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Coronavirus in USA

US warning on herd immunity

Dr Anthony Fauci, the top disease expert in the US, has warned that the US is "unlikely" to develop herd immunity to the coronavirus once a vaccine is available.

He said this was due to the combination of a vaccine that is only partially effective, and the large number of Americans who will refuse to get it.

Dr Fauci, who leads the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said he would happily "settle" for a vaccine that is only 70% to 75% effective.

According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), herd immunity is reached when "a sufficient proportion of a population is immune to an infectious disease (through vaccination and/or prior illness) to make its spread from person to person unlikely".

Last week, Fauci predicted that a Covid-19 vaccination would be available by early 2021.
 
Georgia breaks record in new cases

For the third day in a row, the US state of Georgia has broken its record for new coronavirus cases in a single day.

On Sunday, the state reported 2,225 confirmed cases - topping 2,000 for the first time.

Georgia was among the most aggressive states to reopen, lifting its shelter-at-home order on 30 April, and allowing customers to return to barbershops, salons, bars and restaurants.

But since then it has seen a persistent uptick in new cases.

Georgia has now recorded more than 77,000 cases and 2,778 deaths.
 
California shuts bars and pubs in seven counties

California Governor Gavin Newsom has ordered bars, breweries and pubs to be closed in seven counties - including Los Angeles - and recommended that they close in nine other counties as coronavirus cases surge in the state.

Newsom's order comes two days after Texas and Florida - where new cases are soaring - also ordered bars to shut.

"Covid-19 is still circulating in California, and in some parts of the state, growing stronger,” Newsom said in a written statement. “That’s why it is critical we take this step to limit the spread of the virus in the counties that are seeing the biggest increases."

Experts say bars can be especially bad for the transmission of coronavirus, as large crowds gather and intermingle, patrons lower their masks to drink and raise their voices over loud music - possibly spreading respiratory droplets further.

On Sunday, coronavirus cases in California topped 215,000
 
Florida reports more than 5,000 new cases

The Florida Department of Health reported 5,266 new coronavirus cases on Monday, bringing the state's total to 146,341 infections.

It comes amid a massive upsurge in new cases in Florida and only two days after the state set its newest record for single-day cases at 9,585.

Another 28 coronavirus-related deaths were also reported on Monday, bringing the state's total to 3,447.

The median age for new cases reported on Monday was 37 years old, significantly lower than in the earlier days of the pandemic.

Meanwhile, beaches throughout southern Florida have been closed for the 4 July Independence Day weekend in an effort to keep transmission rates down.
 
New York governor Andrew Cuomo has said president Donald Trump should issue an executive order mandating that people wear masks in public, and he should “lead by example” by wearing one himself.

He told a media briefing:

The other states are just starting to do it now, states that were recalcitrant, governors who said ‘we don’t need to do this, masks don’t work.’

Now they’re doing a 180...let the president have the same sense and do that as an executive order.
 
Los Angeles records 'alarming' surge in COVID-19 cases to more than 100,000

Los Angeles County recorded an “alarming” one-day spike of nearly 3,000 new COVID-19 infections on Monday, taking its total to more than 100,000 cases, public health officials said, warning that hospitals could soon be overwhelmed.

Los Angeles and neighboring counties have become a new epicenter in the pandemic as cases and hospitalizations have surged there despite California Governor Gavin Newsom’s strict order last week requiring masks in nearly all public spaces.

“The alarming increases in cases, positivity rates and hospitalizations signals that we, as a community, need to take immediate action to slow the spread of COVID-19,” Barbara Ferrer, director of public health for Los Angeles County, said in a statement announcing the sharp upswing.

“Otherwise, we are quickly moving toward overwhelming our healthcare system and seeing even more devastating illness and death,” Ferrer said.

The county reported a single-day record of 2,903 new cases.

California, which on Sunday ordered bars in Los Angeles and six other counties to close, is among several U.S. states including Florida, Texas and Arizona battling a new wave of infections as the nation emerges from weeks of clamp-downs on residents and businesses

Texas and Florida ordered the closure of all their recently reopened bars on Friday.

Democrats leading the biggest metropolitan areas in Texas on Monday renewed calls for Governor Greg Abbott to give them the authority to make decisions on mandatory mask wearing and social distancing to protect their hard-hit populations.

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner asked Abbott to give local leaders back the powers they had in April, until an executive order from the governor nixed it: their ability to fine people who do not follow rules mandating masks and social distancing.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...-cases-to-more-than-100000-idUKKBN2401YI?il=0
 
Arizona closes bars, gyms and cinemas

The governor of the US state of Arizona has told bars, cinemas, gyms, water parks and nightclubs they have to close again.

Doug Ducey says the closures are necessary after coronavirus cases and hospitalisations reached new highs over the weekend, and he expects the numbers to get worse.

"We simply cannot let up," he told a press briefing. "We're not going back to normal anytime soon."
 
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Record number of cases in US

The US has seen record numbers of new cases in recent days.

At least 16 states have paused or rolled back their reopening plans.

Arizona is the latest to tighten lockdown restriction, following other states like Texas and Florida, where the number of coronavirus cases have spiked again.

Arizona Governor Doug Ducey has ordered the closure of bars, nightclubs, gyms, cinemas and water parks until at least 27 July, after the state recorded its highest daily number of new cases, more than 3,800 on Monday.

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Fauci: 'US could easily see 100,000 daily cases'

Dr Anthony Fauci tells the US Senate hearing in Washington that "clearly we are not in total control right now" of the US pandemic.

"We’re going to continue to be in a lot of trouble" if people don't start social distancing and wearing masks, he warns.

Daily cases are currently at around 40,000 per day.

The daily infection rate "could easily go up to 100,000 a day," he continues, saying he "would not be surprised" to see such a high rate of infection.

"It is going to be very disturbing, I will guarantee you that."
 
Eight states added to New York governor's quarantine order

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has ordered people arriving from an additional eight states to quarantine for 14 days.

The eight additional states are California, Georgia, Iowa, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada and Tennessee, all of which have growing caseloads, Cuomo said in a statement.
 
Mount Rushmore Trump event with no social distancing

South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem has said that people attending an Independence Day event at Mount Rushmore with President Donald Trump will not be required to practise social distancing.

Speaking on Fox News, Ms Noem also said that free face masks would be given to attendees, but their use would not be enforced.

State officials have told people "to focus on personal responsibility," she added, and that attendees "[had] the opportunity to make a decision that they're comfortable with."

President Trump is expected to deliver remarks at the celebration, a day before America's 4 July holiday.
 
U.S. coronavirus cases double in June in at least 10 states

Coronavirus cases more than doubled in at least 10 U.S. states, including Florida and Texas in the month of June, a Reuters analysis on Tuesday showed.

Arizona recorded the biggest jump in cases for the month at 294%, followed by South Carolina and Arkansas. Cases also more than doubled in Alabama, Nevada, North Carolina, Oklahoma and Utah.

Nationally cases rose by at least 43% and deaths increased by 20%. Several states have yet to report cases on Tuesday. (Open tmsnrt.rs/3dM9TLE in an external browser for a Reuters interactive)

While much of the world appears over the worst of the pandemic, the United States and a few other countries are still seeing huge daily spikes.

In the six months since the World Health Organization (WHO) first reported a cluster of mysterious pneumonia cases in Wuhan, China, more than 500,000 people have died from the coronavirus, including over 126,000 Americans.

A strong national response, stringent lockdowns and mandatory mask wearing in public helped bring the pandemic under control in much of Asia and Europe. In the United States, wearing masks has become a divisive political issue and many states began reopening businesses without having met government health benchmarks for doing so safely.

In the past week, 21 U.S. states reported rates of people testing positive for the virus above the 5% level that the WHO has flagged as concerning. Arizona has the highest rate in the country at 24%. (Open tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR in an external browser for a Reuters interactive)

Cases increased by less than 10% in June in just four states - New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Jersey.

New York, once the epicenter of the U.S. epidemic, saw cases rise by about 6% in June - the lowest rate in the country - after strict lockdown and social distancing measures were put in place to help bring the disease under control.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-h...double-in-14-states-during-june-idUKKBN2412PN
 
So US is recording spikes and highest cases than ever, but why has the death rate gone down? People are not dying like they were back in April. Am I missing something here?
 
So US is recording spikes and highest cases than ever, but why has the death rate gone down? People are not dying like they were back in April. Am I missing something here?

The spike in cases just started in the past week or so. Sadly, we'll see an increase in deaths in approx. 2-3 weeks.
 
US cases rise by 43,644 to 2,624,873

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported 2,624,873 cases of coronavirus, an increase of 43,644 cases from its previous count, and said that the number of deaths had risen by 560 to 127,299.
 
So US is recording spikes and highest cases than ever, but why has the death rate gone down? People are not dying like they were back in April. Am I missing something here?

I believe this rise in cases is being seen in younger folks, who have a lower death rate.
 
Donald Trump believes contagion will 'sort of just disappear' at some point

As infections in the United States continue to soar, President Donald Trump has reiterated his belief that the contagion will “at some point... sort of just disappear, I hope”, AFP reported.

But the US leader who has yet to be seen in public wearing a face mask during the pandemic added he would have “no problem” doing so.
 
The top US expert in infectious diseases, Dr Anthony Fauci, has expressed his concern over the rise in coronavirus cases in the country, warning of the risk of a greater outbreak if the latest surge is not controlled.

"We got hit very badly, worse than any country, with regard to the number of cases and the number of deaths. The problem we're facing now is that in an attempt to so-called reopen or open the government and get it back to some form of normality, we're seeing very disturbing spikes in different individual states in the US," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

"We've got to get that under control or we risk an even greater outbreak in the United States."

Comparing the situation in the US to how some European countries controlled the spread of the virus, Dr Fauci said: "They closed down to the tune of about 97% lockdown. In the US, even in the most strict lockdown, only about 50% of the country locked down. That allowed the perpetuation of the outbreak."

"We need to engender some societal responsibility in people, particularly the younger people," he explained, noting that young people were less likely to be seriously affected by Covid-19 but could still spread the disease.
 
US jobless rate now at 11%

The latest US jobs figures have just come out. The economy added 4.8m jobs in June.

The unemployment rate also dropped to 11.1% from 13.3% in May, according to the Labor Department. Americans filed 1.4m new unemployment benefits claims.

The jobless rate remains historically high, and is far above the 3.5% seen in February before the pandemic reached the US.
 
Florida records over 10,000 new cases in a day

Florida shattered records on Thursday when it reported over 10,000 new coronavirus cases, the biggest one-day increase in the state since the pandemic started, according to a Reuters tally.

Outbreaks in Texas, California, Florida and Arizona have send cases rising at rates not seen since April.

In June, Florida infections rose by 168% or over 95,000 new cases. The percentage of tests coming back positive has skyrocketed to 15% from 4% at the end of May.

Home to 21 million residents, Florida has reported more new daily coronavirus cases than any European country had at the height of their outbreaks.

To contain the outbreak, the state has closed bars and some beaches but the governor has resisted requiring masks statewide in public or reimposing a lockdown.

Only one other state has reported more than 10,000 new cases in a single day. New York recorded 12,847 new infections on 10 April, three weeks after the state implemented a strict lockdown that closed most businesses. While the state has relaxed many measures, it requires masks in public and mandates anyone arriving from 16 other US states with high infections to self-quarantine for two weeks.
 
More than 40 headteachers from San Francisco have been told to self-isolate, after being exposed to coronavirus at an in-person meeting
 
What's the latest from the US?

The US has recorded its largest single-day jump in infections since the start of the pandemic, with more than 53,000 new cases reported yesterday

Cases are currently rising in 37 out of 50 states, leading governors to roll-back their plans to end lockdowns

Southern states are seeing a particularly large surge. Over the past week, Arizona has the highest average daily increase in cases per million people

Texas reported about 8,000 new confirmed cases of the virus yesterday. The state's governor has now ordered people to wear face coverings in public

Chicago, in the midwestern state of Illinois, has said everyone who travels to the city from states where cases are surging will need to quarantine for 14 days upon arrival. The new rule will take effect on Monday

President Donald Trump said the surge in cases in the country was due to testing being "so massive and so good, far bigger and better than any other country"

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Several U.S. states post record COVID cases, curfew ordered in Miami

Alabama and several other states reported record increases in coronavirus cases on Friday as Florida’s most populous county imposed a curfew ahead of the Independence Day weekend and Arkansas joined a push towards mandating mask-wearing in public.

North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Alaska all saw new daily highs in cases of COVID-19, the illness caused by the novel coronavirus, while Texas hit a new peak for hospitalizations, with one doctor calling for a “complete lockdown” in the state to get the virus under control.

The recent surge, most pronounced in southern and western states, has alarmed public health officials, who urged caution ahead of a July 4th holiday weekend to celebrate the Declaration of Independence of the United States in 1776.

North Carolina reported 951 hospitalizations and 2,099 cases, both record highs.

Bill Saffo, mayor of Wilmington, North Carolina, said many infections had been traced to large gatherings and predicted a further jump after the holiday weekend as people flouted guidelines on social distancing and masks.

“We know that the spread is going to happen. We know probably in about two weeks we’ll see a spike from the July 4th weekend,” Saffo told CNN.

Despite the jump in infections, the daily death rate in the United States has remained relatively flat, a reflection of the growing proportion of positive tests among younger, healthier people who are less prone to severe outcomes.

However, U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams warned that the impact on fatalities from the recent surge, which started in mid-June, had yet to be seen. “Deaths lag at least two weeks and can lag even more,” he told “Fox & Friends” on Friday.

His remarks came hours ahead of a trip by President Donald Trump to Mount Rushmore in South Dakota where he is expected to give a speech to thousands of supporters in which he will rail against the “left wing mob” and view a fireworks display at the landmark depicting four U.S. presidents in stone.

The visit has drawn criticism from Native Americans, who say the remote area is sacred to them, as well as health experts who discourage large congregations of people.

Trump, whose handling of the pandemic has come under harsh criticism from Democrats and some Republicans, has repeatedly sought to dismiss the jump in cases as a function of more tests and again this week predicted the virus would “disappear.”

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...es-curfew-ordered-in-miami-idUKKBN24429C?il=0
 
US marks another new daily record for infections

The United States reported 57,683 COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours, a tally by Johns Hopkins University showed, making Friday the third consecutive day the country logged more than 50,000 new cases.

The Baltimore-based university's tracker showed the total number of cases since the pandemic reached the US at 2,793,022.


The university also recorded a further 728 fatalities, bringing the total US death toll to 129,405.
 
Florida, Texas post daily COVID-19 records as 'positivity' rates climb higher

Florida and Texas, two states that have emerged as the latest hot spots of the U.S. coronavirus outbreak, both reported new single-day record increases in confirmed COVID-19 cases on Saturday - with nearly 20,000 additional infections combined.

For a second straight day, Texas also registered an all-time high in the number of people hospitalized with the highly contagious respiratory illness - 7,890 patients after 238 new admissions over the past 24 hours.

By comparison, New York state - the U.S. epicenter of the outbreak months ago, reported just 844 hospitalizations on Saturday, far below the nearly 19,000 hospital beds occupied by COVID-19 patients at the peak of its coronavirus crisis.

During the first four days of July alone, a total of 14 states have posted a daily record increases in the number of individuals testing positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus that has killed nearly 130,000 Americans.

And in a further sign the virus is spreading, at least 18 states, including the three most highly populated - California, Texas and Florida - have posted ominous rates of infection as a percentage of diagnostic tests over the past two weeks.

The recent surge, most pronounced in Southern and Western states that were among the latest to impose mandatory business restrictions at the outset of the pandemic and the first to relax them, has alarmed public health officials ahead of weekend July Fourth holiday celebrations.

The majority of Independence Day fireworks displays across the country have been canceled, as state and local authorities urged Americans to avoid large crowds, practice safe social distancing and wear face coverings while out in public.

Florida’s confirmed coronavirus cases rose by a record 11,458 on Saturday, the state’s health department said, marking the second time in three days that its caseload jumped by more than 10,000 in 24 hours.

The latest case numbers in Florida, which has yet to report statewide hospitalizations, surpassed the highest daily tally reported by any European county during the height of the coronavirus outbreak there.

In Texas, meanwhile, the number of new cases rose by a record 8,258 on Saturday. North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Alaska, Missouri, Idaho and Alabama all registered new daily highs on Friday.

Despite the rising number of infections, the average daily U.S. death toll has gradually declined in recent weeks, reflecting the growing proportion of positive tests among younger, healthier people less prone to severe illness when infected.

OMINOUS SIGN OF VIRUS TRANSMISSIONS
Still, a growing number of states are reporting a troubling upward trend in the percentage of diagnostic tests that come back positive - a key indicator of community spread that experts refer to as the positivity rate.

The World Health Organization considers positivity rates above 5% to be concerning, and widely watched data from Johns Hopkins University shows at least 18 states with average rates over the past two weeks exceeding that level and climbing.

Eleven states averaged double-digit rates over the past seven days – Arizona (26%), Florida (18%), Nevada (16%), South Carolina (15%), Alabama (15%), Texas (14.5%), Mississippi (14%), Georgia (13%), Idaho 11%), Kansas (10%) and Utah (10%). That was up from four states with double-digit rates two weeks ago.

Even in California, which led the nation with statewide workplace closures and stay-at-home orders issued on March 19, the positivity rate has crept up to an average of 7% over the past week.

Against that backdrop, Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez imposed an indefinite nightly curfew starting Friday and halted the reopenings of casinos and other entertainment venues. Earlier this week, Miami-Dade and neighboring Broward County, the state’s two most populous counties, required residents to wear face coverings in public.

Arkansas on Friday joined a push toward mandating mask-wearing in public. Governor Asa Hutchinson authorized the state’s cities and towns to enact a “model ordinance” requiring face coverings.

The move came a day after Texas Governor Greg Abbott ordered face masks worn in most public places, reversing his stance following an alarming rise in infections.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly sought to minimize the jump in confirmed cases as a function of greater testing and again this week predicted that the virus would “disappear.”

“If you test 40,000,000 people, you are going to have many cases that, without the testing (like other countries), would not show up every night on the Fake Evening News,” Trump wrote on Twitter on Saturday.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-h...s-positivity-rates-climb-higher-idUKKBN2450JS
 
U.S. CDC reports 2,785,023 coronavirus cases, 129,397 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Saturday reported 2,785,023 cases of new coronavirus, an increase of 52,492 cases from its previous count, and said that the number of deaths had risen by 749 to 129,397.

The CDC reported its tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by a new coronavirus, as of 4 pm ET on July 3 compared with its previous report a day earlier. (bit.ly/31sxbnj)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...avirus-cases-129397-deaths-idUKKBN2450O8?il=0
 
45,300 new daily cases reported in US

The US has dipped under 50,000 new coronavirus cases for the first time in four days, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University, although experts fear celebrations for Independence Day weekend will continue to fuel the nation’s surging outbreak.

Johns Hopkins counted 45,300 new coronavirus infections in the US on Saturday, after three days in which the daily count reached as high as 54,500 new cases. A word of caution, though, the lower figure on Saturday does not necessarily mean the situation in the US is improving, as it could be due to reduced reporting while the country enjoys a national holiday.

The United States continues to have the most infections and virus-related deaths in the world, with 2.8 million cases and nearly 130,000 dead, according to the university.

Experts say the true toll of the pandemic is significantly higher, due to people who died before they were tested and missed mild cases. To show just how steep the current infection curve is in the US, the country was reporting under 20,000 new infections a day as recently as 15 June.
 
Latest updates from the US

Despite a nationwide rise in coronavirus cases, President Donald Trump touted the country’s “progress” against the covid-19 disease in a 4 July speech

The US has reported 2.8 million cases and 129,000 deaths since the pandemic began. More than 11,000 new cases of the virus have been reported in the past 24 hours in Florida alone

Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr Stephen Hahn has said it is “too early to tell” whether Florida will be safe for the Republican National Convention next month, CNN reports

New York City is preparing for phase three of opening on Monday. Under the plan, nail salons, tattoo and massage parlours will be allowed to reopen however indoor dining will remain banned

Across the border in Mexico, the death toll from coronavirus rose to 30,366 on Saturday, making it the country with the fifth highest number of fatalities in the global pandemic
 
The Mayor of Austin, Texas has warned that hospitals in the city could be “overrun” within two weeks if cases continue increasing at the current rate.

Speaking on CNN’s State of the Union, Steve Adler warned that places in intensive care could possibly fill up within 10 days.

“If we don’t change the trajectory, we are within two weeks of having our hospitals overrun,” he said.

The number of Covid-19 patients currently hospitalised in Texas has risen to 7,890, up from 3,247 two weeks ago.

In the first four days of July, 15 US states have reported record increases in new cases of the virus which has infected nearly three million Americans and killed almost 130,000 people.
 
U.S. CDC reports 2,841,906 coronavirus cases, 129,576 deaths

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Sunday reported 2,841,906 cases of new coronavirus, an increase of 52,228 cases from its previous count, and said the number of deaths had risen by 271 to 129,576.

The CDC reported its tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by a new coronavirus, as of 4 p.m. EDT on July 4 compared with its previous report a day earlier. (bit.ly/38rDity)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-h...coronavirus-cases-129576-deaths-idUKKBN2460RQ
 
This country is screwed.

I think this will just accelerate America’s decline which was already on its way but now the fault lines are so much clearer
 
Outbreak infects more than 100 at US university fraternity

More than 100 university students who are members of fraternities and sororities have been infected by the coronavirus, according to a statement from the University of Washington and the city of Seattle.

Fraternities are social clubs for male university pupils and sororities are for females.

A joint statement from the university and the city said that 121 students tested positive for Covid-19 - with 112 of them residents of the Greek Row section of campus.

There are over 1,000 pupils living in the Greek Row area. Many are now being asked to self-isolate and be tested.

Fraternities and sororities are private organisations, with national headquarters and chapters on some university campuses. Members must participate in activities, which often involve large amounts of drinking, in order to foster bonding that will lead to networking opportunities after graduation.

As of Sunday, 171 students, seven faculty members and 35 staff members at the University of Washington have been infected. The current plan is for the campus to open for in-person classes in the fall.
 
More than 130,000 people have now died of Covid-19 in the US, according to the tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.

The grim milestone now means that more than twice as many people have died in the US than in Brazil, which has the second-highest death toll.

The US has an estimated population of 328m, against Brazil's of around 210m.

The US also has almost 2.9 million confirmed cases of coronavirus.

New York has the highest death toll of the states, with more than 32,000
 
The US has suffered 235 more deaths and registered 44,361 new cases, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has said. That takes the respective totals to 129,811 and 2,886,267.
 
New York’s governor Andrew Cuomo on Monday called on Donald Trump to not be a “co-conspirator” of the coronavirus and acknowledge the “major problem” it poses as cases spiked in dozens of states after some rushed to reopen, Reuters reports.

The number of US coronavirus deaths exceeded 130,000 on Monday (see 3.59pm.), following a massive surge of new cases that has put Trump’s handling of the crisis under the microscope and derailed efforts to restart the economy.

“So, Mr. President, don’t be a co-conspirator of Covid,” Cuomo said at a news briefing.

Acknowledge to the American people that Covid exists, it is a major problem, it’s going to continue until we admit it and each of us stands up to do our part.

Cuomo said the president was “enabling” the virus if he failed to acknowledge the severity of the situation, and slammed the president’s comments that the surge in US cases was due to increased testing.

“He makes up facts. He makes up science,” Cuomo said, citing several past Trump statements on the virus such it would disappear like a miracle as the weather got warmer.

He said all those things, none of them were true. And now we have a problem in 38 states because some people believe him.

Cuomo said coronavirus hospitalisations in New York dropped to 817 - the lowest since 18 March - and nine people died from Covid-19 on Sunday, adding:

The numbers have actually declined since we started reopening.

Cuomo warned about complacency now that the worst seemed to be over in New York, pointing to reports of some July Fourth celebrations, including in Manhattan and on Fire Island and upstate, where revellers ignored social distancing and face covering rules. He said:

That curve was purely a function of what we did. If we change what we’re doing, you’re going to change the trajectory of the virus.
 
Hospitals approaching capacity as Miami closes resturants

Hospitals rapidly approached capacity in Florida and Texas, and the Miami area closed restaurants again because of the surging coronavirus, as the US emerged from a Fourth of July weekend of picnics, pool parties and beach outings that health officials fear could fuel the rapidly worsening outbreak.

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US virus death toll passes 130,000: Johns Hopkins tally

The United States passed another grim coronavirus milestone as the death toll from the virus climbed past 130,000, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.


US unemployment drops in June - five million people back at work
The country has had 2,888,729 COVID-19 cases and 130,007 deaths as of midday in Washington, the university reported.

The world's hardest hit country, both in confirmed cases and deaths, the United States has experienced a resurgence of the disease since June that has forced several states to suspend their phased economic reopenings.

On Saturday, the number of new daily infections hit a record 57,683.
 
The US saw a 27% increase in new cases in the week to 5 July, compared to the previous seven days, with 24 states reporting positivity test rates above the level that the World Health Organization has flagged as concerning.

Nationally, 7.5% of diagnostic tests came back positive last week, up from 7% the prior week and 5% two weeks ago, according to a Reuters analysis of data from The Covid Tracking Project, a volunteer-run effort to track the outbreak.

The WHO considers a positivity rate above 5% to be a cause for concern because it suggests there are more cases in the community that have not yet been uncovered, Reuters has reported.

Deaths, which health experts say are a lagging indicator, continued to fall nationally to 3,447 people in the week ended 5 July. A handful of states, however, have reported increases in deaths for at least two straight weeks, including Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, Texas and Tennessee.
 
Hospitalizations jump 50% in California as coronavirus infections soar

New coronavirus cases soared in California over the July Fourth weekend, stressing some hospital systems and leading to the temporary closure of the state capitol building in Sacramento for deep cleaning, officials said on Monday.

The number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 has increased by 50% over the past two weeks to about 5,800, Governor Gavin Newsom said at a briefing.

About a third of those hospitalized were in Los Angeles County, state and local records showed, with about 630 confirmed and suspected coronavirus patients requiring intensive care.

And 25% of the hospitalizations in the county in July were among patients aged 18 to 40, health officials said, as new cases increasingly hit a younger population that may have been lax about safety precautions in recent weeks.

Farther north, nearly 1,400 inmates at San Quentin State Prison have been sickened by the virus, putting pressure on hospitals in Marin County, where the facility is located, Newsom said.

All told, 271,684 Californians have tested positive for the virus, including 11,529 in the past 24 hours, state records show. About 6,300 have died.

Determined to slow the spread of the disease over the holiday weekend, state alcohol regulators visited nearly 6,000 bars and restaurants to make sure they were complying with new rules banning indoor dining and closing bars that do not serve food, Newsom said.

Nearly half a million businesses were contacted by the state over the weekend and warned that failing to enforce social distancing guidelines, including a statewide mandate to wear face coverings, could lead to a citation, he said.

The virus also reached into the halls of government.

On Monday, Assemblywoman Autumn Burke, a Democrat from Los Angeles County, posted on Twitter that she and her daughter had tested positive for the virus after what state human resources representatives called a “mask-to-mask” transmission.

Lawmakers have been meeting in person at the state Capitol building in Sacramento since mid-May.

Burke did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but a spokeswoman for state Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon said the building had been closed for a deep cleaning out of concern for “the health and safety of the Capitol community.”

Five people who worked at the capitol had been infected with the virus, spokeswoman Katie Talbot said.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...oronavirus-infections-soar-idUKKBN2472W9?il=0
 
The deaths of 130,284 people in the US have now been linked to Covid-19, according to data collected by the Johns Hopkins University.

This means the official death toll is about twice that of Brazil, which has the second-highest toll.

The US has an estimated population of 328m though, against Brazil's 210m.

After Brazil, there's the UK with more than 44,000 deaths and Italy with just under 35,000.

The US is also leading the tally of the highest number of confirmed infection, currently at 2,935,712.

Overall, New York has the highest death toll among US states, with more than 32,000 fatalities linked to the virus - but confirmed infections are now surging in southern states as well.
 
A number of states have put their reopening plans on hold as they struggle to contain growing outbreaks of Covid-19

The greater Miami area in Florida is the latest place to delay reopening plans and reimpose restrictions. It suspended indoor-dining at restaurants and closed gyms on Monday

California, Texas and Florida are among more than two dozen states that have reported high infection rates in recent days. In California, the number of people admitted to hospital with coronavirus increased by 50% over the past two weeks. Texas reported a similar rise and officials said hospital beds were full in some areas

"It's a serious situation that we have to address immediately," the nation's top infectious disease specialist, Dr Anthony Fauci, said on Monday. "We're surging back up," he said

Meanwhile, colleges and universities have altered their reopening plans. Harvard University said all autumn semester classes would be taught online and other institutions have followed suit

There have now been more than 2.9m confirmed cases of the virus in the US, with more than 130,000 deaths
 
Texas sheriffs 'won't enforce' governor's mask mandate

Law enforcement officials in Texas say they will not enforce the newly enacted ruling requiring mask to be worn in public.

After the Texas governor ordered masks to be worn in public in any county with at least 20 Covid-19 cases on 2 July, multiple county sheriffs vowed not to enforce the rule.

The sheriff of Denton County, which encompasses part of the city of Dallas-Fort Worth, called the mandate an "executive order not a law" and said it is too difficult to enforce.

The office of the sheriff of Montgomery County, just north of Houston, said it will not enforce the order for fear it could be sued by the people who are stopped.

The governor's order calls for warnings for people who do not wear masks, and a $250 (£200) fine for multiple offenders. But officers say they will not know who is a multiple offender, because they will not be documenting any individual incident.

The order also specifically says no citizen can be arrested or jailed for refusing to wear a mask. Critics in law enforcement say this makes the mandate legally impossible to enforce.
 
Average age of US coronavirus patient drops by 15 years

The average age of a coronavirus patient in the US has dropped by around 15 years compared to the early stages of the pandemic, according to Dr Anthony Fauci, the director of the US National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Reports from states where virus cases are surging - such as California, Arizona, Florida and Texas - confirm Dr Fauci's statement, as most new cases are young people who have flouted social distancing guidelines or have essential jobs that require them to be on the frontlines.

“The average age of people getting infected now is a decade and a half younger than it was a few months ago, particularly when New York and New Orleans and Chicago were getting hit very badly,” Dr Fauci said in an interview on Monday.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said on Monday that the median age for a patient needing hospitalisation in the state is now 33 years old. Most patients being diagnosed in March and April were in their 50s and 60s, he said.
 
At least 84 prisoners and nine prison guards and employees have died from the coronavirus so far, according to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

The latest victim was Correctional Officer V Kenneth Harbin, 60, who died on 4 July.

According to figures released last week by Texas officials, 8,811 offenders and 1,556 employees have tested positive.

Prisons and jails around the US have been outbreak epicentres since the early days of the pandemic. Inmates have no ability to practice social distancing and sometimes little access to basic hygiene products such as soap and warm water.

In California, San Quentin prison has been hit by a deadly outbreak after infected prisoners were transferred there from another facility.

As of Monday, six San Quentin inmates have died and another 1,387 inmates have tested positive. Officials say they are urgently trying to reduce the prison's population to below 3,000.
 
The personal protective gear that was in dangerously short supply during the early weeks of the coronavirus crisis in the United States is running low again as the virus resumes its rapid spread and the number of hospitalised patients climbs.

A national nursing union is concerned that gear, known as PPE, has to be reused. A doctors association warns that physicians' offices are closed because they cannot get masks and other supplies. And Democratic members of Congress are pushing the Trump administration to devise a national strategy to acquire and distribute gear in anticipation of the crisis worsening in coming months.

"We're five months into this, and there are still shortages of gowns, hair covers, shoe covers, masks, N95 masks," said Deborah Burger, president of National Nurses United, who cited results from a survey of the union's members. "They're being doled out, and we're still being told to reuse them."

When the crisis first exploded in March and April in hot spots such as New York City, the situation was so desperate that nurses turned plastic rubbish bags into protective gowns. The lack of equipment forced states and hospitals to compete against each other, the federal government and other countries in desperate, expensive bidding wars.

In general, supplies of protective gear are more robust now, and many states and major hospital chains say they are in better shape. But medical professionals and some legislators have cast doubt on those improvements as shortages begin to reappear.

Dr Aisha Terry, an associate professor of emergency medicine at George Washington University in Washington, said she has good access to PPE, but some non-academic and rural health facilities have much less.

"I think overall, production, distribution and access has improved," Terry said. "But the fear is that we will become complacent" and allow supplies to dwindle in some places.

In a letter to Congress last week, the health department in DuPage County, Illinois, near Chicago, said all hospitals in the county are reusing protective gear "in ways that were not originally intended and are probably less safe than the optimal use of PPE".

The DuPage County department is a supplier of last resort that steps in when facilities have less than two weeks' worth of gear. As of Monday, it had only nine days of some supplies at the current request level. A rise in new infections could make the supply go much faster.

The American Medical Association wrote to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Vice President Mike Pence and members of Congress calling for a coordinated national strategy to buy and allocate gear.

New York Representative Carolyn Maloney released a memo last week before a congressional committee hearing that raised concerns about looming problems in the supply chain. Her report was based on interviews with unnamed employees at medical supply companies, one of whom warned that raw material for gowns is not available at any price in the amounts needed, leading to an "unsustainable" situation.

Rear Admiral John Polowczyk, who is in charge of coronavirus-related supplies for the White House, told Congress last week that more than one-fourth of the states have less than a 30-day supply.

"It would seem like in less than 30 days, we're going to have a real crisis," said Illinois Representative Bill Foster.

FEMA, which manages the nation's stockpile, would not break down which states have enough gear to last beyond 30 days and which do not. In June, the government started replenishing its once-depleted stockpile with the goal of building up a two-month supply.

As of June 10, FEMA had distributed or directed private companies to distribute more than 74 million N95 masks and 66 million pairs of gloves, along with other gear. The agency said it changed its distribution method to send more equipment to hot spots.

Although all US states and territories have received some protective gear from FEMA, an Associated Press analysis of the agency's own data found that the amounts varied widely when measured by population and the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases.

The AP analysis found that low-population, mostly rural states received the largest FEMA allocations per confirmed case. As of mid-June, for example, Montana had received 1,125 items of protective gear per case, compared with 32 items per case in Massachusetts, an early hot spot. States including California, Iowa and Nebraska, all of which have seen a surge in confirmed infections, received among the lowest amounts of protective gear from FEMA per case, according to the AP analysis.

Many states say the federal supplies make up a small part of their stockpiles after they spent millions of dollars to acquire equipment on their own.

Concerns extend beyond the amount of gear. In New Hampshire, an association representing nursing homes said most items sent by FEMA in early June were unusable, including child-size gloves, surgical masks with ear loops that broke when stretched and isolation gowns with no arm openings.

A nonprofit group called #GetUsPPE was established in March by physicians to help distribute donated protective gear.

The group had a 200 percent increase in requests during the last two weeks of June from medical providers in Texas, a state with a big surge in confirmed virus cases. State officials there have said their supplies are adequate

"We anticipated that we would need to be around for a few weeks until someone else stepped in and solved this problem," said Dr Megan Ranney, an emergency physician at Rhode Island Hospital who was among the group's founders. "Here we are, still getting hundreds of thousands of requests a week."

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...kers-runs-virus-resurges-200707130810479.html
 
More from White House coronavirus task force coordinator Deborah Birx.

She said a few moments ago that the United States and other countries could have had a stronger initial response to Covid-19 if China had been more forthcoming about key features of the virus.

At a panel held by the Atlantic Council, a US think tank, Birx said the United States would have been more focused on identifying Covid-19 patients without symptoms if China has shared information about the frequency with which Covid-19 patients, particularly young people, are asymptomatic, Reuters reports.

“I have to say if we had known about the level of asymptomatic spread, we would have all looked at this differently,” Birx said at the panel.

“That’s usually the initial countries’ responsibility ... and I think that did delay across the board our ability to really see or look for this.”

Birx said that public health officials had originally assumed that only 15 to 20% of Covid-19 patients are asymptomatic when in fact that number is at least 40%.

“We were looking for people with symptoms. We should have looked for anyone who would have been exposed,” she said.

Such points are important, but seem less important than America’s six lost weeks of downplaying the threat of the virus and then showing inadequate leadership from Washington on down on testing and supplies of medical equipment for hospitals and their workers.
 
Virus is beyond control in states. When some portion of population takes precaution and other portion refuses to do it, it won't help.
 
US cases rise past 3 million

More then 3 million coronavirus infections have been recorded across the US since the beginning of the pandemic, according to both the New York Times and NBC.

NBC reports that more than 46,500 new cases were added to the tally on Tuesday.

The US has by far the highest number of confirmed infections in the world.
 
US sees record 60,000 daily cases

The US reported a record of more than 60,000 daily confirmed cases of coronavirus on Tuesday, according to Johns Hopkins University.

The previous highest tally was 55,220, which the US recorded on 2 July.

The latest figures come as the states of California and Texas each reported more than 10,000 new daily cases.

US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that America was "in a good place" regarding the pandemic.

But Dr Anthony Fauci, infectious disease expert and adviser to the White House on coronavirus, said the country was still "knee-deep" in only its first coronavirus wave.

The US has had by far the highest number of confirmed cases and deaths of any nation.

More than three million infections have been recorded across the US since the beginning of the pandemic, according to both the New York Times and NBC.

Covid-19 has been linked to more than 131,000 deaths in the US.
 
US passes 3m coronavirus cases

The number of people who have tested positive for the coronavirus in the United States has officially passed 3 million, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.

More than 131,000 people in the US have now died with Covid-19.
 
Vice President Mike Pence has just confirmed this at a press conference, and added that more than 130,000 people had died.

Removing his mask to address reporters, Pence went on to defend President Trump's handling of the pandemic. He said the latest wave of cases seemed to be flattening out.

"While we mourn with those who mourn, because of what the American people have done, because of the extraordinary work of our healthcare workers around the country, we are encouraged that the average fatality rate continues to be low and steady," he said.
 
In Los Angeles, a cafe shields diners from virus with private greenhouses

A Los Angeles cafe has filled its parking lot with individual greenhouse dining pods to help diners feel safe during the coronavirus pandemic.

The Lady Byrd Cafe in the city’s trendy Echo Park neighborhood closed its doors at the start of the pandemic in March.

When outdoor dining was allowed to resume, owner Misty Mansouri was ready, having transformed the restaurant’s blacktop parking lot into a garden filled with flowers, herbs and plants with private glass cabins.

The investment has paid off as the governor has once again banned indoor dining in much of the state, having allowed restricted openings in late May, after coronavirus cases broke records and hospitalizations rose 50% in two weeks.

Mansouri said the pods, which have windows to allow air flow, are cleaned and sanitized after each use and comply with guidelines issued by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“The CDC guidelines are really you just have to be six feet apart, right? I just went the extra step to make sure that people feel extra comfortable,” she said. “Many of the people who have dined here, this has been their first experience and they feel super-safe.”

Mansouri was inspired by images of similar dining spaces in Europe. Dutch restaurant ETEN introduced glass dining huts on its waterside patio in May.

Thessa Villegas, 34, who convinced her reluctant friend Rebecca High to go out for lunch by showing her the greenhouses on the cafe’s website, called the experience the “holy grail of dining.”

“I think this is amazing. This is what I think we have needed for a very long time in merging that safety plus the whole experiencing social interaction,” she said.

The only drawback to the pods, Mansouri said, is that, although they have roof windows and fans, they can get warm inside during the heat of a Los Angeles summer day.

“They’re really lovely in the evening and they’re really lovely in the morning,” she said.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...s-with-private-greenhouses-idUKKBN2492K6?il=0
 
At least 26 lawmakers and 10 others who work at the Mississippi state capitol in Jackson have been infected with coronavirus.

The state has 174 lawmakers in total.

Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves on Wednesday urged members of the public who may have been in close contact with any of the state's lawmakers to get tested as soon as possible.

An outbreak in the southern US state has forced authorities to revisit its response to Covid-19 following weeks of loosening restrictions.

Mr Reeves said that measures such as enforced social distancing and the use of face coverings at indoor spaces may need to be implemented.

"The situation that we have feared is upon us," he said at a news conference on Wednesday, adding: "Please protect yourself. Please protect your loved ones. Please wear masks. Please try to stay home as much as possible."

Mississippi has reported 1,188 deaths linked to coronavirus, and more than 32,800 confirmed cases.
 
Another record tally in the United States

There was another daily record of infections in the US on Wednesday, according to tallies from Reuters and the New York Times.

Reuters said more than 60,000 cases were confirmed, as a number of states deal with a surge in infections.

President Trump says the cases are a reflection of mass testing, and the death rate - which is down on the mid-April peak - is a better reflection of how the country is coping.

For the second day in a row, Reuters said, the reported number of people with Covid-19 who died was over 900.

The rolling seven-day average of daily deaths is 585 - down from a peak of 2,255 in April, according to Worldometers.

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US unemployment rate drops to 11.1%

Americans filed 1.3m new unemployment claims last week, the US Labor Department has reported, down from 1.4m claims filed the week earlier.

Nearly 18 million American workers are still receiving jobless benefits, but the data shows that hiring is starting to increase.

By the end of June, the jobless rate fell to 11.1% from a peak of 14.7% in April.

Jobless claims are now at roughly double their highest point during the 2007-09 Great Recession.
 
The US surge in cases - in graphics

Many states in the US, particularly in the south, are seeing a surge in cases of coronavirus.

But where else are cases rising, and how does this surge compare to the rest of the outbreak? We've drawn up some graphics to help answer these questions.

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Florida hospital ICUs 'near full capacity'

Nearly half of all hospital intensive care units (ICUs) in the US state of Florida have almost reached full capacity because of the coronavirus pandemic, officials say.

A total of 95 hospital ICUs were at least 90% full as of Thursday, according to the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration.

Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, which has the largest capacity for ICU patients, earlier said its units were 91% full.

Dr Andrew Pastewski, ICU Medical Director there, told the BBC: "We have gone from one Covid floor to two, to three, and now we have a fourth area."

On Monday, the mayor of Miami-Dade - Florida's most populous county - ordered restaurants to shut soon after reopening in light of the climbing number of infections.

Florida has reported more than 230,000 cases of coronavirus and more than 4,000 Covid-19-related deaths.
 
Six U.S. states see record surges in COVID-19 cases, Florida becomes epicentre

Six U.S. states suffered record spikes in new COVID-19 cases on Friday and Florida, an epicentre of the pandemic, saw infections rise sharply for the second day in a row as the Walt Disney Co. stuck to its plans to reopen its flagship theme park in Orlando.

The surges in Georgia, Louisiana, Montana, Ohio, Utah and Wisconsin put the United States on a pace to once again set a single-day record for new coronavirus cases as Walt Disney World became the latest flash point in a national debate over access to public spaces.

The Walt Disney Co. (DIS.N) said the theme parks in Orlando would open on Saturday to a limited number of guests, requiring all visitors and employees to undergo temperature checks and wear face masks and cancelling parades, firework displays and other crow-drawing events.

Disney’s chief medical officer said this week that she believed the broad set of safeguards the company developed with health experts would allow guests to visit the park safely.

Roughly 19,000 people, including some theme park workers, have signed a petition asking Disney to delay the reopening. The union representing 750 Walt Disney World performers has filed a grievance against the company, alleging retaliation against members over a union demand that they be tested for COVID-19.

A Disney spokeswoman said Disney World would reopen without the performers after Actors Equity union representatives had not been available for further talks. Seven other unions reached agreements with Disney on returning to work.

Other theme parks opened in Orlando in June, including Comcast Corp’s Universal Studios Orlando and SeaWorld Entertainment Inc’s SeaWorld.

Florida recorded 11,433 new coronavirus cases on Friday, the state health department said, just short of the state’s record high and more evidence that it was at the centre of the U.S. pandemic.

FLORIDA REELS
Florida does not disclose the number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients but earlier this week more than four dozen Florida hospitals reported their intensive care units were full.

This month, Florida has repeatedly reported more new daily coronavirus cases than any European country had at the height of their outbreaks. Its positive test rate, at 19% earlier this week, is one of the highest in the country.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, a Republican, angered some residents and medical experts by calling the spike a “blip.”

On Friday, DeSantis said that the state would receive more than 17,000 vials of the antiviral drug remdesivir from the U.S. government, adding: “That’ll be something that will hopefully help to improve patient outcomes.”

Scott Burkee, a 43-year-old former Disney employee from Davenport, Florida, said DeSantis “has shown zero effort to control the spread, he only becomes concerned when Trump does. The virus is clearly out of control.”

Trump, a Republican, travelled to Florida on Friday for an event at the U.S. military’s Southern Command and a campaign fundraiser.

The president has sparred with state and local officials and teachers unions over the reopening of schools and said on Friday the Treasury Department would re-examine the tax-exempt status and funding of those that remain closed.

Trump previously vowed to cut federal funding to the schools and eject foreign students attending universities in the United States unless their schools offer in-person classes, although most education funds come from state and local coffers.

The United States has the world’s highest known numbers of both COVID-19 cases and deaths. The number of confirmed U.S. infections is over 3 million, according to a Reuters tally, stoking fears that hospitals will be overwhelmed.

More than 133,000 Americans have died, a toll that experts warn will likely surge along with the rise in cases.

Overall, coronavirus cases are rising in 44 American states, based on a Reuters analysis of cases for the past two weeks compared with the prior two weeks.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...-florida-becomes-epicentre-idUKKBN24B2QV?il=0
 
California to release 8,000 prisoners to slow pandemic

California will release up to 8,000 inmates early from state prisons to slow the spread of COVID-19 inside facilities, state authorities said on Friday.

Several California prisons have suffered large coronavirus outbreaks and the state corrections department said inmates could be eligible for release by the end of August.

The release marks the biggest move yet by California to “decompress” prison populations and reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmission by creating more space for social distancing and quarantines.

“These actions are taken to provide for the health and safety of the incarcerated population and staff,” California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Secretary Ralph Diaz said in a statement.

Prisoners with a year or less left to serve will be eligible for release. Among prisoners excluded from early release are those convicted of violent felonies and sex crimes, the department said.

The move follows a reduction in inmate populations statewide by around 10,000 since the pandemic began.

California Governor Gavin Newsom said on Thursday nearly 2,400 people in California’s 35 prisons have tested positive for the coronavirus, including 1,314 at San Quentin State Prison north of San Francisco.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...prisoners-to-slow-pandemic-idUKKBN24B34T?il=0
 
Dozens of US marines have been infected with coronavirus at two bases on the southern Japanese island of Okinawa in what is feared to be a significant outbreak, the Associated Press reports.

Okinawa prefectural officials said they could say only that a few dozen cases had been found recently because the US military asked that the exact figure not be released.

The outbreaks occurred at Marine Corps Air Station Futenma, which is at the centre of a relocation dispute, and Camp Hansen, Okinawan officials said.

Local media, citing unnamed sources, said about 60 people had been infected.
 
US cases continue to rise

As mentioned this morning, cases in the US are continuing to rise.

There have now been more than three million cases and more than 130,000 deaths, making the US, the worst hit nation in the world.

Today, Florida confirmed 10,360 new cases, bringing the state's total number of infections to 254,511.

On Friday, nine states had record single-day infections - Alaska, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana. Montana, Ohio, Utah and Wisconsin.

Texas has also been hit hard by the pandemic.

Governor Greg Abbott said the US army is sending a medical taskforce to Houston to help tackle the outbreak there.

On Friday, the city reported 670 new cases of the virus.

Houston's Texas Medical Centre is currently operating at a 105% capacity, according to ABC News.

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Highest single-day rise in cases in Texas

Infections in the US state of Texas rose by 10,351 on Saturday to 250,462 in total, the highest single-day increase in the state since the pandemic started.

Current hospitalisations in Texas rose by 81 to a record high of 10,083 on Saturday, the state health department said.

The New York Times reported earlier that in the popular beachfront vacation spot of Corpus Christi hardly any new infections were recorded in early June, before out-of-towners brought the virus back.

Now the city of 325,000 has one of the fastest-growing outbreaks in Texas.
 
Florida sets new record for rise in cases

Florida has broken another coronavirus record, reporting 15,300 new cases with 45 additional deaths in the past day.

The figures, released by the state's health department, surpass the previous record rise of 11,458 new infections on 4 July.

They come a day after Walt Disney World reopened in the state.
 
US coronavirus cases hit 3.3 million

Coronavirus infections continue to surge nationwide, especially in western and southern states, where lockdown restrictions were lifted earliest in some cases

On Sunday, Florida’s infections rose by more than 15,000 - the largest single-day increase since the pandemic began. A day earlier, parts of Walt Disney World had been reopened to much fanfare

In contrast, New York City - previously the epicentre of the country’s epidemic - reported no new Covid-19 deaths over 24 hours for the first time since March
 
Florida records 12,000 new cases, a day after shattering records

Florida has recorded more than 12,600 new coronavirus cases, its second-highest daily total since the outbreak began, coinciding with the state's attempt to revive tourism and attract visitors to the recently reopened Disney World.

Florida along with Arizona, California and Texas, has emerged as a new US epicentre of the pandemic in recent weeks. Infections have risen rapidly in about 40 of the 50 states over the last two weeks, according to a Reuters analysis.
 
Coronavirus: White House targets US disease chief Dr Anthony Fauci

US infectious disease chief Dr Anthony Fauci is being targeted by the Trump administration as tensions rise between the health expert and the president.

The White House has been increasingly critical of Dr Fauci, and on Sunday, an official shared a list detailing past apparent erroneous comments.

Dr Fauci's changing advice on masks and remarks on Covid-19's severity are among the points from the White House.

The move to undercut him comes as the US continues to see surges in Covid-19.

There are over 3.3 million cases confirmed and more than 135,000 deaths nationwide, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Dr Fauci has contradicted President Donald Trump's comments on the pandemic a number of times, pushing back on the president's claims that the outbreak is improving and attributing hasty state re-openings to the recent surges.

The White House memo leaked over the weekend had noted "several White House officials are concerned about the number of times Dr Fauci has been wrong on things".

Though the White House said Dr Fauci and Mr Trump have a "good working relationship" on Monday, Trump adviser Peter Navarro told CBS News: "When you ask me if I listen to Dr Fauci's advice, my answer is only with caution."

What has the White House said?
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Monday told reporters the memo was a "direct response to a direct question" from the Washington Post.

"The notion that there's opposition research and that there's Fauci versus the president couldn't be further from the truth," she said. "Dr Fauci and the president have always had a very good working relationship."

Echoing the contents of the memo earlier, Mr Navarro, an economic adviser to Mr Trump, said Dr Fauci "has been wrong about everything I have ever interacted with him on".

"When I warned in late January in a memo of a possibly deadly pandemic, Fauci was telling the media not to worry," he said.

Mr Navarro said Dr Fauci fought against Mr Trump's "courageous decision" to halt flights from China, initially said the virus was "low-risk", "flip-flopped on the use of masks" and said there was "only anecdotal evidence" regarding hydroxychloroquine as a treatment.

"Now Fauci is saying that a falling mortality rate doesn't matter when it is the single most important statistic to help guide the pace of our economic reopening."

Admiral Brett Giroir, assistant US health secretary and member of the virus task force, told NBC News on Sunday that while he respects Dr Fauci, he is not always right.

"Dr Fauci is not 100% right and he also doesn't necessarily, he admits that, have the whole national interest in mind. He looks at it from a very narrow public health point of view."

Mr Trump on Monday retweeted comments from a game show host accusing "everyone", including the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC) of lying about the coronavirus.

Last week, the president told Fox News Dr Fauci was "a nice man but he's made a lot of mistakes".

As cases and deaths continue to rise in a number of states, Mr Trump has been accused by critics of politicising health issues, including wearing masks.

Mr Trump has also clashed with the World Health Organization (WHO), accusing the body of mismanaging the pandemic when it began and failing to make "greatly needed reforms".

On 7 July, he formally began to pull the US out of the WHO and said funding would be redirected.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53392817
 
California has reimposed restrictions on businesses and public spaces amid a spike of coronavirus infections in America's most populous state.

Governor Gavin Newsom on Monday ordered an immediate halt to all indoor activities at restaurants, bars, entertainment venues, zoos and museums.

In the worst-affected counties of the south-western US state, churches, gyms and hairdressers will also close.

California has more than 330,000 Covid-19 cases, with more than 7,000 deaths.

The reimposition of the restrictions in the state with nearly 40 million people was prompted by a 20% rise in people testing positive in the past two weeks and increasing numbers of Californians are now needing intensive care.

Infections have risen rapidly in about 40 of America's 50 states over the last two weeks, according to an analysis by Reuters news agency.

Along with California, Florida, Arizona and Texas have emerged as centres of the pandemic. Towns and counties across Florida have been reinstating restrictions that were lifted in May when infections began to drop.

But on the east coast, New York City - which in April had one of the highest Covid-19 death rates in the world - recorded no new fatalities from the disease for the first time in four months.

There are currently more than 3.3 million confirmed Covid-19 cases across the country, and more than 135,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.

What are the new restrictions in California?
Governor Newsom warned on Monday that "this virus is not going away anytime soon".

"I hope all of us recognise that if we were still connected to some notion that somehow when it gets warm it's going to go away or somehow it's going to take summer months or weekends off - this virus has done neither.

"We are now effective today requiring all counties to close their indoor activities, their indoor operations in the following sectors: restaurants, wineries, tasting rooms, movie theatres, family entertainment centres, zoos and museums, card rooms and the shuttering of all bars.

"This is in every county in the state of California."

The new measures reverse the easing of the state's strict lockdown in May and then again in June, when restaurants, bars and gyms reopened with in counties that met the state's safety guidelines.

Dr Robert Wachter, chair of the Department of Medicine at University of California San Francisco, told the BBC World Service some people seemed to have got complacent in the fight against the disease.

Increasing numbers of Californians are needing intensive care.
"It was appropriate to begin easing the restrictions," he said.

"We were doing so well and things seemed under control. And so the restrictions were eased but I think people took that as the starting gun for changing behaviour too much. So yes people were allowed to go out and around but they were supposed to wearing a mask. They were supposed to be keeping their distance. They were supposed to be avoiding large crowds. And I think too many people got a little bit complacent.

"And as you know in the United States the messaging on things like masks has been quite muddied in part because the federal government has been very unclear and sometimes unhelpful."

Tensions have grown between President Donald Trump and the country's infectious disease chief, Dr Anthony Fauci, over the handling of the pandemic.

Dr Fauci has contradicted Mr Trump's comments on the pandemic a number of times, pushing back on his claims that the outbreak is improving and attributing hasty state reopenings to the recent surges.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53399080
 
5.4 million lost health insurance in US - study

An estimated 5.4 million US workers lost their health insurance between February and May, according to a new study by the nonpartisan advocacy group Families USA.

Those months saw more losses than any previous year in US history. The last time the nation saw such a spike in uninsured workers was during the 2008 recession when 3.9 million people lost healthcare coverage.

In the US, where health insurance is typically linked to an employer, the staggering job losses due to the pandemic have been particularly painful.

Given that severe cases of Covid-19 see people in intensive care units for weeks to months, families who lost coverage could also face costly hospital bills if they fall seriously ill.

An analysis published on Monday by the Urban Institute and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation estimates that from April until this coming December, more than 10 million Americans will lose their employer-sponsored health insurance because of pandemic-related job loss.
 
Health experts have defended US infectious disease chief Dr Anthony Fauci amid criticisms from the White House.

Tensions between Dr Fauci - a key voice in the US pandemic response - and the president have been rising and, on Sunday, a Trump administration official shared a list detailing past apparent erroneous comments by the public health expert, including his changing guidance on masks.

Though officials have denied any conflict between Dr Fauci and President Trump, medical experts have rebuked the White House over the memo.

The Association of American Medical Colleges said taking Dr Fauci's quotes "out of context to discredit his scientific knowledge and judgment will do tremendous harm to our nation's efforts to get the virus under control, restore our economy and return us to a more normal way of life".

The Infectious Diseases Society of America said: "If we have any hope of ending this crisis, all of America must support public health experts, including Dr Fauci, the preeminent infectious diseases scientist and public health expert in the country and the best person for the job."

Dr Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard University Global Health Institute, tweeted: "Sidelining Dr Fauci makes the federal response worse. And it's the American people who suffer."

Former Centers of Disease Control Director Tom Frieden has weighed in on the administration's critiques of the health agency in general, saying: "If there was that much focus attacking the virus that causes Covid instead, we’d all be safer."

Source BBC
 
Florida sees new daily death toll high

The US state of Florida has reported a new record high of 132 additional deaths on Tuesday, as well as more than 9,100 new confirmed cases. The total death toll is now over 4,400.

As cases surge in the wake of business reopenings and national holidays, the Sunshine State has fast become one of the regions with the highest surges in the country, along with Texas and Arizona.

On 12 July, the state broke the national record by reporting 15,300 new cases in a single day.

Florida only hit the 100,000 case mark on 22 June, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. Just 13 days later, that number had doubled. Now, there are more than 287,000 cases.

The positive test rate - which indicates how much the virus is spreading, taking into account testing increases - is nearing 20%, the highest since early March when the pandemic hit the US.

That's also four times the standard for reopening set by the World Health Organization, and double the recommendation of the Centers for Disease Control.
 
US base on Japan's Okinawa confirms 36 more cases: report

Authorities have confirmed 36 more coronavirus infections at Camp Hansen on Japan's Okinawa, taking to 136 the tally at US military bases on the island, Kyodo News said.

The outbreak emerged at the weekend, provoking the anger of the prefecture's governor, who has called into question the US military's virus prevention measures.
 
Russia reports more than 6,400 new coronavirus cases

Russia reported 6,422 new coronavirus cases, pushing its confirmed national tally to 746,369, the fourth highest in the world.
 
Trump administration takes control of COVID-19 data in US

The Trump administration is taking control of data collection on COVID-19 hospitalisations in the United States from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) rising questions about whether the information will be politicised as cases in the US surge and deaths rise.

Patient information will now be sent to a new central database in Washington, DC run by the US Department of Health and Human Services instead of to the CDC, which has been criticised for slow and inconsistent public reporting of the number of cases, available beds and ventilators
 
US unemployment claims rise by 1.3m

A further 1.3 million people filed for unemployment in the US last week as the economic damage inflicted by the coronavirus pandemic continues to take its toll.

Jobless claims have declined significantly since mid-April, levelling off at around the one million mark in recent weeks after the country reopened for business.

In the week ending 11 July, jobless claims dropped by just 10,000 compared to the previous week, Labor Department figures showed.

That was a lower-than-expected reduction, signalling the fragility of the country’s economic recovery as coronavirus infections surge once more nationwide.

This week’s new claims were almost double the pre-pandemic record set in 1982.

The Labor Department's report on Thursday showed the total number of unemployed people as of 4 July was 17.3 million, a decrease of 422,000 on the previous week.
 
US sets another virus record with 77,638 new cases

The US marked a record number of coronavirus cases on Friday for the third consecutive day, notching 77,638 new infections in 24 hours, according to a tally by the Johns Hopkins University.

The country also recorded 927 deaths in that period, according to a count at 8:30pm (00:30 GMT, Saturday). The figures bring the US's death toll to 139,128 and its caseload to 3.64 million confirmed cases.
 
The US has now recorded more than 3.6 million cases of the virus and more than 139,000 people have died.

Daily cases continue to remain high in the country, with confirmed infections on Friday surpassing 70,000.

Some of the worst-hit states include Texas, Florida and Arizona.

Texas recorded 174 deaths on Friday, the most in one day since the pandemic began there.

Officials on the Texas-Mexico state border say hotels in the area could be converted into medical units by next week.

Public schools in the state have been given permission to keep their campuses closed well into autumn.

California Governor Gavin Newsom has announced strict criteria for school reopenings which means it is very unlikely that many students will return to classrooms in autumn.
 
U.S. CDC reports coronavirus cases rise nearly 75,000

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Saturday reported 3,630,587 cases of new coronavirus, an increase of 74,710 cases, and said the number of deaths had risen by 918 to 138,782.

The CDC reported its tally of cases of the respiratory illness known as COVID-19, caused by a new coronavirus, compared to a day earlier.(bit.ly/2CMM1e8)

The CDC figures do not necessarily reflect cases reported by individual states.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-h...navirus-cases-rise-nearly-75000-idUKKCN24J0VU
 
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