WASHINGTON — Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Cory Booker said separately Sunday that they’ve tested positive for Covid-19 amid a rapidly spreading pandemic wave.
Both senators said they are vaccinated and have had booster shots. Though contracting the coronavirus while fully vaccinated is known as a breakthrough case, both attributed their mellow experiences so far with the deadly disease to their top-level inoculation.
“I regularly test for COVID & while I tested negative earlier this week, today I tested positive with a breakthrough case,” Warren, D-Mass., said on Twitter. She said she is feeling only mild symptoms and is “grateful for the protection provided against serious illness that comes from being vaccinated & boosted.”
Booker, D-New Jersey, later tweeted that he had mild symptoms Saturday and tested positive.
“I’m beyond grateful to have received two doses of vaccine and, more recently, a booster — I’m certain that without them I would be doing much worse,” he said.
While the it appears the omicron variant, believed to be a factor the December wave, is more contagious and may increase the chances of breakthrough infections, vaccinated Americans generally seem to be experiencing symptoms no worse than than when other variants broke through to inoculated patients.
Neither senator identified which strain of Covid they have.
The reported number of pandemic cases in the state of New York on Saturday represented a record. At the same time there were 97 percent fewer hospitalizations for Covid-19 patients in New York City compared with the pandemic’s last peak in 2020, NBC New York reported.
Cities and schools are bracing for a rapid rise in cases of infection with the omicron variant of the coronavirus amid the continued onslaught of the delta variant. A growing number of schools are closing as the Biden administration unveiled a new strategy Friday to use increased Covid testing to keep children in classrooms.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, warned Sunday that the next few weeks will put severe stress on hospital systems as the omicron variant is “raging around the world.”
There is no doubt about the omicron variant’s “extraordinary capability” for transmission, Fauci said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Although the latest coronavirus mutation appears to cause less severe symptoms in vaccinated people, Fauci warned that its transmissibility counteracts the mildness of the cases.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com