In Clark County, the COVID-19 transmission rate jumped from 263 cases per 100,000 residents on Dec. 23 to 437 cases per 100,000 on Dec. 30. Hospitalization rates due to COVID-19 are also ticking up in Washington state – from Dec. 12, 2021 to Jan. 2, 2022, the number of
Washingtonians hospitalized for COVID-19 increased by 80 percent, jumping from 610 to 1,099 in three weeks. Likewise,according to Washington Department of Health data, the number of Washington residents requiring a ventilator for COVID-19 also increased over that three-week time period, jumping from 93 ventilated COVID-19 patients on Dec. 12 to 126 patients on Jan. 2.
President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser, Anthony Fauci, told the Washington Post in late December the omicron variant, which studies have shown may be less severe than the delta variant that caused a massive U.S. COVID-19 surge in the summer and fall of 2021, will likely still cause complications for the nation’s health-care system.
“We’re going to have a real challenge to the health-care delivery system — namely the number of beds, the number of ICU beds and even the number of health-care providers,” Fauci told The Washington Post. “Even vaccinated people are getting breakthrough infections. So if you get enough nurses and doctors infected, they are going to temporarily be out of action. And if you get enough of them out of action, you could have a double stress on the health-care system.”
Staff at Kaiser Permanente Northwest hospitals sent an urgent message to the community before the Christmas holiday, predicting a “significant spike in COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations driving by the omicron variant” in the coming weeks and asking people to “get vaccinated and get boosted” against COVID-19.