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Florida reports a surge in COVID cases, but how dangerous is the virus today?

COVID-19 is persistent and thriving throughout the country. But what threat is it today? And what is its relationship with humans now?
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COVID-19 is persistent and thriving throughout the country. But what threat is it today? And what is its relationship with humans now?

COVID-19 cases are once again recording a summer spike with some of the highest weekly case reports seen this year. But what is our relationship with COVID four years after the pandemic outbreak?

COVID-19 cases are on the rise this summer in Florida.

The state Department of Health reported 21,531 cases in the first week of July, about an 11% increase from its lowest weekly total in April at 2,390 cases.

County totals shows high weekly case totals as well in July, with a slight decrease from Week 1 to Week 2.

Miami-Dade reported 4,119 the first week and 3,568 the second week. Broward reported 2,225 the week and 1,718 the following week. Palm Beach, Hillsborough and Orange also reached more than 1,000 cases both weeks.

Those weekly totals beat out the winter spike from January and fall in line with a rising trend of COVID seen around the country.

Why the increases in COVID cases?

Across the country, the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionreport , that viral activity in wastewater has been high, but hospitalizations, severity and deaths have been low.

The majority of cases reported are the highly transmissible subvariant strains of the omnicron variant.

The strains are extremely contagious as they have mutated to avoid most people’s immune systems, but the infections they create are mild, said Ira Longini, a professor of biostatistics at the University of Florida.

“It's evolved to a point where it causes more like a cold like you'd get from a normal seasonal cold virus, although it's still highly transmissible,” Longini said.

Is it dangerous?

The current strain’s severity isn’t showing any more symptoms than a common cold, including mild fever, body aches, stuffy nose and difficulty breathing.

“It’s because it only infects the upper respiratory tract, and it doesn't get deep into the lungs,” Longini said. “Most, almost everybody infected, has a mild illness or no illness.”

But that’s not the case for everyone.

“Some people do become very ill and end up in the hospital or even dying because they have underlying factors that contribute to that, but most people recover in three, four or five days from this current subvariant of COVID-19,” Longini said.

Florida reports 3,000 deaths from COVID this year. through June. Florida reported 8,000 deaths all of last year.

Orange County reported about 121 deaths in 2024. But that’s a drop from last year: Orange reported 329.

Do we still quarantine?

While the numbers are relatively low, and COVID is mutating closer to the common cold, Longini still recommends people should quarantine (three to five days) or wear a mask if they test positive to protect those who are immunocompromised.

“It could infect an immunecompromised person and regain some of its function as far as severity. And we really don't want another variant that causes severe disease,” Longini said.

Research also shows that COVID patients with immunodeficiency have an increased risk of developing a chronic, prolonged phase of infection.

“The best protection against that is for people to try to damp down the transmission as much as possible. So sequestering oneself during their illness is a good idea,” Longini said. “None of us want this virus even in a more reduced form.”

The CDCrecommends five days of quarantine and to take precautions for 10 days. If a patient is in public, it’s recommended they wear a facemask for 10 days.

What about vaccines?

As for vaccinations, the amount of Floridians receiving COVID protection has fallen dramatically since its peak in 2021, when 15 million people received at least one dose, data shows. In 2023, those numbers fell to 1.9 million.

While interest in vaccine protection has waned along with the virus’ severity, Longini said the vaccine can still protect against mild infection and offer a large amount of protection against severe infections, despite most vaccines being behind whatever the current rotating strain is.

“[The vaccine] is going to be several mutations behind the strain that's circulating. So it's not going to be perfect protection, but we find that you reduce your risk by 20% to 50% against illness and 70% or 80% against severe illness,” Longini said.

As for wearing a mask, Longini said that it’s really up to the individual to consider.

“I don't think it's necessary anymore to wear a mask unless you're infected,” Longini said. “In a large gathering or on an airplane, I recommend you (wear a mask) for personal reasons if you want to protect yourself.”

Copyright 2024 Central Florida Public Media

Joe Mario Pedersen
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