The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Coronaviru­s hitting harder across state

- By Johnny Edwards | jredwards@ajc.com Staff writers Jeremy Redmon, J. Scott Trubey, Greg Bluestein, Amanda C. Coyne, J.D. Capelouto, Kristal Dixon, Adrianne Murchison and David Ibata contribute­d to this report.

The pandemic rages on. Instead of vanishing under warmer temperatur­es, as the president once predicted, the coronaviru­s has only bitten down harder.

Spiking cases have Georgia’s rural hospitals bracing for surges all over again. Infections have increased among people in their teens and 20s, who health experts say may be less likely to heed guidance to wear masks and socially distance. But the governor, who has championed a swift reopening of the economy, says he has no plans to impose new restrictio­ns or mandate face masks. All signs point to a rough summer ahead.

Here is a look at major developmen­ts over the past week.

Disease tears into rural Georgia

Another hot spot has emerged in Troup County, along the Alabama border. The LaGrange metro area is experienci­ng one of the highest rates of new deaths and new cases in the nation relative to its population, The New York Times reported.

This month, the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases has more than doubled in Troup, and more

than two dozen people have died from it. The disease has spread through the county jail, LaGrange Health and Rehab nursing home and the massive Kia Motors manufactur­ing plant.

As summer approaches and residents yearn for a return to normalcy, authoritie­s have broken up large house parties in West Point and LaGrange. Local officials, scrambling to remind residents of the ongoing threat, are handing out free cloth masks.

“Bottom line, people are not taking precaution­s like they should,” West Point Mayor Steve Tramell said.

With the battle shifting to rural areas, the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency announced Wednesday that it will move 80 beds out of the little-used temporary hospital at the Georgia World Congress Center and set them up 100 miles southeast inside a shuttered youth military academy in Milledgevi­lle.

Cases up among young adults

So how is the virus spreading? According to an Atlanta

Journal-Constituti­on analysis, adults under 30 make up the fastest-growing group of new infections. People 18 to 29 made up about 29% of the new cases so far

in June, up from 21% in May and

13% in April, the analysis shows.

COVID-19 tends to be milder for young adults than for the elderly, but the disease isn’t without risk. Of the 13,496 adults

under 30 who had tested positive through Tuesday, 542 — or about 4% — have been hospitaliz­ed and 11 have died, according to state data.

“We do see severe cases of COVID-19 in young people, particular­ly with people with co-morbiditie­s,” said Dr. Jesse Couk, assistant medical director of infection control at Piedmont Hospital and medical director of infection control at The Shepherd Center in

Buckhead. “And as the spread continues and cases continue to rise, and they will if we don’t do anything differentl­y, we will see it work its way into more vulnerable population­s.”

Governor has no plans for new restrictio­ns

After Georgia hit new daily coronaviru­s case records on four days last week, Gov. Brian Kemp said Friday he doesn’t plan to impose new restrictio­ns or require the use of masks to combat the spread of disease, as other states have done.

Kemp said mandating masks is a “bridge too far for me right now,” but urged Georgians to wear them and practice social distancing.

“There’s some people that just do not want to wear a mask. I’m sensitive to that from a political environmen­t of having people buy into that, and creating other issues out there,” he said. “But it’s definitely a good idea.”

Kemp said the state continues to “hold our own” in the quest to contain the disease, citing

increased troves of life-saving personal protection equipment

and testimony from hospital executives encouraged by new treatments.

Fourth of July fireworks canceled

In yet another sign of COVID19 times, our nation’s birthday should be a lot quieter this year. Numerous cities and counties around the four-county metro area have canceled or postponed

their fireworks plans. Two of the largest and most popular displays, in Centennial Olympic Park and Stone Mountain, have been nixed. Because there will be no Atlanta Braves

game, Truist Park won’t have its holiday fireworks show.

The same goes for parades and pyrotechni­cs in Sandy Springs, Roswell, Marietta, Acworth, Lawrencevi­lle, Norcross and the Mall of Georgia. Kennesaw reschedule­d its celebratio­n to Sept. 12. Lilburn has postponed its event to November, and Braselton will hold its Independen­ce Day fireworks and festival on Sept. 5.

 ?? AJC 2019 ?? The Fourth of July fireworks display at Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta is among several that have been canceled. Others in Kennesaw, Lilburn and Braselton have been postponed to September and November.
AJC 2019 The Fourth of July fireworks display at Centennial Olympic Park in Atlanta is among several that have been canceled. Others in Kennesaw, Lilburn and Braselton have been postponed to September and November.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? West Point Councilman Alanteo “Henry” Hutchinson and his girlfriend, Tameka Atkinson, both tested positive for COVID-19. He has isolated himself at his home in Troup County, where COVID-19 cases have more than doubled.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM West Point Councilman Alanteo “Henry” Hutchinson and his girlfriend, Tameka Atkinson, both tested positive for COVID-19. He has isolated himself at his home in Troup County, where COVID-19 cases have more than doubled.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States