San Diego Union-Tribune

FLORIDA REPORTS SINGLE-DAY RECORD OF 15K CASES

Number surpasses previous high seen in New York state in April

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Florida on Sunday reported the highest single-day total of new coronaviru­s cases by any state since the start of the pandemic, with 15,300 new infections, eclipsing the previous high of 12,274 recorded in New York on April 4 amid the worst of its outbreak.

The number reflects both increased testing and a surge in transmissi­on of the virus that has strained hospitals, led to shortages in a key antiviral drug and amplified fears about the pace at which the state lifted restrictio­ns on movement and commerce.

“It has just been horrifical­ly busy,” John Toney, a professor of infectious diseases at the University of South Florida, said of hospitals, where patients were flooding in and doctors and nurses were growing overwhelme­d and exhausted.

“It’s reminiscen­t of what everyone dealt with in New York,” Toney

said. “It’s certainly putting a strain on a lot of the systems, even though hospitals are trying to accommodat­e.”

The increase of 15,300 cases has come as Walt Disney World has let tourists back onto its rides, the Republican National Convention is set to begin in Jacksonvil­le in August, and Gov. Ron Desantis has ordered that public schools reopen for five days a week when classes resume next month.

“If you can do Home Depot, if you can do Walmart, if you can do these things,” the governor said, “we absolutely can do the schools.”

The surge in Florida reflects how the spread of the virus has escalated in much of the country, particular­ly in states in the South where governors following President Donald Trump’s lead have pushed aggressive­ly to ease restrictio­ns and encourage businesses to reopen.

Now some states are trying to add mask mandates and other protective measures and seeing renewed tensions between governors and mayors as they disagree over how much to pull back on the reopening.

In some ways, the situation in Florida differs from the worst days of the pandemic in New York.

Some of the increase in cases reflects the dramatic increase in testing; Florida is testing several times the number of people that New York was at the height of its crisis. The spread of the disease amid the Florida sun does not play out with the same dread as it did in crowded city streets in New York. Hospitals are better supplied and somewhat more prepared to treat patients than they were in March and April.

While the daily death toll in Florida climbed to a high last week, it remains far below the levels that New York suffered, at least for now.

“We expected this to happen,” said Jay Wolfson, a professor of public health and medicine at the University of South Florida. “The calculus for this disease is proximity, congestion and time,” he added. “You had people going to parties. You had restaurant­s open up. You had bars open up. You had beaches open up. You had graduation parties for students.”

From the start, the response to the virus has been defined by a tug of war as officials have had to balance taking aggressive steps to inhibit its spread with limiting the array of economic and social consequenc­es those measures unleashed.

Now that balance is being calibrated yet again as the outbreak is growing across 37 states, and eight states — all but one in the South or Southwest — set single-day death records over the last week: Alabama, Arizona,

Florida, Mississipp­i, North Carolina, South Dakota, Texas and Tennessee.

The states seeing the record increases were often among those where officials had delayed implementi­ng stay-at-home orders in the spring and moved quickly to ease the restrictio­ns they did put in place.

Florida has recorded more than 269,800 cases, with more than 4,200 total deaths, according to a New York Times database. There were also single-day records Sunday in the counties that include Florida’s largest cities, including Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, Fort Myers, West Palm Beach, Pensacola and Sarasota.

The latest data shows the increasing strains that Florida hospitals are under. Some 43 intensive care units in 21 Florida counties have hit capacity and have no beds available. Doctors are working longer hours and, faced with shortages of the

key drug remdesivir, doctors and nurses are having to choose between patients and even to change the remdesivir criteria to use it later in the disease.

Even with the dramatic spike in cases and sickness in the state, many Floridians remain blasé about the virus and averse to the simple act of wearing a mask to prevent its spread.

On Clearwater Beach, in Pinellas County on Florida’s western coast, Jason Dormois, 17, part of a crew handling sun lounges, said he was not worried. “I’m out in the sun; I’m a healthy young man,” he said. He said he had been out of his job for two months and stuck at home, and “people need the money.”

Others were appalled people were not taking the virus more seriously.

“It’s asinine, the way people are acting. Look at the beach — not one mask,” said Anthony Babcock, 47, who had worked in music publishing. “And those who say it’s a free country — it’s not about being a free country. It’s about being smart. We’ll see what happens in two weeks.”

In Ybor City, a popular area of Tampa lined with pirate-themed bars, tattoo parlors and cigar shops, restaurant­s were open. At Zydeco Brew Werks, a sign was posted on the front door reading, “City ordinance: A face mask is required to enter this establishm­ent.”

And yet no one wore a mask inside, except for the employees. There might have been fewer people compared to the days before the pandemic, yet little else about the atmosphere was different.

Kent White, who wore a bandanna that said “Make America Strong Again,” said he tried to keep his face covered, but he was still frustrated by the economic devastatio­n caused by the virus. He said his business building gondolas had suffered because of supply chain disruption­s, and he couldn’t get raw materials into the country from China.

“We can’t keep the country shut down,” White, 60, said. “It’s done so much damage to this country, and that continues to damage people.”

Bradley Wasinda, 47, who works at a restaurant, said he had tried to encourage patrons to cover their faces when in the restaurant but not eating. But the effort was futile.

“Can I be honest with you? I’ve given up on trying to enforce it,” he said, describing the fiery responses his requests incited. “I gave up,” he said. “I’m over it.”

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