As we celebrate the coming of a new year with 2023 on the horizon, there is a darker milestone coming up as the COVID-19 pandemic reaches its 3-year mark.
It was Jan. 10, 2020, when the World Health Organization (WHO) announced that the outbreak of respiratory illness in Wuhan, China was caused by the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV), and just 10 days after that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported the first laboratory-confirmed case of COVID-19 in the United States.
The pandemic has had staggering consequences across the globe with Statista reporting on Dec. 9, 2022, that to date there have been:
In the United States alone, the Johns Hopkins University & Medicine Coronavirus Resource Center reports that there have been 1,085,224 deaths from the pandemic.
The same Statista report showed the United States reporting more COVID-19 cases than any other country in the world with more than 100 million cases thus far.
In fact, the United States, according to the data, has had 101,213,638 COVID-19 cases, more than double India, which has had the second most cases with 44,675,509.
According to Statista, as of Dec. 9, 2022, the top 20 countries in the world with reported COVID-19 cases (keeping in mind that not all countries have health reporting to the same standards as the United States) are:
“Governments’ stark daily figures on the spread of coronavirus are difficult to compare across the countries and may be significant undercounts,” warns the Financial Times.
While the U.S. has the most reported COVID-19 cases since the start of the pandemic, there are other countries with a higher observed case-to-fatality ratio, according to Johns Hopkins University & Medicine Coronavirus Resource Center.
The top mortality rates from COVID-19 have been from:
Peru also topped the list of deaths per 100,000 population:
The United States ranked 16th overall in deaths per 100,000 population from COVID-19 at 329.39.
The Council of Foreign Relations says that the swift development of effective vaccines against COVID-19 was an unprecedented scientific achievement with governments, multilateral organizations, and private firms spending billions of dollars to develop these vaccines.
The United States has helped lead the way in vaccination efforts with U.S. pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, partnering with German firm BioNTech, and U.S.-based Moderna to develop pioneering and effective vaccines using messenger RNA technology.
The United States-based vaccines efficacy, according to the New York Times, includes:
By the end of this year, over 13 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines will have been administered worldwide with some countries achieving 75 percent full vaccination rates. In the United States, 81 percent of the population has received at least one dose.
Johns Hopkins University & Medicine Coronavirus Resource Center says that the United States trails only China and India in people receiving at least 1 dose:
The United States, however, is not one of the countries that have at least 90 percent of the population receive 1 dose. Countries on that list include:
The United States and other countries, such as China, have had radically different approaches to the COVID-19 pandemic.
China just eased some of its Zero-Covid policies which have become controversial within the country.
Forbes reported: “China announced it was relaxing some of its strictest Covid restrictions on Wednesday, a major policy shift that suggests Beijing is preparing to abandon its zero-Covid strategy in favor of learning to live with the virus, which experts told Forbes was inevitable but risks igniting a huge wave of cases that the world’s most populous country is poorly prepared to face.”
Just days later, however, CNN reported that in Beijing there were empty streets, deserted shopping centers, and residents staying away from one another.
“Not because the city, like many Chinese ones before it, is under a zero-Covid lockdown. This time, it’s because Beijing has been hit with a significant, and spreading, outbreak – a first for the Chinese capital since the beginning of the pandemic, a week after leaders eased the country’s restrictive Covid policy,” said CNN.
Stat magazine reported that in the United States the streets were not deserted as crowds have returned to public spaces and many are not wearing masks.
“At this point, everyone is well and truly sick of Covid-19 and the accommodations we have had to make to co-exist with it. So sick of it, in fact, that many people appear to have given up trying to avoid the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Restaurants are packed, airports are hopping. Once-ubiquitous masks are now an increasingly rare sight,” said the publication.
The publication interviewed 34 infectious disease experts in the U.S. and found among this group:
The infectious disease group is warier of COVID-19 than the general population.
“Heading into the 2022 holidays, Americans may be worrying about prices or the inevitable family fight about politics, but few of them are worried about COVID-19,” reported Ipsos on Dec. 6, 2022. “The Axios/Ipsos Coronavirus index shows that with just over a third seeing contracting COVID-19 as a large or moderate risk, most Americans appear to be including the virus in their daily calculus and moving on. Indeed, Half of Americans say they have already returned to pre-COVID routines while only a third report wearing a mask some or all of the time when leaving the home.”