Despite vaccines, US has lost more lives to Covid-19 this year than last

White flags, representing the Americans who died because of Covid-19, planted near the Washington Monument. PHOTO: AFP

NEW YORK (NYTIMES) - This was supposed to be the year that vaccines brought the pandemic under control. Instead, more people in the United States have died from Covid-19 this year than last year, before vaccines were available.

As at Tuesday (Nov 23), the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had recorded 386,233 deaths involving Covid-19 in 2021, compared with 385,343 in 2020. The final number for this year will be higher, not only because there is more than a month left but also because it takes time for local agencies to report deaths to the CDC.

Covid-19 has also accounted for a higher percentage of US deaths this year than it did last year - about 13 per cent compared with 11 per cent.

Experts say the higher death toll is a result of a confluence of factors - most crucially lower-than-needed vaccination rates, but also the relaxation of everyday precautions, such as masks and social distancing, and the rise of the highly contagious Delta variant.

Essentially, public health experts said, many Americans are behaving as if Covid-19 is now a manageable, endemic disease rather than a crisis - a transition that will happen eventually but has not happened yet.

Yet many are also refusing to get vaccinated in the numbers required to make that transition to what scientists call "endemicity", which would mean the virus would still circulate at a lower level, with periodic increases and decreases but not spike in the devastating cycles that have characterised the pandemic.

Just 59 per cent of Americans are fully vaccinated, the lowest rate of any Group of 7 major industrialised nation.

"We have the very unfortunate situation of not a high level of vaccine coverage and basically, in most places, a return to normal behaviours that put people at greater risk of coming in contact with the virus," said Dr Jennifer Nuzzo, a public health researcher and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Centre for Health Security.

"If you take no protections whatsoever, you have a virus that is capable of moving faster and you have dangerous gaps in immunity, which add up to, unfortunately, a lot of continued serious illness and deaths."

Dr Celine Gounder, an infectious disease specialist at Bellevue Hospital Centre, estimated that roughly 15 per cent of the US population might have immunity from prior infection, which is not as strong or durable as immunity from vaccines.

Many of those people have also been vaccinated, but even assuming the two groups did not overlap and so 74 per cent of Americans had some level of immunity, that still would not be enough to end the pandemic, said Dr Gounder. It would probably take an 85 per cent to 90 per cent vaccination rate to make the coronavirus endemic, she said.

"When vaccines were rolled out, people in their minds said 'Covid-19 is over'," Dr Gounder said. "And so even if not enough people are vaccinated, their behaviour returned - at least for some people - to more normal, and with that changing behaviour, you have an increase in transmission."

Some news outlets reported last week that confirmed 2021 deaths had surpassed 2020 deaths. Those reports stemmed from counts of deaths based on when the deaths were reported, not when they happened - meaning some deaths from late 2020 were counted in early 2021.

The CDC counts, which did not show that mark being reached until this week, are more accurate because they are based on the dates on death certificates.

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