COVID activity continued to rise in many European countries last week, up 14% compared to the previous week in people ages 65 and older, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) said today in a regular update.In the United States, COVID indicators continue to fall, with the BA.5 Omicron variant still dominant, but newer subvariants are slowly making more of a mark.Europe's seniors account for most new hospitalizationsThe pooled rate in Europe for all age-groups has been rising for the past 3 weeks, and the impact on seniors is leading to rising hospital indicators.However, deaths—often a lagging indicator—continue to fall, and the ECDC noted that deaths declined 10% last week compared to the week before.
The agency said forecasts predict that deaths will start showing an increasing trend in the middle of October.The ECDC said the rise in cases is likely due to changes in population mixing following the summer break, with no indication that the rise is linked to changes in circulating SAR-CoV-2 variants.Similarly, the United Kingdom's Health Security Agency (HSA) yesterday said most COVID indicators rose last week, with hospital admissions still highest in people ages 85 and older.Susan Hopkins, MBBCh, the HSA's chief medical officer, said the further increases are concerning, with hospitalization rates at their highest levels in months. "Outbreaks in hospitals and care homes are also on the rise," she said.Denmark's cases rose last week in all five of its regions, the Statens Serum Institut said yesterday in an update.
Hospitalizations are also rising, with people ages 70 to 89 making up the largest proportion of new COVID admissions. However, officials added that intensive care unit (ICU) admissions