The three most-populous states in the US are reporting record increases in new coronavirus cases as concerning trends in the pandemic have emerged across the country.
California, Texas and Florida all set records for the number of new cases in one day. Nationally, 34,720 new cases were reported Tuesday in the US — the third-highest number of new cases reported in one day since the beginning of the pandemic, based on a data archive kept by Johns Hopkins University. The two days with more cases were both in April.
Those three states account for 27.4% of the 328 million people living in the US, according to the latest US Census Bureau estimates.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott urged people to stay home due to the surge, with some health officials calling for a stricter stay-at-home order.
“Because the spread is so rampant right now, there’s never a reason for you to have to leave your home,” Abbott told CNN affiliate KBTX.
“Unless you do need to go out, the safest place for you is at your home.”
New cases and hospitalizations are rising at their fastest rate yet, with Texas reporting 5,551 cases on Wednesday, breaking the previous record of 5,489 set the day before, health authorities said.
In the nation’s most populous state, California obliterated its previous single-day high with 7,149 cases reported on Tuesday, according to state Department of Public Health. The previous record, set the day before, was just more than 5,000. Hospitalization and ICU rates due to the virus are also at an all-time high in the state.
Gov. Gavin Newsom pleaded with Californians to think of others by wearing masks, keeping a safe distance and increasing handwashing. Loosely quoting Scripture, Newsom implored residents to “love thy neighbors, like yourself, please.”
Acknowledging that younger people tend to feel safer returning to normal, Newsom said, “be careful about Mom and Dad, and careful about your mother-in-law, your father-in-law, your grandparents.”
In Florida, the state reported 5,511 new cases on Tuesday, the highest number in a single day, according to the Florida Department of Health.
Further state actions in Texas could be announced if the virus continues to spread at this rate, even as officials encourage mask wearing and social distancing in places like bars that are often overcrowded, Abbott said.
The renewed caution by Abbott, a Republican, is welcome but doesn’t go far enough, said Sarah Eckhardt, a special assistant to Judge Sam Biscoe of Travis County, home to Austin. Texas began reopening after the state’s stay-at-home order expired May 1.
“I am glad that he did reverse court,” Eckhardt said. “I am not confident that we will be able to reduce this trajectory.”
Cases rise in at least 26 states
At least 26 states are seeing a rise in cases compared to the previous week, data from Johns Hopkins University show. Those states are Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Utah, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
Arizona saw 3,591 new cases in a day on Tuesday.
Between 130,000 and 150,000 Americans will likely die from coronavirus infections by July 18, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it its latest forecast.
It suggests a somewhat slower increase in deaths than the last forecast. On June 18, the CDC’s ensemble forecast predicted 135,000 deaths by July 11.
The CDC’s ensemble forecast uses data from 20 different national forecasts, including the University of Washington’s IHME, which looks at a different time period, and which earlier Wednesday projected 179,000 US deaths by October 1.
Many of the models take into consideration shelter-in-place orders, relaxing of restrictions and population movements.
More than 2.37 million people have been infected across the US with the virus since the beginning of the pandemic and at least 121,965 have died, according to Johns Hopkins. The country accounts for a quarter of both the world’s total infections and total global deaths.
“We stopped the treatment too early,” CNN chief medical correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta said. The result could be “exponential growth” of cases.
But many places remained unprepared and reopened far too soon and far too quickly — leading to the latest surges, experts have said.
It’s a stark contrast with other parts of the world, including countries in Europe, which lowered their case counts with the help of longer lockdowns and have now begun to slowly reopen.
Hospitals should plan for surge of patients
In Arizona, hospital systems need to put emergency plans in place due to the increase in new Covid-19 cases, said Will Humble, executive director of the Arizona Public Health Association, on Wednesday.
He predicted the state’s hospitals will go into surge capacity mode by July 4.
Arizona’s public health agency says 88% of ICU beds and 86% of inpatient hospital beds in the state are now in use due to a surge in Covid-19 cases. Both are record highs since the state started reporting the statistics in late March.
“What I’d be focusing right now on is sounding the alarm to our hospital systems to get ready,” Humble said. “Because no matter what you do at this point, given where we are at the increase in cases, the exponential growth, taking into consideration the incubation period for this virus, we’re going to go into surge capacity mode by the Fourth of July.”
Health officials in the state need to “get those emergency plans in place because, at this point, I don’t see an alternative but to go to crisis standard prepare in Arizona probably, probably in 10 days, maybe less,” Humble said.
Officials in Harris County, the state’s most populated county, should “intervene now” and go back to an “aggressive” lockdown due to the steep increase in new Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations, said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.
“We are now projecting that our intensive care units will fill up over the next two weeks. And the reason that’s significant is because we know as ICUs start to fill up, mortality goes up,” Hotez told CNN on Wednesday.
“It gets harder and harder to manage all of those patients, even if you have — even if you’re fully staffed,” he said. “So, this is when you see mortality rates really start to accelerate.”
Hotez would like to see a lockdown like the one implemented at the end of March, he said. “Because things are so dire, we have to intervene now and we have to be very aggressive at implementing stay-at-home and other social distancing measures.”
“This time, we have to go back to what’s called ‘containment mode,’ meaning less than one new case per million residents per day,” Hotez said.
In Florida, officials have pointed to Miami-Dade County as one of the hardest-hit areas in the state but say patients requiring hospitalizations seem to be younger and less sick, according to reporting from the Miami Herald. One physician told the newspaper many infections can be attributed to community spread.
The observation echoes announcements by many city and state leaders in recent days — particularly in the South — which highlighted that cases seem to be shifting to younger groups. In many cases, officials pointed back to instances including parties and bars as sources of recent clusters.
Texas has temporarily suspended alcohol permits of at least 12 bars in the state found to be violating coronavirus-related protocols.
New research suggests Black Lives Matter protests across the country have not led to a spike in cases.
Similarly, while some politicians say that increased testing is the cause of increased positive cases, that is not necessarily so, says Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy at the University of Minnesota.
“This is not an artifact of just more testing at all,” he said.
Some states remaining steady
Meanwhile, cases in 10 states are holding at a steady pace. Those states include Illinois, Louisiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Virginia.
Cases are on the decline in 14 states: Alabama, Alaska, Connecticut, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Rhode Island, South Dakota and Vermont.
Experts have expressed concern that even states who may be seeing temporary dips in cases could begin seeing dangerous rises again as they begin reopening and more residents venture out.
New York, New Jersey and Connecticut issued a travel advisory Wednesday that requires people arriving from states with high coronavirus rates to quarantine for 14 days.
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said the quarantine advisory is “not a polite recommendation,” adding it applies to residents of the state as well who traveled to other states that fit the categories aforementioned.
Murphy urged younger populations to continue heeding guidelines as officials across the country report more young groups get sick.
“We’ve seen an INCREASE in the percentage of #COVID19 cases between the ages of 18-29,” he said on Twitter. “Do the right thing. Wear a mask. Keep your distance. Wash your hands. Don’t be a knucklehead.”
In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted Tuesday beaches will be open for swimming starting July 1.
While New Yorkers can swim this summer they won’t be able to run in the New York City Marathon this fall: The event was canceled due to health and safety concerns, organizers said Wednesday.
EU considering if US travelers will be allowed in
Meanwhile, European Union member states are discussing barring visitors from several countries, including the US, EU officials told CNN.
The EU is working with member nations to decide which travelers would be considered safe to visit the bloc starting July 1. That criteria will be focused on the “circulation of the virus,” one EU diplomat said.
In a statement, the State Department said it advised Americans to continue checking the websites of relevant embassies for information including on entry restrictions and quarantine policies.
As reported by CNN