getting worse?
Houston could be worst-affected city in U.S. if COVID-19 trend continues, expert says
Dr. Peter Hotez, Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, says if the spike in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue, the city of Houston could become the worst-impacted city in the U.S.
"We are potentially facing a very serious public health threat," he says.
Hotez tells CultureMap news partner, ABC13, that he began noticing the numbers going up after the Memorial Day holiday.
During a briefing on Monday, Mayor Sylvester Turner reported 1,789 new COVID-19 cases, adding to Houston's total of 14,322. Monday's total is the most the city has reported in one day so far.
"I have never reported these type of numbers," said Turner.
Continuing down this path could mean Houston will then see what happened in New York, says Hotez.
"Where there is a big surge and it becomes difficult to manage patients and that's where death rate goes up," he says.
He adds he's most concerned with low-income neighborhoods where he said there may be more crowds and people with co-morbidities.
He hopes people take the message and proceed with caution.
"We will get a better sense if this is trending over next few days," he says. "We are potentially facing a very serious public health threat." This is why Houston could become the city worst affected by COVID-19.
This message comes hours after Gov. Greg Abbott said COVID-19 is "spreading at an unacceptable rate in Texas" after an alarming spike in cases across the state.
During his briefing on Monday, June 22, the governor announced infection rates have gone from 4.5 percent in May to 9 percent.
"Hospitalizations for COVID-19 average just over 1,600 a day in the latter part of May," explained the governor. "In the last four or five days, hospitalizations have averaged more than 3,200 a day. To state the obvious, COVID-19 is now spreading at an unacceptable rate in Texas, and it must be corralled."
However, Abbott said there is now more testing being conducted in hot spots across the state, and said they're working with hospitals to make sure anyone with COVID-19 receives the proper treatment.
"Closing down Texas again will always be the last option," said Abbott.
Abbott continues to push for Texans to stay at home, wash their hands, and practice safe social distancing.
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For more on this story, including video, visit our news partner, ABC13.