Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alabama officials beg people to be cautious at Thanksgivi­ng

- BY KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Doctors and health officials on Monday pleaded with people to take precaution­s during Thanksgivi­ng — such as skipping large indoor gatherings — as the state and nation experience­s an unchecked spread in COVID-19.

“Please do everything you can possibly do to keep yourself and your loved ones safe. We don’t want this to be the last ever Thanksgivi­ng for someone in your family like your parents or grandparen­ts,” Harris said.

Harris said Thanksgivi­ng, and how it is handled, will determine what December and Christmas look like. “We are not going to get a do-over on this.”

The state is seeing the highest number of daily new cases since the pandemic began and an increase in hospitaliz­ations, he said. As of Monday, about 1,400 people were in state hospitals with COVID-19, slightly below the summer peak of about 1,700.

According to the COVID Tracking Project, the 7- day rolling average of daily new cases in Alabama has risen over the past two weeks from 1,386 new cases per day on Nov. 8 to 2,097 new cases per day on Nov. 22.

“Alabama is seeing its numbers go up, just like every other state in the country right now. We are not headed in the right direction. We are adding a couple thousand new cases a day at least,” Harris said.

Harris said the state’s overall mortality rate from COVID-19 is about 1.5%. He said while that may sound low, it is about 15 times the mortality rate from the flu and the risk increases dramatical­ly with age. He said the mortality rate for people over age 75 is about 20%.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued holiday guidelines and noted that celebratin­g virtually or with members of your own household poses the lowest risk. Recommenda­tions include limiting the number of attendees as much as possible so people from different households can remain at least six feet apart, moving events outdoors and avoid gatherings in crowded, poorly ventilated spaces with persons who are not in your household.

Harris and Chief Medical Officer Dr. Mary McIntyre discussed how they are handling the holiday. Harris said he and his wife will be at home on their own.

McIntyre said she is limiting her gathering to a total of seven people and will visit with other family members via Zoom, including their tradition of saying what they are thankful for this year. They will use masks and temperatur­e checks. McIntyre said she will serve all the food instead of having the normal buffet.

Since the pandemic began more than 230,000 people in Alabama have tested positive for COVID-19 and more than 3,400 people have died.

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