Speed of coronavirus deaths shock doctors as New York toll hits new high
Send a link to a friend
[April 09, 2020]
By Nick Brown and Gabriella Borter
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New York state,
epicenter of America's coronavirus crisis, set another single-day record
of COVID-19 deaths on Wednesday, as veteran doctors and nurses voiced
astonishment at the speed with which patients were deteriorating and
dying.
The number of known coronavirus infections in New York state alone
approached 150,000 on Wednesday, even as authorities warned that the
official death tally may understate the true number because it omits
those who have perished at home.
"Every number is a face, " said New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, who
ordered flags flown at half-staff across New York in memory of the
victims.
"This virus attacked the vulnerable and attacked the weak, and it's our
job as a society to protect the vulnerable."
Doctors and nurses say elderly patients and those with underlying health
conditions are not the only ones who appear relatively well one moment
and at death's door the next. It happens to the young and healthy, too.
Patients "look fine, feel fine, then you turn around and they're
unresponsive," said Diana Torres, a nurse at Mount Sinai Hospital in New
York City, the center of the nation's worst outbreak. "I'm paranoid,
scared to walk out of their room."
Nearly 430,000 cases of COVID-19, the highly infectious lung disease
caused by the coronavirus, were confirmed in the United States as of
Wednesday afternoon, including more than 14,700 deaths. For the second
straight day the virus killed at least 1,900 in a 24-hour period.
Cuomo said 779 people had died in the past day in his state. New Jersey
reported 275 had died there. Both totals exceeded one-day records from
just a day earlier.
Despite the grim figures, Cuomo said overall trends still appeared
positive. Cuomo cited a drop in new hospitalizations and other data as
evidence that New York's social-distancing restrictions were "bending
the curve," helping to gain some control over the infection rate.
New York is one of 42 states where governors have issued "stay-at-home"
orders and closed all non-essential workplaces.
While public health experts say such measures are vital for controlling
the contagion, the restrictions have strangled the U.S. economy, leading
to widespread layoffs, upheavals on Wall Street and projections of a
severe recession.
Cuomo said the loss of life would likely continue at current levels or
increase in days ahead as critically ill patients die after prolonged
bouts hooked up to ventilators.
SCALING BACK TOLL
U.S. deaths due to coronavirus topped 14,700 on Wednesday, the second
highest reported number in the world behind Italy, according to a
Reuters tally.
New York state accounts for over a third of the U.S. total.
Officials have warned Americans to expect alarming numbers of
coronavirus deaths this week, even as an influential university model on
Wednesday scaled back its projected U.S. pandemic death toll by 26% to
60,000.
"We are in the midst of a week of heartache," Vice President Mike Pence
said during a White House briefing on Wednesday, but added, "we are
beginning to see glimmers of hope."
[to top of second column]
|
A woman is loaded into an ambulance by paramedics in the Harlem
neighbourhood of Manhattan during the outbreak of the coronavirus
disease (COVID19) in New York City, New York, U.S., April 8, 2020.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
Dr. Craig Smith, surgeon-in-chief at Presbyterian Hospital's
Columbia University Medical Center in Manhattan, heralded
encouraging numbers that suggested a turning tide in Wednesday's
edition of his daily newsletter to staff.
There were more discharges of patients than admissions for two days
running, he said, adding: "Hosanna!"
But that comes as cold comfort to some healthcare workers on the
front lines, who told Reuters they have treated patients while
experiencing symptoms of the novel coronavirus themselves without
being able to get tested.
In Michigan, one of the few hospital systems conducting widespread
diagnostic screenings of staff, found more than 700 workers were
infected - over a quarter of those tested.
The continued test kit shortages - even for the workers most at risk
- is “scandalous” and a serious threat to the patients they treat,
said Dr. Art Caplan, a professor of bioethics at the NYU Grossman
School of Medicine.
'BIG BANG'
At the White House on Wednesday, U.S. President Donald Trump said he
would like to reopen the U.S. economy with a "big bang" but not
before the death toll is on the downslope.
Trump did not offer a time frame, but his chief economic adviser,
Larry Kudlow, said on Tuesday a resumption of commerce was possible
in four to eight weeks.
Louisiana is "beginning to see the flattening of the curve" with the
number of new coronavirus cases reported in the past 24 hours - 746
- lower than recent days, Governor John Bel Edwards said. Louisiana
had been one of the nation's hot spots.
California, like New York, had one of its highest single-day death
tolls with 68 people dying of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours,
Governor Gavin Newsom said. The state may not see its infection
curve flattening until the end of May, requiring weeks more of
social distancing, officials say.
New York City officials said a recent surge in people dying at home
suggests the most populous U.S. city may be undercounting the loss
of life.
"I think that's a very real possibility," Cuomo told his daily news
briefing.
So far New York City's announced death toll has reflected only
laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 diagnoses, mostly at hospitals. At
least 200 people are believed to be dying at home in the city every
day during the pandemic, authorities said.
Pence warned that Philadelphia and Pittsburgh were cities of
"particular concern" as a possible future flash points in the
epidemic.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely, Nick Brown, Jonathan Allen, Doina
Chiacu, Susan Heavey, Maria Caspani, Brad Brooks, Susan Cornwell,
Nathan Layne, Lisa Lambert, Stephanie Kelly, and Gabriella Borter;
Additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Writing by Will Dunham and
Bill Tarrant; Editing by Bill Berkrot, Cynthia Osterman and Michael
Perry)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |