Hart cumulative COVID case load tops 100

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Hart County saw its biggest one-day surge in COVID-19 cases on Friday, July 10.

The cumulative number of infections in the county surpassed the 100-case mark Friday, hitting 101 reported novel coronavirus cases since the state began tracking the numbers, according to preliminary data in a status report released from the Department of Public Health. The total number of cases in Hart County was reported to be at 91 on Thursday.

No deaths have been reported from the disease in Hart County as of 3 p.m. Friday.

At least eight people in Hart County have been hospitalized due to the virus responsible for a global pandemic.

Statewide, 2,965 people in Georgia have died from the virus, while more than 111,000 have reportedly been infected. Nearly 13,000 people in Georgia have been hospitalized in relation to the virus.

More than 1,000,000 people have been tested for the virus in Georgia. The PCR, or nasal swab tests, account for 1,046,348 tests, of which 9.7 percent tested positive. Antibody tests account for 177,244 of the state’s tests and 5.2 percent of those tested returned positive results. 

The Department of Public Health notes that confirmed cases over the last 14 days may not be accounted for due to illnesses yet to be reported or test results may still be pending.

Hart County Administrator and Emergency Management Director Terrell Partain said earlier this week that Hart County is seeing about three new cases per day, but some of those cases are listed at the same address. One of the addresses, where he said he knows only one woman lives, has shown six cases of COVID-19.

Partain said the reporting “doesn’t make much sense” but he doesn’t know whether it’s faulty reporting from the state or something else that is causing the discrepancy.

In Atlanta, Gov. Brian Kemp is poised to reopen the Georgia World Congress Center for standby hospital beds and medical equipment amid a recent increase in COVID-19 positive cases and hospitalizations in the state.

The governor also plans to tap a metro Atlanta hospital for an extra 100 surge and ICU beds, as well as fund additional staff at health-care and elderly care facilities in Georgia amid the COVID-19 uptick.

A 200-bed alternative care facility was activated in April at the World Congress Center in downtown Atlanta as COVID-19 cases soared and state officials rushed to boost emergency bed capacity. Its operations were paused in late May as Kemp moved to relax business restrictions and jump-start the state’s flagging economy.

The renewed state-driven buildup of hospital capacity comes as local hospitals have warned the number of patients being admitted for COVID-19 is edging up, particularly among younger Georgians, according to the governor’s office.

“On a daily – if not hourly – basis, we are monitoring hospitalizations by region, and the governor continues to hold weekly conference calls with hospital executives to gauge needs,” said Kemp’s communications director, Candice Broce.

Amid the buildup, state officials noted patients with COVID-19 are seeing shorter hospital stays through use of the treatment drug remdesivir and because their cases are less acute, in part due to their age.

Hospitals in the state will also likely continue conducting revenue-generating elective medical procedures despite the current COVID-19 increases, Broce said. Elective surgeries were put on hold earlier this year but resumed in late April as COVID-19 cases began slowing and hospitals sought to ease financial strain.

State officials also expect to see an increase in the number of positive COVID-19 test results in the coming days after testing specimens dropped off over the Fourth of July holiday weekend.

Georgia is negotiating “new solutions” to expand in-house test processing and results turnaround with more details forthcoming, Broce said.

As of Friday afternoon, more than 111,000 people in Georgia had tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel strain of coronavirus that sparked a global pandemic. It had killed 2,965 Georgians.

Beau Evans of Capitol Beat News Service contributed to this report.