Health Officials Say U.S. COVID-19 Cases Fell 60 Percent Since September
FRIDAY, Oct. 29, 2021 (HealthDay News) -- COVID-19 cases have plunged by 60 percent since mid-September's delta-driven peak, U.S. health officials said earlier this week. But with winter on the way, they warned that Americans still need to protect themselves and others against the virus.
"We are now heading in the right direction ... but with cases still high, we must remain vigilant heading into the colder, drier winter months," Rochelle Walensky, M.D., director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a White House coronavirus briefing, CNN reported.
Along with the arrival of winter, there is still a relatively high number of cases and many children remain ineligible for vaccination. During the last week, new cases averaged 69,011 a day, compared with 127,531 a day in mid-September, Johns Hopkins University data show, CNN reported. The all-time peak was in mid-January, with more than 251,800 new cases a day.
There were 51,541 COVID-19 patients in U.S. hospitals as of Wednesday, a 50.4 percent decrease from September, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, CNN reported. As of Wednesday, COVID-19 deaths during the past week averaged 1,369 a day, compared with 2,092 on Sept. 22, the Hopkins data showed.
Some experts have been cautious about whether the United States has seen the worst of the pandemic. "We saw this happen in June over the summer, when we declared the pandemic to be over a bit too early," Richina Bicette-McCain, M.D., associate medical director at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, told CNN. "We decided that those who are vaccinated need not wear masks, which turned into everyone not wearing masks, and then subsequently the spike and the delta wave followed."
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