Tuesday, July 7, 2020

US Covid-19 Coronavirus Cases Continue To Rise But Deaths Continue To Fall

While cases have been surging across the country in recent weeks, deaths, which health experts say are a lagging indicator because it takes time for people to get sick and die, continue to fall nationally. Experts say this downward trend reflects advances in treatment and prevention, as well as the large share of cases among young adults, who are more likely than older ones to survive COVID-19

Daily Mail: US coronavirus cases are on the rise in 40 states but deaths continue to FALL - for now - as Texas, Arizona and California see record hospitalizations

* Sixteen states have posted record daily case counts this month alone and new COVID-19 cases are now rising in 40 states across the US, according to an analysis of data
* The US has seen a 27 percent increase in new COVID-19 cases in the last week compared to the previous seven days
* Deaths, which health experts say are a lagging indicator because it takes time for people to get sick and die, continued to fall nationally in the week ending July 5
* Experts say this downward trend reflects the large share of cases among young adults, who are more likely than older ones to survive COVID-19
* Health officials fear the downward trend in deaths, which is a lagging indicator, could reverse itself
* The number of cases across the United States has now surpassed 2.9 million and more than 130,000 Americans have died from COVID-19
* Texas, Arizona and California are among those reporting record hospitalizations from coronavirus

Coronavirus infections are now on the rise in 40 states across the US as Sunbelt states including Texas, Arizona and California continue to report record hospitalizations and cases.

The number of cases across the United States has now surpassed 2.9 million and more than 130,000 Americans have died from COVID-19.

Sixteen states have posted record daily case counts this month alone and new COVID-19 cases have risen nationally every week for five straight weeks, according to a Reuters analysis of data from The COVID Tracking Project.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: Hospitals are starting to fill up .... Dozens of Florida hospitals at full ICU capacity -state data report (Reuters). But many of these cases are non-Covid-19 .... Stanford expert says 80-85 percent of Texas hospital patients 'have nothing to do with COVID-19' (The Hill).

2 comments:

copley7 said...

All this concern will end on November 3rd.

On November 4th no one will give a damn about Chin's Covid-19 virus.

This is all to get Trump. Notice how no one is talking about the Blue state resurgence, example California is a fiasco.

B.Poster said...

In TX case, at least half of the additional cases of hospitalization are due to chronic conditions that have worsened under COVID-19 restrictions. My contacts in the medical profession have pointed this out. The media and "experts" so scared people that many of them didn't want to get out and seek medical help and knowing of they went to the hospital they'd be separated from loved ones meant they were still more reluctant to seek medical help. Now their situation is even worse. The cure has ibdeed been worse than the disease.