Winter sparks worries of new COVID-19 wave in Georgia
Nearly eight months into the COVID-19 pandemic, Georgia officials and public-health experts are eying the upcoming winter season with caution amid a recent uptick in positive coronavirus cases and the dual impacts of the flu.
Cases of COVID-19, which had killed 8,156 people by Friday and sickened hundreds of thousands more in Georgia, have declined sharply since a peak in late July when the state averaged more than 3,500 cases per day, according to state Department of Public Health (DPH) data.
But cases have crept back up in recent weeks from a daily average of just under 1,200 cases on Oct. 1 to more than 1,700 cases as of Thursday. The DPH data also shows the states case positivity rates and hospitalization counts have ticked up over the past few weeks.
Georgias recent increases mirror a spiking trend of new COVID-19 cases across the U.S. that soared to more than 113,000 nationwide on Thursday though Georgias case rates have not risen so steeply as in many other states, said Jose Cordero, an epidemiology professor at the University of Georgia (UGA).
"Right now, we are in an upward trend," Cordero said. "When you have a virus like [COVID-19], you have it not in a single wave but in multiple waves. And thats exactly what were seeing."
https://www.savannahnow.com/news/20201107/winter-sparks-worries-of-new-covid-19-wave-in-georgia