Beyond the sheer numbers, though, the governor and health officials are concerned that the toll might keep escalating through the winter months when more time will be spent indoors. Carney is especially concerned about the impact on hospitals. He noted that when the number of inpatients peaked at 474 last January, hospitals had greatly reduced their services and elective surgeries to accommodate treatment of COVID-19 patients.
“We also had sectors of our economy closed down,” Carney said. “And fewer people going into the hospital.”
Carney and Division of Public Health Director Dr. Karyl Rattay highlighted the current situation to remind people to get fully vaccinated and for all adults to get a booster shot as soon as they are eligible.
Those eligible to get a COVID-19 booster dose include all adults who got the two-shot Pfizer or Moderna vaccine at least six months ago or the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine at least two months ago, she said.
“Being able to stop these hospitalizations and getting us out of the pandemic surge, the roller coaster we are in, is going to require more people getting vaccinated and more people getting boosted,’’ Rattay said. “None of this is rocket science but it’s time to double down. Now is the time to do it.”
Rattay also stressed that the current spike is a surge of the delta variant and that the new omicron variant, while expected here soon, has not yet been detected in sampling of positive cases.
‘We’re not doing well with boosters’
Last January, with vaccinations only just starting, the weekly daily case average peaked at 844.
But the September surge and the current spike are coming as vaccinations continue ticking upward. Nearly 86% of adults and 27% of minors have received at least one dose of a vaccine, according to state data. Of the 551,700 people who are fully vaccinated, about 162,500 have also received a booster shot, state statistics show.
That’s not enough, Carney said. “We’re not doing well with boosters,’’ he said.
The governor, who is 65, noted that he got his booster shot last month to give him “extra protection.”
Public health spokeswoman Sharon Smith stressed that the “vast majority of new cases and hospitalizations are among those who are unvaccinated or partially vaccinated.”
Smith said local and federal public health officials have “noted that the current vaccines’ effectiveness does appear to wane over time.’’
Rattay also highlighted the fact that case rates are highest and vaccination rates lowest in predominantly Republican western Sussex County. Carney, a second-term Democrat, said he believes there is a political motive to some of the resisters, but said that only puts them and their friends and family in danger of infection and possibly serious illness or death.
“People are citing misinformation, bad information, and maybe sometimes it’s just an excuse not to do what’s recommended,’’ Carney said. “We’re going to continue trying to find a way to get people to do the right thing.”