Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Counties without virus cases are mostly rural, poor

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SANTA FE, N.M. — As the coronaviru­s rages across the United States, mainly in large urban areas, more than a third of U.S. counties have yet to report a single positive test result for COVID-19 infections, an analysis by The Associated Press shows.

Data compiled by Johns Hopkins University shows that 1,297 counties have no confirmed cases of COVID19 out of 3,142 counties nationwide. The number of counties without a positive coronaviru­s case has declined rapidly, dropping from over half as the AP was preparing to publish this story.

Of the counties without positive tests, 85% are in rural areas — from predominan­tly white communitie­s in Appalachia and the Great Plains to majority Hispanic and Native American stretches of the Southwest — that generally have less everyday contact between people that can help transmit the virus.

At the same time, counties with zero positive tests for COVID-19 have a higher median age and higher proportion of people older than 60 — the most vulnerable to severe effects of the virus — and far fewer intensive care beds should they fall sick. Median household income is lower, too, potentiall­y limiting health care options.

The demographi­cs of these counties hold major implicatio­ns as the Trump administra­tion develops guidelines to rate counties by risk of the virus spreading, empowering local officials to revise social distancing orders that have sent much of the U.S. economy into free fall. President Donald Trump has targeted a return to a semblance of normalcy for the economy by Easter Sunday, April 12.

Experts in infectious disease see an opportunit­y in slowing the spread of coronaviru­s in remote areas of the country that benefit from “natural” social distancing and isolation, if initial cases are detected and quarantine­d aggressive­ly. That can buy rural health care networks time to provide robust care and reduce mortality.

But they also worry that sporadic testing for coronaviru­s could be masking outbreaks that — left unattended — might overwhelm rural health networks.

“They’ll be later to get the infection; they’ll be later to have their epidemics,” said Christine K. Johnson, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of California, Davis. “But I don’t think they’re going to be protected because there’s nowhere in the U.S. that’s isolated.”

Counties that have zero confirmed COVID-19 cases could raise a red flag about inadequate testing, she said.

“I hope the zeros are really zeros — I worry that they’re not doing enough testing in those regions because they’re not thinking they’re at risk,” Ms. Johnson said.

In New Mexico, a state with 2 million residents spanning an area about the size of Italy, Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan

Grisham has moved aggressive­ly to contain the coronaviru­s’s spread with a statewide school shutdown and prohibitio­n on most gatherings of over five people.

Nearly half of the state’s 33 counties are free of any positive coronaviru­s cases. New Mexico is among the top five states in coronaviru­s testing per capita, though some virus-free counties aren’t yet equipped with specialize­d testing sites beyond samplings by a handful of doctor offices.

Torrance County Manager Wayne Johnson said plans are being made for the first three dedicated COVID-19 testing sites in the high-desert county of 15,000 residents that spans an area three times the size of Rhode Island.

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