COVID-19 cases in Minnesota's hospital intensive care units are nearing pandemic lows even as coronavirus infections are nudging upward.
Minnesota reported 23 COVID-19 ICU hospitalizations on Friday, which is well below the peak of 369 on Dec. 15 and is the lowest total since mid-July.
The decline occurred despite an increase in total COVID-19 hospitalizations in Minnesota from 183 on April 10 to 207 on Friday. The seven-day average of new coronavirus infections also rose from 373 per day in the week ending March 20 to 615 per day in the week ending April 13.
Health officials hope that the COVID-19 pandemic continues to follow a trend of declining severity and ICU admissions that began in mid-December when the severe delta variant of the coronavirus was replaced by a faster-spreading but milder omicron variant. Patients placed in ICUs often needed ventilators to breathe and had much higher death rates.
The decline in ICU hospitalizations likely reflects the number of people with immunity from COVID-19 vaccinations or from recent infections during the omicron wave, said Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy. Studies have shown that the COVID-19 vaccines are more effective at preventing deaths and hospitalizations than infections.
"The vaccine and previous immunity surely can have a big impact" on the number of severe COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, he said.
However, he cautioned that immunity wanes and future viral strains could be more resistant to the vaccine, so the current progress could be temporary. The pandemic has been unpredictable, he added. Researchers still are baffled, for example, about why an alpha viral variant caused COVID-19 waves in Minnesota and Michigan at this time last year but not in other states.
"Some of this, we just don't know," he said.