Covid is always "effectively" among these 2 groups, warned of experts
The demographics of which catches Covid - and was seriously eager.
As summer approach, there are signs that the end of the Pandemic of Covid could be at sight. Many hope that life will remain "normal" as the US disease and prevention control (CDC) centers continue to update their guidelines, including recommending that entirely vaccinated persons can beOutside without masks in most situations. But we are not totally very clear because a health expert warns that Covid "spread effectively" among two groups of people. Read it to see who is currently the most at risk of catching the virus and more about how your blows can be effective,This vaccine can protect you from all variants, a new study says.
COVID is still spreading in people under 40 and those who were not vaccinated.
During an interview with CNN on May 3,Ashish jha, MD, Dean from the Brown University School of Public Health, launched the overall decrease in national hospitalization and Covid deaths. "We are starting to see the effects of all these vaccinations," he said.
But he then added that a new part of the population was still atrisk of catching the virus, even as national figures have dropped. "This pandemic is now actually among young people, and it is a very dangerous moment to be unaccinated in the country because it spreads efficiently among young people and non-vaccinated people," he said.
Young people now see more serious results with COVID.
According to CDC data on May 4, theVaccine rolks In the United States, it has been effective to reach the vulnerable population greater than 65, having administered at least one dose at 82.8% of seniors and fully vaccinate 69.7%. But as vaccination rates in the young population continue to take off, the cohort of people aged 18 to 64 became theMost important group currently hospitalized With COVID for the first time in the pandemic with 36,000 admissions reported, Yahoo News Reports.
"There is a very strong increase, it appears, among young adults ... they are people largely thinking that their age protects them from becoming very sick of Covid-19, which does not happen", "Cassie Sauer, CEO and President of the Washington State Hospital Association, said at a press conference on April 26.
Other experts warn that even the youngest are even younger at the risk of Grave Covid. "40 percent of our business was under 40, which makes me bug,"Chris Baliga, MD, a Franciscan Health Infectious Disease Doctor of Virginia Mason in Washington State, recent patients at a press conference of April 26. "We have never seen this earlier in the pandemic". And for more things on how to stay safe, checkThe most risky things you do after you are vaccinated, says CDC.
The variants could return to normal a much longer and more difficult process.
According to JHA, the continued propagation between these new groups could have sustainable effects limiting the speed with which we come back quickly to some parts of normal life. He pointed out that the recent strong increase in business and the slowdown in vaccination rates meant that "the immunity of the herd" had to eradicate the virus would probably not be achieved, what he called "a problem".
"If we do not vaccinate, then obviously one of the things we have known is that we get large epidemics, you can have more variations," said Jha CNN. "It will be difficult to make these big gatherings, interior concerts, outdoor baseball games, this stuff will become much more difficult if we do not make more progress on vaccinations."
Experts emphasize the need to increase more people to be vaccinated to slow the spread of COVID.
While the experts started to say thatEradication of the virusCan be too difficult to achieve in the coming months, some also pointed out that focused vaccines on the vulnerable parts of the population will make fewer epidemics of COVID, less likely to overwhelm the hospital system as at its first appearance. But others point out that there is really only one way to put the virus behind us once and for all.
"Our best way out of this pandemic is to be vaccinated"Katie Shaff, MD, an infectious expert from the permanent Kaiser disease, told ABC News. "We are all so exhausted, myself included, but as when you see young people at the hospital dying, you just have to deal with this and say it's real. We have to be vaccinated. " And for more details on why experts are changing priorities,Dr. Fauci says "the immunity of the flock" is no longer the goal with COVID - it's.