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Your daily coronavirus update: As deaths spike, some areas could see ‘robust’ reopening

Death toll rose to 1,564 as officials revise numbers

  • The Associated Press
A man sits in a public park in Lancaster, Pa. on April 19, 2020.

 Kate Landis / PA Post

A man sits in a public park in Lancaster, Pa. on April 19, 2020.

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» Day-by-day look at coronavirus disease cases in Pa.
» What the governor’s stay-at-home order means

(Harrisburg) —

Regions of Pennsylvania that have seen a relatively low number of confirmed cases of the new coronavirus might be able to reopen “in a fairly robust” way on May 8, Gov. Tom Wolf said Tuesday, shedding more light on his recovery roadmap even as the state’s death toll rose sharply.

State health officials recently changed the way they count COVID-19 deaths, resulting in a near-doubling of the state’s death toll in just three days, from 836 to more than 1,500. Many of the deaths occurred days or weeks ago, according to the Department of Health, and the number of new virus cases has trended down recently.

Wolf, a Democrat, says Pennsylvania has made sufficient progress to begin gradually reopening some businesses in early May, depending on the availability of widespread diagnostic testing and the capacity of the health care system. Republicans are pushing a more aggressive timetable.

In a conference call with reporters Tuesday, Wolf said he intends to loosen restrictions on people and businesses in much the same way they were imposed: Gradually, and county by county.

“There is not one size that fits all. We can start to reopen the state in, I think, some areas (in) a fairly robust way, in other areas less so,” Wolf said. “If I were in Philadelphia, I probably would not want my government to be saying, ’OK, everything seems to be just perfect right now.’”

More than half of all people who have tested positive for the virus statewide live in Philadelphia and its four suburban counties. Many rural counties, by contrast, have been minimally impacted. Five counties have reported just one or two cases.

Wolf’s health secretary, Dr. Rachel Levine, said Tuesday that contact tracing — identifying people who have been exposed to an infected person so they can be quarantined — will be “very important” as Pennsylvania emerges from the pandemic.

The governor said there’s no budget for contact tracing, but Levine, in a separate briefing, gave assurances that Pennsylvania will have a “very robust” tracing program that will be funded with federal dollars.

Other coronavirus-related developments in Pennsylvania:

Cases

Pennsylvania’s COVID-19 death toll rose by 360 to 1,564, the state health department reported Tuesday, with nearly 1,300 additional people testing positive for the virus.

Not all of the deaths happened in one 24-hour period. The health department has been revising its numbers upward because it is now counting probable deaths, or deaths in which a coroner or medical examiner listed COVID-19 as the cause or contributing cause but the deceased were not tested for the virus.

Officials have said the updated numbers are part of the department’s efforts to reconcile data provided by hospitals, health care systems, county and municipal health departments and long-term care living facilities with the department’s own records of births and deaths.

Several central Pennsylvania counties saw large increases in their death counts today because of the Department of Health’s new reporting process. There are 22 additional deaths in Lancaster County, 10 in Franklin (which previously had zero reported deaths), eight in Berks, seven in York, three in Lebanon, two in Cumberland, two in Dauphin, two in Schuylkill, one in Adams and one in Columbia.

Since the first cases were reported in central Pennsylvania on March 13, a total of 5,904 people in the region have tested positive for the virus. The first coronavirus-related deaths in this region were reported about two weeks later, on March 28. Since then, a total 237 central Pennsylvania residents have died from COVID-19 or related complications.

  • Adams: 91 cases, including 2 deaths
  • Berks: 1988 cases, including 82 deaths
  • Columbia: 225 cases, including 8 deaths
  • Cumberland: 194 cases, including 6 deaths
  • Dauphin: 400 cases, including 11 deaths
  • Franklin: 143 cases, including 10 deaths
  • Juniata: 72 cases
  • Lancaster: 1295 cases, including 88 deaths
  • Lebanon: 525 cases, including 8 deaths
  • Mifflin: 21 cases
  • Northumberland: 77 cases
  • Perry: 20 cases, including 1 death
  • Schuylkill: 277 cases, including 7 deaths
  • Snyder: 30 cases, including 1 death
  • Union: 29 cases
  • York: 517 cases, including 13 deaths

Statewide, more than 34,500 people have tested positive, according to the latest health department statistics.

For most people, the virus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up in a couple of weeks. Older adults and people with existing health problems are at higher risk of more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.

Cases by ZIP code

The Pennsylvania Department of Health has started releasing ZIP code-level information about cases of the novel coronavirus.

State health officials published an interactive map on Monday that shows the number of confirmed cases of the new virus and the number of negative virus tests. The map is searchable by county and ZIP code. The county data also shows the number of COVID-19 deaths.

Screen capture of the Pennsylvania Department of Health zip code level map.

Screen capture of the Pennsylvania Department of Health zip code level map.

Health Secretary Rachel Levine said even residents in communities with a relatively low number of confirmed cases should continue to heed social distancing rules, noting a lack of widespread testing means the actual number of people with the virus is far higher than what shows up in the statistics.

The virus has been spreading faster in recent days in less populated counties like Columbia, Northumberland, Juniata and Susquehanna.

Nursing homes

Two days after the federal government said it planned to collect and release data on COVID-19 at individual nursing homes, the state Health Department said it would look into doing the same.

For weeks, state health officials have refused to publicly release the names of long-term care facilities with virus cases. Statewide, 796 residents of these facilities have died — over half the state’s COVID-19 death toll. Advocates and some lawmakers say the agency’s reluctance to name names endangers residents, staff and the public at large.

Late Sunday, following a request from Democratic U.S. Sens. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania and Ron Wyden of Oregon, the federal government said it would track virus infections and deaths at nursing homes nationwide and release that information to the public.

Levine said Tuesday that Pennsylvania might follow suit.

“I think we will strongly consider doing that,” she said. “We’ll have to figure out the right way to do that so that we get the most information to the public but also protect patient privacy. So we’ll be working to look at that over the next number of days.”

One retailer, one customer

Retail businesses would be able to open if they can operate with a single employee serving one customer at a time under legislation that passed the GOP-controlled state House on Tuesday.

The proposal would also permit retail stores to offer curbside pickup, as the state-owned liquor store system has recently started doing.

Republican backers said the one-worker, one-customer system would be safer than shopping at large retail outlets that have been permitted to remain open during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Democratic opponents called the proposal shortsighted and warned it would expose workers and customers to risk of infection.

Telemedicine bill

Wolf’s office said he will veto legislation approved by the state Senate on Tuesday that requires insurers to cover health care services delivered remotely by certain audio and video methods, after abortion opponents in the House inserted provisions that Democrats say interfere with abortion rights.

The Republican-controlled Senate voted along party lines to approve the bill, sending it to the governor’s desk. Wolf supports abortion rights.

The abortion pill is not available at pharmacies, and Planned Parenthood says women who visit a clinic are sometimes prescribed it after a video consultation with a physician who is not physically present. Democrats say the bill that passed Tuesday bans doctors from prescribing the abortion bill via telemedicine. Republicans say it wouldn’t change anything.

The telemedicine bill has been hung up for years on the question of how it affects abortion rights. Healthsystems and hospitals say telemedicine coverage is particularly important now because of the pandemic.

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