Vaccinations are beginning to rise in some states where COVID-19 cases are soaring, White House officials said Thursday in a sign that the summer surge is getting the attention of vaccine-hesitant Americans as hospitals in the South are being overrun with patients.
Coronavirus coordinator Jeff Zients told reporters that several states with the highest proportions of new infections have seen residents get vaccinated at higher rates than the nation as a whole. Officials cited Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Missouri and Nevada as examples.
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āThe fourth surge is real, and the numbers are quite frightening at the moment,ā Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said on a New Orleans radio show. Edwards, a Democrat, added: āThereās no doubt that we are going in the wrong direction, and weāre going there in a hurry.ā
Louisiana reported 2,843 new COVID-19 cases Thursday, a day after reporting 5,388 ā the third-highest level since the pandemic began. Hospitalizations are up steeply in the last month, from 242 on June 19 to 913 in the latest report. Fifteen new deaths were reported Thursday.
Just 36% of Louisianaās population is fully vaccinated, state health department data shows. Nationally, 56.3% of Americans have received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Aly Neel, a spokesperson for Louisianaās health department, said the state has seen āa little bumpā in vaccinations recently, adding that details would be available Friday.
Warner Thomas, president and CEO of the Ochsner Health system serving Louisiana and Mississippi, said the system had seen a 10% to 15% increase in people seeking vaccination over the past week or two. It has administered vaccines at churches, the New Orleans airport, basketball games and the mall.
āWe see each person we get vaccinated now as a victory," said Dr. Katherine Baumgarten, director of infection prevention and control for the 40-hospital system, noting that it has been bringing in traveling nurses and that projections show its ICUs could fill up at the current rate of infection.
Dr. Catherine OāNeal, chief medical officer and an infectious disease specialist at Our Lady of the Lake regional medical center, said Thursday that the most shocking aspect of the surge has been its speed. The caseload has roughly tripled in the course of a week, she said.
On Sunday, the medical center stopped taking transfers of coronavirus patients from hospitals in other parts of the state because they simply did not have the capacity, she said.
In Missouri, which is second only to Arkansas and Louisiana in the number of new cases per capita over the past 14 days, officials have rolled out a vaccine incentive program that includes $10,000 prizes for 900 lottery winners. The state lags about 10 percentage points behind the national average for people who have received at least one shot.
Hospitals in the Springfield area are under strain, reaching pandemic high and near pandemic high numbers of patients.
āYounger, relatively healthy and unvaccinated. If this describes you, please consider vaccination," tweeted Erik Frederick, chief administrative officer of Mercy Hospital Springfield, noting that half of the COVID-19 patients are ages 21 to 59 and just 2% of that group is vaccinated.
The surge that began in the southwest part of the state, where some counties have vaccination rates in the teens, has started to spread to the Kansas City area, including at Research Medical Center.
āI donāt want to keep putting my life on the line just because people donāt want to get vaccinated or listen to what health care professionals are recommending," lamented Pascaline Muhindura, a registered nurse who has worked on the hospitalās COVID-19 unit for more than a year.
āA lot of them donāt even believe in COVID-19 to begin with. It is incredibly frustrating. You are helping someone that doesnāt even believe that the illness that they have is real," Muhindura said.
Dr. Jason Wilson, an emergency physician with Tampa General Hospital, also has watched the rise in cases with frustration. Unlike earlier in the pandemic, when many patients were in their 70s, he has seen the median patient age fall to the mid-40s.
āI spent a lot of time this fall and last summer saying, āWeāve got to do these things, these social mitigation strategies until we get that vaccine. Just hang in there," Wilson said.
Hospitals initially were hopeful as cases declined. But then, he said, āThings just fell flat."
Conservative Utah reported Wednesday that almost 300 people were hospitalized due to the virus ā the highest number in five months. Intensive care units reached 81.5% capacity. Health officials renewed their pleas for residents to get vaccinated.
One of Arizonaās biggest hospital systems issued its own call for vaccinations, citing an increase in seriously ill COVID-19 patients in just a few weeks. Dr. Michael White, of Valleywise Health, said doctors were mostly treating people with moderate symptoms, but that began to change two weeks ago. Now patients arrive acutely ill.
āThis delta at the moment it is honing in on largely unvaccinated persons,ā said Dr. William Schaffner, a professor of infectious diseases in the health policy department at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville.
The variant, which originated in India, now accounts for an estimated 83% of coronavirus samples genetically identified in the U.S. It is the predominant strain in every region of the country and continues āspreading with incredible efficiency,ā the director of the CDC, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, told reporters at the White House.
She said the mutation is more aggressive and much more transmissible, calling it āone of the most infectious respiratory viruses we know of.ā
āWe are yet at another pivotal moment in this pandemic,ā she warned. āWe need to come together as one nation.ā
The CDC has not changed its guidance that vaccinated people do not need to wear masks. But in Georgia, Atlanta Public Schools announced Thursday that it will implement a āuniversal mask wearingā policy in all of the system's school buildings when fall classes begin.
Just 18% of eligible students in the Atlanta school system are fully vaccinated and 58% of its employees have said they are either fully vaccinated or plan to be, officials said.
āGiven our low vaccination rates and increasing community spread, the CDC acknowledges that universal masking would be appropriate,ā the school system said in the statement.
In Arkansas, a group of Democratic lawmakers urged the governor and Republicans who control the Legislature to lift the stateās ban on schools and local governments requiring people to wear masks.
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Associated Press Writer Kevin McGill in New Orleans contributed to this report.