‘Tis the season when we take stock of our lives and wonder if we are better off. In some ways, our lives as Americans are much better now. In other ways, we’re in worse shape.
Today, we have COVID-19 vaccines, which work and are widely available. The vaccines were developed at “warp speed” during Donald Trump’s time in office and deployed rapidly under Joe Biden’s watch. Both presidents deserve credit for their actions, which are saving lives.
Today, in Washington state, three out of four citizens have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine and two-thirds are fully vaccinated. While the numbers are impressive, far too many people are still dying and a high percentage of the deaths are among the unvaccinated.
The Kaiser Family Foundation found the SARS-CoV-2 virus is deadly for all age groups in our country. The Foundation also found that, between June and November of this year, vaccinations could have prevented as many as 163,000 COVID-19 deaths in the United States. This month, the Foundation published data showing there have been nearly 700,000 vaccine-preventable COVID-19 hospitalizations in this country between June and November 2021, and that the cost of treating unvaccinated COVID-19 patients during those six months was around $13.8 billion.
The good news is we are better at stopping COVID-19 than we were preventing polio in the 1950s. It took years to develop and test vaccines, and things didn’t always work. In 1954, an early batch actually caused a polio outbreak.