Dr. Tom Frieden Profile picture
Oct 2, 2020 16 tweets 4 min read Read on X
Epi Weekly. 40 million plus 1. And…NYC is on the brink of a precipice.

A minimal estimate is about 40 million infections in the United States with the virus that causes Covid. The infection of President Trump is the most prominent, and one of the most telling.

First of thread/
My thoughts are with the President, First Lady, family, and all others infected with and affected by Covid. The President’s infection is a reminder that Covid is an ongoing threat. No one is safe – not even heads of state – until everyone is safe. fxn.ws/3ioVuaG
2/16
Risk of severe illness and death increases with age. A 74-year-old has approximately 3% chance of death, higher in males and people who are obese, and much higher if hospitalization is required. 85-90% of those infected in their 70’s will have no, mild, or minor illness.
3/16
People who get prompt medical care likely have better outcomes. Remdesivir may reduce the duration of illness. The data on convalescent plasma are contradictory. Monoclonal antibodies, which the president received, are promising, especially early in illness, but unproven.
4/16
Testing is only useful as part of a comprehensive strategy. What’s important isn’t how many people are tested or how often, but what is done with testing to reduce risk. Testing doesn’t replace wearing a mask, watching your distance from other people, and washing your hands.
5/16
It’s a plain truth that face masks protect others, and almost certainly protect yourself as well. The more people wear masks when we’re near others, the safer we’ll all be. Did the extensive testing done at the White House give a false sense of security? Absolutely.
6/16
We need to rebrand contact tracing. Let’s call it what it is: supporting people who have and who were exposed to Covid. Are Vice President Biden and Chris Wallace at risk from debate? Maybe. The louder someone talks the more chance virus will spread. 7/16 go.nature.com/34f6lig
Every person infected with Covid is a step backwards in our effort to slow the pandemic and reopen society. We are nowhere near herd immunity, and getting there without a vaccine would cost hundreds of thousands of lives and millions of jobs.
8/16
We must better prevent and treat this virus. We’re all in this together, and the better we prevent and fight it, the more lives we can save and the sooner and safer we can get to the new normal.

Now on to the weekly tradition: Reviewing epi of Covid in the past week.

9/16
Overall in the US, most states had increases during September. New trend feature on the exit strategy website is helpful, although the trends are discouraging. 10/16 covidexitstrategy.org
Really the only states reassuringly low are Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, perhaps Connecticut. Many, like Florida, continue to have high positivity rates, are opening, and will inevitably have increases in the coming weeks. Intentional or just neglect of science?
11/16
Closer to (my) home…. NYC is on edge of a precipice. Extensive, ongoing spread in religious communities, very high risk of a resurgence. From Governor Cuomo: (NYC’s media statements have shockingly lacked basic information on the number tested and positive, and on trends). 12/16
Parts of this community had extensive spread in Spring. If it's being hit hard again either herd immunity hard to reach or immunity wanes.

For more than a month NYC has had 300 or so diagnosed cases a day. But we still lack basic information about how the city is doing. 13/16
What proportion of each week's cases were previously identified as contacts and were in quarantine already?
For how many was the source identified?
What's the average time from symptom onset, or test taking, to isolation?
Are cases isolating? Contacts quarantining? 14/16
Challenging to work with religious community that doesn’t trust government. How about hiring 1,000 people from community through acceptable intermediary organizations to fight Covid? Key to start ASAP, standardize training & performance monitoring and get community buy-in. 15/16
Today is Gandhi’s birthday. I think about his call to empathy, and to recognize that the enemy is hate.

16/Final

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More from @DrTomFrieden

May 3, 2023
Updated Covid booster recommendations and the unwinding of the public health emergency in the United States have raised questions and highlighted lingering challenges. How should we be thinking about these developments? Who should get a booster this spring? 1/thread
Covid hasn’t gone away, but it no longer poses the same threat to most people it did in the first years after its emergence. This is due, in large part, to lifesaving vaccinations and treatment, and also to prior infections, which reduce the risk too. 2/
Our wall of immunity, built up from both vaccinations and infection, is strong—but it’s not impervious. Protection wanes, and the virus continues to mutate. Even now, older adults and medically vulnerable people remain susceptible to severe illness and death. 3/
Read 19 tweets
Apr 8, 2023
In New York City, Covid killed more people than any other cause in the pandemic’s first year and caused life expectancy to drop by 4.6 years on average, according to the newly released annual report of NYC vital statistics. Confirmation of a devastating toll. 1/thread
What gets measured can be managed, which is why reports like this are crucial. More than 200 New Yorkers die every day, including >50 people under age 65, a data point I tracked closely as NYC Health Commissioner and focused intently on bringing down. bit.ly/41cFZcm 2/ Image
Every life counts. A moving piece published last week in @nytimes shows vividly the necessity—and challenge—of tracking all births and deaths. 3/ bit.ly/3Gmll1O
Read 10 tweets
Mar 17, 2023
The past three years of fighting Covid feel like a fog of war. Although everyone wants to move on, we must reckon with how bad the pandemic was—and how much worse it could have been. 1/thread
20 million excess deaths have occurred during the Covid pandemic—more than all but the two other leading causes of death, cardiovascular disease and cancer. Without vaccination, measures to reduce infections and lifesaving medical care so many more lives would have been lost. 2/
Those who are intent on undermining public health action argue that there was nothing we could have done to counter Covid, that all of the infections and deaths were inevitable. But they ignore that some places had much lower rates of infections, hospitalizations and deaths. 3/
Read 15 tweets
Feb 23, 2023
Masks have been an effective tool throughout the Covid pandemic, despite erroneous claims to the contrary. 1/thread
The widely cited Cochrane review on masks was poorly done and even more poorly communicated. Regrettably, researchers analyzed the wrong datasets, in the wrong way, and overstated their conclusions—leading to sweeping and inaccurate characterizations. 2/
Many nuances around mask type, setting, behavior, and policy are explained in this helpful piece by @dr_kkjetelina. bit.ly/3ErwuNN 3/
Read 15 tweets
Feb 4, 2023
Over the past decade, global smoking rates dropped by 23% and 750 billion fewer cigarettes are sold annually. But despite this progress, tobacco is still the world’s leading cause of death and unless we do more, will kill ONE BILLION people in this century. 1/thread
The FDA recently announced a national ban on menthol cigarettes and a new California law to curb flavored tobacco was overwhelmingly affirmed by voters in November. Big Tobacco's reaction to these two recent public health wins underscores the fight we have ahead of us. 2/
Why are these wins significant? Big Tobacco has a long history of targeting Black communities with menthol cigarettes. The FDA ban could undo shocking disparities in lung cancer deaths suffered by Black Americans compared to their white counterparts. bit.ly/3JtXQWQ 3/
Read 8 tweets
Jan 29, 2023
Amid discussion of the future of Covid vaccination, we can’t lose sight of the present: Only 1% of immunocompromised people in the US received a full set of Covid vaccinations as of Aug. That’s a colossal failure. The 5 steps to avoid failure in public health explained 1/thread
500 people are still dying from Covid every day. That’s not normal and it doesn’t have to happen! Immunocompromised people—along with the elderly—are at the highest risk of dying from Covid. 2/
Vaccines are remarkably effective against severe disease, but their protection must be reinforced, especially for vulnerable people. Boosters reinforce our protection, and a new CDC study underscores their importance. bit.ly/4062XCq 3/
Read 24 tweets

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