CDC Slashes Omicron Estimates: See Latest PA Cases

PENNSYLVANIA — Federal health officials have walked back week-old estimates claiming the highly contagious omicron variant is responsible for nearly 3 out of 4 new coronavirus cases in parts of the United States, though in Pennsylvania proportions are still high.

On Dec. 18, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 73 percent of new cases were linked to omicron. This week, however, the agency revised those figures, slashing the earlier estimate to 23 percent — a drop of nearly 50 percentage points.

CDC had stated last week that omicron represented 75 percent of new cases in Pennsylvania. That estimate now stands at 57 percent, the agency said.

The drastic change suggests that while omicron cases are on the rise, the variant is not infecting people nationwide at the rate the CDC had projected.

“There's no way around it, it is a huge swing that makes it seem like something went really wrong," Dr. Shruti Gohil, associate medical director at UC Irvine's School of Medicine, told National Public Radio. "But there is always a delay in the testing information that comes in, and that's what the public should take away.”

The new data comes a month after omicron was detected half a world away and days after Americans gathered for the holidays. It also comes as Pennsylvania reports some of its highest-ever cases of coronavirus, with the seven-day average nearing the peak of what it’s been for the entire pandemic.

The delta variant, meanwhile, is responsible for 42 percent of new cases in the Keystone State and nearby area.

Despite this week’s revision, omicron cases are increasing nationwide. The variant accounted for nearly 59 percent of all new cases for the week ending on Dec. 25. The delta variant — the variant more likely to cause severe illness — still accounts for nearly 41 percent of new cases.

The CDC groups Pennsylvania with Delaware, Virginia, Washington D.C., West Virginia, and Maryland when reporting COVID-19 data.

In some regions of the U.S., the spike in omicron cases is significantly higher than the national average. The variant accounts for more than 88 percent of new infections in other areas of the Northeast and nearly 87 percent in the Texas region.

The delta variant had been dominant since June, and as recently as the end of November represented 99.5 percent of new cases.

Only about 33 percent of Americans have gotten their COVID-19 booster shots, which health officials say is the best defense against the omicron variant. About 62 percent of Americans are fully vaccinated but aren’t boosted, and health officials are worried about the nation’s ability to withstand a fifth wave of COVID-19.

For more information, go to the CDC data tracker.

This article originally appeared on the Across Pennsylvania Patch