COVID-19 surges in U.S. Midwest, Broadway dark until
June
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[October 10, 2020]
By Lisa Shumaker
CHICAGO (Reuters) - COVID-19 shattered records for new cases in the U.S.
Midwest, straining hospitals, and will darken New York's Broadway
theaters until June, a decision the Actors' Equity Association union
called "difficult but responsible."
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The Broadway closure that began in March had been due to end in
early January until the Broadway League industry group announced the
extension on Friday.
A dozen Midwestern states together reported a record 16,807 new
cases on Thursday, according to a Reuters analysis. The surge is
most extreme in the northern Midwest, where weather is the coldest.
Illinois reported its biggest increase since May 14 on Thursday.
(Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/3d9OAoF)
The number of Midwest COVID-19 patients hospitalized hit a record
high on Thursday for the fourth day in a row and now tops 8,000.
Nationally, nearly 34,000 coronavirus patients are hospitalized, the
highest since Sept. 4.
(Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/3lwVO9f)
Michigan's hospitalizations reached 918 on Thursday, up from 687 the
previous day. Wisconsin is opening a field hospital outside
Milwaukee with the number of COVID-19 patients hospitalized hitting
a new record on Thursday.
While deaths nationally decline, health experts say they are a
lagging indicator that usually rises weeks after cases surge.
Cases are rising in New York, a city that early in the pandemic
endured the world's most rampant outbreak. To curb a second wave,
the city has closed businesses and schools in neighborhood hot
spots, drawing protests from a small contingent of Orthodox Jews.
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The number of COVID-19 patients hospitalized in the state has been steadily
creeping up from the middle to upper 400s last month to 779 on Thursday, while
the infection rate, which had been below 1% for most of the late summer was
above 1.1% this week.
But New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said one-fifth of the state's infections are
in a handful of "red zones" that account for only 2.8% of the population.
Excluding those areas, where infection rates were 6.6% the state's rate was
0.9%, he said.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who began a three-day hospital stay a week ago with
his own COVID-19 infection, is set to resume his re-election campaign on
Saturday by addressing supporters from the balcony of the White House.
The president's campaign schedule ramps up with a rally at an airport in central
Florida on Monday.
U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she would resume talks on a possible
economic stimulus package with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Friday, but
Senate Republicans voiced doubts that a deal can be reached before the election.
(Reporting by Lisa Shumaker; additional reporting by Steve Holland and Jeff
Mason in Washington, DC, Bhargav Acharya in Bengaluru and Barbara Goldberg and
Peter Szekely in New York; Editing by Nick Zieminski, Howard Goller and Cynthia
Osterman)
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