More people are ending up in emergency rooms and dying in recent weeks from COVID-19, federal health data showed.

The information agencies collect, known as surveillance data, that tracks cases and the spread of COVID-19 has become limited in the years since the start of the pandemic. However, COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths are indicators of the disease’s spread. The numbers for emergency room admissions and deaths have risen, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest data.

Insight into the uptick: Why are people suddenly getting COVID-19 this summer?

COVID-19, with its endless list of mutating sub-variants, appears to have more predictable seasons, with large jumps in cases during winter months, and smaller increases in the summer. Experts previously told that cases appear to be increasing this summer, however, Americans don’t face nearly the same risk of serious illness or death due to COVID-19 compared to earlier in the pandemic, thanks in part to vaccines and prior infections that keep people protected.

This doesn’t mean people still shouldn’t be concerned. In 2023, more than 75,000 people died from COVID-19. Nearly a million people wound up in U.S. hospitals last year.

There has been a 23% increase in emergency department visits in the past, according to CDC data posted on Monday. The data was taken from the week of June 22, the latest available data, which showed the weekly percentage of emergency room visits diagnosed as COVID-19 was at 0.9%. It showed a substantial rise in people being diagnosed in Hawaii and, to a lesser extent, in Arizona, New Mexico, Florida and Washington. The percentage of COVID-19 diagnoses has ticked upwards since early May, CDC data showed.

There hasn’t been a marked change in COVID-19-related hospitalizations. But deaths have jumped 14% in the past week. While that sounds alarming, it’s important to note it’s a percentage increase compared to recent numbers. It doesn’t mean the total number of deaths is anywhere near as high as they were early in the pandemic. 

CDC: Updated COVID vaccines and flu shots recommended for fall

Provisional data shows hundreds of deaths, compared with more than 2,000 deaths on average each week in late December and January. Before that, when the omicron variant dominated cases in 2021, weekly averages topped 20,000 deaths that winter.

Health officials noted during a recent panel to approve updated COVID-19 vaccines this fall that older people remain at heightened risk of the worst outcomes from COVID-19. The CDC recommends everyone 6 months and older receive the updated COVID-19 vaccine once it is available later this year.

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