PAUL KRUGMAN: How COVID became a Red-State crisis
Friday,, July 30, 2021 -- COVID is now a crisis for the unvaccinated. Risks for vaccinated Americans aren't zero, but they're vastly lower than for those who haven't gotten a vaccine.... COVID is now a crisis largely for red states. And it's important to make that point both to understand where we are and as a reminder of the political roots of America's pandemic failures. ... The danger from COVID's resurgence depends not just on the number of cases nationwide but also on how concentrated those cases are geographically.
Posted — UpdatedWhat Carroll didn’t say, but is also true, is that COVID is now a crisis largely for red states. And it’s important to make that point both to understand where we are and as a reminder of the political roots of America’s pandemic failures.
But simply looking at who remains unvaccinated misses what may soon become a crucial point: The danger from COVID’s resurgence depends not just on the number of cases nationwide but also on how concentrated those cases are geographically.
At that point effective vaccines seemed a distant prospect. This in turn made it seem likely that a large fraction of the population would eventually contract the virus whatever we did. Pre-vaccine, it seemed as if the only way to avoid long-run mass infection was the New Zealand strategy: a severe lockdown to reduce cases to a very low level, followed by a test-trace-isolate regime to quickly put a lid on any flare-ups. And it seemed all too clear that the U.S. lacked the political will to pursue such a strategy.
Yet there was still good reason to impose social distancing rules and mask requirements. Even if most people would eventually get the virus, it was important that they not all get sick at once, because that would overload the health care system. This would cause many preventable deaths, not just from COVID-19 but also because other ailments couldn’t be treated if the hospitals, and especially intensive care units, were already full.
This logic, by the way, was why claims that mask mandates and distancing guidelines were attacks on “freedom” were always nonsense. Do we think people should be free to drive drunk? No, not just because in so doing they endanger themselves, but even more because they endanger others. The same was true for refusing to wear masks last year — and for refusing to get vaccinated now.
As it turned out, masks and social distancing were even better ideas than we realized: They bought time until the arrival of vaccines, so that a great majority of those who managed to avoid COVID in 2020, and have since been vaccinated, may never get it.
But there are regions in America where large numbers of people have refused vaccination. Those regions appear to be approaching the point we feared in the early stages of the pandemic, with hospitalizations overwhelming the health care system. And the divide between places that are in crisis and those that aren’t is starkly political. New York has five COVID patients hospitalized per 100,000 people; Florida, where Gov. Ron DeSantis barred businesses from requiring that their patrons show proof of vaccination, has 34.
So, will COVID’s resurgence stop America’s much-awaited return to normalcy? In much of the country, no. Yes, vaccination has stalled far too soon even in blue states, and residents of those states should be a bit more cautious, for example by resuming mask-wearing when indoors (which many people in the Northeast never stopped). But so far it doesn’t look as if the delta variant will prevent continuing recovery, social and economic.
There are, however, places that really should put strong measures into effect — mask mandates for sure, and maybe even partial lockdowns — to buy time while they catch up on vaccinations.
Unfortunately, these are precisely the places that will almost surely do no such thing. Missouri is experiencing one of the worst current COVID outbreaks, yet on Tuesday the St. Louis County Council voted to end a mask mandate introduced by the county executive.
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