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Total H ospitalizations

18,654 18,825
18,569
18,707 18,697
18,279 18,335
18,079 17,735
17,493 17,316
16,837 16,967
16,479 16,103
16,213 16,044
15,905
15,599
15,021
14,810
14,258
13,383 13,524
12,819
12,839 12,646
12,226 12,159
11,598
10,929 10,993
10,350 9,786 9,600
9,179
9,517 9,647 8,665
8,196
8,503 7,776
7,262
7,226 6,946
7,328 7,063 6,706
6,394 5,897
6,481 6,220 5,840 5,570
5,818 5,187
5,327 4,844
4,642
4,393
4,079
3,343
2,629
2,043
1,406
1,042
617
326 496
March 16 May 23
N et Change in Total Hospitalizations
1,412 1,427
1,297
1,248
1,1541,175 1,157
1,095
1,014
847
714 736
637 656
586 574 586
425
364 358
290
170 200
91 121 85 53 118
-59 -20 -47 -36 -57 -22
-128 -110 -139 -117
-173 -163 -174 -202
-240 -248 -249
-312 -323
-362 -349
-419 -421 -420 -383-343
-445
-487 -514-469 -514
-600 -578 -561 -564
-685 -605-643
-754 -763-734
March 16 May 23
N et Change in Intubations
351
313 316
303 295
290 291
260
222
200
192
165
124 132
116 121 109 110
93 94
88
69 69
43
27
-7
-26 -21-14 -16
-32
-40 -48 -41
-53 -56 -56
-65 -63 -57 -60
-73 -62-72 -73 -76 -76
-78
-92 -92 -91
-102 -102 -100
-112 -108 -108 -111
-127 -118 -115 -110
-124-124
-108
-130 -130
-139
March 17 May 23
N ew C O VID H ospitalizations Per D ay
Gross ne w C O VID hospitalizations (3-day rolling average)
3,1813,169
3,042
2,945
2,825 2,772
2,736 2,722 2,689
2,563
2,487
2,411 2,389
2,210
2,119 2,0162,156
2,039 2,045
1,925 1,949
1,833
1,776
1,616
1,564
1,4081,404
1,389 1,367
1,265 1,224 1,119
1,076
973
924 970933 954
837 831
789717
656694 659 607
601 604 572
489 521488 420 431
401416 400374 373
321295 246
225208 229
March 20 May 23
N umber of Lives Lost
May 18: 10 5
May 19: 112
May 2 0: 10 5
May 21: 10 9
May 2 2: 84
May 23: 10 9
(82 in Hospitals, 27 in N ursing Homes)
Number of Lives Lost
3-day rolling average
763 755
736 739
724
713 703 714 704
701
651
628
608 617 605
558
554
543
525
506
485
471 470
451
423
391 384
384
374 364
339 331
329
297
279
260
231 224
235 229 226 216 198
195 188
174 173
149 152 149 143
134 117
105 108 107 109 99 101
78
58
36 45
16 21
March 2 5 May 23
March 20 May 23
What does a Governor do on
Memorial D ay w e ekend?
Goes to the beach!
And brings his friends!
Memorial D ay
• State be aches open: Jones B e ach, Sunk en
Me adow, Hither Hills and Robert Moses
• C ampgrounds & RV parks will ope n
state wide tomorrow.
• BE SM ART
?
? Reopening ?
?
F ollow the numbers not emotions
F ollow the science not the politics
Where Do Regions Currently Stand?
Le arn from the past
or repe at it.
1918 Pandemic: Learn the Lessons
Mitigation Efforts in Place
In 1918,
Weekly Deaths per 100,000

St. Louis exp erienced a


sharp increase in d eaths
wh en restrictions w ere
relaxed after two months.
0 5 10 15 20
Weeks Since Outbreak
1918 Pandemic: Learn the Lessons
Mitigation Efforts in Place
Weekly Deaths per 100,000

In D enver, when mitigation


me asures w ere ended
after 10 w e e ks, influenz a
de aths spik e d again,
even worse than before.
0 5 10 15 20
Weeks Since Outbreak
Learn the Lessons for Reopening
In C alifornia and Florida,
the de ath rate could spike
to roughly 1,0 0 0 a day by
July without efforts to
mitigate the spre ad,
according to the report.
The people of N ew York
We have to stay smart.
Mid-H udson
Th e Mid-Hudson region is
still on track to enter
Phase 1 of reop ening by Tuesday.
14-day decline in 14-day decline 30 per 1k
net in hospital New residents Contact Tracers
Share of ICU
hospitalizations deaths hospitalizations Share of total beds tested 30 per 100K
beds available
Region OR OR (Under 2 per 100K available monthly residents or Metrics Met
(threshold of
Under 15 new Fewer than 5 residents— (threshold of 30%) (7-day average based on
30%)
hospitalizations deaths 3 day rolling avg) of new tests infection rate
(3-day avg) (3-day avg) per day)
Mid-Hudson 40 I 0 9I5 1.62 37% 53% 4,855/2,322 Expected 6/7
Long Island
Long Island is on track to op en
Wednesday if d eaths continue to
d ecline contact tracing op eration will
b e online by Wednesday.
14-day decline in 14-day decline 30 per 1k
net in hospital New residents Contact Tracers
Share of ICU
hospitalizations deaths hospitalizations Share of total beds tested 30 per 100K
beds available
Region OR OR (Under 2 per 100K available monthly residents or Metrics Met
(threshold of
Under 15 new Fewer than 5 residents— (threshold of 30%) (7-day average based on
30%)
hospitalizations deaths 3 day rolling avg) of new tests infection rate
(3-day avg) (3-day avg) per day)
Long Island 42 I 0 11 I 10 1.22 34% 37% 5,828/2,839 Expected 5/7
As Long Island moves toward Phase 1,
the MTA will be taking
steps to protect LIRR customers.
Th e MTA is doing what people
thought was virtually impossible
cle aning and disinfecting trains and
buses daily.
LIRR
The LIRR is re ady to add more cars to trains
to help assist with social distancing as Long
Island and the Downstate region reop ens.
REMIN DER:
Mask is mandatory when riding on
public transportation systems.
Starting today, N e w York professional sports le agues
will be able to begin training camps in the state while
following appropriate he alth protocols.
Veterinarians
Veterinarian practices
will be able to open in all regions
beginning on Tu esday.
N ourish N Y Initiative U pdate
H ere on Long Island:
10,0 0 0+
O ver 10,0 0 0 households on Long Island
have received N ourish N Y products.
Six new Nourish N Y distributions are
sch eduled for Long Island this w e ek.
N ourish N ew York
Philanthropies/foundations
can help.
Contact:
C O VIDPhilanthropies@exec.ny.gov
STAY HOME. STOP THE SPREAD. SAVE LIVES.
As we begin to reopen,
we must use this opportunity to
Build B ack B etter.
We announced Eric Schmidt,
former CE O and Executive
Chairman of Google, founder of
Schmidt F utures, would chair
a 15-member blue-ribbon
commission focused on
improving telehealth and
broadband access using ne w,
innovative technologies.
Blue-Ribbon Commission
Eric Schmidt - Executive Ch air/Found er, Schmidt Futures
Rich ard Parsons - Ch air, Rockefeller Found ation
D arren Walker - Presid ent, Ford Found ation
D e nnis Rivera - Former Ch air, SEIU H e althcare
Plinio Ayala - Presid ent, CE O, P er Scholas
Ch arles Phillips - Ch air/Former CE O, Infor
Sid Mukh erje e - Physicia n/Author, Assista nt Professor At Columbia
Ja ne Rose nth al - Co-found er/CE O/Executive Ch air, Trib eca Film F estival
Dr. Toyin Ajayi - Chief H e alth Officer & Co-Found er, Cityblock H e alth
Eliza b eth Alexa nd er - Presid ent, Andre w W. Mellon Found ation
Marth a Pollack - Presid e nt, Cornell University
Steven Koonin - Director, NYU C enter For Urb a n Science And Progress
Satish K. Trip athi - Presid e nt, SU NY B uffalo
Ha mdi Ulukaya - Found er/Ch airma n/CE O, Chob a ni
Ma urie McInnis Incoming Presid ent of SU NY Stony Brook
Ginny Rommety Ch air, IB M
We are turning th e page and starting
a ne w chapter in this crisis
management.
C hapter 1: stabilizing th e h e alth crisis
to
C hapter 2: reopening smartly.
C hapter 3 will be rebuilding and
recre ating th e economy.
Smart government
has a role to play.
Government must stimulate
and le ad th e way to ne w
economic opportunities.
Government must think big:
• Airports
• Mass transit
• Roads & bridges
• N ew technology for education
• N ew telemedicine
• N ew public health system
It always has.
N EW YORK TO U G H
SM ART
U NITED
DISCIPLINED
LO VIN G

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