New York is requiring masks in all indoor places across the state. Massachusetts is sending free home COVID-19 test kits to its poorest areas. Maine has activated its National Guard to help hospitals.
In the U.S. Northeast, officials are trying every tactic to control a winter surge that has emergency rooms overflowing and infection rates soaring.
Admissions of patients with COVID-19 climbed 14.4% across the nation in the week ended Dec. 9, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The rate was more than double — 33.5% — in New England.
The surge is happening in some of the nation’s most vaccinated states. In Massachusetts, where 88% of the population has had at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, the state will send out more than 2 million rapid antigen tests to the poorest communities, Governor Charlie Baker said Monday.
A New York state mask mandate for all indoor public places takes effect Monday. That includes restaurants, stores, houses of worship and office buildings that don’t have vaccine requirements for entry. The order is directed at areas outside New York City, which already has tough restrictions and the state’s lowest COVID-19 rates. As of Dec. 11, New York City’s positive-test rate was 2.7%, while western New York’s was 9.5%.
“These temporary measures will help us get through the holiday season safely,” Governor Kathy Hochul said. “I share everyone’s frustration that we have gotten to this point, especially with the vaccine at our disposal.”
Since the nation’s Thanksgiving holiday Nov. 25, New York state’s seven-day average case rate has increased 43% and hospitalizations have increased 29%. While the percentage of New Yorkers fully vaccinated continues to increase — gaining 2 percentage points from Thanksgiving weekend — the pace isn’t fast enough to curb the spread of the virus, Hochul said.
New York City is going further than other jurisdictions in imposing a vaccine mandate on private-sector workers starting Dec. 27.
“You’re seeing the trend lines with cases going up, hospitalizations going up, so we need to attack on all fronts,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said in a briefing Monday. “We can see the handwriting on the wall” as shutdowns are happening in Europe, he said.
In New Jersey, hospitalizations are at the highest since the end of April. Hospitals are struggling to balance the increase in COVID-19 patients with patients injured in car accidents, those getting operations delayed last year and those with mental-health problems.
“There are shifts where we’re teetering,” Shereef Elnahal, chief executive officer of University Hospital in Newark, said in a Dec. 10 interview. “I’m concerned about capacity right now. If there is yet another COVID surge, I’m not sure what we’re going to be able to do.”
New Jersey will open its third megasite for vaccinations in Somerset County on Dec. 15, the one-year anniversary of the state’s first vaccinations. As the state sees a surge in cases amid the holiday season with its positivity rate at 8%, its Health Department is partnering with Vault Health to administer free at home COVID-19 saliva testing kits. The tests will be sent through the mail and users will be guided virtually by a medical professional on how to administer them.
The delta variant remains the predominant variant in the U.S., but officials are preparing for more cases caused by the omicron strain first identified in South Africa. Fear of omicron, which appears more transmissible, but perhaps less severe, contributed to a 30% increase in vaccine doses in the U.S. in the week ended Dec. 9, federal data show.
On Monday, Fidelity Investments paused its voluntary return-to-office pilot program in New England amid rising Covid-19 risks. The move applies to offices in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New Hampshire.
Maine, New Hampshire and New York have activated the National Guard to help hospitals treat COVID-19 patients. New Hampshire, which has the highest seven-day case rate in the U.S., also is sending residents free at-home rapid COVID-19 tests. Within a day of the Nov. 29 offer to send tests to any resident, all 800,000 were taken. Another round was pledged.
The current Massachusetts surge rivals the levels of a year ago. Baker emphasized that the surge would be worse if not for the state’s high vaccination rate. Even so, hospitals are straining to the point they’re cutting back on elective procedures. Other New England states are in similar straits, with Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont setting records in recent days for cases and hospitalizations.
Rapid tests “have proven to be a very effective tool, especially for people who are going to be gathering indoors with folks either they don’t know or they’re not normally around,” Baker told reporters Monday. “That’s probably, heading into the holidays, one of the more important ways people can use them.”
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