Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

State virus cases tick up by 2,348, set 1-day record

Hospitaliz­ations drop by 25; covid-19 takes 11 more lives

- JOSEPH FLAHERTY

Arkansas reported 2,348 new covid-19 cases on Thanksgivi­ng, a single-day record that a chief state health official described as worrisome as residents head into the height of the holiday season.

The new-cases increase Thursday exceeded the state’s previous record of 2,312 cases set on Nov. 13.

Hospitaliz­ations declined for the first time this week, snapping a four-day streak of daily records set for the number of patients being treated in medical facilities, including a high of 1,028 hospitaliz­ations reported Wednesday.

The Arkansas Department of Health’s tally of hospitaliz­ations fell by 25, to 1,003, Thursday.

Likewise, the number of patients on ventilator­s fell by 22, to 169, from 191 the previous day.

Results from 13,675 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests and 3,455 antigen tests were reported Wednesday.

In a statement posted on Twitter, Gov. Asa Hutchinson suggested that the high level of testing seen the day before the holiday would decline later in the week.

“I suspect that high level of testing will slow until Monday. Cases are high but a small reduction in hospitaliz­ations is an improvemen­t,” Hutchinson wrote.

An additional 11 deaths

were reported Thursday. All but one were among confirmed covid-19 patients, according to the Department of Health. A total of 2,436 Arkansans have now died as a result of covid-19.

Since March, when the state’s first case of the virus was identified, a total of 152,625 infections have been reported in the Natural State.

The count of active cases in the state rose Thursday, though not to the same level as the active-case peak seen last weekend. According to the Department of Health, active cases Thursday increased by 574, to 17,588.

Health officials reported that an additional 1,380 individual­s classified as confirmed covid-19 cases and 382 classified as probable cases had recovered as of Thursday.

The numbers reported Thursday “are worrisome for what it might mean for after Thanksgivi­ng,” state epidemiolo­gist Dr. Jennifer Dillaha said in a phone interview.

Health officials have urged people to avoid travel and take precaution­s to prevent transmissi­on of the virus when holding holiday gatherings.

Dillaha said “time will tell” whether people traveling and holding gatherings are doing those activities in such a way as to minimize transmissi­on.

According to Dillaha, some portion of the individual­s represente­d in the pool of more than 2,300 new cases reported Thursday will develop severe cases of the disease, and many of those people will end up in a hospital.

The new cases will put additional pressure on the state’s health-care system, already strained because of the recent surge in hospitaliz­ations.

Capacity in the state’s intensive care units declined further Thursday.

Health Department spokeswoma­n Meg Mirivel said 68 adult beds in intensive care units were available on Thursday — a decrease from the 75 beds available the day before. The state has a capacity of 1,139 ICU beds, according to the Department of Health.

Slightly more than 34% of the occupied ICU beds were occupied by covid-19 patients, she said.

The staffing of medical facilities — rather than available bed space — is the part of the healthcare system more susceptibl­e to strain amid the covid-19 outbreak, according to Dillaha.

“It’s not hard to convert a regular hospital bed into a ICU bed,” she said. “It’s the staffing that you need to take care of the patient that is stretched.”

Dillaha said that because other states are also experienci­ng record-high cases and pressure on their hospitals, “they’re needing more nurses also, so all the states in the surroundin­g area are recruiting from each other to get nurses to come work in their state.”

“Many nurses are experienci­ng burnout. They can’t take time off to get rest and kind of personal renewal that they need to keep going,” Dil

laha added. “And it’s very difficult for those people who are putting themselves on the line to stay on the line for extended periods of time.”

CASES BY COUNTY

Washington County led the state in new cases reported Thursday, with 182, according to the Health Department, followed by Pulaski County, with 164; Benton County, with 160; Craighead County, with 121, and Garland County, with 100.

Of the confirmed cases reported Thursday, 44 were in correction­al facilities.

Active cases in Pulaski County declined by 23, to 1,843, according to the Department of Health.

In Benton County, active cases rose by 35, to 1,090, as in Washington County, where active cases rose by 19, to 1,440.

SCHOOL CASES

According to the Little Rock School District’s covid-19 report released Wednesday, four students and three staff members recently tested positive for the virus.

Two students at Bale Elementary tested positive. One staffer each at Parkview High School, Southwest High School and Western Hills Elementary tested positive, the district reported.

Additional­ly, one student entered quarantine, according to the district. No additional covid-19 reports will be released until Sunday, the district said in its Wednesday update.

According to the Department of Health’s report released Wednesday on virus cases in educationa­l settings, school districts in Springdale and Bentonvill­e reported the highest and second-highest number of confirmed and probable active cases, with 134 and 69 active cases, respective­ly.

The Little Rock School District was third, with 62 active cases, followed by the Rogers School District, with 61.

Earlier this week, the school districts in Springdale and Little Rock announced modificati­ons to their operations because of covid-19.

Springdale pivoted to virtual learning for the period between Thanksgivi­ng break and Dec. 7, and the Little Rock School District announced that instructio­n would take place online every Friday beginning in January.

Among colleges and universiti­es, the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le led in terms of active cases, with 141, and a cumulative total of 2,620 infections, according to the Department of Health report.

Fifty-nine active cases were reported at Harding University in Searcy and 41 at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little Rock.

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