Well into our "fourth COVID19 wave", it seems like the steady increase in Hospitalizations has finally plateaued. %Positive is above 5%, which is a problem for stats, and hospitalizations never really went anywhere close to the 2nd wave numbers (~500ish hospitalized). So 4th wave is looking to be > 2nd wave, but less than 3rd or 1st wave.
Is this it? Can I be optimistic now? Maryland has reached 50% Adult 1st dose vaccinated this past week: or 2.1 million 1st-dose vaccinated (6 million total population, ~4-million adults). With warmer weather coming about (outdoor meetings), huge uptake in vaccinations, it feels like we're past the hardest point of this pandemic. Last week, we peaked at over 95,000 vaccinations in one day (this week we're averaging ~70,000, the decline
probably due to the pause in J&J distribution). Either way, we're averaging in excess of 1% population-per-day (or ~1.75% of the >Age16 crowd)
Vaccination centers remain tightly booked: but my social circle (younger under 35 folks) seem able to get slots as long as we try to F5 for a bit. Its not "easy" to get a slot, but certainly possible. There seem to be multiple 3rd party free websites that help search for timeslots, with varying amounts of success (since the official government website really, really sucks for this). As discussed from months ago: the system remains mostly the same. The various "mass vaccination" sites (~6 of them in our state) do have one unified website (back when I got things for my parents: each of the mass vaccination sites were a different webpage), so its a wee bit easier now. But CVS, Giant, Riteaid, Walgreens, Walmart, Safeway, and each individual hospital system all have different websites and reservation systems.
A lot of them are still on priority 2B or 2C, so it sucks to go through the whole website registration process and then see that they aren't covering phase 3 (general public yet). Ah well, in that case, just go down to the next website and start over. Its highly annoying that this "state-wide priority phase" thing is so ad-hoc. The governor announces one thing, but the pharmacies / hospital systems do something else. I understand why this happens (There's more vaccine hesitancy in the rural-parts of the state: so those areas are opening up to phase 3 faster. The urban areas are staying behind, focusing on the prioritized populations since the vaccination rate seems higher). So having the different organizations make a
local decision makes sense to some degree, but it makes it a lot more annoying to get a vaccine.