Miami-Dade to shut down restaurants again as Florida’s Covid-19 hospitalizations surge
As Florida sets the most dubious of records amid the coronavirus pandemic, Miami-Dade County has decided it’s done playing by the state’s rules.
As of Wednesday, restaurants in the county, the state’s most populous, will be shut down — again — except for takeout and delivery, county Mayor Carlos Gimenez announced in a news release. The mayor’s executive order will also close party venues, fitness centers and short-term accommodation rentals.
What you need to know about coronavirus
Summer camps and daycare centers may remain open with capacity limits and other rules. Office buildings, retail stores and grooming services will also remain open. The order will not affect certain outdoor activities, hotel and condo pools or the planned Tuesday reopening of county beaches, the mayor said, but it contains caveats mandating social distancing and mask rules.
“If we see crowding and people not following the public health rules, I will be forced to close the beaches again,” Gimenez said.
A 10 p.m.-to-6 a.m. curfew will remain in effect for everyone but essential workers and those with religious obligations.
Anyone witnessing violations is asked to call 305-4POLICE, the statement said.
“We want to ensure that our hospitals continue to have the staffing necessary to save lives,” Gimenez said, explaining the motivation.
Setting bad records
Florida now has more than 206,000 cases, placing it behind only New York and California, and it topped its highest daily tally Friday with 11,436 cases — more than a dozen states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have tallied since the beginning of the pandemic.
It followed up Saturday with 9,997 cases and 6,327 on Sunday. It has more than 3,700 deaths.
The state’s numbers over the past two weeks are disturbing to many health professionals. From June 23 to July 5, state hospitalizations spiked 88%, from 818 to 1,538, while the number of patients on ventilators or in intensive care units more than doubled. The state is also experiencing a shortage of contact tracers, according to a CNN investigation.
“The virus is not harmless. No, absolutely not,” Gimenez told CBS News on Sunday. “When you have more (cases), you obviously will have more hospitalizations, more ICUs, more respirators and, unfortunately, you’ll have more fatalities.”
Hospital director: ‘Kudos to the staff’
The University of Miami Health System is seeing positive tests on the rise and more patients, ranging from their 20s to 90s, said Dr. David Lang, the system’s medical director of emergency medicine.
“I think it puts some stress on the system,” he said. “Many of them are getting sicker, and our admissions have gone up.”
The hospital has been prepping since January and has a plan that is comprehensive and fluid, the system’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Tanira Ferreira said. While the staff is capable of handling different levels of surge — and have beds, ventilators and medicine to handle it — it has not been easy on them.
“Certainly, it does stress the system, but kudos to the staff. We have not stopped working. The staff continues to work — work nights, days, weekends, you call it,” Ferreira said.
When the state first shut down in April, the city of Miami was counting about 35 news cases a day, and the curve flattened thereafter, down to 14 new cases a day, said Miami Mayor Francis Suarez. He presides over the city, while Gimenez helms the county government.
“Now, we’re at over 90 news cases per day as of Thursday,” Suarez said. “We’re at three times faster growth rate. I think that the virus has just become very efficient at spreading. … When one person gets it in a household, they come home. By the time they experience symptoms and get tested, everybody in the house is infected, so you go from one person to a four- or five-person infection rate almost overnight.”
The city is mandating masks in public and instituting penalties for businesses that don’t follow the rules, he said. Another stay-at home order could be in the cards, the mayor said. He’d like to see a statewide mask rule, he said.
“I don’t think it’s any different than … asking people to wear a seat belt and ticketing them if they don’t,” Suarez said.
Miami Beach is also experiencing rising hospitalizations that could end in another shelter-in-place order, Mayor Dan Gelber told CNN, predicting the situation in his city is “going to get much worse.”
“Too many people obviously are not taking seriously at all these admonishments to socially distance, to wear masks, all those things,” Gelber said. “We’re going to try to avoid a full shelter-in-place, but we can’t take that out of the equation because, frankly, if our hospital system is so overwhelmed — well, then we will have to consider that.”
Contact tracing an issue
Though Miami-Dade County is the Covid-19 epicenter in a state that has become the nation’s epicenter, the county doesn’t have its own contact tracers because the duties fall under Florida’s responsibilities, it said.
In mid-May, Gimenez said the county would hire up to 1,000 contact tracers, but asked Monday how many had been hired, a county representative said via email only the Florida Department of Health can do the work.
“We are in discussions with the state on how the county can supplement their efforts. As soon as these discussions conclude, we will have a direction in what we can do to assist in the contact tracing efforts. So, we don’t have our own,” the Miami-Dade statement said.
In his statement announcing the executive order, Gimenez said the county was “still tracking the spike” in cases involving 18- to 34-year-olds, which he said was a result of younger residents congregating in congested places without precautions. Graduation parties, restaurant gatherings and protests were among the places the virus spread, he said, citing doctors.
The Florida Department of Health did not respond to CNN’s requests for comment.
In the meantime, officials are reminding the public to do its part to slow the virus’ spread.
“We can tamp down the spread if everyone follows the rules,” Gimenez said. “I am counting on you, our 2.8 million residents, to stop the spread so that we can get back to opening our economy.
Added Ferreira with the University of Miami Health System: “It’s all in the behavior. People need to adhere. The scientific message has not changed, and that message is social distance, wear a mask, you wash your hands, if you’re sick please go and get tested. That message has not changed.
“What needs to be happen is people need to adhere and follow that message.”