The Bakersfield Californian

Virus fight stalls in early hot spots New York, New Jersey

- BY MARINA VILLENEUVE AND MIKE CATALINI

ALBANY, N.Y. — A year after becoming a global epicenter of the coronaviru­s pandemic, New York and New Jersey are back atop the list of U.S. states with the highest rates of infection.

Even as the vaccinatio­n campaign has ramped up, the number of new infections in New Jersey has crept up by 37 percent in a little more than a month, to about 23,600 every seven days. About 54,600 people in New York tested positive for the virus in the last week, a number that has begun to inch up recently.

The two states now rank No. 1 and 2 in new infections per capita among U.S. states. New Jersey has been reporting about 647 new cases for every 100,000 residents over the past 14 days. New York has averaged 548.

The situation in New York and New Jersey mirrors a national trend that has seen case numbers inch up in recent days. The U.S. is averaging nearly 62,000 cases a day, up from 54,000 two weeks ago.

Neither state is experienci­ng anything like what they saw last spring, when hospitals — and morgues — were overflowin­g. And like the rest of the country, both are in a much better place than in January, at the peak of the pandemic’s winter spike.

But the lack of improvemen­t or even backslidin­g in recent weeks has raised concerns that the states are opening too quickly and people are letting down their guard too much, just as potentiall­y more contagious variants of the virus are circulatin­g more widely.

“When we’re seeing leveling off of cases or increase, that’s when it’s a time to rethink policies,” said Roy Gulick, chief of the infectious diseases division at Weill Cornell Medical College and New York-Presbyteri­an Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center.

In February, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo allowed the state’s largest stadiums to host sporting events and concerts again, albeit at only 10 percent of normal capacity. New York City movie theaters have been allowed to reopen. Restaurant­s can now operate at 50 percent capacity in New York City.

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