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North Carolina governor, health department plea for public's help as coronavirus numbers spike

North Carolina governor, health department plea for public's help as coronavirus numbers spike
DEATHS. DYING FROM COVID-19 OR MORNING A LOVED ONE RIGHT NOW CAN BE ISOLATING AND DIFFICULT. WE REALLY ARE PRAYING FOR ALL THOSE SUFFERING NOW. AND TODAY OUR CONCERN IS GROWING ABOUT THE INCREASE IN CASES AND HOSPITALIZATIONS IN NORTH YOUR LINEUP. THIS IS ALSO HAPPENING IN MANY STATES ACROSS THE COUNTRY. WHILE OUR HOSPITAL STILL HAVE CAPACITY, WE KNOW THIS CAN CHANGE QUICKLY, SO WE ARE WORKING WITH HOSPITALS AND TRACKING HOSPITALIZATIONS AND ICU BEDS CLOSELY. TODAY IS NORTH CAROLINA’S HIGHEST DAY OF NEW CASES SINCE THE PANDEMIC STARTED AND ALSO THE HIGHEST DAY OF TESTING WE HAVE HAD. THE HIGH NUMBER OF NEW CASES IS NOT JUST RELATED TO MORE TESTING. THESE NUMBERS SHOW THE DISEASE IS SPREADING AND MORE PEOPLE NEED HOSPITAL CARE AND THIS HAS TO BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY. IN THE LAST WEEK WE HAVE DONE AN AVERAGE OF OVER 15,000 TESTS A DAY. THAT’S A HIGH NUMBER. IT’S GOOD. WE NEED TO DO MORE. TESTING IS AVAILABLE ALL OVER THE STATE BUT WE ARE SPECIFICALLY TARGETING HISTORICALLY MARGINALIZED COMMUNITIES AND OTHER HIGH RISK POPULATIONS. THE STATE IS ALSO WORKING TO SURGE TESTING TO HOT SPOTS AS THOSE NEEDS EMERGE. WE ALSO KNOW WHEN YOU HAVE BEEN IN A CROWD, THE RISK OF CONTRACTING COVID-19 INCREASES YOUR THIS IS SECULARLY TRUE WHEN MANY ARE NOT WEA
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North Carolina governor, health department plea for public's help as coronavirus numbers spike
North Carolina is closely monitoring hospital capacity and pushing testing resources to emerging hot spots as the state recorded its highest one-day increase yet in coronavirus cases, Gov. Roy Cooper said Friday.North Carolina recorded 1,768 COVID-19 cases, matched its 10% high of tests coming back positive and saw a small dip in hospitalizations after four straight days of record numbers.Click the video player above to see what Gov. Cooper said during his coronavirus update.And yet, the state may only now be experiencing its first rough patch.“This isn’t a second wave. This, for us, is a first,” said Mandy Cohen, secretary of the NC Department of Health and Human Services. “I think it reminds us that this virus is here, and we have to learn to live with this virus because we don’t have a vaccine, we don’t have a cure. This is a matter of how can we live with this virus so we don’t see any spike.” Part of the growth in cases comes from the increases in tests, which reached its second consecutive single-day high on Friday with 21,442 tests completed. But while more tests may yield more positive cases, the proportion of tests that have come back positive has also increased.Another driving force behind the uptick is residents traveling throughout the state to newly reopened businesses without following the recommended public safety guidelines.Giselle Corbie-Smith, director of UNC’s Center for Health Equity Research, warns “it would be dangerous to underestimate how much of this pandemic is still raging on.”Crystal Wiley Cené, an associate professor of general medicine and clinical epidemiology at UNC, fears more pain lies ahead.“This is concerning. There’s no question about it,” Cené said of the rise in cases. “I think all public health experts and modelers of this pandemic, we will expect to see a second wave of this that may be much worse than this first wave. Everyone is waiting with bated breath, hanging our hats on a vaccine.”North Carolina public health officials have identified eight counties running the greatest risk of rapid spread. They include the large urban counties of Wake, Mecklenburg, Forsyth and Durham, mid-sized Johnston and Alamance and smaller-sized Lee and Duplin.In Alamance County, Sheriff Terry Johnson this week refused to cite a small racetrack for large crowds when an executive order signed by Cooper limits mass outdoor gatherings to 25 people. Ace Speedway in Altamahaw held events on May 23, May 30 and June 6 drawing anywhere from 2,500 to 4,000 attendees each day. Attendees had traveled from southern Virginia and various parts of North Carolina but largely didn’t wear masks or maintain 6 feet (1.8 meters) of physical separation from one another.On Thursday, a judge told the track to stop holding races. Cohen had signed an order telling the track to close until operators complied with the mass gathering limit and social distancing rules.While public health officials can’t directly tie the uptick to the racing events, Alamance County has seen a substantial rise in cases recently. Since the pandemic began in March, nearly two in five positive COVID-19 cases have occurred in the last 10 days — an increase from 413 to 681 since June 3, according to the county health department.“This virus is highly contagious and dangerous, and violating public health orders put everyone at greater risk,” said a statement from the state health department.Public health experts say the number of nursing homes and communities with higher density housing are also contributing to the rising number of cases in other parts of the state.Cooper and Cohen have persistently sounded the alarm this week for people to take precautions, and the administration vowed on Friday to work toward testing in all nursing homes. While it is possible for the state to close down parts of the economy it has recently reopened, Cooper told reporters Friday he’s leaning toward opening more businesses rather than returning to a lockdown or stricter gathering limits.“The priority is getting our children in school in August, and we want to do that,” Cooper said. “We also want to continue taking steps to ease restrictions to reignite the economy. But we’re not going to do that until our trends and indicators tell us that it’s time to do that.”

North Carolina is closely monitoring hospital capacity and pushing testing resources to emerging hot spots as the state recorded its highest one-day increase yet in coronavirus cases, Gov. Roy Cooper said Friday.

North Carolina recorded 1,768 COVID-19 cases, matched its 10% high of tests coming back positive and saw a small dip in hospitalizations after four straight days of record numbers.

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Click the video player above to see what Gov. Cooper said during his coronavirus update.

And yet, the state may only now be experiencing its first rough patch.

“This isn’t a second wave. This, for us, is a first,” said Mandy Cohen, secretary of the NC Department of Health and Human Services. “I think it reminds us that this virus is here, and we have to learn to live with this virus because we don’t have a vaccine, we don’t have a cure. This is a matter of how can we live with this virus so we don’t see any spike.”

Part of the growth in cases comes from the increases in tests, which reached its second consecutive single-day high on Friday with 21,442 tests completed. But while more tests may yield more positive cases, the proportion of tests that have come back positive has also increased.

Another driving force behind the uptick is residents traveling throughout the state to newly reopened businesses without following the recommended public safety guidelines.

Giselle Corbie-Smith, director of UNC’s Center for Health Equity Research, warns “it would be dangerous to underestimate how much of this pandemic is still raging on.”

Crystal Wiley Cené, an associate professor of general medicine and clinical epidemiology at UNC, fears more pain lies ahead.

“This is concerning. There’s no question about it,” Cené said of the rise in cases. “I think all public health experts and modelers of this pandemic, we will expect to see a second wave of this that may be much worse than this first wave. Everyone is waiting with bated breath, hanging our hats on a vaccine.”

North Carolina public health officials have identified eight counties running the greatest risk of rapid spread. They include the large urban counties of Wake, Mecklenburg, Forsyth and Durham, mid-sized Johnston and Alamance and smaller-sized Lee and Duplin.

In Alamance County, Sheriff Terry Johnson this week refused to cite a small racetrack for large crowds when an executive order signed by Cooper limits mass outdoor gatherings to 25 people.

Ace Speedway in Altamahaw held events on May 23, May 30 and June 6 drawing anywhere from 2,500 to 4,000 attendees each day. Attendees had traveled from southern Virginia and various parts of North Carolina but largely didn’t wear masks or maintain 6 feet (1.8 meters) of physical separation from one another.

On Thursday, a judge told the track to stop holding races. Cohen had signed an order telling the track to close until operators complied with the mass gathering limit and social distancing rules.

While public health officials can’t directly tie the uptick to the racing events, Alamance County has seen a substantial rise in cases recently. Since the pandemic began in March, nearly two in five positive COVID-19 cases have occurred in the last 10 days — an increase from 413 to 681 since June 3, according to the county health department.

“This virus is highly contagious and dangerous, and violating public health orders put everyone at greater risk,” said a statement from the state health department.

Public health experts say the number of nursing homes and communities with higher density housing are also contributing to the rising number of cases in other parts of the state.

Cooper and Cohen have persistently sounded the alarm this week for people to take precautions, and the administration vowed on Friday to work toward testing in all nursing homes.

While it is possible for the state to close down parts of the economy it has recently reopened, Cooper told reporters Friday he’s leaning toward opening more businesses rather than returning to a lockdown or stricter gathering limits.

“The priority is getting our children in school in August, and we want to do that,” Cooper said. “We also want to continue taking steps to ease restrictions to reignite the economy. But we’re not going to do that until our trends and indicators tell us that it’s time to do that.”