Covid Deaths Surge Across a Weary America as a
Once-Hopeful Summer Ends
Cases are starting to fall in some hard-hit Southern
states, but nearly half of Americans are not fully vaccinated, allowing the
Delta variant to persist.
Mitch
SmithJulie Bosman
By Mitch
Smith and Julie Bosman
Sept. 5,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/05/us/covid-surge-united-states.html
OVERLAND
PARK, Kan. — A summer that began with plunging caseloads and real hope that the
worst of Covid-19 had passed is ending with soaring death counts, full
hospitals and a bitter realization that the coronavirus is going to remain a
fact of American life for the foreseeable future.
Vaccination
rates are ticking upward, and reports of new infections are starting to fall in
some hard-hit Southern states. But Labor Day weekend bears little resemblance
to Memorial Day, when the country was averaging fewer than 25,000 cases daily,
or to the Fourth of July, when President Biden spoke about nearing independence
from the virus.
Instead,
with more than 160,000 new cases a day and about 100,000 Covid patients
hospitalized nationwide, this holiday feels more like a flashback to 2020. In
Kansas, many state employees were sent home to work remotely again. In Arizona,
where school mask mandates are banned, thousands of students and teachers have
had to go into quarantine. In Hawaii, the governor has issued a plea to
tourists: Don’t visit.
“The irony
is that things got so good in May and most of June that all of us, including
me, were talking about the end game,” said Dr. John Swartzberg, an infectious
disease specialist at the University of California, Berkeley. “We started to
enjoy life again. Within a very few weeks, it all came crashing down.”
The
resurgence has left the country exhausted, nervous and less certain than ever
about when normalcy might return.
More than
1,500 Americans are dying most days, worse than when cases surged last summer
but far lower than the winter peak. Though the rate of case growth nationally
has slowed in recent days and incremental progress has been made in Southern
states, other regions are in the midst of growing outbreaks. And with millions
of schoolchildren now returning to classrooms — some for the first time since
March 2020 — public health experts say that more coronavirus clusters in
schools are inevitable.
“No one’s
wanting to go back to fight-Covid mode,” said Andrew Warlen, the director of
the Health Department in Cass County, Mo., who said some parents had resisted
quarantining their students even after they were exposed to someone with the
virus.
Vaccines
are effective in preventing severe disease and death, but 47 percent of
Americans are not fully vaccinated, allowing the highly infectious Delta
variant more than enough opportunity to inflict suffering and disrupt daily
life. Health officials say that most of the patients who are being hospitalized
and dying are not vaccinated, and that it is those unvaccinated people who are
driving the current surge and burdening the health care system.
“I know a
lot of people are feeling this whiplash — you could see the light at the end of
the tunnel, and then it was snatched away again,” said Kate Franzman, 36, a
director of a nonprofit group who lives in Indianapolis and has started wearing
a mask in public once again.
The summer
surge has played out in a fatigued, politically divided country with no unified
vision for how to navigate the pandemic. During previous upticks, the promise
of vaccines led many to think that a return to ordinary life was perhaps just
months away and that masking up or staying home was a short-term investment
toward that goal. But the virus’s mutations and the refusal of millions of
Americans to take the shots have dimmed that hope.
In much of
the South, intensive care units are overflowing, and in the Midwest and
Mid-Atlantic regions, where cases are still rising, governors are bracing for
worse days in the coming weeks.
“People ask
us sometimes, ‘What’s the end goal here? You’re not going to conquer Covid, and
it’s not going to go away forever,’” said Elizabeth Groenweghe, the chief
epidemiologist for the public health department in Kansas City, Kan. “And I
think that really it’s to get to a point where the level of community
transmission is at least sustainable and not impacting our daily lives so
negatively.”
The
question, increasingly, is not how to eradicate Covid, but how to manage it. In
contrast to the early months of the pandemic, businesses are open, children are
returning to classrooms, and sports stadiums are full. Across most of the country,
government-ordered vaccine mandates and new lockdowns have been political
nonstarters.
A small but
growing list of Democratic governors in states including Illinois, Louisiana
and New Mexico have required facial coverings in indoor public settings, but
most governors from both parties have not. Several Republican-led states have
blocked local officials from imposing their own mask mandates.
Gov. Eric
Holcomb of Indiana, a Republican, also pointed to inoculations, not mask
mandates, as the best response to the current surge. Daily reports of new cases
in his state have quadrupled since the start of August.
“I’m trying
to do everything I can to get people to see the answer to the problem — and the
answer to the problem is getting vaccinated,” Mr. Holcomb said. “I hated that
people had to learn that cold, hard fact through death and hospitalization.”
Signs of
Delta’s toll abound. Colleges in Virginia and Texas have moved classes online
after outbreaks. A hospital in Kansas transferred a patient to Wisconsin
because there were no staffed beds nearby. Exhausted hospital employees in
North Dakota have been asked to cover extra shifts.
“It’s as if
you finish a battle, and before you truly get rested and really thinking about
your personal well-being and recovery, you’re thrust back in,” said Dr. Michael
LeBeau, the president and chief executive for the Bismarck, N.D., region for
Sanford Health, a hospital system in the Upper Midwest where coronavirus
hospitalizations increased 339 percent over four weeks in August.
Epidemiologists
described the country’s current state in the pandemic as fragile, and examples
from other countries offer few concrete answers about the path forward.
Infection levels in India and Britain fell sharply after Delta-fueled surges,
but cases in Britain have since started to rebound. In Israel, Delta has led to
a major uptick in cases this summer despite a strong vaccination rate.
In much of
the United States, schools are just beginning to open up, though children under
12 remain ineligible for vaccines, and mask usage is uneven. Vaccination rates
are inching upward as more employers require shots, but 36 percent of adults
are still not fully vaccinated. And breakthrough infections in vaccinated people
are becoming more frequent, suggesting that vaccines are losing some efficacy,
though they remain highly protective against severe outcomes.
Understand Vaccine and Mask Mandates in the U.S.
Vaccine rules. On Aug. 23, the Food and Drug
Administration granted full approval to Pfizer-BioNTech’s coronavirus vaccine
for people 16 and up, paving the way for an increase in mandates in both the
public and private sectors. Private companies have been increasingly mandating
vaccines for employees. Such mandates are legally allowed and have been upheld
in court challenges.
Mask rules. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention in July recommended that all Americans, regardless of vaccination
status, wear masks in indoor public places within areas experiencing outbreaks,
a reversal of the guidance it offered in May. See where the C.D.C. guidance
would apply, and where states have instituted their own mask policies. The
battle over masks has become contentious in some states, with some local
leaders defying state bans.
College and universities. More than 400 colleges
and universities are requiring students to be vaccinated against Covid-19.
Almost all are in states that voted for President Biden.
Schools. Both California and New York City have
introduced vaccine mandates for education staff. A survey released in August
found that many American parents of school-age children are opposed to mandated
vaccines for students, but were more supportive of mask mandates for students,
teachers and staff members who do not have their shots.
Hospitals and medical centers. Many hospitals and
major health systems are requiring employees to get a Covid-19 vaccine, citing
rising caseloads fueled by the Delta variant and stubbornly low vaccination
rates in their communities, even within their work force.
New York City. Proof of vaccination is required
of workers and customers for indoor dining, gyms, performances and other indoor
situations, although enforcement does not begin until Sept. 13. Teachers and
other education workers in the city’s vast school system will need to have at
least one vaccine dose by Sept. 27, without the option of weekly testing. City
hospital workers must also get a vaccine or be subjected to weekly testing.
Similar rules are in place for New York State employees.
At the federal level. The Pentagon announced that
it would seek to make coronavirus vaccinations mandatory for the country’s 1.3
million active-duty troops “no later” than the middle of September. President
Biden announced that all civilian federal employees would have to be vaccinated
against the coronavirus or submit to regular testing, social distancing, mask
requirements and restrictions on most travel.
“What
worries me the most is not where we’re at, although that’s bad enough, but
where we’re headed,” said Andrew Noymer, an associate professor of public
health at the University of California, Irvine. “I think the U.S. is still in
for a doozy of a next six months. We haven’t seen the effects yet of school
reopening.”
Interviews
with people across the country revealed a swirl of angst, frustration and
resignation over the current state of the pandemic. Some Americans said that,
once vaccinated, they were determined to return to the activities they had
treasured before the pandemic. Others said they felt stuck in an interminable
state of Covid, concerned about the Delta variant and newly cognizant of how
much time they were spending in public.
“We’re
still living like we’re unvaccinated,” said Stacey Hopkins, 58, a community
organizer in Atlanta who is vaccinated. “If we go to a restaurant, we see if we
can eat outside, or take out.”
Chantheada
No, 18, of Aberdeen, Wash., said she had recently been denied access to a
restaurant because she was not vaccinated. She said she had been saddened by
the uptick in cases and had adjusted her routine as a result.
“I take a
lot of precautions,” Ms. No said. “I wash my hands extra, and I don’t go out as
much as I used to.”
But the
return of restrictions and mandates has also led to frustration, notably among
some vaccinated Americans who questioned why they were facing new rules when so
many others had not gotten their shots. Though fully vaccinated people are far
less likely to get Covid or to require hospitalization, federal officials have
warned that they can still transmit the virus to others if they become
infected.
“I hate
wearing a mask,” said Sabastien Pavese, 23, a transportation coordinator in
Portland, Ore., where the governor has ordered that face coverings be worn at
public gatherings, including outdoors. “I think people should be able to walk
around without a mask if they feel like it. I’m vaccinated, and I’m doing just
fine.”
Justin
Reid, a structural engineer in Meadowbrook, Ala., has been frustrated by the
possibility of a mask requirement in his 4-year-old daughter’s preschool — so
much so that he has decided to keep her home if necessary.
“I’m not
subjecting her to that when I don’t have to,” said Mr. Reid, who said he had
been vaccinated.
There will
be no immediate fix for the pandemic, experts said, and no promise that the
current surge will be the final one.
“I think
we’re definitely at risk for being in a very unsatisfying, muddling-though kind
of state for a while,” said Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, a vice dean at the Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Still,
there remains the prospect, as more city councils vote to require face
coverings and more people decide to get shots, that the pandemic’s course will
eventually feel more upbeat, more like it did when summer started.
“I’m hoping
March of next year that we’re having a very different conversation, that we’ve
gotten through it,” said Cory Mason, the mayor of Racine, Wis., where masks are
once again mandatory. “I think that’s the one thing that everybody agrees on:
Can we just get back to a place where Covid isn’t dominating so much of our
time and our lives?”
Mitch Smith
reported from Overland Park, and Julie Bosman from Chicago. Reporting was
contributed by Sarah Bahr in Indianapolis; Sydney Cromwell in Birmingham, Ala.;
Grace Gorenflo in Aberdeen, Wash.; Daniel Heyman in Charleston, W.Va.; Timothy
Pratt in Atlanta; and Emily Shetler in Portland, Ore.
Sept. 2,
2021
Mitch Smith
covers the Midwest and the Great Plains. Since joining The Times in 2014, he
has written extensively about gun violence, oil pipelines, state-level politics
and the national debate over police tactics. He is based in Chicago. @mitchksmith
Julie
Bosman is the Chicago bureau chief of The New York Times. She has reported for
the Times on the coronavirus pandemic, education, politics, law enforcement and
literature. She joined the Times in 2002 as a news assistant in the Washington
bureau. @juliebosman • Facebook



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