On September 14, 2022

Covid levels ‘low’ as Omicron booster campaign kicks off

By Erin Petenko/VTDigger

Covid-19 levels in Vermont remain “low,” according to the Vermont Department of Health’s latest weekly surveillance update.

The data comes amid the first week of the Omicron booster, also called the bivalent vaccine, which became available Wednesday, Sept. 7 in Vermont. This booster specifically targets the BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants of Omicron. About 80% of recent samples of the virus in Vermont were the BA.5 subvariant, according to the department.

Courtesy CDC
Only Rutland and Bennington coun- ties were listed as having a medium risk as of last Thursday, Sept. 8

Health officials and doctors urged Vermonters to get boosted despite the state’s low Covid levels, pointing to the vaccine’s ability to prevent severe disease in high-risk people and limit the length and severity of symptoms in low-risk people.

Covid cases and hospitalizations in Vermont declined in the past week after increasing the week before. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention rated only two Vermont counties as having “medium” Covid levels on Thursday, down from six counties a week earlier. Rutland and Bennington are the only counties that still report medium Covid levels.

The health department reported 494 cases in the past week, down 9% from the week before. Cases have also declined nationally in recent weeks, according to The New York Times.

There were 35 new Covid hospital admissions in the past week, down 40% from the week before. As of Wednesday Sept. 7, four people were in intensive care for Covid.

The department reported eight additional Covid deaths this week, for a total of 715 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic in March 2020. That brings August’s total to 19 deaths, higher than the June and July total of 12 deaths each, but lower than May’s 32 deaths.

No deaths have been reported so far in September. Because of the delay in processing death certificates, the health department often takes days or weeks to update death data.

The department also reported vaccination data, which predates updated recommendations around the new Omicron booster. As of Wednesday, about 37% of Vermonters 5 and older were up-to-date on all recommended doses, including booster doses. That’s compared to the 83% of people in that age group that completed their primary series of vaccines.

According to the department, 5- to 11-year-olds had the lowest rate of vaccination, including the recommended booster dose for that age group. The second-lowest were 50- to 59-year-olds, who were recommended to get a second booster dose after the first.

Chittenden County had the highest rate of vaccination, with nearly half of residents 5 and older reported as up-to-date on their vaccinations. Addison and Washington counties also reported high vaccination rates. Essex County, by contrast, reported only 15% of its residents were up-to-date.  The vaccination rate for people of color was higher than non-Hispanic white Vermonters in every age group, although Native American and Pacific Islander Vermonters reported the lowest rates in the state, according to the health department.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Vt Legislature advances bill to ban toxic ‘forever chemicals’ from firefighting gear, dental floss, cleaning products

June 4, 2025
The Vermont Senate and House advance legislation (H.238) May 29 that would outlaw the use of toxic perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in firefighting gear, dental floss, cleaning products, and fluorine-treated containers—a critical step in reducing Vermonters’ exposure to these harmful substances. The Senate expanded the bill as passed by the House by adding a provision that…

To be continued…

June 4, 2025
A final compromise on education reform proved elusive late Friday, and at about 11 p.m., the Senate adjourned, followed by the House at about 11:30 p.m. As late as 10 p.m., legislative leaders were still hopeful that the six conferees (three House and three Senate members) could reach a deal sometime before midnight that would…

Nearing the end?

June 4, 2025
After passing several challenging bills in the last few weeks, the Vermont Legislature adjourned until June 16 due to an impasse over negotiations on our education transformation bill, H.454. Many other bills addressing housing, homelessness, healthcare, and several other major issues required compromises from both the House and the Senate in order to be passed…

Vermont gets $23 million from ongoing settlement with tobacco manufacturers

June 4, 2025
Attorney General Charity Clark announced last month that Vermont received a total of $23,132,483.92 from tobacco manufacturers under the tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (MSA). Annually, Vermont receives monies from tobacco manufacturers from the MSA, which resolved the state’s lawsuit filed in the 1990s. The settlement funds are credited to the state’s Tobacco Fund, and the…