New US coronavirus cases reach record high, south and west worst hit

Healthcare workers in the ICU at a hospital in Richmond, Texas, on July 15, 2020. PHOTO: AFP

LOS ANGELES (AFP) - The number of new cases of coronavirus and fatalities continued to mount across the United States on Wednesday (July 15), with Texas and Oklahoma recording new highs.

Johns Hopkins University, which tracks the spread of the disease, said late on Wednesday that 67,632 new cases of the disease had been reported across the country in the previous 24 hours, a new national record.

The Texas Department of State Health Services reported 10,791 new cases and 110 new fatalities, saying in a tweet that both numbers "are new highs" for the state.

Oklahoma - where the governor, Mr Kevin Stitt, announced on Wednesday that he had tested positive for the virus - recorded 1,075 new cases, a single-day record.

Alabama also hit a grim milestone, recording 47 deaths, the highest in one day. The disease has also been spreading rapidly in other states, notably Florida, which has recorded nearly 302,000 cases of coronavirus since the pandemic began.

California has also seen a surge in recent weeks, prompting officials to reimpose lockdowns.

The state reported its second highest single-day increase in coronavirus cases and deaths on Wednesday, with 11,125 new cases and 140 additional deaths, according to the state's Department of Public Health.

"We are in an alarming and dangerous phase in this pandemic here in L.A. County," said Ms Barbara Ferrer, the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health director, as she announced 44 additional deaths from the virus on Wednesday and 2,758 new cases.

"These alarming trends reflect behaviours from three weeks ago," she added, saying that the county was seeing the highest rates of hospitalisations since the beginning of the pandemic.

She said there were currently 2,193 people hospitalised in the county due to the virus.

"Younger people are being hospitalised at a faster rate than ever before," she said.

Nationwide, more than 65,000 new cases were reported on Tuesday, the nation's second-highest daily total.

The latest research models show the number of US deaths projected to rise to over 150,000 by next month. The death toll currently stands at more than 136,400 and there are more than 3.5 million people infected.

Though the number of new cases slowed in late spring, they began to go upwards again in mid-June as states lifted restrictions and the wearing of the mask became a political dividing line.

President Donald Trump finally wore a mask last week for the first time during the pandemic as he visited a military hospital.

Facial coverings have been recommended by health officials as a precaution against spreading or becoming infected by coronavirus, but many US states have been slow in imposing the wearing of masks in public.

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