As Texas COVID-19 Cases Climb, Houston Pleads For More Tests, Gear

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - MARCH 18: Texas Governor Greg Abbott displays COVID-19 test collection vials as he addresses the media during a press conference held at Arlington Emergency Management on March 18, 2020 in Arlingto... ARLINGTON, TEXAS - MARCH 18: Texas Governor Greg Abbott displays COVID-19 test collection vials as he addresses the media during a press conference held at Arlington Emergency Management on March 18, 2020 in Arlington, Texas. Abbott announced that Arlington health officials received 2,500 testing kits so all residents and workers at the Texas Masonic Retirement Home, the retirement home where COVID-19 victim Patrick James lived with his wife, will be tested for the virus. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images) MORE LESS
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HOUSTON (AP) — Cars lined up for more than a mile outside a Houston hospital Thursday as the nation’s fourth-largest city began drive-thru testing for the coronavirus, but officials warned they don’t have enough kits or protective gear to meet demand.

“I don’t want to create false hope that we are ready right now to have a radical increase in testing,” said Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, the top county official in Houston. “We are unfortunately not.”

Hours after the drive-thru testing began, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott ordered schools closed for more than 5 million students and shuttered restaurant dining rooms. Texas has more than 140 cases and health officials in Dallas confirmed the state’s fourth death related to the virus that causes COVID-19. About 2,500 testing kits were available at the drive-thru at United Memorial Medical Center and only those showing symptoms would be screened for the virus, said U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee.

She warned that the state is running out of personal protective equipment and that more is needed, although she didn’t say how long the existing supply would last.

One of the first vehicles through was a red pickup truck containing a woman who could be heard loudly coughing. Health workers in blue protective gear removed her from the truck and put her on a stretcher, then wheeled her into a nearby tent.

For most people, the coronavirus causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia.

The vast majority of people recover from the virus. According to the World Health Organization, people with mild cases recover in about two weeks, while those with more severe ones can take three to six weeks to recover.

Nationwide, public frustrations over the difficulties of getting tested for the new virus have been building since the first U.S. case was confirmed Jan. 20. Early missteps with test kits developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, coupled with strict government criteria about who qualified for screening, have led to widespread reports of people struggling to get tested.

Texas health officials reported that the state had administered about 2,000 tests as of Wednesday. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott told mayors and county officials a week ago that the supply of tests exceeded demand, and on Thursday said the state will soon have the capacity to test around 15,000 people a week.

Abbott had lagged behind other governors nationwide in ordering school and business closures, having until now left that decision to local health officials. That resulted in a patchwork of restrictions that had varied starkly even between big neighboring cities such as Dallas and Fort Worth, frustrating and confusing some local officials.

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Weber reported from Austin, Texas.

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The Associated Press receives support for health and science coverage from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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Notable Replies

  1. Avatar for spin spin says:

    Texans are fucked. They are about to have the toxic brew of the largest uninsured population of any state (how is that not expanding medicare looking now), a government with little capacity to address medical or other issues, and a dip shit at the top who is afraid to upset the crazy christian Trump supporters by taking any actions, start to kill and infect people in very large numbers.

    Lots of people will die, and it will be interesting to see how it changes people’s perceptions of a stand off, everyone for themselves, approach to government.

  2. Rachel Maddow last night mentioned 7 states NOT taking Covid-19 seriously…TX was one of them!

    Will The Irresponsible+Incompetent Russo-installed IMPeetus grovel to WHO to get those 500K test kits that he refused to accept and deliver protective gears from the military reserve! AND more important, to tell those Science/Covid-deniers to STAY-AT-HOME…otherwise, “But your numbers”…will go up more than you care to like!

  3. Will the survivor’s finally turn Texas back to a blue state?

  4. but officials warned they don’t have enough kits

    Unpossible. I distinctly remember Trump telling me, in more than one presser, that anyone that wants a test can get one. That every American can get one if they wanted it. Are you implying that he may have stretched the truth a bit?

  5. Stop saying “the vast majority or people recover from the virus”. The 97% recovery rate is going to move closer to the 80% non-hospitalized rate when the hospitals are overwhelmed.

    Maybe go with 20% require hospitalization, and of those as much as 20% die (or whatever the numbers). That will more readily lead people to contemplate the serious of getting the infection as well as the implications to themselves when the hospital system is over-whelmed.

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