I was checking out the
NY Times and their charts on each state.
18 states have increasing daily new cases trends (Arizona, California, Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, New Mexico, North Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming). Another 15 have plateau'd, some near the peak of the charts. Only four states, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Vermont actually show a near dissipation of daily cases.
Seems insane that this is when some states want to open up.
There's more to it than that. It's not really a "open everything woo-hoo" or "stay closed and don't leave your house or else".
For Arizona, for example... The cases have been close to level for a few weeks, with some daily variations, and a recent spike when new VA info got added... but the testing also increased. Hospitalizations have been decreasing on average over the past few weeks. Arizona hasn't hit capacity for beds, and already has plans in place for bed overflow to non-hospital settings if needed. They haven't even hit a point of needing to move some non-COVID cases out of hospitals into alternative care settings like long-term nursing. And we've been pretty steady at about 20% ventilator capacity. All in all, Arizona is positioned to handle a larger case load than we've experienced so far.
And the loosening of the lockdown is just that - a loosening. It's planned to be a staged process, moving through several phases. The current recommendation from the governor is that people who are able to work from home should continue to do so indefinitely, and that we'll be phasing in businesses that can't be operated remotely, with limitation son the number of customers allowed to be on site at one time, and additional requirements for safety.
All in all, it seems like a reasonable approach to balancing the health impact and the economic impact.
I can't speak for other states, but I'm hoping that most of them are also taking reasonable approaches.