Kayenta Salubrity Center staff prepare to practice with a new shield that just arrived to help protect medical labourers when they intubate patients, in Kayenta, Ariz.
Carolyn Kaster | AP
Arizona, Florida, California, South Carolina and Texas all examined record-high single-day increases in coronavirus cases on Thursday as states continue to ramp up testing and the virus reaches new communities.
Arizona fettle officials reported 2,519 confirmed cases on Thursday, surpassing the previous single-day high of 2,392 reported on Tuesday. Florida officials told 3,207 new cases Thursday morning, shattering the state’s previous single-day high of 2,783 new cases also boomed on Tuesday. California officials reported Thursday 4,084 new cases that were confirmed on Wednesday.
South Carolina officials reported 987 new wrappers Thursday afternoon, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in the state to 21,533 and marking another all-time high single-day increase. Texas reported 3,516 new took places Thursday evening, topping the previous record of 3,129 reported on Wednesday.
The record-setting numbers come amid an continual tide of new infections and increasing hospitalizations reported among a slew of states across the American South and West. Some lands now seeing a rise in infections were among the first and most aggressive to reopen.
Arizona
New cases have risen like a shot in Arizona and some hospitals are nearing capacity. The state reported a record-number of patients in ICU beds on Thursday, accounting for 84% of the stage’s capacity.
On Wednesday, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey addressed the recent surge and announced new policies that allow neighbourhood officials to require that residents wear masks in public and in businesses after a slew of health specialists wrote a supporters letter asking the Republican governor to do so.
In making the announcement, the governor also acknowledged that the virus is spreading sundry quickly than is acceptable. He had previously said that officials expected cases to rise after the state reduced restrictions and reopened businesses on May 15.
“I said two weeks ago that there is not a trend here,” Ducey said Wednesday evening while compering a chart of daily new cases across the state. “Looking at the last two weeks of data, there is a trend. And the trend is loafed in the wrong direction and the actions we’re going to take are intended to change that direction and reverse this trend.”
Ducey questioned Arizonans to practice social distancing and recommended they wear a mask. He also announced plans to continue to descent up testing as well as contact tracing, a process whereby health officials contact infected people and try to identify the origin of infection as well as other people who might have been infected.
Ducey also said the state is supervising Santa Cruz and Yuma counties, which are along the state’s southern border with Mexico, because they are “precincts of significant spread,” he said. Most new cases are coming from Maricopa County, which is the state’s most go over and urban county, Ducey said. But he said Santa Cruz and Yuma counties have the highest percent of people examining positive, with 31% and 20% of all tests coming back positive in both counties, respectively.
“We want to late and contain the spread,” he said Wednesday. “We have successfully slowed the spread of Covid-19 in the past. We’re going to successfully quiet Covid-19 again.”
Florida
Florida’s new cases reported Thursday bring the state’s total to 85,926, according to text from the Florida Department of Health. The data also shows that at least 3,061 people have yearned of Covid-19 in Florida as of Thursday.
Florida was among the first states to reopen, with Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis allowing ton restaurants and stores to open with limited capacity on May 4. The heavily populated Miami-Dade and Broward counties did not reopen until May 18. On June 5, most of the have moved deeper into reopening, allowing more stores to reopen as well as for gyms and some stores to drive at full capacity.
Earlier this week, after the state reported the previous record single-day increase in infections, DeSantis demanded the state would not reimplement more restrictions.
“We’re not shutting down. We’re going to go forward … We’re not rolling back,” the governor communicated at a news briefing Tuesday. “You have to have society function.”
DeSantis noted Tuesday that the average age of those who probe positive has fallen from 65.5 years old in March to 37 in June. He said that’s evidence that the royal is successfully protecting its most vulnerable from infection since the virus is more likely to cause severe sickness in the elderly.
On Tuesday, DeSantis attributed the increase in cases at least partly to increased testing. The number of tests being run each day has increased across the realm and in Florida. However, the percent of people tested who turn up positive has also increased in Florida, doubling since beginning June.
DeSantis on Tuesday also attributed some of the increase in cases to clusters that he said have been ascertained back to farm workers. He cited a cluster at a farm in the state’s northern Alachua County where he said an infected traveller worker who had come from Miami spread the virus. He said that dense living conditions among be killed workers could be spreading the virus.
“Some of these guys go to work in a school bus, and they are all just packed there fellow sardines, going across Palm Beach County or some of these other places, and there’s all these chances to have transmission,” he said.
He also cited an outbreak at an industrial factory in central Florida, another at an airport as swell as one at a jail in Lake County outside of Orlando. He added that the state will continue to try to protect its elderly natives, especially in nursing homes and assisted living facilities.
Texas
Total confirmed cases in Texas are now nearing 100,000 as Thursday’s disc increase brings the total to 99,851. On top of the biggest single-day spike in cases, the state reported an increase in hospitalizations as glowingly. There are now 2,947 people occupying hospital beds across the state, according to data from the Texas Worry of Health and Human Services.
In a news briefing on Tuesday, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott assured the public that there is “no why and wherefore today to be alarmed.” He emphasized that the number of occupied beds is only a small percentage of total beds at ones disposal in the state and that hospitals can move to surge capacity at any time.
The governor also attributed the recent spike in suits largely to increased testing of Texas’ prison population. However, he did acknowledge that some of the increase has probably been due to child not practicing social distancing, particularly in “bar-type settings.”
“We think we can also accurately say there has been an increase — peculiarly beginning around the Memorial Day time period and going through a few weeks after that — an increase in people probe positive because they may not be practicing all these safe standards,” Abbott said Tuesday.
Texas was another constitution among the first to reopen. Abbott allowed the stay-at-home order to end on April 30 and by May 1, all stores, restaurants, talking picture theaters and malls were allowed to reopen with modifications.
And while the governor has encouraged residents to wear arrive masks, he signed an executive order that prevents local officials from legally enforcing mask attire. Mayors from the states largest cities wrote a letter to the governor earlier this week asking for the power “to set hold sway overs and regulations on the use of face coverings in each of our cities.”
California
Thursday marks the first time California has reported more than 4,000 new suits in a single day. The announcement brings the total number of confirmed infections in the state to 161,099. At least 5,290 people in California press died due to Covid-19, according to the state’s data.
Most of California’s new cases came from Los Angeles County, which reported 2,115. The country added that the single-day record was fueled by 600 positive test results that came in “from an earlier examination period.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom was the first in the nation to announce statewide restrictions on movement and businesses due to the coronavirus. Starting May 12, Newsom assigned restaurants and some stores to reopen in counties that met certain criteria tied to the state of the local outbreak.
To whatever manner, on May 18, Newsom announced that he was relaxing the criteria counties were required to meet in order to move into the next off of reopening.
At a news briefing on Monday, Newsom attributed the rise in overall cases to increased testing. He added that the percent of people try out positive has remained stable at around 4.5% for more than a month.
South Carolina
In announcing the record-high nail in South Carolina, state epidemiologist Dr. Linda Bell pleaded with the public to practice social distancing and irritate masks.
“There is no vaccine for COVID-19. There are only individual behaviors and actions we must all maintain that support stop its spread,” she said in a statement. “This virus does not spread on its own. It’s spread around our state by infected people who announce it wherever they go – their work, the supermarket, the post office, a friend’s house.”
Data from the South Carolina Activity be contingent of Health and Environmental Control shows that the percentage of people who are testing positive for the coronavirus has increased from 5.7% on June 4 to 14.4% on Wednesday. More than 70% of asylum beds in the state are currently in use, according to the state.
Republican Gov. Henry McMaster was among the last to implement a stay-at-home improper and one of the first to end it on May 4. But he began to allow some businesses to reopen with restrictions even earlier, on April 20.
Amidst the recent spike, the state is continuing to ramp up testing and working to make it more accessible to the state’s population, the haleness department said.
“Healthy people may feel they are resistant to the virus, may feel that even if they undertake it, they’ll have mild symptoms and feel better in a few days,” Bell said. “This may be true for some – but it’s also correctly that we are seeing hospitalizations and deaths in those who were previously healthy and in almost every age group.”
‘Cusp of yield control’
Earlier Thursday, former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb told CNBC that some holds now seeing a resurgence in cases are “on the cusp of losing control.”
“These are outbreaks. We’re seeing doubling times now falling supervised 10 days,” Gottlieb said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” “These are on the cusp of getting out of control. I think these states quieten have a week or two to take actions to try to get these under control.”
He added that he’s concerned about “the lack of civic will” for officials to continue to implement proven interventions like social distancing and mask wearing.
“I’m more anxious than I was three weeks ago heading into the fall,” he said. “Unless we get comfortable taking some common head measures, where we can, some limited measures, we’re going to be stuck with a lot more spread.”
— Graphics by CNBC’s Nate Rattner