COVID-19 hospitalizations spike, shutdowns take effect with holidays on the horizon

FILE PHOTO: The outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Madison
Nurses work in a ward housing coronavirus patients at UW Health University Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin.
REUTERS/Daniel Acker/File Photo

By Maria Caspani and Gabriella Borter

The number of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in the United States has jumped nearly 50% in the last two weeks, forcing states to impose new restrictions to curb the alarming viral spread as Americans face a potentially grim winter and holiday season.

Nearly 79,000 people were being treated for the disease in hospitals across the country on Thursday, a Reuters tally showed, the most at any time during the pandemic. The country has been recording 161,607 new cases daily on a 7-day rolling average as of Wednesday.

The acceleration has forced a spate of new school and business closings to slow community spread, upending lives of Americans once again.

Suzanna Riordan, a Brooklyn mother, said she burst into tears upon hearing the announcement that New York City public school classrooms would shut beginning Thursday as the city’s 7-day positive test rate average hit a previously-agreed closure threshold of 3%.

Riordan’s daughter Olivia, 7, had been excited at the prospect of adding one more day of in-person education a week starting next week as part of the city’s hybrid learning plan, Riordan said.

“Since September she’s gotten maybe seven days in school,” Riordan said. “And those are the days where…she comes home excited and happy and she gets to see other second graders. And that’s gone again.”

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio defended his decision to revert to at-home virtual schooling, adding that additional safety standards to reopen the largest U.S. school district would be announced before next Thursday’s Thanksgiving holiday.

“The schools have been shut temporarily but only temporarily. They will back be and they’ll be safer than ever,” de Blasio told reporters.

The mayor also said he expected the state would shut down indoor dining and gyms in his city within “a week or two” given the current rate of infections.

Stringent measures were going into effect across the country this week as the U.S. COVID-19 death toll passed a quarter million, the highest in the world.

Michigan began a three-week shutdown on Wednesday that closed gyms, high schools, colleges and entertainment venues.

Minnesota, one of several Midwest states dogged by soaring infection rates per capita, ordered a shutdown of restaurants, bars, fitness centers and entertainment venues starting on Friday through at least Dec. 18. More than 90% of hospital intensive care unit (ICU) beds were already occupied in the eastern half of the state.

In the nation’s capital, the Smithsonian Institution announced it would close its museums and the National Zoo beginning on Monday, with no set reopening date.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration has persisted in criticizing state efforts to curb the virus by shutting down parts of their economies. He has also refused to share critical COVID-19 data with President-elect Joe Biden and his transition team, threatening to slow the incoming administration’s pandemic response.

The soaring rate of infections and shutdowns aimed at reversing that trend portends a bleak winter for the American economy.

Last week, the number of Americans filing new claims for jobless benefits unexpectedly rose as new business closures unleashed a fresh wave of layoffs and further slowed the labor market recovery.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits totaled a seasonally adjusted 742,000 for the week ended Nov. 14, compared to 711,000 in the prior week, the Labor Department said on Thursday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 707,000 applications in the latest week.

Health and government officials have warned that the sharp rise in hospitalizations could worsen if Americans do not limit their Thanksgiving holiday celebrations to small, single-household gatherings.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a “strong recommendation” on Thursday that Americans refrain from traveling for the holiday.

The Northeast, which for months had successfully held the virus at bay after the pandemic’s crushing first wave in the spring, has experienced the highest percentage jump in hospitalizations at 85.4% over the past 14 days, according to Reuters data. During that same period, hospitalizations in the Midwest have risen by 56.8%, in the West by 50.1%, and in the South by 34.4%.

In Maryland, which reported a record 2,910 new cases in a 24-hour period on Thursday, the Baltimore public school district said it would halt in-person learning the week after Thanksgiving to avoid exacerbating virus spread that may occur over the holiday.

Looking further ahead, officials in Pennsylvania announced that crowds will not be permitted to attend annual Groundhog Day festivities in Punxsutawney.

Famous furry prognosticator, Punxsutawney Phil, will still come out on Feb. 2 to predict when winter will end, but the event will be streamed online, the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club’s website said.

Reuters