U.S. Surgeon General Blames ‘Pandemic Fatigue’ For Recent COVID-19 Surge

Surgeon General Jerome Adams, pictured on Capitol Hill on Sept. 9, says the Trump administration coronavirus task force is sharing information with “everyone,” despite claims that they are not sharing information with the Biden transition team.

Michael Reynolds / AP

The COVID-19 crisis in the U.S. is getting worse by nearly every metric. On Friday alone, there were more than 184,000 new confirmed cases and 1,400 deaths, the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center reported. Hospitals are reaching capacity. To date in the U.S., there have been more than 10 million confirmed cases of the virus and more than 240,000 have died — more than any other nation.

U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams says “pandemic fatigue” is largely to blame. People are tired and aren’t taking mitigation measures as seriously as before, he says.

“The virus hit different places of the country at different points,” Adams, who is also a member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, tells NPR’s All Things Considered. “And so you’ve had people who’ve been doing these things since February, March, April, but they didn’t really start to see the wave until later on. And they’re just plain tired.”