USA TODAY US Edition

Why are states seeing a spike in COVID-19 cases?

Several reasons cited for upticks across US

- Adrianna Rodriguez

New York and Chicago, which saw a surge of coronaviru­s cases at the start of the pandemic, are experienci­ng a decline in cases and have begun reopening in phases.

But that trend doesn’t hold throughout the rest of the country.

Soaring case numbers in Arizona have diverted lawmakers’ attention from protests after the death of George Floyd back to the public health crisis.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has asked for members of the administra­tion’s Coronaviru­s Task Force, specifical­ly naming Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx, to conduct a briefing for Democratic senators next week on the spike in cases in Arizona and elsewhere across the U.S., according to his office.

Other states seeing a sudden spike in COVID-19 cases include South Carolina, Florida, Alaska, Arkansas, California, Kentucky, New Mexico, North Carolina, Mississipp­i, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Puerto Rico.

Though experts aren’t exactly sure why these states are experienci­ng an unexpected uptick in cases, they said lifting lockdown restrictio­ns, isolated outbreaks and the virus catching up to communitie­s previously not impacted may each play a role.

“This virus is much more spotty,” said Arnold Monto, professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of Michigan School for Public Health. “It is so complicate­d that when people give you a simple answer to this, it’s probably not right.”

In April, the Trump administra­tion announced guidelines to reopen the country, which included a 14-day decline of confirmed coronaviru­s cases or a decline of positive tests as a percent of total tests within that period.

However, some states eager to get back to work didn’t meet those federal government guidelines before reopening.

Florida’s first phase began May 18, which reopened restaurant­s, retail and museums at half capacity. Not only did the state fail to meet a two week decline in cases, but it actually reported an increase in cases per day a week before reopening. According to Johns Hopkins data, Florida reported 594 cases on May 10. Five days later there were more than 800 cases.

About three weeks later, on June 5, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ went on to phase two reopening, even as daily cases have topped the 1,000 mark and have continued to do so for the past seven days.

... lifting lockdown restrictio­ns, isolated outbreaks and the virus catching up to communitie­s previously not impacted may each play a role.

A record 1,698 cases of COVID-19 were announced Thursday morning by the Florida Department of Health, marking the largest single-day increase in the state since the pandemic began.

In Tennessee, Gov. Bill Lee said Wednesday that state’s recent “uptick” in coronaviru­s infections and hospitaliz­ations was an expected result of the state reopening much of its economy and urged residents to redouble precaution­s to prevent the virus from continuing to spread.

Georgia is notably not on the list of states where cases are on the rise, said Dr. Jeffrey Shaman, professor of environmen­tal health at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health. Gov. Brian Kemp was heavily criticized when the Peach State became one of the first states to begin reopening in April.

In the six weeks since Georgia loosened restrictio­ns, its curve has stayed relatively flat. Shaman said this could be due to resident behavior, suggesting people continued to shelter in place despite the lifting of lockdowns.

It’s hard to know for sure because there’s no real data on how many businesses truly reopened or what percentage of people actually wear masks, he said.

However, Georgia Public Health reported the results of 7,684 tests Tuesday, of which 9.8% were positive, nearly double the rate from the previous day, according to an analysis by the August Chronicle.

“We don’t want to be totally caught up in a numbers game,” Monto said. “What we need to look at is patterns.”

Coronaviru­s community outbreaks

Both Monto and Shaman say another reason some states may be experienci­ng unexpected spikes is because of “super spreaders,” events or enclosed community outbreaks.

A super spreader is an infected person who can transmit the disease to a large number of people.

“We’ve got a lot of anecdotes and it’s hard to define who a super spreader is, you only know after the fact,” he said.

Other states say their spike is due to a local outbreak in a confined space such as a nursing home, prison or meatpackin­g plant.

The Texas Department of State Health Services attributes the state’s spike in coronaviru­s cases to increased testing in prisons.

According to the Texas Tribune, the number of prisoners reported to be infected with the virus jumped from about 2,500 to 6,900 in the two weeks since prisons started reporting test results May 26.

Overall cases jumped by 34% from May 25 to June 7, and nearly a quarter of the increase came from 10 counties with prisons and meatpackin­g plants.

“You have clusters, you have nursing homes, meat packing and they add a lot of cases,” Monto said. “So that has to be factored in as well.”

The number of coronaviru­s cases tied to meatpackin­g plants has more than doubled since President Donald Trump invoked the Defense Production Act in late April to compel slaughterh­ouses and processing plants to stay open.

The Midwest Center for Investigat­ive Reporting found more than 20,400 infections across 216 plants in 33 states.

States catching up to the pandemic

Not much is known about the virus’s seasonalit­y as it has only been present for the past six months. But if it’s anything like the flu, Monto says, it could come in waves.

“I think ‘catching up’ is a phenomenon,” he said. “If you miss the first wave, you catch up in the second wave.”

With the flu, there’s a lull in the summer, Monto says.

States that aren’t impacted in the spring by the seasonal virus usually see a spike in flu infections in a second wave.

However, there is no data to support this hypothesis with the coronaviru­s. In fact, seasonalit­y doesn’t seem to be a factor, as hot southern states like Arizona and New Mexico are now experienci­ng a spike in cases. Contributi­ng: Brett Kelman, USA TODAY Network Health and patient safety coverage at USA TODAY is made possible in part by a grant from the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation and Competitio­n in Healthcare. The Masimo Foundation does not provide editorial input.

 ?? CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? People enjoy the water in Miami Beach, Florida, on June 10. The beaches of Miami opened after nearly three months of closure due to the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.
CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES People enjoy the water in Miami Beach, Florida, on June 10. The beaches of Miami opened after nearly three months of closure due to the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.
 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ?? Protesters march during a rally at Cesar Chavez Park on June 3, in Laveen, Ariz., protesting the death of George Floyd, who died May 25 after being restrained by Minneapoli­s police.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP Protesters march during a rally at Cesar Chavez Park on June 3, in Laveen, Ariz., protesting the death of George Floyd, who died May 25 after being restrained by Minneapoli­s police.
 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP ?? Arizona hospitals expected to be able to treat new coronaviru­s cases without going into crisis mode were above 80% capacity Tuesday.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/AP Arizona hospitals expected to be able to treat new coronaviru­s cases without going into crisis mode were above 80% capacity Tuesday.

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