Michigan Covid-19 cases are skyrocketing, so the federals are sending doctors and nurses to help strained hospitals
The 44 medical staff – including doctors, nurses and respiratory therapists – will be split between Dearborn’s Beaumont Hospital outside Detroit and the Spectrum Health system in Grand Rapids, the state health department said.
Teams will arrive next week “and begin treating patients immediately, providing support for the next 30 days,” the department said.
“I’m grateful that the federal government approved our request to provide much-needed relief to health care workers who remain on the front lines of this pandemic,” Whitmer said. on Wednesday.
Michigan is reporting more new cases per capita than any other state
Although Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations in the United States have dropped following the summer spike, They have increased over the past few weeks.
Michigan — along with several other states that weren’t initially hit as hard as the South during the summer bull run — have been particularly under pressure.
Michigan recently reported its highest seven-day average of new daily cases for the pandemic, at 8,793 as of Nov. As of Thursday, the average was 8,470 a day – still more than double the average at the end of October, according to Johns Hopkins University data.
About 54.4% of Michigan’s population was fully immunized as of Wednesday – ranking 27th out of 50 states for that indicator, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
As of Thursday, Michigan reported more new cases per capita last week than any other state, with Wisconsin, Minnesota and New Hampshire, according to JHU data.
According to the US Department of Health and Human Services, the number of Covid-19 patients in Michigan hospitals was 4,104 as of Friday.
This number has generally increased since mid-July and could soon match Michigan’s pandemic peak: 4,468 on November 30, 2020.
Cases are generally increasing in the US
The statistics are expected to be distorted over the next few days as many states do not report numbers on Thanksgiving. But as of Wednesday – the day before Thanksgiving – the country averaged 95,758 new Covid-19 cases every day for seven days, according to JHU data.
According to JHU data, this is still well below the summer 2021 peak of 171,123 reached on September 13, but has generally increased since late October, when the average dropped to nearly 70,000 a day, according to JHU data.
According to HHS, more than 52,900 Covid-19 patients were in US hospitals as of Friday. This is also down from its summer 2021 peak of 103,896 on September 1, but it is up from November 9, when it dropped to around 48,600.
According to HHS, more than three-quarters of ICU beds are fully provided across the country, more than 1 of which are for Covid-19 patients.
Fauci said more people need to be vaccinated
And what will happen to Covid-19 in the US over the next few months depends on what Americans do, including whether more of the population gets vaccinated and booster shots, Fauci told Brianna Keilar of CNN on Friday “New Day”.
“Right now, we have a tool, a very effective tool,” he said Friday. “We have too many people … eligible for vaccination who are not vaccinated. We have to get them vaccinated. There’s no reason not to vaccinate them.”
But that leaves more than a quarter of the eligible population — about 81 million people — without at least one dose of the drug, an analysis of CNN CDC data shows.
People who are not immunized face a much greater risk tested positive for Covid-19 compared with fully vaccinated individuals, and the gap was even larger in risk of hospitalization or death, according to the CDC.
Unvaccinated people are six times more likely to test positive for Covid-19 and 14 times more likely to die from Covid-19, according to CDC data. announced on Monday.
“You get a boost now, you can go into winter and have a higher level of protection,” he said. “That’s why we’re pushing people to: A) Get vaccinated in the first place if you haven’t already; and B) If you’ve been vaccinated and you’re monitoring your mRNA for six months or more, or two or more months after J&J, go get your boosters. This is really important as we head into this colder winter.”
CNN’s Deidre McPhillips and Naomi Thomas contributed to this report.
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