‘Rest in paradise’: Georgia teen loses both mom and dad to COVID-19 in the same week – USA TODAY

A rising high school senior in Georgia is mourning the loss of both his parents after they lost their lives to COVID-19 in the same week, media outletsreport.

According to WSB-TV, 17-year-old Justin Hunter lost his parents, Eugene and Angie Hunter, last week. His father was 59, his mother was 57.

Hunter said they didnt have any pre-existing conditions.

We were a regular family just trying to stay safe during the pandemic, Hunter told the station. When my mom would go to the store, she would be wearing a mask and she would be wearing gloves.

Hunter told WXIA-TV that the entire family had tested positive for COVID-19 a week earlier and were all quarantined. He was asymptomatic but his parents soon began exhibiting the telltale symptoms: fever, headache and cough.

Hunter waited at home while his parents were admitted to Emory Johns Creek Hospital. On July 26, the hospital called to notify him that his father passed away. Thats when he spoke to his mom over the phone.

(She said) shes going to keep fighting to get better to come back, Hunter told WXIA-TV.

Then four days later, on July 30, he got another call from the hospital saying that his mother died. Hunter was told he couldnt go to the hospital to see them as hes still in quarantine.

Eugene and Angie Hunter were together for 35 years and met in college, according to WSB-TV. Hunters father was known in his church community as a talented saxophone player. His mother was a human resources executive.

Hunter told the station his parents always supported his football dreams. They always discussed plans for him to continue schoolwork, get a football scholarship and eventually go pro.

'There has been a failure': 40 people infected by Hurtigruten outbreak, Paul Gauguin ship quarantined

I know theyre watching me from above and theyre going to be the ones to give me strength to get through this, Hunter told WXIA-TV.

He told the station he plans to live with relatives.

Hunter did not immediately respond to USA TODAYs request for comment, however, heposted a statement on Twitter Friday in memory of his parents, thanking the community for their love and support.

Dear mom and dad, thank you for making me the person I am today, he said. You guys will forever be carried in my heart. And from this day on everything I do is for you. I love you mom, I love you dad. Rest in paradise.

Follow Adrianna Rodriguez on Twitter: @AdriannaUSAT.

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'Rest in paradise': Georgia teen loses both mom and dad to COVID-19 in the same week - USA TODAY

Coronavirus reunites long-lost sisters who haven’t seen each other in over 50 years – CNN

Doris Crippen, 73, said she had come down with what she thought was the flu in May. Due to how weak it made her, she ended up falling and breaking her arm, sending her to the emergency room and eventually down memory lane.

It turned out she had coronavirus and had to spend almost 30 days in the hospital recovering, Crippen said. After she was released, Crippen went to Fremont Methodist Health's Dunklau Gardens to get rehab on her arm.

It was there that she encountered a wonderful surprise.

Bev Boro, 53, has been a medication aide at Dunklau Gardens in Fremont for 22 years and when she came across Crippen's name on a patient board she immediately recognized it.

"I couldn't believe it," Boro said at a July 22 news conference. "I thought, 'Oh my God, I think this is my sister.'"

The two women have the same father but different mothers, and they have not seem each other in 53 years, when Boro was a baby. Crippen lived with her mother, but Boro and four of their 14 siblings were separated by the state and put up for adoption when she was 6 months old.

On June 27, Boro decided to take a chance and confirm that Crippen was who she thought she was. Since, Crippen is hard of hearing, Boro went into her room with a white board and wrote their father's name. Crippen confirmed that was her dad.

"I pointed at myself... and said, "That's mine too!"... I have our dad's eyes," Boro said.

"I about fell out of my chair and I just burst into tears," Crippen said. "It was just a happy feeling to find my sister. It's been 53 years since she was a baby and I held her."

Crippen had tried to find her siblings several times over the years, but d failed.

"It's amazing ... really overwhelming, after so many years," Crippen said. "I never thought I'd find her again."

Boro on the other hand had tracked down most of their siblings, and now she gets to reunite Crippen with the family members Crippen thought she had lost. They are now trying to plan a family reunion.

"It was the Lord's blessing that I got sent here," to the rehab center, "because if I hadn't been sent here, I wouldn't have found her," Crippen said.

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Coronavirus reunites long-lost sisters who haven't seen each other in over 50 years - CNN

Media to be banned from Republican convention due to coronavirus restrictions – The Guardian

The media will reportedly not be allowed to witness Donald Trumps formal renomination as the Republican partys choice for president at its national convention later this month.

Citing coronavirus-related health concerns, a convention spokesperson told the Associated Press that media members would be turned away in order to assure compliance with state and local guidelines regarding the number of people who can attend events.

The announcement was highly unusual and would represent a historic departure from convention practices in modern times. An Arkansas newspaper, the Democrat Gazette, first reported the news. The Republican national committee, which organizes the convention, could not immediately be reached for comment.

Held once every four years, the national conventions represent occasions for party officials and operatives to come together to strategize, renew contacts, share excitement and ultimately formally nominate the partys candidate for president.

The official nomination is typically covered with a wall-to-wall media blitz including cheering crowds decked out in party swag and a live broadcast of the nominees acceptance speech. The exposure typically results in a bounce of a few points for the nominee in approval polls.

But this year the Republican party appears intent on repeating its nomination of Trump, whose dismal performance in handling the coronavirus pandemic has dragged his popularity to historic lows, with no cameras present, in subversion of the presidents own instinct for spectacle and obsession with TV ratings.

Given the health restrictions and limitations in place within the state of North Carolina, we are planning for the Charlotte activities to be closed [to] press Friday, August 21Monday, August 24, a convention spokeswoman told the AP.

We are happy to let you know if this changes, but we are working within the parameters set before us by state and local guidelines regarding the number of people who can attend events.

It was not clear how the convention could move forward in compliance with state guidelines, which have been a sticking point between Republicans and the states Democratic governor for months. North Carolina currently has set an official limit of 10 people for indoor gatherings and 25 people outdoors.

The Republican national party has announced that 336 officials will attend the convention.

Confronted with earlier expressions of concern by the state about the crowds, the Republican party abruptly announced the relocation of key convention activities to Florida, which has a strongly pro-Trump Republican governor.

But Trump had to call off the public components of the convention in Florida last month, citing spiking cases of the virus across the country.

The convention was once expected to bring 15,000 journalists to Charlotte, but the spread of coronavirus this spring upended those plans.

The seven-day average for confirmed new Covid-19 cases in North Carolina climbed steadily before breaking the 2,000 barrier last month. The state has recorded almost 2,000 deaths from coronavirus since the start of the pandemic. Face masks are required in public in the state per executive order.

Privately, some GOP delegations have raised logistical issues with traveling to Charlotte, citing the increasing number of jurisdictions imposing mandatory quarantine orders on travellers returning from states experiencing surges in the virus.

The subset of delegates in Charlotte will be casting proxy votes on behalf of the more than 2,500 official delegates to the convention. Alternate delegates and guests have already been prohibited.

The Democrats have planned a mostly virtual convention to nominate Joe Biden to be held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from 17-20 August.

North Carolinas Democratic governor Roy Cooper said last week that the state would welcome Trump if he decided to attend the convention.

Hes welcome to come, but nothing has changed about our resolved to keep health and safety first, Cooper said. Obviously we would have concerns about people coming in and about a large crowd, but well continue to keep health and safety number one in this process.

Trump indicated in an interview at the White House last month that he would travel to Charlotte to accept the nomination.

Well be doing a speech on Thursday the main speech, the primary speech, Trump told reporters. Charlotte, they will be doing the nominating on Monday. Thats a different period, a different thing happening, but theyll be doing nominations on Monday. I speak on Thursday.

Trump last month announced cancellation of three days of events set for Florida. I looked at my team and I said the timing for this event is not right. Its just not right, Trump said at the White House. To have a big convention, its not the right time.

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Media to be banned from Republican convention due to coronavirus restrictions - The Guardian

U.S., China must ‘step up’ to lead in the coronavirus crisis or emerging economies may sink, experts say – CNBC

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) waves to the press as he walks with US President Donald Trump at the Mar-a-Lago estate in West Palm Beach, Florida, April 7, 2017.

Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images

Both the U.S. and China have to "step up to the plate" and provide global leadership at a time when the world's poorest countries are in trouble due to the pandemic, said a distinguished economist.

The coronavirus outbreak, which has led to countrywide lockdowns globally, has done "extreme damage" to the global economy, said Raghuram Rajan, a finance professor at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business.

"I think the most important difference is: who has been able to stand?" he said, at a conference organized by Singapore-based bank DBS in late July. Citing data from an International Monetary Fund (IMF) report in June, he pointed out that on average, fiscal and credit measures taken by developed, industrial countries to deal with the pandemic amounted to 20% of gross domestic product.

Among emerging economies, that figure fell to 5%, and for developing economies, or the poorest countries in the world, it is barely a percent, said Rajan, who was a former governor at India's central bank.

"They all face the same virus, but they have had different capabilities of spending money on it ... it is proving very costly across the world," he said.

There's a "huge risk" of emerging markets sinking, Rajan warned. "We're not paying enough attention to it. There's not enough relief How do they come out, well, with limited fiscal resources? Many of those countries their debt to GDP is going to skyrocket, even just from all the damage that has been done from the loss in revenues, from the loss in GDP."

According to the IMF, 45 low-income developing countries have sought emergency financing from the global lender, and public debt has exceeded 48% of GDP on average during the 2020-2021 period, according to the report.

Tharman Shanmugaratnam, a senior minister in Singapore and chairman of the country's central bank, pointed out that most of the growth today or about two-thirds of global growth comes from the emerging world. He was speaking at the same session as Rajan.

It has to come from the two biggest countries in the world China and the United States. Both have to step up to the plate, both have not ... 40 poorest countries in the world clearly ... need more resources to fight the virus.

Raghuram Rajan

Former governor at India's central bank

"When we think about the future of the world economy, it's fundamentally about whether the emerging world is going to continue to emerge, or whether it's going to submerge," said Tharman, who also chairs the Group of Thirty, a global council of economic and financial leaders.

"There is today a very real risk of a submerging world that the gains we made over two to three decades are going to unravel, and we're going to see consequences which are not merely economic, but consequences which are social, which are political and now which are going to be geopolitical," he said.

Limited growth will lead to global ramifications.

"Everything from forced migration, as well as the export of political extremism, will become a reality if we see limited growth, and large numbers of people becoming unemployedeither formally or informally unemployed. Consequences will be faced everywhere in the world" he continued.

The world needs global leadership in order to expand the resources needed for countries that need them most,Rajan said.

"It has to come from the two biggest countries in the world China and the United States. Both have to step up to the plate, both have not ... 40 poorest countries in the world clearly ... need more resources to fight the virus," he said.

Tensions between China and the U.S. escalated further this year over a variety of issues, from the origins of the coronavirus outbreak, to their rivalry over the South China Sea, and the passing of a controversial national security law in Hong Kong.

Rajan added that he hoped the U.S. presidential elections in November will be the "turning point" when both countries can come to a dialogue.

"There is really an enormous role for global leadership here," he said. "It has to be from both sides ... and hopefully other countries, the smaller democracies of the world can push them to come together in some kind of dialogue."

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U.S., China must 'step up' to lead in the coronavirus crisis or emerging economies may sink, experts say - CNBC

Coronavirus in Wisconsin: 922 new confirmed cases, one additional death – Green Bay Press Gazette

There were 922confirmed cases of COVID-19 and one coronavirus-related death statewide, health officials reported Sunday.

The positive cases make up9.6% of the 9,643 tests processed since Saturday, according to the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

As of Sunday,337people were in hospitals with known cases of the virus. Of those, 110were in intensive care, according to the Wisconsin Hospital Association.

Over 54,920people have tested positive for the virus; 9,994of reported cases remain active, while 80.1% of people have recovered from COVID-19.

The Department of Health's weekly ratings of county COVID-19 activity were reportedWednesday.Note that ratings are based on a combination of total new cases per 100,000 people over the past two weeks and the percent change in new cases between the past seven days and the seven days before that. Parentheses reflect a change in the activity level from the previous week's rating.

Global cases have surpassed 17.8million, and deaths neared 680,800as of mid-Sunday, according to Johns Hopkins University.More than 4.6million of those cases and 154,750 deaths were in the United States.

Contact Benita Mathew at (920) 309-3428 or bmathew@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @benita_mathew.

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Coronavirus in Wisconsin: 922 new confirmed cases, one additional death - Green Bay Press Gazette

August 2 update: The latest on the coronavirus and Maine – Bangor Daily News

The BDN is making the most crucial coverage of the coronavirus pandemic and its economic impact in Maine free for all readers. Click here for all coronavirus stories. You can join others committed to safeguarding this vital public service by purchasing a subscription or donating directly to the newsroom.

Twenty-three more cases of the coronavirus were reported on Sunday, according to state health officials.

Sundays report brings the total coronavirus cases in Maine to 3,958. Of those, 3,535 have been confirmed positive, while 423 were classified as probable cases, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

New cases were reported in Cumberland (5), Hancock (7), Oxford (1), Washington (1), Penobscot (2) and York (5) counties, state data show. Information about where two cases reported wasnt immediately available.

The statewide death toll stands at 123.

Heres a roundup of the latest news on coronavirus and its impact in Maine:

Theres no expectation that all Maine students will return to school buildings full-time in the fall. But just the fact that the state has given the green light for all schools to reopen highlights Maines unique position in the U.S. when it comes to the coronavirus. Matthew Stone, BDN

Decades of disenfranchisement are at the heart of the uneasy choice facing Black voters, one of the Democratic Partys most important voting groups. Widespread problems with mail-in ballots during this years primary elections have added to the skepticism at a time when making Black voices heard has taken on new urgency during a national reckoning over racial injustice. Corey Williams, The Associated Press

As Maines wild blueberry growers step into overdrive to rake and process the states banner fruit over the coming weeks, they are also trying to quickly give coronavirus tests to the migrant workers who come from out-of-state each season to provide the industry with critical manual labor. Charles Eichacker, BDN

Mount Desert Island Hospital said Friday that its only recently recorded its first positive test results in several months, and that its heard from out-of-state visitors who were tested in their home state but didnt receive their results which were positive until they had arrived in Maine. Eesha Pendharkar, BDN

U.S. Sen. Susan Collins blamed Democrats on Friday for not accepting a last-minute one-week extension of $600 in weekly unemployment insurance benefits after the Senate left for the weekend before reaching a deal on a coronavirus aid package. Jessica Piper, BDN

As of Sunday afternoon, the coronavirus has sickened 4,646,691 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 154,744 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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August 2 update: The latest on the coronavirus and Maine - Bangor Daily News

The daily coronavirus update: 14 deaths, nearly 1500 new cases announced over weekend – MinnPost

MinnPost provides updates on coronavirus in Minnesota Sunday through Friday. The information is published following a press phone call with members of the Walz administration or after the release of daily COVID-19 figures by the Minnesota Department of Health.

Here are the latest updates from August 2:

Eight more Minnesotans have died of COVID-19, the Minnesota Department of Health said Sunday, for a total of 1,614.

Of the people whose deaths were announced Sunday, one was over 100 years old, two were in their 90s, one was in their 80s, two were in their 70s, one was in their 60s and one was in their 30s. Five of the eight deaths announced Sunday were among residents of long-term care facilities. Of the 1,614 COVID-19 deaths reported in Minnesota, 1,231 have been among residents of long-term care.

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The current death toll only includes Minnesotans with lab-confirmed positive COVID-19 tests.

MDH also said Sunday there have been 55,947 total confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Minnesota. The number of confirmed cases is up 759 from Saturdays count and is based on 15,174 new tests. You can find the seven-day positive case average here.

Since the start of the outbreak, 5,241 Minnesotans have been hospitalized and 302 are currently in the hospital, 149 in intensive care. You can find more information about Minnesotas current ICU usage and capacity here.

On Saturday, MDH reported six deaths and 725 new cases, based on 15,158 new tests. 317 were in the hospital, 149 in intensive care.

Of the 55,947 confirmed positive cases in Minnesota, 48,847 are believed to have recovered.

More information on cases can be found here.

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MDHs coronavirus website: https://www.health.state.mn.us/diseases/coronavirus/index.html

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Hotline, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.: 651-201-3920

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The daily coronavirus update: 14 deaths, nearly 1500 new cases announced over weekend - MinnPost

On the First Day of School, an Indiana Student Tests Positive for Coronavirus – The New York Times

One or two confirmed cases in a single classroom would require those classes to close for 14 days, with all students and staff members ordered to quarantine. The rest of the school would continue to operate, but if two or more people in different classrooms in the same school tested positive, the entire building would close for an investigation, and might not reopen for two weeks depending on the results.

In California, where schools in two-thirds of the state have been barred from reopening in person for now, state guidelines call for a school to close for at least 14 days if more than 5 percent of its students, faculty and staff test positive over a two-week period.

Updated July 27, 2020

Chicago, the nations third-largest school district, has proposed a hybrid system for reopening that would put students into 15-member pods that can be quarantined if one member tests positive. School buildings should close if the city averages more than 400 new cases a week or 200 cases a day, the plan states, with other worrying factors like low hospital capacity or a sudden spike in cases taken into account.

In Indiana, where the middle school student tested positive on Thursday in Greenfield, an Indianapolis suburb of 23,000 people, the virus began to spike in mid-June, and the caseload has remained relatively high. This week, Indianapolis opted to start the school year online.

The Greenfield-Central Community School Corporation, with eight schools and 4,400 students, gave families the option of in-person or remote learning. At Greenfield Central Junior High School, which the student with the positive test attends, about 15 percent of the 700 enrolled students opted for remote learning, said Mr. Olin, the superintendent.

It was overwhelming that our families wanted us to return, he said, adding that families needed to be responsible and not send students to school if they were displaying symptoms or awaiting test results. Students are also required to wear masks except when they are eating or for physical education outside, he said and as far as he knew, the student who tested positive was doing so.

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On the First Day of School, an Indiana Student Tests Positive for Coronavirus - The New York Times

Coronavirus in Texas is deadlier for people of color – The Texas Tribune

Correction: On July 30, the state said an automation error caused approximately 225 deaths to be incorrectly added to the overall death count; a subsequent quality check by Department of State Health Services epidemiologists revealed COVID-19 was not the direct cause of death in these cases. The numbers and charts in this story have been updated to account for this error and are current as of July 30.

Texas southernmost county, Cameron, is home to just 1.5% of the states population, but it accounts for nearly 5% of its known COVID-19 fatalities.

Cameron County where 89% of residents are Hispanic and nearly a third live below the poverty line stands out as just one stark example of widespread disparities in COVID-19 outcomes. Across Texas and the nation, the novel coronavirus is deadlier for communities of color and low-income communities.

These disparities, and a wealth of other demographic information, became more apparent this week when new tallying methods at the state health agency revealed a more complete picture of who has died in Texas and where. Trends showing that Black and Hispanic individuals had been disproportionately hit by the virus were clear nationally and apparent in local snapshots, but until earlier this week, the Texas Department of State Health Services limited demographic data had clouded the picture of those disparities statewide.

Hispanic Texans make up about 40% of the states population, but they account for 49% of its known COVID-19 fatalities. Black Texans also appear slightly overrepresented in the fatality toll, representing 14% of fatalities but just 12% of the state population. Texas reported a total of 6,274 fatalities Thursday evening.

By contrast, white and Asian Texans died at lower rates relative to their share of the states population.

Sometimes called the great equalizer, the novel coronavirus has been anything but a deadly reality in a state like Texas, where the Hispanic population is expected to become the largest group in the state by mid-2021.

The disparities should not have been a surprise, said Jamboor Vishwanatha, director of the Texas Center for Health Disparities at the University of North Texas Health Science Center.

What COVID did is essentially shined a bright light on existing disparities, Vishwanatha said, citing disparities in rates of preexisting conditions like diabetes and cardiovascular issues, as well as social factors like income inequality and access to health care. You would expect something like this to happen.

Research has found that higher-paid employees are more likely to have the option to work from home, and that Black and Hispanic employees are less likely to be able to work remotely. In Texas and across the country, front-line employees like janitors, grocery clerks and transit workers are more likely to be women and people of color, an Associated Press analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data revealed.

Thats forced low-income workers and people of color to risk their health at work, exposing them to the virus while others earn a paycheck from home.

Many of these folks, particularly early on, were exposed to the disease, Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, said Wednesday at an event put on by The Academy of Medicine, Engineering and Science of Texas.

Benjamin said a higher prevalence of chronic illnesses like hypertension and heart disease is contributing to disparities.

Geography has also played a role. Many of Texas deadliest hot spots have emerged in communities of color: among immigrant workforces at the meatpacking plants in the Panhandle; in Houston, one of the countrys most diverse cities; and in the Rio Grande Valley, where the population is majority Hispanic.

In general, most deaths have been recorded where most Texans live in big cities like Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, El Paso and Austin. But some counties, like Cameron and Hidalgo in the Rio Grande Valley, are mourning an outsized number of people relative to their population. Both counties are about 90% Hispanic.

Even in bigger urban areas, some whiter, wealthier counties seem to be faring better than poorer counties with more diverse populations. Travis County has some 400,000 more residents than El Paso County but fewer deaths, according to state data. According to census data, Travis County is about half white and a third Hispanic, with a median household income around $76,000 annually; El Paso County is 83% Hispanic, with a median household income around $44,000 annually.

And the virus true death toll is almost certainly higher than reported; for experts, the question is by how much.

The state may be showing a particular undercount in Hidalgo, a majority-Hispanic county in the Rio Grande Valley that is being ravaged by COVID-19. County health officials, using local medical records, report 576 deaths; the state, now relying on death certificates, revised its tally for the county down from over 450 to 312. Local officials said the difference is caused by delays in the issuance of death certificates.

Meanwhile, Vishwanatha said, access to testing has been more limited in communities of color.

Pointing to local data from North Texas, Vishwanatha said there is a disparity between communities of color and white groups not only in chance of getting infected but also in chance of dying from the disease. The gulf is even wider for mortality rate than it is for infection rate.

We are currently facing a critical situation where some of our communities are really suffering. We need to do everything to overcome these disparities. But hopefully this COVID situation has brought out something that we should have been tackling all along how to overcome these chronic health disparities that our communities suffer, Vishwanatha said.

Disclosure: The UNT Health Science Center has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Coronavirus in Texas is deadlier for people of color - The Texas Tribune

Greg Abbott skipping Republican National Convention to deal with coronavirus – The Texas Tribune

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Gov. Greg Abbott will skip the Republican National Convention later this month in North Carolina as he continues to respond to the coronavirus pandemic in Texas, and Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick will instead chair the state's delegation to the scaled-down gathering.

Abbott announced the plan in a letter dated Friday to the national GOP chairwoman, Ronna McDaniel.

"It was an honor being selected to serve as Chair of the Texas Delegation for the 2020 Republican National Convention," Abbott wrote. "However, as we deal with the COVID-19 pandemic, my top priority remains focused on protecting the health and safety of Texans."

Later this month, Charlotte will host the national convention, which has been pared down to delegates' official business due to the pandemic. President Donald Trump initially sought to hold a portion of the convention his renomination acceptance speech in Jacksonville, Florida, but abandoned that plan late last month amid a rise in coronavirus cases there.

The Republican National Committee decided earlier this summer to limit state's in-person delegations to Charlotte to six members an especially significant reduction for Texas, which normally sends over 150 delegates to the national convention.

Patrick, who chairs Trump's reelection campaign in Texas, was already the vice chair of the delegation to Charlotte. The five other delegates who will join him now are Allen West, the new state party chairman; Toni Anne Dashiell and Robin Armstrong, Texas' two RNC members; Deon Starnes, a member of the State Republican Executive Committee; and Adolpho Telles, the chairman of the El Paso County GOP.

Abbott also missed the Republican National Convention in 2016. At the time, he was recovering from severe burns he suffered during a family vacation earlier that summer.

Abbott's letter to McDaniel was first reported by The Dallas Morning News.

The state Republican Party last month held its convention, which went virtual despite a legal battle to hold it in person in Houston as that city experienced a dramatic surge in coronavirus infections. The convention ended up being plagued by technical issues and long delays, so much so that delegates voted to finish their business at a later date. A special party committee has since recommended that the SREC take up the unfinished business at its Sept. 19 meeting.

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Greg Abbott skipping Republican National Convention to deal with coronavirus - The Texas Tribune

The Strange Lives of Objects in the Coronavirus Era – The New York Times

Surfacing

The pandemic has inspired a flurry of new and novel items and given ordinary ones new meanings.

By Sophie Haigney

Illustrations by Peter Arkle

Plastic bubbles that hover over restaurant tables. Rods for contactless elevator-button-pushing. Portable seats that attach to lampposts, for shoppers waiting outside crowd-controlled stores. Dresses with skirts that have a six-foot radius. Podlike enclosures to keep gym-goers separate. A plastic sleeve that enables hugging at nursing homes. Masks in every imaginable form.

A set of new objects has emerged in the last few months to address the new reality of illness, lockdown, social distancing and social protest. Some of these objects are wacky and unrealized speculative concepts that may never see the light of day. Others, like cocktails-in-a-bag, thermometers and all manner of partitions, are already circulating widely. And some arent new at all: familiar household items like bottles of Lysol and rolls of toilet paper, which have taken on new meaning and importance because of scarcity or sudden unusual needs.

Im thinking a lot about what these objects are going to say about the pandemic in the future, said Anna Talley, a masters student in the history of design at the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Royal College of Art. Talley and a fellow student, Fleur Elkerton, have compiled an expansive online archive called Design in Quarantine. Some of these objects are whimsical, or a little ridiculous, like an ultra-large distancing crown distributed by a German Burger King in May. Others are the heartbreaking artifacts of illness and mass death, economic collapse and crisis.

Objects can give us an insight into a time period that documents cannot, said Alexandra Lord, chair of the medicine and science division at the Smithsonians National Museum of American History, who is helping to lead the museums Covid-19 collecting task force. As at many museums, curators there are engaging in whats called rapid response collecting, trying to gather material and objects even as the crisis unfolds. The nature of the pandemic has made it difficult to gather physical objects, but Lord and her colleagues have solicited ideas and offers from the public. They are trying to determine what will be crucial to future historians and viewers, even as the crisis continues to unfold.

We as historians like to have hindsight, but we already know certain objects like ventilators will be a crucial part of the story, Lord said. Masks, too, have become symbols of the crisis in their myriad and already-evolving forms: hand-sewn, N95, high-fashion, reusable, disposable.

At the New-York Historical Society, historians have been collecting since mid-March, trying to gather things that tell a specific story about the citys experience. They began making a collecting wish list that included signs about store closures in different languages, bottles from distilleries that were converted into bottles for hand sanitizers, and the blanket of a baby born amid the pandemic.

Theres a white polo shirt that the governor tends to wear when hes been doing his daily press briefings, Louise Mirrer, president and chief executive of the New-York Historical Society, said in May, when Gov. Andrew Cuomo was doing daily briefings. Wed like to have that, and we will ask him for that. (As of publication time, it remains on the wish list).

The New-York Historical Society is also seeking objects that illustrate the personal toll of the pandemic some of which would be difficult to collect now. There are some more sensitive objects that well ask for later, like artifacts from people who have lost friends and relatives, Mirrer said.

Some ordinary objects have transformed into artifacts, either because of the shadow of loss, or simply because of their newfound importance as the crisis continues to shift. Some of the early fads of the pandemic may already feel like relics of the past. Things from April seem old already, said Donna Braden, senior curator at the Henry Ford Museum. It was almost easier to identify those iconic objects early on, and now the crisis has become so fragmented and so pervasive.

The protests in June also marked a significant change, and a major collecting event for history museums. The New-York Historical Society, for instance, has collected a mural depicting George Floyd by the artists Matt Adamson and Joaquin G that covered a boarded-up shoe store in Soho. Theyve also collected protest signs and posters.

Some objects exist at a kind overlap between the protests and the pandemic, records that tell two narratives at once. At the Black Lives Matter protests, many people are carrying signs that reference the fact that Covid-19 is impacting communities of color disproportionately, and that this is all part of this bigger story about systemic racism in the U.S., Lord said.

Some of the objects with which weve become familiar throughout the pandemic have undergone changes or will have renewed meaning during reopenings. Now there are also masks for kids who are going back to school, these Crayola masks that are one for every day, then you put them in a sealable package and wash them, Braden said.

A number of the new designs and proposals might fall into the category of what the architecture critic Kate Wagner describes as coronagrifting: a trend defined by the emergence of cheap mockups of Covid-related design solutions that are substanceless but garner attention on Instagram. Talley and Elkerton, of Design in Quarantine, are conscious that some of the more outlandish designs in their archive might fall into that category. Weve been asked a bit about including quite speculative and conceptual designs from design practices or designers that cant be actualized and maybe are just responding to the pandemic to get the publicity, Elkerton said. For a while we were wondering, Are we actively promoting that by including these things? But were just trying to document what is happening in the design world, and the coronagrifting projects are interesting in themselves.

Theyve also become interested, Elkerton said, in failed designs. As a historian, its often more interesting to find out why something doesnt work or take hold than what does, she said.

There is something both poignant and hopeful in these acts of documentation and collection, in trying to look back at our current crisis through the imagined lens of history. In collecting present objects as artifacts of the future, were imagining that future as a kind of afterward a time and place where this is no longer ongoing, and we can look back.

As historians and curators begin to collect and document, many of us have become engaged in a kind of self-archiving: documenting lockdowns and sicknesses, saving newspaper articles and childrens art projects, building what amounts to pandemic collections. I find it really interesting that people are becoming almost historians of their own lives, Lord said.

We are by definition always living through history, but a crisis like this brings it into relief: We sense the significance of this time for future observers, and have the urge to preserve it.

Surfacing is a biweekly column that explores the intersection of art and life, produced by Alicia DeSantis, Gabriel Gianordoli, Jolie Ruben and Josephine Sedgwick.

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The Strange Lives of Objects in the Coronavirus Era - The New York Times

Ursa gets buffed as this coming Sunday Aghanim’s Trials are set on the highest ascension level – VPEsports

The latest Aghanims Labyrinth updates bring another batch of buffs and nerfs to several rooms and a couple of buffs for Ursa while the Trials are announced to take place on the highest ascension level, Grand Magnus.

Although the Trials are set on the Grand Magnus difficulty, anyone will be able to give it a try, regardless of their progression through the Labyrinth. However, reaching Aghanim and defeating him will be quite a challenge this week, even for those who have completed all the ascension levels.

Nonetheless, to slightly ease the task, Valve has buffed Ursa, a hero who seems to be more and more popular in the Labyrinth normal runs.

Ursa updates:

There are also several bugs fixed in preparation for this Sundays trials:

Aghanims Trials begin Sunday, August 2nd at 12:00 CEST/03:00PDT/18:00 PST, when players will be able to choose a two-hour time window to queue and test their strength through the labyrinth. The two-hour window will be available just once each week. Competition windows will be spaced out in five hours intervals, much like the TI10 Battle Pass Gauntlet challenge. More details on how the Trials work can be found on the event official FAQ page, HERE.

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Ursa gets buffed as this coming Sunday Aghanim's Trials are set on the highest ascension level - VPEsports

Health care options are expanding in Jacksonville area – The Florida Times-Union

The Florida Times-Union Editorial Board| Florida Times-Union

Three Jacksonville hospitals ranked in the Top 20 of U.S. News & World Reports Best Hospital rankings released last week.

Mayo Clinic Jacksonville tied for first place in the state, while Baptist Health Jacksonville ranked 11th and Ascension St. Vincents Riverside was 19th.

This is just more evidence that Jacksonville is coming into its own as a health care hub.

All eyes are on the coronavirus, and many companies are stepping back from an uncertain economy, but Ascension is looking ahead.

Ascension St. Vincents has bought more than 33 acres at Interstate 95 and County Road 210 West for a 56-bed hospital in Nocatee. Construction on the $115 million hospital is expected to begin this fall and be completed by 2022.

It will create 600 jobs and offer emergency services, general surgery, short-term care, cardiovascular care, orthopedics and musculoskeletal care as well as lab and imaging services.

The hospital is expected to grow with Nocatee and could be expanded to 300 beds.

And Ascension also has an orthopedic specialty hospital on the drawing boards for the Ascension St. Vincents Southside campus Ascension Florida, Gulf Coast and Phoenix-based Healthcare Outcomes Performance Company, a partner with Southeast Orthopedic Specialists, which will provide the physicians.

It would be the first orthopedic specialty hospital in the region, and the project includes ambulatory surgical centers.

Ascension St. Vincents also has opened two emergency care centers recently, one near Collins Road on the Westside and another near Monument Road in Arlington.

Walmart is expanding its health care services to Florida, with a health center at one of its Jacksonville stores, though the location has not been announced. It will offer primary care, urgent care, imaging, labs, counseling, hearing and optical services.

And the University of North Florida is priming the pump as well, offering coaching for aspiring health care entrepreneurs. It will help them develop business plans, network and receive professional support to get their idea off the ground.

All of this means health care is becoming more accessible in Jacksonville. And it also means more career and business opportunities in health care.

Other areas of Jacksonville are becoming more accessible as well.

Better accessibility

A new shuttle service is available in Downtown, LaVilla, Brooklyn, Riverside and Avondale. It is a partnership between Jacksonville Transportation Authority and Go Tukn, a locally owned tour, private event and urban transportation company.

The pay-to-ride service began last month. Tukn Ride will use JTAs bus stops to pick up riders who reserve and pay through a mobile app. Rides start at $2.

The distinctive green and white vehicles are European, ecofriendly Tuk Tuks and a Tukn Bus for larger groups.

The Downtown-to-Avondale corridor is all about walkability and this new service will help residents and visitors explore the business districts and restaurants and reduce vehicular traffic.

Merchants are supporting the new service by offering discounts to riders.

In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, the 14-passenger Tukn Bus has a lift for passengers in wheelchairs along with two specially designated areas. The Tukn Ride mobile app indicates which stop-to-stop rides are with the Tukn Bus.

All drivers complete thorough background screenings and must have a clean driving record. Due to the COVID-19 situation, drivers will wear face coverings and be responsible for enhanced cleaning and disinfecting procedures; hand sanitizer will be available on all Tukn Ride vehicles.

At Go Tukn we strongly believe if we help other businesses grow and prosper in the community we love, it will help drive innovation, bring more tourism to the area, and create a vibrant, thriving Urban Core, said owner Stephanie Dale in a news release.

Also, Jacksonville Arboretum and Botanical Gardens now has a new ADA-accessible path along the lake. The South Loop Ravine Overlook is over 1,000 feet long and 10- feetwide covered in asphalt.

The project was made possible by donations that were matched by the Delores Barr Weaver Legacy Fund.

Its great that more people will be able to explore this iconic urban forest and trail system

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Health care options are expanding in Jacksonville area - The Florida Times-Union

Ascension Seton to construct medical office building at Wolf Lakes Village in Georgetown – Community Impact Newspaper

The project's master plan calls for destination retail, first-class restaurants, hotels, cinema, multifamily, townhomes, and medical and Class A offices for several corporate campuses. (Courtesy Wolf Lakes Village)

According to a news release, the 40,000- to 60,000-square-foot medical office building will encompass a wide range of specialties and services, including orthopedics and full outpatient imaging servicesX-Ray, CT, MRI, ultrasound, mammography, and bone density testingwith more specialties expected in the future.

We are excited to have Ascension Seton on our site, said Iva Wolf McLachlan, president of Wolf Lakes LP, the developer of Wolf Lakes Village, in the release. Ascension has an outstanding reputation and long history of providing high-quality medical care in Central Texas and the United States.

Ascension Seton bought the 12-acre site located in the southwest section of the Wolf Lakes Village site located at the intersection of I-35 and Hwy. 29.

The significant growth in the Georgetown area over the past five years has led to this investment at Wolf Lakes Village, and we look forward to serving individuals in Central Texas through this Ascension Seton expansion, said Ray Anderson, chief strategy officer at Ascension Texas, in the statement.

The city of Georgetown identified life science and health care as target industries, Mayor Dale Ross said this project will not only provide additional medical services to residents, but it is expected to create a significant number of high-paying jobs.

The Ascension Seton project is the first development for Wolf Lakes Village, a one-of-a-kind European Village on a rare in-fill tract strategically located near downtown Georgetown and the I-35 corridor, the release said. The projects master plan, first announced in 2018, calls for destination retail, first-class restaurants, hotels, cinema, multifamily, townhomes, and medical and Class A offices for several corporate campuses.

Other planned amenities on Wolf Lakes Village include an outdoor amphitheater, parks, lakes, sports court, ice-skating rink, a wedding chapel and event center.

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Ascension Seton to construct medical office building at Wolf Lakes Village in Georgetown - Community Impact Newspaper

Ascension deputys visit with 3-year-old goes viral on social media – Weekly Citizen

Michael Tortorich| Donaldsonville Chief

An interaction between an Ascension Parish Sheriffs deputy and a young boy has gone viral via social media in recent days.

As of the end of the week, users had shared the Facebook post more than 100 times. The photos and caption had more than 1,000 positive reactions and some 100 comments by July 26.

APSO Deputy Chet Chambless spotted young Cullen as he waved while the police car patrolled the neighborhood. Chambless flipped on his lights and siren for the smiling boy.

When Chambless found out Cullen had a brand new baby sister at home, he gathered together some fun stuff for Cullen to play with at home. He even returned to the house a few hours later with a gift bag of coloring books and crayons.

Cullens mom, Cassandra Sibenaller, shared the positive story on social media. She is the owner and president of Trende Marketing, and formerly served as vice president of commercial lending at United Community Bank.

She said Cullen had just turned 3 in June and his baby sister was born July 16.

He had been a big brother for just a couple of days, and so his dad took him for a walk through our neighborhood for a little alone time, she said. They saw the sheriffs car and waved, and Officer Chet flashed his lights and turned on his siren for them.

Sibenaller said Cullen was super thrilled by the experience of meeting the deputy.

Unfortunately when he stopped by later Cullen was napping, but he brought him a gift bag with lots of fun stuff, including a tattoo, magnet, pencils, bracelet, and badge, she said.

Cullen was excited by the whole experience, she added, and was appreciative of Chambless kindness.

It made his day to know he was being thought about and he keeps talking about the policeman, she said. We appreciate Officer Chet taking some extra time out of his busy day to make Cullen feel special.

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Ascension deputys visit with 3-year-old goes viral on social media - Weekly Citizen

King Mohammed VI: All Moroccans Must Have Social Security in 5 Years – Morocco World News

Rabat King Mohammed VI called for the generalization of various social security programs to cover all Moroccans in the next five years in his Throne Day speech.

Moroccos development projects must focus on social justice, which can only be achieved if all Moroccans benefit from social welfare coverage, the monarch stressed.

King Mohammed VI gave the speech on Wednesday, July 29, the eve of the 21st anniversary of his ascension to the throne.

To emphasize the importance of an inclusive, generalized social security program, the King recalled his 2018 Throne Day speech. In his speech two years ago, he called for a reform of social security schemes in Morocco.

This year, however, King Mohammed VI defined a clear deadline for the reform, saying all Moroccans must benefit from social security in the next five years.

The Moroccan government should begin the reform in January 2021 through a gradual plan, the King stressed.

According to him, the government must first work on generalizing medical insurance and family allowances. Familial allowances are allocations given to heads of households, depending on the number of their family members.

After the generalization of the two benefits, the government needs to work on creating an inclusive pension program, as well as a basic unemployment allowance, King Mohammed VI said.

The monarch urged the government to build on the existing social welfare coverage programs to develop better, more inclusive plans.

To do so, King Mohammed VI emphasized the importance of creating a national unified register. The register would allow the inclusion of workers in the informal sector and guarantee equality in access to social security for all Moroccans, he said.

The King called on the government to take a participatory approach in the reform plan, taking into account the concerns of citizens and civil society.

He also stressed the importance of good governance, based on transparency, social dialogue, justice, and accountability.

At the end of his speech, King Mohammed VI thanked Moroccans for the patriotism they have shown during the COVID-19 pandemic. He also asked citizens to remain solidary in the coming phase, acknowledging its difficulty.

Calling on Moroccans to honor the legacy of their grandfathers, the nations valiant martyrs, the sovereign said capitalizing on the achievements made during the crisis is a must.

King Mohammed VI ended his speech on an optimistic note, quoting the Quran: Allah puts no burden on any person beyond what He has given him. After a difficulty, Allah will soon grant relief.

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King Mohammed VI: All Moroccans Must Have Social Security in 5 Years - Morocco World News

We can stop COVID-19 in Pensacola. But we’ve got to do it together | Guestview – Pensacola News Journal

Tom VanOsdol, Guest columnist Published 9:41 a.m. CT July 31, 2020

COVID-19 has been an unprecedented challenge for everyone. Our nation has not faced such a daunting public health crisis since the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918.

Back then, the Daughters of Charity, who founded our health system in Pensacola and Mobile, quickly responded and emerged as unexpected heroes. Today, our healthcare heroes walk in their footsteps. Im extraordinarily grateful for all healthcare workers and particularly those with whom Im so blessed to serve. But we cant do this alone. We need your help.

COVID-19 is easily spread and can have devastating, long-lasting effects, but there are a few critical steps we can all take to reduce the risk of getting it or giving it:

We appreciate the efforts of local businesses and organizations that are implementing plans to curb COVID-19s spread, including mask and social distancing policies. I know these safety measures may seem uncomfortable, but we have a shared responsibility to care for others as if were caring for ourselves or our loved ones.

Again, get the care you need if you get sick, especially if its an emergency. Too often weve seen patients stay home during a health emergency because they were afraid to come to the hospital or their doctors office. Weve made changes to our sites of care to protect you from COVID-19, so dont delay the care you need.

We can and we must work together to beat COVID-19 by following these simple steps and listening to the advice of healthcare and infectious disease officials who provide us with proven techniques to help stop this serious, deadly virus from spreading.

Tom VanOsdol is president and CEO of Ascension Florida and Gulf Coast, which includes Ascension Providence based in Mobile, Ala., Ascension Sacred Heart based in Pensacola, Fla., and Ascension St. Vincents, based in Jacksonville, Fla.

Read or Share this story: https://www.pnj.com/story/opinion/2020/07/31/we-can-stop-covid-19-pensacola-but-weve-got-do-together-guestview/5554114002/

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We can stop COVID-19 in Pensacola. But we've got to do it together | Guestview - Pensacola News Journal

How Hong Kong Is Trying To Tame Its New Spike Of COVID-19 Cases : Goats and Soda – NPR

New rules in Hong Kong require everyone to wear a mask in all outdoor places or face a $650 fine. Above: A masked woman stretches out a public park. Also: The maximum number of people allowed at a public gathering is ... 2. Miguel Candela/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images hide caption

New rules in Hong Kong require everyone to wear a mask in all outdoor places or face a $650 fine. Above: A masked woman stretches out a public park. Also: The maximum number of people allowed at a public gathering is ... 2.

Each week, we answer "frequently asked questions" about life during the coronavirus crisis. If you have a question you'd like us to consider for a future post, email us at goatsandsoda@npr.org with the subject line: "Weekly Coronavirus Questions."

Hong Kong is seeing its biggest surge in coronavirus cases since the outbreak began.

After periods when the city had gotten the number of domestic cases infections not linked to people arriving from abroad down to zero, Hong Kong is now reporting more than 100 new cases a day.

So what is Hong Kong doing about it?

A lot. And the goal is to get the reported coronavirus case numbers back down to just a handful if not none at all.

Interestingly, Hong Kong isn't ordering a blanket "shelter in place" or universal "stay at home" order as some places have. Hong Kong actually has never implemented a full lockdown since the pandemic began.

Instead, city officials have tightened social distancing rules, shut non-essential businesses and required everyone to wear a mask in all outdoor places and on the subway. Violators can be fined $5,000 Hong Kong Dollars ($650 US).

On Wednesday of this week new rules went into effect that closed all bars, nightclubs, karaoke halls and mahjong parlors. Gyms, hair salons and swimming pools were shut as well.

The rules also shuttered food courts, bathhouses, movie theaters, party halls and sports facilities. And restaurants which had been allowed to offer sit-down service were ordered to switch to takeout only (more on that later).

Business owners who violate the restrictions face fines of $50,000 HKD or roughly $6,500 USD and six months in jail.

And while some places in the world have been capping the size of public gatherings at 50 or 20 or 10 people, Hong Kong set their new limit for public gatherings at 2. Yes, you read that right. You can't really get a smaller party.

At a time when there have been mass street demonstrations about the influence of Beijing over the semi-autonomous territory, people who gather in groups larger than 2 can face up to a half a year in prison and a fine of $25,000 HKD ($3,250 USD).

As the new rules were announced, Carrie Lam, chief executive of Hong Kong, told Hong Kongers in a video message that the city is on the verge of an even larger outbreak that could overwhelm its hospitals.

"The government has put in place the most stringent measures ever in enforcing social distancing," Lam said from behind a white mask. "Our frontline staff are battling with the surge and the central government is helping us to enhance testing capability and set up a community treatment facility. What we need now is your co-operation."

You may wonder how the new restrictions are playing out.

On Wednesday, the first day restaurants were forced to only offer takeout, sidewalks were jammed with people trying to eat lunch outside.

"What we saw on the streets of Hong Kong was a lot of office workers buying their lunch takeaway and then eating it on the street, crouching down, kneeling down, sitting on park benches with umbrellas because it's raining," says Ben Cowling, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the University of Hong Kong.

"It made Hong Kong seem like it was a different country to what we're used to. We don't normally see people crouching down eating their lunch outside. So it's kind of strange to see that."

The takeaway-only rule caused so much chaos that city officials reversed it the next day. On Thursday, they put in place new rules allowing restaurants to serve sitdown lunch at 50% capacity and with at least 1.5 meters between tables just shy of 5 feet.

Despite Hong Kong having contained the coronavirus incredibly efficiently for months, Cowling says he's not that surprised there's now a surge in cases.

"We knew that we'd get a resurgence sooner or later because we had relaxed all of the public health measures," Cowling says. "By opening up again, we were vulnerable to a resurgence in cases. And that's what's happened in the past month."

Even before this recent wave of cases, Hong Kong had a strict system for isolating people who are infected and people who'd had close contact with any known case.

Anyone who tests positive is admitted to a hospital for treatment even if they've got no symptoms whatsoever. And they're not allowed to leave until they're confirmed negative on two consecutive tests ideally two days in a row. Close contacts of confirmed cases and people who arrive from abroad are also required to quarantine up to 14 days, even if they test negative.

The quarantine rules are so burdensome that an association representing FedEx pilots this week called on the international shipping giant to suspend operations in Hong Kong. The Air Line Pilots Association said three asymptomatic FedEx pilots who tested positive were "forced" to stay in hospitals for nearly 2 weeks. And other crew members who'd been in contact with them were placed in government camps.

But those strict quarantine requirements have been part of how Hong Kong kept its COVID-19 numbers so low for so long.

Cowling says the new rules that went into effect this week are a way for health officials to put additional pressure on the virus and drive down transmission.

"Hopefully we're going to get the numbers coming down and down over the course of the next month, back to zero again," he says. Slowly restaurants will fill back up. Karaoke will return. Hair salons and swimming pools will reopen.

"And then the whole thing starts again. We try and keep infections out for as long as possible, but sooner or later, they're going to be back and then we'll be facing another wave."

And Hong Kong will have to tighten up measures to push down transmission once again.

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How Hong Kong Is Trying To Tame Its New Spike Of COVID-19 Cases : Goats and Soda - NPR

ICYMI: Governor Cuomo’s Op-Ed in The New York Times: Let’s End the Wait for Coronavirus Test Results. Here’s How. – ny.gov

The New York Times published an op-ed by Governor Andrew M. Cuomo laying out a roadmap to reduce widespread national delays in getting COVID-19 test results. Text of the op-ed is available below and can be viewed online here.

It's been six months since the United States reported its first coronavirus case, and getting a test can still take days. National labs are overwhelmed, leaving people to wait as much as two weeks for results. Every day that testing falls short is another day the virus can spread undetected, costing lives and delaying the reopening of our economy, schools and society.

As states try to control the virus and as Congress considers the fourth Covid-19 relief bill, New York offers important lessons on how to fix the testing mess.

Over the last 10 weeks, New York has used testing to not only flatten the curve, but actually reduce the rate of infection since our phased reopening started. We have kept our testing rates high through partnerships with federal and local governments. In February and early March, New York worked with the Food and Drug Administration to gain the necessary approvals to begin using our own Covid-19 test and mobilize a network of hundreds of labs. In April, when our labs were struggling because of shortages of a necessary chemical ingredient, reagents, President Trump and I reached an agreement that helped double New York's capacity.

Here's what states should do to build a sustainable testing operation, and how Congress can help.

Mobilize smaller local labs. Almost all states are now using a handful of national testing companies, and they are overwhelmed. New York has managed to avoid the delays because more than 80 percent of our testing does not depend on the national laboratories experiencing long turnaround times for results.

In the early days of the pandemic, New York organized hundreds of local labs to conduct as many tests as possible. We moved equipment sitting idle to labs that could run them around the clock. Today, more than 250 labs in the state report results each day some conducting 10 tests daily, some thousands. All together, New York can now conduct on average 65,000 tests a day.

And while any lag time is not ideal, over the past week, more than 85 percent of New York's tests took a median of just two days (and an average of three days) from collection to result, and lags will continue to shorten as we move tests from labs with backlogs to labs without.

Each state should mobilize its own network of laboratories, which will take pressure off the major national labs, reduce reporting times and arm states with data that can help slow the spread of the virus. Congress should dedicate money to help develop the capacity of local laboratories and ensure federal agencies can provide speedy approvals and technical assistance to states.

Streamline the supply chain. In New York and other states, there are high-capacity labs running at partial capacity because they don't have enough supplies.

How can it be, six months after America's first case was reported, that the United States still doesn't have an adequate supply chain? What labs need reagents and plastic pipette tips are not complicated to manufacture. They can, and should, be made in mass quantity, immediately, and here at home.

New York invested $750,000 in Rheonix, an Ithaca-based manufacturer to build lab instruments and make reagent kits, which are now being used for thousands of tests daily. States should tap their local manufacturing companies to compensate for international shortages, and Congress should allocate funding for businesses that fill these needs.

Invest in innovative solutions. The Food and Drug Administration recently approved pooled testing, where multiple samples are run at once, increasing capacity and saving lab supplies. But for one national lab, the approved pool size is just four samples. In Wuhan, China, up to 10 specimens were pooled, allowing the city to increase its capacity to 1.5 million tests daily, up from 46,000 tests daily.

The federal government should direct research money so that labs can increase their pool size, while ensuring accuracy. With flu season on the way, Congress and federal agencies should also invest in developing widely available single tests that can detect multiple respiratory viruses, including the coronavirus and different types of influenza.

Congress should also invest in developing more tests that can give results in minutes and that can be administered at workplaces, not just labs. The F.D.A. has approved only a handful of these devices, and they are not widely available.

Fund all necessary testing. Currently, under federal rules, "medically necessary" testing is free for those with coronavirus symptoms, as well as asymptomatic people who have been exposed to the virus.

But states should be able to conduct broad community screening 40 percent of infected people are asymptomatic to detect the virus and control its spread. For example, Congress should ensure testing is free for individuals who attend mass gatherings, regularly ride public transportation or interact with members of the public at work.

New York is proof that a real testing strategy can control Covid-19. But our future success depends on other states to do the same a virus anywhere is a virus everywhere.

There can be no economic recovery without each state having a sustainable testing strategy. New York has already advised other cities, and we stand ready to help any state or local government replicate our success.

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ICYMI: Governor Cuomo's Op-Ed in The New York Times: Let's End the Wait for Coronavirus Test Results. Here's How. - ny.gov

Yes, the Coronavirus Is in the Air – The New York Times

But before aerosols can get far, they must travel through the air thats near: meaning that they are a hazard at close range, too. And all the more so because, just like the smoke from a cigarette, aerosols are most concentrated near the infected person (or smoker) and become diluted in the air as they drift away.

A peer-reviewed study by scientists at the University of Hong Kong and Zhejiang University, in Hangzhou, China, published in the journal Building and Environment in June concluded, The smaller the exhaled droplets, the more important the short-range airborne route.

So what does this all mean exactly, practically?

Can you walk into an empty room and contract the virus if an infected person, now gone, was there before you? Perhaps, but probably only if the room is small and stuffy.

Can the virus waft up and down buildings via air ducts or pipes? Maybe, though that hasnt been established.

More likely, the research suggests, aerosols matter in extremely mundane scenarios.

Consider the case of a restaurant in Guangzhou, southern China, at the beginning of the year, in which one diner infected with SARS-CoV-2 at one table spread the virus to a total of nine people seated at their table and two other tables.

Yuguo Li, a professor of engineering at the University of Hong Kong, and colleagues analyzed video footage from the restaurant and in a preprint (not peer reviewed) published in April found no evidence of close contact between the diners.

Droplets cant account for transmission in this case, at least not among the people at the tables other than the infected persons: The droplets would have fallen to the floor before reaching those tables.

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Yes, the Coronavirus Is in the Air - The New York Times