U.S. sets one-day record with more than 60,500 COVID cases; Americans
divided
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[July 10, 2020]
By Lisa Shumaker and Omar Younis
(Reuters) - More than 60,500 new COVID-19
infections were reported across the United States on Thursday, according
to a Reuters tally, setting a one-day record as weary Americans were
told to take new precautions and the pandemic becomes increasingly
politicized.
The total represents a slight rise from Wednesday, when there were
60,000 new cases, and marks the largest one-day increase by any country
since the pandemic emerged in China last year.
As infections rose in 41 of the 50 states over the last two weeks,
Americans have become increasingly divided on issues such as the
reopening of schools and businesses. Orders by governors and local
leaders mandating face masks have become particularly divisive.
"It's just disheartening because the selfishness of (not wearing a mask)
versus the selflessness of my staff and the people in this hospital who
are putting themselves at risk, and I got COVID from this," said Dr.
Andrew Pastewski, ICU medical director at Jackson South Medical Center
in Miami.
"You know, we're putting ourselves at risk and other people aren't
willing to do anything and in fact go the other way and be aggressive to
promote the disease. It's really, it's really hard," he said.
Stephanie Porta, 41, a lifelong Orlando, Florida, resident, said only
about half the shoppers at her grocery store wore masks, though that was
more than she saw two weeks ago.
"They're trying to make everything seem normal, when it's not. People
are dying, people are getting sick. It's insane," she said.
Florida on Thursday announced nearly 9,000 new cases and 120 new
coronavirus deaths, a record daily increase in lives lost. Governor Ron
DeSantis called the rising cases a "blip" and urged residents not to be
afraid.
"I know we've had a lot of different blips," DeSantis said. "We're now
at a higher blip than where we were in May and the beginning of June."
Florida is one of the few states that does not disclose the number of
hospitalized COVID patients. But more than four dozen Florida hospitals
reported their intensive care units reached full capacity earlier this
week.
In Texas a group of bar owners sued Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican,
saying his June 26 order closing them down violates the state
constitution, the Dallas Morning News reported.
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Hundreds of people line up outside the Kentucky Career Center, over
two hours prior to its opening, to find assistance with their
unemployment claims, in Frankfort, Kentucky, U.S. June 18, 2020.
REUTERS/Bryan Woolston
Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, said Thursday that keeping schools closed
would be a greater risk to children's health than reopening them.
California and Texas, the two most populous states, announced record
increases in COVID deaths on Wednesday.
California has seen cases and hospitalizations surge, even though it
imposed one of the strictest lockdowns. After several lawmakers and
staffers at the state Capitol in Sacramento were infected, lawmakers
said the legislature would not return from summer break until July
27.
Riverside University Health System, east of Los Angeles, expanded
its 44-bed intensive care unit after it filled up with patients.
"It's been very consistent every day in the last couple of weeks.
Every day has been like a full moon," Riverside emergency room
physician Stephanie Loe said, referring to doctors' beliefs that a
full moon brings more patients to the emergency room.
Governors in California, Florida and Texas have either ruled out
forced business closures and quarantines or called them a last
resort. But Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti warned he would impose a
new stay-at-home order in two weeks if the latest surge did not
ease.
The rise in infections also weighed on the stock market Thursday on
fears of new lockdowns, which would take a toll on the economic
recovery. The Dow <.DJI> and the S&P 500 <.SPX> ended down about 1%.
(Reporting by Omar Younis in Los Angeles, Rich McKay in Atlanta and
Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, California; Additional reporting by
Lucia Mutikani in Washington and Maria Caspani and Sinead Carew in
New York; Writing by Lisa Shumaker and Dan Whitcomb; Editing by
Cynthia Osterman, Daniel Wallis and Leslie Adler)
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