U.S. Avoids Predicted Winter COVID Surge

March 13, 2023 – Last year, federal officials warned of a likely COVID-19 surge this winter. It never happened, making this the first pandemic winter without a significant spike.

Deaths from COVID-19 and official case counts declined dramatically, compared to the surges seen during the winter of 2021-2022.

Many experts have said that wave never appeared because so many Americans have either been vaccinated, infected, or both. That created a wall of immunity. 

While the infection rate didn’t skyrocket this winter, COVID-19 still played a deadly role across America. Weekly deaths peaked at 4,439 the week of Jan. 11, compared to a peak of 17,378 in early February 2022. From peak to peak, that’s a decline of 75%. 

Compared to last winter, cases reported to the CDC this winter were down about 90%. The week of Jan. 19, 2022, infections peaked at 5.6 million cases. This winter, the peak was 494,946 weekly cases at the end of December 2022. After that end-of-year high, cases declined for a couple of weeks, tipped back up to 479,604 in early January, and have steadily headed down since, with 170,576 cases reported last week. 

Comparing data can be a problem, because home testing use and reporting vary, John Brownstein, PhD, a biomedical informatics expert at Harvard Medical School, told ABC News. Declines in COVID-19 hospitalization and death rates still point to a less severe season, he said.

COVID-19 isn’t going away, though. The latest projection models from the University of Washington, which has been analyzing COVID-19 statistics since the pandemic started, show a steady infection rate and slightly declining death and hospitalization rates through the spring.

Globally, the virus has been less deadly but is forecast to remain a problem. From November 2021 to December 2022, worldwide infection counts doubled, compared to the prior year, but there were just one-fifth of the deaths, according to a report released last week by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, a global health research center at the University of Washington. 

“The massive Omicron waves and high vaccination rates in many high-income countries have together contributed to high levels of immunity against SARS-CoV-2 infection,” the authors wrote.

They predicted there will be significant COVID-19 activity outside the U.S. in the coming year, particularly in China, where many people don’t have immunity provided by prior infection and models project an uncontrolled outbreak. 

source

share this post
Picture of The Editorial Team

The Editorial Team

We are a team of certified chefs & holistic nutrition specialists, who love to learn and share everything health and wellness.

Videos
Programs
our new cookbook

A Complete Guide to Healthy Eating

Over 100 hand-picked, outrageously delicious recipes.
sign up for our

Newsletter

Will be used in accordance with our privacy policy

Join our Mailing list!

Get all latest news, exclusive deals and academy updates.