Covid-19: United States reports daily record of 3,230 deaths

ICU at hundreds of hospitals across the country at or near capacity

A testing site worker gives instructions on how to complete a Covid-19 oral swab test at a pop-up community testing site in the Panorama City neighbourhood of Los Angeles, California, on Wednesday. Photograph: Getty Images
A testing site worker gives instructions on how to complete a Covid-19 oral swab test at a pop-up community testing site in the Panorama City neighbourhood of Los Angeles, California, on Wednesday. Photograph: Getty Images

The United States on Wednesday crossed a new threshold of more than 3,200 Covid-19 deaths in a single day while public health officials stepped up preparations for a vaccine campaign of historic scope ahead of final regulatory review.

Steady movement toward a vaccine rollout on the eve of a critical review by leading US medical experts comes as Covid-19 caseloads surged alarmingly higher, straining healthcare systems in some pandemic hot spots to the breaking point.

Intensive care units at hundreds of hospitals in cities and rural communities across the country were reported to be at or near capacity, US Department of Health and Human Services data showed.

Ten mostly rural counties scattered across California reported having no ICU beds whatsoever on Wednesday, according to state health figures analyzed by Reuters. In Fresno County, home to 1 million people, only seven ICU beds remained unfilled on Wednesday. Largely agricultural San Joaquin County just to the north was down to just five ICU beds.

READ MORE

The number of Covid-19 patients hospitalized nationwide grew to a new all-time high of 106,217 by late Wednesday, up about 18 per cent over the previous two weeks.

205,661 infections a day

The United States also has documented an average of 2,259 deaths and 205,661 new infections each day over the past week, a toll that US health officials warn is likely to accelerate in the coming months before a vaccine becomes widely available to the public.

At least 3,230 US patients died on Wednesday alone, according to a Reuters tally of state-by-state data. The latest figure surpassed the previous December 3rd record of 2,861 Covid-19 deaths and marked the first time the virus has claimed 3,000 American lives or more in a single day – exceeding the death toll from the September 11th, 2001, attacks on America.

To date, Covid-19 has killed more than 289,000 Americans, out of about 15 million known to have been infected since January.

Medical experts have said the crisis will only worsen in the weeks ahead amid colder weather, especially if Americans continue to disregard warnings to avoid unnecessary travel and large gatherings over the holidays.

Besides the monumental human cost, the pandemic has wreaked havoc on the economy, forcing millions out of work as public health authorities imposed sweeping restrictions on social and economic life in an effort to tamp down the contagion.

Congress, meanwhile, has struggled to end a months-long political stalemate over economic assistance.

The Democratic-controlled US House of Representatives on Wednesday approved a one-week extension of federal government funding, giving politicians more time to haggle over a broader spending package with coronavirus relief.

The Republican-led Senate was expected to vote on the measure as early as Thursday and send it to US president Donald Trump in time to avoid a government shutdown.

But disagreements remain over business liability protections demanded by Republicans and aid to state and local governments sought by Democrats before a final deal is reached on economic assistance.

Vaccines on the way

Some officials said vaccinations could begin as soon as this weekend, and states have escalated plans for what is likely to be distribution effort of unprecedented dimensions.

“I can’t think of a government operation that has been commenced that is more difficult and intricate than what governments will be asked to do here,” New York governor Andrew Cuomo said at a briefing on Wednesday.

A panel of independent medical experts was due meet on Thursday to decide whether to recommend that a vaccine from Pfizer Inc and German partner BioNTech SE. should receive emergency use authorization of the US Food and Drug Administration.

In a sign that approval could be swift, documents released by the FDA ahead of the advisory review raised no new red flags over the safety or efficacy of the Pfizer vaccine.

FDA consent could come as early as Friday or Saturday, followed by the first US injections on Sunday or Monday, Moncef Slaoui, chief adviser to the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed vaccine development program, told Fox News on Tuesday.