NYC’s top health official says confirmed cases ‘tip of the iceberg’


NYC's top health official says confirmed cases 'tip of the iceberg'

Nearly 1 million New York City residents probably have been exposed to the coronavirus, well above the number of confirmed cases, the city’s top health official said Thursday.

Data compiled by Johns Hopkins University showed that more than 147,000 people in New York City have tested positive for Covid-19 as of Thursday.

“That really I think is the tip of iceberg for a number of different reasons,” Health Commissioner Dr. Oxiris Barbot said at a news briefing. “New Yorkers have been heeding our advice that if they have mild symptoms, at this point in time, when you’ve got community-wide transmission, having a test result isn’t going to change what we’re going to tell you to do.”

New York City is still struggling to ramp up its capacity to test broadly for Covid-19, which means increasing laboratory capacity and acquiring necessary supplies such as test kits, swabs and reagents, which are chemicals needed to process the tests, Mayor Bill de Blasio said. Barbot added that the city still has to prioritize who gets tested.

“We want to reserve testing for those individuals who are really sick enough to be in the hospital,” she said. “With that being said, it wouldn’t surprise me if at this point in time, we have probably close to a million New Yorkers who have been exposed to Covid-19.”

Widespread testing and tracing of people who come into contact with infected individuals will be crucial to easing restrictions and reopening the city, de Blasio said. He previously announced that the city will begin manufacturing its own test kits, hoping to ramp up as many as 50,000 per week in addition to those kits the city acquires externally.

“We need the firepower of testing and tracing,” he said Thursday. “The more testing we get the more truth we will find. The more testing we get, the more we can fight back and contain this disease. All roads lead to testing.”

On Wednesday, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced that billionaire former mayor Mike Bloomberg  will help the state develop and implement an aggressive program to test people and trace their contacts. Bloomberg will contribute $10 million and help to build an online program to train what Cuomo described as an “army” of tracers.

Lifting restrictions without enough testing and tracing infrastructure could lead to a “backfire” in which the virus resurges and health officials are unable to contain it before it spreads across the city again, de Blasio said. 

“Unless we are very careful and we have some good luck and some blessings thrown in, we have to be weary of a resurgence,” he said. “It will not only backfire. It will set us back by months and months.”

Several states have announced plans to at least partially lift social distancing restrictions. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, announced Monday that the state will reopen businesses on Friday, starting with retail locations such as gyms, barber shops, fitness centers and bowling alleys. Kemp’s decision came after several states mostly in the South unveiled plans to restart parts of their economy.

President Donald Trump said Wednesday he “totally disagrees” with Kemp’s decision. Trump added that Kemp’s decision violates the phase 1 guidelines the White House announced last week  that recommends states wait to ease social distancing restrictions until there’s widespread testing and a low level of community transmission. 

De Blasio said he is not looking elsewhere for a path to reopening. He said he “prays and hopes” governors who decide to reopen are doing so based on data.

“I don’t know what’s happening in each and every state, each and every city, … but I do know a lot of states are rushing to reopen,” de Blasio said. “My fear is there are people governed more by politics or image or they’re concerned more about the economy than they’re concerned about the health and welfare of their people.”

The statistics New York City is using to track the outbreak, which include new hospital admissions, the number of patients in intensive care and the percent of those tested who are infected, indicate progress, de Blasio said. He said 227 people were admitted to hospitals for Covid-19 on Tuesday, down from 252 on Monday. The number of people in intensive care for Covid-19 at New York City’s Health + Hospital locations dropped from 821 on Monday to 796 on Tuesday, he added.

“We’re decelerating. That’s a very good thing, but we need to finish the job,” he said, adding that the number of people in intensive care has remained troublingly high. “We’re not there yet and we need to be sober about it and we still have a substantial distance to cover.”

De Blasio reiterated that New York City schools will need to remain closed through the end of the school year and that the city will only reopen when health officials advice it is safe to do so.

“The challenge is, and I say this very sadly, the coronavirus is alive and well and living in New York City.”


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