“Liberating”
social distancing will push rates up again
Written by Kaiser Health News
Trump is trying to stir up his supporters to protest state social distancing policies. Here's one of them who seems to be hedging his bets. |
President
Donald Trump and some governors have pointed to the slowdown as an indication
that the day has come for reopening the country.
“Our experts say the curve has flattened and the peak in new cases is behind us,” Trump said Thursday in announcing the administration’s guidance to states about how to begin easing social distancing measures and stay-at home orders.
“Our experts say the curve has flattened and the peak in new cases is behind us,” Trump said Thursday in announcing the administration’s guidance to states about how to begin easing social distancing measures and stay-at home orders.
But
with the national toll of coronavirus deaths climbing each day and an ongoing
scarcity of testing, health experts warn that the country is nowhere near “that
day.”
Indeed, a study released this week by Harvard scientists suggests that without an effective treatment or vaccine, social distancing measures may have to stay in place into 2022.
Indeed, a study released this week by Harvard scientists suggests that without an effective treatment or vaccine, social distancing measures may have to stay in place into 2022.
Kaiser
Health News spoke to several disease detectives about what reaching the peak
level of cases means and under what conditions people can go back to work and
school without fear of getting infected. Here’s what they said.
By Walt Handelsman, The Advocate |
As with any disease, the numbers need to decline for at least a week to discern any real trend.
Some health experts say two weeks because that would give a better view of how widely the disease is still spreading.
It typically takes people that long to show signs of infection after being exposed to the virus.
But
getting a true reading of the number of cases of COVID-19, the disease caused
by the coronavirus, is tricky because of the lack of testing in many places,
particularly among people under age 65 and those without symptoms.
Another
factor is that states and counties will hit peaks at different times based on
how quickly they instituted stay-at-home orders or other social distancing
rules.
“We
are a story of multiple epidemics, and the experience in the Northeast is quite
different than on the West Coast,” said Esther Chernak, director of the Center
for Public Health Readiness and Communication at Drexel University in
Philadelphia.
Also
making it hard to determine the peak is the success in some areas of
“flattening the curve” of new cases. The widespread efforts at social
distancing were designed to help avoid a dramatic spike in the number of people
contracting the virus. But that can result instead in a flat rate that may
remain high for weeks.
“The
flatter the curve, the harder to identify the peak,” said William Miller, a
professor of epidemiology at Ohio State University.
The
Peak Does Not Mean The Pandemic Is Nearly Over
Lowering
the number of new cases is important, but it doesn’t mean the virus is
disappearing. It suggests instead that social distancing has slowed the spread
of the disease and elongated the course of the pandemic, said Pia MacDonald, an
infectious disease expert at RTI International, a nonprofit research institute
in North Carolina.
The “flatten the curve” strategy was designed to help lessen the surge of patients so the health care system would have more time to build capacity, discover better treatments and eventually come up with a vaccine.
The “flatten the curve” strategy was designed to help lessen the surge of patients so the health care system would have more time to build capacity, discover better treatments and eventually come up with a vaccine.
Getting
past peak is important, Chernak said, but only if it leads to a relatively low
number of new cases.
“This
absolutely does not mean the pandemic is nearing an end,” MacDonald said. “Once
you get past the peak, it’s not over until it’s over. It’s just the starting
time for the rest of the response.”
What
Comes Next Depends On Readiness
Although
Trump said the nation has passed the peak of new cases, health experts
cautioned that from a scientific perspective that won’t be clear until until
there is a consistent decline in the number of new cases — which is not true
now nationally or in many large states.
“We
are at the plateau of the curve in many states,” said Dr. Ricardo Izurieta, an
infectious disease specialist at the University of South Florida. “We have to
make sure we see a decline in cases before we can see a light at the end of the
tunnel.”
Even
after the peak, many people are susceptible.
“The
only way to stop the spread of the disease is to reduce human contact,” Chernak
said. “The good news is having people stay home is working, but it’s been
brutal on people and on society and on the economy.”
Before
allowing people to gather in groups, more testing needs to be done, people who
are infected need to be quarantined, and their contacts must be tracked down
and isolated for two weeks, she said, but added: “We don’t seem to have a
national strategy to achieve this.”
“Before
any public health interventions are relaxed, we better be ready to test every
single person for COVID,” MacDonald said.
In
addition, she said, city and county health departments lack staffing to contact
people who have been near those who are infected to get them to isolate. The
tools “needed to lift up the social distancing we do not have ready to go,”
MacDonald said.
You’re
Going To Need Masks A Long Time
Whether
people can go back out to resume daily activities will depend on their
individual risk of infection.
While
some states say they will work together to determine how and when to ease
social distancing standards to restart the economy, Chernak said a more
national plan will be needed, especially given Americans’ desire to travel
within the country.
“Without
aggressive testing and contact tracing, people will still be at risk when going
out,” she said. Social gatherings will be limited to a few people, and wearing
masks in public will likely remain necessary.
She
said major changes will be necessary in nursing home operations to reduce the
spread of disease because the elderly are at the highest risk of complications
from COVID-19.
Miller
said it’s likely another surge of COVID-19 cases could occur after social
distancing measures are loosened.
“How
big that will be depends on how long you wait from a public health perspective
. The longer you wait is better, but the economy is worse off.”
The
experts pointed to the 1918 pandemic of flu, which infected a quarter of the world’s
population and killed 50 million people. Months after the first surge, there
were several spikes in cases, with the second surge being the deadliest.
“If
we pull off the public health measures too early, the virus is still
circulating and can infect more people,” said Dr. Howard Markel, professor of
the history of medicine at the University of Michigan. “We want that
circulation to be among as few people as possible. So when new cases do erupt,
the public health departments can test and isolate people.”
The
Harvard researchers, in their article this week in the journal Science, said
their model suggested that a resurgence of the virus “could occur as late as
2025 even after a prolonged period of apparent elimination.”
Will
School Bells Ring In The Fall?
Experts
say there is no one-size-fits-all approach to when office buildings can reopen,
schools can restart and large public gatherings can resume.
The
decision on whether to send youngsters back to school is key. While children
have been hospitalized or killed by the virus much less frequently than adults,
they are not immune. They may be carriers who can infect their parents.
There are also questions of whether older teachers will be at increased risk being around dozens of students each day, MacDonald said.
There are also questions of whether older teachers will be at increased risk being around dozens of students each day, MacDonald said.
Another
factor: The virus is likely to re-erupt next winter, similar to what happens
with the flu, said Jerne Shapiro, a lecturer in the University of Florida
Department of Epidemiology.
Without
a vaccine, people’s risk doesn’t change, she said.
“Someone
who is susceptible now is susceptible in the future,” Shapiro said.
Experts
doubt large festivals, concerts and baseball games will happen in the months
ahead.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom endorsed that view Tuesday, telling reporters that large-scale events are “not in the cards.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom endorsed that view Tuesday, telling reporters that large-scale events are “not in the cards.”
“It’s
safe to say it will be a long time until we see mass gatherings,” MacDonald
said.
Kaiser Health News(KHN) is a national health policy news
service. It is an editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation which is not affiliated with
Kaiser Permanente.