The US is unlikely to be sent back into lockdown despite a surge in COVID-19 cases stemming from the Delta variant, top US scientist Anthony Fauci said Sunday.
The US is in for “some pain and suffering in the future” but enough people have now been vaccinated to prevent a repeat of 2020 winter’s deadly surge, the infectious disease expert who advises President Joe Biden told ABC’s This Week.
“I don’t think we’re going to see lockdowns,” Fauci said, after Biden this week said the US was probably headed for new restrictions because of the Delta variant surge.
Elsewhere in the world countries including China and Australia have in fact put some of their people back under lockdown as the highly contagious variant spreads, not long after it seemed life was beginning to return to normal.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention changed course this week and said fully vaccinated people should mask up indoors in higher-risk areas of the country.
The top US health authority says the Delta variant is as contagious as chickenpox and, critically, that breakthrough cases in vaccinated individuals, though rare, may be as transmissible as unvaccinated cases.
This change in mask policy, after Biden had predicted a “summer of freedom” if enough Americans got a shot, has caused worries that confidence in coronavirus vaccines would be undermined.
Fauci tempered this on Sunday by reiterating that people who are vaccinated run a very low risk of infection, and even lower of hospitalization or death if they do get sick.
“We are seeing an outbreak of the unvaccinated,” he said.
Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, said Sunday he was worried that some people might take the mask policy shift to indicate vaccines are not effective, “which would be absolutely wrong.” “If you’re vaccinated right now, your likelihood of getting severely sick is 25-fold reduced,” he told CNN.
New COVIID-19 cases are up four-fold in the past few weeks but vaccination rates are up sharply, too, Collins said. “People are getting the message,” he said.
The CDC says under 60 percent of the US population over age 12 is fully vaccinated.
But there are still wide disparities as vaccination took on a political tint under former president Donald Trump, with the liberal north and east more open to getting a shot and the conservative south more wary.
Anthony Fauci Photo: AFP