COVID hospitalizations are on the rise, could signal ‘late summer wave,’ says the CDC
Despite the surge, COVID rates still at 'near-historic lows,' experts say
The number of COVID-19 hospitalizations is rising this summer in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Hospitalizations of people with the virus are up 10%, per CDC data — the sharpest increase since December 2022.
More than 7,100 patients with COVID were hospitalized in the week of July 15, up from 6,444 the prior week.
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COVID-related emergency room visits are also on the rise, comprising 0.73% of visits as of July 21, compared to 0.49% a month prior.
"After roughly six, seven months of steady declines, things are starting to tick back up again," Dr. Brendan Jackson, the CDC's COVID-19 incident manager in Atlanta, Georgia, told NPR this week.
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"We've seen the early indicators go up for the past several weeks," he continued.
"And just this week, for the first time in a long time, we've seen hospitalizations tick up as well."
He added, "This could be the start of a late summer wave."
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The spikes have been most prominent in the Southeast, Jackson said.
"Early indicators of COVID-19 activity (emergency department visits, test positivity and wastewater levels) preceded an increase in hospitalizations seen this past week," CDC spokesperson Kathleen Conley said in a statement.
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Despite the uptick, she confirmed that COVID rates are still at "near-historic lows" in the U.S.
Overall, COVID deaths continue to decline.
They're now at the lowest rate since the CDC started keeping track, according to Jackson.
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The surge in summer cases doesn’t mean the CDC plans to recommend a return to masking, he said.
More concerning are the "mutagenic" subvariants emerging in Asia, the doctor said.
"For most people, these early signs don't need to mean much," Jackson said.
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Dr. Marc Siegel, professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center and a Fox News medical contributor, is skeptical that a summer surge is underway.
"Ordinarily, I would pay careful attention to wastewater analysis, but given the amount of immunity still around from prior infection and vaccination — coupled with the fact that we are still within the Omicron family with most infections remaining mild and hospitalizations showing only a slight uptick — I don't see this as a harbinger of another surge," he told Fox News Digital.
"These are just embers of a fire not completely out."
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More concerning to Siegel are the "mutagenic" subvariants emerging in Asia, the doctor said.
As a result, said Siegel, "I am likely going to recommend the new XBB subvariant booster in the fall, especially for those in high-risk groups who haven't had a recent infection or vaccine."
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