CORONA COVID burden shifts to younger Americans with older generations vaccinated

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COVID burden shifts to younger Americans with older generations vaccinated
Experts report an uptick in young people who are seriously ill with COVID-19.

ByArielle Mitropoulos and John Brownstein
April 30, 2021, 6:08 AM
• 10 min read

Demand for COVID-19 vaccine stalls in some parts of US

In Philadelphia, there is a push to get through 4,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine before it expires Thursday.

With vaccination totals increasing and coronavirus cases declining across the country, many Americans are feeling a newfound sense of hope, that perhaps, there is finally a light at the end of the tunnel.

However, health and government officials across the country are continuing to warn that the virus is still spreading among unvaccinated populations, with a larger share of younger Americans becoming infected, and in some cases, hospitalized with severe cases of the virus.

For the first time, patients between the ages of 18 and 64 now account for the largest cohort of the 37,000 total patients currently hospitalized with the virus. With more older Americans vaccinated, this marks the third week that the number of hospitalized individuals in the 65 and older age group has been smaller than both the 18-49, and the 50-64 age groups.

COVID-19 Associated Hospitalizations by Age
“Hospitals are seeing more and more younger adults, those in their 30s and 40s, admitted with severe disease," Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky reported during a press briefing earlier this month.

Experts say the exact reason behind this trend is unclear, but could include the rise of variants, relaxed attitudes towards distancing and other mitigation measures, a younger population that is not yet fully vaccinated and vaccine hesitancy. It could also be merely more younger people getting the disease.

Even though not all hospitalizations are the result of severe illness, state officials say the trend is worrying.

“There is a very sharp increase, it appears, in younger adults… these are largely people who think that their age is protecting them from getting very sick from COVID-19, that is not happening,” Cassie Sauer, CEO and president of the Washington State Hospital Association, said during a press conference on Monday.

'Dr. Chris Baliga, an infectious disease physician from the Virginia Mason Franciscan Health in Washington state, reported earlier this week that he has seen more patients under the age of 40 than at any other time in the pandemic, while noting that these younger patients appear to be coming in sicker than before.

COVID-19 vaccines may not offer complete protection for people with compromised immune systems

“40% of our cases were under the age of 40, which is mind-boggling to me. We never saw that earlier in the pandemic,” Baliga said during a briefing on Monday.

This trend, according to experts, may be the result of a number of factors.

Dr. Katie Sharff, an infectious disease expert at Kaiser Permanente, told ABC News that one of the driving factors may be simply more young people are becoming infected, and with that, inevitably, there will be more severe cases.

While earlier in the pandemic, the disease was affecting predominantly older adults, currently, coronavirus infections among Americans 18-54 account for the highest proportion of new cases per 100,000 residents.

Sharff, too, said she has seen more patients in her Oregon hospital between the ages of 40 and 50 requiring hospitalization, with some patients as young as 30 ending up in the ICU, and a lower percentage have had to be placed on mechanical ventilation.

In Oregon, daily COVID-19 cases have doubled, and the number of patients hospitalized with the virus has surged by 106%.

“If you have that many more young people getting infected there will at least be a subset who develop severe disease,” Sharff explained. Although some patients have pre-existing medical conditions, like obesity, what has been “really striking with this surge” is that not all younger patients needing care have concerning medical conditions that put them at high risk.

Part of the problem, Sharff said, is that younger people, when infected, tend to stay home a bit longer to manage their symptoms, as opposed to older Americans, who generally have been hospitalized earlier in their illnesses.

Because the U.S.’ vaccination strategy targeted high-risk individuals by age, almost all of these younger hospitalized patients have yet to be vaccinated, Samuel Scarpino, epidemiologist and assistant professor at Northeastern University, told ABC News.

“In previous surges, the majority of our patients were elderly and had chronic medical conditions. We're seeing less of that very elderly population and I think that really speaks to the efficacy of the vaccines,” Sharff noted.

Earlier this month, all 50 states opened vaccinations to residents 16 years and older, but it will take some time for those younger populations to be fully protected, Scarpino explained.

“With the 4 to 6-week delay between first dose and the full level of immunity, it will be a few more weeks before those age groups have the same level of protection as older individuals who were vaccinated in months prior,” Scarpino said.

But there are other younger people who have chosen not to get vaccinated, Sharff said. “I think that vaccine hesitancy is pretty real,” Sharff noted.

Vaccine demand has been steadily decreasing in recent weeks, as those who were eager to be inoculated get their shots and officials work to convince those wearier to be vaccinated.

Just in the last seven days, the average number of vaccines administered has dropped by nearly 12%, down from the average of 3.3 million doses administered a day, earlier this month, to 2.6 million on Thursday.

According to a recent ABC News/Washington Post poll, nearly 1 in 4 Americans, 24%, are disinclined to receive any of the coronavirus vaccines, down from 32% three months ago. 16% of those polled ruled out vaccination entirely.

Additionally, more transmissible and potentially deadlier variants now account for the majority of new cases across the U.S. The national prevalence of B.1.1.7, first identified in Britain and now, is now estimated to account for nearly 60% of new cases, according to the CDC.

Baliga said he believes the rise of coronavirus variants, and in particular, the B.1.1.7 variant, first identified in the United Kingdom, is behind the rise in cases and hospitalizations among younger people.

“I think that’s what’s driving a lot of what we’re seeing in the younger population,” Baliga said, saying he viewed it as the “single most important” factor driving up numbers.

With more people are succumbing to “pandemic fatigue," and thus letting down their guard, with lax social distancing and COVID-19 protocols, experts say, with many also blaming their infection on increased social gatherings and travel.

Moreover, the combination of more infectious strains of the virus with lower vaccination rates have made young people more vulnerable to the virus.

In Massachusetts, coronavirus variants appear to be hitting younger people more seriously than earlier strains of the disease last year, with an increasing number of residents in their 20s-50s hospitalized, Gov. Charlie Baker said during a press conference on Monday.

While the risk of COVID-19 related death among young populations remains lower than among older age groups, Baliga reported that there are still some young patients who are succumbing to the virus, which he calls a “preventable disease” with vaccines, he said.

To date, over 86,000 Americans between the ages of 18 and 64 have died due to COVID-19, accounting for approximately 19.4% of the U.S. virus-related death toll.

Younger people, in particular, can harbor the feeling that they are less vulnerable to the disease than the more at-risk older adults, Sauer said, but they shouldn't assume that they are “safe from this disease.”

“Our best way out of this pandemic is to get vaccinated," Sharff said. "We are all so exhausted, myself included, but like when you see young people in the hospital dying, you just have to kind of face it head-on and say this is real. We have got to get vaccinated."
 

Richard

TB Fanatic

Brazil’s Covid ‘Fukushima’ and P1 variant killing young people threatens to destabilise the world

Brazil is facing a ‘biological Fukushima’ and is seeing lethal new Covid variants every week that could threaten to destabilise the world, one of the country’s leading health experts has warned.
The country’s P1 variant – believed to be 150 times more contagious than the original Covid-19 virus – is of the most concern. It can reinfect those who had the first strain, and has killed thousands of people in their 30s, 40s and 50s.
The variant has infected hundreds in Canada, including players in the professional ice hockey team – the Vancouver Canucks – and has been recorded in 27 people in the UK. Its lethality and speed of transmission has prompted a top doctor to warn Australia against complacency.

Miguel Nicolelis, who was until February leading the Covid response team for the northeast region of 60 million people in Brazil, said ‘we are brewing new variants every week and some of these are more infectious, more lethal and some of them are going to cross the borders to other countries in South America, Latin America and eventually the whole world’.
Cemetery workers  in full protective gear carry a coffin during the burial of a Covid victim in Sao Joao, Brazil


Cemetery workers in full protective gear carry a coffin during the burial of a Covid victim in Sao Joao, Brazil
Covid patients lie in beds on a field hospital built inside a sports centre on the outskirts of Sao Paulo


Covid patients lie in beds on a field hospital built inside a sports centre on the outskirts of Sao Paulo
A daily record of 4,195 deaths were registered in Brazil on Tuesday, with the latest projections putting the country on track for 600,000 fatalities by July.
It comes as President Jair Bolsonaro, who was a Covid-denier, ignored growing calls from health experts for a nationwide lockdown.
‘We’re not going to accept this politics of stay home and shut everything down,’ he said.
‘There will be no national lockdown.’
Professor Nicolelis said President Bolsonaro was presiding over ‘the largest human tragedy in Brazilian history’.
‘It’s a nuclear reactor that has set off a chain reaction and is out of control. It’s a biological Fukushima,’ Professor Nicolelis said, referencing the Japanese nuclear disaster triggered by a tsunami in 2011.
He told the BBC: ‘I think that Brazil is not just the epicentre of the pandemic worldwide, it is a threat to the entire effort of the international community to control the pandemic on the planet.
‘If Brazil is not under control the planet is not going to be under control.’

more at link - has this reached the US?
 

Mprepared

Veteran Member

Brazil’s Covid ‘Fukushima’ and P1 variant killing young people threatens to destabilise the world

Brazil is facing a ‘biological Fukushima’ and is seeing lethal new Covid variants every week that could threaten to destabilise the world, one of the country’s leading health experts has warned.
The country’s P1 variant – believed to be 150 times more contagious than the original Covid-19 virus – is of the most concern. It can reinfect those who had the first strain, and has killed thousands of people in their 30s, 40s and 50s.
The variant has infected hundreds in Canada, including players in the professional ice hockey team – the Vancouver Canucks – and has been recorded in 27 people in the UK. Its lethality and speed of transmission has prompted a top doctor to warn Australia against complacency.

Miguel Nicolelis, who was until February leading the Covid response team for the northeast region of 60 million people in Brazil, said ‘we are brewing new variants every week and some of these are more infectious, more lethal and some of them are going to cross the borders to other countries in South America, Latin America and eventually the whole world’.
Cemetery workers  in full protective gear carry a coffin during the burial of a Covid victim in Sao Joao, Brazil


Cemetery workers in full protective gear carry a coffin during the burial of a Covid victim in Sao Joao, Brazil
Covid patients lie in beds on a field hospital built inside a sports centre on the outskirts of Sao Paulo


Covid patients lie in beds on a field hospital built inside a sports centre on the outskirts of Sao Paulo
A daily record of 4,195 deaths were registered in Brazil on Tuesday, with the latest projections putting the country on track for 600,000 fatalities by July.
It comes as President Jair Bolsonaro, who was a Covid-denier, ignored growing calls from health experts for a nationwide lockdown.
‘We’re not going to accept this politics of stay home and shut everything down,’ he said.
‘There will be no national lockdown.’
Professor Nicolelis said President Bolsonaro was presiding over ‘the largest human tragedy in Brazilian history’.
‘It’s a nuclear reactor that has set off a chain reaction and is out of control. It’s a biological Fukushima,’ Professor Nicolelis said, referencing the Japanese nuclear disaster triggered by a tsunami in 2011.
He told the BBC: ‘I think that Brazil is not just the epicentre of the pandemic worldwide, it is a threat to the entire effort of the international community to control the pandemic on the planet.
‘If Brazil is not under control the planet is not going to be under control.’

more at link - has this reached the US?

Why? Brewing new variants every week? The theory that the Pfizer was put in your system and then later the virus it was programmed to target is set loose and then it overwhelms your immune system and you die, and no connection between the vaccine given much earlier, no blame can be give, makes me think, has it already happened? A flu vaccine or something given in the past? I don't know. Something about Italy and the connection of the people dying that had received the new flu vaccine were more sick and dying compared to those who had not received the lastest flu shot. Since I believe this pandemic was planned, I trust nothing any scientist or government says. Is this Gates and his de-population already happening?
 

corona

Contributing Member
Over a year and most young people didnt contract the virus NOW its effecting the young? This seems to weird. I get more convice this is a bio attack.
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Over a year and most young people didn't contract the virus NOW its effecting the young? This seems to weird. I get more convice this is a bio attack.
Well, perhaps a MEEDIA creation for political reason.

Half of those who now get Covid and require hospitalization HAVE HAD THE VACCINE.

So much for efficacy.


Politifact glossed the numbers but did admit that 1.4 percent of NEW cases of Covid had the full vaccine panel. What they fail to discuss is that Dr. Harvey Risch (Critic of Vaccination and Bannon War Room commentator) was referring to "Covid Cases that require hospitalization."

There is a big difference between total Covid Cases and those which require hospitalization. (i.e. 95.4 percent v. 4.6 percent) Hospitalization Rates and Characteristics of Patients Hospitalized ...

The purpose of the vaccine was not to cure or even prevent Covid. Rather the vaccine was created to "shave the peak," lessen symptoms, and prevent overloading of the US Healthcare Systems which would contribute to even higher loss of life.

What they don't tell you is that "shaving the peak" is a curve - and the same number die underneath the curve - it just takes longer to get there.

And perhaps in the delay, better treatments will be found. (This seems to be the case which has contributed to a fairly low death rate in the US.)

Dobbin
 

Richard

TB Fanatic
I think the greatest conspiracy is that the Chinese who let loose the virus in the first place, produced one or more vaccines that don't work and sold them to many countries, a double whammy.........
 
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