Los Angeles Times

COVID ravages West Virginia

State sets two daily records in last week for positive cases. GOP governors rail against vaccine rules.

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. — West Virginia has set two daily records in the last week for positive coronaviru­s cases as the pandemic continues to ravage the state.

A total of 1,821 confirmed cases Saturday surpassed Thursday’s record 1,738 cases, according to state health data. The previous one-day high of more than 1,700 was set on Dec. 31.

The statewide total of 7,849 positive cases for the six days ending Saturday has already passed the seven-day total for the previous week, which had been the second highest during the pandemic. Sunday’s figures will be released on Monday.

The highest for one week was nearly 8,200 cases in early January, a time before vaccines were available to most people younger than 65.

The amount of weekly virus deaths statewide has gone up steadily since early August, when six deaths were reported for the week of Aug. 9. There have been 83 deaths in the lpast week and 3,207 overall.

Roughly 60% of West Virginia residents over age 12 have been fully vaccinated and about 75% have received one dose.

About 83% of people currently hospitaliz­ed for the virus in West Virginia are unvaccinat­ed, including 90% of intensive care unit patients, said James Hoyer, a retired major general leading the state’s coronaviru­s task force, last week.

Republican Gov. Jim Justice has refused pleas to issue an indoor mask mandate. An earlier mandate was lifted in June.

U.S. studies released late last week show COVID-19 vaccines remain highly effective against hospitaliz­ations and death even as the highly contagious Delta variant has swept the nation.

As Delta surged in early summer, those who were unvaccinat­ed were 4½ times more likely than fully vaccinated people to get infected, over 10 times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed and 11 times more likely to die, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

However, several Republican governors continued to rail Sunday against President Biden’s sweeping new vaccinatio­n requiremen­t, threatenin­g legal action or complainin­g that the presidenti­al action to protect the public’s health is “counterpro­ductive.”

Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts, speaking on “Fox News Sunday,” said he plans to join other Republican governors in challengin­g Biden in court.

Ricketts said that Nebraska’s attorney general has been consulting with other attorneys general who say the federal government is oversteppi­ng its authority by mandating that all employers with more than 100 workers require them to be vaccinated or test for the virus weekly, affecting about 80 million Americans.

The roughly 17 million workers at health facilities that receive federal Medicare or Medicaid also will have to be fully vaccinated.

“This is really going to create huge problems for all small businesses and for our American workers. and again, you shouldn’t have to make the choice of keeping your job or getting a jab in the arm,” Ricketts said.

Biden, in a visit to a school Friday, accused the Republican governors of being “cavalier” with the health of young Americans. Asked about those who would file legal challenges, he replied, “Have at it.”

In Nebraska, Ricketts has encouraged people to get vaccinated and wear masks while resisting mandates to do either.

The seven-day rolling average of daily new cases in Nebraska has risen over the last two weeks from 715.14 new cases per day on Aug. 27 to 822.86 new cases per day on Friday as the Delta variant spreads.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, another Republican, said in an appearance on “Meet the Press” that federal mandates hurt efforts to overcome resistance to taking the COVID-19 vaccine.

Hutchinson has been working to persuade reluctant Arkansas residents to be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s. But on NBC, he said a comprehens­ive federal vaccinatio­n mandate “hardens the resistance.”

Hutchinson said federal requiremen­ts are “counterpro­ductive,” interferin­g with state vaccinatio­n efforts instead of supporting them.

“We talked about the fact that we’ve historical­ly had vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts in schools,” he said. “But those have always come at the state level, never at the national level.”

“And so this is an unpreceden­ted assumption of federal mandate authority that really disrupts and divides the country. It divides our partnershi­p between the federal government and the states. And it increases the division in terms of vaccinatio­n when we should all be together trying to increase the vaccinatio­n uptake,” he added.

Hospitals in Iowa’s second-largest city, Cedar Rapids, are now limiting elective procedures because of increased numbers of patients driven partly by a surge in COVID-19 admissions.

The Cedar Falls Gazette reports that UnityPoint Health-St. Luke’s Hospital and Mercy Medical Center confirmed Friday their facilities are preserving capacity because of high patient counts in recent weeks. Cedar Rapids hospitals had not delayed or postponed elective surgeries and procedures since last fall.

St. Luke’s is limiting surgeries that require a hospital stay to 10 per day.

Mercy officials confirmed that it also is temporaril­y reducing the number of elective procedures that require hospital stays after surgery.

 ?? Saul Loeb AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT Biden visits Brookland Middle School in Washington, D.C., Friday. He accused GOP governors of being “cavalier” with the health of young people.
Saul Loeb AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENT Biden visits Brookland Middle School in Washington, D.C., Friday. He accused GOP governors of being “cavalier” with the health of young people.

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