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COVID-19 Is Spreading In Texas. Is It Time to Panic? No
The Federalist ^ | June 26, 2020 | Chuck Devore

Posted on 06/26/2020 10:29:48 AM PDT by Kaslin

Prior studies have suggested a weak connection between the intrusive government measures to slow the spread of COVID-19 and the progression of the virus.


Texas is in the news, and not in a good way, over an increase in COVID-19 cases over the past four weeks. There’s quite a bit of speculation over why the virus, which largely bypassed the Lone Star State until the end of May, suddenly seemed to become more pernicious.

Some point to a lack of enforcement for social distancing measures and masks. Yet California, a state of similar size and demographics, where Democrat Gov. Gavin Newsom was far more aggressive in pursuing a shutdown than Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, has seen a case increase of about the same magnitude, which even started at about the same time as Texas.

Unemployment numbers can give us a sense of how widespread the shutdowns in each state were. Since February, California’s unemployment rate jumped 12.4 percent to 16.3 percent in May, while Texas’ saw an increase of 9.5 percent to 13 percent over the same period.

Prior studies have suggested a weak connection between the intrusive government measures to slow the spread of COVID-19 and the progression of the virus, suggesting that due to its ease of transmission in certain environments, such as mass transit and residences, it will inevitably spread until a certain percentage of the population develops immunity.

Had California’s unemployment rate gone up only as much as the rate in Texas, the state would have saved about 600,000 jobs. What did California gain for this sacrifice? Perhaps not much. According to The New York Times’ interactive coronavirus site, as of June 25, California’s per capita case count is 9 percent higher than Texas’s and its per capita fatality rate is 89 percent higher than in Texas.

How to Understand Statistics

Of course, both states pale in comparison to the losses in New York, where Democrat Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s deadly misstep of placing seniors with active cases of the virus into nursing homes to clear space in hospitals resulted in tens of thousands of additional deaths. New York’s per capita case count remains about four times higher than that in either California or Texas, and its fatality rate is 11 times greater than California’s and a staggering 21 times greater than Texas. While the trends are troubling in America’s two most-populous states, due to several factors, they aren’t likely to get close to, much less exceed, New York’s debacle.

The intense focus by the media and the political left on largely conservative states where the virus toll is mounting (from a low base) plays into the very human, and often irrational, perception of risk. If the number of cases goes from 10 to 20, that’s a doubling, and the public gasps. Yet if the number of cases goes from 1,000 to 1,100, we collectively yawn.

Similarly, we don’t do well with unseen but very real effects, as observed by French economist Frédéric Bastiat in 1850. To list one example, COVID-19 largely spares school-age children its most harmful effects, meaning measures like cancelling school and disrupting friendships may lead to far greater losses from suicide than the virus could ever threaten. Further, the lost months and years of education will visit negative consequences on the COVID generation for the remainder of their lives. But those consequences are unseen—for now.

These Explanations Don’t Hold Water

Returning to Texas, there are four reasons frequently given for the recent increase in cases: Abbott and those liberty-loving Texans opened up too soon (that California surged while locked down more than Texas doesn’t help this argument); cases appeared to mount just after Memorial Day, when many people visited friends and relatives; cases increased among the young after large protests that started about a week after Memorial Day, and; large numbers of infected Mexicans and Central Americans are fleeing across the southern border as Mexico has forgone any coherent COVID response, leaving its already weak medical system wholly unprepared to cope.

Regardless of the reasons for the virus’ increased prevalence in Texas—something likely unavoidable until enough people develop immunity, whether through catching it or by being vaccinated once a vaccine is developed and proven—the state is now dealing with an increase in hospitalizations. This means we’re hearing calls for Abbott to roll back the state’s economic and social opening.

Unfortunately, the rhetoric over Texas’ hospital capacity is clouded by a lack of understanding and, in all too many cases, a ghoulish partisan glee.

Texas Is Ready If the Increase Continues

The first thing to understand about hospitals is that they are businesses and if they don’t generate more income than expenses, they are forced to lay off doctors and nurses, forego the acquisition of costly but life-saving medical equipment, and eventually close their doors. This was seen all over America a few months ago when hospitals were directed to cut back on “elective” procedures to make way for an expected wave of coronavirus patients that, with the exception of some states in the Northeast, thankfully never materialized. This led to a round of layoffs as hospitals nationwide struggled with a plunge in revenue.

The second factor to consider is that Abbott’s COVID-19 response team, lead by former state representative and anesthesiologist Dr. John Zerwas, put together a flexible five-phase system to expand hospital bed, ICU bed, and ventilator capacity as needed. This advance work led to an 89 percent increase in available capacity from the onset of the virus to mid-June.

Lastly, as Texas’ regional hospital systems and public health officials saw the immediate threat from the virus recede in May, the number of critical “elective” procedures rose, as people with heart disease, breast cancer, colon cancer, and other life-threatening conditions, sought treatment—in too many cases, dangerously delayed.

Texas Hospitals Have Ample Room to Handle a Surge

Thus, uninformed critics of Texas—or outright partisan scaremongers—claimed in recent days that Houston’s medical system was about to be overrun by virus patients, pointing to the slender margins of the region’s ICU capacity, with 95 percent of the beds full. The critics failed to note two rather important factors.

As an example, at the Texas Medical Center, one of Houston’s largest hospital networks, some 70 percent of the available ICU beds as of June 23 were taken by non-COVID patients, with 27 percent treating patients suffering from the virus and 3 percent of the beds available. However, that total ICU number was without activating the system’s “sustainable surge” capacity, which would quickly add another 373 beds—more than the 362 beds currently being used by virus patients.

Further, as virus cases are admitted to the hospital system, “elective” patients can be cycled out as they recover and elective procedures can be scaled back to make more room. If the Texas Medical Center receives even more COVID patients, they can activate their “unsustainable surge” capacity, adding another 504 beds for a total of 2,207 beds in a system currently treating 362 COVID patients—a six-fold increase in ICU capacity currently treating virus patients. The misinformation got so bad that the leaders of Houston’s hospital network issued a statement on Thursday assuring Houstonians that they had ample capacity to handle the expected increases in COVID-19 patients.

Our Ability to Treat Wuhan Flu Patients Has Increased

The focus on hospitalizations and more serious ICU or ventilator use misses a few other vital factors. First, our understanding of the virus and how to treat it has improved significantly over the past few months.

We know to lay patients prone if they are having breathing difficulty, avoiding use of ventilators as much as possible. We now have a wider array of treatments that appear to improve the chances for recovery. And, due to increased testing, a larger share of people who were previously not likely to be hospitalized are now being placed under observation.

Further, the number of patients receiving treatment might be higher for the simple reason that hospitals have been incentivized to take them due to the 20 percent financial incentive passed by Congress for treating Medicare patients with COVID-19, with many insurance companies joining in after being pressured by governors.

This leads to one statistic that, in its finality, is the true arbiter of how hard a state is being hit by COVID-19: fatalities. In this grim statistic, Texas is still doing relatively well, although time will tell, as deaths typically lag cases and hospitalizations by six to nine days.

Even so, the running seven-day average of deaths in Texas has been trending down since it first peaked in late April. In New York City, 584 people lost their lives to the virus on April 7. New York City has 28 percent of Texas population. Texas’s worst day of fatalities was 58 on May 14—less than one-tenth New York’s grim toll with more than three times the population.

Looking at New York state, with 65 percent of Texas’ population, Texas would have to suffer 47,700 fatalities to reach the Empire State’s per capita death toll. As of June 25, Texas had lost 2, 296 of its residents to COVID-19.

Is the virus spreading in Texas? Yes. Is it time for panic? No.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: coronavirus; covid19; economicshutdown; gregabbott; healthpolicy; lockdowns; shutdowns; texas; wuhanflu
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1 posted on 06/26/2020 10:29:48 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Thank you for posting. A lot of people loosing there mind here. They forgot the President Trump got some extra time to prepare with the lock downs.

We are ready for any breakout... It Texas or any other state runs out of Bed, President Trump will send help.


2 posted on 06/26/2020 10:32:35 AM PDT by DEPcom
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To: DEPcom

We did not actually exceed hospital capacity in New York City at the very height of the worst of this.

What makes anyone think it is going to happen now?

If it was actually happening wouldn’t Debbie Birx be on TV raising the alarm with charts and graphs? Wouldn’t Trump be sending a hospital ship?


3 posted on 06/26/2020 10:36:27 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog (Patrick Henry would have been an anti-vaxxer)
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To: Kaslin

Hospitals seem to be admitting and then counting as COVID 19 patients admitted for other reasons. Follow the money. More COVID 19 more money. Gotta make money somehow to survive - but the stats sure look bad.


4 posted on 06/26/2020 10:38:41 AM PDT by pacpam (action=consequence and applies in all cases - friend of victory)
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To: DEPcom

The only number that matters is deaths and Dan Patrick said it is still flat. All this seems to be much ado about something that is certain to happen. More tests = more cases.


5 posted on 06/26/2020 10:40:37 AM PDT by pnut22
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To: pnut22; Deacon; Buckeye McFrog; Kaslin; All

Texas has a 7,200 ICU bed capacity.

Of those beds, 4,400 - or 61% - are filled w/NON-Covid patients
This, btw, is about average, for TX ICU occupancy.

18% (currently) are Covid

So, we are at 79% of ICU bed capacity, with and additional 2 - 3 K beds that can be turned into ICU beds, if needed.

This info is per Dan Patrick, who was on Varney & Co, this a.m.

Also....the surge, in Harris County hospitals (and other areas) is, imo, directly related to the Floyd protests.

(I posted, earlier, on another thread)

Texas Children’s PEDIATRIC Hospital is taking in overflow from these indigent hospitals.

....The safety net hospital system, which treats many of the roughly 1 million uninsured or underinsured residents in Harris County, was treating high volumes of patients prior to the recent spike in cases, said Harris Health President and CEO Dr. Esmaeil Porsa. Now, Harris Health is taking steps to ensure its hospitals can sustainably weather the surge in hospitalizations.

“Our ICUs are already overwhelmed, and that’s the reason why we are going through our next level of surge planning,” Porsa told the Houston Business Journal.

Harris Health has 94 ICU beds between Ben Taub and LBJ, and the hospital system is working to convert some of its 395 adult medical/surgical beds into ICU beds to handle the surge. But Harris Health needs additional ICU nurses to staff those beds, Porsa said. Harris Health has pulled employees from other non-acute areas to address shortages, but staffing is a concern, he said.

“If somehow, magically, there’s a group of 10 or 20 ICU nurses that I can have, then I can transform more of my beds into ICUs,” Porsa said.

Harris Health has also been transferring patients to other Houston-area hospitals to free up capacity. In a June 25 virtual news conference, Texas Children’s Hospital President and CEO Mark Wallace said that his hospital had taken transferred patients from Ben Taub and LBJ. Earlier this week, Harris Health transferred around 60 patients to larger hospital systems within 48 hours, Porsa said....

(HBJ link/subscription only.)


6 posted on 06/26/2020 10:47:45 AM PDT by Jane Long (Praise God, from whom ALL blessings flow.)
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To: pnut22

That is right the only number that counts is the death rate. Listening to Vice President Pence briefing now. The number of positive spike are the protesters under age 35. A lot of those folks are young and will not die.

The parents and grand parents they spread the virus to, we can treat, the USA is ready to take care of them.


7 posted on 06/26/2020 10:51:32 AM PDT by DEPcom
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To: DEPcom

Today in New Mexico the governor tightened the restrictions which were stricter than most places. They have/had mandatory mask wearing everywhere plus closed restaurants, shops, gyms, etc. they are far from reopening their state.However the cases of Covid have increased in spite of their strict regulations. It’s curious that the population being affected are the 30 so age group....Nah never mind the riots wouldn’t have anything to do with this outbreak....crazy me for thinking that.


8 posted on 06/26/2020 10:53:10 AM PDT by lilypad
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To: Kaslin

Cases (or those who have had covid) rising is a good thing. It grows the denominator. The funny part is, no one seems to realize this, that those numbers moving up is not a bad thing. The more who have had it, the harder and harder it is for the virus to move through humanity. That is why we should’ve never closed schools. If we had not shut everything down, we would be out of this by now.

But little tin pot dictators are gonna dictate. It is just too bad many people buy into the hysteria. All they need to do is crack a textbook on the human immune system, and they would quickly find that EVERYTHING we have done, and continue to do, is incorrect.


9 posted on 06/26/2020 10:55:07 AM PDT by walkingdead (By the time you realize this is not worth reading, it will be too late....)
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To: Kaslin

More testing = more cases detected

More cases detected among the ‘young and restless’ = more herd immunity

More herd immunity = more chance the virus plays itself out

More chance the virus plays itself out = Less chance the elderly and those with underlying conditions who are staying home will get infected.


10 posted on 06/26/2020 10:57:30 AM PDT by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: lilypad

Also, mask-wearing/identity-hiding and anti-social distancing restrictions bog down the economic recovery and maintain the high level of fear, distrust, depression and anger among the population as when wearing their little mask, most people (people on the street; waiters; store workers; you-name-it) look like they belong in a sick ward. The Democrat/Left needs to keep these soul-crushing mandates going to the first Tuesday in November to have even an outside chance against Trump.


11 posted on 06/26/2020 10:58:35 AM PDT by glennaro (Prager: "Until it's safe" means "Never"!)
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To: Kaslin

ZERO evidence that lockdowns/shutdowns slow transmission rates of the chinese virus or reduce hospitalizations.

lockdowns or ‘pauses’ are to give politicians cover that they are doing something to justify their existence and providing a foil to hurt their opponents (i.e. Trump)


12 posted on 06/26/2020 10:59:42 AM PDT by sheehan (DEPORT ALL ILLEGALS.)
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To: Buckeye McFrog
"We did not actually exceed hospital capacity in New York City at the very height of the worst of this.

What makes anyone think it is going to happen now? "

You don't have to overload the ICUs to have a bad outcome, it is just a symptom of the real problem, which is the spread of the virus. NY didn't overload, but 1 out of 500 people in in the city died of Covid in a 2 month period. That's not a "Yay" we didn't overload the hospitals number.

13 posted on 06/26/2020 11:02:36 AM PDT by Wayne07
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To: DEPcom

Please clarify. Did Pence come right out and say that these spikes are due to young protesters? That would be EPIC if he did. The media has worked triple-overtime to suppress such talk.


14 posted on 06/26/2020 11:03:20 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog (Patrick Henry would have been an anti-vaxxer)
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To: Wayne07
You don't have to overload the ICUs to have a bad outcome, it is just a symptom of the real problem, which is the spread of the virus. NY didn't overload, but 1 out of 500 people in in the city died of Covid in a 2 month period. That's not a "Yay" we didn't overload the hospitals number.

Let me put you in the Wayback Machine and take you back to mid-March when this all started. We were told they needed 15 Days to Slow the Spread. Why? To BEND THE CURVE and to keep hospital capacities from being exceeded.

You've bought into the mission creep, my FRiend.


15 posted on 06/26/2020 11:05:42 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog (Patrick Henry would have been an anti-vaxxer)
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To: Kaslin

Kinda coincides with all of the protestors/Rioters who started roaming the streets, hand and hand, without masks back in late May and June, doesn’t it? I doubt it has spread from the few that were run out of their churches in the last month.


16 posted on 06/26/2020 11:07:14 AM PDT by richardtavor
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To: sheehan

“””lockdowns or ‘pauses’ are to give politicians cover that they are doing something”””


you are not correct. Lockdowns provided time:

1. To produce PPE in sufficient quantities in the USA. Let us not forget that our Medical Supply Companies had outsourced almost all of their manufacturing to China and elsewhere.
2. For our doctors and hospitals to better understand the virus and develop treatments.
3. To implement practices in our nursing home facilities to stop the virus from getting in.
4. To develop mass testing capabilities to know who was infected.

These are the reasons the lockdowns were put in place.


17 posted on 06/26/2020 11:08:21 AM PDT by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: Kaslin

Absolutely it is time to panic: All liberals in Austin need to flee back to New York and Boston where they will be safe!


18 posted on 06/26/2020 11:12:06 AM PDT by CodeToad (Arm Up! They Are!)
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To: Kaslin

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/coronavirus/texas-government-counting-every-covid-positive-hospital-case

Bars shut down for a while and 50% capacity at eating establishments. My friend is the head nurse at one of the larger hospitals north of Dallas and they have exactly 2 patients in their COVID ward. 30,000 test/day and the way they are counting COVID hospitalizations = liberal panic


19 posted on 06/26/2020 11:12:36 AM PDT by Cold War Veteran - Submarines
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

“4. To develop mass testing capabilities to know who was infected.”

Why? What does testing do? Is it magical?


20 posted on 06/26/2020 11:12:37 AM PDT by CodeToad (Arm Up! They Are!)
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