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US sees rising COVID-19 deaths, variants

Biden's Omicron measures too little, too late for fast-moving virus, experts say

By LIU YINMENG in Los Angeles | CHINA DAILY/XINHUA | Updated: 2021-12-25 07:52
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A person has a nasal swab applied for the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) test taken at a mobile testing site in New York, US, December 3, 2021. [Photo/Agencies]

The COVID-19 death toll in the United States has surpassed 800,000, a somber reminder that 2021 was a year that saw a relentless wave of new infections.

The stark number was recorded among a cumulative total of more than 51 million coronavirus cases in the country. The US makes up 4 percent of the world's population, but accounts for 15 percent of the 5.3 million COVID-19 deaths, making it the nation with the highest fatality rate from the virus.

The "tragic milestone", as President Joe Biden put it, arrived amid calls for vaccination as the Omicron variant gains ground.

"If you're not fully vaccinated, you have good reason to be concerned," said Biden on Tuesday at the White House, where he unveiled the federal government's plans to buy 500 million rapid coronavirus tests to be distributed free to those who request them starting from January.

About 200 million people, or 61 percent of the US' population, are fully vaccinated.

Biden also activated some 1,000 military medical personnel to support hospitals.

But health experts said the new measures are too little, too late to stem a surge of Omicron related cases over Christmas and New Year.

A day after Biden outlined plans to distribute 500 million at-home coronavirus test kits, Anne Rimoin, an epidemiology professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, praised his focus on testing, a "critical tool" that the US was "woefully" behind on.

"Unfortunately, it's late in coming and will be a small drop in the bucket compared to the tsunami of cases on the horizon," she said.

The tests promised by Biden equate to just 1 or 2 per US resident. Households need far more to make daily decisions about exposure.

"We need those tests now," she said. US testing is behind the curve because of a lack of skilled workers, a shortage of at-home tests and low investment in recent months, according to interviews with officials, health providers and test makers.

Omicron now accounts for 73 percent of all new cases in the country, up from less than 1 percent at the beginning of the month, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Breakthrough Omicron infections are rising among the country's fully vaccinated population. Only 30 percent have gotten booster shots, which are said to provide more protection.

"He kept reiterating, 'vaccines work, vaccines work', like a mantra, a talisman," tweeted Gregg Gonsalves, a Yale University epidemiology professor, adding that Biden should have made clear that a booster shot was key to protecting against Omicron.

More integral response

He also said Biden should have made masks a more integral part of the response.

"And on masks? Bupkis. Get people N95s and other better masks," he wrote. "This sounded like an administration caught flat-footed, running to play catch-up."

Joshua Salomon, a Stanford University health policy professor, said he would have liked Biden to elaborate on reducing risks. "There's a tidal wave of infection coming, and I would have liked to see the president emphasize that all of us-whether vaccinated or boosted or unvaccinated-can do more to minimize transmission risks," he said.

The World Health Organization urged people to cancel holiday gatherings, saying they would result in "overwhelmed health systems and more deaths". Instead, the White House said on Tuesday that it was following CDC guidance, which includes recommending masks in indoor public settings and self-testing before gatherings with another household.

"They're going to the path of least resistance now. They know people are tired, people are fed up. They know that any talk of any harsher measures ... will get met by vociferous pushback from the Republicans," Gonsalves said.

Monica Gandhi, an infectious diseases expert at the University of California, San Francisco, told China Daily that cases will likely surge during the holidays, but the country is in a "different place" this year compared with 2020 due to vaccines.

Gandhi said the most important thing for the US is to encourage vaccinations; deliver boosters to high-risk individuals such as those over the age of 65 and those with medical conditions; and track hospitalizations carefully during the holidays.

About 75 percent of those who have died from the virus have been 65 or older. For those who have died from the virus, it is 1 in 100 for older people as compared with 1 in 1,400 for people younger than 65.

Biden, who took office in January, campaigned on a promise to take control of the pandemic, which his predecessor Donald Trump played down as hundreds of thousands died.

He has largely focused on persuading the public to get vaccinated, amid pushback from many Republican leaders who reject vaccine and masking rules and an anti-vaccination movement fueled by conspiracy theories on social media. The country's vaccination rate lags behind most rich nations.

Impact on schools

COVID-19 is also having an impact on education.

The highly transmissible Delta and Omicron variants have forced some schools to revert to remote learning from in-person instruction.

Amid a recent surge in coronavirus cases, the New York City Education Department shut down 859 classrooms this month, four times the number in November. Nearly 2,500 classrooms faced partial closure as a result of the newly reported infections.

In New York, nearly 42,600 people had positive coronavirus tests from Dec 15 to 18. According to the city government website, 82.5 percent of adult New Yorkers were fully vaccinated as of Tuesday.

Biden also announced on Tuesday that the city would be the first to have federal testing sites.

School districts nationwide are also canceling classes for "mental health days", so that students and staff could recover from the stress of returning to school during the pandemic.

Many K-12 schools across the country have implemented strict mask and vaccination requirements to help keep students in school safely. Those measures, however, do not prevent schools from closing temporarily when coronavirus outbreaks are detected among students and staff.

Agencies and Xinhua contributed to this story.

 

 

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