The United States has passed another grim milestone in the pandemic as the Omicron variant races across the country: COVID hospitalizations have now eclipsed a previous peak, which was seen last January.
There were 142,388 people hospitalized with COVID-19 as of Sunday, more than the previous record of 142,315 hospitalizations reported on Jan. 14, 2021, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Meanwhile, the seven-day average of daily hospitalizations reached 132,086 by Sunday, an 83% increase from two weeks ago, The New York Times reported.
Hospitalization numbers include people who test positive for the coronavirus after being admitted for other conditions, so some patients may have been admitted for causes other than COVID-19, the Times noted. There is no national database showing the actual number of patients hospitalized specifically for COVID-19.
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Younger patients driving COVID hospitalizations
COVID-19 hospitalizations are now being driven in large part by people younger than 60: Daily COVID-19 admissions among people older than 60 remain lower than last winter.
Data in areas that first saw Omicron surges now show deaths spiking sharply — not as fast as case rates, but fast enough to hint at future devastation.
The surge in cases has overwhelmed hospitals nationwide, and about one-quarter face critical staffing shortages, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Some states have deployed the National Guard to help, while others are having hospitals