By HEATHER HOLLINGSWORTH and JIM SALTER July 21, 2021
MISSION, Kan. (AP)
— COVID-19 cases nearly tripled in the U.S. over two weeks amid an onslaught of
vaccine misinformation that is straining hospitals, exhausting doctors and
pushing clergy into the fray.
“Our staff, they
are frustrated,” said Chad Neilsen, director of infection prevention at UF
Health Jacksonville, a Florida hospital that is canceling elective surgeries
and procedures after the number of mostly unvaccinated COVID-19 inpatients at
its two campuses jumped to 134, up from a low of 16 in mid-May.
“They are tired.
They are thinking this is déjà vu all over again, and there is some anger
because we know that this is a largely preventable situation, and people are
not taking advantage of the vaccine.”
Across the U.S.,
the seven-day rolling average for daily new cases rose over the past two weeks
to more than 37,000 on Tuesday, up from less than 13,700 on July 6, according
to data from Johns Hopkins University. Health officials blame the delta variant
and slowing vaccination rates. Just 56.2% of Americans have gotten at least one
dose of the vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
In Louisiana,
health officials reported 5,388 new COVID-19 cases Wednesday — the
third-highest daily count since the beginning of the pandemic in early 2020.
Hospitalizations for the disease rose to 844 statewide, up more than 600 since
mid-June. New Orleans leaders urged people to resume wearing masks indoors.
Utah reported
having 295 people hospitalized due to the virus, the highest number since
February. The state has averaged about 622 confirmed cases per day over the
last week, about triple the infection rate at its lowest point in early June.
Health data shows the surge is almost entirely connected to unvaccinated
people.
“It is like seeing
the car wreck before it happens,” said Dr. James Williams, a clinical associate
professor of emergency medicine at Texas Tech, who has recently started
treating more COVID-19 patients. “None of us want to go through this again.”
He said the
patients are younger — many in their 20s, 30s and 40s — and overwhelmingly
unvaccinated.
As lead pastor of
one of Missouri’s largest churches, Jeremy Johnson has heard the reasons
congregants don’t want the COVID-19 vaccine. He wants them to know it’s not
only OK to get vaccinated, it’s what the Bible urges.
“I think there is a
big influence of fear,” said Johnson, whose Springfield-based church also has a
campus in Nixa and another about to open in Republic. “A fear of trusting
something apart from scripture, a fear of trusting something apart from a
political party they’re more comfortable following. A fear of trusting in
science. We hear that: ‘I trust in God, not science.’ But the truth is science
and God are not something you have to choose between.”
Now many churches
in southwestern Missouri, like Johnson’s Assembly of God-affiliated North Point
Church, are hosting vaccination clinics. Meanwhile, about 200 church leaders
have signed onto a statement urging Christians to get vaccinated, and on
Wednesday announced a follow-up public service campaign.
Opposition to
vaccination is especially strong among white evangelical Protestants, who make
up more than one-third of Missouri’s residents, according to a 2019 report by
the Pew Research Center.
“We found that the
faith community is very influential, very trusted, and to me that is one of the
answers as to how you get your vaccination rates up,” said Ken McClure, mayor
of Springfield.
The two hospitals
in his city are teeming with patients, reaching record and near-record pandemic
highs. Steve Edwards, who is the CEO of CoxHealth in Springfield, tweeted that
the hospital has brought in 175 traveling nurses and has 46 more scheduled to arrive
by Monday.
“Grateful for the
help,” wrote Edwards, who previously tweeted that anyone spreading
misinformation about the vaccine should “shut up.”
Jacob Burmood, a
40-year-old Kansas City, Missouri, artist, said his mother has been promoting
vaccine conspiracy theories even though her husband — Burmood’s stepfather — is
hospitalized on a ventilator in Springfield.
“It is really,
really sad, and it is really frustrating,” he said.
Burmood recalled
how his mother had recently fallen ill and “was trying to tell me that
vaccinated people got her sick, and it wasn’t even COVID. I just shut her down.
I said, ‘Mom, I can’t talk to you about conspiracy theories right now.’ ... You
need to go to a hospital. You are going to die.”
His mother, who is
in her 70s, has since recovered.
In New York City,
workers in city-run hospitals and health clinics will be required to get vaccinated
or get tested weekly as officials battle a rise in COVID-19 cases, Mayor Bill
de Blasio said Wednesday.
De Blasio’s order
will not apply to teachers, police officers and other city employees, but it’s
part of the city’s intense focus on vaccinations amid an increase in delta
variant infections.
The number of
vaccine doses being given out daily in the city has dropped to less than
18,000, down from a peak of more than 100,000 in early April. About 65% of all
adults are fully vaccinated, compared with about 60% of public hospital system
staffers, said system leader Dr. Mitchell Katz.
Meanwhile,
caseloads have been rising in the city for weeks, and health officials say the
variant makes up about 7 in 10 cases they sequence.
“We have got to
deal with it aggressively. And in the end, there is also a thing called
personal responsibility,” de Blasio said, urging inoculated people to raise the
issue with unvaccinated relatives and “get up in their face.”
Back in Louisiana,
New Orleans officials issued the new guidance on indoor masks, hoping to avoid
the kind of virus-related shutdowns that devastated the city’s tourism economy
in 2020. Mayor LaToya Cantrell stopped short of requiring masks. She said the
advisory “puts the responsibility on individuals themselves.”
The announcement
came as the city’s seven-day average of new cases rose to 117, the highest
level since early February. It had fallen as low as eight in mid-June.
Salter reported
from St. Louis.
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