Health & Fitness

WI COVID Numbers Ease, Still 'Too High': Health Officials

Hospitalizations, infections and deaths from coronavirus are declining but are still too high according to health experts.

Wisconsin coronavirus numbers are downtrending, and experts saying getting vaccinated is still the best thing to do in the face of still high cases and hospitalizations.
Wisconsin coronavirus numbers are downtrending, and experts saying getting vaccinated is still the best thing to do in the face of still high cases and hospitalizations. (Rachel Nunes/Patch)

February 2, 2022

Infections, hospitalizations and deaths from COVID-19 are all declining, but the spread of the coronavirus still remains extremely high, according to public health providers.

Find out what's happening in Across Wisconsinfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The seven-day average of new cases reported per day dropped to 5,562 statewide as of Monday, the Department of Health Services (DHS) reported — less than one-third of the most recent peak average of more than 18,000 on Jan. 19.

Hospitalizations still remain high, but are slowly diminishing. The Wisconsin Hospital Association reported Tuesday that 91 percent of intensive care unit beds in the state are full, an improvement over recent weeks in which the number stood at 95 percent or more. COVID-19 patients account for about 20 percent of those hospitalized in ICUs; at the peak of the most recent surge, they were more than one in three.

Find out what's happening in Across Wisconsinfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Local trends have followed. During a Milwaukee County COVID-19 briefing, Dr. Ben Weston, the county’s chief medical advisor described “encouraging trends” in declining cases and hospitalizations and in the percentage of COVID-19 tests reported as positive.

At the same time, however, “it’s important to remember that the absolute numbers of each of these are still critically high,” Weston said, with all three measures still well above the previous records set in 2020.

“We are moving in the right direction, but the disease burden in the community remains high,” Weston said.

COVID-19 vaccine availability has expanded on two fronts. Pfizer has announced plans to seek federal authorization for its vaccine in children six months to 4 years old. In addition, the Moderna vaccine has gained full approval from the Food and Drug Administration for people 18 or older, DHS announced Tuesday, moving it from the previous emergency use authorization.

The Pfizer vaccine received full approval for people 16 and older in August.

“These approvals are further confirmation that these vaccines are effective and safe,” said DHS Secretary-designee Karen Timberlake in a department statement that urged people to get vaccinated if they have hesitated on the grounds that the vaccine hadn’t yet received a final federal OK.

At the same time, though, yet another variant of the novel coronavirus has emerged and appears to be spreading even faster than the current dominant variant, omicron. The new variant has been classified as a version of omicron. It has been detected in Wisconsin, and it “may complicate our recovery,” Weston said.

While the new variant is more difficult to distinguish from previous versions of the virus, it remains easily detectable through COVID-19 testing, he said.

Even with the rapidly diminishing cases, “we’re not quite out of the woods yet,” Weston said, with case counts still high and hospitals still crowded if slightly less so, and the new variant. “So the single best thing you can do now, really, is to ensure that you’re vaccinated and, importantly, to make sure you’re boosted,” he added.


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