WaPo | The
coronavirus is spreading at dangerous levels across much of the United
States, and public health experts are demanding a dramatic reset in the
national response, one that recognizes that the crisis is intensifying
and that current piecemeal strategies aren’t working.
“Unlike
many countries in the world, the United States is not currently on
course to get control of this epidemic. It’s time to reset,” declared a report released this week by Johns Hopkins University.
Another report from the
Association of American Medical Colleges offered a similarly blunt
message: “If the nation does not change its course — and soon — deaths
in the United States could be well into the multiple hundreds of
thousands.”
The
country is exhausted, but the virus is not. It has shown a consistent
pattern: It spreads opportunistically wherever people let down their
guard and return to more familiar patterns of mobility and socializing.
When communities tighten up, by closing bars or requiring masks in
public, transmission drops.
That
has happened in some Sun Belt states, including Arizona, Florida and
Texas, which are still dealing with a surge of hospitalizations and
deaths but are finally turning around the rate of new infections.
There
are signs, however, that the virus is spreading freely in much of the
country. Experts are focused on upticks in the percentage of positive coronavirus
tests in the upper South and Midwest. It is a sign that the virus could
soon surge anew in the heartland. Infectious-disease experts also see
warning signs in East Coast cities hammered in the spring.
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