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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Jun 24 2020

Full Issue

As Cases Spike In Texas, One Children's Hospital Now Taking Adults

In other news from across the state: Leaders wrestle with reopening public schools; UT Southwestern Medical Center warns about alarming trends; and more.

The rise in new COVID-19 cases in Texas has gotten so taxing that a children's hospital in Houston is now admitting adult patients. The Texas Children's Hospital said it opened up its intensive care unit and acute care-beds to adults who are suffering from the virus. Houston has 14,322 confirmed cases to date and over the last two weeks has seen a record number of new daily cases that average over 200 a day, according to the Houston Health Department. (Pereira, 6/23)

"Today, Texas will report an all-time high in the number of cases of people testing positive" for the coronavirus, Gov. Greg Abbott said Tuesday, adding that for the first time, his state would surpass 5,000 new cases in a single day. Hours later, the Texas Department of State Health Services reported 5,489 new cases. Abbott initially revealed the daunting new record during an interview with TV station KBTX in which he urged people to take the deadly disease seriously, telling them to wear a mask in public, stay home when possible and take other precautions. (Chappell, 6/23)

Texas is seeing a sharp rise in cases; it was just days ago that the state crossed the 4,000-case mark for the first time in its daily tally. New cases have hit the Houston area so hard that the Texas Children's Hospital is now admitting adult patients. The move comes despite the fact that Houston is home to the massive Texas Medical Center 鈥 deemed the largest medical center in the world. (Chappell, 6/23)

The rising number of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations in Houston has U.S. Rep. Pete Olson, R-Sugar Land, ringing an alarm with the nation鈥檚 top infectious disease experts in Washington who last month were praising the city鈥檚 efforts to contain the virus. During a U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee meeting Tuesday, Olson warned that the current trajectory of cases in Houston has the city on pace to be one of the worst affected cities in the nation if something doesn鈥檛 change. Olson said there are experts comparing Houston鈥檚 situation to Brazil鈥檚. (Wallace, 6/23)

The number of hospitalized coronavirus patients in Dallas County was at a record high once again Tuesday, with a spike in the number of people being treated in intensive care units. The county reported 445 new cases of COVID-19, as well as seven deaths from the virus. (Jones and Steele, 6/23)

As COVID-19 continues to surge here, UT Southwestern Medical Center is warning about 鈥渁larming鈥 trends and urging residents to stay vigilant, especially around the July Fourth holiday. Its doctors also had a message for business: Keep employees working at home if you can. While that approach won鈥檛 fly in some industries, many others have embraced remote work. It鈥檚 helping them get through the pandemic and slowing the potential spread of the disease. (Schnurman, 6/23)

The Trump administration is planning to end federal support for local coronavirus testing sites across the nation at the end of the month 鈥 including seven in Texas, where confirmed cases of COVID are spiking. Texas officials are urging the White House to rethink the move, warning of 鈥渃atastrophic cascading consequences鈥 of pulling federal support for testing sites, four of which are in Houston and Harris County and administer thousands of tests per day. City officials consider two of those sites 鈥 the largest in the city, administering up to 500 tests each per day 鈥 the backbone of Houston鈥檚 testing efforts. (Wermund, 6/23)

Texas leaders expect public schools to re-open for in-person classes in August, but appear willing to leave many of the health and safety decisions for combating the ongoing coronavirus outbreak to local education officials, including whether to require students and faculty to wear face masks. Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath was expected to release formal safety guidelines Tuesday regarding the opening of public schools in the upcoming 2020-21 academic year, but backed off in the face of rising COVID-19 cases across the state. (Webb, 6/23)

Precinct 4 Commissioner Jack Cagle updated Harris County鈥檚 efforts to corral the novel coronavirus and flood mitigation efforts at the virtual State of the County Lunch-In held by the Lake Houston Area Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday. Cagle shared that he has personally seen the impact of the coronavirus. (Mehrtens , 6/23)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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