As the coronavirus surges, it is reaching into the nation's last untouched areas
As the coronavirus surges, it is reaching into the nations last untouched areas
Karin Brulliard
Then came October. Three residents tested positive, knocking Petroleum off zero-case lists, forcing the countys lone school to close for a week and proving, as Sheriff Bill Cassell put it, that eventually we were going to get it, and that the virus aint gone yet.
That is a lesson people in many other wide-open places have been learning as the coronavirus surges anew. Months after it raced in successive waves along the nations coasts and through the Sun Belt, it is reaching deep into its final frontier the most sparsely populated states and counties, where distance from others has long been part of the appeal and this year had appeared to be a buffer against a deadly communicable disease.
In Montana, which boasts just seven people per square mile, active cases have more than doubled since the start of the month, and officials are warning of crisis-level hospitalization rates and strains on rural health care. In Wyoming, which ranks 49th in population density, the National Guard has been deployed to help with contact tracing. Those two states, along with the low-density states of Idaho, North Dakota and South Dakota, now have some of the nations highest per capita caseloads. Even Alaska, the least-crowded state, is logging unprecedented increases, including in rural villages.
People here make the joke that weve been socially isolating since before the state was founded, said Christine M. Porter, an associate professor of public health at the University of Wyoming. In terms of the reason this happened now and it didnt happen before, it was essentially luck-slash-geography. Its a disease that spreads exponentially once its taken root, unless you take severe measures to stop it.
The rest: https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2020/10/26/covid-last-counties-without-cases/