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Coronavirus hotspots ease, but officials warn normal is a long way off

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The number of new coronavirus infections in some of the states hit hardest by the pandemic in the last month is easing, but public health officials warn that widespread transmission is still taking place, and that a return to normal life is a long way off.

New daily case counts have declined in the last two weeks in eleven states where the virus surged after lockdowns eased and people began venturing out more, raising hopes that the second wave of infections has crested.

“Our numbers seem to be stabilizing, which is fantastic. I’ll take stable, but I’d rather see them stable at a lower rate,” said Mandy Cohen, North Carolina’s secretary of Health and Human Services. “We still have work to do to go from stable to decline.”

In interviews with state health officials this week, most said they remain concerned that the drop in new cases may be a plateau at an unacceptably high level of transmission, rather than a sustained decline. Arizona has reported more than 17,000 new cases in the last week; Florida added 71,800 new cases; and Texas piled on another 55,000 new cases. 

“We are not at a point where we can get back to normal,” said Daniel Ruiz, Arizona’s chief operating officer. “The governor has been very clear with Arizonans, we may not be back to normal until the end of the year.”

Positive trends in some states are a reflection of new concerns about the coronavirus among people who once thought they were invulnerable, either because the virus was not spreading widely in their communities or because they mistakenly believed the virus poses no risk to younger people. Now that the virus has spread more broadly in states previously spared in the spring, social distancing practices have increased, according to cell phone data.

In many places, evidence suggests the most vulnerable populations — older people and those with underlying conditions — are doing a far better job protecting themselves than are younger, healthy people.

 

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