Gov. Mike DeWine said Tuesday no one knows how long the coronavirus pandemic will continue in Ohio, but he compares the current moment to "halftime."
The governor is sounding a pessimistic warning as the state heads toward colder months, saying the average number of new cases is up and positivity has increased.
In his regular coronavirus briefing, DeWine said the number of new COVID-19 cases was 1,447. The average for the last week is 1,475, but both numbers are above where the state was two weeks ago. The positivity rate is up, despite an increase in testing, at 4.1 percent, up from 2.7 percent on Sept. 23.
Of Ohio’s 88 counties, 51 are listed as “high incident” in the Ohio Public Health Advisory System, meaning there are 100 cases of coronavirus for every 100,000 people.
Daily New Confirmed & Probable COVID-19 Cases In Ohio
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"What this means is we've seen this spread. If you're in a high-incident county or a red county, you should be concerned," DeWine said. "We're not trying to scare anybody, but these measures have not looked like this since we've done this," he said, referring to the state health department’s color-coded map that has been in use since July.
DeWine said Ohio has never had as many counties listed as high incidence as it does right now.
The governor said he gets a lot of questions about the future: "What's our goal? What's Halloween going to look like? What's Thanksgiving going to look like? What's Christmas going to look like? Next year, baseball, and on and on.”
“The truth is no one can answer these questions with great certainty,” he said. “What we can say is things will get better, but in all likelihood they will get worse before they get better.” That’s evident in the trend lines of the last few weeks, he said.
“The virus is tough. It's cunning. It will not give up,” he said. “All the experts we have talked to for months now have said the cold weather hits, more people move inside, we can't be outside as much, that's when we’re going to see more spread.”
But the governor said not all is without hope. Ohioans have done "exceedingly well" so far, when compared with other countries and other states, he said.
“What we've really avoided is this huge spike where we would see our hospitals overflowing. We all remember seeing those stories coming out of Italy. We've seen them come out of New York. We've seen them come out of California, Texas, Florida, more recently, Mississippi,” he said.
Despite Ohio's death total of 5,017 as of Tuesday, high unemployment, failing businesses, and impacts on mental health, "we are in better shape than we would have been, if we hadn't made the sacrifices."
Those sacrifices include mask wearing and social distancing, he said. And DeWine remains confident that Operation Warp Speed, the federal effort to develop and distribute a COVID-19 vaccine, will work.
"As the New York Times reported [Monday], the operation is, and I quote, 'working with remarkable efficiency.' Doesn't mean there won't be glitches. Doesn't mean it'll be perfect. But it seems to be coming along."
Until a vaccine is readily available, DeWine is encouraging Ohioans to focus on what they can control: the basic hygiene recommendations promoted since the beginning of the pandemic.
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