U.S.
records over 1,000 coronavirus deaths in a single day
for first time since early June
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[July 22, 2020]
By Lisa Shumaker
(Reuters) - U.S. deaths from the novel
coronavirus rose by more than 1,000 on Tuesday, the biggest single-day
increase since early June, according to a Reuters tally.
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After weeks of declining fatalities, there were more than 5,200 U.S.
COVID-19 deaths in the week ended July 19, up 5% from the previous
seven days, a Reuters analysis found. That was the second successive
week of rising deaths.
Nearly 142,000 Americans have died from COVID-19, a toll that
experts warn will likely surge following recent record spikes in
case numbers and an alarming rise in hospitalizations in many
states.
U.S. deaths peaked in April, when the country lost on average 2,000
people a day. Fatalities had steadily fallen, averaging 1,300 a day
in May and under 800 a day in June, according to a Reuters tally.
But after many states reopened without achieving benchmarks for
doing so safety, such as two weeks of declining cases, deaths are
rising again in 21 states, including Arizona, Florida and Texas,
based increases in the last two weeks compared with the prior two.
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While some of the increase in new cases can be attributed to more testing,
hospitalizations, which are not tied to testing numbers, began to surge in late
June as well.
So far in July, 17 states have reported record numbers of currently hospitalized
COVID-19 patients with nine states announcing new highs on Tuesday, including
Alabama, Texas and California.
In Florida, about four dozen hospitals on any given day report that their (ICUs)
have reached full capacity.
(Writing by Lisa Shumaker; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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