A reason still to care about Covid.
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The Morning

December 23, 2021

Good morning. Ready to give up on Covid? Spare a moment to think about older people.

Passing out home test kits in New York City yesterday. Janice Chung for The New York Times

The age gap

By now, you’ve probably heard someone say it, or maybe you’ve said it yourself: We’re all getting Covid.

“Yes, you’ll get the virus,” Dr. James Hamblin wrote in his newsletter. “I think we all have a date with Covid at some point,” Helen Branswell, a health reporter at Stat News, said. “People are starting to give up,” my colleague Tara Parker-Pope told me.

It’s an understandable feeling given Omicron’s intense contagiousness, even among the vaccinated. A surge that began in the Northeast is now spreading to the Midwest, South and beyond:

Chart shows seven-day averages. | Source: The New York Times

Some of the country’s new Covid acceptance — or fatalism — stems from frustration with the costs of pandemic precautions: the loss of learning from closed schools; the isolation from social distancing; the nationwide rise in blood pressure, drug overdoses, mental health problems and more.

And some of the new attitude stems from the reality that contracting Covid will not be a big deal for most people. Hospitalization rates for children and for vaccinated people under 50 years old remain minuscule.

But I do want to raise one major point of caution. Covid in recent months has continued to present a meaningful amount of risk to older people, despite vaccination. It’s too soon to know whether Omicron will change the situation, but the safest assumption — absent more data — is that Covid will remain dangerous for the elderly.

“There is good reason for older adults to continue to try to avoid becoming infected, because the risk for hospitalization in that age group is still significant,” Dr. Shelli Farhadian of Yale University told me.

Today’s newsletter will walk through the data and then consider its implications.

The risks

A team of British researchers, led by Dr. Julia Hippisley-Cox at the University of Oxford, has conducted some of the most detailed research on Covid risks for different groups of people. The BMJ, a peer-reviewed journal, published the work, and it is available in an online calculator. The research was done before Omicron emerged and covers only residents of Britain, but it is still instructive.

Here are estimated post-infection death rates for several hypothetical people, all vaccinated.

Unless noted, people are of average U.S. height and weight and lack major medical problems. | Source: QCovid

The risks here for older people are frightening: A rate of 0.45 percent, for instance, translates into roughly a 1 in 220 chance of death for a vaccinated 75-year-old woman who contracts Covid. If the risks remain near these levels with Omicron, they could lead to tens of thousands of U.S. deaths, and many more hospitalizations.

Encouragingly, there are reasons to believe that Omicron’s death rate may be lower. Three new studies released yesterday suggested that Omicron causes milder illness on average than earlier versions of the virus. “I would guess that the mortality risk with Omicron is much smaller” than with earlier variants, Dr. George Rutherford of the University of California, San Francisco, told me yesterday.

One reassuring comparison is to a normal seasonal flu. The average death rate among Americans over age 65 who contract the flu has ranged between 1 in 75 and 1 in 160 in recent years, according to the C.D.C. Pre-Omicron versions of Covid, in other words, seem to present risks of a similar order of magnitude to vaccinated people as a typical flu. Some years, a flu infection may be more dangerous.

With Omicron, “I think the risk is not super high for relatively healthy and boosted people in their 70s,” Janet Baseman, an epidemiologist at the University of Washington, told me. “I think it’s moderate at most.”

Still, Baseman and other experts recommend vigilance, for several reasons. First, the flu kills tens of thousands of Americans a year, and we should probably pay more attention to it. (After declining last year during social distancing, flu infections are rising again now, as these Times charts show.)

Second, Omicron is so contagious that it has the potential to swamp hospitals and cause many otherwise preventable deaths even if only a small share of infections are severe. “We’re not at a place to treat this as a cold,” Azra Ghani of Imperial College London said.

Baseman said that if she were in her 70s, her primary worry would be getting moderately ill, needing standard medical care and not being able to get it at an overwhelmed hospital. Dr. Aaron Richterman of the University of Pennsylvania told me, “There is a strong rationale for reasonable efforts to mitigate transmission, particularly over the next four weeks.”

Remember that these efforts do not need to last forever. In South Africa, the number of new Covid cases is already falling, suggesting that the initial Omicron surge may be sharper and shorter than previous surges. Again, though, nobody knows what the next few weeks will bring.

In the meantime, it makes sense for many people — not just those over 65 — to think about which risky activities are easy to cut out. It also makes sense to wear N95 or KN95 masks, which are more effective than most. Above all, scientists say, get boosted now if you are eligible.

There are also some steps that individuals cannot take but that society could: Requiring people to be vaccinated to enter restaurants (as New York City has and Washington, D.C., soon will) and fly on airplanes; expanding access to walk-in vaccine clinics, rapid tests and post-infection treatments (as the Biden administration has begun doing); and improving ventilation in public indoor spaces.

I have focused on vaccinated people today’s, because they are already trying to protect themselves and their communities. Here is a different version of the chart above, this time adding the death risk for an unvaccinated, otherwise healthy 75-year-old woman who contracts Covid:

Unless noted, people are vaccinated, mostly healthy and of average U.S. height and weight. | Source: QCovid

If you are not vaccinated, you’re in a completely different category of danger.

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THE LATEST NEWS

The Virus

Politics

Business

  • Many companies have responded to staffing shortages by raising wages. Schools and nonprofits can’t keep up.
  • I flew to Baltimore”: The dearth of new and used cars has forced Americans to go to great lengths.
  • Architects are the latest white-collar workers who want to unionize.

Other Big Stories

Villagers in Bihar, India, praying in secret this year. Atul Loke for The New York Times

Opinions

Understanding how to use rapid Covid tests is vital, says Alan McNally.

With Eric Adams, working-class Black New York is finally taking charge, Mara Gay writes.

Take Gail Collins’s end-of-year politics news quiz.

MORNING READS

Issa Kassissieh, the official Santa Claus of the Holy Land. Amit Elkayam for The New York Times

Holidays: Jerusalem Santa is bringing some local cheer.

Big City: A farewell to Bill de Blasio, the mayor New Yorkers loved to hate.

Busted: The new high school prank? Catching your classmate snoozing.

Peter Dinklage: The actor spoke to The Times about life after “Game of Thrones.”

Balenciaga: In 2021, one brand set the fashion agenda.

Lives Lived: Born into show business, Sally Ann Howes starred in some 140 stage, screen and television productions across six decades, including “Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.” She died at 91.

ARTS AND IDEAS

Warner Bros.

Back to the Matrix

When the first “Matrix” movie came out in 1999, at the dawn of the internet age, it posited a future where ordinary life had been replaced with a computer simulation. Now, the series has a new installment, “The Matrix Resurrections” — and two decades of technological advances have made that sci-fi premise feel a lot closer. Here’s a guide:

  • The new movie “alternately amuses and frustrates you with its fantastical world,” The Times’s Manohla Dargis writes in her review.
  • At Vox, Emily VanDerWerff explains how the first “Matrix” film “altered the cultural firmament in a way original ideas almost never do anymore.”
  • Carrie-Anne Moss, who plays the character Trinity, spoke to The Times about starring alongside Keanu Reeves: “It feels like a connection of our souls in a way that is beyond the intellect.”
  • Reeves “created a form of action stardom that no other actor has quite achieved before or since,” Angelica Jade Bastién writes in New York magazine.
  • Is reality a simulation? An N.Y.U. philosophy professor says it’s possible.
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PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook

Linda Xiao for The New York Times

An easy weeknight pasta featuring crème fraîche, peas and scallions.

What to Watch

Denzel Washington and Frances McDormand play a toxic power couple in Joel Coen’s crackling adaptation of Shakespeare’s “Macbeth.”

What to Read

ThighMasters, Jazzercise, yoga and more: In “Let’s Get Physical,” Danielle Friedman writes about ways 20th-century women worked out.

Now Time to Play

The pangrams from yesterday’s Spelling Bee were clarify and farcically. Here is today’s puzzle — or you can play online.

Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: First, second and third (five letters).

If you’re in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. The Times has three Oscar contenders, including a video investigation into the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

Here’s today’s print front page.

The Daily” is a special episode, “The Year in Sound.” “Popcast” features TikTok music critics.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Editor: David Leonhardt

Deputy Editor: Adam B. Kushner

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Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson

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