What will COVID look like this summer? Health experts say the virus won’t be endemic, yet.

HealthyLife TopNews

The past two pandemic summers saw a spike in COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and death, but this season may be different. 

While health experts expect cases to rise, they don’t think there will be a wave as devastating as the previous two summers or the recent omicron surge. 

Unlike the previous summers, most of the U.S. population now has some immunity against the coronavirus from vaccines, boosters and previous infections. People also have access to antivirals that can prevent hospitalizations in the unvaccinated.

Research however shows that immunity wanes and new variants could evade what protection remains. 

“I know we all want to be done with COVID, but I don’t think it’s done with us,” said Dr. Jessica Justman, associate professor of medicine in epidemiology and senior technical director of ICAP at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health.

What to expect this summer  

Coronavirus trends in the spring give experts clues about what to expect this summer. Cases plummeted after the omicron surge in the winter, then plateaued and began to rise again in the spring. 

A USA TODAY analysis of Johns Hopkins data shows the pace of cases doubled in April compared to the month prior to about 54,000 per day. But the average pace of deaths fell to 327 per day, about half of where it was at the end of March.

The month ended with 17,288 COVID-19 patients in the hospital, not far above March’s ending of 16,032.

While the unpredictable coronavirus makes it difficult to pinpoint what the summer will look like, experts have a few theories. 

The worst case scenario isthe emergence of a potent new variant that isn’t dulled by current vaccines and previous infections, causing a large wave of cases, hospitalizations and deaths.

“A full surge over the summer is going to be really dependent on a variant fully emerging. That tends to be the biggest trigger that will send us into a surge,” said Dr. Keri Althoff, professor of epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “Those transmissible variants are good at finding pockets of unvaccinated people and those people are more at risk of hospitalization and death.”

The best case scenario is a sustained level of low transmission and no new variants. 

Julie Swann, a professor and public health researcher at North Carolina State University, expects the situation this summer to land in the middle: a small wave throughout the country with a slight uptick in hospitalizations and deaths.

Areas likely to be most affected by this swell are ones not heavily impacted by the omicron variant where people haven’t mounted recent immunity protection. 

What to expect long term: Is COVID-19 endemic, yet?

Barring a new devastating variant, most health experts agree the country may finally be out of the acute pandemic phase. 

But it’s still far from an endemic phase, when COVID-19 is expected to become like the seasonal flu, bringing a week or two of misery but low risk of severe disease or death. 

“We’re in the middle,” Justman said. “I hope that we are moving towards endemic but I can’t say that we’re endemic because I don’t feel like things are predictable, yet.”

For a virus to be considered endemic, Althoff said, scientists must determine an acceptable level of COVID-19 transmission. That hasn’t happened. 

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