Fauci: United States is out of ‘pandemic phase’
“We’re really in a transitional phase, from a deceleration of the numbers into hopefully a more controlled phase and endemicity,” Fauci told the Washington Post on Wednesday.
On “PBS NewsHour,” Fauci noted that “we don’t have 900,000 new infections a day and tens and tens and tens of thousands of hospitalizations and thousands of deaths.”
White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Wednesday that Fauci’s comments about being in a different phase of the pandemic are “absolutely true.”
“There’s no question that we are in a moment, a different moment, in our fight against COVID,” she said, but “we also know COVID isn’t over.”
Fauci’s comments came the same day that other federal health officials were reporting sweeping findings about the spread of the coronavirus: Some 60% of Americans have antibodies indicating that they were infected with the virus at least once, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.
The average number of confirmed new cases reported daily in the United States has risen 61% in the past two weeks. More than 50,000 new cases were reported Tuesday, according to a New York Times database.
Fauci said Tuesday that he believed that even that reported increase was an undercount, because more people are turning to at-home testing and many do not report the results.
Tracking new cases has become more difficult since the omicron peak, with the country recording a steep decrease in the most reliable method, PCR testing. But Dr Rochelle P Walensky, the CDC’s director, said the national statistics reflected “a true and reliable drop in our overall cases.”
Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the World Health Organization, warned at a news briefing Tuesday that it would be difficult to track the evolution of the coronavirus if countries did not maintain consistent testing.
“When it comes to the deadly virus, ignorance is not a bliss,” he said.
The European Union issued a statement Wednesday that seemed akin to Fauci’s remarks, saying that the bloc was moving out of the “emergency phase” of the pandemic. The EU said it would focus on vaccination, surveillance and testing to prepare for the possibility of a new wave of infections in the fall.
China, by contrast, has been trying to achieve “zero COVID” in the country, but virus outbreaks continue to rage there. Officials in Beijing are trying to test most of the city’s 22 million residents in an effort to avoid imposing a citywide lockdown like the one that has disrupted life in Shanghai for weeks.
In Washington, the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner will be held Saturday for the first time since 2019, and 2,600 politicians, journalists and officials are expected to attend. Fauci, 81, will not be there, he said, “because of my individual assessment of my personal risk.”
With the virus racing through the Biden administration and Vice President Kamala Harris testing positive Tuesday, President Joe Biden, 79, made his own risk assessment of the dinner in consultation with his doctors. He is expected to attend and “showcase his support for the free press,” Psaki said, but he will not eat at the event and may wear a mask when he is not speaking.