Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,190
Great news....as is the cases dropping in other areas hard hit by the B-117 variant. I listened to Dr. Osterholm's podcast today, and he's very concerned about that variant taking off here....in the coming weeks. Time will tell if he's right, but he's become very vocal on getting one dose into as many people over 65 as possible...delaying second doses. He's saying we're on a sunny beach right now, and a category 5 hurricane is out there and you'd never know it. His concern is that we're not getting enough vaccines in people and that states are prematurely beginning to open up.
That's happening here in NJ....little by slowly, but it's happening. I heard another leader in the northeast the other day. The metrics they used to shut down restaurants in mid-December were at 40-something cases per 100,000 people. Now they're opening up at 25% indoor....when cases are in the 60s per 100,000 people. He sounded like he was an event planner..."you can get engaged at one of our restaurants on Sunday and have a 250 person indoor wedding in our state in March".
Osterholm is saying that this is too fast, and there's too much "wood" left for this virus to burn through. And with cases of B-117 doubling every ten days....that we're potentially facing a big problem.
I'm not saying this will happen....I have no idea. But he seems pretty confident that it will. I guess we'll find out in the coming weeks. It's also important to keep in mind that in the areas where these variants really took hold, there are very strict lockdowns in place....like the Northeast last spring, but more severe in some cases. This article from The Washington Post addresses this.
Not a scientist, but I question how much dry wood is left to burn in the US. Right now, even with the surge of cases caused by the new variant, the cumulative case rate in the UK would place it 44th if it were a US state, with only 6 states, DC and Puerto Rico having lower rates. About a dozen states have had twice as many cases per 100K. And that's just based on confirmed cases, without attempting to account for the fact that like most of Europe, the UK has had a much stronger testing scheme that went into effect much more quickly than ours. So my guess is that the new variant isn't going to find quite as much kindling among our population now as it did in the UK when it was first identified; I think it is more likely to encounter a lot of semi-damp wood, enough to allow for some flare ups and a slow, struggling burn that never quite takes off but not enough to spark a wildfire. Look at the states where the new variant has been identified: their case rates are still falling, despite the new variant making up a higher percentage of tested samples, and some (like FL) have almost no restrictions in place at all.
Osterholm has consistently been on the more alarmist/pessimistic side of the professional spectrum, and while I do appreciate his caution, I also think it is noteworthy that those experts that have been pretty solidly in the middle (like Fauci) are presenting a much more measured view of the coming weeks and months - not advocating throwing caution to the wind, but also not warning that disaster is lurking just over the horizon.