USA TODAY International Edition

Bracing for new wave in North

Devastatin­g early outbreak in NY region left lessons

- Joseph Spector, David Robinson, Terrence T. McDonald, and Meredith Newman

In early March, Dr. Jeffrey Shaman watched from his New York City home as political leaders debated how best to control the first cases of the new coronaviru­s.

It soon led to screaming at the television.

Shaman, an infectious disease expert at Columbia University, said he thought city schools should have been closed right then, in the first week of March, or at least by the second week of the month.

“It was definitely too slow,” he told the USA TODAY Network. “I could not believe the schools were still open.”

Schools in New York ultimately closed March 16 when the state had 950 COVID- 19 cases and nine deaths.

New York and New Jersey have gone on to have the most coronaviru­s deaths in the nation, nearly 32,600 ( including 4,600 probable deaths in New York City) and 15,700, respective­ly.

That was followed by 8,500 in Massachuse­tts; 8,400 in California; 7,600 in Illinois; and 7,100 in Pennsylvan­ia. Maryland had about 3,500 deaths, while Delaware had 580, according to federal data.

Infection rates in the Northeast have fallen to record lows in recent weeks even as they have soared to

record highs in more than 30 other states, mostly in the South and West.

Now the question is: How well prepared are Northeast states for another spike of COVID- 19?

Nowhere in the country is a region more aware of the virus’ impact than the Northeast.

And that experience – with thousands of deaths, overwhelme­d hospitals and a shuttered economy – is working to inform how officials respond to an anticipate­d second wave.

The states have been working together to try to thwart a spike but at the same time making independen­t decisions on when to open or close certain industries.

“We see the second wave in the distance,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said July 17. “It will have an effect on New York. How bad? We don’t know. But we cannot stop the virus at our borders. We’re trying everything we can.”

Late shutdowns, European travel and nursing homes fueled virus’ early days

Shaman’s early warnings about the need for a quick shutdown were not heeded. New York didn’t close to nonessenti­al workers until March 22, when the state had 114 deaths and more than 15,000 cases.

Shaman co- wrote a study in May that said New York could have saved as many as 17,000 lives if it instituted its stay- at- home order two weeks earlier.

“We didn’t pick up and learn quickly from seeing what was happening in China,” Shaman said.

“We didn’t follow the leads of South Korea and Vietnam and Taiwan to control it, and we dithered and doubted the evidence and worried about the economic repercussi­ons of it, which I can understand.”

He added, “It’s an uncertain time and it’s difficult, but this is one of the few instances where leadership really matters.”

Cuomo has blamed the federal government, saying it let more than 3 million Europeans travel to the U. S., mainly the Northeast, at least six weeks before the pandemic became apparent.

A U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report July 17 noted that by the time travel restrictio­ns from Europe were put in place March 13, “importatio­n and community transmissi­on of SARS- CoV- 2 had already occurred in NYC.”

A faster shutdown may also have saved more lives among the most vulnerable population, those in nursing homes and extended care facilities.

About 43% of New Jersey’s deaths occurred in nursing homes, while nearly 6,300 deaths in New York, or 25% of the total, were in the facilities. Nursing home deaths made up nearly 70% of COVID- 19 deaths in Pennsylvan­ia.

The nursing home deaths have drawn heavy scrutiny over whether states should have better insulated residents from COVID- 19 cases, but New York has insisted the problem was the result of staff spreading the infection through the homes.

U. S. Rep. Tom Reed, R- N. Y., is among those calling for an independen­t investigat­ion of nursing home deaths.

He said in a statement July 6 that blaming staff “when the state knowingly created COVID hotspots by forcing homes to accept COVID- positive patients is a slap in the face to those who lost a loved one.”

What Northeast states learned from the first wave of pandemic

New York’s daily death toll hit as high as 800 in early April, but now daily deaths are in the single digits, and there have been a few days without any deaths reported.

The Northeast is trying to keep it that way: New York, New Jersey and Connecticu­t are requiring a 14- day quarantine for visitors from states with high infection rates and requiring they fill out questionna­ires when they enter New York.

And the states’ phased reopening has been largely successful compared with states in the South and West that now are shutting down businesses after a broad reopening last month.

“The only way we can keep our positivity rate and our RT, or rate of transmissi­on, low is by taking the precaution­s that we have across the past four months,” New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said July 17.

The pandemic, in many ways, has laid bare fundamenta­l flaws in American society.

Watching the coronaviru­s spread like wildfire through low- income communitie­s plagued by overcrowde­d housing underscore­d the systemic racism fueling disparate health outcomes for generation­s of Black and Hispanic people.

Stories of nurses and doctors being infected with COVID- 19 and dying as hospitals struggled to secure protective masks and gowns exposed gaping holes in emergency preparedne­ss plans and government stockpile systems.

And in the face of new surges across the country, renewed fears of shortages of personal protective equipment and COVID- 19 testing supplies further revealed the faults in a medical supply chain over- reliant on Chinese imports.

Yet efforts in the Northeast to shore up regional manufactur­ing of basic medical goods and COVID- 19 testing infrastruc­ture show promise against a second wave.

New public health responses targeting zip codes hit hardest by COVID- 19 deaths also offered a glimmer of hope that key resources, including contact tracing, testing and medical care, would better reach communitie­s of color.

Meanwhile, politicall­y charged debates over reopening plans and mask wearing in public, which New York ordered April 15 to help turn the tide in its coronaviru­s outbreak, endangered the entire undertakin­g nationally, experts said.

“We are seeing unnecessar­y tens of thousands of deaths and illnesses and disruption because people do not want to believe the evidence,” said Dr. Gregory Poland, an Infectious Diseases Society of America and Mayo Clinic expert.

“They make it into a political or cultural or economic or faith- based issue, and it’s not,” he said. “The virus knows nothing of those areas. The virus knows one thing: Find the next susceptibl­e person and infect them.”

Delaware’s meat plants, nursing homes hit hard as testing lagged

That was the case in Delaware: State health officials saw a significant outbreak in April in small towns in Sussex County, particular­ly among Hispanics and Haitian immigrant communitie­s.

Many of those residents work in the county’s largest industry – chicken processing plants – where to complete their jobs, workers must stand close together, not adhering to social distancing guidelines.

Many of the low- income workers can’t afford to lose a paycheck, leading to hesitation about whether they should get tested – even if they have been exposed to the virus.

Language barriers led to challenges when the residents tried to access emergency resources and learn what safety precaution­s they needed to take.

Delaware nursing homes were also devastated in the early weeks of the pandemic, particular­ly because it was difficult for facilities to obtain protective equipment for employees and they have been historical­ly understaffed.

Because of limited testing in Delaware at the time, only residents with symptoms could receive a COVID- 19 test.

Deaths in long- term care facilities have contribute­d to more than 60% of the cumulative number of COVID- 19 deaths in Delaware. It has led to Gov. John Carney requiring all long- term care employees to be tested on a weekly basis.

“One of the biggest problems across the country and every state in America from the beginning of this COVID crisis was the lack of availabili­ty of testing,” Maryland Gov. Hogan said June 10.

While Delaware has seen a decrease in the number of daily COVID- 19 cases and hospitaliz­ations, the RehobothDe­wey Beach ZIP code saw a spike in cases in late June. Many of these cases involved young people and residents.

In late June, Carney announced that he is pausing Delaware’s plans to reopen its economy. Not long after, he mandated that, in eastern Sussex County, customers will no longer be able to sit or stand at a bar. Instead, beachgoers will have to sit at a table and be served.

“Too many Delawarean­s and visitors are not following basic public health precaution­s,” Carney said June 25. “Now’s not the time to let up.”

Pennsylvan­ia sees harsh economic effects

When the coronaviru­s pandemic hit Pennsylvan­ia in March, Gov. Tom Wolf scrambled to prevent his biggest fear: overwhelme­d hospitals that had no beds for patients.

Pennsylvan­ia never ran out of hospital beds or lifesaving ventilator­s, even when the virus peaked in April.

But businesses opened in defiance of state orders. Republican lawmakers tried to end the emergency powers of Wolf, a Democrat.

Millions lost jobs. Businesses struggled to survive. Without a bailout, the restaurant industry could end up a shadow of its former self, especially now that the governor has ordered them to either cut back to 25% of their dine- in capacity or close again.

And now, as administra­tors, parents and politician­s argue about whether to send children back to school, Pennsylvan­ia is seeing a surge of fresh cases.

This pandemic steered Pennsylvan­ia toward a recession. The Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance and the Paycheck Protection Program helped, but they have an expiration date, and right now “this virus doesn’t,” Labor and Industry Secretary Jerry Oleksiak said

So even as the state crawls out from economic lock- down, high unemployme­nt and the lingering public health crisis slow the process, leaving economists to agree on one thing: Pennsylvan­ia won’t to recover from this disaster for years.

“Ultimately, what’s going to work is not enforcemen­t,” Wolf said May 26. “What’s going to work is each and every individual Pennsylvan­ian, each and every business owner doing everything they can to protect their employees and their customers and protect each other from this disease.”

‘ We don’t really have a clear national policy on this’

Many experts and health officials attributed the most glaring missteps to the lack of federal government leadership.

The criticism spanned from the CDC distributi­ng faulty test kits to states, which delayed the pandemic response in January and February, to mixed messages coming from the Trump administra­tion on the threat posed by spikes in COVID- 19 cases.

“We don’t really have a clear national policy on this, and that’s been pretty evident,” said Dr. Michael Mendoza, health commission­er of Monroe County in upstate New York.

In the absence of a universal plan, some states ignored, or shunned, lessons learned in the Northeast, threatenin­g to undo the communal sacrifices that helped reduce infections in New York and New Jersey.

“When our messages and our data became politicize­d and distorted … that’s when it became very difficult for us,” Mendoza said.

Amid the chaotic early weeks of the pandemic this spring, the politicall­y fueled confusion proved especially harmful because of limited scientific understand­ing at the time of how the coronaviru­s stealthily spread before symptoms appeared in many people.

As intensive care units filled up, state officials scrambled to boost hospital bed capacity. Fears that hospitals would run out of lifesaving breathing machines ignited interstate competitio­n over ventilator­s as opposed to a coordinate­d national response.

Ultimately, the flawed preparedne­ss plan and scattersho­t emergency response helped delay the revelation­s unfolding today, such as the prospect that all Americans wearing face coverings in public could dramatical­ly decrease the virus’ spread in four to six weeks.

In dissecting the myriad of pandemic- related failures, Poland of the Mayo Clinic evoked findings of the 9/ 11 Commission report that delved into the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

“We believe the fundamenta­l problem was one of imaginabil­ity, though we had been warned many times and many ways, we failed to imagine it was possible and therefore failed to prepare,” he said, recounting the report.

“I think that singular statement is precisely applicable to the pandemic,” Poland said, adding, “I hope that one thing that has happened is that our deniabilit­y has been stripped away and our imaginabil­ity enlivened.”

Northeast states continue to limit reopening

New York and New Jersey have reopened many businesses but have kept some closed.

New Jersey has not allowed the resumption of indoor dining, while New York has outside New York City.

Malls, casinos and amusement parks have remained shuttered in New York, but New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia have opened them with safety precaution­s.

And New York tightened restrictio­ns on outdoor dining, requiring alcohol purchases to be accompanie­d by food to cut down on large drinking scenes.

It’s a process that Northeast governors continue to evaluate based on daily monitoring of the rates of infection. The concern is that the rapid spread of disease in the bulk of the country will eventually cause a spike in states that have tamped down the virus.

“This second wave is just going to be other states infecting us again for a second time,” Cuomo said July 16 on MSNBC.

“There’s no vaccine yet,” New Jersey’s Murphy warned July 17. “All we’ve got is social distancing, wearing a face covering whenever you are out in public, and certainly whenever you’re indoors, washing your hands frequently with soap and water for at least 20 seconds.”

Republican lawmakers in New Jersey say Murphy cut state lawmakers out when he crafted coronaviru­s- related orders, unfairly allowing big- box retailers to remain open while forcing smaller stores to close.

He limited outdoor gatherings, then showed up at Black Lives Matters rallies where protesters were not socially distanced. Those rallies, however, were not shown to result in spikes of COVID- 19 cases.

But, as in other Northeast states, Murphy’s strategy began to look smarter in July.

As states like California, Texas and Florida, which reopened sooner than New Jersey, began to see virus cases surge, their governors hastily closed businesses they had allowed to reopen. Now, Murphy hopes to not join those states in having to change course.

“We should all take pride in the fact we want to get this exactly as right as we can,” he said.

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“We see a second wave in the distance,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says. “It will have an effect on New York. How bad? We don’t know.” JOHN MINCHILLO/ AP
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