CDC data shows that these East Coast states are also among those with the lowest rate of new cases per capita over the past week
In Colorado, most of those who are eligible to get vaccinated against Covid-19 have received at least one dose so far, Gov. Jared Polis said Friday, highlighting the milestone.
With 75% of Colorado’s eligible residents having initiated vaccination, the governor pointed out it’s “an important accomplishment, but it also means that there’s 25%, one in four Coloradans, who are eligible, who still need to go out and get protected so that we can end this pandemic.”
Polis pleaded with the unvaccinated to get their shots, reasoning that they hold the key to the availability of critical health care.
“We actually have the lowest ICU available rate that we’ve had since the start of this crisis, in part due to the unvaccinated with Covid and just other types of trauma that goes up seasonally this time of year,” Polis explained. “Some hospitals are reaching very close to their capacity limits. And that wouldn’t be happening if people were vaccinated.”
Meanwhile on the East Coast, Vermont, Connecticut and Massachusetts have fully vaccinated at least two-thirds of their population. The trio are also among the states seeing the lowest rate of new cases per capita over the past week, CDC data shows.
And even though the unvaccinated now comprise a slight minority of the total population, Covid-19 patients are straining health care resources in ways that health experts have been insisting are preventable via inoculation.
Vaccines provide critical protection against variants
Among all ages, the Moderna vaccine was 95% effective against hospitalization, while the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine had an 80% effectiveness and the Johnson & Johnson vaccine had a 60% effectiveness, the study found.
But among those 75 and older, the study found vaccine effectiveness against hospitalization was lower. Effectiveness against hospitalization for adults under 75 was 89%, but it was 76% among those age 75 and older, the study found.
Meanwhile, the Mu variant of Covid-19 has emerged on health experts’ radar, but Dr. Anthony Fauci assured people Friday that it doesn’t exhibit signs of being more resistant to the vaccines more than the Delta variant.
“The reason it was brought to attention, it had a number of mutations that were of interest. But when you look at the effect of antibodies against these mutations, it is not a matter of alarm, in that although it diminishes somewhat the protection, it falls well within the range of Delta and Beta (another coronavirus variant),” Fauci said at a White House Covid-19 Response Team briefing.
And as federal health officials consider a booster vaccine dose for most Americans, full vaccination still means either two doses of an mRNA Covid-19 vaccine or one dose of Johnson & Johnson’s Covid-19 vaccine, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Friday. But she acknowledged that may change.
“I anticipate over time that may be updated, but we will leave that to our advisers to, to give us some recommendations,” she said during a White House Covid-19 Response Team briefing.
Testing helps avoid school quarantines, expert says
Meanwhile, as schools nationwide struggle with returning safely to classrooms, one former federal health official urged that Covid-19 testing is an effective approach to preventing outbreaks.
Placing students in “pods” in schools and routine asymptomatic testing are the most effective ways to try and reduce spread in schools, former US Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb said.
He explained that regular testing can prevent a large number of students from quarantining, and therefore, not miss classes.
“Rather than quarantine that whole classroom you just test them in a serial fashion to make sure that you didn’t have an exposure that led to a downstream case and so you can actually use testing to prevent quarantines.” he said Friday during an Axios event.
He added that even as Covid-19 case rates decline, children are still suffering from a surge.
“Even as cases decline in every age category, the one age category where it’s continuing to increase is in school aged children,” he said.
Students at Westlake High School, Sandtown Middle School and Renaissance Middle Schools are moving to remote learning due to a “high volume of positive cases and direct contacts” and have reached Level 2, which includes having 3 or more students or staff members test positive at the same site. The school system said it anticipates in-person learning to resume at these three schools on September 21.
CNN’s Virginia Langmaid, Deanna Hackney, Deidre McPhillips and Kay Jones contributed to this report.