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COVID hospitalizations are rising in Central Florida

Orlando Regional Medical Center.
Orlando Regional Medical Center.

Florida’s weekly average of COVID-19 hospitalizations doubled between November and January, according to federal data.

CDC data show Florida hospitalization numbers rose to a weekly average of 2,200 admissions by the first week of January. Orlando Health reports its numbers have been rising but not at a concerning rate.

Dr. Elena Cyrus, a UCF epidemiologist, said the rising rate of hospitalizations accompanied by lower death counts compared to last year means two things: the current variant of the virus spreads faster, but it isn’t as strong.

“So there's a greater number of cases, which then allows there to be a greater number of hospitalizations. But the virus is not severe enough that it causes as many deaths, as we saw at the beginning of the epidemic, or as many ICU admissions as we saw before the epidemic. So the virus itself is less virulent or less strong,” she said.

Weekly deaths in Florida are half of what they were this time two years ago, CDC data shows. Between Dec. 22 and Dec. 28, the CDC recorded 309 Florida deaths. During the same period in 2020, Florida reported 664 deaths.

Additionally, the rising hospitalization rate tells experts the virus is better at evading the vaccine, which will always be “somewhat” of a step behind the mutating virus.

"The vaccines will sort of always be slightly behind the current variation of the virus. So for every vaccine, for every virus of COVID-19, we'll never have anything like 100% coverage," Cyrus said.

COVID-winter season the new normal?

COVID joined a rise in other respiratory illnesses this winter along with RSV and the Flu.

Does that mean a COVID season has become the new normal?

Cyrus said that may very well be the case, but the virus won’t be under control until hospitalizations, ICU admissions, and deaths begin averaging at less severe levels.

Another factor keeping the idea of "COVID increases" away from being considered a normal seasonal occurrence is the decreased amount of treatment options compared to last year.

"We thought by this time this year, and in future years, our treatment options would actually increase to mitigate some of those hospitalizations. And in fact, what happened was the reverse. We actually lost some of the treatment options," Cyrus said.

Monoclonal antibodies are non-responsive to some of the variants that exist now, and Paxlovid has negative interactions with some patients with compromised immune systems.

"So it is a new normal, but we still want to manage it better, right? We would like to see this as a new normal but at a less severe level," Cyrus said. "So that's where it should be ideally in terms of a broad epidemiological perspective is that we anticipate a great number of cases, but that the hospitalizations would be low, the deaths would also be low, and the ICU admissions would also be low."

Originally from South Florida, Joe Mario came to Orlando to attend the University of Central Florida where he graduated with degrees in Radio & Television Production, Film, and Psychology. He worked several beats and covered multimedia at The Villages Daily Sun but returned to the City Beautiful as a reporter for the Orlando Sentinel where he covered crime, hurricanes, and viral news. Joe Mario has too many interests and not enough time but tries to focus on his love for strange stories in comic books and horror movies. When he's not writing he loves to run in his spare time.
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