The Morning: Colin Powell, “mix and match” boosters, a subway derailment

Two charts showing the risks to the vaccinated.

Good morning. Colin Powell's death highlights the continuing Covid risks to older Americans with medical conditions.

Colin Powell in 2002, when he was secretary of state.Brooks Kraft/Corbis, via Getty Images

The threat, in perspective

Colin Powell's death at 84 underscores the continuing risk that Covid-19 presents to older people — even if they are fully vaccinated, as Powell was.

For vaccinated Americans in their 70s and 80s, Covid remains more dangerous on average than many other everyday risks, including falls, choking, gunshot wounds or vehicle accidents:

Covid data is an annualized rate from the week of Aug. 29 to Sept. 4, and is a sample from 16 U.S. jurisdictions. Data for other causes is from 2019.Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

The numbers in this chart are averages, of course, covering a wide range of situations. They encompass both healthy older people and those with compromised immune systems (as was the case with Powell, who had multiple myeloma and Parkinson's disease). At every age, Covid presents considerably more danger to people with serious underlying medical conditions.

"Vaccines turn Covid into a mild disease," Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, wrote yesterday. But mild infections can "kill vulnerable people," he explained.

For older people with a medical condition, the vaccines both sharply reduce the dangers of Covid and still leave Covid as a meaningful threat, one that arguably justifies a different approach to day-to-day life. Spending time indoors with an unmasked, untested grandchild or eating a meal inside a restaurant may not be worth the risk, at least until case counts have fallen to low levels.

For older people who are healthy, the risks may be more tolerable. Covid is probably not vastly more dangerous than other activities that people do without thinking — like driving a vehicle or climbing a flight of stairs — but it is not zero risk, either.

"Getting vaccinated doesn't deliver you into an entirely new category of pandemic safety — safer and more protected than anyone who hasn't gotten vaccinated — but simply pushes you down the slope of mortality risk by the equivalent of a few decades," David Wallace-Wells has written in New York Magazine.

As a country, what can we do to protect older people from Covid? The data points to at least three good answers.

1. Reduce caseloads

The main reason that Covid deaths surged in the U.S. recently is that cases surged. If cases return to their low levels of the spring and early summer, deaths among older adults will probably plummet as well. In June, only about one-tenth as many Americans over 65 were dying from Covid as in August, according to the C.D.C.

Chart shows data from a sample of 16 U.S. jurisdictions.Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

The most effective way to reduce caseloads is to continue raising the country's vaccination rate, through workplace mandates and other measures. Vaccinating children under 12 can also save the lives of older people.

Cases in the U.S. have already fallen 50 percent since Sept 1. If the declines continue — and can be maintained — the risks for older Americans will be much more manageable than they were in the late summer.

2. Give booster shots

Scientists are still trying to figure out how quickly vaccine immunity wanes. But the bulk of the evidence suggests that it does wane at least somewhat in the first year after vaccination, which creates additional risks for older people. Among that evidence: Covid case counts are higher in Britain, where vaccinations tended to happen earlier, than in other parts of Europe, as John Burn-Murdoch of The Financial Times has noted.

Waning immunity, in turn, suggests that booster shots can protect vulnerable people.

In the U.S., the federal government has not yet authorized booster shots for any recipients of the Moderna or Johnson & Johnson vaccines, although a scientific advisory panel has recommended them for people who are 65 and older, among others. Pfizer vaccine recipients 65 and older are already eligible for a booster once they are at least six months removed from their second shot.

Powell was set to receive a booster shot last week but had to postpone it when he became sick, a spokeswoman said.

3. Expand rapid testing

If rapid Covid tests were widely available, as they have been in much of Western Europe, they could help protect the elderly.

In a previous newsletter, I mentioned a woman in Germany who greeted visitors with a stash of rapid tests — allowing her husband, who has Parkinson's disease, to stay safe and still have a social life. Imagine if American families could do the same. Grandma and grandpa are coming over for Sunday dinner? Everybody else takes a rapid test before they arrive.

The Biden administration has promised to make rapid tests widely available this fall. For now, they are still difficult to find, largely because the F.D.A. has been slow to approve them.

For most Americans, vaccination makes the risk of a serious form of Covid extremely rare. And for children, Covid tends to be mild even without vaccination. But until caseloads decline more, the situation remains frightening for many older people.

Colin Powell with Ronald Reagan in 1988.Barry Thumma/Associated Press

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Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. Join Nikole Hannah-Jones and others at 7 p.m. Eastern tomorrow for a virtual event about homecoming at historically Black colleges.

"The Daily" is about Colin Powell.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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