Enterprise-Record (Chico)

US virus deaths hit record levels with the holidays ahead

- By Lisa Marie Pane and Rachel La Corte

Deaths from COVID-19 in the U. S. have soared to more than 2,200 a day on average, matching the frightenin­g peak reached last April, and cases per day have eclipsed 200,000 on average for the first time on record, with the crisis all but certain to get worse because of the fallout from Thanksgivi­ng, Christmas and New Year’s.

Virtually every state is reporting surges just as a vaccine appears days away from getting the go-ahead in the U.S.

“What we do now literally will be a matter of life and death for many of our citizens,” Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said Tuesday as he extended restrictio­ns on businesses and social gatherings, including a ban on indoor dining and drinking at restaurant­s and bars.

While the impending arrival of the vaccine is reason for hope, he said, “at the moment, we have to face reality, and the reality is that we are suffering a very dire situation with the pandemic.”

Elsewhere around the country, North Carolina’s governor imposed a 10 p.m. curfew, and authoritie­s in Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley sent a mass cellphone text alert Tuesday telling millions about the rapid spread of the virus and urging them to abide by the state’s stayat-home orders.

The virus is blamed for more than 285,000 deaths and 15 million confirmed infections in the United States.

Many Americans disregarde­d warnings not to travel over Thanksgivi­ng and have ignored other safety precaution­s, whether out of stubbornne­ss, ignorance or complacenc­y. On Saturday night, police in Southern California arrested nearly 160 people, many of them not wearing masks, at a house party in Palmdale that was held without the homeowner’s knowledge.

Before his death Friday from complicati­ons of COVID-19, 78-year-old former Alabama state Sen. Larry Dixon asked his wife from his hospital bed to relay a warning. “Sweetheart, we messed up. We just dropped our guard. ... We’ve got to tell people this is real,” his friend Dr. David Thrasher, a pulmonolog­ist, quoted him as saying.

Although Dixon had been conscienti­ous about masks and social distancing, he met up with friends at a restaurant for what they called a “prayer meeting,” and three of them fell ill, Thrasher said.

Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronaviru­s task force coordinato­r, offered what sounded like a subtle rebuke of the way President Donald Trump and others in the administra­tion have downplayed the disease and undercut scientists.

“Messages need to be critically consistent,” Birx said Tuesday at a Wall Street Journal conference of CEOs. “I think we need to be much more consistent about addressing the myths that are out there — that COVID doesn’t really exist, or that the fatalities somehow are made up, or the hospitaliz­ations are for other diseases, not COVID, that masks actually hurt you.”

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