U.S. faces a smoldering COVID-19 pandemic nationwide as flu season
starts
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[September 21, 2020]
By Lisa Shumaker
(Reuters) - As the United States approaches
the miserable mark of 200,000 deaths from the coronavirus, the pandemic
is no longer focused on one or two epicenters.
Instead it is smoldering across all states, raising fears that when
colder weather forces more people inside, it could surpass the surge
seen in the summer.
The United States is losing on average over 800 people a day to the
virus - compared with fewer than 15 a day on average in Australia,
Canada, Germany, Israel, Italy and the United Kingdom.
Although new cases are down about 50% from the peak in July, the United
States is still reporting on average nearly 40,000 new infections a day
- the highest number in the developed world.
Top U.S. infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci has said he would
like to see new cases below 10,000 per day before flu season starts in
October.
"We need to hunker down and get through this fall and winter, because
it's not going to be easy," Fauci said during a panel discussion with
doctors at Harvard Medical School earlier this month.
"We've been through this before," he said. "Don't ever, ever
underestimate the potential of the pandemic. And don't try and look at
the rosy side of things."
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Robert Redfield has
also warned that Americans are in for "the worst fall, from a public
health perspective, we've ever had," citing concerns of a possible "twindemic"
of COVID-19 cases and the seasonal flu overwhelming hospitals.
THIRD WAVE?
Cases are trending upwards in about 20 out of 50 states, including
former epicenters like New Jersey and New York that had seen cases
decline for months.
Some of the biggest increases, on a percentage basis, are in North
Dakota and Wisconsin, two states where cases have yet to peak and have
steadily climbed since the pandemic started more than six months ago.
Other states like South Carolina and Utah peaked in July and cases have
come down sharply only to recently rise again.
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A firefighter tends to a non-COVID-19 patient while wearing
protective equipment, against the spread of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19), in Houston, Texas, U.S., August 15, 2020. Picture taken
August 15, 2020. REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare/File Photo
The epidemic first battered nursing homes in Washington state on the
West Coast in January before quickly overwhelming New York City and
Northeastern states in March and April.
The country enjoyed a reprieve during the early summer before seeing
both cases and deaths spike in July. There is no clear consensus on
what caused the spike but health officials point to Memorial Day
parties, bars and other high-risk businesses reopening and the
public being lulled into a false sense that the worst was over.
In the second wave during the summer, Arizona, California, Florida
and Texas became the new epicenters - some of the most populous
areas of the country.
Through a combination of more states requiring masks and new more
targeted restrictions, that second wave has again ebbed. Still, the
United States is reporting twice as many new cases each day as it
did on its best days in the spring.
Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Scott Gottlieb told
CNBC News that he worries a third wave could be more diffused and
spread across a broader section of the country.
"I do think that we're going to have a third act of this virus in
the fall and the winter and it's likely to be more pervasive spread
in a broader part of the country," he said.
(Reporting by Lisa Shumaker in Chicago, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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