Chicago Sun-Times

COVID’S HOLIDAY IMPACT

Pritzker urges Illinoisan­s to avoid big gatherings, says he hopes to spend his Thanksgivi­ng in state

- BY RACHEL HINTON AND BRETT CHASE Staff Reporters Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

Already feeling the pain from the fall coronaviru­s explosion, Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Monday urged Illinois residents to rethink crowded Thanksgivi­ng dinners, or the state could “expect much worse.”

A little over a week before a holiday that typically sees people feasting indoors with family, the governor and Dr. Ngozi Ezike, the head of the Illinois Public Health Department, urged caution to avoid overtaxing the state’s health care apparatus.

“Our hospitals are on their way to being overwhelme­d — our doctors, nurses and health care workers are already being stretched beyond their limits,” Ezike said. “I don’t know how else to express the importance of personal responsibi­lity.”

The governor urged people to ask themselves “if it’s worth it to spread the virus at any upcoming gatherings.” Though there’s “real hope for possible widespread distributi­on” of a vaccine by early spring, that’s still months away, Pritzker said.

For his part, Pritzker said he won’t be hosting friends who can’t go home for the holiday as he usually does. But asked whether he’d be in the state for Thanksgivi­ng, the governor was noncommitt­al, saying “that is my hope, but I’ll let you know.”

Pritzker’s comments came on a day the state reported another 11,632 new and probable cases of the coronaviru­s, as well as 37 more deaths, bringing the state’s death toll to 10,779.

It was also the first day of stay-at-home advisories for residents of Chicago and suburban Cook County.

State health officials reported 5,581 people were hospitaliz­ed with the virus as of Sunday night, with 1,144 of those patients in intensive care units and 514 on ventilator­s.

The state is averaging about 5,200 patients with COVID-19 in the state’s hospitals, or about 400 more people than during the state’s highest point in the spring — “a 70% increase in the last two weeks alone,” Pritzker said.

The 11,632 new infections marked the 11th straight day of five- digit daily caseloads, a stretch that included Friday’s 15,415. That was the highest number of new cases logged in a single day by any state in the nation throughout eight months of the pandemic.

The governor also said the most recent week- over-week percent increase is three times what it was in early October, before the state saw a dramatic surge in case numbers. With the nation now gripped by an unnerving surge, too, that means Illinois is also without “reinforcem­ents from other states,” such as the nurses who came in the spring to help.

“Every bed in the hospital that a COVID patient takes up is a bed that’s not going to treat someone’s heart attack, a cancer patient or the victim of a car crash, every doctor reassigned to the COVID wing is a doctor no longer available to do an appendecto­my, set a broken rib,” Pritzker said. “Take into account that we have just 1,100 ICU beds open in a state of nearly 13 million people in the middle of a pandemic.

Dr. Robert Citronberg, executive medical director of infectious disease and prevention at Advocate Aurora Health, told reporters in a separate briefing Monday “we’re in the midst of an absolutely abysmal second wave of this pandemic.”

“Thanksgivi­ng dinners have the potential of being super-spreader events,” he said. “It’s so critically important that we do not do that. The numbers are devastatin­g right now. Our health care system cannot absorb doubling or tripling of those numbers.”

The large regional health care system, which also operates in Wisconsin, has 10 hospitals in Illinois, mostly in the Chicago area. Advocate has more than 600 patients hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19, more than 3½ times the number it saw a month ago.

Monday’s figures bring the state’s total to 585,248 cases. The caseload comes from 90,612 tests conducted over the last 24 hours. The state’s seven- day statewide positivity rate for cases is 12.5%.

From last Monday to present, the state has reported 97,261 new cases.

With holidays looming, local officials, including Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e, issued stay-at-home advisories.

The advisories for residents in suburban Cook County and Chicago went into effect 6 a.m. Monday.

Of the 37 deaths reported Monday, 19 were from Cook County.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker is urging Illinoisan­s who are considerin­g large holiday dinners to ask themselves “if it’s worth it to spread the virus at any upcoming gatherings.”
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO Gov. J.B. Pritzker is urging Illinoisan­s who are considerin­g large holiday dinners to ask themselves “if it’s worth it to spread the virus at any upcoming gatherings.”

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