CoronavirusCovid Updates: Omicron Drives New U.S. Virus Cases to a Daily Record

The U.S. breaks its single-day case record, nearly doubling the highest numbers from last winter.

Image
Waiting for coronavirus tests on Wednesday in Indianapolis. Long lines are forming at testing sites across the country, and record numbers of cases have been recorded this week.Credit...Cheney Orr/Reuters

With a caseload nearly twice that of the worst days last winter, the United States shattered its record for new daily coronavirus cases, a milestone that may not adequately illustrate the rapid spread of the Delta and Omicron variants because testing has slowed over the holidays.

As a second year of living with the pandemic was drawing to a close, the new daily case total topped 488,000 on Wednesday, according to a New York Times database. (The total was higher on Monday, but that number should not be considered a record because it included data from the long holiday weekend.)

New reported cases by day
Feb. 2020
Sept.
Apr. 2021
Nov.
Jun. 2022
Jan. 2023
200,000
400,000
600,000
800,000 cases
7-day average
19,508

These are days with a reporting anomaly.

Source: State and local health agencies. Daily cases are the number of new cases reported each day. The seven-day average is the average of the most recent seven days of data.

Wednesday’s seven-day average of new daily cases, 301,000, was also a record, compared with 267,000 the day before, according to the database. In the past week, more than two million cases have been reported nationally, and 15 states and territories reported more cases than in any other seven-day period.

The rise in cases has been driven by the highly contagious Omicron variant, which became dominant in the United States as of last week. So far, however, those increased cases have not resulted in more severe disease, as hospitalizations have increased only 11 percent and deaths have decreased slightly in the past two weeks.

Because Covid tests have been in short supply over the holidays, Wednesday’s numbers still may not fully illustrate the havoc caused by the two variants, which have sent caseloads soaring and have worsened a labor shortage, upending the hospitality, medical and travel industries, among others.

Demand for tests has outstripped supply, particularly in the last month as the Omicron variant has spread at an astonishing speed. And the holiday season offers its own disruptions to the U.S. case curve, with many testing sites offering limited hours and labs and government offices not open to report test results.

Last year, the national case curve showed pronounced declines after Thanksgiving and Christmas that did not reflect real decreases in new infections. The impact of holidays may be even more noticeable this time around, as illustrated by the Labor Day holiday in September, because states are reporting data less consistently than they did a year ago.

Before Tuesday, the seven-day U.S. average had peaked on Jan. 11 at 251,232. That was during a catastrophic winter when vaccinations were still relatively new. Today, more than 62 percent of Americans are fully vaccinated.

No matter what the true caseload is right now, the United States has confronted a new set of challenges as the Delta and Omicron variants have converged. The variants have disrupted holiday travel and gatherings, depleted hospital staffs and plunged the United States into another long winter.

Covid patients in hospitals and I.C.U.s
Early data may be incomplete.
Feb. 2020
Sept.
Apr. 2021
Nov.
Jun. 2022
Jan. 2023
50,000
100,000
150,000 hospitalized
Hospitalized
In I.C.U.s
0
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The seven-day average is the average of a day and the previous six days of data. Currently hospitalized is the most recent number of patients with Covid-19 reported by hospitals in the state for the four days prior. Dips and spikes could be due to inconsistent reporting by hospitals. Hospitalization numbers early in the pandemic are undercounts due to incomplete reporting by hospitals to the federal government.

Record caseloads have been reported in a laundry list of U.S. cities where vaccination rates are relatively high, including New York, Washington, Seattle, San Francisco, Boston, Atlanta and Detroit.

Experts say there are two reasons for the high numbers in urban areas: population density and more Covid testing.

Cities are tightly packed hubs for travel and socializing, which leaves people more susceptible to the highly contagious Omicron variant, said Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, a physician and epidemiologist at the University of California, San Francisco.

“Then you layer in on top of it that we do a lot of testing in these major urban centers precisely because we’re worried about big surges overwhelming hospitals,” she said on Wednesday.

In fact, she said, city caseloads may be higher than reported because of the rise in at-home tests that often don’t get reported to state officials, so they don’t end up in official case totals.

With global cases at a record, the W.H.O. warns of a ‘tsunami’ as U.S. officials stress Omicron’s ‘milder’ effects.

Video
bars
0:00/1:10
-0:00

transcript

W.H.O. Warns of a ‘Tsunami’ of Delta and Omicron Infections

The World Health Organization said the circulation of these coronavirus variants could drive a rapid spike in infections, but the agency added that early data showed vaccines continue to offer protection from severe illness and death.

“Right now, Delta and Omicron are twin threats that are driving up cases to record numbers. Which, again, is leading to spikes in hospitalizations and deaths. I’m highly concerned that Omicron being more transmissible, circulating at the same time as Delta, is leading to a tsunami of cases.” “These infections are occurring in both the vaccinated and unvaccinated people. However, it appears that vaccines are proving to be still protective because even though the numbers are going up exponentially in many countries, hospitalizations and, even within hospitalization — hospitalized people, the need for ventilation, the need for critical care, that doesn’t seem to be going up proportionately. We still cannot predict what this virus is going to do in people who have no prior immunity, either due to vaccine or natural infection.”

Video player loading
The World Health Organization said the circulation of these coronavirus variants could drive a rapid spike in infections, but the agency added that early data showed vaccines continue to offer protection from severe illness and death.CreditCredit...Kriston Jae Bethel for The New York Times

The World Health Organization warned on Wednesday that the ongoing circulation of the Delta variant and the emergence and rapid spread of Omicron could create a “tsunami” of infections that could overwhelm health care systems, even as top American health officials emphasized that early data showed Omicron infections producing milder illness.

The global average of new cases hit a new high of more than 930,000 on Tuesday, according to a New York Times database. The previous high was more than 827,000, reached in late April.

New reported cases by day
Feb. 2020
Sept.
Apr. 2021
Nov.
Jun. 2022
Jan. 2023
1,000,000
2,000,000
3,000,000 cases
7-day average
452,384

These are days with a reporting anomaly.

Source: Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University, U.S. state and local health agencies. Daily cases are the number of new cases reported each day. The seven-day average is the average of a day and the previous six days of data.

“Delta and Omicron are now twin threats driving up cases to record numbers, leading to spikes in hospitalization and deaths,” Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the W.H.O.’s director-general, said at a news conference in Geneva. “I am highly concerned that Omicron, being highly transmissible and spreading at the same time as Delta, is leading to a tsunami of cases.”

But along with the warnings, U.S. officials and the leading scientists at the U.N. agency said that the early data from places where Omicron was spreading offered some cautiously positive signs.

Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director, said at a White House news conference that even as cases had increased by around 60 percent over the past week, to around 240,000 cases recorded each day, hospital admissions and deaths were hinting at a milder wave of the virus.

“While our cases have substantially increased from last week, hospitalizations and deaths remain comparatively low right now,” she said, pointing to a seven-day average of hospitalizations of 9,000 per day, an increase of about 14 percent from last week. The seven-day average of daily deaths stood at roughly 1,100 per day, she added, a decrease of about 7 percent.

“This could be due to the fact that hospitalizations tend to lag behind cases by about two weeks,” she said, “but may also be due to early indications that we’ve seen from other countries like South Africa and United Kingdom — have milder disease from Omicron, especially among the vaccinated and boosted.”

Citing a series of international studies showing milder Omicron outcomes, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser, said at the same news conference that “the pattern and disparity between cases and hospitalizations strongly suggest that there will be a lower hospitalization-to-case ratio when the situation becomes more clear.”

Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, the chief scientific officer for the W.H.O., said that early real-world data indicated that the link between infection numbers and hospitalizations had been “disrupted.”

She cautioned that the evidence on Omicron is just emerging. “We can still not predict what this virus will do,” she said.

While it was increasingly clear that vaccinated people are being infected with Omicron, meaning that there was a reduction in the capacity of vaccines to neutralize the virus, the early evidence on the protection vaccination might provide was positive.

Vaccines, she said, still “appeared to be protective” against severe illness and death. But it was a complicated equation that needed to take into account a host of factors — including the clinical vulnerability of those being infected — and there was simply not enough data.

Dr. Mike Ryan, the head of the W.H.O. emergencies program, said that Omicron had yet to work its way into all parts of society — including the most vulnerable populations and the unvaccinated.

The Omicron outbreaks around the world, he said, started in primarily younger age groups and the variant is only now moving into older populations.

“I think we will still see decoupling from cases and severe disease,” he said. But the sheer number of daily cases — the “force of infection” — could lead to surges of patients and increased pressure on health care systems.

He also noted that even in countries with plentiful vaccines, there were large pockets of unvaccinated people, and it was simply too early to know if Omicron itself is less virulent than the variants that have come before.

Dr. Tedros said the “narrative going on right now that it is milder or less severe” might be dangerous since the high transmission rates alone could lead to an increase in hospitalizations and death.

“We should not undermine the bad news with the good news,” he said. “There are both elements here.”

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

New York City is being pummeled by Omicron.

Image
People waited for two hours on Wednesday for test kits and masks that were being handed out at a park in Brooklyn.Credit...Sarah Blesener for The New York Times

One New York City subway line was suspended on Wednesday and five others were running with delays because so many workers were out sick.

Twenty CityMD locations, where thousands of New Yorkers go to get tested for the coronavirus, were closed because of staffing shortages caused by the virus.

The Police Department has canceled days off for any officer healthy enough to work. Nearly one in three paramedics are out sick, and the Fire Department begged New Yorkers not to call 911 unless they were truly experiencing an emergency, after a spate of calls from people who were just looking for an ambulance ride to a hospital to get a coronavirus test.

Broadway shows are closing even as others reopen. Libraries are shuttering left and right.

New York City is exhausted, beleaguered and riddled with coronavirus thanks to the Omicron variant. More than 110,000 people have tested positive just since Christmas Day, and the positivity rate in some neighborhoods is approaching 30 percent.

Some hospitals in the city are under stress: Mount Sinai Health System said Wednesday it was deferring elective surgeries where possible.

But as Year Two of the pandemic limps offstage to make way for Year Three, New York remains open, with piecemeal slowdowns and closings.

Omicron, Mayor Bill de Blasio told New Yorkers shortly before Christmas, would provide the city with a “challenging few weeks,” banking on the uncertain proposition that the variant would follow the trend set in South Africa, one of the first countries to identify it. But because Omicron appears to cause milder disease than earlier iterations of the virus, because more than 80 percent of New Yorkers are fully vaccinated, and because he has ordered a vaccine mandate for all private-sector employers, he said he did not see a need for a 2020-style lockdown.

And so the city is carrying on with plans for a limited Times Square New Year’s Eve ball drop, even as the chairman of the City Council’s Health Committee urged Mr. de Blasio on Wednesday to cancel the celebration — as Rome, Paris and Tokyo have done with theirs.

Mayor-elect Eric Adams one-upped Mr. de Blasio, announcing on Wednesday that he would take the oath of office in Times Square shortly after the midnight ball drop.

Gov. Kathy C. Hochul announced a new statewide record of 67,000 daily cases on Wednesday — nearly 20,000 more than the previous record set Dec. 24 — and said that Covid-related hospital admissions jumped 10 percent in a single day and that deaths neared 100 for the first time in months.

New York City also set a record, with 39,591 new cases announced Wednesday by the governor’s office, nearly 30 percent more than the old record of 31,024, also set Dec. 24. And the city’s Covid hospitalizations are up to more than 2,700 — but the number of Covid patients in intensive care was 350 earlier this week, less than half the number during last winter’s surge.

The virus’s pressure was evident in many different arenas in the city. In the high-profile sex trafficking trial of Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime associate, the judge ordered the jury on Tuesday to deliberate through the New Year’s weekend if necessary, because it was only a matter of time before jurors or others involved might have to quarantine, risking a mistrial.

Signs of a half-shut city were everywhere. The W subway line was suspended early Wednesday morning. Clicking the status button for the A, D, E, N and R trains brought up a message: “You may wait longer” for a train, it said. “We’re running as much service as we can with the train crews we have available.”

In Downtown Brooklyn, Wanda Ortiz, who has had a fever, body aches and a scratchy throat since Christmas, summoned the strength to head over to the CityMD on Atlantic Avenue Wednesday morning to get tested. The clinic was dark.

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” Ms. Ortiz, 68, said as she read the note on the door. She wandered off to find another testing site, hoping she would not have to stand in line too long in the cold.

Joseph Goldstein, Alexandra E. Petri, Dana Rubinstein and Ali Watkins contributed reporting.

As Omicron spreads, officials ponder what it means to be ‘fully vaccinated.’

Image
Getting a second dose of a Covid vaccine in Phoenix this month. Though 62 percent of Americans currently qualify as fully vaccinated, just a third of them have also had a booster dose.Credit...Adriana Zehbrauskas for The New York Times

As the highly transmissible Omicron variant spreads across the United States, corporations, schools, governments and even sports leagues are reconsidering what it means to be “fully vaccinated” — and if that definition should include booster shots.

Now federal health officials, too, have taken on the question. Although top policymakers want to encourage Americans to get three doses, some would like to avoid changing the definition of a phrase that has become pivotal to daily life in much of the country, according to officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe internal deliberations.

Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, the C.D.C. director, said in an interview on Tuesday that she and other health officials were “working through that question” now.

Redefining “fully vaccinated” could lead to enormous logistical challenges, as even supporters of the idea concede, and it is likely to incite political backlash. Tens of millions of Americans who thought of themselves as vaccinated might discover that without boosters, they could lose access to restaurants, offices, concerts, events, gatherings — any place where proof of vaccination is required to enter.

That prospect is already becoming real in some European countries: France has said that its health passes, granting easy access to restaurants, museums, long-distance trains and other public places, will expire for some adults who fail to take up a booster shot within seven months of becoming eligible. Officials in Britain have suggested they may take a similar step this year.

In the United States, such a change could risk undermining trust in public health officials after two years of shifting recommendations, experts said. Some Americans may feel that the goal posts have been moved again, and too suddenly.

The C.D.C. currently defines “fully vaccinated” as those who have received two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna shots, or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson shot.

Although experts continue to believe that these regimens protect against hospitalization and death, the vaccines’ effectiveness against infection with the virus wanes over time. What had been considered full vaccination is substantially less effective against infection with Omicron, though a booster dose is likely to shore up the immune system’s defenses.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Georgia is the latest state to ask the National Guard to help hospitals.

Image
Georgia is asking the National Guard for support at hospitals and testing sites as the state is overwhelmed with cases.Credit...Dustin Chambers for The New York Times

As the Omicron variant besieges health care systems across the country, Georgia has joined the growing list of states calling on the National Guard for reinforcements.

Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, said on Wednesday that the state would deploy around 200 troops to hospitals and testing sites starting next week. About half of them will be sent to hospitals, while the others will provide support at testing sites and other locations.

This month, Indiana, New Hampshire, Maine and New York have also asked the Guard to help staff hospitals and nursing homes, as health care workers themselves are increasingly infected.

Though hospitalization levels in the United States remain much lower than those reached during the peaks of last winter and spring, the virus surge has stretched health care systems and strained overtaxed workers.

Covid patients in hospitals and I.C.U.s
Early data may be incomplete.
Apr. 2020
Oct.
Apr. 2021
Oct.
Apr. 2022
Oct.
2,000
4,000
6,000 hospitalized
Hospitalized
In I.C.U.s
0
Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The seven-day average is the average of a day and the previous six days of data. Currently hospitalized is the most recent number of patients with Covid-19 reported by hospitals in the state for the four days prior. Dips and spikes could be due to inconsistent reporting by hospitals. Hospitalization numbers early in the pandemic are undercounts due to incomplete reporting by hospitals to the federal government.

In Georgia, Mr. Kemp said on Wednesday that hospital workers in the state were being overwhelmed by people who needed coronavirus tests but weren’t experiencing severe symptoms.

“We urge Georgians to be patient,” he said, adding that in August, the state authorized 2,500 troops to be deployed “for times such as these.”

As it did in other states, the Covid situation in Georgia took a dramatic turn this month. Hospitalizations have been rising, averaging more than 2,000 a day, but they remain far below peak levels, according to a New York Times database. While deaths have also been increasing, the state’s daily average of 29 is a fraction of the record, 135, set on Jan. 30.

However, the state has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the country, with only 51 percent of people fully vaccinated.

A sizable number of patients remain infected with the Delta variant. On Tuesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that Omicron cases made up a significantly lower percentage of the overall U.S. caseload than it had previously estimated.

Nevertheless, Omicron has a considerably easier time than Delta infecting vaccinated people. The coming cascade of patients threatens to overwhelm hospitals in states beyond Georgia, even as medical workers themselves test positive.

The 2022 Westminster Dog Show is postponed over Omicron’s surge.

Image
The Westminster Kennel Club’s board of governors announced on Wednesday that it was postponing its 2022 dog show, which had been scheduled for late January.Credit...John Minchillo/Associated Press

The 146th edition of the Westminster Dog Show, a midwinter tradition in New York City for more than a century, has been postponed amid fears about Omicron’s spread.

“The health and safety of all participants in the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show are paramount,” the Westminster Kennel Club said in a statement on Wednesday. “We appreciate the community’s continued interest and support as we delay the show to a time when we can safely convene.”

The event had been scheduled to take place in late January. Officials did not announce a new date for the show but said they planned to hold it sometime in 2022.

Officials postponed this year’s show to June from February over concerns about the virus. The show was moved from Madison Square Garden, its longtime home, and held outdoors at Lyndhurst, a riverside estate in Tarrytown, N.Y., north of the city. No outside spectators were allowed in 2021.

The changes to the last show were necessary, organizers said, to ensure the event could take place and still comply with the “ever-changing government restrictions.”

Cases continue to climb in New York City, averaging more than 23,000 new cases a day, according to a New York Times database. The spread of two highly contagious variants — Omicron and Delta — have led to record case counts nationwide, disrupting travel plans and exacerbating worker shortages.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

An overwhelmed testing site in Connecticut is forced to close after a gun threat.

Image
A Bristol, Conn., testing site was forced to shut down after a woman who said she was waiting in line threatened to shoot people.Credit...Amanda Morris for the New York Times

BRISTOL, Conn. — Crowds grew increasingly frustrated and unruly as wait times stretched for hours at a coronavirus testing site here that is run by Genesys Diagnostics, an Oakdale-based company. Some were getting out of their cars to ask how much longer it would take — others were arguing with the staff.

“We opened at 12, and when we came, this place was already flooded,” said Xavier Quintana, a specimen collector who estimated that there were close to a thousand cars packed into two parking lots.

People were growing panicked, Mr. Quintana said, and the staff could not keep up with the demand. Only a few people were working out of a small trailer set up in one parking lot.

Then, a woman who said she was waiting in line called the company shortly before 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, threatening to shoot people at the site.

It was shut down within minutes, forcing many to go home without a test. The police did not find a gun or a credible threat on the scene but were investigating the episode, said Lt. Geoffrey Lund, the public information officer for the Bristol Police Department.

On Wednesday morning, a site in nearby New Britain that is also run by Genesys Diagnostics shut down after people became agitated, the site’s manager, Aaron Williams, said.

“People are getting fatigued and getting mad and causing problems,” Mr. Williams said.

Staffing shortages have been an issue at numerous testing sites, he said, especially in areas where employees are being asked to work outside in cold weather.

New reported cases by day
Apr. 2020
Oct.
Apr. 2021
Oct.
Apr. 2022
Oct.
5,000
10,000 cases
7-day average
126
Source: State and local health agencies. Daily cases are the number of new cases reported each day. The seven-day average is the average of the most recent seven days of data.

At the Bristol site, the size of the staff was increased to about eight employees the next day, and police cars were set up around the site to limit the size of the crowd to about 100 cars at a time.

José Mamguia, a 22-year-old resident of Bristol who was turned away on Tuesday after the shooting threat, nodded off in his car on Wednesday after about two hours of waiting in line.

By 1:30 p.m., some in line had already been waiting for over four hours. Erin Dunn, 43, of Bristol, had arrived at 9 a.m. and was growing increasingly fatigued. As a retired nurse, she understood the stress that the staff must have been under, but she was starting to feel symptoms after a probable exposure to the virus.

“I could go to sleep right now,” she said.

What she wanted was more information. Nobody had told her how long the wait would take or what the process would be. Messages left for Genesys Diagnostics on Wednesday were not returned.

Grace Bianchi, 63, had already been to the New Britain site earlier in the morning. People there were getting mad and driving through barriers, she said, and she and her husband were told to leave and go to the Bristol site instead.

“I didn’t know I had to have lunch and dinner in my car,” Mrs. Bianchi said as she scanned seven other rows of cars in the parking lot. She needed to get a test to return to work next week.

“This is ridiculous,” she said. “Working people should go first.”

She and her husband didn’t get tested until 3:30 p.m.

There is no evidence that protesters and threats have slowed down the country’s mass vaccination campaign. A spokesman for the National Sheriffs’ Association, Patrick Royal, said on Wednesday that his group had not heard of widespread instances of violence at testing sites across the country.

Adeel Hassan contributed reporting.

With his inauguration ceremony postponed, Eric Adams will be sworn in on New Year’s Eve in Times Square.

Image
Eric Adams will be sworn in by the city clerk, using Mr. Adams’s family Bible. Credit...Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

Eric Adams will be sworn in as the 110th mayor of New York City in Times Square early Saturday, shortly after the Waterford Crystal ball drops on 2021.

“Times Square has long been synonymous with the New Year — a place of excitement, renewal, and hope for the future,” Mr. Adams said in a statement. “These are the same themes that animated my campaign and will inform my mayoralty, as I prepare to lead the city out of this challenging period.”

The city clerk will swear him in using Mr. Adams’s family Bible, and he will take office on Saturday at the tourist hot spot sometimes called the “Crossroads of the World.”

Mr. Adams has made a point of reveling in New York City’s nightlife, something that he has cast as boosterism for the city’s struggling club and restaurant scene. His swearing-in will come on the heels of Times Square’s annual New Year’s Eve celebration, featuring live performances by KT TunstaChlöe, and Journey.

Some epidemiologists have argued that Mayor Bill de Blasio should cancel the outdoor event in deference to the spread of the Omicron variant, but he has resisted, instead agreeing to limit the crowds to 15,000 and requiring masks and full vaccination.

Mr. Adams recently canceled an indoor inauguration ceremony he had planned for Saturday evening at Brooklyn’s opulently restored Kings Theatre, citing the surge in coronavirus cases. It isn’t clear when the ceremony will be rescheduled.

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

In hard-hit Bergamo, Italy, people rush to get tested as an Omicron wave looms.

Image
Lining up at a pharmacy to book nasal swab tests, in Milan, Italy, last week.Credit...Luca Bruno/Associated Press

In Italy’s northern valleys near Bergamo, which were ravaged by the coronavirus in 2020, a new surge of infections has confronted doctors with a completely different scenario from the first wave.

About 93 percent of adults in the Serio river valley are vaccinated. Hospitals are not overwhelmed. The biggest problem now, said Mario Sorlini, a doctor in the area, is keeping up with the demand for nasal swabs as people rush to get tested.

“In the beginning, the situation was dramatic because patients got sick and died very quickly, before we even had the time to see them,” Dr. Sorlini said. “Now we have many cases, but with much milder symptoms.”

Still, cases are rising fast, and so are fears that the surge of infections could still swamp hospitals. On Wednesday, as Italy reported more than 98,000 new daily cases, a record, the government extended its vaccination mandate to hotels, outdoor restaurant dining, swimming pools, public transportation, fairs and practices for team sports. The new requirements will not apply to people who have recently recovered from the virus and will become effective on Jan. 10.

While the Delta variant is still dominant in the country, Omicron, which represented 28 percent of the cases as of last week, is quickly catching up. Italy’s health authorities said that, given its higher transmissibility, Omicron would soon become the leading variant.

On Christmas, Italy made masks compulsory outdoors and extended its Green Pass requirement, making proof of vaccination, recent recovery from the virus or a negative swab test necessary even to drink a coffee at a bar’s counter. The government also closed nightclubs and banned crowded parties and celebrations.

But with studies showing that vaccines offer protection against severe illness and death from Omicron, Renato Brunetta, Italy’s public administration minister, said he hoped to make vaccinations compulsory for all workers. That would push another two or three million people to get vaccinated, he said, bringing Italy a step closer to the near-total lockdown of unvaccinated people, similar to the ones Germany and Austria have imposed.

The labor minister, Andrea Orlando, told the newspaper La Stampa that the spread of the Omicron variant had forced the government to consider “limiting the circulation of unprotected people.”

Many nations are emphasizing vaccination as a weapon in the current surge, believing that total lockdowns cause too great an economic toll and that even days-long quarantine periods for people exposed to the virus should be reduced or done away with. The Italian government on Wednesday announced that it would lift a quarantine mandate for people who had received a booster — or a second shot in the four previous months — and had been exposed to the virus. Unvaccinated people would still have to quarantine for 10 days.

Experts say that since hospitalizations and deaths remain lower than in earlier waves, requiring vaccinated people to quarantine after being exposed to the virus would unnecessarily take large numbers of workers away from their jobs.

“If we no longer have doctors and nurses going to the hospital and there are no longer bus or train drivers, the country stops,” said Matteo Bassetti, an infectious-disease doctor in the northwestern city of Genoa. “We cannot afford that,” he added.

World Junior Championship, a showcase for hockey’s top prospects, is canceled.

Image
Rogers Place arena in Edmonton, Alberta, sat empty after the remainder of the IIHF World Junior Hockey Championship was canceled on Wednesday because of the spread of the coronavirus among players. Credit...Jason Franson/The Canadian Press, via Associated Press

The World Junior Championship, an annual showcase of the next generation of hockey stars, which was already underway in Canada, was canceled on Wednesday as the rapid spread of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus continued to wreak havoc on the sports world.

The International Ice Hockey Federation, the sport’s global governing body, said it was scrapping the tournament after a player on the Russian national team tested positive for the virus, which would have necessitated the cancellation of the third game in two days, between Russia and Slovakia on Wednesday.

Two previous games — between Switzerland and the United States and between Finland and the Czech Republic — had already been canceled because of positive cases.

The cancellation was an ominous sign for sports leagues, including the N.H.L. and the N.B.A., which have been struggling to maintain schedules amid a steep surge in cases driven by the convergence of the Omicron and Delta variants.

On Tuesday, U.S.A. Hockey said the final two games of the women’s national team’s My Why Tour, which had been set for Jan. 3 and Jan. 6 in Alberta, Canada, had been canceled, less than a month before the team was scheduled to leave for the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.

The World Juniors, which was also being held in Alberta, is a beloved post-Christmas tradition in Canada, transfixing fans in the country, which has historically dominated the event.

The United States won last year’s tournament, which features some of the best men’s hockey players under 20, who train for years to reach the event and are considered top prospects for the N.H.L.

Over the past decade, the tournament’s most valuable players have included the New York Rangers’ first overall pick Alexis Lafreniére (2020), Filip Forsberg of the Nashville Predators (2014) and John Gibson of the Anaheim Ducks (2013).

Luc Tardif, the president of the International Ice Hockey Federation, said the organization had begun the tournament “with full confidence” in the protocols that had been put in place, but then had to readjust them as cases surged. The protocols included daily testing and a team quarantine requirement when positive cases were confirmed.

“Unfortunately, this was not enough,” Mr. Tardif said in a statement. “We now have to take some time and focus on getting all players and team staff back home safely.”

John Vanbiesbrouck, general manager of the United States National Junior Team, said he was proud of the team and would work to ensure they get home safely.

“Our hearts go out to the players and staff of not just our country,” he said in a statement, “but every nation, who have worked so hard, and sacrificed so much, to get to this point.”

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Delta Air Lines updates its Covid-19 policies after the C.D.C.’s new guidance.

Image
Delta Air Lines was one of the first companies to adapt to the shorter isolation period recommended for people with Covid-19.Credit...Karsten Moran for The New York Times

Delta Air Lines has updated its policies for workers who get sick with the coronavirus, soon after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shortened its recommended isolation period for Americans infected with Covid-19.

Delta was one of the first companies to adapt to the updated guidance, which it had publicly called on the C.D.C. to do. The Biden administration and major companies have said shortening the isolation period will help keep society functioning, but unions have worried it could allow companies to pressure employees to come back to work.

The airline’s new policy, dated Tuesday, provides five days of paid leave for workers who test positive for the coronavirus to isolate, according to an internal communication to company leaders obtained by The New York Times. And it encourages, but does not require, a Covid test to go back to work, going a step further than the C.D.C. guidance, which does not include a recommendation for additional testing. Delta’s new protocols make no mention of whether returning employees should have improving symptoms, as suggested by the C.D.C.

Many airlines have had to cancel a spate of flights during the busy holiday travel season, blaming staff shortages caused by a spike in infections. Delta and other airlines asked the C.D.C. last week to update its isolation recommendations, which some public health officials said were outdated. Delta warned that the 10-day isolation period that the C.D.C. put in place last year could “significantly impact” its operations as the Omicron variant of the virus rapidly spreads, and it suggested a five-day isolation period with an “appropriate testing protocol.”

A spokesman for the airline said Delta is “strongly recommending our people get tested prior to returning to work, regardless of symptoms (or absence of).” He did not say whether the airline would request to see the results of any test. Delta requires all employees to wear masks in work areas, in airports and on flights.

Delta will extend its five days of Covid-specific paid time off, which it offers only to fully vaccinated individuals, by two additional days if an employee tests positive at the end of the initial isolation period, according to the memo. It previously offered 10 days of paid leave for workers with Covid.

The airline also put in place new guidelines for workers who are exposed to Covid for long periods of time without the protection of masks. (The guidelines echo new parameters outlined by the C.D.C.) Those who have received a booster shot or are recently fully vaccinated do not need to quarantine. Those who are unvaccinated or who received their primary shots longer ago should quarantine for five days after a high-risk exposure.

Delta said that 97 percent of its work force is vaccinated. While other carriers, like United Airlines, have mandated vaccines for their work force, Delta has opted to charge unvaccinated workers an additional $200 a month to remain on the company’s health plan.

Some scientists have been critical of the C.D.C.’s decision to shorten the isolation period without a requirement for testing. The Association of Flight Attendants is asking airlines to require a negative test for employees at the end of a five-day isolation period. It is also asking that unvaccinated workers be required to abide by a 10-day isolation period and that employees be provided with high-quality masks for at least five days after returning to work.

Several states expand unemployment benefits to workers who refused Covid-19 vaccines.

Image
Demonstrators protest vaccine mandates outside the Florida Capitol in November. Florida is one of five states where workers who lost their jobs for refusing vaccination are eligible to receive unemployment benefits.Credit...Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press

Several months after ending federal emergency unemployment programs early, some Republican-led states have passed laws that would allow workers to receive unemployment benefits if they were fired for refusing a Covid-19 vaccine.

Although workers who lost their jobs for not complying with employer mandates would typically be ineligible to receive such benefits, Florida, Iowa, Arkansas, Tennessee and Kansas have moved to expand benefits to those unvaccinated workers.

Other states like Wyoming, Wisconsin and Missouri are considering similar changes.

Florida, Iowa, Arkansas and Tennessee — which have Republican governors — were among the first to end some or all federal unemployment benefits early, which state officials blamed for worker shortages in many industries. Kansas, which is led by a Democratic governor and Republican legislature, ended its pandemic unemployment benefits in September, when the federal programs expired.

Opponents say the changes set a dangerous precedent and could embolden people to refuse a vaccine as the coronavirus causes a record number of cases across the nation and millions of people remain unvaccinated. About 62 percent of the nation is fully vaccinated, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“I can’t stress enough how blatantly hypocritical this is, considering how they ended pandemic benefits early and robbed people who desperately needed that income support,” said Judy Conti, the director of government affairs for the National Employment Law Project, a liberal advocacy group. “And yet they’re willing to go out on a limb and provide benefits to people who are refusing to take vaccines because they believe complete misinformation.”

State leaders say the changes are necessary to give employees the freedom to choose whether they receive a vaccine. Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, a Republican, said the new policy would give employees “the assurance that they will still receive unemployment benefits despite being fired for standing up for their beliefs.”

“This is a major step forward in protecting Iowans’ freedoms and their abilities to make health care decisions based on what’s best for themselves and their families,” Ms. Reynolds said in a statement after the state legislature passed the law in October.

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly, a Democrat, said states should take the lead on vaccine mandate laws after approving a bill that would broaden vaccine exemptions and extend unemployment benefits to unvaccinated workers who lost their jobs.

“I have been clear that I believe it is too late to impose a federal standard,” Ms. Kelly said in a statement last month. “States have been leading the fight against Covid-19 for nearly two years.”

Jared Walczak, the vice president of state projects at the conservative Tax Foundation, said that employers could end up paying more in unemployment insurance taxes if more workers became eligible for benefits and they were charged for the workers they dismissed.

The impact of the new laws remains to be seen, employment experts said. An October poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation found that 5 percent of unvaccinated adults said they left their jobs over vaccine mandates.

But the effects could be more widespread if other states follow and if President Biden’s mandate for large companies to require employees to get a vaccine or submit to weekly testing is upheld. The Supreme Court said it would hold a special hearing next month to assess the legality of the measure.

“​The real issue would be if the employer mandate was allowed to go into effect in January for large employers,” said Andrew Stettner, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, a progressive think tank. “For that, you might be looking at tens of thousands of individuals across the country.”

Advertisement

SKIP ADVERTISEMENT