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Coronavirus Second Wave? Nope, The U.S. Is Still Stuck In The First One - NPR

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People sit inside social distancing markers at the Domino Park in Brooklyn borough of New York on May 27, 2020. Stay-at-home orders in New York helped to lower the state's reproduction number, which estimates how many people one sick person could infect with the coronavirus. Michael Nagle/Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images hide caption

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Michael Nagle/Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images

Just weeks after states across the U.S. began re-opening, coronavirus infections are on the upswing in several states. Several states like Arizona, Utah, Texas and Florida have seen dramatic increases in daily case counts. This has given rise to some unsettling questions: Is the U.S. at the start of a second wave? Have states re-opened too soon? And have the recent widespread demonstrations against racial injustice inadvertently added fuel to the fire?

The short, unpleasant answer to the first question is that the U.S. has not even gotten through the current, first wave of infections. Since peaking at around 31,000 new daily cases on March 10, daily cases dropped to around 22,000 new cases on average by mid May and have stayed almost steady over the last four weeks. Nationwide more than 800 people continue to die day after day.

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Several prominent forecasters are predicting a slow, but steady accumulation of additional deaths between now and Oct. 1 — more than 56,000 by one estimate, around 90,000 by one another.

"We really never quite finished the first wave," says Ashish Jha, a professor of global health and Harvard University. "And it doesn't look like we are going to any time soon."

That said, forecasters say we could still be due for a true second wave later in the year, citing growing evidence that colder weather could lead to a surge in coronavirus cases.

Why we're stuck

So why is the U.S. stuck in a coronavirus plateau, despite months of widespread social distancing? To explain, it helps to get a bit technical. The key indicator at issue is what's called the "reproduction number" of the coronavirus — or the R for short — essentially a proxy for how powerfully infection is spreading in your community. It tells you, for each individual who is infected, how many other people will they go on to infect? When the reproduction number is above 1, case counts will spiral upward exponentially. When it gets to well below 1 and stays there, outbreaks subside.

For example, if the reproduction number is 2, then one person goes on to infect two others. Those two people go on to infect four others. Those four go on to infect eight, then 16, and so on. If you assume, say, a 6-day interval between each new round of infections — in just over a month, that one initial person will have launched a chain that has infected 127 people.

Most estimates are that early this year, when no measures were being taken to keep the coronavirus in check, the reproduction number in the U.S. was above 2.

The stay-at-home measures and other social distancing efforts that states undertook this spring served to push the reproduction number to slightly below 1 — 0.91 according to one estimate by Youyang Gu, an independent modeler whose work is highly regarded by prominent epidemiologists.

This stopped the upward spiral of cases. But because the reproduction number was still so close to 1, the curve of new infections never really bent sharply downward. Essentially most of the U.S. reached a kind of steady state — with each infected person passing the virus on to one new person, in a regular drip-drip of new infections and new deaths.

"If things stay basically status quo and we continue doing what we're doing, we're going to continue seeing 25,000 to 30,000 additional deaths a month for the foreseeable future," Jha says.

Now that states have opened up, the reproduction number has started to creep back up above 1. According to Gu's analysis that is now the case in more than two-thirds of states. Assuming the reproduction number stays around 1, the U.S. won't likely see the kind of runaway run-up in cases that was so alarming in New York. But it does mean cases and deaths will continue to accrue steadily.

Parkland Hospital employees give verbal instructions to a man and a woman on how to self administer a COVID-19 test at a walk up facility in Dallas. Texas saw a surge in cases this past week and researchers say it's likely that we will see a steady drip in cases through the summer. Tony Gutierrez/AP hide caption

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Tony Gutierrez/AP

Grim as it is, even this picture may be overly rosy, says Jha. "I'm worried that the idea that we're going to stay flat all summer is a very optimistic view of what is going to happen over the next three months," he says.

To maintain a reproduction number that's close to 1, or better yet, push it back to just under 1, "would take a lot of work," says Jha. "You'd have to have really substantially ramped up testing and isolation [of new cases]." There's also evidence emerging that widespread use of mask by people when they are out in public could help, notes Jha. Unfortunately, he says, it is hard to envision the U.S. adopting any of these practices to a sufficient degree, "based on where we are today."

The seasonal effect

It gets worse. On Thursday, Chris Murray, the head of the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation forecasting team, pointed to growing evidence that as the weather turns cold, the coronavirus will spread more easily.

Murray's team analyzed the pattern of coronavirus spread in the U.S. to date. They found that the drop in the reproduction number since early spring can't be entirely explained by obvious contributing factors — such as people's reduced mobility or mask wearing or better testing. And when the team looked for additional variables that could explain the change, they found a strong correlation with warming weather.

This finding doesn't shed light on why transmission may be reduced in the warmer months. (For example, Could it be that coronavirus droplets don't hang in colder air for as long? Is it simply that people spend less time mingling with each other indoors?). But says Murray, "as time goes by, the evidence is accumulating that it is a very strong predictor of transmission."

The effect is not strong enough to make the virus completely disappear over the summer. But it does mean that, says Murray, that, come autumn transmission will likely pick up.

"If it follows the historic pattern of pneumonia, then [right now] we may be in a period in most states in the U.S. of relatively low numbers, low transmission, but worrisome trends in the wrong direction in September and October." says Murray. "Seasonality will be a very big driver of the second wave."

Restaurants have opened up in cities across the country. As more people intermingle, coronavirus modelers say that any steps to mitigate risk such as practicing social distancing or wearing a mask can have an impact on the spread of the virus. Alex Edelman/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Alex Edelman/AFP via Getty Images

He adds though, that this does not consider actions that can mitigate the impact. "Clearly what individuals choose to do can moderate the forecast," he says, noting that widespread mask use and avoiding social contact with people outside one's household could help.

Parsing the effects of protests

Even as many public health experts cheered the anti-racism protests — and the possibility that many lives could be ultimately be saved if the demonstrations result in policy changes that reduce racial inequities — some wondered at the extent to which this would come at a cost of increased COVID-19 deaths.

But calculating just how many additional infections the demonstrations might lead to is difficult. There is no accurate count available of the number of participants, let alone their ages — which appear to skew young, suggesting the vast majority of those infected would not experience bad outcomes.

Also with little prior research on this particular form of intermingling, it's hard to say how much infection results from it. Though many people have been standing and marching in close quarters, being outdoors mitigates the effect of crowding, as does mask use.

"Some transmissions will almost certainly happen at the protests and the question is whether those lead to a lot of cases down the line or a relatively small number of cases down the line," says Marc Lipsitch, an epidemiologist at Harvard.

What really matters, he explains, is what happens after the demonstration. Do those who are infected at marches go into an environment where there's a high level of ongoing transmission or a low level?

"How much transmission happens later on," says Lipsitch, "is far more dependent on our actions as a society And whether we can suppress transmission around the country than on how many people go to the protests."

In other words perhaps the better question is not, Will the demonstrators cause a spike in COVID-19 infections? But rather, will all of us — the public and our leaders — behave in a way that keeps reproduction numbers low and ensures that these marches and any improvements to racial equality they achieve don't come at a cost of many more COVID-19 deaths.

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