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The number of confirmed cases of the COVID-19 Delta variant in Utah nearly quadrupled on Thursday — from 42 to 162 — but not because there are a lot of new cases.
The international database PANGO (Phylogenetic Assignment of Named Global Outbreak) has merged its reporting of the B.1.95 variant and the Delta variant (B.1.716.2), which caused the big, one-day jump. All of the “new” Delta cases reported on Thursday were formerly listed as B.1.95, so without that change there would’ve been no increase.
Earlier this week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reclassified Delta as a “variant of concern” in the United States because of “mounting evidence that the Delta variant spreads more easily and causes more severe cases when compared to other variants.” First identified in India, Delta is also the dominant strain there and in the United Kingdom. It’s about 40-60% more transmissible than the Alpha variant, which is currently dominant in the United States.
About 10% of all the coronavirus cases in the United States are now the Delta variant, according to the CDC, up from 2.7% on May 22. The coronavirus vaccines currently available are proving effective against the Delta variant.
Thursday’s seven-day rolling average of new cases in Utah was 288 on Thursday, the Utah Department of Health reported. That figure had dropped to as low as 202 a day on June 2.
Some of that rise, Gov. Spencer Cox said Thursday at his monthly televised news conference on PBS Utah, can be attributed to the Delta variant. “The Delta variant is here. We believe the Delta variant is growing,” he said. “The great news is that the vaccines work against the Delta variant.”
In response to the variant, UDOH issued a statement that it “strongly” encourages “anyone who is 12 and older to get vaccinated as soon as possible.” And Cox repeated the same plea — and displayed frustration that most COVID-19 cases diagnosed recently, as well as hospitalizations and deaths, are among the unvaccinated.
Since March 23, when vaccines became available to all Utahns 16 or older, the state has seen 28,233 new cases of COVID-19, and 98.6% of them were unvaccinated, Cox said.
Similarly, Cox said, 95.2% of the 1,625 Utahns who were hospitalized with COVID-19 in that time frame were unvaccinated — and 98.2% of the 113 Utahns who died from COVID-19 since March 23 did not get vaccinated.
“It’s very sad,” Cox said, his voice rising with anger. In recent weeks, Cox said, he has spoken with families “whose loved ones have died or who are in the hospital, in dire circumstances right now, because they refused to get vaccinated. Completely preventable. They didn’t have to die. They don’t have to be in the hospital. But they’re dead now, and they’re in the hospital now, because they refused to get vaccinated.”
Information about where to get vaccinated is available at coronavirus.utah.gov/vaccine.
Cox repeated the state’s goal — echoing the national goal set by the Biden administration — of having 70% of adults receive at least one shot by July 4. “It’s looking like we’re not going to get there, unless we have a big surge of vaccinations over the next couple weeks,” he said. “We’re hoping that will happen. We’re pulling out all the stops to make that happen.”
Cox said 64.3% of adults in Utah have received at least one dose of the vaccine. “So we’re close. We’re within shouting distance of 70%.”
The national average, Cox said, is 65%. “So the good news is we’re not doing [that much] worse than the nation,” Cox said. “The bad news is we’re not doing better than the national average.”
The state has sent letters to 10,000 Utah businesses, Cox said, urging them to make it easier for employees to opt for the vaccine — by playing host to mobile vaccine clinics, or giving employees paid time off to get their shot, or providing incentives to employees and customers.
It remains up in the air whether the state government will offer its own incentives. Cox said his office has been discussing possible incentives with legislative leaders. “There hasn’t been much interest in that” from the legislature, Cox said, though “we continue to have those discussions.”
Vaccine doses administered in past day/total doses administered • 6,496 / 2,767,967.
Utahns fully vaccinated • 1,331,326.
Cases reported in past day • 369.
Deaths reported in past day • None.
Tests reported in past day • 3,742 people were tested for the first time. A total of 6,724 people were tested.
Hospitalizations reported in the past day • 173. That’s 14 more than on Wednesday. Of those currently hospitalized, 66 are in intensive care, four fewer than on Wednesday.
Percentage of positive tests • Under the state’s original method, the rate is 9.9%. That’s lower than the seven-day average of 7.6%.
The state’s new method counts all test results, including repeated tests of the same individual. Thursday’s rate was 5.9%, higher than the seven-day average of 4.9%
[Read more: Utah is changing how it measures the rate of positive COVID-19 tests. Here’s what that means.]
Totals to date • 410,746 cases; 2,324 deaths; 17,204 hospitalizations; 2,751,868 people tested.
This story is developing and will be updated.
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