U.S. cases have risen by over 100,000 for three out of the last
seven days, putting pressure on hospitals in several states and
causing families to rethink their plans for Thanksgiving dinner
on Nov. 26.
Twenty out of 50 states reporting record one-day increases on
Thursday. Previously, the most states that reported records for
new cases in a single day was 16 on Oct. 30, according to
Reuters data.
While the spread of the virus is wide, the outbreak is hitting
the Midwest particularly hard, based on daily new cases per
capita.
Illinois reported nearly 10,000 new cases on Thursday and along
with Texas is leading the United States in the most cases
reported in the last seven days.
Other Midwestern states with record increases in cases on
Thursday were Nebraska, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota,
Missouri, North Dakota, Ohio and Wisconsin. Arkansas, Colorado,
Maine, Kentucky, Oregon, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, Rhode Island,
Utah and West Virginia also set records for rises in new
infections.
Some cities and states have announced new measures such as
curfews or reduced gathering sizes to combat the spread of the
virus, but the United States has taken no action at the federal
level. Seventeen out of 50 states do not require masks.
Many countries in Europe are shutting high-risk businesses and
even ordering national or regional lockdowns in the face of a
second wave of the virus.
In addition to rising cases, U.S. hospitalizations of COVID-19
patients rose to over 52,500 on Thursday, up for an 11th
consecutive day and getting closer to the record of 58,370 set
in July.
North Dakota reported only eight free intensive care unit beds
in the entire state on Thursday. Hospitalization are a key
metric because they are not affected by the amount of testing
done.
Coronavirus deaths are trending higher but not at the same rate
as cases. The United States is averaging 850 deaths a day, up
from 700 a month ago.
In recent days, six states have reported their highest one-day
increases in pandemic deaths: Arkansas, Idaho, North Dakota,
South Dakota, West Virginia and Wyoming.
The pandemic has affected nearly every aspect of American life,
including a record number of voters mailing in their ballots in
Tuesday's elections.
(Reporting by Lisa Shumaker in Chicago and Anurag Maan in
Bengaluru; editing by Jonathan Oatis, Grant McCool and Jane
Wardell)
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