After towns and cities across the country canceled annual fireworks
displays to avoid large crowds gathering, many Americans launched
bottle rockets and roman candles from streets and suburban backyards
to commemorate Independence Day.
In the first four days of July alone, 15 states have reported record
increases in new cases of COVID-19, which has infected nearly 3
million Americans and killed about 130,000, according to a Reuters
tally.
Florida's cases have risen by over 10,000 for three out of the last
four days, including climbing by 10,059 on Sunday, surpassing the
highest daily tally reported by any European country during the
height of the coronavirus outbreak there. Cases are also soaring in
Arizona, California and Texas and trending upwards in Midwest states
that once had infections declining such as Iowa, Ohio and Michigan,
according to a Reuters analysis of how much cases rose in the past
two weeks compared with the prior two weeks.
In Phoenix, Arizona, people gathered on Saturday without masks or
social distancing to listen to a speaker at a rally against
restrictions to prevent the spread of the virus. Many in the crowd
wore red, white and blue, and some held signs saying, "Capitalism
makes sense. Socialism doesn't. Go Trump 2020."
"We opened way too early in Arizona," Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego
said on ABC. She said the city was in a "crisis related to testing,"
with people waiting in eight-hour lines in their cars to find out if
they were infected.
During an Independence Day speech at the White House on Saturday,
U.S. President Donald Trump claimed without evidence that 99% of
coronavirus cases in the United States were "totally harmless."
In Texas alone, the number of COVID-19 patients currently
hospitalized rose to a record 7,890 on Saturday compared with 3,247
just two weeks ago. The Democratic mayor of Austin, Texas, warned
during an interview with CNN that his city's hospitals could reach
capacity in two weeks and run out of intensive care unit (ICU) beds
in 10 days. In Arizona, about 90% of ICU beds are full.
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'NO ROOM TO EXPERIMENT'
Trump, a Republican, has refused to wear a mask in public and has been reluctant
to encourage Americans to do so, saying it was a personal choice. A July 4
celebration he attended at Mount Rushmore in South Dakota was "mask-optional"
and had no social distancing.
Mixed messaging from governments has been a major factor in people not following
coronavirus mitigation recommendations in Miami Beach, said its Democratic
mayor, Dan Gelber.
Miami Beach's coronavirus hospitalizations have doubled in the last 14 days and
hospitals now have 158 people on ventilators, up from 64 two weeks ago, he told
CNN.
"We're spreading it because of this incredible activity, and too many people
obviously are not taking seriously all of these admonishments to socially
distance to wear masks," he said.
In addition to rising cases, an alarming percentage of tests are coming back
positive. The World Health Organization considers a positivity rate above 5% to
be cause for concern because it suggests there are more cases in the community
that have yet to be uncovered.
Ten states averaged double-digit positivity rates over the past week – Arizona
(26%), Florida (18%), South Carolina (17%), Nevada (14%), Alabama (14%), Texas
(14%), Mississippi (13%), Georgia (13%), Idaho (11%) and Kansas (10%), according
to The COVID Tracking Project
https://covidtracking.com/
data/charts/state-percent-positive-and-average-tests-per-100k-people, a
volunteer-run effort to track the outbreak.
Judge Lina Hidalgo of Harris County, a hard-hit county in Texas that includes
Houston, said officials must be proactive in getting ahead of the virus and
advocated a stay-at-home order. "We don't have room to experiment. We don't have
room for incrementalism when we're seeing these kinds of numbers," she told ABC.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu in Washington; Writing by Lisa Shumaker; Editing by
Daniel Wallis)
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