Hospitalizations for COVID-19 in North Texas are on track to
reach the highest levels of the pandemic by the end of the month, according to
the latest forecasting report from UT
Southwestern Medical Center. As of Monday, about 3,350 people in the
19-county region were hospitalized with COVID-19, or about one in four
patients.
Blame the contagious omicron variant, which is accounting for 98
percent of reported COVID cases in the area. Transmission of the virus is at
its highest levels since the start of the pandemic, according to the UT
Southwestern researchers.
Per the report:
“Both the percentage
and absolute number of positive tests among UTSW samples continue to rapidly
increase, reflective of recent sharp jumps in the DFW area more broadly. Test
positivity rates statewide are currently at their highest recorded level since
the pandemic began and are still increasing. This means that the true number of
cases is far higher than recorded case counts.”
The fallout from holiday gatherings, the start of a new school
year, and new-year office returns will contribute to the spread.
Omicron does appear to be less deadly than both delta and COVID-19’s
original vintage. But it’s so contagious that we’re nevertheless likely to hit
new peaks in case numbers and hospitalizations, putting further strain on doctors and nurses, teachers, and all the other essential workers who
have had to put up with much more than most of us these last two years. It is
not a great time to have a medical emergency in Dallas-Fort Worth.
The CDC, stepping in it, released some new and confusing guidelines about
isolating and testing in response to omicron. Getting tested remains harder
than it should be, although Dallas County is opening more
testing sites this week to meet increased demand.
The best ways to protect yourself and others from COVID-19 should be familiar at this point. If you’re sick, stay at home. Wear an N-95 or KN-95 mask if you’re indoors in a crowd. Most important, get vaccinated and boosted: The state health department says unvaccinated people are 20 times more likely to die from COVID than those who have gotten the jab.
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