Coronavirus

Is COVID-19's Winter Surge Already Here? Experts Warn Pandemic Isn't Over

'I don’t think the spike will be as bad as last winter because we have vaccines available and the approval for younger age groups is a big game changer,' one public health expert said

Frank Franklin II/AP Photo File Photo: Pedestrians wear protective masks during the coronavirus pandemic as they walk along 71st Avenue as snow falls Feb. 18, 2021, in the Queens borough of New York.

A new surge of COVID-19 cases is expected to start hitting the United States around Thanksgiving just as the holiday season begins, public health experts are warning.

But with more and more Americans vaccinated, it’s not likely to linger as long or do as much damage because there’s a level of protection this season that wasn’t there last year, they say.

“I don’t think the spike will be as bad as last winter because we have vaccines available and the approval for younger age groups is a big game changer, especially for hospitalizations and death rates,” said Monica Wang, an associate professor of community health sciences at the Boston University School of Public Health.

The threat of another COVID surge is real and political leaders like California Gov. Gavin Newsom, whose state is still recovering from a wave of delta variant infections that clogged hospital emergency rooms, are urging Americans to remain vigilant.

Read the full story at NBCNews.com.

Kids who get the COVID vaccine should be able to go maskless in school, says Dr. Alok Patel. "I can't wait to see those kids with their bright, smiling shining faces again," Patel says. He answers all our questions about the COVID vaccines being approved for administration to children.
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