Cases of other respiratory illnesses, including flu and RSV, are also on the rise.
Several key COVID-19 trends that authorities track are now accelerating around the country, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced Friday. It's the first major nationwide uptick in the spread of the virus seen in months.
The largest increases are in the Midwest and the Mid-Atlantic, the agency said in its weekly report updated Friday, though virtually all regions of the country are now seeing accelerations.
Data reported by the agency from emergency rooms and wastewater sampling have tracked some of the steepest increases so far this season in the region spanning Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin.
Rates of infections of nursing home residents across this Midwestern region have also soared in recent weeks, higher than in most other parts of the country, approaching levels not seen since the peak of last winter's COVID-19 wave.
Have they updated any of the vaccines recently? I wonder if that could be contributing o increased spread. Talked to a lady who just got Covid after getting her eighth shot.
I don't believe the most recent vaccine released is fully up to date with the most recent ascendant variants. Unfortunately, even with the increased speed of conception and production that mRNA vaccines allow, large-scale viral pathogens still manage to mutate at a faster rate.
If the rate of spread was reduced through other measures than just vaccinations, we'd have a better capability to create up to date versions in time to be relevant.
Considering this research was published a year and a half ago, is any of it going into actual vaccine production? I feel like big pharma loves the idea of needing yearly or bi-yearly covid vaccines far more than the idea of a single vaccine that provides universal antibodies.
That makes sense! Hopefully this will allow the Covid vaccine to become a normal single inoculation we can add to our list of “viruses we’ve all but ended”
Overall people actually need to get the booster to build immunity. And just because you're vaccinated doesn't mean you won't get sick at all. That's not how this works.
That's not how mRNA vaccines work. In fact, most modern vaccines don't work that way. You're referring to inoculation which is distinct from vaccination.
An mRNA vaccine works like a special set of instructions that tells your body how to make a pretend piece of a germ, but without using any real germ parts. Your body makes, then sees this pretend piece and learns how to protect you against the real germ. It's like teaching your body to recognize and fight the germ without ever having to meet it for real.
Remember the COVID spike proteins? That's what the vaccine is teaching your body about, not any actual viruses.
I am familiar with that, but if you start taking this way with antivaxxers you will lose them. This is just an implementation detail, the vaccines in one way or the other expose your immune system to the pathogen so you have opportunity to learn to fight it.
We have:
weakened pathogen or variant that is less harmful (cowpox vs smallpox)
inactivated, the virus is there, but insurance of reproducing
subunit (just pieces of the virus)
mRNA (what you just said)
vector (almost there same as mRNA, but delivered by another virus)
and more
The idea is always to teach your immune system to fight it, before we get the real thing. I don't get why I was down voted to hell.
NovaVax has been so frustrating for me! Each shot is always approved like a month after the equivalent Pfizer/Moderna, sometimes multiple months. And by the time it's finally approved, it's always been past the window in which I needed to get vaccinated.
I finally managed to get it this year - but only because I was sick with parainfluenza and everything got pushed back two weeks. If that hadn't happened, I would've had to go with Moderna again.