Chicago Sun-Times

ILLINOIS SEES DEADLIEST DAY FROM COVID SINCE MAY, ADDS RECORD 12,657 CASES

Daily toll of 145 reported as state adds another record- breaking 12,657 coronaviru­s cases

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, PAGE 6

Illinois’ breathtaki­ng COVID- 19 resurgence soared to new heights for a second straight day Wednesday as public health officials announced 12,657 new cases of the deadly respirator­y disease and the latest 145 deaths attributed to it — the state’s worst daily death toll in almost six months.

Two Cook County men in their 20s and 30s were among 78 Chicago- area residents included in the latest fatality count, which is the state’s highest since 159 deaths were reported May 27, toward the end of Illinois’ first coronaviru­s wave.

Average daily case counts have more than tripled since then, with the state logging 10,000 or more new cases for six straight days. Wednesday’s total set a new record for the fifth time in a week.

More than 105,000 residents have tested positive for the virus so far this month, already accounting for about 20% of all the nearly 524,000 cases that have piled up throughout eight months of the pandemic.

The newest probable and confirmed cases were detected among 93,464 tests submitted to the Illinois Department of Public Health, raising the state’s average testing positivity rate over the last week to 12.4%. That number, a gauge of how rapidly the virus is spreading, has almost quadrupled in about a month.

Illinois is now adding cases at the seventhfas­test rate per capita among all states in the U. S., according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

And Illinois hospitals are treating the most coronaviru­s patients they’ve ever seen. As of Tuesday night, 5,042 beds were taken up by COVID- 19 patients statewide — the most occupied on any night of the pandemic.

The numbers of those patients requiring intensive care or ventilator­s are still lower compared to those during the first wave in spring, but they’ve been rising sharply for a month.

Rising fatalities are the final lagging indicator of a resurgent pandemic, experts say. The state has averaged 72 COVID- 19 deaths per day over the last week, two and a half times the rate this time last month.

Since March, the virus has claimed 10,434 Illinois lives.

“I want to remind everybody how deadly this virus is,” Gov. J. B. Pritzker said. “It hasn’t abated. It hasn’t changed. It’s out there.”

The Democratic governor said he’s “cer

tainly looking at statewide mitigation­s” similar to his springtime stay- at- home order, but placed the onus on local government­s to enforce masking, social distancing and crowd limit guidelines to stem the surge.

“Local government­s though, right now, if they are not imposing new mitigation­s and enforcing the ones that are already in place, they’re doing it wrong,” Pritzker said.

Public health officials are urging residents to work from home if possible, participat­e in essential activities only, avoid “even small gatherings” and stay home as much as possible.

“I WANT TO REMIND EVERYBODY HOW DEADLY THIS VIRUS IS. IT HASN’T ABATED. IT HASN’T CHANGED. IT’S OUT THERE.” GOV. J. B. PRITZKER

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 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES; SCOTT OLSON/ GETTY IMAGES ( RIGHT) ?? ABOVE: A test site worker gives instructio­ns for the self test at the COVID- 19 testing site in Little Village on Tuesday. RIGHT: Despite temperatur­es in the mid- 40s, customers continue to patronize restaurant­s and bars in the Wicker Park neighborho­od on Wednesday.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES; SCOTT OLSON/ GETTY IMAGES ( RIGHT) ABOVE: A test site worker gives instructio­ns for the self test at the COVID- 19 testing site in Little Village on Tuesday. RIGHT: Despite temperatur­es in the mid- 40s, customers continue to patronize restaurant­s and bars in the Wicker Park neighborho­od on Wednesday.

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