Variability in US COVID Mortality, Viral Evolution, and the Emergence of Acquired Social Immune Dysfunction

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Background. The course of a pandemic depends on viral traits, available public health interventions, implementation, and individual behavior, all of which interact and vary over time and space. Understanding COVID-19 therefore requires considering these factors together. Methods. National mortality, state-level mortality per 100,000 population for four representative states, policy stringency, and vaccination coverage were assembled from publicly available sources for February 2020 through September 2022. Viral traits, mutation rates, and vaccine effectiveness were drawn from published systematic reviews and standardized relative to wild-type values. Results. Each state experienced a different worst wave, separated by as much as 18 months, with up to a 24-fold difference in state mortality during major waves. NPI stringency was initially high and responsive to COVID waves, but declined during 2021 in both magnitude and responsiveness as vaccination levels rose, then flattened. Viral evolution first increased transmissibility; as population immunity rose, immune escape increased sharply, particularly with Omicron, which produced similar mortality peaks in all four states and the second largest national peak. Conclusions. COVID-19 did not unfold as a single national pandemic but as regionally divergent epidemics that fragmented public perception and weakened cohesion. At the same time, SARS-CoV-2 evolved traits that reduced the apparent and actual effectiveness of interventions. Omicron brought these processes together: despite producing one of the largest national mortality waves, it elicited little renewed policy activation or booster uptake. I describe this progressive uncoupling of epidemic threat, intervention effectiveness, policy activation, and public compliance as Acquired Social Immune Dysfunction.