Rome News-Tribune

State leaders facing a second wave resist steps to curb virus

- By Adam Geller and David Pitt

DES MOINES, Iowa — Even as a new surge of coronaviru­s infections sweeps the U.S., officials in many hardhit states are resisting taking stronger action to slow the spread, with pleas from health experts running up against political calculatio­n and public fatigue.

Days before a presidenti­al election that has spotlighte­d President Donald Trump’s scattersho­t response to the pandemic, the virus continued its resurgence Friday, with total confirmed cases in the U.S. surpassing 9 million.

The number of new infections reported daily is on the rise in 47 states. They include Nebraska and South Dakota, where the number of new cases topped previous highs for each state.

The record increases in new cases have eclipsed the spikes that set off national alarms last spring and summer. During those outbreaks, first in the Northeast and then in Sun Belt states, many governors closed schools and businesses and restricted public gatherings.

But this fall’s resurgence of the virus, despite being far more widespread, has brought a decidedly more limited response in many states. Most are led by Republican governors backing a president who insists, falsely, that the country is getting the virus under control.

Over the past two weeks, more than 76,000 new virus cases have been reported daily in the U.S. on average, up from about 54,000 in midOctober, according to Johns Hopkins University. Deaths, which usually lag case numbers and hospitaliz­ations, are also rising, from about 700 to more than 800 a day.

The virus has now killed more than 229,000 Americans.

Neverthele­ss, many officials have resisted calls to enact measures like statewide mask mandates or stricter curbs on the size of gatherings, casting the response to the virus as a matter of individual decision-making.

“At the end of the day, personal responsibi­lity is the only way. People will either choose or not choose to social distance, or choose to wear a mask or not,” said Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, a Republican. “What we can do is to remind them is that personal responsibi­lity can protect them.”

Lee’s state is among those without a blanket mask mandate despite a study released this week showing that areas of Tennessee where people are not required to wear them are seeing the most hospitaliz­ations.

In Iowa, where a record 606 coronaviru­s patients were hospitaliz­ed Friday, one health expert said officials there had been too quick to reopen, along with several neighborin­g states.

“If we follow the course that the other Midwestern states like Wisconsin, North Dakota and South Dakota have, we’re going to have trouble keeping up,” said Dr. Ravi Vemuri, an infectious disease specialist at MercyOne hospitals.

Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds, who has rejected mask requiremen­ts and said Iowans must learn to live with the virus, continued this week to downplay efforts to contain it.

On Wednesday, Reynolds, who has made frequent campaign appearance­s for Trump and other candidates surrounded by crowds of often maskless supporters, poked fun at Theresa Greenfield, a Democrat running in a tight Senate race, for suspending a campaign tour after a staff member was exposed to someone who tested positive.

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 ?? AP-Seth Wenig ?? Medical personnel don PPE while attending to a patient (not infected with COVID-19) at Bellevue Hospital in New York, on Wednesday. Hospitals in the city’s public NYC Health and Hospitals’ system have been upgrading their equipment, bracing for a potential resurgence of coronaviru­s patients, drawing on lessons learned in the spring when the outbreak brought the nation’s largest city to its knees.
AP-Seth Wenig Medical personnel don PPE while attending to a patient (not infected with COVID-19) at Bellevue Hospital in New York, on Wednesday. Hospitals in the city’s public NYC Health and Hospitals’ system have been upgrading their equipment, bracing for a potential resurgence of coronaviru­s patients, drawing on lessons learned in the spring when the outbreak brought the nation’s largest city to its knees.
 ?? AP-Robert F. Bukaty ?? Will Surks, of Westfield, N.J., a freshman at Bowdoin College, has his temperatur­e checked as a safety measure, before being allowed into a campaign event for Sara Gideon, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, at the Town Mall, on Thursday in Brunswick, Maine. Gideon, the speaker of the Maine House, is challengin­g incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins.
AP-Robert F. Bukaty Will Surks, of Westfield, N.J., a freshman at Bowdoin College, has his temperatur­e checked as a safety measure, before being allowed into a campaign event for Sara Gideon, Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate, at the Town Mall, on Thursday in Brunswick, Maine. Gideon, the speaker of the Maine House, is challengin­g incumbent Republican Sen. Susan Collins.

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