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COLUMBUS Ohio Governor Mike DeWine and Lt. Governor Jon Husted provided the following updates on Ohio’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Economic recovery
Governor DeWine on Thursday outlined the progression of Ohio’s economic recovery.
Ohio’s gross domestic product (GDP) outpaced the nation in the final quarter of calendar year 2020. The U.S. GDP is estimated to have grown 4.3 percent in the quarter, and Ohio’s GDP is estimated to have increased 5 percent during the same timeframe.
Ohio’s unemployment rate in February 2021 was 5 percent and the national rate was 6.2 percent.
This month, Ohio’s tax revenues exceeded the monthly estimate by $41 million, or 2.6 percent, and remain 4.3 percent above the estimate for the fiscal year-to-date. This is a dramatic improvement from one year ago.
Staff Writer
COLUMBUS More infectious and more deadly variants of the COVID-19 virus are expected to be ascendant in coming weeks, but vaccinations are also climbing.
DeWine said coronavirus cases are surging, with 2,742 new cases reported in Ohio in the last 24 hours and a 21-day reported case average of 1,801. There are 111 Ohioans newly hospitalized with the virus and a total of 1,193 infected people hospitalized across the state.
“We continue to see a significantly higher number in cases,” the governor said Thursday. “ICU admissions are up. Not dramatically.”
“We’re moving now in the wrong direction,” he said during his broadcast on the Ohio Channel.
There have been 166 cases of the syndrome in Ohio so far. Author: Dave Dino DeNatale Updated: 3:26 PM EDT April 8, 2021
COLUMBUS, Ohio Much of the emphasis in the state s fight against COVID-19 has been treating older Ohioans as opposed to youngsters.
However, during his briefing on Thursday, Gov. Mike DeWine and state health experts addressed a growing concern about how the virus is impacting children. COVID has historically affected older Ohioans more than children. But children aren’t immune to getting sick with COVID, and in some rare cases, they can develop multisystem inflammatory syndrome. This can be a serious complication for children, DeWine said.
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