Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Report: ‘ Florida is in full pandemic resurgence’

- By Naseem S. Miller nmiller@ orlandosen­tinel. com.

Florida is now painted in red — for increase in the number of COVID- 19 cases, for test positivity and high levels of community transmissi­on in nearly 90% of the counties, according to the Jan. 3 White House COVID- 19 Task Force report obtained by the Orlando Sentinel.

“Florida has seen an increase in new cases despite a significan­t decrease in tests performed, an increase in test positivity, and rapidly rising hospitaliz­ations,” said the report. “Florida is in full pandemic resurgence and must increase mitigation, along with an active COVID vaccinatio­n program to decrease community spread and save lives.”

Orange County, which has been in the fifth or sixth place for the number of new of cases in the state, now ranks third behind MiamiDade and Broward counties, the report shows. The three counties account for 36% of COVID- 19 cases in Florida.

The Orlando-Sanford-K is sim me ear ea is labeled as one of the regions in the nation with an increased burden of COVID19, potentiall­y straining health-care resources. The number of COVID- 19 cases in the area had a 52% increase compared to the prior week.

The Jan. 3 task force report, along with three others from December, were released a day after the state agreed to settle its lawsuit with the Orlando Sentinel over delays in providing the weekly Task Force reports.

As part of the settlement, the state has agreed to release the future weekly task force reports within two business days and pay $ 7,500 in attorney fees.

The four weekly reports released to the Sentinel, starting Dec. 13, document the continued deteriorat­ion of COVID- 19 metrics in Florida. On Thursday, Florida set a record for the number of COVID- 19 cases, reporting nearly 20,000 confirmed infections.

Meanwhile, Gov. Ron DeSantis has turned his attention away from the virus spread and toward the vaccine rollout.

In response to questions about increasing cases and hospitaliz­ation in recent days, DeSantis has repeated one message: trusting people to use common sense, without elaboratin­g on what he means. The task force reports repeatedly and clearly urge state officials to encourage masks and other mitigation efforts to contain the spread of the virus.

“Focus on uniform behavioral change including masking, physical distancing, hand hygiene, no indoor gatherings outside of the immediate households, and ensuring every American understand­s the clear risks of ANY family or friend interactio­ns outside of their immediate household indoors without masks,” said the Dec. 13 report.

“Florida is not adequately mitigating, resulting in surging cases, hospitaliz­ations, and high cases among longterm care facilities’ staff,” said the Dec. 20 report. “Preventing a post-Christmas/ Kwanzaa surge is critical through clear and continuous messaging: ‘ To preserve our hospital system for you, we need you to wear masks, physically distance, wash hands, and avoid crowds and social gatherings beyond your immediate family.’ ”

“No unmasked public gatherings are safe and no indoor private gatherings are safe without all members fully masked, unless all members are actively taking the same precaution­s and regularly test negative,” said the Dec. 27 report. And on Jan. 3, the task force wrote: “Florida’s post- holiday numbers raise significan­t concerns with rising test positivity and increasing hospitaliz­ations, suggesting a resurgence of community spread. This requires a combinatio­n of aggressive mitigation with further restrictio­ns and substantia­l accelerati­on of vaccinatio­ns, utilizing all pathways from pharmacies, from high throughput sites and a simplifica­tion of vaccine tiers to single age bands(e.g .: everyone over 65). Creating complexity is resulting in poor immunizati­on rates.”

The Jan. 3 report is the first of the weekly task force reports to put emphasis on vaccinatio­ns.

“Do not delay the rapid immunizati­on of those over 65 and vulnerable to severe disease; recommend creation of high throughput vaccinatio­n sites with use of EMT personnel to monitor for potential anaphylaxi­s and fully utilize nursing students. No vaccines should be in freezers but should instead be put in arms now; active and aggressive immunizati­on in the face of this surge would save lives,” said the report.

As of Jan. 7, Florida had received 1.15 million doses of vaccine and has administer­ed 339,000 doses, according to the federal numbers. DeSantis has promised that the vaccinatio­n rates will accelerate now that the holidays are over.

Staff and residents at more nursing homes are also testing positive for the virus, the reports show.

On Dec. 13, 41% of nursing homes were reporting at least once case of COVID19 in staff. That percentage increased to 46% on Dec. 20 and 27 and to 50% on Jan. 3.

On Jan. 3, the state had a 13% increase in new COVID - 1 9 hospitaliz­ations compared to the week before. And the numbers have continued to increase since.

Although hospitals continue to have capacity and resources in Central Florida, the number of COVID- 19 patients in regular hospital beds and in the ICU has been steadily increasing with no peak in sight.

AdventHeal­th has now escalated its status to red, more judiciousl­y scheduling non- essential elective surgeries that require hospitaliz­ation.

“It’s so critical to continue to protect and prevent ourselves f rom getting [ COVID- 19], because we don’t want to get to a point where health care has to be rationaliz­ed,” said Dr. Raul Pino, health officer for the Florida Department of Health in Orange County, during a news conference on Wednesday.

 ?? STEPHEN M DOWELL/ ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? A mile- long line of cars waits in line for COVID- 19 testing at Barnett Park in Orlando on Tuesday. The line of cars, which was moving slowly, began at Colonial Drive and continued on the winding road into the test site.
STEPHEN M DOWELL/ ORLANDO SENTINEL A mile- long line of cars waits in line for COVID- 19 testing at Barnett Park in Orlando on Tuesday. The line of cars, which was moving slowly, began at Colonial Drive and continued on the winding road into the test site.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States