Virus Expert Warns These 19 States Will Have Next Surge — Eat This Not That

By Ghuman

Introduction

As the United States continues to grapple with the COVID-19 pandemic, a virus expert is warning that 19 states are at risk of a surge in cases. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, has warned that states that have reopened too quickly or have not taken the necessary precautions to prevent the spread of the virus could be at risk of a surge in cases. In response to this warning, Eat This Not That has compiled a list of 19 states that are at risk of a surge in cases and the steps that can be taken to help prevent the spread of the virus. From avoiding large gatherings to wearing a face mask, Eat This Not That has the information you need to stay safe and healthy during this pandemic.

Virus Expert Warns These 19 States Will Have Next Surge — Eat This Not That

As the coronavirus pandemic continues to spread across the United States, one virus expert is warning that 19 states are at risk of a surge in cases. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, recently warned that states such as Arizona, California, Florida, and Texas are at risk of a surge in cases due to their high population density and lax social distancing measures.

Fauci also warned that states such as Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee are also at risk of a surge due to their high population density and lack of social distancing measures. He urged people in these states to take extra precautions to protect themselves and their communities.

Fauci also warned that states such as Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, Utah, and Wyoming are also at risk of a surge due to their high population density and lack of social distancing measures. He urged people in these states to take extra precautions to protect themselves and their communities.

Fauci also warned that people should take extra precautions to protect themselves and their communities, such as wearing masks, washing their hands frequently, and avoiding large gatherings. He also urged people to eat healthy foods and avoid processed and sugary foods, which can weaken the immune system.

Fauci’s warning comes as the United States continues to grapple with the coronavirus pandemic. As of July 8, 2020, the United States has reported more than 3 million cases of the virus and more than 130,000 deaths. The virus has spread rapidly across the country, with some states seeing a surge in cases in recent weeks.

It is important for people in the 19 states at risk of a surge to take extra precautions to protect themselves and their communities. Wearing masks, washing hands frequently, avoiding large gatherings, and eating healthy foods are all important steps to take to help prevent the spread of the virus.

While you’re making Christmas plans, the coronavirus has its own harrowing plan, as cases rise to an average of 118,000 a day, deaths climb, and hospitals in many states are overwhelmed. There’s “38,000 deaths a month now occurring in this country from COVID” and the “winter surge,” aka the “second wave of Delta activity,” is here, says virus expert Dr. Michael Osterholm, on the latest episode of his podcast, in which he also namechecks certain states the virus is battering most. Read on to see the 19 states that are in big trouble right now or will be soon—and to ensure your health and the health of others, don’t miss these Sure Signs You’ve Already Had COVID.

Montpelier, Vermont, USA town skyline in autumn.
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“Vermont, which has fully vaccinated 74% of its population—they ranked fifth on the list of states with the highest case rates. In addition, cases and hospitalizations there have reached an all-time high and continued to grow. The one overriding finding” about all the states you’re about to read about “is that the ICUs and most of the hospital beds are occupied by unvaccinated individuals. So even with this very high level of vaccinations in many of these states, as I have said time, time again, if you are not vaccinated, this virus will find you, it will find you.”

Phoenix, Arizona, USA cityscape in downtown at sunset.
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“Crowding of Arizona’s strained health care system continues to worsen during the latest surge, with availability of hospital beds sinking to the lowest level since the pandemic began, state officials reported on Dec. 9. Only 4% of inpatient beds and intensive care unit beds statewide were available as of Wednesday, according to the state Department of Health Services’ coronavirus dashboard,” reports Fox 10. “The dashboard also reported 3,663 additional confirmed COVID-19 cases and 75 more deaths, increasing the state’s pandemic totals to 1,305,260 cases and 22,854 deaths.”

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“Hospitals on the Western Slope have been slammed for weeks, and the statewide picture is similarly grim. As of Wednesday, 1,419 patients were hospitalized with COVID-19. Half of the state’s hospitals said they anticipated a staffing shortage in the next week; more than a third of them anticipated ICU bed shortages in the next week,” reports CPR. “And behind those numbers, patients are feeling the impact.”

Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA downtown skyline at dusk.
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“At one of the hospitals where I work, in rural New Mexico, the covid-19 patients are often young. Many are extremely sick, and most are unvaccinated,” writes Clayton Dalton in the New Yorker. “Not long ago, I walked into a room to find a woman in her mid-thirties. (Patient details have been changed to protect privacy.) She was unvaccinated, and had tested positive the week before. Her oxygen saturation was just fifty per cent, and her chest X-ray looked terrible. She seemed resigned and scared. When I asked her why she hadn’t got the vaccine, she shrugged. …In New Mexico, it doesn’t feel like we’re experiencing a new ‘wave’ of the pandemic—it’s more like we’re in the middle of an endless voyage, in twenty-foot seas, miles from land.”

“The number of Utahns hospitalized with COVID-19 jumped by 28 in the past day to a total of 549, according to the Utah Department of Health. And 209 of those patients are in intensive care,” reports the Salt Lake Tribune. “A data analyst at one of Utah’s largest hospitals noted Thursday that the state’s current surge in COVID-19 hospitalizations rivals the peak of last winter’s surge, with one difference — the current one is longer. Erin Clouse, strategic engagement manager for University of Utah Health, said in a Facebook Live community briefing that the current surge has stretched for 12 weeks as hospitalizations hover between 500 and 600 a day with no sign of letting up. The surge that hit Utah hospitals last winter lasted about nine weeks, she said.”

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Historic buildings in Downtown Detroit - Michigan, United States
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“Michigan is reporting its highest number of cases in hospitalizations since the start of the pandemic. This includes the activity we saw there last spring with the alpha variant. And although Minnesota hasn’t quite reached record high levels of cases in hospitalizations during this surge, we’re now reporting our highest ever occupancy rates of adult ICU beds,” says Osterholm. “With 98% of these beds filled statewide.”

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Osterholm is from Minnesota and says “our surge literally began in mid-August and has generally been just an upward ride ever since. Our system is tired. In many cases, it is bending to the point of breaking, that’s what Delta is doing.”

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“Nebraska Medical Center announced Tuesday it will place more limits on surgeries as COVID-19 concerns continue to push the hospital toward maximum capacity,” reports KETV. “We need to make changes to make sure we have beds for patients and access for patients needing time-sensitive, medically-necessary procedures,” said Matt Pospisil, vice president of operations at Nebraska Medicine in the Med Center’s daily briefing. “Nebraska Medical Center said the number of patients admitted with COVID-19 stood at 79 on Monday, and the number had ‘steadily increased’ over the last several weeks. The hospital also noted more workers were not present due to exposure to COVID-19.”

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“Wisconsin hospitals are facing staffing shortages and a severe lack of beds in intensive care units as COVID-19 infections rise. Less than 3% of ICU beds were available in the state as of Thursday,” reports USA Today.

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“The coronavirus’s omicron variant was detected for the first time in Illinois in a Chicago resident, authorities announced Tuesday, almost two weeks after discovery of the new variant first reported by South African scientists created fresh hurdles for public health officials in the crusade to beat back the pandemic,” reports the Chicago Tribune. “Chicago is still in the throes of an earlier COVID-19 surge driven by the highly contagious delta variant. Making that vaccination appointment — plus getting a booster shot for adults — is more crucial than ever,” experts say.

Indianapolis, Indiana, USA skyline over Soliders' and Sailors' Monument at dusk.
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“Health officials in Indiana reported about 2,750 COVID-19 hospitalizations as of Wednesday, with Indiana University Health, the state’s largest hospital system, calling on the National Guard to help lessen the burden on health care workers,” reports Newsweek. “A current surge in cases in Indiana is quickly approaching pre-vaccine numbers. According to the Indiana Department of Health, an average of 30 people are dying from the virus per day. IU Health said it contacted the National Guard because the strain on the workers at its 16 hospitals across Indiana ‘has never been greater.’”

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Des Moines Iowa skyline and public park in USA
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“There were 777 people infected by the coronavirus who were receiving inpatient treatment at Iowa hospitals on Wednesday, the highest number yet this year, according to state data. That number was up 8 percent in the past week,” reports the Times Republican. “Hospitals are in a staffing crisis,” said Jennifer Nutt of the Iowa Hospital Association, to the paper. “The staffing shortages have been terrible for a while now. The current surge will also have an impact.”

Arkansas flag flying high beside the State Capitol Building
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“Here we go again,” says Fox 4. “That’s the message from doctors and hospitals across the Kansas City region as COVID-19 cases begin to climb. Some areas are experiencing a jump in hospitalizations that doctors said hasn’t been seen in a year.” “We are really close to the maximum [number] and I don’t think we are at the peak yet. So I think this will be the highest we’ve ever seen with COVID,” Dr. Ragu Adiga, Chief Medical Officer at Liberty Hospital, said during an update provided by the University of Kansas Health System on Tuesday.

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Cleveland, Ohio, USA downtown skyline on the river.
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“Health officials made their plea once again for Ohioans to get vaccinated, as the state is seeing more COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations as the end of the year nears,” reports the Columbus Dispatch. “Our COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to be driven largely by unvaccinated Ohioans,” said Bruce Vanderhoff, director of the Ohio Department of Health, to the paper. “In recent weeks, Ohio has reported several days of more than 8,000 COVID-19 cases, some of the highest levels since September’s fall peak fueled by the delta variant.”

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“Rhode Island, which has fully vaccinated, 74% of its population ranked third on the list of states with the highest number of cases per capita, although they haven’t hit record high levels,” says Osterholm. “During this surge, they’re clearly seen a lot of transmission and hospitalizations are continuing to creep up.”

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“All of Massachusetts is again considered high-risk for COVID-19 transmission as new cases continue to surge, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The latest data from the CDC shows that every county in the state has a high COVID transmission rate, with more than 100 new cases reported per 100,000 residents between Nov. 30 and Dec. 6,” reports WHDH.

Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
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“Geisinger, one of Pennsylvania’s largest health systems has run out of beds due to the COVID surge, causing patients to wait 10 to 20 hours in the emergency department, officials said Wednesday,” reports Newsweek. “Officials said doctors and nurses are having to perform ‘waiting room medicine’ on waiting patients.” “COVID continues to rage on,” Dr. Jaewon Ryu, Geisinger’s president and chief executive officer, said, “emphasizing the importance of vaccinations.”

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The Delaware State Capitol Building in Dover, Delaware.
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“Delaware surpassed 300 COVID-19 related hospitalizations this week, which is the highest this figure has been since early February,” reports Delaware Online. “It’s another indication of the battle Delaware is facing: Hospitalizations are up by 83% since November, currently hovering around 307 as of Dec. 7. Of these hospitalizations, about two dozen are in critical care.” 

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“Governor Kathy Hochul announced that masks will be required to be worn in all indoor public places in New York unless businesses or venues implement a vaccine requirement. The governor made the decision based on the state’s weekly seven-day case rate as well as hospitalizations. The new business and venue requirements extend to both patrons and staff,” reports ABC 7. “I have warned for weeks that additional steps could be necessary, and now we are at that point based upon three metrics: Increasing cases, reduced hospital capacity, and insufficient vaccination rates in certain areas,” Governor Hochul added. So get vaccinated and boosted and to protect your life and the lives of others, don’t visit any of these 35 Places You’re Most Likely to Catch COVID.