Data: The COVID Tracking Project, CSSE Johns Hopkins University, state health departments; Map: Andrew Witherspoon, Michelle McGhee/Axios The U.S. has brought new coronavirus infections down to the lowest level since March 2020, when the pandemic began, Axios' Sam Baker and Andrew Witherspoon report. The big picture: Nearly every week for the past 56 weeks, Axios has tracked the change — more often than not, the increase — in new COVID-19 infections. Those case counts are now so low, the virus is so well contained, that this will be our final weekly map. By the numbers: The U.S. averaged roughly 16,500 new cases per day over the past week, a 30% improvement over the week before. New cases declined in 43 states and held steady in the other seven. - The official case counts haven't been this low since Americans went into lockdown in March last year — when the pandemic was still new, no one knew how long this would go on, and inadequate testing meant that cases were undercounted.
Overall, roughly 33 million Americans — about 10% of the population — have tested positive for COVID-19. - About 595,000 people have died from the virus in the U.S., making it deadlier for Americans than the past 80 years of wars and other armed military conflicts combined, including World War II.
The U.S. largely failed to contain the virus until the vaccines arrived. But now, the virus really is under control, nationwide and in every state, thanks almost entirely to the vaccines. Just over half of American adults are now fully vaccinated, according to the CDC. The bottom line: The vaccines work. They've brought cases to their lowest point yet, and because that improvement is the result of vaccines, there's no reason to believe the virus will start gaining significant ground again any time soon. Share this story. |
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