Parts of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut could be put under a short-term quarantine, President Trump said Saturday, as other states reported spikes in coronavirus cases, prompting fears they would emerge as the next hot spots.
President Trump said he was still considering a two-week quarantine Saturday afternoon, tweeting, "A decision will be made, one way or another, shortly."
The US surpassed Italy and China this week to become the country with the most coronavirus cases in the world and now has at least 111,980 known cases, according to CNN's tally. At least 1,858 people have died in the US, with at least 402 of those deaths reported on Friday alone.
More than 52,000 of the country's cases are in New York state alone.
It was unclear what a quarantine of the tri-state area would entail, though Trump said it would be "enforceable" and restrict travel from the areas in question.
Trump's announcement came just as New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo was addressing his state in a news conference, where Cuomo said he spoke with the President Saturday morning.
But when he was asked about the President's comments, Cuomo said a quarantine had not been a topic of discussion.
"But I can tell you, I don't even like the sound of it," the governor said.
New York officials forecast the apex of the pandemic in the state is still 14 to 21 days away. At that point, the state expects it will need 140,000 hospital beds, Cuomo said.
To increase capacity, New York and its National Guard are assembling four 1,000-bed temporary, overflow hospitals in existing buildings. One, at Manhattan's Javits Convention Center, will open Monday, Cuomo said. The USNS Comfort is set to arrive in New York City the same day, providing another 1,000 beds.
Meanwhile, officials elsewhere are concerned their states could follow in New York's footsteps.
In Los Angeles County, cases more than tripled in six days, and one official says numbers will keep going up. Health Director Barbara Ferrer says she expects to see case counts in Los Angeles double every four days for the next two to three weeks.
"No matter where you are, this is coming to you," Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said Thursday. "Take all the measures you can now to make sure people are home."
On Friday, the FDA approved a coronavirus test that can provide results in less than 15 minutes, using the same technology that powers some rapid flu tests.
Pandemic will hit these states hard, top US doctor says
New hot spots have emerged as the numbers have also escalated in other states, the country's top doctor says.
Those include Detroit, Chicago and New Orleans, US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams told "CBS This Morning" on Friday.
"The virus and the local community are going to determine the time line. It's not going to be us from Washington DC. People need to follow their data, they need to make the right decisions based on what their data is telling them," he said.
"Everyone's curve is going to be different," Adams said.
In Chicago, hospitals and health officials have begun preparing for a surge in patients after Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the city could see more than 40,000 hospitalizations in the next week, CNN affiliate WLS reported.
"This morning, we spent time with folks from the state and my team and Army Corps of Engineers at McCormick Place. We were looking at what it takes, not in a theoretical way, to layout thousands of beds," Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady of the Chicago Department of Public Health told the news station.
One registered ICU nurse with University of Chicago Medicine, who asked not to be named for fear of reprisal, told CNN that she's afraid of what the ICU will look like in another week as cases rise.
"The number of Covid patients we are getting is rapidly increasing every day," she said, "and all of us collectively worry about what will happen as it gets worse if this is where we are starting."
University of Chicago Medicine officials did not immediately respond to CNN's reques...
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