New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio vowed that New York City will not go into another lockdown despite the spread of the highly transmissible Indian Delta variant, citing high vaccination rates in the city.
‘We are watching the Delta variant very carefully in this city…We have a lot of information, and we’re obviously watching it around the world but the difference here is a very high level of vaccination,’ he said noting that 4.2 million city residents have been fully vaccinated and another 4.6 million have received one dose.
‘The bottom line is right now we’re winning the race against the Delta variant, but we’ve gotta keep winning,’ he said.
DeBlasio’s comments come as the CDC warns the ‘most transmissible’ Covid variant could soon be the dominant version of the virus in the United States, after it quickly spread across at least 12 states, and 85 countries, since it first emerged in India in April.
The decision on whether or not the city goes back into lockdown, however, rests with Gov. Andrew Cuomo, and not the mayor, who is reaching the end of his second and final term.
So far, 51% of New York City residents are vaccinated, with 56% having received one vaccine does, according to the New York City Health Department.
The Delta variant has quickly spread across the US with Arkansas, Missouri and Kansas especially hard hit
DELTA IN THE US: Delta variant now accounts for one-in-five new coronavirus infections in the United States
DeBlasio’s announcement came as LA residents are being urged to mask up again – two weeks after the county dropped its mask mandate – amid Delta Variant concerns.
The virus strain has already wreaked havoc in the UK, where post-pandemic reopening has been delayed by the virus after it caused infections to spike 50 percent in one week.
Now there are fears that the US could follow suit, or even go back into lockdown, if the Delta variant takes hold – with states with low vaccination rates particularly vulnerable.
On Monday, Los Angeles County Department of Public Health recommended that residents in the county, the most densely populated in the US, start donning masks again to protect against the variant – even as they admitted that fully vaccinated people are at little risk.
‘While COVID-19 vaccine provides very effective protection preventing hospitalizations and deaths against the delta variant, the strain is proving to be more transmissible and is expected to become more prevalent,’ said Public Health director Barbara Ferrer.
‘Mask wearing remains an effective tool for reducing transmission, especially indoors where the virus may be easily spread through inhalation of aerosols emitted by an infected person.’
In LA county, there have been more than a million cases of Covid-19 and 24,480 deaths, while the Delta variant accounts for 5.7% of new cases in California.
As of mid June, there were 64 cases of the Delta variant identified in LA County, according to the Los Angeles Department of Public Health.
Nationally, there have been more than 33million cases of coronavirus – and 604,152 deaths. The highly transmissible variant now accounts for 20.6% or one in five of those new cases.
Overall, there have been a total of 4,305 cases of the Delta variant confirmed in the United States.
The variant has spread rapidly over the past two months, but still only accounts for four per cent of new cases worldwide.
Considering its rapid spread in other countries particularly in the UK, White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said the variant could pose a major setback to the US’s efforts to end the pandemic.
‘Similar to the situation in the UK, the delta variant is currently the greatest threat in the US to our attempt to eliminate Covid-19,’ he said on NBC’s Today show last week.
Many states have only just reopened, with California’s coming after intense pressure on Gov. Gavin Newsom to end the mandates.
LA County’s announcement comes as the CDC noted that Delta variants are now responsible for about one in every five new infections across the country.
The recommendation falls in line with that of the World Health Organization which announced last week that it wants fully vaccinated people to wear their masks and practice social distancing to protect themselves against the Delta variant.
Dr. Mariangela Simao – WHO assistant director-general for access to medicines and health products – said, ‘Vaccines alone won’t stop community transmission.’
‘People need to continue to use masks consistently, be in ventilated spaces, hand hygiene … the physical distance, avoid crowding,’ Simao said during a press conference from the WHO’s Geneva headquarters
Current guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention remains that vaccinated people in certain public indoor settings do not need to be masked.
Known as B.1.617.2, the Delta variant has been labeled as a ‘double mutant’ by India’s Health Ministry because it carries two mutations: L452R and E484Q.
L452R is the same mutation seen with the California homegrown variant and E484Q is similar to the mutation seen in the Brazilian and South African variants. Both of the mutations occur on key parts of the virus that allows it to enter and infect human cells.
DELTA IN THE UK: variant has been spreading across the world and in the UK in particular, slowing the country’s end of lockdown, and has caused a spike in Covid infections there
DELTA WORLDWIDE: Cases of the Delta variant soared through late spring and early summer
Cases of Covid-19 and the more contagious Delta variant are rising in some parts of the United States, particularly where vaccination rates are low.
So far the Delta variant has been most prevalent in India and the UK, with it accounting for 31% and 27% of new Covid-19 cases respectively in the countries.
In the UK, it has delayed reopening plans, as the country sees a spike in infections.
Weekly Covid deaths went above 100 last week for the first time since May 14, when registrations were delayed because of the bank holiday on Monday May 3.
The ending of most lockdown rules on May 17 coincided with the takeover of the Indian variant.
The variant is also known as the B.1.617.2 strain of the virus (in bright orange). The CDC has warned it could become the dominant strain in the US
The mask recommendation comes as the Indian Delta variant continues its spread across the world. It still, however, only accounts for 1% of total virus cases in the US
Counties in Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Wyoming (marked in red) reported between 100 and 500 cases per 100,000 in the last week, compared to the national average of 23.9 cases per 100,000
All five states have fully vaccinated 35% or fewer residents, lower than the national average of 45.6%, and only three counties between the five have fully vaccinated more than 50%
On Monday, the UK recorded 22,868 new coronavirus infections, up from 8,125 recorded on June 11, which at that time had been the highest daily total since Feb. 26.
But they were still very low compared with the peak of the first and second waves despite surging cases.
The prevalence of the new variant had led to the UK government pumping the brakes on England’s June 21 Freedom Day.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that the numbers were forcing the end of UK lockdowns to be pushed back by four weeks.
Despite the increasing prevalence of the strain over the past two months, infections have been trending down in the US