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Wisconsin's Covid Condition: Hospitalizations Skyrocket with Delta - PBS Wisconsin

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While many Wisconsinites continue to eschew the vaccines, UW Health announced on Aug. 12 it would participate in a clinical trial of the Moderna vaccine for children ages 6 months to 11 years old. No COVID-19 vaccines have yet been approved for children younger than 12. Locally, 80 children will take part in the 14-month study that aims to enroll 12,000 children nationally.

Meanwhile, also on Aug. 12, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration authorized a third dose of the vaccines produced by Pfizer and Moderna for some immunocompromised people. The authorization means solid organ transplant recipients and some others with weakened immune systems will be eligible to receive an immune-boosting third dose of vaccine. The CDC's independent vaccine advisory committee unanimously approved the FDA's authorization on Aug. 13.

The move comes as the Delta variant's extreme transmissibility makes clear that even areas with high vaccination rates are seeing disease activity spike in recent weeks. These include Dane and Door counties, where local public health officials are once again urging all residents to wear face masks in public at the same time that a growing number of hospitals and healthcare systems and other businesses require employees to get vaccinated or return to universal masking policies.

In Milwaukee, where about half of residents are vaccinated, Summerfest organizers announced that visitors to the music festival would be required to show proof of vaccination or a recent negative test result. Many businesses in the city are also returning to masking rules that they had loosened only a couple months earlier.

In the state's second largest metro area, both the city of Madison and Dane County announced Aug. 10 that employees would either need to be vaccinated or be tested weekly for COVID-19.

A few days earlier, state employees were once again required to wear masks at state offices, regardless of vaccination status. In response to a question at the Aug. 12 briefing about whether state employees would be subject to a vaccine mandate, Evers said he would make a decision "within the next week."

During that briefing, Gov. Evers did express support for healthcare systems mandating vaccines for their employees days after about 150 people protested the requirements at the Capitol in Madison.

"There's no misunderstanding on anybody's part that there are people that don't want to be vaccinated," Evers said. "But our health care institutions are at a critical point, and I support their decisions."

Willems Van Dijk added that health care systems regularly require their employees to receive an annual influenza vaccine, as well as vaccines for other preventable infectious diseases like chickenpox, measles and mumps.

"It's one of the responsibilities of a health care system to create a safe place for patients to be cared for," Willems Van Dijk said.

Hospitalizations rising with cases

Organizational vaccine mandates are being announced amid a backdrop of rapidly rising COVID-19 hospitalizations in many parts of Wisconsin, with admissions rising particularly quickly in the southeast part of the state.

As of Aug. 12, the number of people requiring inpatient treatment for COVID-19 hit 600 for the first time since Feb. 3, 2021, according to data reported by the Wisconsin Hospital Association. Nearly half of those patients are in a nine-county region centered around the Milwaukee metro area, where the Delta variant has caused new cases to grow for a month.

By mid-August, the variant is almost exclusively driving rising cases and hospitalizations across the entire state, according to variant surveillance being conducted at the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene and other labs. This situation is prompting hospitals around the state to reopen wards dedicated to treating COVID-19 patients, which they had previously closed following 2020's waves of infections.

With testing for the coronavirus on the rise again in the state, the statewide 7-day average for new confirmed cases sat at 1,104 as of Aug. 11, up from 780 at the beginning of the month, amounting to a more than a 40% increase. Hospitalizations more than doubled across the state over the same period.

The 7-day average for COVID-related deaths, a lagging pandemic indicator, ticked up from one to two on Aug. 10, where it remained the next day. While the average remains low compared to most points during the pandemic, it had hit zero for a period in July.

Another change from previous pandemic surges is the growth of pediatric cases of COVID-19, including more severe infections that require hospitalization. A large majority of children in the state remain unvaccinated, including all children younger than 12, as the new school year looms.

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