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Ohio hospitals got $4B from CARES Act, but ink still running red

Cincinnati-area hospitals got nearly $700 million and all of Ohio received $4 billion from emergency federal pandemic spending known as the CARES Act. Local hospital leaders say the sector would be in a far deeper hole now without that help. “Republicans and Democrats both root for their community hospitals,” said Mike Abrams, president and chief executive officer of the 240-member industry group the Ohio Hospital Association. “No one wants to see the local hospital go under.” The new coronavirus pandemic put an unprecedented financial strain on one-sixth of the economy just as humans needed their hospitals the most. In March 2020, to protect the hospitals as they confronted the first surge of COVID-19, Ohio ordered a six-week pause to nonessential surgery and procedures as part of the overall state shutdown.

Ohio reports 1,946 more coronavirus cases, 86 more deaths: Friday update

Ohio reports 1,946 more coronavirus cases, 86 more deaths: Friday update Rich Exner, cleveland.com, cleveland.com © Rich Exner, cleveland.com/Rich Exner, cleveland.com Coronavirus patients in Ohio hospitals exceeded 1,200 on Friday for the first time in more than a month. CLEVELAND, Ohio - The Ohio Department of Health reported 1,946 coronavirus cases on Friday as the hospital patient count increased to over 1,200 for the first time since Feb. 27. Also on Friday, in the department’s twice weekly update for deaths, another 86 fatalities attributed to coronavirus were reported. This brings the total to 18,827 deaths since the onset of the virus early in 2020, though the actual count is higher. The DeWine Administration early last month switched to a new death reporting systems that now delays by several weeks most deaths reports.

Coronavirus in Ohio: Richland County s per capita rate creeping up

MANSFIELD – After weeks of decline, the per capita rate of new COVID-19 cases over the last 14 days in Richland County is creeping back up. In the last two weeks, Richland County has recorded 151 new cases, meaning there are 125 cases per 100,000 residents, as of Thursday. To compare, the county s incidence rate  cases adjusted for population  was 111 cases per 100,000 residents on March 25, according to the state s public health advisory system, or COVID-19 heat map. On Thursday, the overall incidence rate in Ohio was 167.1 per 100,000 residents, up from 146.9 on March 25. Gov. Mike DeWine said he would lift all health orders at 50 new cases per 100,000 residents.

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