It is much easier these days to find examples about how “What Goes Around…” does indeed “Come Around,” from the negative side of the ledger. So it is with pleasure that I’m able to throw in this prime example of how the “law” works both ways. Add the fact that I am a New York City resident and have seen Covis-19’s nasty impact up close and personal on multiple levels, including the suffering of family members and friends.  New York Has Tamed the Virus. Can It Hold Off a Second Wave?

In addition, I’ve witnessed and participated in the mass exodus out of Manhattan bound for other parts and the deterioration of life in what was one of the world’s most vibrant centers of business and the arts. 

But I have also been profoundly proud of how seriously New Yorkers have bitten the bullet and adhered to the basics. Out walking on the street you see 90% of people wearing a mask and exercising social distancing. In a very real sense it has been a vast example of doing the right thing. 

The result is aptly depicted in this article. However, as it says, “now is now.” It remains to be seen what six and twelve months down the road will teach us. So far, every time the pressure is lifted the virus reasserts and teaches us that it’s just lying in the shadows waiting for us to lower our guard. How long will that go on? We don’t know! What we do know is that What Goes Around Comes Around and right now, in NYC,  we’re seeing the plus side of that rule.

The sustained low rate of infection has surprised local health officials. But a resurgence may be inevitable, despite the state’s and city’s best efforts. New York Has Tamed the Virus. Can It Hold Off a Second Wave?

If you are a fan of Louise L. Hay, you’ll enjoy these life affirming aphorisms packed with spiritual wisdom and life affirming insights— reading one Thoughts to Live by a day can be the calming and stress reducing antidote needed during these challenging times.

~Rob

New York Has Tamed the Virus. Can It Hold Off a Second Wave?

The sustained low rate of infection has surprised local health officials. But a resurgence may be inevitable, despite the state’s and city’s best efforts.

By Aug. 17, 2020

New York State has managed not only to control its outbreak since the devastation of the early spring, but also to contain it for far longer than even top officials expected.

Now, as other places struggle to beat back a resurgence and cases climb in former success-story states like California and Rhode Island, New York’s leaders are consumed by the likelihood that, any day now, their numbers will begin rising.

The current levels of infection are so remarkable that they have surprised state and city officials: Around 1 percent of the roughly 30,000 tests each day in the city are positive for the virus. In Los Angeles, it’s 7 percent, while it’s 13 percent in Miami-Dade County and around 15 percent in Houston. New York Has Tamed the Virus. Can It Hold Off a Second Wave?

The virus is simply no longer as present in New York as it once was, epidemiologists and public health officials said.

“New York is like our South Korea now,” said Dr. Thomas Tsai of the Harvard Global Health Institute.

But nothing is static about the viral outbreak, experts cautioned. The question now is whether the state, where 32,000 people have died of the virus, can keep from being overwhelmed by another wave, as threats loom from arriving travelers, struggles with contact tracing and rising cases just over the Hudson River in New Jersey.

Officials have also been watching warily as cities once seen as models in virus containment struggled with new outbreaks. Hong Kong moved to ban indoor dining and gatherings of more than two people in late July amid a sharp rise in infections. International flights were diverted from Melbourne, Australia, as cases mounted.

In more than a dozen interviews, epidemiologists, public health officials and infectious disease specialists said New York owed its current success in large part to how New Yorkers reacted to the viciousness with which the virus attacked the state in April.

State officials shut down schools and businesses, sacrificing jobs and weakening the economy to save lives. Adherence to mask wearing has been strong. Many vulnerable New Yorkers are still sheltering in their apartments. Others decamped to second homes.

And, critically, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio reopened cautiously, deciding in late June against allowing indoor dining and bars after seeing those activities connected to outbreaks in other states.

“People in New York have taken matters much more seriously than in other places,” said Dr. Howard Markel, a historian of epidemics at the University of Michigan. “And all they’re doing is reducing the risk. They’re not extinguishing the virus.”

 

More New Yorkers are riding the subway, though numbers are still way below pre-pandemic levels.
Credit…Victor J. Blue for The New York Times

Still a resurgence is all but inevitable, public health experts said.

Local beaches have filled on hot weekend days. Diners flock to outdoor restaurants with plywood patios. More than 1.2 million people took the subway on a recent Tuesday, down dramatically compared to a year ago, but more than double what it was on a Tuesday in May.

The same models that predicted an increase in New York City for the summer now see a rise coming in the early fall. Life can be lived outside for now, but will move indoors as the weather cools — just as the flu season is ramping up. Schools are set to open in September.

And confidence in the good numbers themselves could breed complacency about masks and distancing. Already, the city has seen a number of large illicit dance parties and a worrisome spike in cases in Sunset Park, Brooklyn.

“I’m not optimistic about a sustained end to Covid-19 in New York,” said Dr. Irwin Redlener, the director of the Pandemic Resource and Response Initiative at Columbia University. “Even though we had that horrible peak in April, when we were the epicenter, there are still millions of people who are vulnerable.”

Among the biggest threats, officials and epidemiologists said, were out-of-state travelers, who continue to arrive in New York despite a state-mandated 14-day quarantine.

The governor instituted the quarantine requirement for anyone coming to New York from a state with high infection rates. Eight states were initially affected; the list has since grown to 31 states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.

More than 160,000 people have been subject to the quarantine since the start of June, state officials said. But enforcement of the order is near-impossible, and the state could not say how many have actually quarantined.

About 20 percent of new positive cases in New York City have been connected to out-of-state travel, city officials said, with Florida, Georgia and New Jersey the top departure points. Last week, Mr. de Blasio said drivers entering the city could be pulled over at random to be informed of the state’s quarantine rules.

The majority of those reached by the city’s contact tracers have not shared the names of anyone they might have infected: More than 12,500 people who tested positive did not give their contacts to the city, out of about 22,000 total. Those who did shared an average of between two and three contacts.

But city officials could not say how many of those testing positive for the virus were already known to contact tracers — in other words, how many new cases had a connection to a previous positive case. That is considered by infectious disease experts to be a key metric for gauging how under control an outbreak is.

Dr. Jay Varma, the mayor’s senior adviser for public health, said the city’s program had prevented “thousands” of new infections, based on the number of people identified as symptomatic contacts who said they were in quarantine. Just over 200 people have isolated themselves in a city-funded hotel since the start of June.

“I don’t think it’s correct to insinuate that the work that we’re doing is not having an impact when you clearly see the impact in terms of disease numbers in New York,” Dr. Varma said.

Patterns of infection around the state suggest New Yorkers, like most Americans, are chafing under pandemic restrictions.

In New York City, neighborhoods with the highest rate of infection are increasingly found in Manhattan — Hell’s Kitchen or the Financial District, for example, which are home to wealthier residents — in addition to the parts of the Bronx and Queens that have long been hard hit.

 

In younger, wealthier parts of the city, infection numbers are higher, but mask wearing is largely prevalent.
Credit…Dave Sanders for The New York Times

“My concern is complacency,” the city’s former top public health official, Dr. Oxiris Barbot, said in an interview last month. Dr. Barbot resigned this month and voiced “deep disappointment” with Mr. de Blasio’s response to the pandemic.

She said the most important factor in New York’s success so far has been broad acceptance of masks and social distancing, adding, “I think it would be foolish of us to not plan for an inevitable second wave.”

Fatigue with the rules has already sparked localized outbreaks in parts of the state: a high school graduation in Chappaqua that resulted in the infections of 28 people; a July 4 party in Albany that drew 200 people.

Pediatricians in Westchester County became alarmed when families recently began seeking coronavirus tests in order to go to children’s parties where proof of a negative test was required to attend.

“Unfortunately, people still really don’t understand what the testing means,” said Dr. Sherlita Amler, the county’s health commissioner. “It’s just a moment in time. It’s not a get-out-of-jail card.”

While antibody surveys have suggested one in five New York City residents may have already been exposed, public health officials do not believe herd immunity is behind the low numbers, or could be relied on in the future.

What may protect New Yorkers who decide to buck the rules and gather in groups without masks is the fact that so many of their neighbors are still masking up, said Dr. Barbot.

“If a new infection gets introduced into the community, it will be a terminal transmission, meaning that it won’t go any further,” she said. “More people wearing face coverings seems to be in line with that.” She cautioned that it was a theory and the data is not yet there.

And even at the currently low levels, the number of new virus cases in New York City — 386 reported positive on Tuesday out of 46,185 tested, according to state data — is still too great for its contact tracers to effectively determine where people are becoming infected, said Dr. Barbot. The new norms of behavior have to continue for the foreseeable future, she said.

“I think that we are changing the culture,” said Dr. Howard Zucker, the state health commissioner, adding that social distancing and masks are now almost “a reflex.”

Such changes have been evident from new behaviors. In Westchester County, where indoor dining is allowed, patrons are opting to eat outside. Some restaurants still only offer outdoor seating.

“When the weather turns colder, that will be the test of whether people are comfortable dining indoors,” said Noam Bramson, the mayor of New Rochelle, which had the first reported cluster in New York in March. The city of 80,000 had 33 active cases at the end of July, he said, down from more than 1,000 in the spring.

The ways New York has contained the virus are varied, and together offer a preview of what life may look like for months if not years to come.

“The work force is going to be different for a while,” said Jim Malatras, who has been advising Governor Cuomo on the virus response. He wondered aloud when and how things like gyms or movie theaters would be able to open safely in the state. (On Monday, the governor announced gyms would be allowed to open with limited capacity on Aug. 24.)

“We’re taking it slow,” he added. “Dave Matthews isn’t performing at Madison Square Garden anytime soon.”

Correction: 

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this article misstated when Dr. Oxiris Barbot resigned. She resigned this month, not last week.

J. David Goodman covers lobbying, fund-raising and the influence of money in politics. A former reporter in City Hall and at police headquarters in New York, he has written about government, politics and criminal justice for The Times since 2012. @jdavidgoodman

 

And if you happen to be a fan of Louise L. Hay or other forward thinkers/authors like her, you may appreciate my new journal of life affirming aphorisms called Thoughts to Live By. They are meant to be a tool to start or end the day, or referenced to calm the raging beast when life events throw us off balance, ie: a possibly useful antidote during these challenging times.

Thoughts To Live By Rob Davis

What Goes Around available at Amazon


Kirkus Reviews, the gold-standard for independent & accurate reviews, has this to say about

What Goes Around Comes Around:

A stable, positive, non preachy, objective voice makes the book stand apart from others in the genre. The author gives readers not just points or principles to ponder, but real human experiences that demonstrate them. A successful guide that uses anecdotes to reveal powerful truths about life.

~ Kirkus Reviews

“A stable, positive, non-preachy, objective voice makes the manual stand apart from others in the genre.  A successful guide that uses anecdotes to reveal powerful truths about life.” – Kirkus Reviews

Buy What Goes Around at Amazon

“I’ve read a number of books that focus on sharing a similar message, including “The Secret” by Rhonda Byrne, “The Answer” by John Assaraf & Murray Smith, “The Celestine Prophecy” by James Redfield, “Think and Grow Rich,” by Napoleon Hill, and I must say that I find Rob’s to be my favorite. – Sheryl Woodhouse, founder of Livelihood Matters LLC

New York Has Tamed the Virus.  Can it Hold Off a Second Wave?

New York Has Tamed the Virus.  Can it Hold Off a Second Wave?