Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Cases rising in 40 of 50 states

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The number of confirmed coronaviru­s cases per day in the U.S. climbed to an all-time high of more than 50,000 Thursday, with the infection curve rising in 40 of the 50 states in a reversal that has largely spared only the Northeast.

Four states — Arizona, California, Florida and Texas — reported a combined 25,000 new confirmed cases Thursday, and 36 states are seeing an increase in the percentage of tests coming back positive for the virus.

“What we’ve seen is a very disturbing week,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious-disease expert, said in a livestream with the American Medical Associatio­n.

In a major retreat that illustrate­d how dire things have become in Texas, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott ordered the wearing of masks across most of the state after refusing until recently to let even local government­s impose such rules.

The surge has been blamed in part on Americans not covering their faces or following other social distancing rules as states lifted their lockdowns over the past few weeks. Fauci warned that if people don’t start complying, “we’re going to be in some serious difficulty.”

The U.S. recorded 50,700 new confirmed cases, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University. That represents a doubling of the daily total over the past month and is higher even than what the country witnessed during the most lethal phase of the crisis in April and May, when

the New York metropolit­an area was the worst hot spot in the U.S.

All but 10 states are showing an upswing in newly reported cases over the past 14 days, according to data compiled by the volunteer COVID Tracking Project. The outbreaks are most severe in Arizona, Texas and Florida, which, together with California, have reclosed or otherwise clamped back down on bars, restaurant­s and movie theaters over the past week or so.

Nebraska and South Dakota were the only states

outside the Northeast with a downward trend in cases.

While some of the increases may be explained by expanded testing, other indicators are grim, too, including hospitaliz­ations and positive test rates. Over the past two weeks, the percentage of positive tests has doubled in Georgia, Kansas, Montana, Michigan, Missouri, Tennessee, Mississipp­i, South Carolina and Ohio. In Nevada, it has tripled. In Idaho, it is five times higher.

In Texas, where new cases in the past two weeks have swelled from about 2,400 a day to almost 8,100 on Wednesday, the positive rate ballooned from 8% to 14.5%. In Arizona, it has gone from 5.7% to 10.3%.

Abbott, who in May began one of the most aggressive reopening schedules of any governor, ordered the wearing of masks in all counties with at least 20 COVID-19 cases.

Abbott said in a video posted on Twitter that the state’s lower infection rate and case counts after his stay-home order in April might have led some to think the “coast was clear.” But the number of people hospitaliz­ed in Texas because of COVID-19 has tripled since late May, after businesses began reopening.

“We are now at a point where the virus is spreading so fast, there is little margin for error,” Abbott said. “I know that wearing

a face covering is not the convenient thing to do, but I also know that wearing a face covering will help us to keep Texas open for business. And it will help Texans earn the paycheck they need.”

Florida reported more than 10,000 new confirmed cases for the first time Thursday. That’s six times higher than the daily count of less than a month ago. The state also reported 67 deaths for the second time in a week and 325 new hospitaliz­ations, one of the biggest 24-hour jumps in Florida yet. Georgia, likewise, saw its biggest single-day increase yet, nearly 3,500 cases.

“I’m discourage­d because we didn’t act fast

enough to shut things down, and we could have done a much better job getting a handle on the virus,” said Megan Archer, a 39-year-old woman from West Palm Beach, Fla., who lost her job with a county parks department during the outbreak.

Several Northeaste­rn states have seen new infections slow down significan­tly, including New York, Massachuse­tts, Connecticu­t, Rhode Island and New Jersey, which allowed its Atlantic City casinos to reopen Thursday, though with no smoking, drinking or eating.

Pennsylvan­ia, an outlier among Northeaste­rn states, reported its highest one-day total of new cases

since May, with more than 830, more than one-quarter of them in Pittsburgh’s Allegheny County, which will impose a one-week shutdown of bars and restaurant­s and all gatherings of more than 25 people starting Friday.

President Donald Trump on Wednesday seemed confident the virus would soon subside, telling Fox Business: “I think that, at some point, that’s going to sort of just disappear, I hope.”

The U.S. has reported at least 2.7 million cases and more than 128,000 dead, the highest toll in the world. Globally there have been 10.7 million confirmed cases and over 517,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins’ count.

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