Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• As cases continue to rise, ban on alcohol sales at bars, restaurant­s likely to last weeks, county health official says,

- By Sean Hamill and Hallie Lauer

The director of the Allegheny County Health Department said Wednesday with an ongoing, daily rise in COVID-19 cases, she does not expect to rescind the county’s order banning the sale of alcohol in bars and restaurant­s for weeks at least.

“Allegheny County ended June with some of the worst COVID numbers in the state,” said Dr. Debra Bogen, noting the 722 new COVID-19 cases reported since June 20 in the county and more than 100 new cases on each of the past two days alone. “Frankly, I don’t expect these numbers to decline for at least a couple of weeks.”

As a result, she said at the county’s weekly online COVID19 news conference, “we really don’t expect to see a big change [in the county alcohol ban] for a couple of weeks, at the soonest.”

The decision to ban the sale of alcohol was based on contact tracing informatio­n by the health department’s staff calling people who are infected, aided by other county staff who don’t normally do contact tracing, all of whom have been working 14- to 15-hour days to make calls on each case to try to pin down where people are becoming infected.

The result, Dr. Bogen said, is the cases are clearly from two main sources: people going out to bars and restaurant­s locally — which resulted in the alcohol ban — and from people who

traveled out of state, primarily to Carolina and Florida coasts, where they also went to bars and restaurant­s. The reports of out-of-state travelers testing positive led to the county’s recommenda­tion travelers self-quarantine for two weeks, or get two negative tests.

Those testing positive are rapidly changing the makeup of the demographi­cs of positive cases.

On June 20, people ages 19 to 24 had only tested positive 148 times, or just 7% of the 2,158 cases in the county since the first case here in March.

By Wednesday, just 10 days later, the number of people ages 19 to 24 who tested positive more than doubled to 385 cases overall, now representi­ng 13% of the 2,870 total cases.

That means of the 722 new cases in the county since June 20, “that small sliver of our population [ages 19 to 24] accounts for one-third of our recent cases,” Dr. Bogen said, noting the median age of the 722 new cases was just 27.

The only age group with more cases since June 20 was ages 25 to 49, which have had 295 new cases in the last 10 days, and now make up 36% of all of the county cases.

“The change in our case numbers going from near zero to over 100 in just a few weeks should really be a wake-up call that we have asymptomat­ic spread in our community,” Dr. Bogen said. “You don’t know who has it and who doesn’t.”

The spike in cases not only in Allegheny County, but the surroundin­g counties, over the last week is troubling, county Executive

Rich Fitzgerald said at the news conference.

“For many months … this region was one of the best in the country as far as keeping the numbers down, positive cases down, low percentage, low raw numbers,” he said. “Then over the last 10 days we’ve seen an uptick of our numbers to the fact that we’ve really gone up much higher than any of us really feel comfortabl­e with.”

The rapid spike came so fast it outpaced the health department’s plans to hire more contact tracers for a projected fall increase in cases.

“I was personally planning for this rise in cases really in the fall when I thought we’d see it, and was surprised by the rapid rise in cases,” Dr. Bogen said.

Dr. Bogen said she discussed the spike in cases with the state Department of Health, but she said the decision to ban alcohol in bars and restaurant­s “was really my decision.”

Though there has been some pushback, Mr. Fitzgerald said he fully supported Dr. Bogen and her staff’s decision.

“They’re going to follow the science and I’m going to be there to support what they’re doing,” he said.

Though the numbers are small so far, Dr. Bogen noted hospitaliz­ation numbers are starting to “creep up” with 13 in just the last three days. Seven of those 13 hospitaliz­ations were people in their 20s or 30s.

Though many have wondered whether the ongoing police brutality protests in the Pittsburgh area over the last month have led to COVID-19 cases, Dr. Bogen said of the new cases since June 20, only four of those infected said they had attended a protest, and two of those four said they had also attended a bar or restaurant.

The county’s contact tracing team got informatio­n from infected residents that combined they had attended at least 40 different bars, restaurant­s and nightclubs. Fifteen of those locations were reported more than once by different people who tested positive.

“Many reported [to the contact tracing team] that neither patrons nor employees [at the bars, restaurant­s and nightclubs they attended] wore masks or were practicing physical distancing,” Dr. Bogen said.

Allegheny County on Wednesday topped its highest single-day increase of positive COVID-19 cases with 110 new cases, according to the county health department.

It marked the second day in a row the county has seen a daily increase of more than 100 new cases.

The statewide total for COVID-19 cases is 87,242, with an additional 636 cases being reported by the state health department on Wednesday. Western Pennsylvan­ia accounts for 194 of those new cases. Allegheny County had the highest increase in cases, followed by Westmorela­nd County with 29 new cases of the virus.

Statewide, there was an increase of 38 new deaths, three of which were in Western Pennsylvan­ia — Allegheny County reported one; Erie County reported two additional deaths.

The death toll for Allegheny County is 187, reported by both state and county health department­s.

Here are the total number of positive cases reported

Wednesday in Western Pennsylvan­ia:

• Allegheny: 2,870 (up 110 from Tuesday)

• Armstrong: 76 (up 2)

• Beaver: 678 ( up 9)

• Butler: 311 (up 4)

• Cambria: 83 (up 3)

• Clarion: 35 (up 1)

• Clearfield: 72 (no change)

• Crawford: 57 (up 4)

• Erie: 620 (up 13)

• Fayette: 117 (up 1)

• Forest: 7 (no change)

• Greene: 41 (no change)

• Indiana: 111 (up 3)

• Jefferson: 24 (up 2)

• Lawrence: 103 (up 1)

• Mercer: 140 (no change)

• Somerset: 61 (no change)

• Venango: 19 (up 1)

• Washington: 230 (up 11)

• Westmorela­nd: 675 (up 29)

Here are the total number of deaths reported Wednesday in Western Pennsylvan­ia:

• Allegheny: 187 (up 1 from Tuesday)

• Armstrong: 6 (no change)

• Beaver: 78 (no change)

• Butler: 13 (no change)

• Cambria: 3 (no change)

• Clarion: 2 (no change)

• Clearfield: 0 (no change)

• Crawford: 0 (no change)

• Erie: 12 (up 2)

• Fayette: 4 (no change)

• Forest: 0 (no change)

• Greene: 0 (no change)

• Indiana: 6 (no change)

• Jefferson: 1 (no change)

• Lawrence: 9 (no change)

• Mercer: 6 (no change)

• Somerset: 1 (no change)

• Venango: 0 (no change)

• Washington: 6 (no change)

• Westmorela­nd: 38 (The county coroner is reporting 32.)

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