The novel coronavirus has infected at least 427 known people in New Jersey, reaching into all but three of the state’s 21 counties.

New Jersey officials on Wednesday announced 162 new cases since the previous day and reported that two more women had died, bringing the state’s death toll from COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, to five.

The pandemic has already brought much of the state to a grinding halt with malls and entertainment venues ordered closed indefinitely, eateries ordered to provide take-out or delivery service only, schools ordered closed, and all residents asked to stay home from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. every night. The same measures are being taken in Pennsylvania, New York and Connecticut.

With massive layoffs in the restaurant industry, the state's unemployment lines were jammed this week as federal officials hammer out an economic stimulus deal to help Americans and industries.

Even religious institutions have postponed mass gatherings and celebrations to keep with Murphy’s order to keep gatherings of people to less than 50 people.

On Tuesday, police in Lakewood broke up two wedding parties that each had more than 50 guests.

Murphy on Wednesday said parents need to make sure their children also weren’t having house parties or underground events.

“Simply put, this is not a time for anyone to be bringing people together whether it be a wedding, a funeral … a religious rite of passage, a large birthday and anniversary or other party,” Murphy said during his daily news briefing.

“The fact of the matter is we mean it when we say 50 people.”

The two women whose deaths were revealed Wednesday lived in Essex and Hudson counties. Both are in their 60s and had underlying medical issues, officials said. More information about them was not immediately available.

New Jersey's cases have affected people ages 5 to 95.

State health officials, meanwhile, continue to work toward getting more hospital beds and space to deal with a potential surge of people seeking hospitalizing. More than half of all the people who have tested positive for the virus in New Jersey have required hospitalization, although that figure may change as testing becomes more widespread in the weeks ahead.

Health Commissioner Judith Persichilli said Wednesday that 199 additional hospital beds were being made available in hardest-hit North Jersey, 11 additional beds in Central Jersey and 50 in South Jersey.

Authorities are looking to reopen Underwood-Memorial Hospital in Woodbury, which would add 300 beds to deal with general acute care.

The state was considering eight hospital facilities that have closed in the past decade to see if any could be brought online. The Woodbury hospital was the one most recently closed.

Persichilli said Wednesday that the state also was looking at facilities that are under construction as well as vacant or underused wings of existing hospitals.

Murphy on Tuesday had said that the state would call on the Army Corps of Engineers for help in potentially setting up field hospitals.

Persichilli, meanwhile, signed an executive directive to authorize hospitals to use certified mobile intensive care paramedics in their facilities.

The need for hospital beds and facilities will become critical as the virus spreads, which is why government authorities have been promoting social distancing, self-quarantines and curfews in order to tamp down the spread of the disease and prevent medical facilities from being overwhelmed by patients.

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Sergio Bichao is deputy digital editor at New Jersey 101.5. Send him news tips: Call 609-359-5348 or email sergio.bichao@townsquaremedia.com.

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