COVID-19 Hospitalizations Up In 45 States
COVID-19 hospitalizations are up 27 percent nationwide over the last 14 days, with 45 states and Washington, D.C., reporting an increase.
Nationwide, COVID-19 cases increased 61 percent over the past 14 days, according to HHS data collected by The New York Times. Reported case counts may be directionally helpful at this point of the pandemic, given the use of rapid, at-home COVID-19 tests that result in under-counting.
“I think that we’re dramatically undercounting cases,” former FDA commissioner Scott Gottlieb, MD, told CBS News on April 11. “We’re probably only picking up one in seven or one in eight infections.”
Hospitalizations are up 27 percent nationwide over the last 14 days, with a daily average of 22,642 people hospitalized with COVID-19 as of May 16. The CDC is keeping a close eye on the acuity of hospitalizations, with Director Rochelle Walensky, MD, noting that the agency is seeing less oxygen use, fewer ICU stays and no increase in associated death compared with earlier periods of the pandemic.
Here are the 14-day changes for hospitalizations in each state and Washington, D.C., reporting an increase, along with their daily average hospitalizations:
Hawaii: 62 percent (121 hospitalizations)
Iowa: 61 percent (139)
Montana: 61 percent (35)
Wisconsin: 54 percent (412)
Alaska: 53 percent (45)
Virginia: 53 percent (483)
Michigan: 52 percent (1,029)
Massachusetts: 49 percent (809)
Pennsylvania: 44 percent (1,324)
Rhode Island: 42 percent (95)
New Jersey: 42 percent (822)
Connecticut: 41 percent (393)
Maine: 39 percent (234)
Nebraska: 39 percent (92)
Illinois: 38 percent (985)
Florida: 37 percent (1,750)
Indiana: 33 percent (341)
Utah: 33 percent (92)
West Virginia: 33 percent (143)
Maryland: 32 percent (497)
Washington, D.C.: 32 percent (96)
Minnesota: 32 percent (464)
Arizona: 30 percent (361)
Oregon: 30 percent (324)
Nevada: 30 percent (186)
Colorado: 27 percent (182)
California: 27 percent (1,725)
Ohio: 26 percent (830)
Delaware: 25 percent (197)
New York: 20 percent (2,755)
New Hampshire: 20 percent (121)
Missouri: 17 percent (425)
Vermont: 16 percent (66)
Kentucky: 14 percent (251)Â
Washington: 12 percent (512)
Louisiana: 8 percent (71)
Georgia: 8 percent (644)
North Carolina: 7 percent (945)
Mississippi: 7 percent (78)
Texas: 7 percent (1,163)
New Mexico: 6 percent (86)
Arkansas: 6 percent (103)
Tennessee: 5 percent (246)
South Dakota: 5 percent (29)
Idaho: 4 percent (42)
Alabama: 1 percent (164)
The 14-day changes for cases in each state reporting an increase, along with their daily average cases, can be found through HHS data collected by The New York Times here. Seven-day changes for cases in each state can be found here.
President Joe Biden signed into law on March 15 a sweeping $1.5 trillion bill that funds the government through September. The legislation did not include the COVID-19 funding the White House had requested from Congress because of partisan disagreement about offsetting the funding.
The current lack of funding is affecting resources for COVID-19 testing and treatment. The Health Resources and Services Administration stopped accepting providers’ claims for COVID-19 testing and treatment of the uninsured on March 22 because of a lack of sufficient funds and stopped accepting claims for the vaccination of uninsured people on April 5.
The stalemate in Congress has passed the two-month mark despite warnings from the White House for weeks about the risks of underfunding.