Arizona, Florida, Oklahoma, Oregon and Texas all reported record
increases in new cases on Tuesday after recording all-time highs
last week. Nevada also reported its highest single-day tally of new
cases on Tuesday, up from a previous high on May 23.
Hospitalizations are also rising or at record highs.
At Arizona's Tucson Medical Center on Monday, just a single
intensive care unit (ICU) bed designated for COVID-19 patients was
available, with the other 19 beds filled, a hospital representative
said.
"ICU to be expanded, hopefully, in coming days," Dr. Steven
Oscherwitz, an infectious disease expert at the hospital, said in a
tweet on Monday night. "Not sure where people needing ICU care will
be able to go, since most AZ (Arizona) hospitals are pretty full
now."
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Health officials in many states attribute the spike to businesses
reopening and Memorial Day weekend gatherings in late May. Many
states are also bracing for a possible increase in cases stemming
from tens of thousands of people protesting to end racial injustice
and police brutality for the past three weeks.
CHURCH OUTBREAK
In Oregon, health officials are trying to contain an outbreak of
over 200 new cases in Union County linked to the Lighthouse United
Pentecostal Church.
The Oregonian newspaper reported that a video on the church's
Facebook page on May 24 showed hundreds of people standing close
together singing. Large gatherings were not permitting under the
state's reopening plan at that time. The video has since been
deleted, it said.
Reuters was not able to reach the church for comment.
In Texas, Governor Greg Abbott said the record number of new cases
is due to more testing. Hospitalizations - a metric not linked to
increased testing - also hit a record high. But the state has nearly
15,000 hospital beds available, Abbott said.
For the week ended June 14, testing increased over 30% but the
positive rate held steady at 7%, a Reuters analysis showed.
Texas tested 674 out of every 100,000 residents last week, while
about half of the 50 states tested at least 1,000 out of every
100,000 residents. New York led the nation, testing 2,245 out of
every 100,000 residents, according to the analysis.
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The top Texas health official, John Hellerstedt, said the increase was
manageable but the situation could change.
"The possibility that things could flare up again and produce a resurgence of
COVID-19," which would stress the state's healthcare system "is still very
real," Hellerstedt said.
'WE ARE WINNING'
Across the United States, 17 states saw new cases rise last week, according to a
Reuters analysis.
In Oklahoma, where President Donald Trump plans to hold an indoor campaign rally
on Saturday, new cases rose 68%.
Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday said officials were considering other,
possibly outdoor, venues for the Tulsa event. The virus spreads far more
efficiently in enclosed spaces.
On Tuesday, Oklahoma health officials
https://www.ok.gov/triton/modules/
newsroom/newsroom_article.php?id=150&article_id=59139 urged anyone attending the
rally to get tested for the coronavirus before arriving and then to self-isolate
following the event and get tested again. The health commissioner urged those
over 65 or at higher risk of coronavirus-related complications to stay home.
Pence pushed back against talk of a second wave of infections, citing increased
testing.
"In recent days, the media has taken to sounding the alarm bells over a 'second
wave' of coronavirus infections. Such panic is overblown," Pence wrote in a Wall
Street Journal opinion piece. https://www.wsj.com/articles/there-isnt-a-coronavirus-second-wave-11592327890
"We are winning the fight against the invisible enemy."
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More than 2.1 million people have been infected with the coronavirus in the
United States and over 116,000 have died from COVID-19, by far the most in the
world.
(Open https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR in an external browser for a Reuters
interactive)
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago; Additional reporting by Doina Chiacu
in Washington and Brad Brooks in Austin, Texas; Writing by Lisa Shumaker;
Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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