People’s CDC COVID-19 Weather Report: July 25, 2022
The Weather: We remain in a sustained COVID surge: every week since early June, 99% of US population lives in high or substantial transmission.
In fact we’ve updated our transmission map (h/t @JasonSalemi) to show how high transmission is, 73% living in the highest two levels!
Watch the spread here:
VIDEO: Modified CDC Community Transmission Levels 3/22/22 - 7/22/22
On Variants: While BA4/5 now make up 90% of cases nationally, no new variants are rising yet.
Centaurus (BA2.75) has been detected in some states but it is not clear if it will outpace BA5 – we’ll keep updating on this!
Wastewater Monitoring: National wastewater data from @BiobotAnalytics shows a small dip for the first time in months.
And yet, we are still at levels higher than any surge before Omicron. Levels are fluctuating, but remain high in all regions.
Hospitalizations: For 13 weeks in a row, hospitalizations are still rising nationally – with the most dramatic increases among those 70 and older.
This sustained surge is having significant health impacts on many living in the US – and is unsustainable for our healthcare workers.
Deaths: From July 14 to July 20, 2,468 people died of COVID nationally. Even the New York Times commented how this version of “normal” is brutal – and the estimate of 100,000 dead per year will almost certainly be exceeded this year.
Of course, sustained high levels of cases, hospitalizations & death are not inevitable. The government could choose a better response – updated vaccines, free high-quality masks & testing, improved ventilation, & paid sick leave – and create a better, healthier “normal.”
On Long COVID: Another study has confirmed higher diagnoses of diabetes and cardiovascular disease in the 4-12 weeks after a COVID infection. This suggests a need for increased monitoring during early recovery.
In one of the first cohort studies to examine children who were tested for COVID at ERs, and again at 90 days, 4.6% of COVID-positive children had new or persistent symptoms at follow-up, compared to only 2.7% in COVID-negative children.
These proportions nearly doubled in hospitalized children.
Additionally, the study identified symptoms that were more common in the COVID-positive children at follow-up, including: fatigue or weakness, loss of appetite, general psychological concerns, and continued loss of smell or taste.