Yuma Sun

CDC pleads with Americans to avoid Thanksgivi­ng travel

-

NEW YORK – With the coronaviru­s surging out of control, the nation’s top public health agency pleaded with Americans on Thursday not to travel for Thanksgivi­ng and not to spend the holiday with people from outside their household.

The Thanksgivi­ng warning from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention came as the White House coronaviru­s task force held a briefing for the first time in months and Vice President Mike Pence concluded it without responding to questions by reporters or urging Americans not to travel.

Other members of the task force – whose media briefings were a daily fixture during the early days of the outbreak – talked about the progress being made in the developmen­t of a vaccine.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said pharmaceut­ical companies Pfizer and BioNTech will seek emergency government approval for their coronaviru­s vaccine on Friday. And infection disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci sought to reassure the public that the vaccine is safe while still encouragin­g Americans to wear masks.

The CDC’s Thanksgivi­ng warning was some of the firmest guidance yet from the government on curtailing traditiona­l gatherings to fight the outbreak.

The CDC issued the recommenda­tions just one week before Thanksgivi­ng, at a time when diagnosed infections, hospitaliz­ations and deaths are skyrocketi­ng across the country. In many areas, the health care system is being squeezed by a combinatio­n of sick patients filling up beds and medical workers falling ill themselves.

The CDC’s Dr. Erin Sauber-Schatz cited more than 1 million new cases in the U.S. over the past week as the reason for the new guidance.

“The safest way to celebrate Thanksgivi­ng this year is at home with the people in your household,” she said.

If families do decide to include returning college students, military members or others for turkey and stuffing, the CDC is recommendi­ng that the hosts take added precaution­s: Gatherings should be outdoors if possible, with people keeping 6 feet apart and wearing masks and just one person serving the food.

Whether Americans heed the warning is another matter. The deadly comeback by the virus has been blamed in part on pandemic fatigue, or people getting tired of masks and other precaution­s. And surges were seen last summer after Memorial Day and July Fourth, despite blunt warnings from health authoritie­s.

The United States has had more than 11 million diagnosed infections and over 250,000 deaths from the coronaviru­s. CDC scientists believe that somewhere around 40% of people who are infected do not have obvious symptoms but can still spread the virus.

CALIFORNIA CURFEW

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday announced the imposition of an overnight curfew on most residents as the most populous state tries to head off a virus case surge that officials fears could tax the state’s health care system.

What officials called a limited stay-at-home order requires nonessenti­al residents to stay home from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. starting Saturday. It lasts until Dec. 21 but could be extended. It covers 94% of the state’s nearly 40 million residents.

“The virus is spreading at a pace we haven’t seen since the start of this pandemic and the next several days and weeks will be critical to stop the surge. We are sounding the alarm,” Newsom said in a statement.

Also Thursday, Rhode Island Democratic Gov. Gina Raimondo announced a “two-week pause” with some businesses closures and capacity reduced for restaurant­s and houses of worship starting Nov. 30. Officials will reevaluate COVID-19 caseloads on Dec. 13 and if they have not eased, she said “a full state lockdown” will follow.

In New Hampshire, Republican Gov. Chris Sununu previously resisted calls for a statewide mask mandate but issued an order requiring face coverings to be worn in public spaces indoors and outdoors.

KEEPING UP WITH NONCOVID-19 CASES

Hospitals are struggling to keep up with non-coronaviru­s cases ranging from broken bones to heart attacks in states where COVID-19 cases are tying up resources.

In Kansas, rural hospitals are running into difficulty trying to transfer patients to larger hospitals for more advanced care.

“Whether it is regular pneumonia or appendicit­is or fractures that need surgery, they have a limited amount of beds in their facilities and they are not taking a lot of these routine cases,” said Perry Desbien, a nurse practition­er who works in Smith Center and other rural communitie­s. “They are saying, ‘Send them home. Have them follow up in the office. Unless it is life-threatenin­g, we don’t want to see them either.’”

Earlier this month, the Mayo Clinic Health System in Wisconsin announced it was suspending elective medical procedures.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker noted that with COVID-19 patients claiming a quarter of the state’s hospital beds, there are fewer resources for heart attack patients, expectant mothers or cancer patients.

“When we let our hospitals get overrun or even close to it, it is all of us suffering,” Pritzker said.

SICK HOSPITAL WORKERS

The Mayo Clinic Health System, a Midwest network of hospitals and clinics run by the world-renowned Mayo Clinic, reported that 905 staff members have been diagnosed with COVID-19 in the past two weeks.

Dr. Amy Williams, executive dean of Mayo Clinic Practice, said the vast majority were exposed in the community and not at work.

“It shows how widely spread this is in our communitie­s and how easy it is to get COVID-19 in the communitie­s here in the Midwest,” she said.

In Kansas, 178 employees and doctors at a Topeka hospital had active coronaviru­s cases or were isolated and on leave because of contact with someone who had coronaviru­s. And the University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City and nearby clinics had 206 employees, including physicians, nurses and support staff, out as of Tuesday after testing positive. An additional 260 were not at work and quarantini­ng while they awaited test results.

POSITIVITY RATE

The positivity rate – the percentage of tests coming back positive for the virus – has taken on a more prominent role in the nation’s response to the crisis in recent days.

New York City shut down in-person classes in the nation’s largest school system this week after the positivity rate surpassed 3%. That angered families who believe it is too stringent a standard and question why bars and restaurant­s can remain open.

The positivity rate has soared to record levels all around the nation. South Dakota, Iowa and Wyoming’s rate are all averaging above 50%, and the national average is now 10%.

Health experts caution that there are weaknesses in the positivity data because states calculate the rate differentl­y. But they say the overall trend is not in dispute, and it indicates severe spread and, in many places, insufficie­nt testing.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS NOV. 18 FILE PHOTO, a lone pedestrian walks past a public service sign reminding Chicago residents of the return to a stricter COVID-19 protocol along the city’s usually busy Magnificen­t Mile in Chicago.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS NOV. 18 FILE PHOTO, a lone pedestrian walks past a public service sign reminding Chicago residents of the return to a stricter COVID-19 protocol along the city’s usually busy Magnificen­t Mile in Chicago.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States