US virus deaths surpass 450K; daily toll is stubbornly high

Coronavirus deaths in the United States surpassed 450,000 on Thursday, and daily deaths remain stubbornly high at more than 3,000 a day, despite falling infections and the arrival of multiple vaccines.
Infectious disease specialists
expect deaths to start dropping soon, after new cases hit a peak right around
the beginning of the year. New COVID-19 deaths could ebb as early as next week,
said the new director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
But there’s also the risk that
improving trends in infections and hospitalizations could be offset by people
relaxing and coming together — including this Sunday, to watch football, she
added.
“I’m worried about Super Bowl Sunday, quite
honestly,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Thursday in an interview with The
Associated Press.
Walensky said one reason cases and
hospitalizations are not rising as dramatically as they were weeks ago is
because the effect of holiday gatherings has faded.
The effect on deaths is delayed.
The daily toll amounts to 50,000 new fatalities in the last two weeks alone.
“We’re still in quite a bad place,” she said.
The nation reported 3,912 COVID-19
deaths Wednesday, down from the pandemic peak of 4,466 deaths on Jan. 12.
The biggest driver to the U.S.
death toll over the past month has been California, which has averaged more
than 500 deaths per day in recent weeks.
Dora Padilla was among the
thousands of Californians who died in the last month.
The 86-year-old daughter of
Mexican immigrants served two decades as a schools trustee for Southern
California’s Alhambra Unified School District after helping out as a parent
volunteer and band booster for her own children. She was one of few Latinos to
hold elected office at the time.
She tested positive in December at
the facility where she lived, then developed a fever and saw her oxygen level
drop. The facility was going to call an ambulance but decided to treat her
there amid a surge in infections that filled local hospitals with virus
patients, said her daughter Lisa Jones.
“They were just about ready to call an
ambulance, but they realized there is nowhere for her to go. She is going to
end up in a hallway somewhere,” Jones said.
Padilla was stable for days and
seemed to be improving, but suddenly grew ill again before she died.
“I am still just kind of numb,” her daughter
said.
California’s experience has
mirrored many of the inequalities that have been exposed since the pandemic
began nearly a year ago, with people of color being hit especially hard.
For example, Latinos make up 46%
of California’s overall death toll, despite being 39% of the state’s
population. The situation has worsened in recent months. In November, the daily
number of Latino deaths was 3.5 per 100,000 residents, but that rate shot up to
40 deaths per 100,000 last week.
Alabama is another hot spot. The
seven-day rolling average of deaths there has risen over the past two weeks,
from 74 to 147 deaths per day. Kentucky, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South
Carolina and Tennessee also saw surges in deaths.
The hardest hit demographic groups
continue to be the oldest and frailest, said Dr. Thomas Holland of Duke
University.
When coronavirus first swept
through the country, it was concentrated in nursing homes, prisons and other
congregate care settings. It later spread more broadly.
“But deaths have still been concentrated among
older patients and patients” with other health problems, Holland said. “Even as
the pandemic has spread more broadly in the population, the demographics of who
dies from COVID has not really changed.”
In Florida, for instance, 83
percent of deaths attributed to the virus have been in people 65 and older.
Still, that hasn’t been enough to
inspire some people to wear masks. A recent viral video from Oakes Farms Seed
to Table, a local grocery store in Naples, Florida, showed both maskless
customers and employees, chatting and laughing, without any social distancing.
Alfie Oakes, the store’s owner,
told NBC’s “Today” show he knows masks do not work, and he does not believe the
coronavirus has killed hundreds of thousands of people in the United States.
“That’s total hogwash,” Oakes said, adding: “Why
don’t we shut the world down because of the heart attacks? Why don’t we lock
down cities because of heart attacks?”
He did not return a call from the
AP on Thursday.
Public health experts are watching
Florida closely this week, because the Super Bowl will be played in Tampa. City
leaders and the NFL are trying to ensure social distancing by capping
attendance at a third of the stadium’s capacity — 22,000 people. Still, there
will be parties, events at bars and clubs, and other activities that draw
people together.
While most people who become
infected will recover, others face a much longer road. It can take a week or
two to get sick enough to end up in the hospital. Then, those who are severely
ill may end up in an ICU for many weeks, and some will die.
“The patients who don’t do well are often in for
these long and very stormy courses, and the patients who die, that’s typically
weeks into their hospital stay,” Holland said.
Treatments have evolved for COVID
over time, but there have not been any “game-changing miracle treatments” on
par with the development of the vaccine, Holland said.
“We’ve had things on the margin that are
helpful,” Holland said.
Among those, the use of steroids
for patients who require oxygen, different ventilator strategies and preventing
and managing blood clots. There’s also the use of monoclonal antibodies for
outpatients early in their illness who do not need to be on oxygen, but who
might be at higher risk of complications.
In addition, changes in testing
have helped.
“Clearly, if people know they’re infected,
they’re going to be more likely to do the things they need to do, like staying
at home and quarantining or isolating,” he said.
Looking forward, the big concern
is how the virus is changing, shifting into new strains that are potentially
more infectious and better able to evade antibody products or to make vaccines
less effective.
“We’ve always been in a race,” Holland said. “But it’s a lot more obvious now that we’re in a race to vaccinate people fast enough to slow down transmission, so that the virus has fewer opportunities to mutate and change and create these strain problems for us.”