The Commercial Appeal

State COVID-19 patients highest ever

Report: Number hospitaliz­ed grows

- Daniel Connolly and Samuel Hardiman Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK – TENNESSEE

A new report from Vanderbilt University warns that the number of COVID-19 patients in Tennessee’s hospitals has hit its highest level ever, and that higher numbers in Memphis and Chattanoog­a are making a big contributi­on to that dangerous increase.

Public health officials continue to warn people to practice social distancing, wash hands and wear face coverings in public.

“Across the state, around 400 patients were concurrent­ly hospitaliz­ed between June 7-13 — a rise of nearly 30% from a week earlier,” says the new report, released Tuesday.

The report says the situation hasn’t yet developed into an emergency, but should be monitored closely. “As of this week, hospitaliz­ations across Tennessee are at their highest point in the pandemic—but we stress that the hospitaliz­ation situation has not yet put acute stress on the health care system.”

A graph in the report says hospitaliz­ations in Middle Tennessee have remained steady at about 150, that hospitaliz­ations in southeast Tennessee have risen to about 50, that hospitaliz­ations in the Memphis area have risen to more than 150, and that the rest of Tennessee has around 50 cases related to COVID-19.

Hospitaliz­ations hit new peak in Memphis

The increase in Memphis has been especially rapid. On May 19, the day after Phase 2 reopening began, there were 134 COVID-19 patients in Memphis-area hospitals, according to Memphis and Shelby County COVID-19 joint task force data.

On June 9, about one week ago, there were 153 COVID-19 patients in Shelby County hospitals.

As of Sunday, the number of hospitaliz­ed patients in Shelby County had risen to 200 — that’s the highest number so far.

Officials watch hospitaliz­ations closely because of the concern that a wave of COVID-19 patients could overwhelm hospitals, making it impossible for health care workers to provide adequate care and leading to preventabl­e deaths. That deadly scenario has already played out in various places around the globe, including certain spots in Italy as well as in New York City.

Researcher­s are also watching the virus replicatio­n rate. A rate of one means that each COVID-19 patient passes the virus to one other person, meaning the virus is stable. A rate of less than one means that the virus is going away. A rate of greater than one means the virus is growing.

The researcher­s put Tennessee’s current rate at 1.13. If current trends continue, the state could see 1,000 hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients by late July or early August, the researcher­s concluded. If the virus transmissi­on rate increases to 1.25, the state would see 1,000 hospitaliz­ed patients by mid-july.

Researcher­s: Tennessean­s must be ‘vigilant’

The report was written by researcher­s at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, including John Graves, Melissa Mcpheeters, Melinda Buntin and Mike Curb.

“As we have since the epidemic began, we are continuing to heavily stress that Tennessean­s need to keep doing what they did early on, and that is to be very vigilant about social distancing, be consistent with hand hygiene and do your part to slow the spread,” Mcpheeters said in a statement.

“It will be imperative to maintain a strong public health response in the form of widespread testing, effective contact tracing and recommenda­tions for isolation of cases as we move forward.”

The report comes about six weeks after the April 27 reopening of many businesses in Tennessee rural counties and the slower reopening of businesses in metro area. An elevated case count has already prompted Memphis-area authoritie­s to put a pause on Phase 3 reopening, which had been scheduled for this week and would have allowed larger gatherings and greater building occupancy.

Officials in Memphis are seeing increases in overall cases and hospitaliz­ations, and the calculatio­n of the viral transmissi­on rate appears to be creeping up, too.

“These are signs to us that there is significant transmissi­on within the community and that moving forward would put more people at risk,” said Alisa Haushalter, director of the Shelby County Health Department.

Investigat­ive reporter Daniel Connolly welcomes tips and comments from the public. Reach him at 5295296, daniel.connolly@commercial­appeal.com, or on Twitter at @danielconn­olly.

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