NEW YORK – New York City’s coronavirus death toll surpassed 1,000 on Tuesday as an overwhelmed health system embraced the arrival of hundreds of additional paramedics, EMTs and ambulances.
The lifeline of health care support includes 500 paramedics and EMTs and 250 more ambulances, city officials said.
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Among those who died in the city was the first victim under 18, according to the city’s health department.
A somber-sounding Gov. Andrew Cuomo said early Tuesday that more than 300 new deaths had been reported in the state in the previous 24 hours, a number rendered obsolete just hours later by the virus that has infected more than 75,000 statewide.
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NUMBERS UP
Deaths from the coronavirus continued to climb steeply in New York, topping 1,500 by Tuesday morning, according to Cuomo.
The city reported before dusk that it has nearly 1,100 deaths alone.
The New York City region has the lion's share of the state's confirmed cases.
The outbreak hit close to home for the governor, who spoke early Tuesday of his brother and “best friend,” CNN anchor Chris Cuomo, testing positive for the disease.
“Luckily we caught it early enough. But it's my family, it's your family, it's all of our families,” the governor said.
The news is certain to get worse in New York City as the outbreak is expected to peak in the next month.
The virus, which causes the disease COVID-19, has spread rapidly across the globe. It causes mild symptoms in many of those infected, but it can cause severe symptoms or death for some, including older adults and those with underlying medical conditions such as respiratory ailments. Relatively few deaths among children have been reported.
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MORE HOSPITAL BEDS
A temporary hospital built inside a New York City convention center began accepting patients, and a nearby Navy hospital ship was expected to take in patients soon.
Beds at the Jacob Javits Convention Center and the USNS Comfort are designed to take pressure off New York City hospitals as coronavirus cases spike. The combined 2,000 beds were added to handle non-coronavirus patients.
Hospitals in the city were already showing signs of stress. Elmhurst Hospital in Queens was so busy that critically ill COVID-19 patients waited in the emergency room for beds to become available, according to an administrator. Outside other hospitals, workers in protective gear have been loading bodies of coronavirus victims into refrigerated trailers.
The emergency hospital sites at the convention center began taking patients Monday night, according to the governor’s office. The Navy said Tuesday that the ship docked off Manhattan was expected to accept patients soon.
There were more than 10,900 people in New York hospitalized for COVID-19, with at least 2,700 in intensive care. The number of new hospitalizations statewide Monday was at a high since the outbreak: 1,412.
Also, the National Tennis Center in Queens, where the U.S. Open is played, will start housing coronavirus patients next week and will eventually hold 350 coronavirus patients, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said.
He said patients who have tested positive for COVID-19 but are not in intensive care will be treated at the tennis center to relieve pressure from the overtaxed Elmhurst Hospital, where 13 people died of the virus in one 24-hour period last week.
De Blasio said medical personnel and equipment are arriving in the city to meet an expected surge in coronavirus cases next week but more health care workers, equipment and supplies are needed, and he asked anyone who might have a ventilator lying around to contribute it including oral surgeons, plastic surgeons and veterinarians.
“This is a war effort, everyone needs to contribute,” the mayor said. "You’ll get it back when this battle is over."
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UNEMPLOYMENT WOES
Cuomo apologized to laid off New Yorkers having trouble trying to file for unemployment benefits. The state’s unemployment site is so deluged it keeps crashing, Cuomo said.
“It is not working as smoothly as I would like to see it,” Cuomo said. “It’s compounding people’s stress.”
The state labor agency received 1.2 million calls Monday; it used to average 10,000 calls a day, according to the administration.
The governor said hundreds of people are working to fix the problem.
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MORE AMBULANCES ON THE WAY
New York City is bringing in 250 out-of-town ambulances and 500 paramedics and emergency medical technicians to help its swamped EMS system respond to the coronavirus crisis.
The city's ambulances are responding to about 6,000 calls a day — 50% more than average. Fire Commissioner Daniel Nigro said a five-day stretch last week was the busiest in the history of the city's EMS operation.
So far, 100 ambulances have arrived and the rest are expected by the end of the week, said Omar Bourne, a spokesman for the city’s emergency management agency. They’re supplied through the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Officials say the surge in coronavirus cases has delayed responses to lower-level calls. Oren Barzilay, head of the city’s EMS workers union, said some people are waiting up to six hours for help.
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OTHER DEVELOPMENTS
— Cuomo and lawmakers are trying to find their way forward on a state budget despite uncertainty about the size of the financial toll the coronavirus outbreak will take.
— U.S. Rep. Max Rose will deploy to the National Guard Wednesday to help with the COVID-19 response in his native Staten Island. The Democrat is a captain in the Army National Guard and will serve as an operations officer.
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Associated Press writers Larry Neumeister and Karen Matthews contributed from New York, Marina Villeneuve, Mary Esch and Hill contributed from Albany, N.Y.