Houston Chronicle

Most new patients in N.Y. not working, older

- By Karen Matthews, Marina Villeneuve and Michael Hill

NEW YORK — The great majority of people newly hospitaliz­ed with the coronaviru­s in New York are either retired or unemployed and were avoiding public transit, according to a new state survey, the first such look at people still getting seriously ill despite six weeks of severe social distancing.

The survey of 1,269 patients admitted to 113 hospitals over three recent days confounded expectatio­ns that new cases would be dominated by essential workers, especially those regularly traveling on subways and buses.

Retirees accounted for 37 percent of the people hospitaliz­ed. Another 46 percent were unemployed. Almost three-quarters were 51 years or older. Only 17 percent were working.

Only 4 percent were still using public transporta­tion in their daily life, they survey found, though it also noted that informatio­n on transit use was only available for about half the people surveyed.

“We were thinking that maybe we were going to find a higher percentage of essential employees who were getting sick because they were going to work, that these may be nurses, doctors, transit workers. That’s not the case,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said at his daily briefing.

The survey also showed, however, that 18 percent of the people admitted to hospitals with the virus had been transferre­d from nursing homes, underscori­ng the difficulty those facilities have had controllin­g infections.

People were far less likely to be hospitaliz­ed in other institutio­nal settings.

Fewer than 1 percent were in jails; 4 percent were in assisted living; 2 percent in congregate housing and 2 percent were homeless.

It also found that African-Americans and Hispanics were being hospitaliz­ed at far greater rates that whites, mirroring other studies.

While hospitaliz­ation rates have been easing in New York, an average of more than 600 people per day have been admitted to hospitals in the state over the past three days.

The virus killed 232 people in the state Tuesday, Cuomo said, and nearly 2,800 people tested positive for the virus.

The state’s survey of newly hospitaliz­ed patients matches what doctors are seeing in the field, said Dr. Frederick Davis, emergency room physician at Long Island Jewish Medical Center.

“Many of the patients that are presenting now are older. Early on we saw a wide range of individual­s that were presenting with respirator­y symptoms. As time has gone on we have seen more presentati­ons in the older population­s,“he said.

With expanded availabili­ty of testing, Davis said, younger patients with milder symptoms are getting treated at home or by their primary care physicians. People still working also now know, unlike in March, that the virus is very widespread, so they are taking additional precaution­s.

New York City normally has the country’s busiest public transit system, with a weekday ridership of more than 5 million. But ridership has dropped more than 90 percent during the pandemic.

“Thank God things are getting better in New York City, but we still have a long way to go,” de Blasio said.

 ?? Mark Lennihan / Associated Press ?? A patient is moved in New York on Wednesday. The majority of people newly hospitaliz­ed with the virus in New York are either retired or unemployed and were avoiding public transit.
Mark Lennihan / Associated Press A patient is moved in New York on Wednesday. The majority of people newly hospitaliz­ed with the virus in New York are either retired or unemployed and were avoiding public transit.

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