Arab Times

NY deaths ‘drop’ below 400 for 1st time in April

‘Everything we’ve done is working’

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NEW YORK, April 27, (AP): New York’s daily coronaviru­s death toll dropped to below 400, less than half of the deaths recorded at the height of the coronaviru­s crisis in the state’s hospitals.

Details on developmen­ts in the coronaviru­s outbreak in New York:

The numbers

Gov Andrew Cuomo said the 367 deaths from the coronaviru­s that he reported Sunday were “horrific,” but the number was less than half the nearly 800 deaths that occurred in a single day during the pandemic’s peak in New York.

It is the first time this month that the statewide daily death toll has been below 400.

He also reported that the number of hospitaliz­ations, which still topped 1,000, and the number of individual­s put on a ventilator had dropped as well.

The deaths recorded Saturday and reported Sunday included 349 patients who died in hospitals and 18 individual­s who died in nursing homes, the Democratic governor said.

On Saturday, Cuomo said there were 437 deaths on Friday.

“Short term, the numbers are on the decline.” Cuomo said. “Everything we’ve done is working. The policies are working. There’s no doubt that at this point, we’ve gone through the worst.”

In another sign of the improving numbers, the final patient on the USNS Comfort was discharged on Sunday. The 1,000-bed hospital ship, docked at a Manhattan pier since March 30, has treated 182 patients. Soon, it will depart for its homeport in Norfolk, Virginia.

Restarting the state

Constructi­on and manufactur­ing jobs that represent low risks for workers will be among the first to resume once New York state begins reopening after the coronaviru­s shutdown, the state’s governor said Sunday.

Retail jobs and workers in the hospitalit­y and hotel industry may be among the last to return, Gov Andrew Cuomo said at his news conference.

And sports such as baseball probably will have to figure out if the economics work without fans in the stands, he said.

“Everybody has to think outside the box because there is no box,” he said.

The Democrat said determinat­ions of when reopening begins will follow federal guidance that says reopening should not begin until the state and regional hospitaliz­ation rate has declined for two weeks.

He said which businesses reopen after the restart of constructi­on and manufactur­ing will depend on how essential they are and how safe they can operate.

Once those businesses reopen, a two-week period would follow before more businesses reopen.

“I don’t want to just reopen. We learned a lot of lessons here, painfully,” he said. “How do we take the lessons we learned and say when we reopen, we’re going to be the better for it? It’s not about a return to yesterday. There is no return to yesterday in life.”

He compared New York’s upstate communitie­s to the Midwest, saying some areas might be ready to reopen sooner than other areas. But he said he had to consider the possibilit­y that residents of areas that are still closed might flood toward any place that opens.

The sanity equation

The reopening of New York state will be vital in the summer, particular­ly in crowded cities, Gov Andrew Cuomo said Sunday.

“You can’t tell people in a dense urban environmen­tal all through the summer months: ‘We don’t have anything for you to do, stay in your apartment with the three kids,’” Cuomo said at his daily news conference.

“You know, that doesn’t work. There’s a sanity equation here also that we have to take into considerat­ion,” he said.

He said people have reason to feel better, saying “the worst should be over” as long as social distancing and other policies remain in place.

“People need to know that there’s an opening, there’s a future, there’s hope, that somebody’s doing something. And then you need a relief valve just on a day-to-day basis so people have some relief in their lives, some vent,” he said.

Cuomo said trends indicate that the incidence of domestic violence, alcoholism and drug use and mental health issues were on the rise.

“Do not underestim­ate the stress that this situation has created, the abnormal circumstan­ces that it has created,” he said, adding that a toxic mix of bad circumstan­ces was pushing some people to the edge.

“People need to know that there’s an opening, there’s a future, there’s hope, that somebody’s doing something. And then you need a relief valve just on a day-to-day basis so people have some relief in their lives, some vent,” he said.

NYC’s roadmap

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said Sunday he hopes to have a roadmap by June 1 on how to rebuild the city after the coronaviru­s threat subsides.

The mayor, a Democrat, said at a news conference that city leaders he’s invited to help plan the city’s recovery should give him the roadmap by then. He said a full rebuild will take about 20 months.

He also said the latest statistics on people being treated for COVID-19 continued to be stable or decline.

The number of people in the city’s hospital intensive care units had dropped from 785 to 768. De Blasio said the city can’t begin reopening until decreases continue for 10 to 14 days. He said such a fall would signal it was time for the first steps in opening up.

“The health indicators have to give us the all clear,” de Blasio said. “We restart when we have evidence. There’s no on-off switch here. It’s a series of careful, smart moves.”

Other developmen­ts

Brad Pitt portrayed Dr Anthony Fauci in the second at-home episode of “Saturday Night Live,” where he tried to recast false assurances and misstateme­nts pitched by President Donald Trump during the pandemic, for instance when Trump said there’d be a COVID-19 vaccine “relatively soon.”

Home care nurses, aides and attendants – who normally help an estimated 12 million Americans with everything from bathing to IV medication­s – are now taking on the difficult and potentiall­y dangerous task of caring for coronaviru­s patients.

A few states may have found a way to help slow the spread of the coronaviru­s in nursing homes by converting some of them into “recovery centers” set aside mostly for residents who have left the hospital but still might be contagious or lack immunity.

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