Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Weekly REPORT | Delta could lead to 'hyperlocal outbreaks.'

From the YaleMedicine.org: If Delta continues to move fast enough to accelerate the pandemic, F.
070521-Bulloch-County-COVID-19-Report-1

From the YaleMedicine.org: If Delta continues to move fast enough to accelerate the pandemic, F. Perry Wilson, MD, a Yale Medicine epidemiologist says the biggest questions will be about transmissibility—how many people will get the Delta variant and how fast will it spread?

The answers could depend, in part, on where you live—and how many people in your location are vaccinated, he says. “I call it ‘patchwork vaccination,’ where you have these pockets that are highly vaccinated that are adjacent to places that have 20 percent vaccination,” Dr. Wilson says. “The problem is that this allows the virus to hop, skip, and jump from one poorly vaccinated area to another.”

In some cases, a low-vaccination town that is surrounded by high vaccination areas could end up with the virus contained within its borders, and the result could be “hyperlocal outbreaks,” he says. “Then, the pandemic could look different than what we’ve seen before, where there are real hotspots around the country.”

Review the full article, 5 Things To Know About the Delta Variant, written by KATHY KATELLA.

DAILY REPORT:


vforvaccinatedpin





About This Report:

A special thanks to Dr. Frank Davis, M.D. F.A.C.S, a retired trauma surgeon who lives in Bulloch County. He has worked closely with the Grice Connect team to design the COVID-19 dashboard and provide brief interpretation of the data. You will be seeing and hearing more from Dr. Davis as an important member of the GC team. We will continue to update and adapt the data in this report to make it relevant. We have shifted our emphasis to vaccinations, while continuing to provide daily Coroncavirus impact.

Thanks for supporting and following Grice Connect.