San Antonio Express-News

Texas’ lead in COVID infections forecasts more troubling times

- By Jordan Rubio, John Tedesco, Todd Ackerman and Lauren Caruba

Texas’ grim distinctio­n as the national leader in COVID-19 infections came as little surprise to some medical experts, who blamed politician­s for conflictin­g messages about the virus and warned the worst is yet to come.

Texas this week breached a milestone of 1 million cumulative cases since the start of the pandemic, recording more infections than any other state. For reference, more people have been infected in the Lone Star State than live in Austin.

If Texas were its own country, it would rank 10th in terms of total cases, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, placing it higher than European hot spots such as Italy.

The big numbers are not a shock in a state that’s home to roughly 29 million people. The rate of 3,508 cases per 100,000 Texans is still lower than in about half of the states in the country. But Texas had more newly reported cases in the last week— anaverage of about 8,520 daily — than other large, hard-hit states, such as New York, California and Florida. Only Illinois has a higher seven-day average.

On Tuesday, Texas reported more than 11,500 new cases, the highest number since its summer *Bexar County numbers were not updated Wednesday because of Veterans Day. State count, based on different criteria, is higher.

Source: State of Texas, S.A. Metropolit­an Health District, CDC, Johns Hopkins peak in July. Resurgence of the virus has been slower in San Antonio, but coronaviru­s cases, COVID hospitaliz­ations and the share of people testing positive for the virus all have gradually increased over the past month.

With cases climbing elsewhere in the state and the U.S., it’s only a matter of time before they spike again in San Antonio too, said Dr. Jundawoo, medical director of the San Antonio Metropolit­an Health District.

“Eventually it’s going to seep back over to San Antonio,” she said.

While much of the national attention has focused on the Midwest and upper Midwest, where caseloads and hospitaliz­ations are threatenin­g to overwhelm health systems, Texas is now firmly in its third wave.

Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of Baylor College of Medicine’s National School of Tropical Medicine and co-director of Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Developmen­t, saw troubling trends in the state’s data.

“The worst is maybe yet to come,” Hotez said.

Hotez, a leading expert on the coronaviru­s, placed the blame for the rising number of coronaviru­s cases in Texas squarely on the Trump administra­tion for downplayin­g the severity of the pandemic and attempting to discredit scientists who urged the public to wearmasksa­ndpractice social distancing.

“Had we had a national plan, a national road map, most of those cases could have been avoided,” Hotez said.

A clash over shutdowns

Other experts said Gov. Greg Abbott’s clashes with mayors and county judges over their authority to shutdown businesses and enforce face mask orders contribute­d to the record numbers in Texas. Ahearstnew­spapers investigat­ion found that the state was unprepared for COVID-19 andlacked critical testing infrastruc­ture and sufficient epidemiolo­gists, despite years of warnings by experts about the dangers of a pandemic.

Renae Eze, spokeswoma­n for the governor’s office, said in a statement that state leaders are working closely with local officials to deal with spikes in hospitaliz­ations andthattex­as is preparing to distribute upcoming treatments for COVID-19 when they become available.

Eze said the state’s efforts will only work if Texans do their part.

“The reality is, COVID-19 still exists in Texas and across the globe, and Texans should continue to take this virus seriously and do their part by social distancing, washing their hands and wearing a mask,” Eze said.

The spread of the coronaviru­s is being driven in part by partisansh­ip and disinforma­tion about the pandemic, said Juan Gutiérrez, chair of mathematic­s at the university of Texas at San Antonio, who has been leading an effort to model the trajectory of coronaviru­s transmissi­on in the u.s. Caseshave risen in smaller counties that voted for President Trump in 2016, he said.

However, Gutiérrez noted that a number of other developmen­ts — reopening of businesses, cooler weather and fatigue from prolonged social isolation — are contributi­ng to higher levels of transmissi­on. Those factors have been paired with unique features of the virus, including a high level of contagious­ness, significan­t asymptomat­ic transmissi­on and an ability to spread over the summer months, that have made containmen­t difficult.

“It is very different, and therefore, it has behaved in ways that we haven’t seen truly before,” Gutiérrez said.

The state’s positive test rate is now 11.63 percent, compared to 7.35 percent a month ago.

El Paso County has become the center of a new wave of COVID-19 cases, with an average of 1,800 newly reported cases daily last week. Hospitaliz­ations of COVID-19 patients reached more than 41 percent of capacity in the El Paso region, according to state data. Several dozen patients have been transporte­d to San Antonio for treatment.

Lubbock and Randall counties, both in the Panhandle, also have been hit hard recently.

Some of the state’s largest cities also have become hot spots, with Dallas and Tarrant counties seeing the second and third most cases cases daily during the past week.

Harris County reported an average of about 738 cases daily during the past week, according to Chronicle data. The county’s positive test rate is steadily increasing, reaching 8.3 percent.

Hospitals see increase

In Bexar County, the seven-day average for new cases has steadily increased and is now at 239, up from 136 at the beginning of October. The positivity rate has climbed to 8.4 percent, up 3.5 percentage points over the past month.

Hospitals in the county are treating more than 300 coronaviru­s patients for the first time since early September, up from 189 on Oct. 20. As of Tuesday, 10 percent of staffed hospital beds in the area were available, according to the Southwest Texas Regional Advisory Council, which manages emergency services for Bexar and surroundin­g counties.

Texas already has the secondhigh­est death toll in the country with 19,248 deaths, trailing only New York.

And the death toll is growing, with Texas reporting 98 deaths daily duringthe pastweek, according to Hearst Newspapers’ data, well above second-place Illinois. The daily average was about 81 deaths a week ago.

Dr. Paul Klotman, president of Baylor College of Medicine, dismissed the 1 million milestone as “inevitable.”

“It shows that for whatever reason we haven’t controlled the infection,” Klotman said. “And given the size of the state, it shows we’re still nowhere near herd immunity.”

Klotman said the 1 million mark doesn’t alarm him as much as the 100,000 new cases a day nationally.

Masks and social distancing remain the best hope to stop the virus froms preading, he added, noting that the 1918 Spanish flu went away without a vaccine because people adopted such practices.

Catherine Troisi, an infectious disease epidemiolo­gist at UTHealth, said the sheer number of infections is due in part to population, but also the state’s large number of Latinos, who makeup a larger percentage of essential workers. COVID-19 also has reached rural areas where, previously, “people thought they didn’t have to worry about it,” she said.

Troisi also cited the state’s early reopening this spring, its delayed mask mandate and its lack of adherence to federal health guidelines. Abbott assembled a task force that created guidelines for safely reopening the state’s economy based on criteria, including testing capacity, the positive test rate and hospitaliz­ations. But not all of them were met before businesses were allowed to reopen.

Predictabl­y, Troisi said, the number of cases grew rapidly and then schools and colleges began reopening.

Add into that pandemic fatigue, she said, and more bad news is coming.

“People are tired of it. Andthere is a lot of concern about the holidays coming up and what that will mean,” Troisi said. “Almost everybody in public health is predicting we’re going to see a surge in cases.”

Hotez, despite seeing trouble in the near future, was optimistic about the promise of a vaccine and an eventual respite from the record-breaking numbers.

“By this time next year, we’ll be in a much better position than we are now,” Hotez said.

 ?? Robin Jerstad / Contributo­r ?? A technician prepares a COVID-19 test at the Bexar County Elections Department for its election staff on Nov. 2. Over 900 election workers and volunteers have signed up for the tests.
Robin Jerstad / Contributo­r A technician prepares a COVID-19 test at the Bexar County Elections Department for its election staff on Nov. 2. Over 900 election workers and volunteers have signed up for the tests.

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