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COVID-19 deaths and hospitalizations in U.S. smash records for a single day

With annual holiday decorations on display, a city sign alerts visitors to the Pier in Manhattan Beach, CA.
With annual holiday decorations on display, a sign alerts visitors that face coverings are required at the Manhattan Beach Pier.
(Jay L. Clendenin/Los Angeles Times)
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The U.S. logged more than 3,100 COVID-19 deaths in a single day Wednesday — more than 20% higher than the previous record set last spring — while the number of Americans hospitalized with the coronavirus eclipsed 100,000 for the first time and new cases are topping 200,000 a day, according to figures released Thursday.

The three benchmarks showed a country slipping deeper into crisis, with perhaps the worst to come, in part because of the delayed effects from Thanksgiving, when millions of Americans disregarded warnings to stay home and celebrate only with members of their household.

Across the U.S., the surge has swamped hospitals with patients and left nurses and other healthcare workers shorthanded and burned out.

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Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced a stay-at-home order affecting most of California.

“The reality is December and January and February are going to be rough times. I actually believe they are going to be the most difficult time in the public health history of this nation,” Dr. Robert Redfield, head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Wednesday.

Health authorities had warned that the numbers could fluctuate strongly before and after Thanksgiving, as they often do around holidays and weekends, when figures often drop because of reporting delays, then rise sharply a few days later as state and local agencies catch up with the backlog.

Still, deaths, hospitalizations and cases in the U.S. have been on a fairly steady rise for weeks, sometimes breaking records for days on end.

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Los Angeles issued a modified stay-at-home order Wednesday night mirroring new L.A. County rules. “Just be smart and stay apart,” Mayor Garcetti said.

The U.S. recorded 3,157 deaths on Wednesday, according to the tally kept by Johns Hopkins University. That’s more than the number of people killed in the Sept. 11 attacks, and it shattered the old mark of 2,603, set April 15, when the New York metropolitan area was the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak.

The number of people in the hospital likewise set an all-time high Wednesday, according to the COVID Tracking Project. It has more than doubled over the past month.

And the number of newly confirmed infections climbed just past 200,000 Wednesday for the second time in less than a week, by Johns Hopkins’ count.

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