cnbc.com 
<https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/10/coronavirus-deaths-tick-up-in-florida-texas-california-arizona.html>
  


Coronavirus deaths tick up in Florida, Texas, California, Arizona as states 
grapple with growing outbreaks


Will Feuer,Nate Rattner

8-10 minutes

  _____  

 

Medical staff wearing full PPE push a stretcher with a deceased patient to a 
car outside of the Covid-19 intensive care unit at the United Memorial Medical 
Center on June 30, 2020 in Houston, Texas.

Go Nakamura | Getty Images

Reported coronavirus-related deaths appear to be on the rise in Florida, Texas, 
California, Arizona and some other states that are struggling to contain 
rapidly expanding outbreaks, a CNBC analysis of data collected by Johns Hopkins 
University shows. 

After peaking at an average of more than 2,000 deaths per day just three months 
ago, primarily driven by New York and New Jersey, fatalities in the U.S. have 
been slowly declining — falling to an average of less than 600 fatalities a day 
from June 23 through July 8. Covid-19 deaths in the U.S. have declined or 
remained relatively stable for weeks, even though cases have more than doubled 
since mid-May. But the daily death toll appears to be on the rise again in the 
U.S., epidemiologists say.

Covid-19 fatalities have steadily ticked up across the nation with the average 
number of fatalities a day rising over the last three straight days to over 600 
on July 9, based on a seven-day average of daily reported deaths, driven by 
surges in several hot spots. Epidemiologists say it is cause for concern that 
deaths are beginning to accelerate again, even if it’s just a few days of data.

U.S. officials and the general public should have seen the rise in deaths 
coming, Larry Levitt, executive vice president for health policy at the Kaiser 
Family Foundation, told CNBC. Deaths tend to lag new cases because it can take 
weeks for a patient to get sick enough to be hospitalized and eventually die. 

“This was predictable. We seem to have had difficulty in this country looking a 
few weeks in advance,” Levitt said. “But we know the pattern that as more 
people get infected, more people get hospitalized and ultimately more people 
die.”


Record highs


Florida, Texas, California and Arizona have all seen their daily death tolls 
rise to record highs over the past three days, according to Hopkins data.

California has reported an average of about 85 new coronavirus-related deaths 
per day over the past seven days as of Thursday, up more than 29% compared with 
a week ago, according to CNBC’s analysis of data compiled by Hopkins. The 
state’s Covid-19 death toll now stands at 6,859, according to Hopkins. 

Florida has recorded an average of 56 deaths per day over the past seven days, 
up over 35% compared with a week ago, CNBC’s analysis shows. Hopkins’ data 
shows more than 4,000 people have died of the disease in the state so far.

On Thursday, Texas reported an average of about 66 new deaths per day over the 
past seven days, up more than 106% over the past week, according to CNBC’s 
analysis. More than 3,000 people have died of Covid-19 in the state so far, 
according to Hopkins. 

To be sure, the fatality data is imperfect, epidemiologists say. If a Covid-19 
patient has an underlying ailment, such as heart disease, and the virus worsens 
their condition and they die, the doctor can categorize cause as either. 
Elderly patients who die in nursing homes often have the coronavirus but aren’t 
often tested, they’ve said. 

“Record keeping can be all over,” said Dr. Bruce Y. Lee, a professor of health 
policy and management at the City University of New York. 

The country, however, is much better equipped today to handle an influx of 
Covid-19 patients than it was at the beginning of the outbreak, epidemiologists 
said. That should help avoid the same kind of spike in fatalities that 
overwhelmed hospitals and funeral homes in the Northeast and Washington state 
in March and April. Nonetheless, three epidemiologists in Florida and Texas all 
said they expect deaths to continue to rise for at least a few weeks.

“Our cases started to increase right around the beginning of June and now as 
I’m looking through, you can see that the deaths have started to trend upward a 
little bit as well,” said Cindy Prins, an epidemiologist at the University of 
Florida. “Initially, a lot of people were saying, well, it’s flat, it’s flat. 
And the concern there was, well, we haven’t caught up with data, and now we are 
starting to see that increase, which is definitely a concern.”


Age shift


State officials in Florida and other states have noted that the recent surge in 
cases is driven largely by younger patients, which is significant because young 
people are less likely to become severely sick and die from Covid-19. However, 
the Covid-19 data shows that those infections are increasingly spreading to 
older, more vulnerable people, which could be driving the uptick in deaths, 
Prins said. 

“There is more testing now than there was then, so that may account for some of 
this, but I think we’re seeing a true increase in cases in older adults, which 
makes sense given the overall large increase in cases,” she added.

The shift from younger people to older people is beginning to show up in the 
data, said Dr. Mary Jo Trepka, an epidemiologist at Florida International 
University. Last month, the state reported that the daily median age of newly 
diagnosed Covid-19 patients hit a record low of 33. On Thursday, however, the 
median age of newly infected people had risen to 40, according to the state’s 
health department. 
<http://ww11.doh.state.fl.us/comm/_partners/covid19_report_archive/state_reports_latest.pdf>
 

With that median age ticking upward, both Prins and Trepka said they expect 
deaths to continue to rise in the coming weeks. However, Trepka noted that 
deaths won’t likely rise at the same rapid pace as New York City, which was hit 
particularly hard early on in the U.S. pandemic. Public health officials have 
since instituted measures to protect vulnerable populations and hospitals have 
improved patient care since then.

“It doesn’t appear to be the same rates as back in April, and I think health 
care has dramatically improved. Care providers are much more skilled at caring 
for people with Covid-19,” she said. “Nevertheless, with these large numbers of 
cases, I do think that we’re going to be seeing continuously more deaths.”


‘It’s everywhere’ in Texas


Deaths caused by Covid-19 began to increase slightly in Texas about two weeks 
ago, according to Spencer Fox, associate director of the University of 
Texas-Austin Covid-19 Modeling Consortium.

“I don’t think it’s anything unexpected,” he said in an interview with CNBC. “I 
think it was more so a question of when we would start seeing an uptick, rather 
than if we would start seeing an uptick.”

His team’s model does not predict as rapid an increase in deaths as was seen in 
March and April in the Northeast and some other parts of the country, he said. 
But hospitalizations have risen at a worrying pace, he said, indicating that 
older and more vulnerable people are getting infected. He added that infections 
in younger people was a “leading indicator” of a worsening outbreak that was 
bound to affect the more vulnerable populations in the state.

“This resurgence might have started in younger populations; maybe they were the 
first to be infected. But clearly those populations aren’t insulated from older 
individuals,” Fox said. “This is a real resurgence in the epidemic. It’s not 
limited to just younger individuals who are more likely to survive it. It’s 
everywhere.”


Deaths to follow


He added that his team’s model predicts that deaths will continue to increase 
for two weeks “at least, if not longer, depending on really how the state 
reacts.”

It’s difficult to get an accurate understanding of the reality of the outbreak 
by looking only at the national numbers, Kaiser’s Levitt said, because the 
progress places like New York have made in combating the outbreak offsets the 
worrying numbers elsewhere. He added that the death toll is an especially 
difficult figure to track because of differences in reporting standards across 
states. 

He said now that there’s an observable increase in deaths, the trend is likely 
to continue for a number of weeks or even months as people who recently got 
infected fall ill, get hospitalized and eventually die.

“I think in the next week, the pattern of increasing deaths is going to become 
clear,” he said. “And it will no longer be possible to claim that the declining 
mortality is somehow a success.”

 

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/018a01d65764%24a3de76a0%24eb9b63e0%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to