COVID-19 pandemic in Puerto Rico

The COVID-19 pandemic in Puerto Rico is an ongoing viral pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a novel infectious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). It is part of the 2019–20 worldwide coronavirus pandemic.

COVID-19 pandemic in Puerto Rico
(top to bottom)
  • The Puerto Rican National Guard and other officials establish the action plan for COVID-19 screening at Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport
  • Pilots and aircraft personnel are screened for COVID-19 at Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport
DiseaseCOVID-19
Virus strainSARS-CoV-2
LocationPuerto Rico
First outbreakWuhan, Hubei, China
Index caseSan Juan
Arrival dateMarch 13, 2020
(5 months and 3 days)
Confirmed cases3,791 (As of 19 July 2020)[1]
Deaths
178 (As of 19 July 2020)[1]
Government website
Puerto Rico Department of Health

Puerto Rico started addressing the risks of an outbreak early on. The island took "some of the most dramatic steps of any U.S. jurisdiction to control the virus," and "several U.S. cities and states followed Puerto Rico’s lead, imposing curfews and shutting businesses" of their own.[2] On February 29, Puerto Rico governor Wanda Vázquez Garced established a task force to look into how the virus could affect Puerto Rico and to lay out plans on how to best mitigate any outbreaks. Given the long delays encountered by the Puerto Rico government in obtaining reasonable turnaround from the CDC test labs in Atlanta for samples submitted for testing, the Island government took the position that every suspicious case was to be treated as a COVID-19 case until test results were received, and ordered patients to be kept in isolation for 14 days. On March 12, one day before the first COVID-19 case case was confirmed, the governor declared a state of emergency and activated the Puerto Rico National Guard to help monitor travelers coming into the Island through its airports and cruise ship docks. In Section 6 of the bulletin, the citizens of Puerto Rico were put on a curfew allowing them to travel out of their homes from 5AM to 9PM for specific reasons such as to buy medicine, to visit a doctor or pharmacy, to buy groceries, or to care for a sick person.[3]

The first cases of COVID-19 in Puerto Rico were reported on March 13. They consisted of two Italian tourists and a 71-year-old cancer patient. The governor expressing concern that the curfew established on the 12th was not being followed took stronger actions and asked all non-essential businesses be closed as of March 15 through March 30.[4][5] The first death recorded was that of the 68-year-old Italian woman tourist; a few days later her husband was reported to have recovered from the virus. Testing is being conducted by veteran's hospitals, private labs, and the Puerto Rico Department of Health.[6]

Background

Recent events

When the first case of COVID-19 was confirmed in Puerto Rico on March 13, Puerto Rico was still recovering from several major natural disasters, including Hurricane Maria[7] and the 2019–20 Puerto Rico earthquakes.[8][9] Increasing the risk of infections from the virus was also the strong ties between Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rican population in New York City, a city which had its first confirmed COVID-19 case on March 1,[10] making the spread of COVID-19 due to people arriving from New York a concern for Puerto Ricans.[11] It was out of this concern that on April 8 Puerto Rico governor Vázquez Garced asked the FAA to halt flights to Puerto Rico from U.S. "hot spots" including New York, New Jersey, Florida, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Illinois.[12]

Healthcare infrastructure

Like the rest of the world, including United States, Puerto Rico was unprepared for the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic.[13] When compared to that of the United States, Puerto Rico's population was at higher risk of COVID-19 due to various additional factors such as an older population, higher levels of poverty, and greater dependence on public resources for access to health care. Despite these factors and shortcomings, by April 16 Puerto Rico had kept the number of COVID-19 deaths rate to less than 17% that of deaths in the United States when the two are compared on an equal per-million-inhabitants basis. A table published on April 16 by Statista, a tracker of COVID-19 cases worldwide, showed the number of deaths in Puerto Rico at 15.96 per million inhabitants while that in the United States is shown at 94.54 per million inhabitants.[14]

It is generally known that the virus is more lethal to older people[15] and Puerto Rico has a high proportion of elderly people. In July 2019, almost 21% of Puerto Rico's population was over the age of 65.[16]

Additionally, elderly residents of Puerto Rico are seven times more likely to live in poverty. Puerto Rico has about 8,194 hospital beds[17] for its (as of July 1, 2019) estimated population of 3,193,694 residents.[16] Governor Pedro Rosselló's 1993 health care reform increased privatization and dependence upon Medicaid or upon Children's Health Insurance Program for 45% of Puerto Ricans and Medicare for 20% of them.

Since 2006, when Washington stopped some special taxes incentives, Puerto Rico entered an economic crisis, lowering its fiscal budgets.[18] Puerto Rican average Medicaid enrollee receive $2,200/year against $6,700 in US States.[18] Washington periodic fiscal cliff also represent a threat to territories health care systems.[18]

Persistent underfunding, uncertainty and the natural disasters of recent years placed Puerto Rico's health care system in weaker position to face the pandemic.[18] Hospital infrastructure have aged.[18] From 2006 to 2016, the number of doctors fell from 14,000 to 9,000, while there is also a shortage of nurses.[18] There aren't enough resources to prepare for disasters- the model has been to provide relief after disasters hit.[18]

Timeline

COVID-19 cases in Puerto Rico, United States  ()
     Deaths        Confirmed cases

Mar Mar Apr Apr May May Jun Jun Last 15 days Last 15 days

Date
# of cases
# of deaths
2020-03-13
3 0(n.a.)
2020-03-14
3(=) 0(n.a.)
2020-03-15
5(+67%) 0(n.a.)
2020-03-16
5(=) 0(n.a.)
2020-03-17
5(=) 0(n.a.)
2020-03-18
6(+20%) 0(n.a.)
2020-03-19
6(=) 0(n.a.)
2020-03-20
14(+133%) 0(n.a.)
2020-03-21
21(+50%) 1
2020-03-22
23(+10%) 1(=)
2020-03-23
31(+35%) 2(+100%)
2020-03-24
39(+26%) 2(=)
2020-03-25
51(+31%) 2(=)
2020-03-26
64(+25%) 2(=)
2020-03-27
79(+23%) 3(+50%)
2020-03-28
100(+27%) 3(=)
2020-03-29
127(+27%) 5(+67%)
2020-03-30
174(+37%) 6(+20%)
2020-03-31
239(+37%) 8(+33%)
2020-04-01
286(+20%) 11(+37%)
2020-04-02
316(+10%) 12(+9%)
2020-04-03
378(+20%) 15(+25%)
2020-04-04
452(+20%) 18(+20%)
2020-04-05
475(+5%) 20(+11%)
2020-04-06
513(+8%) 21(+5%)
2020-04-07
573(+12%) 23(+10%)
2020-04-08
620(+8%) 24(+4%)
2020-04-09
683(+10%) 33(+37%)
2020-04-10
725(+6%) 39(+18%)
2020-04-11
788(+9%) 42(+8%)
2020-04-12
897(+14%) 44(+5%)
2020-04-13
903(+0.7%) 45(+2%)
2020-04-14
923(+2%) 45(=)
2020-04-15
974(+6%) 51(+13%)
2020-04-16
1,043(+7%) 56(+10%)
2020-04-17
1,068(+2%) 58(+4%)
2020-04-18
1,118(+5%) 60(+3%)
2020-04-19
1,213(+8%) 62(+3%)
2020-04-20
1,252(+3%) 63(+2%)
2020-04-21
1,298(+3.7%) 64(+1,6%)
2020-04-22
1,378(+6.2%) 67(+4.7%)
2020-04-23
1,416(+2.7%) 69(+3.0%)
2020-04-24
1,276(=) 77(+12%)
2020-04-25
1,307(+2.4%) 83(+7.8%)
2020-04-26
​1,371(+4.9%) 84(+1.2%)
2020-04-27
1,389(+1.3%) 84(=)
2020-04-28
1,400(+0.8%) 86(+2.4%)
2020-04-29
1,433(+2.4%) 86(=)
2020-04-30
1,539(+7.4%) 92(+7.0%)
2020-05-01
1,575(+2.3%) 94(+2.2%)
2020-05-02
1,757(+11.5%) 95(+1.1%)
2020-05-03
1,808(+2.9%) 97(+2.1%)
2020-05-04
1,843(+1.9%) 97(=)
2020-05-05
1,924(+4.4%) 99(+2.1%)
2020-05-06
1,968(+2.3%) 99(=)
2020-05-07
2,031(+3.2%) 102(+3.0%)
2020-05-08
2,156(+6.2%) 107(+4.9%)
2020-05-09
2,173(+0.8%) 108(+0.9%)
2020-05-10
2,198(+1.1%) 111(+2.8%)
2020-05-11
2,256(+2.6%) 113(+1.8%)
2020-05-12
2,299(+1.9%) 114(+0.88%)
2020-05-13
2,329(+1.3%) 115(+0.88%)
2020-05-14
2,427(+4.2%) 117(+1.7%)
2020-05-15
2,542(+4.7%) 122(+4.3%)
2020-05-16
2,589(+1.8%) 122(=)
2020-05-17
2,646(+2.2%) 123(+0.82%)
2020-05-18
2,710(+2.4%) 124(+0.81%)
2020-05-19
2,805(+3.5%) 124(=)
2020-05-20
2,866(+2.2%) 125(+0.81%)
2020-05-21
2,913(+1.6%) 126(+0.80%)
2020-05-22
3,030(+4.0%) 126(=)
2020-05-23
3,100(+2.3%) 127(+0.79%)
2020-05-24
3,189(+2.9%) 127(=)
2020-05-25
3,260(+2.2%) 129(+1.6%)
2020-05-26
3,324(+2.0%) 129(=)
2020-05-27
3,397(+2.2%) 129(=)
2020-05-28
3,486(+2.6%) 131(+1.5%)
2020-05-29
3,647(+4.6%) 132(+0.76%)
2020-05-30
3,776(+3.5%) 136(+3%)
2020-05-31
3,873(+2.6%) 136(+0%)
2020-06-01
3,935(+1.6%) 138(+1.5%)
2020-06-02
4,023(+2.2%) 140(+1.4%)
2020-06-03
4,508(+12%) 140(+0%)
2020-06-04
4,620(+2.5%) 141(+0.71%)
2020-06-05
4,915(+6.4%) 142(+0.71%)
2020-06-06
4,985(+1.4%) 142(=)
2020-06-07
5,046(+1.2%) 142(=)
2020-06-08
5,185(+2.8%) 142(=)
2020-06-09
5,329(+2.8%) 143(+0.7%)
2020-06-10
5,352(+0.43%) 144(+0.7%)
2020-06-11
5,536(+3.4%) 146(+1.4%)
2020-06-12
5,690(+2.8%) 146(=)
2020-06-13
5,811(+2.1%) 147(+0.68%)
2020-06-14
5,890(+1.4%) 147(=)
2020-06-15
5,951(+1%) 147(=)
2020-06-16
6,003(+0.87%) 147(=)
2020-06-17
6,111(+1.8%) 147(=)
2020-06-18
6,195(+1.4%) 147(=)
2020-06-19
6,463(+4.3%) 147(=)
2020-06-20
6,525(+0.96%) 149(+1.4%)
2020-06-21
6,564(+0.6%) 149(=)
2020-06-22
6,685(+1.8%) 149(=)
2020-06-23
6,731(+0.69%) 149(=)
2020-06-24
6,820(+1.3%) 149(=)
Number of cases and deaths: Cumulative totals reported to date.

Sources:

Notes:

  • On 2020-04-24, due to double-counting, Puerto Rico Department of Health reworked the number of cases.[19]
Municipality [lower-alpha 1] Cases [lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 3] Deaths [lower-alpha 3] Recov. [lower-alpha 3][lower-alpha 4] Pop. Cases / 100k Ref.
78 / 78 7,250 153 3,754,939 193.1
Adjuntas 48 19,483 246.4
Aguada 34 41,959 81
Aguadilla 46 60,949 75.5
Aguas Buenas 59 28,659 205.9
Aibonito 42 25,900 162.2
Añasco 45 29,261 153.8
Arecibo 124 96,440 128.6
Arroyo 33 19,575 168.6
Barceloneta 26 24,816 104.8
Barranquitas 77 30,318 254
Bayamón 404 208,116 194.1
Cabo Rojo 75 50,917 147.3
Caguas 234 142,893 163.8
Camuy 37 35,159 105.2
Canóvanas 138 47,648 289.6
Carolina 328 176,762 185.6
Cataño 57 28,140 202.6
Cayey 108 48,119 224.4
Ceiba 26 13,631 190.7
Ciales 61 18,782 324.8
Cidra 74 43,480 170.2
Coamo 44 40,512 108.6
Comerío 46 20,778 221.4
Corozal 48 37,142 129.2
Culebra 2 0 0 1,818 110
Dorado 95 38,165 248.9
Fajardo 76 36,993 205.4
Florida 35 12,680 276
Guánica 34 19,427 175
Guayama 69 45,362 152.1
Guayanilla 58 21,581 268.8
Guaynabo 322 97,924 328.8
Gurabo 103 45,369 227
Hatillo 33 41,953 78.7
Hormigueros 29 17,250 168.1
Humacao 86 58,466 147.1
Isabela 37 45,631 81.1
Jayuya 72 16,642 432.6
Juana Díaz 80 79,897 100.1
Juncos 50 40,290 124.1
Lajas 42 25,753 163.1
Lares 77 30,753 250.4
Las Marías 18 9,881 182.2
Las Piedras 68 38,675 175.8
Loíza 50 30,060 166.3
Luquillo 40 20,068 199.3
Manatí 49 44,113 111.1
Maricao 17 0 0 6,276 270.9
Maunabo 24 12,225 196.3
Mayagüez 165 89,080 185.2
Moca 42 40,109 104.7
Morovis 63 32,610 193.2
Naguabo 43 26,720 160.9
Naranjito 75 30,402 246.7
Orocovis 73 23,423 311.7
Patillas 59 19,277 306.1
Peñuelas 25 24,282 103
Ponce 184 166,327 110.6
Quebradillas 40 25,919 154.3
Rincón 32 15,200 210.5
Río Grande 100 54,304 184.1
Sabana Grande 54 25,265 213.7
Salinas 102 31,078 328.2
San Germán 64 35,527 180.1
San Juan 939 395,326 237.5
San Lorenzo 65 41,058 158.3
San Sebastián 96 42,430 226.3
Santa Isabel 53 23,274 227.7
Toa Alta 158 74,066 213.3
Toa Baja 185 89,609 206.5
Trujillo Alto 167 74,842 223.1
Utuado 13 33,149 39.2
Vega Alta 78 39,951 195.2
Vega Baja 86 59,662 144.1
Vieques 22 0 0 9,301 236.5
Villalba 45 26,073 172.6
Yabucoa 36 37,941 94.9
Yauco 86 42,043 204.6
Unknown 179 n/a n/a
Outside of Puerto Rico 141 n/a n/a n/a n/a
Updated Jun 29, 2020
Data is publicly reported by Puerto Rico Department of Health[20][21]
  1. Municipality where individuals with a positive case was diagnosed. Location of original infection may vary.
  2. Reported cases includes presumptive and confirmed case. Actual case numbers are probably higher.
  3. "–" denotes that no data is currently available for that county, not that the value is zero.
  4. PRDH is not providing recovered case numbers.

January

Late January: Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport becomes one of twenty U.S. airports identified by U.S. Federal officials where travelers were to undergo additional screening. The screenings were to focus on passengers from Wuhan and included a form to be filled out by the traveler stating their travel, contacts in Wuhan, and the presence of any possible symptoms. Travelers will have their temperatures taken.[22]

February

February 29: Governor Wanda Vázquez Garced establishes a coronavirus task force to track potential cases.[23]

March

March 4: A Panamanian doctor and four companions arrive in San Juan, Puerto Rico after traveling to New York, Miami, and Panama. They attend the National Day of Salsa festival in San Juan on March 7 despite having a fever and feeling ill. On March 12, Vázquez requests all people who were in the VIP section of the Salsa venue to isolate if they had flu-like symptoms because they may have been exposed to the virus.[9]

March 8: A 68-year-old, Italian woman on the cruise ship Costa Luminosa sailing from Fort Lauderdale, Florida is put in isolation in a Puerto Rico hospital after showing symptoms of pneumonia. A test is sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).[24] Vázquez orders that all cruises arriving in Puerto Rico certify that no passengers meet the criteria for COVID-19.[25]

March 10: The Puerto Rico Department of Health reports that five cases are under investigation. According to the Secretary of Health, Rafael Rodríguez Mercado, the CDC received tests on March 10.[23] The five are an Italian couple on a cruise, a cruise ship passenger who was transported to Puerto Rico by the Coast Guard, a Puerto Rican man who had not travelled out of Puerto Rico and a missionary priest from Colegio María Auxiliadora, a Catholic school in Carolina, Puerto Rico.[26]

March 11: There were 19 potential coronavirus cases after it was reported that a group of 16 students and 3 sponsors from Robinson School were required to isolate after arriving from a trip to Mexico City, Mexico to attend a Model United Nations competition. The country of Mexico had reported 7 cases of COVID-19 during their stay, starting on March 4. They arrived in Puerto Rico on March 9 and were allowed to attend school the next day, March 10. None of the individuals who traveled to Mexico City were infected upon returning, despite have traveled through Tocumen International Airport in Panama City, Panama.[27]

March 12: As a preventive measure, Vázquez declares a state of emergency and activates the Puerto Rico National Guard. Puerto Rico has no confirmed cases of COVID-19.[23][28] The Government of Puerto Rico bars tourists from travelling to Vieques and Culebra, island municipalities popular with tourists. Only residents and those delivering supplies are allowed to travel to the islands.[29] Vázquez declares a curfew ordering people to remain in their home through March 30. People are only allowed out for emergencies. There are limited circumstances that people can come out to purchase essential items or obtain essential services from 5:00 am to 9:00 pm.[30][31]

Mid-march: Several universities including University of Puerto Rico, Universidad del Sagrado Corazón, Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico, Ana G. Méndez University, Interamerican University of Puerto Rico, and National University College cancel in-person classes and move to remote instruction.[32]

March 13: Puerto Rico has 17 suspected cases of COVID-19 and has sent tests to the CDC on March 9. Vázquez criticizes the CDC on March 13 for not having results in over four days.[33] However, later in the evening of March 13, Vázquez announces, at a press conference, that three cases have been confirmed: the 68-year-old Italian woman from the cruise ship Costa Luminosa and her 70-year-old husband (both tourists) are hospitalized in isolation at the Ashford Presbyterian Community Hospital in Condado,[4] as well as a 71-year-old Puerto Rican cancer patient in treatment at Auxilio Mutuo Hospital[5] whose relatives had traveled off the island.[34][35] During the evening of March 13, Vázquez closed all public schools for 14 days and bars cruise ships and ferries from the Dominican Republic from docking at Puerto Rico ports.[35]

March 13: Plans to take people's temperature as they enter Puerto Rico at 7 different points of entry are pending the receipt of 50 no-touch infrared thermometers.[36]

March 15: A fourth case of COVID-19 is confirmed and is an 87-year-old military veteran and California resident who was transferred to the Mayagüez Medical Center by United States Coast Guard helicopter after presenting symptoms on a cruise passing through the Mona Passage.[5] Vázquez orders all businesses, with the exception of grocers, supermarkets, gas stations, banking institutions, pharmacies, and medical companies to close.[30]

March 15: Puerto Rico Police commissioner Henry Escalera Rivera postpones all personnel training. Current cadets at the Police Academy will report to locations close to their residences to conduct administrative tasks at the barracks. Until further notice, several documents and certifications will not be issued: background and criminal checks and copies of police reports. The Criminal Record Office will not be offering in-person services and will instead send records through email, free of charge.[37]

March 15: A 65-year-old woman at an undisclosed location becomes the fifth confirmed case. Puerto Rico has 17 other suspected cases.[38]

March 16: Vázquez discusses the possibility of declaring martial law should the population not heed the curfew and rules imposed with the state of emergency. The governor had mandated the closure of all non-essential businesses for two weeks yet some companies had gone about with business as usual, opening their doors, prompting Vázquez to say "we can be much stricter."[39] Business owners are subject to a $5,000 fine and up to six months in jail if they don't abide by the curfew. On March 16, police fine a bar in Orocovis and carry out over two dozen enforcement actions.[40] Puerto Rican Police report making 36 arrests and filing 85 charges for violations during the three days since the curfew was enacted.[41]

March 17: Vázquez sends a letter to the Federal Aviation Administration with three independent requests. In a statement, she explained the letter seeks authorization to close airports without passenger screenings, limit airstrips for charter planes, and allow the island to limit air traffic to the military and vital services.[41] Police saw an increase in domestic violence incidents being reported.[42]

March 18: The sixth confirmed case is announced by a Veterans Hospital spokesperson. State epidemiologist Carmen Deseda reports there were 26 possible cases at the Veterans Hospital, 10 of which tested negative.[43]

March 21: The first death due to COVID-19 is recorded- the 68-year-old Italian woman who had been on the Costa Luminosa cruise ship from Florida, and who had underlying health issues.[44] Also, on March 21, in response to fake news that begins circulating from WhatsApp, people run to the streets, en masse, for mass shopping and hoarding. The fake news stated that the island's grocery stores would close shortly. The March 15 two-week curfew by Vázquez was defied by many due to the fear caused by the fake news, prompting an investigation by the FBI into who initiated the panicking news.[45] In other news, the 2020 Puerto Rico Democratic primary, originally scheduled for March 29, is postponed until April 26.[46]

March 25: The island announces death of a resident due to COVID-19. A 48-year-old female teacher from Rincón dies and because she was the wife of a police officer, all 30 officers on the force are quarantined at home. The curfew is extended to April 12. There are 60 confirmed cases and two deaths.[47]

March 30: The sixth death is recorded.[48]

March 31: The seventh and eighth are deaths recorded. Confirmed cases rise to 239.[49]

April

April 2: Police are enforcing the curfew by arresting drivers and towing cars. By this date, 507 people have been arrested for breaking the island-wide curfew.[50]

April 6: Reports indicate that 10 doctors have tested positive for the coronavirus.[51]

April 9: Seventeen businesses have lost their business license for failing to adhere to the island-wide curfew.[52]

April 10: Medical personnel in hospital emergency rooms in Yauco, Bayamón, Fajardo, and Humacao are using a clear plastic box around the head of the patient when patient is being tested for COVID-19, in order to protect personnel from contamination.[53]

April 21-April 24: The numbers being reported by different agencies in Puerto Rico came into question and on April 21, Orville Disdier Flores, the executive director at the Instituto de Estadísticas de Puerto Rico (PR Statistics Institute), stated that some of the numbers being reported were incorrect, that some cases had been double-counted and that they were working on correcting the errors.[54] On April 23 the numbers were 12680 conducted tests, 1416 tested positive, 69 deaths, and 1940 pending results[6] but on April 24 the numbers were updated to reflect 1276 tested positive and 77 deaths.[1]

May

May 27: On May 27, Érica Rodríguez, a 27-year-old became the youngest person to die of coronavirus in Puerto Rico.[55]

June

July

Government response

March 11: Caribbean Business reports that the United States Department of Health and Human Services will be awarding nearly $5.9 million to Puerto Rico to combat COVID-19.[56]

March 12: At a press conference, Governor Vázquez declares a state of emergency and activates the National Guard. She states that National Guard personnel will be stationed at the Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport and the Port of San Juan to screen arriving passengers for symptoms.[23] The declaration also orders all mass gatherings and events in March to be postponed or canceled. Vázquez expresses frustration at the CDC delays in testing.[28]

March 13: The Secretary of Health of Puerto Rico, Rafael Rodríguez resigns.[57] Congressperson Jenniffer González questions why Vázquez removed the Secretary during a time of crisis, stating that it could signal to federal legislators that the Puerto Rico Department of Health was incompetent and unprepared for the crisis.[58]

Puerto Rico public schools are closed for 14 days.[35]

The House of Representatives of Puerto Rico approves House Bill 2428 to amend Puerto Rico Law 180–1998 to establish unpaid emergency leave of up to 20 days for employees with a suspected or actual diagnosis of a pandemic illness.[59] The bill is awaiting consideration by the Senate of Puerto Rico.[59]

March 14: Congressperson González successfully requests the CDC to include Puerto Rico and other Territories of the United States in their digital alert system.[60] González states she will remain in Washington, D.C., despite having previously scheduled meetings in Puerto Rico, so she could work with the United States Congress.[58]

March 15: Vázquez issues an island-wide curfew through March 30 and closes all businesses not involved in food sales, medicine, or banking.[5] and the police commissioner postponed personnel training.[37]

José Aponte Hernández, a former Speaker of the House of Representatives of Puerto Rico says he would request from Jenniffer González Colón (the resident commissioner of Puerto Rico) for funds to get an old hospital up and running. They discuss the possibility of using an old hospital located on the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station located in Ceiba (a small eastern municipality), to treat persons affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in Puerto Rico.[61]

March 19: Journalists from the Center for Investigative Journalism (CPI) in Puerto Rico state that Carmen Deseda, who had become more visible in the press since the resignation of Rafael Rodríguez Mercado, does not have the credentials to be a state epidemiologist. In response, the governor of Puerto Rico stated it is a team approach and that she supports Carmen Deseda in her role.[62] On the same day, a group of Puerto Rican scientists sign and circulate a document asking for Deseda's resignation saying she had shown a lack of competence in the past and was not up to the task of dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic.[63]

March 25: Acting minister of the Puerto Rico Department of Health places Encijar Hassan Ríos, an epidemiologist, in charge of leading the island's COVID-19 task force.[64]

March 27: Vázquez tightens restrictions around the curfew. Motorists are only allowed out (for emergency shopping) based on the ending digit of their car license plate: license plates ending in 0,2,4,6,8 are allowed out for emergency errands on Mondays, Wednesdays, or Fridays, and license plates ending in odd numbers are allowed out for emergencies errands on Tuesdays, Thursdays, or Saturdays. No one is allowed out on Sundays. People who defy the new rules will be met with a fine of $5,000 or arrest.[65]

April 3: Non-essential businesses that open for business are defying the stay-at-home curfew, and are losing their business license.[66]

April 8: Governor Vázquez asks the Federal Aviation Administration to stop flights from "hot spots" states to San Juan, Puerto Rico. The states she wants to restrict travel from include New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Illinois, and Florida.[12] The governor also decides to review the death count based on CDC guidelines in order to avoid underreporting deaths due to COVID-19 and testing on the island lags.[11]

May 1: Governor Vázquez announced that after much back and forth, the US Treasury Department approved the proposal set forth by the Puerto Rico Department of Treasury on the distribution of $1,200 payments to eligible individuals, which is part of the CARES act signed into law on March 27, 2020 by U.S. President Donald Trump.[67]

May 4: Governor Vázquez announced that people who have recovered should donate plasma and blood, saying blood banks were in need of donations and a government official stated they were hoping to be able to soon provide a glimpse into the number of recovered from COVID-19.[68]

May 5: Jessica Irizarry from the Department of Health explained that each of the 7 regions has a regional epidemiologist and team tasked with tracking, investigating the cases in Puerto Rico. Irizarry stated they have done contact tracing on 2000 positive cases.[69]

June 11: - Vázquez announced the reopening of Puerto Rico's sectors except for external tourism, after an 88-day lockdown.[70]

Statistics

COVID-19 Testing results as of March 23, 2020 at 10 p.m., by the PR Dept. of Health.
Map of PR regions defined by the PR Department of Health

The Puerto Rico Department of Health divides Puerto Rico into 7 regions each with its own epidemiologist and team.[69]

As of May 27, there were 3,397 confirmed coronavirus case and 129 recorded deaths.[71][72]

The number of people recovered, tests administered, and tests pending had been provided in the early stages of the pandemic but was not available since April 24, 2020.[73][6] On May 4, a government representative giving a status with the governor said they might be able to begin providing the number of recovered in the near future.[68]

2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Cases in Puerto Rico[5][4][38][43][6]

As of May 27, 2020 from various sources including the Puerto Rico Department of Health,[6] the PR COVID-19 Dashboard,[1] and the Puerto Rico Medical COVID-19 Task Force:[74]

Regions by the PR Dept. of Health Municipalities Confirmed Cases by Region
Arecibo Arecibo, Barceloneta, Camuy, Ciales, Florida, Hatillo, Lares, Manatí, Morovis, Quebradillas, Utuado, Vega Baja 278
Bayamón Barranquitas, Bayamón, Cataño, Comerío, Corozal, Dorado, Naranjito, Orocovis, Toa Alta, Toa Baja, Vega Alta 677
Caguas Aguas Buenas, Aibonito, Caguas, Cayey, Cidra, Gurabo, Humacao, Juncos, Las Piedras, Maunabo, Naguabo, San Lorenzo, Yabucoa 464
Fajardo Ceiba, Culebra, Fajardo, Luquillo, Río Grande, Vieques 116
Mayagüez Aguada, Aguadilla, Añasco, Cabo Rojo, Hormigueros, Isabela, Lajas, Las Marías, Maricao, Mayagüez, Moca, Rincón, Sabana Grande, San Germán, San Sebastián 387
Metro Canóvanas, Carolina, Guaynabo, Loíza, San Juan, Trujillo Alto 916
Ponce Adjuntas, Arroyo, Coamo, Guánica, Guayama, Guayanilla, Jayuya, Juana Díaz, Patillas, Peñuelas, Ponce, Salinas, Santa Isabel, Villalba, Yauco 452
US[1] 13
Not available[1] 94
Total 3,397[75]
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gollark: You need a compass, straightedge, and a bucket containing between 6 and 83 bees.
gollark: I don't know exactly what it was running when working for the NHS, I just found some configuration which wasn't sufficiently wiped which mentioned NHS domains.

See also

References

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