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States that ended shutdowns early are leading the surge in coronavirus infections

(Matt York | AP) Medical personnel prepare to test hundreds of people lined up in vehicles Saturday, June 27, 2020, in Phoenix's western neighborhood of Maryvalefor free COVID-19 tests organized by Equality Health Foundation, which focuses on care in underserved communities. As coronavirus infections explode in states like Arizona and Florida, people in communities of color are fighting to get tested. Public health experts say wider testing helps people in underserved neighborhoods and is key to controlling a pandemic.

Florida and South Carolina were among the first to open up and are now among the states leading the current surge in coronavirus cases. In contrast, the states that bore the brunt of cases in March and April but were slower to reopen have seen significant decreases in reported cases since. Average daily cases in New York are down 52% since the state reopened in late May and down 83% in Massachusetts.

South Carolina — the first state to reopen retail stores — continues to set records for reported cases. On Wednesday, the average daily case count was 1,570, up from 143 from when the state reopened. State health officials estimate that they have identified just 14% of cases because most go undiagnosed.

Georgia: Cases in Georgia are up 245% since late April, prompting some cities to require the use of face masks. These local mandates go further than a statewide order signed by Gov. Brian Kemp that encourages, but doesn’t require, masks.

Florida has seen a more than tenfold increase in average daily cases since it began reopening in early May. Public health officials said the return to bars, restaurants and house parties was the cause for the spike. The state has since shut down on-site drinking at bars. Florida is not alone — more than a third of states are pausing or reversing plans to reopen.

[Read more: What we know about the long term consequences of getting COVID-19]

Arizona — on top of seeing a spike in cases — has the highest rate of positive tests in the country, with nearly 1 in 4 coming back positive. The nationwide rate is roughly 9%.

California: Among the first states to be affected by the coronavirus, California is now seeing a spike in cases. The state was once seen as a model for how to contain the virus, but experts blame the current surge on an inconsistent adoption of prevention strategies and a haphazard reopening process that gave people a false sense that they were in the clear.

New York, once the epicenter of the virus, has seen average daily case numbers plummet along with the rate of positive test results, which sits at 1%. The state is still reopening, but a full return to normal is a ways off, especially as hot spots emerge across the country. In an effort to prevent a resurgence of the virus in the region, New York, New Jersey and Connecticut issued a joint travel advisory requiring travelers from hot spots to quarantine for two weeks. Violators would be fined, but an enforcement mechanism isn’t currently in place.

(The New York Times) The current surge of coronavirus cases in the United States is closely linked to when states reopened their economies.

President Donald Trump has blamed the rapid growth in cases on an increase in tests, but testing alone does not explain the surge. The United States is conducting nearly three times as many tests as earlier in the outbreak, but the growth in cases is outpacing the growth in testing in at least half of states. Shortages of test kits remain a widespread problem, with reports of some testing sites running out of supplies just minutes after opening.

Additionally, this wave of cases across the country differs from the early outbreak — while older people were primarily affected before, younger people are now making up a much greater share of new cases.

Because younger people are driving the spike in new cases, death tallies are not rising as sharply. But experts warn that the United States may be on the verge of a wave of deaths. Earlier in the pandemic, when testing was more limited, deaths lagged cases by a week or two. With the more widespread testing being done now, that interval is now more like two to four weeks.