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News / Nation & World

Virus hospitalizations surge as pandemic shadows election

Rise in virus cases most pronounced in Midwest, Southwest

By Associated Press
Published: November 3, 2020, 6:38pm
8 Photos
A man wearing gloves and a mask to protect against COVID-19 affixes an &quot;I voted&quot; sticker to his shirt as he leaves a polling place at Indian Creek Fire Station #4 in Miami Beach, Fla., on Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020.(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell) (Robert Cohen/St.
A man wearing gloves and a mask to protect against COVID-19 affixes an "I voted" sticker to his shirt as he leaves a polling place at Indian Creek Fire Station #4 in Miami Beach, Fla., on Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 3, 2020.(AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell) (Robert Cohen/St. Louis Post-Dispatch) Photo Gallery

Americans went to the polls Tuesday under the shadow of a resurging pandemic, with an alarming increase in cases nationwide and the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 reaching record highs in a growing number of states.

While daily infections were rising in all but three states, the surge was most pronounced in the Midwest and Southwest.

Missouri, Oklahoma, Iowa, Indiana, Nebraska, North Dakota and New Mexico all reported record high hospitalizations this week. Nebraska’s largest hospitals started limiting elective surgeries and looked to bring in nurses from other states to cope with the surge. Hospital officials in Iowa and Missouri warned bed capacity could soon be overwhelmed.

The resurgence loomed over candidates and voters, fearful of both the virus itself and the economic toll of any new shutdowns to control its spread. The debate over how far to take economically costly measures has divided a country already sharply polarized over President Donald Trump’s turbulent four years in office.

The pandemic colored who voters chose at the ballot box and how they did it. While many Americans took advantage of expanded access to mail-in voting, lines were long in many polling places, with record turnout expected and reminders of the pandemic everywhere.

“It’s very serious that we have 400 people gathered in one space at the height of the pandemic here in Wisconsin. So, we’ve tried to take every measure to limit the movement throughout the room,” said Claire Woodall-Vogg, the election commission director of Milwaukee, where poll workers were spread out into 12 different pods to limit contact.

Wisconsin health officials reported 5,771 new coronavirus cases Tuesday, a new record.

Iowa hospital officials warned that facilities and staff could be overwhelmed without serious efforts to curtail the virus spread. The seven-day rolling average of the state’s positivity rate reached 36.4 percent over the weekend, the third-highest in the nation, according to researchers at Johns Hopkins University.

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