There’s a very good chance that, by the time President-elect Joe Biden takes office on January 20, the Covid-19 pandemic will be on the retreat. In the meantime, it can still wreak an awful lot of havoc.
The vaccine that Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE announced some very positive news about is not the main reason for the above assertion. It and the other vaccines in development are unlikely to be rolled out quickly enough to make a huge difference by the third week of January.
No, the reason to think the latest coronavirus wave will be on the wane by late January is because that’s what usually happens with winter respiratory-disease epidemics. Here’s how things have played out during recent flu seasons in the US.
The H1N1 influenza pandemic in 2009 peaked even earlier, in late October and early November. Same with the influenza pandemic of 1918. Covid-19 is not the flu — it is much more contagious, for one thing — and there are no guarantees it will follow a similar winter trajectory. But this third wave does have to peak sometime, and given our experience with the disease and its waves so far it seems likely this will happen in the next couple of months.
The job of the coronavirus task force whose membership Biden announced this morning, then, will be not so much to battle the third wave of the virus in the US as to mop up after it and manage the vaccine rollout that could prevent a fourth. Biden would appear to have timed the beginning of his presidency quite well, in other words. And outgoing President Donald Trump, whose administration has bungled many aspects of battling the pandemic but clearly been quite effective in encouraging vaccine development, has seen his long run of lucky timing come to an end.
For the moment, though, the US is coping with its biggest wave of coronavirus infections yet. The disease is by all appearances less deadly than it was last spring, but it is also much more widespread. Americans are clearly tired of social distancing — witness the street celebrations in many cities Saturday after the television networks and Associated Press finally concluded Biden had won the election, or Notre Dame fans rushing the field after a victory over Clemson Saturday night. But the rewards to social distancing and mask-wearing and other non-pharmaceutical means of thwarting the spread of Covid-19 have actually gone up sharply with today’s vaccine news. Just avoid getting the disease for a few more months, and you may never have to get it.
Biden’s response to the vaccine news was that “Americans will have to rely on masking, distancing, contact tracing, hand washing, and other measures to keep themselves safe well into next year.” That sounds about right. He won’t be president until January 20, though, and the current president seems quite unlikely to spend the next two months leading a pro-masks campaign. It is, as it has been for most of the past year, up to the rest of us to keep this from getting worse than it has to before it gets better.
Bloomberg