Get App
Download App Scanner
Scan to Download
Advertisement
This Article is From Jul 30, 2021

Some U.S. Hot Spots Near Mark When U.K. Delta Surge Reversed

STOCKS IN THIS STORY
Goenka Business & Finance Ltd.
--
Cosco (India) Ltd.
--
Nifty Top 20 Equal Weight
--
USD-INR
--
MSCI World
--
Pritika Auto Industries Ltd
--
SAB Events & Governance Now Media Ltd.
--
Regency Investments Ltd.
--
BSE Healthcare
--
Vivanza Biosciences Ltd.
--

Some Covid-19 hot spots in the U.S. are nearing the point at which other countries saw a decline in delta-variant surges.

Delta waves in India and the U.K. have been marked by hyperspeed spikes in infections that eased dramatically after about two months. The first major U.S. Covid outbreaks of the delta era -- in Missouri and Arkansas -- started in earnest around the end of May.

The rest of the U.S. will be watching those states closely as infections spread. The cases are prompting authorities to reconsider masking and other public-health measures, but many state and local governments are doing so gingerly and only after outbreaks are well underway. In Florida's Miami-Dade County, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Wednesday that she would require masks again at indoor county facilities such as libraries.

The tepid response is a sign of the complexities of dealing with a resurgence that's unfolding at an alarming pace, but killing far fewer people.

In the Ozarks, hospitals continue to see elevated levels of Covid-19 admissions. But an estimate of the effective reproduction number -- a measure of average new infections from one infected person -- suggests that those states' waves may be peaking, as former Food and Drug Administration commissioner Scott Gottlieb said Thursday on Twitter. That number, known as Rt, indicates cases should fall if it's below 1.

Gottlieb cited data from covidestim, a project with contributors from Yale School of Public Health, Harvard's T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Stanford Medicine.

Ted Cohen, a professor of epidemiology of microbial diseases at the Yale School of Public Health who helped produce the estimates, noted that they are subject to considerable uncertainty in the near-term due in part to inherent delays in the input data and the changing nature of testing in the U.S.

“Our best estimate is that the reproduction number may have peaked, but there's huge uncertainty,” Cohen said by phone, commenting on the Gottlieb tweet.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

Essential Business Intelligence, Continuous LIVE TV, Sharp Market Insights, Practical Personal Finance Advice and Latest Stories — On NDTV Profit.

Newsletters

Update Email
to get newsletters straight to your inbox
⚠️ Add your Email ID to receive Newsletters
Note: You will be signed up automatically after adding email

News for You

Set as Trusted Source
on Google Search