Wisconsin Health News

DHS, hospitals release more COVID-19 data

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State health officials and Wisconsin hospitals began releasing more data this week on the impact of COVID-19 in the state.

The Wisconsin Hospital Association launched a dashboard on Thursday afternoon showing hospital admissions for the disease as well as bed and ventilator availability.

The dashboard also details the number of hospitals with seven days or fewer of personal protective equipment. It includes a breakdown by region.

As of Friday morning, more than 70 percent of the state’s intensive care unit beds were in use, and there were 1,233 available ventilators.

Meanwhile, the Department of Health Services started releasing more detail on COVID-19 deaths and cases by race and ethnicity.

DHS said Thursday that black Wisconsinites made up 27 percent of the positive COVID-19 cases and 44 percent of the deaths. Black people account for a little less than 7 percent of the state’s population, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore, D-Milwaukee, said a variety of circumstances affecting black Wisconsinites, including disproportionate work in service areas, housing conditions in the inner city that don’t allow for social distancing, a “dearth of healthcare” and underlying health conditions like asthma and diabetes, increase the risk of dying from the virus.

“If someone said to me very specifically, ‘You mean to tell me that COVID-19 is racist?’ Well, COVID-19 is very opportunist, I’ll tell you that,” she told reporters on a press call held by the Democratic Party of Wisconsin. “If you’re weak, if you’re poor, if you can’t afford to have your groceries delivered to you, if you can’t stock up for a month’s time and avoid the interactions, if you work in the public service sector, I think you’re at greater risk. And those things seem to come together for African-Americans.”

Moore said the pandemic “opens the door” for a larger discussion about addressing healthcare disparities.

She called for collecting the demographic data to learn about housing conditions and public transportation, which could be critical for minimizing deaths in the future.

“We’ve often said in the black community, that when America gets the cold, the black community gets pneumonia,” she said. “That literally is coming true.”

Other COVID-19 updates:

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