Boston Herald

Return to normalcy post-COVID-19 will require vigilance

- — bLOOMberG OPInIOn

For the first time in a long while, there’s good news about COVID-19. The omicron wave is cresting in the U.S., and in many states is already receding. A respite from SARS-CoV-2 could well follow. And if new variants eventually emerge, it may be possible to live with them — that is, without shutting businesses, always wearing masks and social distancing.

A return to normal — that modest but elusive goal — should be possible once COVID19 hospitaliz­ations fall from thousands each day much closer to the hundreds associated with a bad flu season. Ensuring it lasts will require careful monitoring, better data collection and a nationwide effort to prevent another crisis.

Five things in particular need to be monitored: 1. Surges in COVID-19 cases and deaths anywhere in the world.

Working with the World Health Organizati­on, the U.S. should help other countries keep a close eye on COVID-19 outbreaks (as well as outbreaks of other contagious respirator­y illnesses) and report data quickly and publicly, as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does in the United States. 2. Genomic changes in the coronaviru­s. To detect the arrival of new variants, the CDC must improve its efforts to analyze the genetic code of the virus found in people who test positive. The agency conducts such testing in certain areas, but it has yet to build out a sufficient­ly extensive and geographic­ally representa­tive system, leaving the U.S. dependent on other countries for news of emerging variants. All patients who experience severe breakthrou­gh infections should have their viruses analyzed.

3. Vaccine effectiven­ess. Working with vaccine makers and independen­t scientists, the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the

CDC need to jointly monitor Americans for waning immunity, especially as new variants arise. All the existing vaccines are expected to lose some of their power with time. It’s crucial to continuall­y assess their effectiven­ess and have boosters available as needed. 4. COVID-19’s presence in sewage.

Measuring the level of coronaviru­s in public wastewater systems can provide an early warning of COVID-19 surges and likewise indicate when infections are waning.

5. Hospital bed availabili­ty and staffing levels. Accurate and timely informatio­n from states on hospital capacity can also indicate when viral infections are surging. The CDC already compiles such data, but state-level statistics aren’t always up to date or consistent. Refining this system can help ensure that the country’s hospitals are prepared to handle an outbreak.

All this informatio­n should be uploaded to public databases. Also needed is a clear sense of how much COVID-19 Americans are willing to live with. Ezekiel Emanuel, of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, suggests setting a risk threshold for COVID-19, flu and other viruses together of about 35,000 hospitaliz­ations and 3,000 deaths in a week. Beyond those levels — or similar benchmarks — elected officials could consider reimposing mask mandates and other restrictio­ns to protect health care systems from overload.

Of course, COVID-19 alone caused about four times that many hospitaliz­ations and five times that many deaths in late January. But the numbers are falling, and with luck the omicron wave will have receded by spring. It’s time to look ahead with cautious optimism, and to put sensible measures in place to end the permanent crisis.

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