COVID-19 cases in Minnesota and across the country have dropped sharply this winter, but doctors and health officials say they aren't exactly sure of all the reasons why.
Adherence to social distancing, mask wearing and other health measures clearly helped slow the spread, and the rollout of vaccines may have started to make a difference, they say. Some speculate the virus might also have run up against cyclical factors as well as sizable pockets of immunity from prior infections, although there's not agreement among health officials on the magnitude of that protection.
Despite the decline, there's considerable uncertainty about whether it can be sustained, particularly as more contagious versions of the virus spread.
Federal officials warned on Friday the U.S. should not relax health restrictions since case declines might already have started to level off. In Minnesota, which was ahead of most states in reporting a winter surge, state officials last week said infection rates are now pushing higher in some rural counties.
"We're seeing some increases in what is coming. … We are by no means out of the woods yet," said Kris Ehresmann, the director for infectious diseases at the Minnesota Department of Health.
Of the cause for the drop in cases this winter, she added: "There are a lot of things that we don't know."
On Saturday, the state Health Department reported 826 new coronavirus cases and 13 more deaths linked to COVID-19. The seven-day rolling average for net case increases stood at about 805 per day — down slightly from Friday's reading, but up from last Saturday's comparable figure of roughly 767 new cases per day, according to the Star Tribune's coronavirus tracker.
The statewide tally for people who have received at least one vaccine dose increased to 836,735 people so far. That's about 15% of the state's population, according to Star Tribune estimates.