Coronavirus pandemic

Parts of US see spike in new cases, hospitalisations

Health officials attribute record increase partly to last month's holiday weekend

Left: A bar in the East Village neighbourhood of New York City last Friday. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said the state has received 25,000 complaints recently of violations of social distancing and other emergency requirements. PHOTO: REUTERS Belo
A bar in the East Village neighbourhood of New York City last Friday. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said the state has received 25,000 complaints recently of violations of social distancing and other emergency requirements. PHOTO: REUTERS
Left: A bar in the East Village neighbourhood of New York City last Friday. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said the state has received 25,000 complaints recently of violations of social distancing and other emergency requirements. PHOTO: REUTERS Belo
A woman playing blackjack at the Excalibur Hotel and Casino last Thursday, after the property in Las Vegas, Nevada, opened for the first time since being closed in the middle of March. Fears that a second wave of infections is happening - or that states have failed to curb their first wave - prompted health officials to plead with the public to wear masks and avoid large gatherings. PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

NEW YORK • New coronavirus cases and hospitalisations in record numbers swept through more US states, including Florida and Texas, as most push ahead with reopening and President Donald Trump plans an indoor rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The United States had more than two million cases of infections as of yesterday.

Alabama reported a record number of new cases for the fourth day in a row on Sunday. Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Florida, North Carolina, Oklahoma and South Carolina all had record numbers of new cases in the past three days, according to a Reuters tally.

Many state health officials attribute the increase partly to gatherings over the Memorial Day holiday weekend late last month.

In Louisiana, which had been one of the earlier virus hot spots, new cases were again on the rise with more than 1,200 registered - the most there since May 21.

Nationally, there were over 25,000 new cases reported last Saturday, the highest tally for a Saturday since May 2, in part due to a significant increase in testing over the past six weeks.

Perhaps more troubling for health officials was the fact that many of these states are also seeing record hospitalisations.

Arkansas, North Carolina, Texas and Utah all had a record number of patients being warded last Saturday. In South Carolina, 69 per cent to 77 per cent of hospital beds are occupied, depending on the region.

While Utah's governor announced last week that most counties there would pause their reopenings, most states are not considering a second shutdown as they face budget shortfalls and double-digit unemployment. Many went ahead with reopenings before meeting government infection rate guidelines for doing so.

New York, the hardest hit state, has utilised health guidelines to instruct its reopening and continued to see all measures of infection drop - new cases, deaths, hospitalisations and positive rates among those getting tested.

However, Governor Andrew Cuomo warned New York City and Long Island officials on Sunday that their reopenings were at risk if they did not stop further large public gatherings that he said are threatening progress on curbing the spread of Covid-19.

Mr Cuomo said the state has received 25,000 complaints recently of violations of social distancing and other emergency requirements, mostly in Manhattan and the Hamptons, affluent beach communities on the east end of Long Island. "Yes, there is a very real possibility that we would roll back the reopening in those areas," he said at a briefing.

Fears that a second wave of infections is happening - or that states have failed to curb their first wave - prompted health officials to plead with the public to wear masks and avoid large gatherings.

However, Mr Trump still plans to hold his first campaign rally since early March this Saturday, and those attending will have to agree not to hold the campaign responsible if they contract Covid-19.

About a third of the record new cases in the state came from Tulsa county, according to state data.

The Tulsa Health Department last Friday said the outbreak was linked to indoor gatherings.

Hospitalisations and the percentage of tests coming back positive have been steady in the state.

"I have concerns about large groups of people gathering indoors for prolonged lengths of time. It is imperative that anyone who chooses to host or attend a gathering take the steps to stay safe," said Mr Bruce Dart, the department's executive director, in a statement that advised people at gatherings to wear masks.

Mr Trump has refused to wear a mask at a series of recent public events.

REUTERS

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on June 16, 2020, with the headline Parts of US see spike in new cases, hospitalisations. Subscribe