More than 45,000 people have died as of late Tuesday from COVID-19
in California, the most populous of the 50 states and one of the
hardest hit in recent months. New York, severely stricken in the
early stages of pandemic last spring, has reported 44,693 lives
lost, according to a Reuters tally. https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/USA-CALIFORNIA/xegvbwkqwpq
"This is a heart-wrenching reminder that COVID-19 is a deadly virus,
and we mourn alongside every Californian who has suffered the tragic
loss of a loved one during this pandemic,” Dr Mark Ghaly, the
state's health secretary, said of the milestone in an email to
Reuters.
California, home to some 40 million people, emerged as a main U.S.
epicenter of the pandemic during a year-end surge of infections and
hospitalizations that swept much of the country, pushing many
healthcare systems to their limits.
When considered in terms of per capita deaths, California, with 113
deaths per 100,000 people, ranks 32nd in the nation in COVID-19
mortality. By comparison, New York, with 248 deaths per 100,000,
ranks second only to New Jersey, which has logged about 230
coronavirus deaths per 100,000 residents.
Nationwide, the daily tallies of new cases and hospitalizations from
COVID-19 have been dropping steadily in recent weeks, while deaths,
a lagging indicator, have plateaued.
The United States as a whole has reported 27.25 million infections
and 468,559 deaths, as of late Tuesday. Just over 79,000 U.S.
patients were hospitalized with COVID-19 on Tuesday, the lowest
daily number since mid-November.
But in California, as in other states, the improvement obscures a
march of illness, hospitalizations and deaths, which remain far
higher than they were at the pandemic's previous peak last summer.
The number of lives lost reported daily in the state has declined
over the past several weeks, but remains "remarkably" high at an
average of 500 fatalities per day over the past 14 days, Governor
Gavin Newsom told a news conference.
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"Deaths continue to be
devastating," Newsom said, speaking at the
opening of a vaccination site at Levi's Stadium
in Santa Clara County near San Francisco.
Public health experts fear that gatherings for Super Bowl
celebrations on Sunday, as well as the arrival of new, highly
contagious variants of the virus may lead to another surge in cases
before most Americans are vaccinated.
In an effort to speed up the immunization campaign being counted on
to halt the pandemic, President Joe Biden on Tuesday announced that
his administration planned to increase the number of vaccine doses
shipped to the states, beginning on Feb. 15.
Part of the expanded supply will be sent to community health centers
in an effort to improve vaccine access for the mostly poor and
minority populations those centers serve, the White House said on
Tuesday.
By Tuesday, about 33 million Americans had received at least one
dose of vaccine to fight the coronavirus, the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported.
"This vaccine is the weapon that will win this war," New York
Governor Andrew Cuomo said at a news briefing on Tuesday. Ten
percent of New York state residents have received the vaccine, he
said.
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, California and Lisa
Shumaker in Chicago; additional reporting by Anurag Maan and Roshan
Abraham in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Robert Birsel)
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