On the third anniversary of the COVID-19 pandemic, the virus is still spreading and the death toll is nearing 7 million worldwide. Yet most people have resumed their normal lives, thanks to a wall of immune protection built from infections and vaccines.
The virus appears here to stay, along with the threat of a more dangerous version sweeping the planet.
โNew variants emerging anywhere threaten us everywhere,โ said virus researcher Thomas Friedrich of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. โMaybe that will help people to understand how connected we are.โ
With information sources drying up, it has become harder to keep tabs on the pandemic. Johns Hopkins University on Friday shut down its trusted tracker, which it started soon after the virus emerged in China and spread worldwide.
Saturday marks three years since the World Health Organization first called the outbreak a pandemic on March 11, 2020, and the United Nationโs health organization says itโs not yet ready to say the emergency has ended.
Hereโs a look at where we stand.
With the pandemic still killing 900 to 1,000 people a day worldwide, the stealthy virus behind COVID-19 hasnโt lost its punch. It spreads easily from person to person, riding respiratory droplets in the air, killing some victims but leaving most to bounce back without much harm.
โWhatever the virus is doing today, itโs still working on finding another winning path,โ said Dr. Eric Topol, head of Scripps Research Translational Institute in California.
Weโve become numb to the daily death toll, Topol says, but we should view it as too high. Consider that in the United States, daily hospitalizations and deaths, while lower than at the worst peaks, have not yet dropped to the low levels reached during summer 2021 before the delta variant wave.
At any moment, the virus could change to become more transmissible, more able to sidestep the immune system or more deadly. Topol said weโre not ready for that. Trust has eroded in public health agencies, furthering an exodus of public health workers.
Resistance to stay-at-home orders and vaccine mandates may be the pandemicโs legacy.
โI wish we united against the enemy โ the virus โ instead of against each other,โ Topol said.
Thereโs another way to look at it. Humans unlocked the virusโ genetic code and rapidly developed vaccines that work remarkably well. We built mathematical models to get ready for worst-case scenarios. We continue to monitor how the virus is changing by looking for it in wastewater.
โThe pandemic really catalyzed some amazing science,โ said Friedrich.
The achievements add up to a new normal where COVID-19 โdoesnโt need to be at the forefront of peopleโs minds,โ said Natalie Dean, an assistant professor of biostatistics at Emory University. โThat, at least, is a victory.โ
Dr. Stuart Campbell Ray, an infectious disease expert at Johns Hopkins, said the current omicron variants have about 100 genetic differences from the original coronavirus strain. That means about 1% of the virusโ genome is different from its starting point.
Many of those changes have made it more contagious, but the worst is likely over because of population immunity.
Matthew Binnicker, an expert in viral infections at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, said the world is in โa very different situation today than we were three years ago โ where there was, in essence, zero existing immunity to the original virus.โ
That extreme vulnerability forced measures aimed at โflattening the curve.โ Businesses and schools closed, weddings and funerals were postponed. Masks and โsocial distancingโ later gave way to showing proof of vaccination. Now, such precautions are rare.
โWeโre not likely to go back to where we were because thereโs so much of the virus that our immune systems can recognize,โ Ray said. Our immunity should protect us โfrom the worst of what we saw before.โ
On Friday, Johns Hopkins did its final update to its free coronavirus dashboard and hot-spot map with the death count standing at more than 6.8 million worldwide. Its government sources for real-time tallies had drastically declined. In the U.S., only New York, Arkansas and Puerto Rico still publish case and death counts daily.
โWe rely so heavily on public data and itโs just not there,โ said Beth Blauer, data lead for the project.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention still collects a variety of information from states, hospitals and testing labs, including cases, hospitalizations, deaths and what strains of the coronavirus are being detected. But for many counts, thereโs less data available now and itโs been less timely.
โPeople have expected to receive data from us that we will no longer be able to produce,โ said the CDCโs director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky.
Internationally, the WHOโs tracking of COVID-19 relies on individual countries reporting. Global health officials have been voicing concern that their numbers severely underestimate whatโs actually happening and they do not have a true picture of the outbreak.
For more than year, CDC has been moving away from case counts and testing results, partly because of the rise in home tests that arenโt reported. The agency focuses on hospitalizations, which are still reported daily, although that may change. Death reporting continues, though it has become less reliant on daily reports and more on death certificates โ which can take days or weeks to come in.
U.S. officials say they are adjusting to the circumstances, and trying to move to a tracking system somewhat akin to how CDC monitors the flu.
โI wish we could go back to before COVID,โ said Kelly Forrester, 52, of Shakopee, Minnesota, who lost her father to the disease in May 2020, survived her own bout in December and blames misinformation for ruining a longtime friendship. โI hate it. I actually hate it.โ
The disease feels random to her. โYou donโt know who will survive, who will have long COVID or a mild cold. And then other people, theyโll end up in the hospital dying.โ
Forresterโs father, 80-year-old Virgil Michlitsch, a retired meat packer, deliveryman and elementary school custodian, died in a nursing home with his wife, daughters and granddaughters keeping vigil outside the building in lawn chairs.
Not being at his bedside โwas the hardest thing,โ Forrester said.
Inspired by the pandemicโs toll, her 24-year-old daughter is now getting a masterโs in public health.
โMy dad would have been really proud of her,โ Forrester said. โIโm so glad that she believed in it, that she wanted to do that and make things better for people.โ
