Science Summer Covid cases are rising across the U.S. — Is it time for a vaccine? - The uptick in cases, caused by a variant of the virus nicknamed "razor blade throat," comes as many Americans have likely gone a year or longer without a Covid shot.

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Summer Covid cases are rising across the U.S. — Is it time for a vaccine?
NBC News (archive.ph)
By Shreya Srinivasan and Berkeley Lovelace Jr.
2025-07-23 17:18:47GMT

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A person wears a mask on the train in New York City, on June 5. Rates of positive Covid tests have been increasing in recent weeks in more than half of the country. Selcuk Acar / Anadolu via Getty Images file

As Covid cases begin to rise this summer, many may be wondering: What are my risks, and is it time to get another vaccine?

As of July 15, Covid cases were growing or likely growing in 27 states including Texas, Illinois, Kentucky, Virginia and Ohio, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Rates of positive Covid tests have also been increasing in recent weeks, the CDC says, specifically in the southern region of the country.

N.B.1.8.1 is the current dominant variant in the United States, accounting for 43% of all new Covid cases, according to the CDC. It’s an offshoot of the XVD.1.5.1 strain, a descendant of the omicron variant. N.B.1.8.1 was responsible for a surge in hospitalizations in China earlier this year.

It’s been nicknamed “razor blade throat,” as there have been anecdotal reports of some people getting painful sore throats, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee. Schaffner noted, however, that sore throats have been a common symptom of Covid since it first began spreading.

“I doubt the clinical spectrum of Covid has changed substantially,” Schaffner said.

Do I need a Covid booster? When will the new vaccines be available?
The uptick in cases comes as many Americans have likely gone a year or longer without a Covid shot.

In May, the Food and Drug Administration asked drugmakers to update their Covid vaccines to target the LP.8.1 strain, a descendent of JN.1, which began spreading widely in 2023 and is another offshoot of omicron. LP.8.1 currently accounts for 31% of all new cases, per the CDC.

The new shots won’t be available until the fall, and are expected to be approved only for adults 65 and up and kids and adults with at least one medical condition that puts them at risk of severe illness. Healthy kids and adults who want a shot may have to find an older version or pay out of pocket. A single dose can cost as much as $140.

Experts say, however, that population immunity — whether from vaccination, prior infection or both — may shield much of the public for now.

“While we don’t have a lot of high level of immunity in the population right now, because it’s been so long, we may have enough low level immunity to just make it a little bit harder for that virus to transmit easily from person to person,” said Andy Pekosz, an infectious disease researcher at Johns Hopkins University.

Indeed, weekly hospitalization rates have remained low, suggesting that the new variant may not be leading to severe illness.

The number of cases are still drastically lower than those this time last year, when the test positivity rate peaked in August at 17.9%. The 2025 season has yet to scrape 5%.

Pekosz said it isn’t unusual for cases to rise during the summer time, when people are likely to crowd indoors to escape the heat. However, he believes that if there is a summer surge of cases, it will be a small one.

“The variants have been around for a while and haven’t caused any major surges up until date,” Pekosz said. “So again, I’m hopeful that if we see a surge, it’ll be a low level surge compared to previous years.”

Dr. Ofer Levy, director of the precision vaccines program at Boston Children’s Hospital, who has advised the FDA, said people who are at high risk of severe illness still may want to consider getting a Covid shot, if they can find one.

High risk groups include:
  • Older adults
  • People with weakened immune systems
  • Pregnant women
  • Those with underlying health conditions, such as asthma and heart disease
Getting a shot is especially important, Levy said, for those who haven’t had one in over a year and whose immunity has likely waned.

“If you’re in a high risk group and you’re in a state where cases are rising, you may want to just get the first available appointment and get a shot to protect yourself,” he said.

People at high risk can then consider getting an additional Covid shot when the updated vaccines are distributed in the fall, he said.

Covid has two waves a year
Schaffner, of Vanderbilt, said people in the high risk groups may also want to consider wearing a mask during indoor activities, such as the movies.

Healthy adults and children may be able to wait longer before getting another shot, Levy added.

“If you’re in a lower risk group, that’s where things get fuzzy,” he said. “I mean if you want a vaccine and your health care provider concurs and you can get it.”

Dr. Michael Phillips, an infectious disease doctor at NYU Langone, said that he sees mostly immunocompromised and older adults test positive for the virus. For those who haven’t gotten a Covid shot in years, Phillips said he doesn’t think they should worry just yet.

“If you’re younger, otherwise healthy, I think you’re OK,” Phillips said. “If you have underlying pulmonary disease, you know, if you’re an older age group, now that’s a time when you should be really talking to a doctor and saying, ‘Gosh, should I be getting a booster for Covid?’”

He said that the amount of positive Covid tests NYU Langone has seen has decreased 40% since February.

Fatima Amaeka, a senior analyst at the Center for Outbreak Response Innovation at Johns Hopkins, said she expects the current wave to peak around September.

Schaffner said to expect another wave in the late fall and winter.

“[Covid] has two increases each year,” he said. “Everyone is familiar with the winter increase that goes along with flu and RSV.”
 
We didn't shut down society and render a significant part of the population in urban center permanently brain-damaged by that for any of those diseases.
And we sure as hell didn't do it, and haven't done it, for heart disease and cancer, which killed more than three times as many as the coof during the 'pandemic', and still kills by the hundreds of thousands every year. Had the coof, caused me far less aggro than the heart issues and the cancer.

And no, those who imposed the unnecessarily oppressive measures upon the American people have not been forgiven, and sure won't be forgotten. Only thing that saved 'them' from getting their asses handed to them was some overly-delayed moves by the courts.

Next time, and there will be a next time, 'they' will find people either ignoring what they say, disobeying any oppressive measures, working around such measures, going to court immediately to get injunctions, and getting online to spread the word. In their lust for short-term power, these wannabe despots permanently gave up their credibility. Fuck 'them'.
 
And we sure as hell didn't do it, and haven't done it, for heart disease and cancer, which killed more than three times as many as the coof during the 'pandemic', and still kills by the hundreds of thousands every year. Had the coof, caused me far less aggro than the heart issues and the cancer.
I understand the point you're attempting to make, but someone else pigging out on a bacon mcdouble every day isn't going to send their arterial plaque my way by coughing near me. Same for cancer.
COVID being a communicable disease was central to any justification attempt for the lockdowns.
 
I really can't help but see red every time I see an article like this pop up, MATI hats aside. These fuckwits lied to society at large, nonstop, and turned them into rabid dogs during the lockdown era. Less crowded streets aside, people were screaming at hair triggers and mental health in general went down the shitter more than it did in a while. They want us to forget that and just let it happen again.
B-b-b-but did you SEE that line go up? Can't you just be nice and do that all again? Huh?
 
I prefer not getting random heart attacks due to my RNA being experimented on by unvetted government cumshots. I'm staying pureblooded and unclotted for as long as I can.

Maybe if Bill "Shit Kike" Gates gets his vaxx mosquitos they can force it on me in a roundabout fag-tier blood disease way.
 
Anyway I’ll take this one like I took the previous ones, which is to say not at all.

Are you sure? You don't want to be responsible for overwhelming the ICUs with your slightly sore throat. If you don't qualify because you're not sick or old you can find somewhere that has some leftovers from an old obsolete batch and pay $140 for the privilege! It's kind of a bargain, really, because if the vaccine is past its expiration date it's even more Safe and Effective. I think. Probably.

Apparently there is still some money to be made from paranoiac retards who can't read between the lines and see what is almost a straight admission that it doesn't matter if your vax is outdated because it does fuck all anyway.
 
Ah yes. The Vaxx. An unhappy memory for half of the country who did not want to play side-effect roulette and the only reason it ended was because of a bunch of ballsy Canadian truckers whose honking made the elites shit the bed so hard they kicked off the Ukraine war as a distraction.

Good job in radicalizing most of the populace by the way. /pol/ can only dream of being that influential.
 
Apparently there is still some money to be made from paranoiac retards who can't read between the lines and see what is almost a straight admission that it doesn't matter if your vax is outdated because it does fuck all anyway
Well, the real money is made from the taxpayer, who funds all of this nonsense, but I do see your point.
The single dumbest group is Boomers: these are people who have had vaccinations for their entire lives - people who personally had relatives who were crippled by polio, and were taught in school about how rubella/smallpox/diphtheria etc were largely eradicated by vaccines and who were explicitly taught that vaccines prevent one from getting the disease. Then in 2020, they all started regurgitating the new lie that "No, vaccines don't stop you from getting sick....you just get less sick...maybe."
When you tell them this is the exact opposite of what has been true for their own entire lives, they'll argue with you!
 
At this point, any news about Covid is a joke. People don't want to think about that shit anymore and anyone who still believes in the Covid lies are the old people and the retarded redditors who prefer to remain in their homes forever due to the Covid scare.

The news reeks of "plz take our vaccinez for realz, peoplez! It'll be so effective, we promise!"
 
And we sure as hell didn't do it, and haven't done it, for heart disease and cancer, which killed more than three times as many as the coof during the 'pandemic', and still kills by the hundreds of thousands every year. Had the coof, caused me far less aggro than the heart issues and the cancer.
Funny enough the rate of preventable deaths rose greatly during covid due to resources being taken away from cancer treatment in hospitals plus people being afraid to go to the doctor and catch the coof. Couple that with hospitals grifting the system and labeling every single death under their care a covid death and you get he inflated death toll.....It's sickening.
 
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