US Covid cases rising again, doubling over 3 weeks driven by Delta variant
The COVID-19
curve in the US is rising again after months of decline, with the number of new
cases per day doubling over the past three weeks, driven by the fast-spreading
delta variant, lagging vaccination rates and Fourth of July gatherings.
Confirmed infections climbed to an average
of about 23,600 a day on Monday, up from 11,300 on June 23, according to Johns
Hopkins University data. And all but two states Maine and South Dakota reported
that case numbers have gone up over the past two weeks.
It is certainly no coincidence that we are
looking at exactly the time that we would expect cases to be occurring after
the July Fourth weekend," said Dr Bill Powderly, co-director of the
infectious-disease division at Washington University's School of Medicine in St
Louis.
At the same time, parts of the country are
running up against deep vaccine resistance, while the highly contagious mutant
version of the coronavirus that was first detected in India is accounting for
an ever-larger share of infections. Read
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