Wednesday, November 11, 2020

VoxCare: How bad is Covid-19 going to get before Trump leaves office?

Today's coronavirus snapshot, as of 2 pm ET Wednesday:

  • 10,313,369 confirmed US cases (51,788,782 worldwide)
  • 240,265 confirmed US deaths (1,277,717 worldwide)

There is no way to sugarcoat it: The US is not in a good place right now.

 

—Dylan

 .

While election night unfurled into election week, America's Covid-19 pandemic was reaching its most critical stage yet.

 

The United States is now facing a record number of coronavirus cases (averaging 119,000 every day for the last seven days, according to the Covid Tracking Project) and a record number of hospitalizations (nearly 62,000 as of November 10). About 1,350 deaths were reported on Tuesday, the highest total since mid-August.

 

And there's only so much that can be done in the last two months of President Donald Trump's term to change that trajectory.

Covid Tracking Project

 

Trump had not held a public event for a full week until Veterans Day, and his tweets have been fixated on his baseless claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him. He has not commented on the surge of Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations.

 

So with the pandemic entering its most dangerous period to date, the country's current leadership — which we are stuck with until January 20 — does not appear to have any plans to do anything about it.

 

In one sense, this is not a surprise. As we learned from a New York Times report over the summer, the Trump administration has long sought to put as much responsibility for the Covid-19 response as possible onto the states.

 

The White House has de facto committed to a dangerous "herd immunity" plan that depends on letting the coronavirus spread unchecked while trying to protect the vulnerable (despite ample evidence that increased community spread will inevitably find its way to the vulnerable) by refusing to take more aggressive action in combating the virus. (And privately, according to the Daily Beast, White House officials acknowledge this is their strategy.)

 

One saving grace of America's decentralized public health response is that states and cities can take their own steps to try to slow down Covid-19. San Francisco decided to forbid indoor dining again and also reduced capacity at gyms and movie theaters. New York state is also requiring bars, restaurants, and gyms to close early.

 

And there are some signs that the latest surge is convincing Republican officials who have been skeptical of more aggressive policies to rethink their approaches. Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds is now requiring people to wear masks in certain circumstances after having long resisted such a mandate.

 

But that flexibility cuts both ways. North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum is still not implementing a statewide mask mandate even as his state's hospitals reach 100 percent of their capacity (though he is encouraging people to wear masks). To the south, a debate over a mask mandate in South Dakota's largest city did not result in a new policy, even while the state is experiencing one of the worst Covid-19 outbreaks in the country.

 

President-elect Joe Biden doesn't actually have any authority yet, though he is attempting to project competence. As Vox's German Lopez wrote, Biden's electoral victory comes too late to stop the fall and winter surges. It's now only a question of how bad things get before he takes power.

 

One of the president-elect's first official actions was to appoint a Covid-19 task force. The Trump administration has not yet acknowledged Biden's victory or allowed the formal transition to begin, but the Biden campaign said they anticipated such intransigence. Campaign officials told me that the former vice president may reach out to state and local leaders during the transition in order to start getting everybody on the same page about what would be necessary to end the pandemic. But Biden also appears to be mindful of not overstepping his bounds while Trump is in office.

 

Trump's obstruction could even undermine the one piece of good news we received this week: promising (but still early) results for the Pfizer vaccine. ProPublica reported on Tuesday that many states and cities were not yet prepared to distribute a Covid-19 vaccine like this one, which has very specific storage and transportation requirements.

 

The Trump administration's Operation Warp Speed has paid drug companies to manufacture vaccine doses, an unambiguously good move, but the project is not responsible for actually delivering the vaccine. As ProPublica noted, that will fall to states and, based on their preliminary distribution plans, there is still a lot of work to be done.

 

And yet, Trump officials have been refusing to cooperate with the incoming administration that will actually be responsible for getting people vaccinated.

 

It is another riff on the same theme: The US is on its own, at least for the next two months.

 
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German Lopez/Vox

Seriously, things are bad in the Dakotas. Here is the latest from Vox's German Lopez:

Unlike other states, South and North Dakota never fully closed down, with the Republican governors in each state resisting ever issuing a stay-at-home order. So most of each state remained open — allowing the virus to spread freely through bars, restaurants, parties, celebrations, rodeos, rallies, and other large gatherings. Among those potential spreading events was a motorcycle rally in Sturgis, South Dakota, in early August, which some experts now blame for a Covid-19 surge that followed in the region, particularly in the Upper Midwest.

Neither state has adopted a mask mandate, which research shows can help suppress the coronavirus. Based on some national data, both Dakotas have some of the lowest rates of mask-wearing in the US.

Bonny Specker, an epidemiologist at South Dakota State University, was blunt in her assessment of the situation in the Dakotas. "Federal and many state leaders have not implemented mandates or reinforced [public health agencies'] recommendations to prevent the spread of the virus," she told me. "In South Dakota, the governor had the information needed to minimize the impact of this virus on the health of South Dakotans, but she ignored that information as well as national recommendations from the CDC."

 
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