. 5, 2024, 6.8% of U.S. adults currently have long COVID and 17.6% have had
long COVID. Using 2020 U.S. Census Bureau estimates, this means 17.5
million adults currently have long COVID and 45.4 million people have ever had
long COVID.
^ I can’t believe it’s been 4
years. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/gma/4-anniversary-declaring-covid-pandemic-100430008.html
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