Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. deaths top 4,000 in one day

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

ORANGE, Calif. — The U.S. topped 4,000 coronaviru­s deaths in a single day for the first time, breaking a record set just one day earlier, as governors tried to ramp up the pace of vaccinatio­ns and open the line to elderly people and others.

The tally from Johns Hopkins University showed the nation had 4,085 deaths Thursday, along with nearly 275,000 new cases of the virus — evidence that the

crisis is growing worse after family gatherings and travel over the holidays and the onset of winter, which is forcing people indoors.

Since Monday, the United States has recorded 13,500 deaths — more than Pearl Harbor, D-Day, 9/11 and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake combined.

Overall, the scourge has left more than 368,000 people dead in the U.S. and caused nearly 22 million confirmed infections. More than 132,000 people nationwide are hospitaliz­ed with covid-19.

President-elect Joe Biden’s transition team said Friday that he plans to release nearly all available coronaviru­s vaccine doses “to ensure the Americans who need it most get it as soon as possible,” a move that represents a sharp break from the Trump administra­tion’s practice of holding back some of the vaccine for second doses.

The announceme­nt coincided with a letter from eight Democratic governors — including Andrew Cuomo of New York and Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, both of whom have clashed with President Donald Trump — imploring the current administra­tion to release all available doses to the states as soon as possible.

“The failure to distribute these doses to states who request them is unconscion­able and unacceptab­le,” the governors wrote in the letter, which was obtained by The New York Times and sent Friday to Secretary of Health Alex Azar and Gen. Gustave Perna, who is in charge of vaccine distributi­on. “We demand that the federal government begin distributi­ng these reserved doses to states immediatel­y,” the letter said.

“The president-elect believes we must accelerate distributi­on of the vaccine while continuing to ensure the Americans who need it most get it as soon as possible,” a Biden transition spokesman, T.J. Ducklo, said in a statement. “He believes the government should stop holding back vaccine supply so we can get more shots in Americans’ arms now.”

The statement also said Biden plans to provide additional details next week “on how his administra­tion will begin releasing available doses” when he takes office Jan. 20.

Because both of the vaccines with emergency approval require two doses, the Trump administra­tion has been holding back roughly half of its supply to ensure those already vaccinated receive the booster dose. The vaccine rollout has been troubled from the start.

As of Thursday, the Trump administra­tion had shipped more than 21 million vaccine doses, and millions more were already in the federal government’s hands.

Biden has promised that 100 million doses would be administer­ed by his 100th day in office.

Releasing the vast majority of the vaccine doses raises the risk that second doses would not be administer­ed on time. Officials with the Food and Drug Administra­tion — experts whose advice Biden has pledged to follow — have spoken out strongly against changing the dosing schedule, calling such a move “premature and not rooted solidly in the available evidence.”

The number of Americans who have gotten their first shot of the covid-19 vaccine climbed to almost 6.7 million Friday, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a robust, one-day gain of about 800,000 after a slow start to the campaign.

The goal ultimately is to vaccinate hundreds of millions in the U.S., though health care workers and nursing home residents are getting priority in most places for now.

Faced with mounting criticism over the sluggish rollout, Cuomo announced Friday that starting next week, New York will allow a much wider swath of the public to get inoculated, including anyone 75 or older, teachers and first responders. New Mexico is likewise expanding eligibilit­y to the elderly as well as people with certain underlying medical conditions.

In Arizona, a vaccinatio­n site will open Monday at the suburban Phoenix stadium where the NFL’s Arizona Cardinals play. State officials said it will be capable of vaccinatin­g thousands of people each day. Oregon plans to dispense thousands of shots at the state fairground­s in Salem this weekend with help from the National Guard.

In Utah, newly installed Gov. Spencer Cox unveiled a plan aimed at increasing the number of shots administer­ed to 50,000 a week. He said he will issue an executive order requiring facilities to allocate their doses the week they are received.

“This virus does not sleep,” Cox said. “This virus does not take weekends off. And neither should we.”

SUN BELT HIT HARD

The lethal surge is being driven in large part by Sun Belt states. California, Arizona, Texas and Florida together had nearly 1,500 deaths and 80,000 cases Thursday and have been setting daily records this week, as have Mississipp­i and Nevada.

Many hospitals in Los Angeles and other hard-hit areas are struggling to keep up and warned they may need to ration lifesaving care. Nurses are caring for more sick people than typically allowed under the law after the state began issuing waivers to the strict nurse-to-patient ratios.

At Los Angeles County’s Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital in Valencia, nurse Nerissa Black said the place is swamped with patients, likening the situation to New York’s at the beginning of the pandemic.

She was assigned six patients and could spend only about 10 minutes with each of them per hour, including the time it takes for her to change her protective gear.

“It’s very hard to decide which one should I go see first: the patient who has chest pain or the patient whose oxygen level is dropping,” she said.

At St. Joseph Hospital south of Los Angeles, nurses in the covid-19 ward described being overwhelme­d as the deaths mount.

“Just today we had two deaths on this unit. And that’s pretty much the norm,” said Caroline Brandenbur­ger. “I usually see one to two every shift. Super sad.” She added: “They fight every day, and they struggle to breathe every day even with tons of oxygen. And then you just see them die. They just die.”

Active-duty military medical personnel were dispatched to a Southern California hospital overwhelme­d with covid-19 patients.

About 20 physician assistants, nurses and respirator­y care practition­ers from the Army and Air Force were sent to Riverside University Health System-Medical Center in response to a state request to the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The 439-bed hospital normally averages 350 patients, but that is now up to 450.

The outbreak has taken another turn for the worse in Arizona, with the state now leading the nation with the highest covid-19 diagnosis rate. Since Dec. 31, one in every 111 Arizonans has been diagnosed with the virus.

VACCINE WORKS AGAINST VARIANT

New research suggests Pfizer’s covid-19 vaccine can protect against a mutation found in the two more-contagious variants of the coronaviru­s initially found in Britain and South Africa.

The study was preliminar­y and did not look at the two other major vaccines being used in the West — Moderna’s and AstraZenec­a’s. But it was reassuring, given questions of whether the virus could mutate to defeat the shots on which the world has pinned its hopes.

“There’s no reason to think the vaccines won’t work just as well on these strains,” said Dr. Frederic Bushman of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, who tracks how the virus mutates.

The mutated version circulatin­g in Britain has also been detected in the U.S. and numerous other countries. That and the variant seen in South Africa are causing global concern because they appear to spread more easily — although how much more isn’t yet known.

Bushman, who wasn’t involved with the Pfizer study, cautioned that it tested just one vaccine against one worrisome mutation. But the Moderna and AstraZenec­a vaccines are undergoing similar testing, and he said he expects similar findings.

That’s because all the vaccines so far are prompting recipients’ bodies to make antibodies against multiple spots on the spike protein that coats the virus.

“A mutation will change one little place, but it’s not going to disrupt binding to all of them,” Bushman said.

While scientists did not expect that a single mutation would completely upend efforts to stop the pandemic, it is still an important area of study because this coronaviru­s, like all viruses, constantly evolves. This study marks just the beginning of continual monitoring to make sure that all the vaccines being rolled out around the world continue to work.

 ?? (AP/The Brownsvill­e Herald/Denise Cathey) ?? Perla Echavarria holds still as Michelle Davies, health services coordinato­r for Harlingen Independen­t School District in Texas, administer­s her first dose of the Moderna covid-19 vaccine Friday at a vaccine clinic in Harlingen, north of Brownsvill­e. More photos at arkansason­line.com/19covid/.
(AP/The Brownsvill­e Herald/Denise Cathey) Perla Echavarria holds still as Michelle Davies, health services coordinato­r for Harlingen Independen­t School District in Texas, administer­s her first dose of the Moderna covid-19 vaccine Friday at a vaccine clinic in Harlingen, north of Brownsvill­e. More photos at arkansason­line.com/19covid/.
 ??  ?? A pharmacist prepares a syringe of the Pfizer vaccine at Queen Anne Healthcare in Seattle, where residents and workers were vaccinated Friday.
(AP/Ted S. Warren)
A pharmacist prepares a syringe of the Pfizer vaccine at Queen Anne Healthcare in Seattle, where residents and workers were vaccinated Friday. (AP/Ted S. Warren)

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