In recent weeks, more people have visited emergency rooms and died from COVID-19, according to federal health data.
The information agencies collect, called surveillance data, that tracks COVID-19 cases and spread has become limited. However, COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths are indicators of the disease’s spread. Emergency room admissions and deaths are on the rise, according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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COVID-19, with its endless list of mutating subvariants, appears to have more predictable seasons, with big increases in cases in the winter months and smaller increases in the summer. Experts have previously told USA TODAY that cases appear to be increasing this summer. However, Americans do not face the same risk of serious illness or death from COVID-19 as they did at the start of the pandemic, thanks in part to vaccines and previous infections that protect people.
That’s not to say people shouldn’t be concerned. In 2023, more than 75,000 people died from COVID-19. Nearly a million people ended up in U.S. hospitals last year.
Emergency room visits increased 23%, according to CDC data released Monday. The data, from the week of June 22, the latest available, showed that the weekly percentage of emergency room visits diagnosed with COVID-19 was 0.9%. It showed substantial increases in the number of people diagnosed in Hawaii and, to a lesser extent, in Arizona, New Mexico, Florida and Washington. The percentage of COVID-19 diagnoses has increased since early May, according to CDC data.
There has been no marked change in COVID-19 hospitalizations. But deaths have increased by 14% in the past week. While this seems alarming, it is important to note that this is a percentage increase from recent numbers. It does not mean that the total number of deaths is as high as it was at the beginning of the pandemic.
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Preliminary data show several hundred deaths, compared to an average of more than 2,000 deaths each week in late December and January. Before that, when the Omicron variant dominated cases in 2021, weekly averages exceeded 20,000 deaths that winter.
Health officials said at a recent panel approving updated COVID-19 vaccines this fall that older adults remain at increased risk for complications from COVID-19. The CDC recommends that everyone 6 months and older get the updated COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available later this year.