The Mercury News

U.S.: Expect increase if stay-at-home orders lifted

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Stay-at-home orders, school closures and social distancing greatly reduce infections of the coronaviru­s, but lifting those restrictio­ns after just 30 days will lead to a dramatic infection spike this summer and death tolls that would rival doing nothing, government projection­s indicate.

The projection­s obtained by The New York Times come from the department­s of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services.

The models use three scenarios. The first has policymake­rs doing nothing to mitigate the spread of the coronaviru­s. The second, labeled “steady state,” assumes schools remain closed until summer, 25% of Americans telework from home, and some social distancing continues. The third scenario includes a 30-day shelter in place on top of those “steady state” restrictio­ns.

The documents, dated April 9, contain no dates for when shelter-in-place orders were delivered nor do they contain specific dates for when spikes would hit. The risk they show of easing shelter-in-place orders currently in effect in most of the country undercut recent statements by President Donald Trump that the United States could be ready to reopen “very, very soon.”

The model foresees a bump in the demand for ventilator­s 30 days after stay-at-home orders are issued, a major spike in infections about 100 days after and peaking 150 days after the initial order. (Assuming further shelter-in-place policies are not implemente­d to reduce future peaks.)

For most states that implemente­d stay-at-home orders in late March, including New York, Massachuse­tts and Illinois, that spike would come in mid- to late summer.

The government’s conclusion­s are sobering. Without any mitigation, such as school closings, shelter-inplace orders, telework and socially distancing, the death toll from coronaviru­s could reach 300,000. But if the administra­tion lifts the 30-day stay-at-home orders, the death total is estimated to reach 200,000, even if schools remain closed until summer, 25% of the country continues to work from home, and some social distancing continues.

If nothing was done, infection rates would top out at 195 million Americans, and 965,000 people would require hospitaliz­ation in an intensive care unit, according to the projection­s’ “best guess.” But with a 30day shelter in place and other measures, infections would still reach 160 million and 740,000 would need intensive care.

Trump has teased the idea of reopening the United States to boost the economy, even as state governors, hospitals around the country and the federal government’s inspector general for Health and Human Services have warned of widespread shortages of test kits, protective gear and medical equipment.

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