COVID-19 cases are up, why aren’t people worried?

As the countdown to 2024 approaches, Dwayne Taylor — the founder of San Jose events company Taylor Productions — is preparing to celebrate. For nearly a decade, he has hosted one of the city’s largest New Year’s parties. And for the first time since 2020, COVID-19 is finally feeling like less of an obstacle.

“I’ve had it three times, and I’ve also had a lot of really close friends who passed away from COVID,” said Taylor, who suspended the parties in 2020 and 2021 before bringing it back last year. “So if I thought for a second that this party would be a problem or a spreader event, I would have canceled it in a heartbeat.”

Despite the persistent presence of COVID-19 and an ongoing surge — hospitalizations are up, and so is the virus’ presence in wastewater — most Bay Area residents are making the same calculus.

Masks and other precautions are being thrown to the winds, and it’s not just revelers. Nearly four years after the pandemic’s onset, state- and county-level health warnings are less frequent and more tempered than they’ve ever been, mostly reminding people to get vaccinated, and to stay home when sick.

“I’ve been struggling in terms of communicating to the public that there’s a lot of virus out there, there’s a high chance of getting sick if you don’t take precautions … but at the same time, things are a lot better,” said John Swartzberg, a clinical professor emeritus of infectious diseases and vaccinology at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health.

Across the Bay Area, regions are seeing “high” levels of COVID-19 in their wastewater, including San Leandro, Central Contra Costa, Oakland, San Francisco, and Redwood City, according to the WastewasterSCAN dashboard, a national dataset based at Stanford University.

San Jose is experiencing a particularly dramatic surge, with wastewater data showing COVID-19 at a level only seen during the two worst waves of the pandemic. Concentration levels are also higher than they were during the first winter wave in January 2021, when hospitals canceled non-emergency surgeries and procedures to ward off a continued spread.

Snapshot taken from the Santa Clara County Public Health Department’s COVID wastewater monitoring data. 

So why aren’t people worried? Unlike the early days of the pandemic, when contracting COVID was deadly business for the elderly and immunocompromised, and risky for everyone else, new infections less frequently equate to hospitalizations and death. Readily available vaccines have usually rendered cases milder, and therapeutics such as Paxlovid can reduce the severity of symptoms.

Even so, the level of hospitalizations this year is not insignificant, and is much higher than people heading to the emergency room with the flu. And COVID is still deadly, contributing to over 1,000 deaths in California since Oct. 1. Between December 10-16, 2,800 people were hospitalized for COVID across the state, compared to just over 1,000 for the flu.

Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious disease doctor at the University of California San Francisco, said there were 27 COVID patients at his hospital on Wednesday — including two in the intensive care unit. That’s compared to 15 patients two weeks ago. Most of those in the hospital, he said, are above age 75 and unvaccinated.

“It’s easier to catch because (the new variant) is more transmissible. That’s why it seems that everybody and their neighbor has COVID right now,” said Chin-Hong.

While hospitalizations are up statewide and nationally, they are nowhere near the heights during the virus’ early surges. Hospitalized COVID patients peaked at 146,000 in late January 2022, down to just 20,000 in mid-December 2023. In California, current hospitalizations are around 1,900, just a fraction of the over 22,000 people hospitalized during the state’s peak in January 2021.

There’s also the risk of catching other respiratory viruses, like RSV and the flu, Chin-Hong said.

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