COVID will likely reach levels in December not yet seen this year, combining with surges of flu, RSV, and other pathogens for a winter not so different from last year’s “tripledemic,” experts say.

Raj Rajnarayanan, assistant dean of research and associate professor at the New York Institute of Technology campus in Jonesboro, Ark., told Fortune that the U.S. is a “sitting duck” in the face of a “syndemic” winter.

It’s a term he prefers to “tripledemic,” as it acknowledges the impact of more than three pathogens on the healthcare system, and the need for policies to address the phenomenon, in addition to medical interventions.

“Strained hospital capacities, workforce exhaustion, burnout, a lack of effective therapeutic tools, poor communication, a lack of compliance [with COVID precautions], a lack of continuity planning, and the pervasive influence of social determinants of health” only make the nation’s delicate health infrastructure more fragile, he said.

  • flicker@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been on Lemmy talking about this for ages. Listen. I’m in healthcare. I work under the Deparment of Developmental and Intellectual Disabilities in a 501c3 doing residential care.

    The health care system in America is absolutely fucked from top down.

    I’m working constantly. We do not have enough people. In my particular field, we are vastly underpaid for the work we do, so no one wants to do it. The jobs are there, the labor isn’t. And listen, no one in this job can blame them!

    We’re so burned out that every time yet another person quits we all nod and say, “Good for them” and soldier on, because if we stop showing up, these people will die.

    That’s just residential care. People living communally with disabilities wind up in every facet of health care (urgent care, hospitals, physicians) at an insane rate, so I see different facilities almost every day, and everywhere I go the story is the same!

    Something has to give. You can’t order us to work and eventually the rising cost of living will force people like me to give up on these marginalized populations. Every LPN and CNA I know has quit healthcare altogether because it’s not worth it. The only one I know who still works is a PRN contractor who charges over $30/hour to work in nursing homes. We have to do something or there won’t be anyone left to treat anyone!

  • FiveMacs@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    The only thing that can save us from this is to give billions to big corporations again…and allow them to increase cost of goods by another 70%…

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      Fuck capitalism, go unvaccinated?

      I am all for pointing out the fundamental issues with for-profit health care. But the funding of emergency vaccine research, expediting of testing and certification, and distribution of vaccines was all a pretty solid win. Its almost like we bypassed the insurance companies to provide every single person in the country with healthcare… The big problem is that we stopped.

        • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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          1 year ago

          So the “again” in this situation has nothing to do with the last pandemic. Which means they are arguing that there is no risk to healthcare. Aka “covid isn’t real” levels of stupidity

          You don’t have to be a rightwing chud to push the same talking points. So let’s try to be better

  • ghostdoggtv@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    3 human pandemics and at least 2 human-adjacent pandemics happening in dogs and chickens at the same time.

  • Bri Guy @sopuli.xyz
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    But not all experts agree. It’s “premature to say it’s going to be a bad year here,” Dr. Michael Osterholm—director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP)—recently told Fortune. While pathogens like flu and RSV peaked earlier than usual during last year’s so called “tripledemic,” the severity of the season “wasn’t beyond usual.” What’s more, low hospital bed capacity and staff levels were under-appreciated factors that contributed to the crisis, making it look worse than it was, he said.

    Encouragingly, while U.S. rates of hospitalization from COVID, RSV, and flu combined are on the rise, they remain below levels seen this time of year during the past two years. Still, they’re significantly higher than those seen in the two winters prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    RSV hospitalizations are the highest they’ve been since 2020, with the exception of last winter. And flu hospitalizations are the highest they’ve been at this time of year since 2017, when they were identical—also with the exception of last year.>>

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      What’s more, low hospital bed capacity and staff levels were under-appreciated factors that contributed to the crisis, making it look worse than it was, he said.

      I mean… isn’t that the big issue?

      It isn’t that people are getting sick. It is that “too many” people are getting sick. Like, in a world with infinite ventilator beds and infinite medical professionals assigned to them, COVID would only have been a labor shortage.

      The issue with a “tripledemic” is that it is multiple highly infectious viruses that target different demographics that very rapidly overwhelm healthcare. If there is less available healthcare then the amount of sick people doesn’t need to be as high. But it is still widespread death and “long covid” permanent injuries.

      I have an academic background so I understand the importance for precision. But this is a perfect example of why the average scientist should never be allowed to talk to the news media.