After a year, omicron still driving COVID surges and worries

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After a year, omicron still driving COVID surges and worries
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It’s been a year since the omicron variant arrived in the U.S. and the virus continues to find ways to avoid defeat.

- A year after omicron began its assault on humanity, the ever-morphing coronavirus mutant drove COVID-19 case counts higher in many places just as Americans gathered for Thanksgiving. It was a prelude to a wave that experts expect to soon wash over the U.S.

Nationally, new COVID cases averaged around 39,300 a day as of Tuesday — far lower than last winter but a vast undercount because of reduced testing and reporting. About 28,000 people with COVID were hospitalized daily and about 340 died. In Arizona’s Navajo County, the average daily case rate is more than double the state average. Dr. James McAuley said 25 to 50 people a day are testing positive for the coronavirus at the Indian Health Service facility where he works. Before, they saw just a few cases daily. which serves the White Mountain Apache Tribe, said they are “essentially back to where we were with our last big peak” in February.Dr.

A new wave would be rough, said Dr. Mark Griffiths, medical director of the emergency department of Children’s Health Care of Atlanta-Spalding Hospital. “So many systems are on the brink of just being totally overburdened that if we get another COVID surge on top of this, it’s going to make some systems crack.”

The giant wave ebbed by mid-April. The virus mutated quickly into a series of sub-variants adept at evading immunity. A

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