Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Puerto Rico lifts restrictio­ns, sees covid cases quickly rise

- FRANCES ROBLES

The coronaviru­s is surging in Puerto Rico, with new cases being reported at a per- capita rate more than six times the national average. The spike began just five days after the island lifted all its pandemic restrictio­ns.

Puerto Rico has reached a seven-day average of 4,000 reported cases a day, more than 3,700 of them first-time infections — up from fewer than 200 new cases a day in early March.

Though the island accounts for less than 1% of the United States population, it is reporting 7% of the nation’s new cases.

“It was doubling every week for a couple of weeks,” said Rafael A. Irizarry, a Harvard statistici­an who keeps a dashboard on Puerto Rico’s covid-19 data.

The increase in cases is no longer quite so steep, but hospitaliz­ations are rising, too. Though only 245 people on the island are currently hospitaliz­ed with coronaviru­s infections, that’s nearly three times the number from two months ago, according to Department of Health data.

New case reports started climbing on March 15, five days after Gov. Pedro R. Pierluisi lifted all coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in Puerto Rico, including requiremen­ts for patrons to show proof of vaccinatio­n to enter indoor venues and for travelers arriving in Puerto Rico to show a recent negative test, Irizarry said.

The Holy Week holiday season leading up to Easter Sunday, and a series of big concerts where most people in attendance did not wear masks, did not help the situation. Dominican musician Juan Luis Guerra tested positive a few days after performing in San Juan.

Puerto Rico achieved high rates of initial vaccinatio­n — 78% of the island’s population is fully vaccinated, well above the national average of 66%.

But many people in Puerto Rico have not received booster shots, and there was an burst of new cases on the island around the Christmas and New Year’s holidays, when the omicron variant first surged in much of the country.

Pierluisi has said that the era of mandates has passed, and it was now up to individual citizens to look to their own sense of “civic responsibi­lity” to decide what precaution­s to take.

Even so, in late April, his administra­tion reinstitut­ed mask mandates in schools.

A coalition of scientists advising the island’s government had urged it to take a tougher stance on mask- wearing, according to Dr. Kenira Thompson, president of the coalition of scientists and vice president for research at Ponce Health Sciences University in Puerto Rico.

Thompson said the rise in cases was a natural result of lifting mandates on the mainland and on the island, which has seen a steady stream of visitors this year.

“Walk through the airport in San Juan — it’s packed,” Thompson said. “There’s been a lot of interchang­ing of people. Tourism is Puerto Rico’s main source of income. We are happy to have people here. But with that exchange of people, we are going to have an increase in positivity and the spread of disease.”

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