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“Deadliest Day” Kentucky Hits Highest Number Of COVID-19 Cases, Deaths

Alexandra Kanik
/
Ohio Valley ReSource

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear hasn’t stopped pleading with the public to stay home, wear face coverings and do whatever it takes to slow the spread of the coronavirus as the state marked its deadliest day yet in the pandemic.

On Tuesday, Beshear announced a record high 4,151 new cases of COVID-19 and the deaths of 35 people. Hospitalizations have sharply risen as well to 1,777, and coronavirus patients occupy 441 ICU beds, another record.

“The virus is spreading so much it overwhelms any communal setting, any one. It’s overwhelmed our long-term care facilities, it’s overwhelmed our prisons, when it gets in. ” Beshear said. “Any places where people gather it will spread and ultimately will harm people.”

There are 173 long-term care residents with the virus and Beshear said 18 more residents have died.

Meanwhile the looming end of federal coronavirus relief spending threatens to hamper the state’s ability to track the spread of the virus. Mark Carter with the Kentucky Department of Public Health discussed the state’s contact tracing efforts, which have been funded by the federal CARES Act. That money will run out at the end of the year.

“We desperately need either an extension of the date, or additional funding, or both, in order to take this program into 2021 and get us through the months we need to get through until we reach the point where we have a widely available vaccine,” Carter said.

Other states in the Ohio Valley also have uncontrolled spread of the virus. Ohio reported more than 9,000 new cases in 24 hours. On Monday, the state announced that hospitalizations in Ohio were at an all-time high with 5,060 patients. Hospitalization numbers have grown exponentially since Nov. 1, when the state had 1,700 hospitalizations.

The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center Chief Clinical Officer Andy Thomas also said people hospitalized for COVID-19 will crowd out others who also need medical care.

"The reality is that hospitals are making difficult decisions about delaying care. It may be non-urgent care, but it's care that may cause someone to go to the ICU after surgery,” Thomas said. “A lot of hospitals are delaying those surgeries because they can't afford their ICUs to be overtaxed."

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