Fast and Furious: COVID Surges to Unprecedented Levels in U.S.
The United States recorded 3157 COVID-19 deaths yesterday, the highest number in a single day and more than 20% higher than the previous record of 2603 deaths set back on April 15.
Infection preventionists and other healthcare professionals battling coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) fight a foe that’s paving a trail of illness, hospitalizations, and death not seen before during this pandemic. Grim records keep getting broken and trends indicate that the COVID-19 scourge only promises to get worse. The United States recorded 3157 COVID-19 deaths yesterday, the highest number in a single day and more than 20% higher than the previous record of 2603 deaths set back on April 15, according to
Meanwhile, according to the
This may be the “
As with the first wave, some states are getting hit harder than others. In Nevada, 29% of all hospital beds are occupied by COVID patients, according to the
The shifting of more and more healthcare resources and space to COVID victims, means less healthcare resources and space will be available for non-COVID patients. In addition, as one hospital in New Jersey
Infection preventionists and other healthcare workers strive to keep up. “The hard part is we all are exhausted from this,” says Rebecca Leach, RN, BSN, MPH, CIC, an infection prevention coordinator and a member of ICT®’s Editorial Advisory Board. Leach says that she works at least 10 hours a day but thinks about the pandemic every waking moment.
“Everybody is tired of having to change their way of life for this. And I can understand the impatience with the public. My biggest impatience is with leadership in government. Some states are doing more to be proactive and some states are not. And that’s where my biggest concern is…. As we saw before in the summer, when states really locked down or mandated masking and that kind of thing, we saw the decrease. If we did that again, I think it would work.”
Reports that COVID vaccines developed by by
“I’m trying to be very hopeful about a vaccine, but I’m also realistic,” says Leach. “We know that there are not going to be enough doses until probably well into next year to really cover a lot of people. They say in the next few weeks we may start seeing a vaccine here in Arizona, which is exciting news. But it’s going to be limited to however many doses we get…. And the whole process of how it’s going to be distributed is a little bit up in the air. Do they have the people to give the vaccine and track it and how is that going to work? I’m hopeful, but it’s not the end by any means especially in the next few months.”
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