San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)
Cases are declining — but will that last?
The number of new coronavirus cases confirmed in the United States has steadily declined in recent days.
In battered New York, the figure has dropped over the past month. The numbers also have plunged in hardhit Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
Some states, including Vermont, Hawaii and Alaska, are reporting few new cases at all.
But that progress is tenuous and uncertain.
The nation has reached a perilous moment in the course of the pandemic, embracing signs of hope and beginning to reopen businesses and ease the very measures that slowed the virus, despite the risk of a resurgence.
With more than twothirds of states significantly relaxing restrictions on how Americans can move about over the past few weeks, an uptick in cases is widely predicted.
Months after the virus began spreading, only about 3 percent of the population has been tested for it, leaving its true scale and path unknown, even as it contin
ues to sicken and kill people at alarming rates.
More than 20,000 new cases are identified on most days. And almost every day last week, more than 1,000 Americans died from the virus.
“We’re seeing a decline; undoubtedly, that is something good to see,” said Jeffrey Shaman, an epidemiologist at Columbia University. “But what we are also seeing is a lot of places right on the edge of controlling the disease.”
The slowing of new cases is a stark change from two weeks ago, when coronavirus cases were stuck on a stubborn plateau nationally and case numbers were rising in many states.
As of Friday, new cases were decreasing in 19 states and increasing in three, while staying mostly the same in the rest, a database maintained by the New York Times shows.
Encouraging signs have emerged in some of the hardesthit places.
In New Orleans, where hundreds of new cases were being identified each day in early April, fewer than 50 have been announced daily in the past three weeks. In the Detroit area, which saw exponential case growth beginning in late March, numbers have fallen sharply. And in Cass County, Ind., where a meatpacking outbreak sickened at least 900 people, only a handful of cases have been reported most days this past week.
Even as many large cities saw their cases drop, increasing infections continue to be reported in parts of rural America. Some communities that have been fighting to get outbreaks under control finally appear to have succeeded, but have little idea how long that will last.
In Sioux Falls, S.D., where the virus sickened more than 1,000 people at a Smithfield pork processing plant, the outbreak appears to be slowing, Mayor Paul TenHaken said. More than 4,000 Smithfield employees, along with their family members and close contacts, recently were tested.
Yet the mayor fears his city’s progress could be temporary. On
Monday, the plant will begin slaughtering hogs again. Hundreds of employees will be back together at work.
“I’ll be honest, it makes me nervous,” TenHaken said. “We’ve seen how a zero-case facility can become a 1,000-case facility.”
Epidemiologists pointed to one overarching reason for the decline in new cases: the success of widespread social distancing.
Americans began to change their behavior in March, and it undoubtedly has helped control the spread of the coronavirus. Between mid-March, when public officials began to close schools and some workplaces, and late April, when the restrictions were lifted or eased in many states, 43.8 percent of the nation’s residents stayed home, cellphone data analyzed by the Times shows.
The major clusters of cases that have arisen have been almost exclusively in three settings without effective social distancing: nursing homes, correctional facilities and food-processing plants.
But in settings where distancing took place, the results have been overwhelming, researchers say.
More than 70 percent of the U.S. population lives in counties where coronavirus cases were reduced as a result of less time spent outside the home, according to one estimate by a research team led by economists at Yale University.
Without government orders to stay at home, 10 million more people in the United States would have been infected with the virus by the end of April, suggested a paper published last week in the journal Health Affairs.
“There’s this disconnect of why it got better,” said Mayor Thomas McNamara of Rockford, Ill., who repeatedly has stressed to his constituents that it’s not yet time to relax the measures that contributed: “Social distancing, stay at home, wear your face covering.”
The challenge has been convincing impatient Americans to continue taking precautions that will continue to slow the spread of the virus while a cure or vaccine remains out of reach.
“I just received an email from someone yesterday who said, ‘I don’t think people in our community are taking it seriously,’” said Kelly Chandler, the public health division manager for Itasca County, Minnesota, a lightly populated community with 42 cases of the coronavirus and six deaths.
Influxes of new cases already were turning up in some places that had seemed to tamp down earlier outbreaks.
In Arizona, which began reopening its economy without seeing a sustained drop in cases, infection numbers have continued to rise. More than 13,100 cases had been identified as of Friday.
In Alabama, case numbers have grown since the state began to reopen its economy. And in Minnesota, cases around St. Cloud and Minneapolis have surged over the past two weeks, even as there were signs the situation could be stabilizing.
“Down the road, as things begin to reopen, there is the possibility of an increase in numbers again,” Bevis said in an email.
Along with cases, the number of deaths has slowed nationally.
Case and death reports vary greatly by day of the week, with spikes around midweek and steep drops on weekends. But on eight of the past nine days, there have been fewer deaths announced than there were seven days prior, an indication that the virus’s toll seems to be easing.
More than half of the 24 counties that have recorded the most coronavirus deaths, including Oakland County, Mich., and Hartford County, Conn., are seeing sustained declines.
Deaths are a lagging sign of the virus’ progression because people who die of COVID-19 typically were infected three weeks earlier.
However, because death counts are not distorted by uneven testing practices, they are “a very clearly observed indicator,” said Nicholas Reich, a biostatistician at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, who has begun to synthesize the projections of deaths produced by several modeling teams on a weekly basis.
The “ensemble” model released Tuesday sees the number drifting down from about 10,000 this week to about 7,000 in the first week of June.
Still, even with the slowing growth in new cases and deaths, the cumulative death toll in the United States is projected to reach about 113,000 by June 6, Reich’s latest ensemble model shows.
The effects of relaxing of restrictions on how Americans move about remain ahead. As more states lifted limits on businesses and movement, about 25 million more people ventured outside their homes on an average day last week than during the preceding six weeks, the analysis of cellphone data found.
But the lag after states reopen, combined with insufficient testing, may mask a rebound until it’s underway for several weeks.
The states that have reopened have offered a mixed picture — one more mysterious element of this virus, which doctors and scientists have grappled to understand as it has spread, swiftly and invisibly, through rural communities, on public transit, and in nursing homes, prisons and factories.
Georgia, which drew national attention when it eased its restrictions late last month, has not seen much change in its case numbers.
Yet in Texas, officials reported a spike in coronavirus cases two weeks after the state began to reopen.
“At this point, there is uncertainty,” said Alessandro Vespignani, director of the Network Science Institute at Northeastern University. “Probably the next week will be one of the crucial ones because if we see more decrease of cases we are still on a ‘good’ trajectory — if not, it really might be more problematic for the future.”