Baltimore, MD - Jan. 9, 2025 - A later-than-normal winter surge in COVID-19 cases is catching some Maryland residents by surprise as infections nationwide reached the highest levels in three years just as Americans were gathering with their families for the holidays.
Health experts call the current uptick in cases a “silent” surge because it comes after a long lull in COVID-19 transmission. This one came “out of nowhere,” Michael Hoerger, an associate professor at Tulane University School of Medicine and public health expert on tracking COVID-19 trends, wrote on X.
Hoerger, who runs a COVID-19 forecasting model that pulls heavily from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention wastewater surveillance data, estimates that 1 in 49 people, or about 2.1 percent of the U.S. population, are currently infected with the virus, according to Hoerger’s data.
Typically, COVID levels start to increase in November and reach a seasonal peak around the end of the year. However, through October of this year, the wastewater surveillance data showed COVID-19 transmission at nearly the lowest level ever.... Read More: Pikesville Patch