While there is still a lot we don’t know about Omicron, things are
starting to come together. We know it is able to infect people who’ve
previously had covid or been vaccinated, and that it spreads extremely
quickly. Combine this with the US having very limited tracking of
variants, and what should we expect to see?
Now imagine that instead of seeing nice colored lines, you just saw a single line representing overall cases:
Instead of the rise in cases being apparent in the data from
~2021-12-01, it’s not until ~2021-12-12 that we see it.
This is what the statistics will look like in places that don’t know
which cases are Omicron. It will look relatively flat, a small uptick
which might be noise, and then a huge spike. And due to reporting
delays, we won’t see the spike until cases are much higher.
The biggest question in my mind is how we are going to react. Are we,
as a society, going to seriously attempt to limit spread?
One potential path is that we don’t. Vaccinated adults are in good
shape, unvaccinated adults less so. Unvaccinated children
were at a similar risk to vaccinated adults pre-Omicron. We don’t
shut things down and it burns through quickly. Hospitals probably get
overloaded leading to additional deaths, especially of unvaccinated
people.
Another potential path is that we really try: we go back to early 2020
policies, but at least this time we know to focus on air and not
surfaces. Omicron is so infectious that I don’t see how we contain
it, and everyone still gets it eventually, but we have more time. This
is the standard flattened curve, with fewer deaths due to the
hospitals being less burdened, and the added potential benefit of
Paxlovid approval (incredibly frustrating that it’s still not even
approved for emergency use) and scale up.
There are also paths in the middle, some of which makes sense. Every
activity has some level of risk and some level of benefit, and the
more we are able to move away from the ones with a bad ratio. The more
we can gain time without giving up too much. In practice, however, I’m
quite skeptical of this: our prioritization so far has been quite poor
(indoor dining + remote elementary school!?) and while I would love to
see improvement here, I’m not hopeful.
Our vaccines work against Omicron, especially for people who get
booster shots when they are eligible. If you are vaccinated, you
could test positive. But if you do get COVID, your case will likely
be asymptomatic or mild.
We are intent on not letting Omicron disrupt work and school for the
vaccinated. You’ve done the right thing, and we will get through
this.
For the unvaccinated, you’re looking at a winter of severe illness and
death for yourselves, your families, and the hospitals you may soon
overwhelm.
I think this last bit is an exaggeration: a large portion of
unvaccinated people have already had covid. I’m also very interested
in whether they will stick to this when cases start to skyrocket.
In terms of where this puts us as individuals, I think we also need to
decide: how much are we willing to give up to avoid (or, more likely,
postpone) catching Omicron? Getting a booster, if you haven’t
already, is worth it under a wide range of futures. The same goes for
using good masks: cloth masks were a temporary stopgap while we scaled
up production of better ones. N95s (and KN95s, KF94s, FFP2s, etc) all
provide much better protection and are widely available, and even
surgical masks are better than cloth.
Personally, I think gathering with vaccinated relatives and friends
over the holidays is still worth it. There is some risk, including
the risk that Omicron is already widespread here and we just don’t
know it yet, but the danger post-booster is low. I do recommend thinking through precautions and talking
about them as a family: my extended family is planning to use rapid
tests, air purifiers, and masks. We need to consider both sides of
the balance, not just the increasingly large chance of an increasingly
small harm, but also the value of seeing loved ones.
Omicron Paths
Link post
While there is still a lot we don’t know about Omicron, things are starting to come together. We know it is able to infect people who’ve previously had covid or been vaccinated, and that it spreads extremely quickly. Combine this with the US having very limited tracking of variants, and what should we expect to see?
Here’s what cases look like in London:
London cases from coronavirus.data.gov.uk split by SGTF percentages from the Omicron daily overview. Inspired by Theo Sanderson’s chart.
Now imagine that instead of seeing nice colored lines, you just saw a single line representing overall cases:
Instead of the rise in cases being apparent in the data from ~2021-12-01, it’s not until ~2021-12-12 that we see it.
This is what the statistics will look like in places that don’t know which cases are Omicron. It will look relatively flat, a small uptick which might be noise, and then a huge spike. And due to reporting delays, we won’t see the spike until cases are much higher.
The biggest question in my mind is how we are going to react. Are we, as a society, going to seriously attempt to limit spread?
One potential path is that we don’t. Vaccinated adults are in good shape, unvaccinated adults less so. Unvaccinated children were at a similar risk to vaccinated adults pre-Omicron. We don’t shut things down and it burns through quickly. Hospitals probably get overloaded leading to additional deaths, especially of unvaccinated people.
Another potential path is that we really try: we go back to early 2020 policies, but at least this time we know to focus on air and not surfaces. Omicron is so infectious that I don’t see how we contain it, and everyone still gets it eventually, but we have more time. This is the standard flattened curve, with fewer deaths due to the hospitals being less burdened, and the added potential benefit of Paxlovid approval (incredibly frustrating that it’s still not even approved for emergency use) and scale up.
There are also paths in the middle, some of which makes sense. Every activity has some level of risk and some level of benefit, and the more we are able to move away from the ones with a bad ratio. The more we can gain time without giving up too much. In practice, however, I’m quite skeptical of this: our prioritization so far has been quite poor (indoor dining + remote elementary school!?) and while I would love to see improvement here, I’m not hopeful.
The White House is indicating pretty strongly that they’re going for the first approach:
I think this last bit is an exaggeration: a large portion of unvaccinated people have already had covid. I’m also very interested in whether they will stick to this when cases start to skyrocket.
In terms of where this puts us as individuals, I think we also need to decide: how much are we willing to give up to avoid (or, more likely, postpone) catching Omicron? Getting a booster, if you haven’t already, is worth it under a wide range of futures. The same goes for using good masks: cloth masks were a temporary stopgap while we scaled up production of better ones. N95s (and KN95s, KF94s, FFP2s, etc) all provide much better protection and are widely available, and even surgical masks are better than cloth.
Personally, I think gathering with vaccinated relatives and friends over the holidays is still worth it. There is some risk, including the risk that Omicron is already widespread here and we just don’t know it yet, but the danger post-booster is low. I do recommend thinking through precautions and talking about them as a family: my extended family is planning to use rapid tests, air purifiers, and masks. We need to consider both sides of the balance, not just the increasingly large chance of an increasingly small harm, but also the value of seeing loved ones.
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