Daily Southtown

Illinois has highest one-day case count; 168 COVID-19 related deaths reported

- By Jerry Nowicki

SPRINGFIEL­D — The state reported its secondhigh­est one-day COVID-19 count Thursday with 14,612, but it also reported its second-highest daily testing output with 113,447 results reported over the previous 24 hours.

The 168 COVID-19 related deaths reported Thursday made for the third-highest one-day total since the pandemic began. That brought the total death toll to 11,178 among 621,383 confirmed cases out of 9.4million test results reported.

Dr. Kamaljit Singh, an infectious disease specialist at North Shore Medical Group, called the COVID-19 pandemica “21st century mass casualty event” and said the hospital system is “close to a breaking point.”

That came as hospitaliz­ations for the virus surpassed 6,000 for the first time since the pandemic began with 6,037 COVID-19 patients in hospital beds at the end of Wednesday. That marks 25 straight days of increasing hospitaliz­ations, while 29% of hospital beds remained open statewide.

Intensive care bed and ventilator usage for the virus each blew past second-wave highs as well, with 1,192 and 587 in use, respective­ly. Approximat­ely 30% of ICU beds and 71% of ventilator­s remained unused at the end of Wednesday.

“I know at times that numbers can just fly over our heads, but to put it in simple terms, one in five hospitaliz­ed patients will die of COVID-19 infection,” Singh said. “It reminds me of growing up during the Vietnam War. I could never wrap my brain around the numbers of soldiers’ lives lost but the pictures were terribly compelling. Unfortunat­ely, I can’t show you pictures of the suffering of our patients, but hopefully you can tell fromthe tone of my voice that this is a real human tragedy.”

He said the capacity restrictio­ns and limits to indoor gatherings seen in the Tier 3 mitigation­s that will take effect Friday are needed to limit the virus’ spread.

“But we will also need to change our private behavior, because a lot of transmissi­ons are occurring at birthday parties, weddings and family gatherings,” he said. “This is especially important as we approach Thanksgivi­ng, and it’s critical that we make our bubble smaller, and only celebrate with our immediate household members.”

He said the goal is to bring the positivity rate down to the low singledigi­ts as the nation awaits a safe and effective vaccine, as that is the only way to achieve any semblance of normalcy. Singh joined Gov. JB Pritzker at his daily briefing Thursday in Chicago. The governor seconded his message.

“Outside of things you have to leave home for like school, work and groceries, we’re asking everyone to stay home as much as you can,” he said. “This is a temporary thing that we can do to reduce the spread of this virus in our communitie­s. That will give our health care workers some relief and ensure that there will be hospital beds and doctors and nurses available for emergencie­s.”

The statewide seven-day average case positivity rate increased slightly from the day prior to 12%, remaining more than a point below its Nov. 13 high of 13.2%. The one- day positivity rate Thursday was 12.9%, which was the fifth-highest sin-

gle-day number of the secondwave.

Eight of the state’s 11 COVID-19 mitigation regions saw the same or lower positivity rates fromthe day before as of Monday, as that data lags three days behind the current day.

“We continue to see concerning trends statewide in our hospitaliz­ation data, but in the most recent two or three days, we’ve seen a hint of leveling in new cases and positivity rates in most of our regions,” Pritzker said. “It’s too early at this point to determine if this stabilizin­g of the average is a meaningful trend or an anomaly, but we’re glad to at least have a pause in our upwardmove­ment.”

He said it is still important to maintain social distance, wear face coverings, wash hands and avoid large gatherings. That’s also true for the Thanksgivi­ng holiday, Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike said at the briefing.

“My fear is that the number of cases, hospitaliz­ations and deaths will spike even further in the weeks after Thanksgivi­ng, because people spent that holiday together, mixing households,” she said. “I don’t want anyone to have to look back and say, ‘if only we didn’t have people over for Thanksgivi­ng, suchand-such, so-and-so, might still be here for New Year’s.’ ”

 ?? NAM Y. HUH/AP ?? Elementary school students sit on board a school bus after attending in-person classes at school Thursday in Wheeling. Several Illinois schools will go to virtual remote learning after Thanksgivi­ng weekend as COVID-19 cases soar.
NAM Y. HUH/AP Elementary school students sit on board a school bus after attending in-person classes at school Thursday in Wheeling. Several Illinois schools will go to virtual remote learning after Thanksgivi­ng weekend as COVID-19 cases soar.

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