Global Coronavirus Cases Surge, Stinging Even Places That Seemed to Have Control – The New York Times

Mr. Inslee, a Democrat, and the states secretary of health, John Wiesman, also announced masks will be required in all common spaces, like elevators, hallways, university housing and hotels, effective July 25.

Currently, masks are required in public spaces when people cannot main social distance.

The new restrictions were announced after the state reported a steady rise in new infections. By the end of last month, the seven-day average of new infections in the state was 538, according to a New York Times database. By Wednesday, that number was 920.

Starting July 30, indoor dining at restaurants and bars will be allowed only for members of the same household, according to the statement from Mr. Inslees office. Others can dine outdoors or place to-go orders.

Restaurants must also close gaming and social areas, the statement said. And indoor service at bars will be prohibited.

Occupancy at indoor movie theaters, currently at 50 percent, will be reduced to 25 percent.

Starting Aug. 6, the size of wedding ceremonies will be limited to either 30 people, or 20 percent of the facilitys indoor occupancy, whichever is smaller. Wedding receptions, though, will be prohibited.

The number of people allowed at gyms, fitness studios, indoor pools and tennis facilities will also reduced, starting July 30.

The current moratorium on evictions, Mr. Inslee said, will be extended until Oct. 15. Details on that will be released shortly, he said.

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Global Coronavirus Cases Surge, Stinging Even Places That Seemed to Have Control - The New York Times

29 new coronavirus cases have been reported in 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.

This story will be updated.

Another 29 cases of the coronavirus have been reported in Maine, health officials said Wednesday.

Wednesdays count brings the total coronavirus cases reported in Maine to 3,866. Of those, 3,457 have been confirmed positive, while 409 were classified as probable cases, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention reports.

New cases were reported in Androscoggin (1), Cumberland (13), Hancock (5), Kennebec (1), Oxford (2), Penobscot (1), Waldo (2) and York (4) counties, state data show.

The agency revised Tuesdays cumulative total to 3,837, down from 3,838, meaning there was a net increase of 28 over the previous days report, state data show. As the Maine CDC continues to investigate previously reported cases, some are determined to have not been the coronavirus, or coronavirus cases not involving Mainers. Those are removed from the states cumulative total.

No new deaths were reported Wednesday, leaving the statewide death toll at 121. Nearly all deaths have been in Mainers over age 60.

So far, 385 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus.

Meanwhile, 17 more people have recovered from the coronavirus, bringing total recoveries to 3,336. That means there are 409 active and probable cases in the state, which is up from 398 on Tuesday.

A majority of the cases 2,159 have been in Mainers under age 50, while more cases have been reported in women than men, according to the Maine CDC.

As of Tuesday, there have been 162,028 negative test results out of 167,429 overall. Just under 3 percent of all tests have come back positive, the most recent Maine CDC data show.

The coronavirus has hit hardest in Cumberland County, where 2,029 cases have been reported and where the bulk of virus deaths 68 have been concentrated. It is one of four counties the others are Androscoggin, Penobscot and York, with 545, 141 and 633 cases, respectively where community transmission has been confirmed, according to the Maine CDC.

There are two criteria for establishing community transmission: at least 10 confirmed cases and that at least 25 percent of those are not connected to either known cases or travel. That second condition has not yet been satisfied in other counties.

Other cases have been reported in Aroostook (31), Franklin (45), Hancock (23), Kennebec (160), Knox (25), Lincoln (33), Oxford (51), Piscataquis (3), Sagadahoc (43), Somerset (34), Waldo (62) and Washington (7) counties. Information about where another case was reported wasnt immediately available Wednesday morning.

As of Wednesday morning, the coronavirus has sickened 4,361,013 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 149,260 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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29 new coronavirus cases have been reported in maine - Bangor Daily News

Coronavirus Live Updates: Moderna and N.I.H. Begin Vaccine Trial – The New York Times

A test of a late-stage vaccine will enroll people at 89 sites around the United States.

One of the first large studies of safety and effectiveness of a coronavirus vaccine in the United States began on Monday morning, according to the National Institutes of Health and the biotech company Moderna, which collaborated to develop the vaccine.

The study, a Phase 3 clinical trial, is to enroll 30,000 healthy people at about 89 sites around the country. Half will receive two shots of the vaccine, 28 days apart, and half will receive two shots of a saltwater placebo. Neither the volunteers nor the medical staff giving the injections will know who is getting the real vaccine.

Researchers will then monitor the subjects, looking for side effects and waiting to see if significantly fewer vaccinated people get Covid-19, indicating that the vaccine works. The main goal is to determine whether the vaccine can prevent the illness. The study will also try to find out if it can prevent severe Covid-19 and death; if it can prevent infection entirely, based on lab tests; and if just one shot can prevent the illness.

Earlier tests of the vaccine showed that it stimulated a strong immune response, with minor and transient side effects like sore arms, fatigue, achiness and fever. But exactly what type of immune response is needed to prevent the illness is not known, so Phase 3 studies are essential to determine whether a vaccine really works.

In a statement, Dr. Francis Collins, the director of the N.I.H., said, Having a safe and effective vaccine distributed by the end of 2020 is a stretch goal, but its the right goal for the American people. He said that despite the unprecedented speed in bringing this experimental vaccine to human testing, the most stringent safety measures were being maintained.

Moderna said in a statement that it would be able to deliver about 500 million doses per year, and possibly up to a billion doses per year, starting in 2021. The company says it will not sell the vaccine at cost, but for profit.

The vaccine uses a synthetic version of genetic material from part of the coronavirus, encased in tiny particles made of fat that help it get into human cells. The genetic material, called messenger RNA or mRNA, then prompts the cells to churn out a tiny piece of the virus, which the immune system sees as foreign, and learns to recognize. If the person is later exposed to the real virus, the immune system will attack.

Messenger RNA has not produced any approved vaccines, but other companies have also invested in the approach because of its potential to produce vaccine quickly. The government announced last week that it had made a $1.95 billion deal to buy 100 million doses of an mRNA vaccine made by Pfizer, in partnership with a German company, BioNTech. That vaccine is also expected to begin Phase 3 trials this month, and the government will buy it only if the trial proves it safe and effective. Curevac and Sanofi are also working on mRNA vaccines.

Moderna said on Sunday that it would receive up to $472 million in additional funding from the federal government to help pay for the late-stage clinical trial. Hundreds of vaccines are being tested for the coronavirus, and 27 are in human trials. The federal government has been promising billions of dollars to companies to quickly develop and manufacture vaccines as part of Operation Warp Speed. In addition to Pfizer and Moderna, Novavax has entered a $1.6 billion deal. Other companies that have received significant federal money include AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson. The total value of Modernas award is now $955 million, the company said.

With Kentucky officials set to announce stricter measures on Monday to contain the coronavirus, a top federal health official suggested that the leaders of nearby states should take a hard look at doing the same.

On a visit to Kentucky on Sunday, Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the Trump administrations coronavirus response coordinator, said several states in the region should reinstate bar closures and restrictions on public gatherings to quell the rise of infections.

We do believe that there are states that do need to close their bars, to decrease indoor gatherings to less than 10 and to decrease social gatherings to less than 10 to really make it possible to control the pandemic before it gets worse, Dr. Birx said at a news conference.

Several states in the South and Midwest are facing the prospect of shutting down parts of their economy again to try to stem the virus, which the Trump administration and many governors have increasingly been forced to recognize as unrelenting. As some states turn to new restrictions to try to stem the spread, Larry Kudlow, the presidents economic adviser, said Sunday on CNN that the administration would lengthen the eviction moratorium which was set to expire at the end of July.

Florida has surpassed New York, an early epicenter of the pandemic in the United States, in the number of cases, and four states have set single-day records for infections: Louisiana, Tennessee, Oklahoma and Alaska.

On her visit to Kentucky, Dr. Birx cited as worrisome not just that state but also Indiana, Ohio, Tennessee and Virginia. She said the federal health authorities were concerned about the percentage of people who were testing positive for the virus, as well as the total number of cases.

Dr. Birx appeared with Gov. Andy Beshear of Kentucky, a Democrat, who said that the state would announce new guidelines on Monday to address the rise in cases.

I want you to know that the White House and Kentucky state government are in complete agreement that the escalation of cases is going to require us to take some new steps, Mr. Beshear said.

In Florida, cases have surged this month. Over the past week, there have been an average of about 10,500 cases per day, an increase of about 19 percent from the average two weeks earlier, according to a New York Times database. There have been at least 5,853 deaths in Florida since the beginning of the pandemic.

And despite increased testing capacity across the nation, there is a consensus among federal state and local officials that test results are taking too long.

The federal government said Sunday that it would pay the testing company Hologic up to $7.6 million to expand the number of tests its machines can run by two million a month. The expanded capacity wont be available until next January.

Testing is considered crucial to understanding and slowing the spread of the virus. When turnaround times extend beyond several days, it can render the information useless, since those tested may have spread the virus to other people by the time their results are back.

Top Trump administration officials proposed on Sunday potentially short-circuiting free-ranging stimulus talks with Democrats to rush through a much narrower bill prioritizing an extension of federal unemployment benefits that are set to expire this week for millions of Americans.

Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, said he would now like to see lawmakers act this week to extend and alter the unemployment program, give tax credits to businesses to help ease reopening costs and grant employers new liability protections while setting aside a long list of other objectives, including Democrats priorities.

Perhaps we put that forward, get that passed, as we can negotiate on the rest of the bill in the weeks to come, Mr. Meadows said on ABCs This Week.

The proposal, echoed by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin in his own Sunday morning interview, was a last-ditch effort by Republicans to prevent the program from lapsing as signs mounted that the nations economy was once again weakening amid a resurgence of coronavirus cases.

With Democrats already on record in opposition to a piecemeal approach, a narrow fix is almost certainly dead on arrival. Republicans know that, suggesting their Sunday proposal may in part be a negotiating tactic laying the groundwork to blame the opposition party when the funds ultimately expire.

Democrats passed their own $3 trillion proposal which also includes money to bail out states and cities, fully fund the $600 additional federal jobless benefit and infuse billions more into the nations health care system in May and view the time pinch now as a problem of Republicans making that only gives them more leverage in shaping a final bill.

Weve been anxious to negotiate for two months and 10 days, Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on Sunday on the CBS program Face the Nation. She said Congress could not leave town for its annual August recess until a deal was

As Hurricane Hanna began to slam the coast of Texas coast over the weekend, some Texans were forced to balance one threat against another. To avoid possible injury or death in the storm, they had to risk infection from the coronavirus.

In ordinary times, if a big storm is approaching, city officials will ask people in seaside and flood-prone areas to evacuate and seek shelter with relatives or in emergency shelters places where people share bathrooms and tight quarters.

But fear of contagion has thrown old protocols out the window.

When I saw that the hurricane was headed our way, I thought, We have enough problems, said the mayor of Corpus Christi, Joe McComb.

Hanna has not displaced many people, as hurricanes go, and that made things a little easier. The relatively low-stakes storm allowed officials to assess how to help people evacuate safely while diminishing the spread of the virus.

But some still faced tough decisions, among them Bartt Howe, a 49-year-old Texan whose boat was his refuge from the pandemic.

Battling diabetes and H.I.V., he knew that catching the virus could kill him, so he had been living alone on the docked boat for three months.

I had managed to stay safe all this time, but the storm kicked me out of my boat, Mr. Howe said. Now here I am, back on land, on borrowed time.

Heres what else is happening with the coronavirus response in the United States:

Everyone who is evacuated will be required to go isolation for 14 days, and their health will be closely monitored, officials said Monday.

The strain of the virus found in Danang is different from five strains detected earlier in the county and spreads more rapidly than the others, they said.

Dozens of flights have been added, but the evacuation is expected to take at least four days. The evacuees are mostly local tourists; Vietnam remains closed to incoming foreign tourists.

Health officials began expanded screening and testing in Danang, a popular tourist destination, after a 57-year-old man tested positive for the fourth time on Saturday, the government said. The infections of three additional people on Sunday, including a 61-year-old man requiring a ventilator, prompted the evacuation. Officials said it was unclear whether all four patients had the same source of infection.

Vietnam said late Monday that it had found an additional 11 cases linked to a Danang hospital, Reuters reported.

Vietnam has been among the worlds most successful countries in containing the virus. It closed down international borders early in the crisis, called for widespread use of masks, and rapidly began strict quarantine and contact-tracing measures. There have been 420 cases and no deaths, according to a New York Times database.

But the case of the 57-year-old-man, who had not traveled outside Danang and rarely left home in the previous month, alarmed Vietnams residents, who are being asked to wear masks again after becoming more lax in recent months.

Several countries that had the virus under control have had to sharpen their response after a sudden uptick in cases. In June, China reimposed restrictions in Beijing after a flare-up ended a 56-day run of no locally transmitted cases. Officials in Australia locked down much of Melbourne in early July after restrictions had been eased for months. But Japan has shied away from new restrictions even as cases broke records last week.

In other news from around the world:

Often criticized for a slow response to the coronavirus, the government in Britain moved quickly this weekend to impose a 14-day quarantine on anyone arriving from Spain, after a spike in coronavirus cases there. The rapid move brought disarray to thousands of Britons, blindsiding those already traveling and embarrassing Britains transportation secretary, Grant Shapps, who is responsible for aviation policy but learned of the quarantine while on vacation. In Spain.

Officials in Hong Kong, which reported a record 145 new cases on Monday and has had more than 100 new cases for six days in a row, said on Monday that they would shut down all dine-in restaurant service, limit public gatherings to two people and require masks in public at all times. Hong Kong is coping with its worst outbreak yet after having the virus largely under control from mid-April to July.

The government of Morocco locked down eight cities on Sunday before the Eid al-Adha holiday. People are prohibited from leaving or entering Berrechid, Casablanca, Fez, Marrakesh, Meknes, Settat, Tangier and Tetouan, except under specific conditions. The lockdown is open-ended. The decision comes after a week of rising coronavirus cases in the North African kingdom and is aimed at containing the virus during a holiday when Moroccans travel across the country to visit family. Over the weekend, the authorities also tightened the control of the mask mandate and fined and even arrested people who didnt wear their masks outside of their homes. Morocco has had 20,278 cases and 313 deaths from the virus.

The health minister of the Mexican state of Chihuahua, Dr. Jesus Grajeda, died nearly two weeks after being hospitalized with Covid-19, Reuters reported. Announcing the death on Sunday on Facebook, Chihuahuas governor, Javier Corral, expressed profound sadness.

The coronavirus pandemic has been surging across Zambia, with the government announcing a record number of cases. Last week, the authorities also said that 15 lawmakers and 11 members of staff had tested positive for the coronavirus.

One of those is the lawmaker Princess Kasune Zulu, 44, prominently known for being the first Zambian legislator to declare that she had H.I.V. Elected in 2016, she has worked with global organizations and traveled the world talking about living with H.I.V. and advocating on behalf of others with it. Ms. Zulu announced that she had tested positive for coronavirus on Facebook, saying she was going into quarantine.

Covid-19 is moving rapidly and so many lives at stake, she wrote on Facebook, urging Zambians to stay at home, wear masks and avoid gatherings, including church. Lets do our part so that God can do his, she said. As of Sunday, Zambias ministry of health had reported cumulative 4,481 cases and 139 deaths.

The latest count of new coronavirus cases was jarring: Some 1,500 virus cases were identified three consecutive days last week in Illinois, and fears of a resurgence in the state even led the mayor of Chicago to shut down bars all over town on Friday.

But at the same moment, there were other, hopeful data points that seemed to tell a different story entirely. Deaths from the virus statewide are one-tenth what they were at their peak in May. And the positivity rate of new coronavirus tests in Illinois is about half that of neighboring states.

There are so many numbers flying around, said Dr. Allison Arwady, the commissioner of the Chicago health department. Its hard for people to know whats the most important thing to follow.

Six months since the first cases were detected in the United States, more people have been infected by far than in any other country, and the daily rundown of national numbers on Friday was a reminder of a mounting emergency: more than 73,500 new cases, 1,100 deaths and 939,838 tests, as well as 59,670 people currently hospitalized for the virus.

Americans now have access to an expanding set of data to help them interpret the coronavirus pandemic. Sophisticated data-gathering operations by newspapers, research universities and volunteers have sprung up in response to the pandemic, monitoring and collecting coronavirus metrics around the clock.

Everybodys tracking this virus in a way that theyve never done with any other infectious disease, said Dr. Amesh A. Adalja, a physician and senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security who has treated coronavirus patients. For some people, its helped them understand what is happening. For other people, its been misinterpreted and not very helpful.

After North Korea on Sunday accused a man of secretly crossing into the country from South Korea and bringing the coronavirus with him, Seoul went in search of any defectors in the South who were missing.

By Monday, South Korean officials had zeroed in on a 24-year-old man, identified only by his family name, Kim, who in 2017 swam across the western inter-Korea border to defect to the South. On July 19, he swam back across the border into Kaesong in the North, they said.

It was not immediately clear why the defector had crossed. The South Korean news agency Yonhap reported that the man had been wanted by the South Korean police for questioning after a rape accusation.

North Korea said on Sunday that the North Korean man was suspected to have been infected with the vicious virus and could be the countrys first virus case. And the reverse defection prompted the Norths leader, Kim Jong-un, to order a total lockdown of Kaesong, a border city of 300,000, and declare a maximum national emergency.

Until Sunday, North Korea had repeatedly said that it had no Covid-19 cases. The claim was questioned by outside experts.

South Korea officials could not say whether the man might have carried the coronavirus across the border.

Nearly 3,000 small businesses in New York City have closed for good in the past four months, blaming falling revenue, vanished tourism and ballooning debt, especially for overdue rent.

Before the pandemic, Record Mart was a fixture of the Times Square subway station for more than 60 years, known for carrying vinyl recordings of Latin and jazz music.

Lou Moskowitz left his job in real estate in 2006 to work full time at the shop, which was owned by his father. Sales at independent record stores were on the decline nationwide, and many were shutting down throughout New York. Mr. Moskowitzs friends questioned his move.

After his father died in 2012, Mr. Moskowitz took over the business. For years, Record Mart survived by selling electronics and headphones and drawing in passers-by to explore its extensive vinyl collection. The shop was not thriving, but revenue trickled in.

Then coronavirus cases and hospitalizations rose in New York, and more than 90 percent of the citys subway ridership disappeared. That was the final nail in the coffin, Mr. Moskowitz said. He weighed the shops future for two months before closing it permanently in June.

Restaurants, barbershops and small shops have closed across the city, and for some New Yorkers, the near-weekly closures of neighborhood mainstays have ushered in a type of mourning.

Its been this long, drawn-out loss, and its a lot to take in emotionally, said Jeremiah Moss, the author of Vanishing New York: How a Great City Lost Its Soul, a book about gentrification.

Mr. Moss said he recently rode by a Manhattan theater and suddenly began wondering if it, too, would disappear soon. And then I pushed it aside, he said, because its just too much right now. Its overwhelming.

Reporting was contributed by Stephen Castle, Emily Cochrane, Nicholas Fandos, Julie Bosman, Troy Closson, Denise Grady, Choe Sang-Hun, Tiffany May, Raphael Minder, Richard C. Paddock, Edgar Sandoval, Eileen Sullivan, Neil Vigdor and Daniel Victor.

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Coronavirus Live Updates: Moderna and N.I.H. Begin Vaccine Trial - The New York Times

Coronavirus in Texas: You Do the Right Things, and Still You Get It – The New York Times

They are amazing nerds, Ms. Roman, 38, said of her parents.

Sheryl Roberts, 65, understood the perils of the pandemic she had diabetes, asthma and heart disease, which could put her at higher risk. Her husband had chronic lung disease and a stent to open a blocked coronary artery.

We have been so careful, so very careful, and stayed away from people, Ms. Roberts said. Her husband began working from home in the spring when Washington State, New York and then other areas around the country were hit hard. Mr. Roberts occasionally made a supermarket run during senior hour; the couples only big, hot date in recent months, Ms. Roberts said, was to view wildflowers from their car.

Their younger daughter was diligent as well. But then she came back from work sneezing one day in mid-June and thought it was allergies. Soon she had a cough, fever, headaches and diarrhea, and lost her senses of taste and smell, telltale symptoms of the coronavirus.

She told me, I dont know whats going on, Mom, but I wore a mask, I wore gloves, I washed my hands, Ms. Roberts said. You do the right things, and still you get it.

Elaine Roberts, who tested positive for the coronavirus, did not become seriously ill. But for her parents, it would be much worse.

Mr. Roberts and his wife started sneezing, then coughing, just like their daughter, and developed fevers and severe body aches. Then he got awfully sick, awfully quickly, Sheryl Roberts recalled. He became confused on June 22. Alarmed, she tested his oxygen level. It was low, and she called her older daughter to take him to an emergency care center, the second visit in two days.

Before he left, his wife asked him to make a promise.

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Coronavirus in Texas: You Do the Right Things, and Still You Get It - The New York Times

July 26 update: The latest on 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.

Another 25 cases of the new coronavirus have been reported in Maine, health officials said Sunday.

Sundays count brings the total coronavirus cases reported in Maine to 3,814. Of those, 3,408 had been confirmed positive, while 406 were classified as probable cases, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

No new deaths were reported Sunday, leaving the statewide death toll at 119.

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

A renowned Portland restaurant that has drawn praise from both Bon Appetit magazine and the James Beard Foundation announced Friday that it is closing permanently due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The owners of Drifters Wife, Orenda and Peter Hale, posted a message on the restaurants Facebook page saying that the decision was difficult. Bill Trotter, BDN

But whether colleges should be testing every student and whether theres capacity for it is a subject of debate. Some colleges plan to test students only if they show symptoms or come into close contact with someone who has tested positive. But some researchers say that approach could quickly cause outbreaks caused by students who dont show symptoms. Collin Binkley, The Associated Press

[Jordan Benissans] seasonal restaurant, Me Lon Togo, in Searsport was so successful in its first two summers that he opened a year-round location in Waterville last June. Business was off to a great start there until March, when Benissan had to close his doors like most restaurants in Maine because of the pandemic. Lauren Abbate, BDN

For one of the first times since March, Sharon Romanow of Belfast settled in this week for a treatment with her longtime acupuncturist, Rhonda Feiman. Abigail Curtis, BDN

As the number of new virus cases have surged in a slew of states, particularly Florida, Texas, California and Arizona, national chains like Walmart, Target and most recently McDonalds are issuing mask mandates as health officials repeatedly advise that covering your nose and mouth can be one of the most effective ways to reduce infections itself a reversal of earlier messaging at the beginning of the pandemic, Anne DInnocenzio, The Associated Press

From Maine to California, boat dealers are reporting unprecedented sales that began in the spring in warm-weather states before picking up steam in other parts of the country, like Maine and Minnesota. Marinas and boat repair shops are swamped by the wave of interest. There also are waiting lists for slips for boats. David Sharp, The Associated Press

As of Sunday afternoon, the coronavirus has sickened 4,212,057 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 146,732 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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July 26 update: The latest on coronavirus and Maine - Bangor Daily News

Coronavirus daily news updates, July 26: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world – Seattle Times

Editors note:This is a live account of COVID-19 updates from Sunday, July 26 as the day unfolded. It is no longer being updated. Clickhereto see all the most recent news about the pandemic, andclick hereto find additional resources.

A half year of pandemic purgatory has left Washington workers and businesses struggling, and schools in limbo. Total case numbers in the state have risen to 51,849, with deaths at 1,494, as of Friday night, with significant racial and geographic disparities. Testing remains insufficient and the future is hard to predict.

Throughout Sunday, on this page, well post Seattle Times journalists updates on the outbreak and its effects on the Seattle area, the Pacific Northwest and the world. Updates from Saturday can be found here, and all our coronavirus coverage can be found here.

The State Department of Health reported 786 new COVID-19 cases in Washington as of Saturday night, and seven additional deaths.

The latest numbers, released Sunday, bring the total count to 52,635 cases with 1,501 deaths. That means 2.9% of people who have been diagnosed with the virus in Washington have died.

This week, Washington state is at a turning point where the outbreak could explode, as in Florida, or might flatten so that hospitals avoid becoming overwhelmed. Read our special Sunday report that explains why "there's no certain end in sight," and some deadly inequities. Hispanic residents account for 43% of cases while only 13% of the state population.

There have been 15,673 more tests reported for the coronavirus in Washington, according to DOH, of which 5% came back positive.

The state's most populous county, King County has seen the highest numbers, reaching 14,417 diagnoses and 644 deaths, as of Saturday. Yakima County, which has been a hot spot, has had 9,629 cases and 194 deaths. In Okanogan County, another farming area where cases are spiking, there have been 605 confirmed cases and 2 deaths.

The data is as of 11:59 p.m. Saturday.

Heidi Groover, Mike Lindblom

Vancouver, B.C. - After crowds at a drum circle filled a Stanley Park beach this week, an artist installed a sign of their health officer, as a reminder to socially distance.

Dr. Bonnie Henry, who projects logic and calm in her daily COVID-19 briefings, is known affectionately as "Aunt Bonnie." Yet she scowls on a stencil by a Vancouver mural artist, who told CBC News it was "a gentle reminder that although we might be over COVID, it's not over us."

British Columbia has waged a relatively strong struggle against coronavirus, though it now faces an uptick. Health authorities reported 27 new cases Friday, with three people currently under intensive hospital care. They count 3,419 cumulative cases and 119 deaths, compared to 51,849 cases and 1,494 deaths in Washington state.

Read the report by CBC here.

Mike Lindblom

Public health experts say masking is essential for the U.S. to climb out of the COVID-19 pandemic. The outbreak has spread to more than 4.1 million and killed more than 145,000 in the country, crippled the economy and thrown the upcoming school year into chaos.

But broad skepticism of masks remains, largely along party lines, with polls showing that Republicans are less likely to wear masks than Democrats or independent voters.

One skeptic, Texan Don Caple, thinks masks are a "communistic move" by the government, but will still sell you one for $10. Read more.

Los Angeles Times

Two weeks after Disney World started opening theme parks for the first time since closing in March because of COVID-19, Disney World's future and that of central Florida's tourism-reliant economy are uncertain. It's unclear when and if tourists will return.

More than 75 million visitors came to Orlando in 2018, mostly due to its reputation as a theme park mecca, which also includes Universal Orlando and SeaWorld Orlando. But the coronavirus has upended Orlandos status as the most visited place in the U.S.

In the week that Disney Worlds Magic Kingdom and Animal Kingdom started welcoming back visitors, occupancy of hotel rooms in the Orlando area was down more than 60% from the previous year, a much deeper drop than the state as a whole, according to STR, which tracks hotel data.

Less than half of Disney Worlds 43,000 unionized workers have been recalled to their old jobs, contributing to two Orlando-area counties having the states highest unemployment rates last month.

Will visitors ever come back?

Associated Press

A tiny Italian island braced for the rapid spread of the coronavirus after several visitors had fallen ill with COVID-19.

But days passed and none of Giglios islanders developed any COVID-19 symptoms even though the conditions seemed favorable for the disease to spread like wildfire.

The Gigliesi, as the residents are known, socialize in the steep alleys near the port or on the granite steps that serve as narrow streets in the hilltop Castle neighborhood, with densely packed homes built against the remnants of a fortress erected centuries ago to protect against pirates.

A cancer researcher stuck on the island decided to try to find out why the virus wasn't spreading on the island. Read more about what she found.

Associated Press

Turmoil is universal in the wake of the pandemic, but the despair is particularly pronounced in the Middle East, where wave after wave of war, displacement and disease have left a generation feeling bitter and hopeless.

While in the West, many who have become unemployed believe they will eventually get their jobs back or somehow recover from the recession, the pandemic in some Arab countries was the final blow to economies now on the cusp of complete collapse.

The strains are also made harder because, in the Arab world, lives for young adults tend to be more scripted than for their counterparts in the West. Cultural expectations put more pressure on males to earn enough so they can move out, marry and provide for families.

For many young people, seeing economies crumble the way that they are and seeing their prospects vanish before their eyes its undoubtedly going to be taking a huge toll on mental health and well-being, said Tariq Haq, a Beirut-based senior employment specialist with the U.N. labor agency.

Read the full story here.

Associated Press

WASHINGTON House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday assailed Republican disarray over a new pandemic relief package as the White House suggested a narrower effort might be necessary, at least for now.

The California Democrat panned the Trump administrations desire to trim an expiring temporary federal unemployment benefit from $600 weekly to about 70% of pre-pandemic wages. The reason we had $600 was its simplicity, she said from the Capitol.

The administrations chief negotiators White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin were returning to the Capitol later Sunday to put what Meadows described as final touches on a $1 trillion relief bill Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is likely to bring forward Monday.

Both Mnuchin and Meadows said narrower legislation might need to be passed first to ensure that enhanced unemployment benefits dont run out for millions of Americans. Pelosi has said she opposes approving a relief package in piecemeal fashion.

Read more about the negotiations here.

Associated Press

The global coronavirus pandemic has magnified the stakes in races for the Washington state House and Senate.

When they return as scheduled in January, state lawmakers will likely face excruciating decisions on taxes and spending to balance an $8.8 billion projected state budget shortfall through 2023. The new class of legislators will also consider policing reforms in light of the protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd.

They must also grapple with Washingtons persistent preexisting problems, such as homelessness and housing affordability, and continuing to rebuild the states struggling mental-health care system.

All 98 House seats are up for election, along with 26 Senate seats. Ballots started going out two weeks ago.

See how key races are playing out.

Joseph O'Sullivan

Six months since the first person in Washington the first person in the nation tested positive for the novel coronavirus, health officials are saying werein an explosive situation.

Our health care system isnt being overwhelmed. But we have not suppressed the virus. Experts say we may be where Florida currently one of the hardest-hit states with infections was several weeks ago. Poised to see all the charts and curves go the wrong way, but not too late to stop them.

In Washington, more people are diagnosed each day than ever, partly because more people can get a test but also because the virus continues spreading.

The pandemic has cast a spotlight on the deadly inequities in our state, as COVID-19 has disproportionately sickened Hispanic people, who account for 43% of cases but just 13% of the population.

Schools, businesses, hospitalizations: Heres whats going well in Washington state, whats not, and what might come next.

Seattle Times staff

People whove been laid off or furloughed from their jobs now have significantly more time to decide whether to hang on to their employer-sponsored health insurance, according to a recent federal rule.

Under the federal law known as COBRA, people who lose job-based coverage because of a layoff or a reduction in hours generally have 60 days to decide whether to continue health insurance. But under the new rule, that clock doesnt start ticking until the end of the COVID-19 outbreak period, which started March 1 and continues for 60 days after the COVID-19 national emergency ends. That end date hasnt been determined yet.

By extending the time frame to sign up for COBRA coverage, people have at least 120 days to decide whether they want to elect COBRA, and possibly longer depending on when they lost their jobs.

Some health policy experts question the usefulness of the change, given how expensive COBRA coverage can be for consumers, and how limited its reach: It isnt an option for people who are uninsured or self-employed or who work for small companies.

In Washington state, residents may find more affordable plans through the Washington Health Benefit Exchange.

For ideological reasons, this administration cant do anything to expand on the Affordable Care Acts safety net, said Sabrina Corlette, a research professor at Georgetown Universitys Center on Health Insurance Reforms. So theyre using these other vehicles. But its really a fig leaf. It doesnt do much to actually help people.

Read the full story here.

Kaiser Health News

It's been a week of retreat for President Donald Trump as he backs down from long-held positions related to the pandemic after polls showed they didn't align with public attitudes or, in at least one case, his Republican allies.

Federal public health officials have released a new strategy that vows to improve data collection and take steps to address stark inequalities in how the disease is affecting Americans.

Baseball is back, with masked players and stands full of empty seats or cardboard cutouts. See photos from around the league, and catch up with the Mariners.

Washington's restaurants have largely been left to self-police if employees get COVID-19. Restaurateurs say direction from state and county health officials has been spotty. And now, with new rules limiting indoor dining to "members of the same household," they've again been left to figure out how to enforce ever-evolving safety policies.

Around the world:

Seattle Times staff & news services

Excerpt from:

Coronavirus daily news updates, July 26: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world - Seattle Times

Larry Hogan On The Parallels Of Fighting Cancer And Maryland’s Coronavirus Outbreak – NPR

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan arrives for a coronavirus briefing in front of the Maryland State House on April 17. Hogan's book Still Standing is out Tuesday. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images hide caption

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan arrives for a coronavirus briefing in front of the Maryland State House on April 17. Hogan's book Still Standing is out Tuesday.

Larry Hogan defeated non-Hodgkin's lymphoma five years ago, a fight that he says has colored many of his decisions as the Republican governor of Maryland, from criticizing President Trump to navigating the coronavirus pandemic.

"It changed me as a person and the way I look at life and what's important. And maybe that's one of the reasons I'm not afraid to stand up and say what I think," Hogan told NPR's All Things Considered. "Cancer is pretty scary. Nothing else really is going to scare me away from anything."

Maryland is currently experiencing an uptick in COVID-19 cases and has seen more than 83,000 cases and 3,300 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic, according to the state's database. And cases are increasing. On Saturday, the state had 1,288 new cases, the largest single-day increase since May 19, according to The Baltimore Sun.

"I do have a lot of empathy for people going through those kinds of things," Hogan said, adding that while his experience governing during the pandemic has differed greatly from his personal experience fighting cancer, there are parallels between the two. "It perhaps made me more intensely focused on trying to protect the health of everybody. It probably didn't just impact my decisions on the coronavirus, but probably everything I do as a governor."

Hogan recently had his five-year checkup and he remains cancer-free. "When the pandemic's over, I can go back and hug some people," he said.

But he still has to deal with a climbing health crisis in his state. Despite the increase in cases, Hogan said Tuesday that he will not change the state's reopening plan now, but added that he would consider doing so in the future if rates of deaths, new infections and hospitalizations continue to rise, The Washington Post reported.

"But as soon as we start to see numbers that don't look good, it's going to cause us to take whatever actions that are necessary," he said on C-SPAN on Tuesday. "My goal is to try to keep the economy safely open, because the economic crisis is nearly as bad as or just as bad as the health crisis."

Hogan dives into the pandemic, his cancer diagnosis, the protests for racial justice that flooded his state following the death of Freddie Gray in police custody and working in politics in 2020 in his book Still Standing: Surviving Cancer, Riots, a Global Pandemic, and the Toxic Politics that Divide America out Tuesday.

Gemma Watters and Tinbete Ermyas edited and produced the audio version of this story.

Read more from the original source:

Larry Hogan On The Parallels Of Fighting Cancer And Maryland's Coronavirus Outbreak - NPR

Tennessee Coronavirus: Another big jump in cases to 93,936, up by 3,140 – WATE 6 On Your Side

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NCAA lays out plan for playing but warns of surging pandemic

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Tennessee Coronavirus: Another big jump in cases to 93,936, up by 3,140 - WATE 6 On Your Side

China is rewriting the facts about Covid-19 to suit its own narrative – The Guardian

China has been here before. During the Sars crisis in 2002 and 2003 it hid cases, censored doctors and withheld information from the world for four months. Nearly 800 people died.

Fast forward to 2020. The successor to Sars appeared, and has so far caused 600,000 deaths and more than 15 million infections worldwide. The Chinese government says it has been open, transparent and responsible throughout; its critics say not open, transparent or responsible enough to avert disaster.

After Sars, China built a nationwide disease surveillance network and formidable bioscience capacity. It invested in research on bat coronaviruses. Disease control chiefs said it could stop another outbreak. But in 2020 none of these preparations were enough to offset risks coming from other directions: ever more rigid top-down politics inside China and a globetrotting population with direct international flights from Wuhan.

Last December patients started turning up in Wuhans hospitals with pneumonia symptoms that didnt respond to treatment. Doctors were quick to send samples for genetic sequencing which soon revealed a coronavirus closely resembling Sars. Chinese scientists warned the new virus was also contagious, spread by respiratory droplets and on surfaces. But both in Wuhan and in Beijing, health authorities sought to minimise the story, first insisting there was no reason to suspect the virus was transmitted by humans and later that the risk was low.

Frontline doctors didnt agree. They tried to warn each other on social media, but were swiftly silenced, some forced to sign police confessions that they had spread misinformation.

The Hong Kong microbiologist Prof Yuen Kwok-yung had helped to identify Sars back in 2003. As soon as he saw the social media posts from Wuhan, he urged the Hong Kong government to take public health precautions. He told Panorama: If you dont make use of every hour, you are in big, big trouble.

Instead, from 31 December to 20 January, Chinas political leaders played down the risks of the virus, squandering the lead their doctors and scientists had given them.

Beijing is naturally sensitive about its early handling of what has gone on to become a global catastrophe. At home its censorship is so overwhelming that it can control the timeline and edit the facts to suit its narrative. Since January, censors have assiduously deleted documentary evidence and added events and comments retrospectively to suggest leadership engagement. Seven months on, the silencing of doctors and scientists continues, while some Chinese citizens who have tried to preserve inconvenient facts or present a different version of the narrative have disappeared.

As a result, there is no meaningful challenge inside China to the official version of events. According to this version, as soon as Beijing had clear evidence of human transmission of the virus it publicly announced it, and prepared tough control measures including the lockdown of Wuhan on 23 January.

The truth is more complex. For example, Beijing certainly had a key part of its evidence on human transmission a week earlier than the official version admits. On 12 January, Yuen diagnosed a family with the novel coronavirus in Shenzhen, 700 miles from Wuhan. Only some members of the family had been to Wuhan. Yuen immediately alerted authorities in Beijing.

But between the beginning of the year and the lockdown, 5 million people left Wuhan for destinations in China and beyond. Prof Andrew Tatem of the University of Southampton told Panorama: If the same interventions that were put in place on 23 January had been put in place on 2 January, we may have seen a 95% reduction in the number of cases.

The Chinese ambassador to the UK, Liu Xiaoming, told the BBC: The Chinese health authorities notified WHO on 31 December in the shortest possible time. In fact it was the WHO that had picked up reports of the outbreak on the internet and on 1 January sought answers from the Chinese government. China responded two days later.

Chinas response time has been much faster than during the Sars outbreak 17 years ago, but most close observers of the Chinese Communist party say full transparency is never its first instinct and that under the leadership of Xi Jinping, information control has grown ever tighter. Challenged on the silencing of doctors and scientists in early January, a key government adviser, Prof Li Lanjuan, told us: To announce its contagiousness, if it is not yet confirmed, would cause public panic. Therefore we must be responsible to the public, and ascertain the facts first.

Some governments have demanded an international investigation in China to determine the origins and early spread of the virus. The Chinese government says it will join a global inquiry into the pandemic but only when the crisis is over. It says it should not be blamed as it is a victim too, and that its tough measures to combat the Wuhan outbreak prevented hundreds of thousands of infections and bought the world time.

Dr Ali Khan spent much of his career in the US Centers for Disease Control and says the world now needs to think ahead. We cant afford to do this again. If some countries having an outbreak [are] deciding to not share that information, there have to be consequences.

But what consequences? The WHOs regulations on protecting against the international spread of disease are legally binding, but there are no sanctions for countries that fail to adhere to them. In recent weeks, western governments have begun adopting a tougher tone towards Beijing on a range of issues, but there is little sign of a concerted international push for new WHO inspection powers to tackle future disease outbreaks. Indeed, the US has just withdrawn funding for the WHO, alleging that the global health body served as Beijings puppet during the early stages of coronavirus.

For now, we are left hoping that Chinas leadership has learned its own lessons about the need to act faster to protect its own public and the world.

Carrie Gracie is a BBC newsreader and presenter and former China editor for BBC News

Panorama: Chinas Coronavirus Cover-Up is on BBC One, Monday 27 July, 7.30pm

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China is rewriting the facts about Covid-19 to suit its own narrative - The Guardian

Kudlow says coronavirus relief will include $1,200 checks and extension of eviction moratorium – CNBC

Larry Kudlow, director of the U.S. National Economic Council, speaks to members of the media at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, April 7, 2020.

Jim Lo Scalzo | Bloomberg | Getty Images

White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow said Sunday that the next round of coronavirus relief will include $1,200 stimulus payments to Americans and the Trump administration will lengthen the federal eviction moratorium.

"There's a $1,200 check coming, that's going to be part of the new package," Kudlow said in an interview on CNN's "State of the Union."

Republicans have finalized the next relief bill, worth about $1 trillion, and will introduce it Monday.The legislation is set to provide temporary and reduced extension of unemployment benefits, another round of stimulus checks, liability protection for businesses and funding to help schools restart. It will also include $16 billion in new funds for testing and tax incentives to encourage companies to rehire employees.

"The check is there, the reemployment bonus is there. The retention bonus is there," Kudlow said of the next relief legislation. "There will be breaks, tax credits for small businesses and restaurants."

"It's a very well rounded package," Kudlow added. "It's a very well targeted package."

Kudlow also said the administration plans to lengthen the federal eviction moratorium, which has protected millions of renters in the last four months from getting evicted.

Cities across the U.S. have been bracing for a surge of evictions when the moratorium expired on Friday. The moratorium covered renters in building with mortgages backed by the government. Lawmakers and housing advocates have called for a nationwide eviction ban along with rent cancellations and other forms of housing relief.

The $600 weekly supplement to state unemployment checks that was imposed in March ended over the weekend. Democrats want to extend the aid while Republicans are set to reduce the subsidy, arguing that extended aid is a disincentive for unemployed Americans to find work.

Kudlow said the administration's plan to cap unemployment benefits on approximately 70% wage replacement is "quite generous by any standard." Last week, Republicans were considering extending the insurance benefit at a reduced level of $400 per month, or $100 a week, through the rest of the year.

As negotiations continue, it's not yet clear when the potentially reduced unemployment supplement would go into effect. The U.S. unemployment rate has surged to above 10% because of the pandemic, with nearly 32 million Americans now receiving unemployment benefits, according to the Labor Department.

Even as cases surge across the South and West, Kudlow remained optimistic about a U.S. economic recovery: "The odds favor a big increase in job creation and a big reduction in unemployment," he said.

The U.S. has reported more than 4 million coronavirus cases and at least 146,484 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

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Kudlow says coronavirus relief will include $1,200 checks and extension of eviction moratorium - CNBC

Who Gets the Covid-19 Vaccine First? Heres One Idea – The New York Times

When a coronavirus vaccine becomes available, who should get it first?

A preliminary plan devised by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this spring gives priority to health care workers, then to people with underlying medical conditions and older people. The C.D.C. has not yet decided whether the next in line should be Blacks and Latinos, groups disproportionately affected by the coronavirus.

But lets suppose that health care workers and people with underlying medical conditions use up the first doses of the available vaccine. Should some be held in reserve for Black and Latino people? What about bus drivers and train conductors? Perhaps teachers or schoolchildren should get it so they can return to classrooms with peace of mind.

If shortages happen, most of the nation will have no chance to get the initial lots of a vaccine under the C.D.C.s plan. And as the United States combats a soaring number of coronavirus cases, rising demand for drugs and maybe ventilators is expected. They, too, will need a fair system of distribution.

One solution that is starting to attract the attention of public health experts is a so-called weighted lottery, which gives everyone a chance at access, although some get a better shot than others.

Doctors and ethicists rank patients, deciding which groups should be given preference and how much. First-responders, for example, may be weighted more heavily than, say, very sick patients who are unlikely to recover.

The goal is to prevent haphazard or inequitable distribution of a treatment or vaccine when there isnt enough to go around. Such a system has already been used in allocations of remdesivir, the first drug shown to be effective against the coronavirus.

This is all very new, said Dr. Douglas White, an ethicist and vice chairman of the department of critical medicine at the University of Pittsburgh, which began using a weighted lottery last month to distribute remdesivir.

Patients have accepted the results, even when they lost in the lottery and ended up being denied the drug, he added.

I speculate that is because we are very transparent about the reason and the ethical framework that applies to everyone who comes into hospital, whether that is the hospital president or someone who is homeless, he said.

To allocate the drug, Pittsburgh doctors decided that the lottery would give preference to health care workers and emergency medical workers. The doctors also weighted the odds to favor people from economically disadvantaged areas, who tend to be mostly Black and Hispanic.

People with other illnesses and limited life spans, like end-stage cancer patients, had the odds weighted against them, giving them a smaller chance to win in the lottery. The system did not consider age, race, ethnicity, quality of life, ability to pay or whether a patient has a disability.

The lottery began in early June, Dr. White said: We had 64 patients. We had to make the supply of remdesivir last at least two weeks. We only had enough to treat one in four patients.

They had a brief respite from the lottery when cases began falling and supplies of remdesivir seemed adequate. But on Sunday, with cases rising again and enough remdesivir for only about half the patients who could be helped by taking it, the hospital system was forced to go back to a lottery.

A weighted lottery will be used in South Carolina if the swelling number of patients causes a shortage, said Dr. Dee Ford, an infectious disease specialist at the Medical University of South Carolina and a member of an advisory group to the state health department. So far, she said, the states supply of remdesivir remains adequate.

Dr. White and his colleagues were considering a weighted lottery before the remdesivir shortage began. And so were other ethicists, like Dr. Robert Truog at Harvard Medical School who had learned about the system when hed feared a ventilator shortage in March.

He consulted with Dr. White, who had developed a system that awarded points to severely ill coronavirus patients depending on their estimated likelihood of surviving. After Dr. Truog and his colleagues published a paper on ventilator distribution, Dr. Truog said, we got a call from an economist at M.I.T.

The economist, Parag Pathak, told Dr. Truog that he and other economists had spent years thinking about how to allocate resources, and have developed and successfully used weighted lotteries.

For example, Dr. Pathak told him, such systems are used allocate spots in oversubscribed charter schools, giving preference to children from certain neighborhoods. Dr. Truog was intrigued, but it turned out that there were enough ventilators, so a lottery was not needed.

Updated July 23, 2020

But remdesivir was another story, Dr. White and Dr. Truog realized: The shortages were not just possible; they were happening.

When remdesivir shortages began, we felt that a lottery system would be a much better allocation methods than a point system, he explained. His group and Dr. Truog developed a weighted lottery for remdesivir, and the Pittsburgh hospitals began using it.

They also noted another advantage: Weighted lotteries can allow researchers to find out, in a rigorous way, which subgroups of patients do best with a new drug or vaccine.

That is because allocation within a group is random. The distribution is, in effect, a randomized, controlled clinical trial. The only difference between, say, people over age 60 who got the drug and those who did not is the toss of a coin in the lottery.

For that reason, outcomes can reveal how well a drug or vaccine works for subgroups of people.

That sort of analysis has been done to study the variations in students performances at different schools, answering questions like: Did students with higher test scores do just as well with or without a charter school? Did the school benefit those who were not doing well in their neighborhood schools?

A large, federal clinical trial showed that remdesivir slightly improved recovery times for hospitalized patients. That study, though, was not designed to show whether some groups like younger people, or those who were earlier in the course of their infection benefited more than others.

These outcome data are buried in the patients electronic health records. Were the patients participating in a weighted lottery, it would be far easier to see who benefited and who did not from remdesivir.

Similar questions can be addressed if a vaccine were to be distributed with such a lottery. But getting that data would be more complicated, because vaccine distribution may involve tens of millions of people.

Still, in principle, lottery data about a vaccine can be as useful as randomized clinical trial data, Dr. Pathak said.

We would like to get people to think ahead about how vaccines are allocated, he said. There is no way we can vaccinate everybody, so we have to think about whats fair and whats just.

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Who Gets the Covid-19 Vaccine First? Heres One Idea - The New York Times

Can Covid-19 Coronavirus Cause Hearing Problems Even With No Other Symptoms? – Forbes

Evidence suggests that the Covid-19 coronavirus may affect your ear and hearing, even if you are ... [+] otherwise asymptomatic. But how strong is this evidence. (Photo: Getty)

Seemingly every week more evidence emerges that the Covid-19 coronavirus is like a really bad box of chocolates. You never know what you're gonna get.

Well, hear is more to consider. Some scientific publications have suggested that the virus may affect your hearing. In fact, theres the possibility that hearing loss could occur even if you dont have any other symptoms. So you think that youve gotten away with no symptoms from a Covid-19 coronavirus infection, but is that really the case?

Just take a look at a post on Medium by Shin Jie Yong, who describes himself on the site as a 20 year old neurobiology postgrad in Malaysia with the life goal of being able to afford a place with dogs. While his article didnt specify exactly why his current place cant have dogs or how much money would be required to have a doggified place, it did list some of the evidence that the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) may have an ear-ry effect.

For example, he cited a letter published in the American Journal of Otolaryngology. It wasnt one of those, hey, how are you doing or you move me, and it isnt my bowels letters. Instead this was a very, very brief case report letters that mentioned the case of an old female in Thailand who was diagnosed with Covid-19 and suffered from hearing loss. This letter contained very few details about the case, including what the authors considered old. So this letter alone didnt provide too much evidence and probably deserved a letter grade of a D minus.

Earning better than a D minus was a subsequent publication in the American Journal of Otolaryngology. This publication was certainly more substantive as it detailed a study conducted by M.W.M.Mustafa of the Qena Faculty of Medicine, South Valley University in Egypt. Mustafa administered hearing tests to 20 people who had tested positive for Covid-19. Now twenty isnt a lot unless you are talking about people in an elevator. But it is certainly more than one. None of the study participants had any other known symptoms from the infection. The study participants were between 20 and 50 years of age and had no history of hearing loss either. Nevertheless, they performed significantly worse than normal on some parts of the hearing tests, including the high frequency pure-tone thresholds and the transient evoked otoacoustic emissions (TEOAE) amplitudes.

Then, there was the letter published in Acta Otorhinolaryngologica Italica. This letter was more of a case series than a formal study. It described six patients, ranging from 22 to 40 years of age, who had more typical Covid-19 symptoms like fever, cough, and shortness of breath as well as seemingly ear-related symptoms. Two had vertigo, with one case being very mild. Four had ringing in the ears. All six had some type of hearing loss, more on one side.

Of course, just because you test positive for the Covid-19 coronavirus doesnt mean that the virus is responsible for everything that you are suffering. So Yong did mention a letter published in the International Journal of Immunopathology and Pharmacology that had the following title: Dont forget ototoxicity during the SARS-CoV-2 (Covid-19) pandemic! It isnt super common for the title of a scientific publication to have an exclamation point at the end of it. Nevertheless, this letter was to warn health professionals that a number of medications being tried to treat the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) can have ototoxicity. While the OTO is apparently a magical order that was founded in Germany in 1901 and focused on sex magic, in this case, oto instead stood for ear. Thus, ototoxicity means toxic to or may damage the ear. The list of drugs that are potentially ototoxic includes chloroquine, hydroxychloroquine, azithromycin, remdesivir, favipiravir and lopinavir. Thus, could hearing problems be the result of medications taken rather than the virus? Perhaps.

On the flip side, it wouldnt be too surprising if the virus were to somehow affect ear function. After all, as Yong pointed out, other viruses such as the herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), the herpes zoster virus (HZV), the cytomegalovirus, the measles virus, and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can affect the ear and cause ear-related symptoms.

Furthermore, theres already been growing evidence that the virus seems to know no boundaries, kind of like that guy who will mention his testicles during a a dinner party or a work meeting. Cases have shown that the virus may spread well beyond the respiratory tract into the nervous system. For example, in a research letter published in JAMA Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, a team from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine (Kaitlyn M. Frazier, MD, Jody E. Hooper, MD, Heba H. Mostafa, MBBCh, PhD, D(ABMM), and C. Matthew Stewart, MD, PhD) described how they detected SARS-CoV2 in the mastoid or middle ear of three patients.

All in all, the evidence to date merely suggests that the Covid-19 coronavirus can affect your ears and potentially leave you with some hearing loss. More studies woule be necessary to form firmer conclusions. Future studies should entail testing more and a wider variety of patients, preferably with hearing tests before and after infection. Plus, its not clear how long such effects may last so following patients for longer periods of time would provide further insight.

Nevertheless, any possibility of hearing loss needs to be taken seriously. Hearing loss is already of significant problem around the world. In the U.S., approximately one in three people between the ages of 65 and 74 has hearing loss, and nearly half of those older than 75 has difficulty hearing, according to the National Institute of Aging (NIA). But hearing loss is not just an issue for older adults. The Hearing Loss Association of American (HLAA) website has a statistic that one in five teens experience some degree of hearing loss. If the Covid-19 coronavirus could indeed affect your hearing, will this pandemic make all of these statistics worse?

The widespread use of face masks may help reduce the transmission of the Covid-19 coronavirus but ... [+] can make it more challenging for the hearing impaired who rely on reading lips for communication. (Photo by Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)

The pandemic has already brought new challenges to those with existing hearing issues. As Janice S. Lintz, CEO, Hearing Access & Innovations, pointed out, the coronavirus prevents people from lip reading since people are wearing face masks. If Covid-19 coronavirus infections end up adding to the total number of people suffering from hearing loss, Lintz added that this will make a bad situation worse.

This would make an already complex infection even more complex. This would be further evidence that a single number alone like deaths or hospitalizations cannot capture the full impact of the Covid-19 coronavirus. It is not just like a cold or the flu. Chances are that your immune system has never seen a virus like this. That means that your body is a wonderland to the virus, but not in a John Mayer type of way. Scientists are rushing to figure out what this virus can do to your body. The rush to re-open prematurely and return society to normal, which by the way aint going to happen anytime soon, for political and business reasons can have bad, long-standing consequences. Instead, people have to listen to science. Heck not listening could end up affecting your hearing in more ways than one.

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Can Covid-19 Coronavirus Cause Hearing Problems Even With No Other Symptoms? - Forbes

Diabetes highlights two Americas. One where COVID is easily beaten, the other where it’s often devastating. – USA TODAY

Pressure to create a coronavirus vaccine is increasing by the day, but for a safe vaccine to enter the market, it takes time. USA TODAY

Dr. Anne Peters splits her mostly virtual work-week between a diabetes clinic on the west side of Los Angeles and one on the east side of the sprawling city.

Three days a week she treats people whose diabetes is well controlled. They have insurance, so they can afford the newest medications and blood monitoring devices. They can exercise and eat well. Those generally more affluent West LA patients who've gotten COVID-19 have developed mild to moderate symptoms feeling miserable, she said but treatable, with close follow-up at home.

"By all rights they should do much worse, and yet most don't even go to the hospital," said Peters, director of the USC Clinical Diabetes Programs.

On the other two days of her work week, it's a different story.

In East LA, many patients didn't have insurance even before the pandemic. Now, with widespread layoffs, even fewer do. They live in food deserts, lacking a car or gas money to reach a grocery store stocked with fresh fruits and vegetables. They can't stay home, because they're essential workers in grocery stores, health care facilities and delivery services. And they live in multi-generational homes, so even if older people stay put, they are likely to be infected by a younger relative who can't.

They tend to get COVID-19 more often and do worse if they get sick, with more symptoms and a higher likelihood of ending up in the hospital, or dying, said Peters, also a member of the leadership council of Beyond Type 1, a diabetes research and advocacy organization.

"It doesn't mean my east side patients are all doomed," she emphasized.

But it does suggest that COVID-19 has an unequal impact, striking people who are poor and already in ill health far harder than healthier, better off people on the other side of town.

Tracey Brown has known that for years.

"What the COVID-19 pandemic has done is shined a very bright light on this existing and pervasive problem," said Brown, CEO of theAmerican Diabetes Association. Along with about 32 million others roughly 1 in 10 Americans Brown has diabetes herself.

"We're in 2020 and every 5 minutes, someone is losing a limb" to diabetes, she said. "Every 10 minutes, somebody is having kidney failure."

Americans with diabetes and related health conditions are 12 times more likely to die of COVID-19 than those without such conditions, she said. Roughly 90% of Americans who die of COVID-19 have diabetes or other underlying conditions. And people of color are over-represented among the very sick and the dead.

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The data is clear: people with diabetes are at increased risk of having a bad case of COVID-19, and diabetics with poorly controlled blood sugar are at even higher risk, said Liam Smeeth, dean of the faculty of epidemiology and population health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He and his colleagues combed data on 17 million people in the U.K. to come to their conclusions.

Diabetes often comes paired with other health problems obesity and high blood pressure, for instance. Add smoking, Smeeth said, and "for someone with diabetes in particular, those can really mount up."

People with diabetes are more vulnerable to many types infections, Peters said, because their white blood cells don't work as well when blood sugar levels are high.

"In a test tube, you can see the infection-fighting cells working less well if the sugars are higher," she said.

Peters recently saw a patient whose diabetes was triggered by COVID-19, a finding supported by one recent study.

Going into the hospital with any viral illness can trigger a spike in blood sugar, whether someone has diabetes or not. Some medications used to treat serious cases of COVID-19 can "shoot your sugars up," Peters said.

In patients who catch COVID-19 but aren't hospitalized, Peters said she often has to reduce their insulin to compensate for the fact that they aren't eating as much.

Low income seems to be a risk factor for a bad case of COVID-19, even independent of age, weight, blood pressure and blood sugar levels, Smeeth said."We see strong links with poverty."

Some of that is driven by occupational risks, with poorer people unable to work from home or avoid high-risk jobs. Some is related to housing conditions and crowding into apartments to save money. And some, may be related to underlying health conditions.

But the connection, he said, is unmistakable.

Peters recently watched a long-time friend lose her husband. Age 60 and diabetic, he was laid off due to COVID, which cost him his health insurance. He developed a foot ulcer that he couldn't afford to treat. He ignored it until he couldn't stand anymore and then went to the hospital.

After surgery, he was released to a rehabilitation facility where he contracted COVID. He was transferred back to the hospital where he died four days later.

"He died, not because of COVID and not because of diabetes, but because he didn't have access to healthcare when he needed it to prevent that whole process from happening," Peters said, adding that he couldn't see his family in his final days and died alone. "It just breaks your heart."

Now is a great time to improve diabetes control, Peters added. With many restaurants and most bars closed, people can have more control over the food they eat. Getting rid of commuting leaves more time for exercise.

David Miller with his girlfriend Margaret Lowell and their dog Lola.(Photo: David Miller)

That's what David Miller has managed to do. Miller, 65, of Austin, Texas, said he's stepped up his exercise routine, walking for 40 minutes four mornings a week at a nearby high school track. It's cool enough at that hour, and the track's not crowded, said Miller, an insurance agent, who's been able to work from home during the pandemic. "That's more consistent exercise than I've ever done."

His blood sugar is still not where he wants it to be, he said, but his new fitness routine has helped him lose a little weight and bring his blood sugar under better control. Eating less remains a challenge. "I'm one of those middle-aged guys who's gotten into the habit of eating for two," he said. "That can be a hard habit to shake."

Miller said he isn't too worried about getting COVID-19.

"I've tried to limit my exposure within reason," he said, noting that he wears a mask when he can in public. "I honestly don't feel particularly more vulnerable than anybody else."

Smeeth, the British epidemiologist said even though they're at higher risk for bad outcomes, people with diabetes should know that they're not helpless.

"The traditional public health messages don't be overweight, give up smoking, keep active are still valid for COVID," he said. Plus, people with diabetes should prioritize getting a flu vaccine this fall, he said, to avoid compounding their risk further.

(For more practical recommendations for those living with diabetes during the pandemic, go to coronavirusdiabetes.org.)

In Los Angeles, Peters said, the county has made access to diabetes medication much easier for people with low incomes. They can now get three months of medication, instead of only one. "We refill everybody's medicine that we can to make sure people have the tools," she said, adding that diabetes advocates are also doing what they can to help people get health insurance.

Controlling blood sugar will help everyone, not just those with diabetes, Peters said. Someone hospitalized with uncontrolled blood sugar takes up a bed that could otherwise be used for a COVID-19 patient.

Brown, of the American Diabetes Association, has been advocating for those measures on a national level, as well as ramping up testing in low-income communities. Right now, most testing centers are in wealthier neighborhoods, she said, and many are drive-throughs, assuming that everyone who needs testing has a car.

Her organization is also lobbying for continuity of health insurance coverage if someone with diabetes loses their job, as well as legislation to remove co-pays for diabetes medication.

"The last thing we want to have happen is that during this economically challenged time, people start rationing or skipping their doses of insulin or other prescription drugs," Brown said. That leads to unmanaged diabetes and complications like ulcers and amputations. "Diabetes is one of those diseases where you can control it. You shouldn't have to suffer and you shouldn't have to die."

Contact Weintraub at kweintraub@usatoday.com

Health and patient safety coverage at USA TODAY is made possible in part by a grant from the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation and Competition in Healthcare. The Masimo Foundation does not provide editorial input.

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Diabetes highlights two Americas. One where COVID is easily beaten, the other where it's often devastating. - USA TODAY

Spike in U.S. Cases Far Outpaces Testing Expansion – The New York Times

New statewide mask orders were issued on Wednesday by the Republican governors of Ohio and Indiana and by Minnesotas governor, a Democrat. And city officials in Washington, D.C., and Baltimore issued new, tougher new mask orders as well.

The latest mask mandates came a day after Mr. Trump, who has long resisted wearing masks and at times even disparaged them, made his most robust call for wearing them yet, urging: When you can, use a mask. Some of the nations largest retail chains, including Walmart, Winn-Dixie and Whole Foods, have also moved to require customers to wear them.

Asked if he favored such mandates, Mr. Trump said Wednesday evening that it should be up to the governors I think all are suggesting if you want to wear a mask, you wear it, he said and that he would decide over the next 24 hours whether to require masks be worn on federal properties in Washington and at the White House.

But several more governors decided the time for masks had come.

Weve got to get this virus under control, Gov. Mike DeWine of Ohio said Wednesday as he issued a statewide mask order that will take effect Thursday evening. Wearing a mask is going to make a difference.

We all want kids to go back to school, we want to see sports, we want to see a lot of different things, we want to have more opportunities in the fall, said Mr. DeWine, who had previously ordered people only in the states hardest-hit counties to wear masks. And to do that, its very important that all Ohioans wear a mask.

Gov. Eric Holcomb of Indiana, a Republican, said Wednesday that he would sign an order mandating masks in most public settings beginning Monday. As we continue to monitor the data, weve seen a concerning change in some of our key health indicators, he said on Twitter. Hoosiers have worked hard to help re-open our state & we want to remain open.

In Minnesota, Gov. Tim Walz signed an executive order Wednesday requiring residents to wear masks in indoor stores and other public indoor spaces beginning Saturday. Mr. Walz said that the state would distribute masks to people and businesses in underserved communities.

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Spike in U.S. Cases Far Outpaces Testing Expansion - The New York Times

Slowly, Italy Is Waking From the Coronavirus Nightmare – The New York Times

Mistakes were made: the area around Bergamo was not declared a no-go area; family doctors were left on their own; patients were brought into hospitals where doctors and nurses were infected; tests for the general population were unavailable for too long.

But Italy coped.

Northern Italians showed resilience; Central and Southern Italians stayed at home, even though the epidemic was less visible there. Here and there, young crowds gathered dangerously, with the cover of night life, beach life, politics, football, even an air show in Turin. But on the whole, Italy stuck to the rules.

From early March to early May, the country found itself with its back to the wall; and thats a position where we Italians give our best. We can be disciplined, but somehow we dont like to admit it, as if it might damage our reputation.

Of course some things didnt work. We were the first in Europe to shut down the schools, and well be the last to reopen them (on Sept. 14, hopefully). For millions of Italians with young children and small apartments, working from home turned out to be a nightmare. And political squabbles, after a lull, restarted. The political parties sniff an early election, and are jockeying for position.

This slows down all decisions. Despite endless consultations, Mr. Conte has not made up his mind about the European Stability Mechanism, whose funds are earmarked for health expenditure. And, more important, he hasnt decided how to allocate Italys share of the E.U. Recovery Fund. This has complicated negotiations at the recent European Council in Brussels, and has given suspicious northern countries led by the Netherlands an excuse to stall. But in the end, predictably, an agreement was found.

Last Tuesday, after 90 hours of negotiation led by the European Commission, the 27 leaders of the European Union agreed to look forward. The 2021-2027 budget will be 1.8 trillion euros: of these, 750 billion will go to the post-Covid recovery fund, called Next Generation E.U. (390 billion will be in aid, 360 billion in loans). Italy one of two countries in Europe hardest hit by the pandemic, alongside Spain will be the main beneficiary. Each Italian citizen, on average, will receive 500 euros; each German and each Dutchman will shell out 840 and 930 euros respectively.

Europe may be hyper-regulated; but in an emergency, rules and regulations help to keep the situation under control. Slowly and painfully, the European Union is getting out of it. Some countries suffered more than others; but none was refused help, nor did any refuse it. As of July 20, 135,000 deaths had been reported among the 445,000,00 people living in the Union. The day before, for the first time since February, Lombardy where I live, and where it all started for Italy registered no coronavirus deaths. We are still worried, but we can finally breathe.

Beppe Severgnini, an editorial writer and editor at Corriere della Sera, writes regularly about Italian and European politics, society and culture.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.

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Slowly, Italy Is Waking From the Coronavirus Nightmare - The New York Times

Why Trump is trying to change his tune on coronavirus – CNN

Sure, he's still saying the virus will magically disappear and the CDC is strongly suggesting that kids go back to school in person, so take this "change in tone" with a grain of salt. But the President is certainly changing his tack (for now) on a number of pandemic-related problems.On Tuesday, Trump added this caveat about the virus: "It will probably unfortunately get worse before it gets better."

After tweeting an image of himself wearing a mask, he urged Americans to wear them -- though he has yet to make any sort of federal mandate.

And on Thursday, Trump cancelled events for the GOP convention in Jacksonville, Florida, and instead will go back to Charlotte, North Carolina as originally planned.

What's behind it all? One word: Polling.

Advisers have said the slip in polls spurred Trump's decision to don a face mask in public as well as his return to the press briefing room. But, but, but: There are only 102 days until Election Day.

The Point: Clearly the numbers matter enough to Trump to make some changes. But will admitting the obvious fact that things will get worse -- or abandoning hastily made plans to hold a new convention -- be enough to turn the tide?

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Why Trump is trying to change his tune on coronavirus - CNN

U.S. Hits 4 Million Cases Of Coronavirus Adding A Million New Cases In Just 15 Days – NPR

People walk along King Street last week in Charleston, S.C. South Carolina is one of many states in the U.S. struggling with a rising number of coronavirus cases. Sean Rayford/Getty Images hide caption

People walk along King Street last week in Charleston, S.C. South Carolina is one of many states in the U.S. struggling with a rising number of coronavirus cases.

Updated at 4:52 p.m. ET

Another day, another mind-boggling milestone: 4 million people in the U.S. have tested positive for the coronavirus. The U.S. hit the 3 million mark just 15 days ago.

That's according to a tracker from Johns Hopkins University.

More than 143,700 people have died from the virus in the U.S. nearly twice as many as Brazil, the country with the second-highest number of fatalities.

Case numbers continue to rise in most U.S. states and territories.

While confirmed cases have surpassed 4 million, federal health officials have said the actual number is likely many times higher. "Our best estimate right now is that for every case that was reported, there actually were 10 other infections," Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said last month.

No part of the country has been untouched by the virus. The New York metro area was the first epicenter in the U.S., and the city became a ghost town amid skyrocketing case numbers. It is now gradually reopening.

New hot spots emerged in June and July: California, Texas and Florida now have large numbers of cases, and Arizona and Louisiana have especially significant case numbers compared with the size of their populations.

People wearing face coverings wait to shop at Walmart on Wednesday in Burbank, Calif. The state has seen more than 425,000 cases, including more than 12,000 new cases on Wednesday. Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

People wearing face coverings wait to shop at Walmart on Wednesday in Burbank, Calif. The state has seen more than 425,000 cases, including more than 12,000 new cases on Wednesday.

California now has more than 425,000 confirmed cases. The state had two days in a row this week with more than 12,000 new cases.

Florida set a grim new mark of its own Thursday: 173 deaths in one day, along with more than 10,000 new cases. Florida is now behind only California and New York in total cases. Miami-Dade County is the state's epicenter, with a positivity rate near 20%.

In Arizona, the rate of cases per 100,000 residents is 2,127.5 which is to say, more than 2% of the population.

So where is the U.S. now, compared with where the experts projected the country might be?

At the end of March, a model from the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation cited by the White House projected this: "Nationwide, a total of 82,141 COVID-19 deaths (range of 39,174 to 141,995) are currently projected through the epidemic's first wave. US COVID-19 deaths are estimated to rise through April 15, the country's projected peak of deaths per day."

The U.S. is still in the first wave, and the number of deaths has exceeded the high end of that projection. And that predicted peak on April 15? According to the Johns Hopkins University tracker, the U.S. had its highest peak so far on July 16, when there were more than 77,000 new cases.

One trend in recent weeks has been more cases among young adults. State and local officials have noted rising case numbers among those in their 20s and 30s, warning that it's important to keep practicing social distancing, mask wearing and hand washing because young people can spread the virus to more vulnerable populations, even if they are less likely to get severe cases of COVID-19.

But the U.S. is rife with mixed messages: Restaurants in many places have reopened for indoor dining, even though it's become clear that the virus spreads most readily indoors.

In recent days and weeks, many governors and mayors have mandated that people must wear masks in public places. But in Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp overruled local government requirements for face coverings and sued Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms for her efforts to require masks.

The rising case numbers suggest that little will be resolved by the time school begins next month an issue vexing parents, governments, employers and the students themselves.

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U.S. Hits 4 Million Cases Of Coronavirus Adding A Million New Cases In Just 15 Days - NPR

Hoping to Understand the Virus, Everyone Is Parsing a Mountain of Data – The New York Times

I think people tend to cherry pick what they want to see, to confirm their biases, she said.

She has been hesitant to place much stock in statistics on deaths caused by coronavirus, for instance. I see a lot of use of the fatality statistics, which are incomplete, Dr. Smith said. You do have deaths from coronavirus, but we know those are undercounted. For me, at least, that is not a particularly useful metric. But those are the type of statistics that some people grab onto.

Perhaps the most telling numbers are trend data examining which direction a community or state seems to be heading, said Michael T. Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesotas Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy.

Theres no magic number for any of this, Dr. Osterholm said. This is more like a windshield where youre looking at everything in front of you. Its not one piece of data. Its all of it coming together.

In 1918, newspapers in cities across the United States published daily tallies of the sick and the dead from the flu pandemic, said John M. Barry, the author of The Great Influenza, and public health officials made policy decisions accordingly, based on the data.

Todays elected officials have far more granular data to consider.

In Chicago, Dr. Arwady, the city health commissioner, has a call with Mayor Lori Lightfoot every morning, discussing the citys total cases, deaths, the seven-day average for testing and detailed hospitalization numbers, among other metrics.

Data to me is one of the best ways to make it real for people, Dr. Arwady said. She often tries to steer Chicagoans to look at coronavirus numbers broken down by ZIP code, so that they understand the risk they face in their own neighborhoods. Mostly, I want people to feel like Covid is in their lives.

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Hoping to Understand the Virus, Everyone Is Parsing a Mountain of Data - The New York Times

25 new coronavirus cases have been reported in 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.

Another 25 cases of the new coronavirus have been reported in Maine, health officials said Sunday.

Sundays count brings the total coronavirus cases reported in Maine to 3,814. Of those, 3,408 had been confirmed positive, while 406 were classified as probable cases, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

New cases were reported in Androscoggin (2), Cumberland (8), Kennebec (1), Sagadahoc (3), Oxford (1), Franklin (1) and York (7) counties, Maine CDC data show.

The agency revised Saturdays cumulative total to 3,789, down from 3,790, meaning there was a net increase of one over the previous days report, state data show. As the Maine CDC continues to investigate previously reported cases, some are determined to have not been the coronavirus, or coronavirus cases not involving Mainers. Those are removed from the states cumulative total.

No new deaths were reported Sunday, leaving the statewide death toll at 119. Nearly all deaths have been in Mainers over age 60.

So far, 381 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus. Of those, 14 people are currently hospitalized, with 10 in critical care and three on ventilators.

Meanwhile, three more people have recovered from the coronavirus, bringing total recoveries to 3,284. That means there are 411 active and probable cases in the state, up from 390 on Saturday.

A majority of the cases 2,126 have been in Mainers under age 50, while more cases have been reported in women than men, according to the Maine CDC.

As of Sunday, there have been 158,251 negative test results out of 163,251 overall. Just under 3 percent of all tests have come back positive, Maine CDC data show.

The coronavirus has hit hardest in Cumberland County, where 2,011 cases have been reported and where the bulk of virus deaths 68 have been concentrated. It is one of four counties the others are Androscoggin, Penobscot and York, with 534, 139 and 621 cases, respectively where community transmission has been confirmed, according to the Maine CDC.

There are two criteria for establishing community transmission: at least 10 confirmed cases and that at least 25 percent of those are not connected to either known cases or travel. That second condition has not yet been satisfied in other counties.

Other cases have been reported in Aroostook (31), Franklin (46), Hancock (19), Kennebec (158), Knox (25), Lincoln (33), Oxford (49), Piscataquis (3), Sagadahoc (43), Somerset (34), Waldo (60) and Washington (7) counties. Information about where one case was reported wasnt immediately available Friday morning.

As of Sunday morning, the coronavirus has sickened 4,181,268 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 146,484 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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25 new coronavirus cases have been reported in Maine - Bangor Daily News

Coronavirus daily news updates, July 25: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world – Seattle Times

Editors note:This is a live account of COVID-19 updates from Saturday, July 25 as the day unfolded. It is no longer being updated. Clickhereto see all the most recent news about the pandemic, andclick hereto find additional resources.

The coronavirus pandemic continues to cripple Americans whose families have experienced layoffs in the past several months, and a new poll shows nearly half of those families believe those jobs are lost forever. But negotiations over a new COVID-19 rescue bill were still in flux Friday after the White House floated cutting an unemployment benefits boost to as little as $100.

In King County, the top health official warned residents Friday that the current seven-day average of new coronavirus cases has reached the highest its been since the beginning of April, and urged community members to start making long-term fundamental changes.

Throughout Saturday, on this page, well be posting updates on the pandemic and its effects on the Seattle area, the Pacific Northwest and the world. Updates from Friday can be foundhere, and all our coronavirus coverage can be foundhere.

After facing intense scrutiny for planning to air a baseless conspiracy theory that infectious-disease expert Anthony Fauci helped to create the coronavirus, conservative TV broadcaster Sinclair Broadcast Group announced Saturday that it will delay the segment to edit the context of the claims.

Sinclair, which has 191 stations across the country, received backlash this week after America This Week host Eric Bolling interviewed Judy Mikovits, a former medical researcher featured in the debunked Plandemic conspiracy online film.

In the Sinclair interview, Mikovits claimed that Fauci manufactured the coronavirus and shipped it to Wuhan, China, where the outbreak originated. A chyron during the segment reads, DID DR. FAUCI CREATE COVID-19?

Mikovits and her lawyer Larry Klayman dropped other unfounded allegations during the show, including President Donald Trump soft-pedaling relations with China because he has evidence of the countrys involvement with the inception of the virus.

The show was released online earlier this week before it was to be aired on local news channels. The segment was first reported by Media Matters, a left-leaning media watchdog. As of Saturday afternoon, the show was pulled from Sinclair websites.

Read the full story here.

The Washington Post

If your town is partly closed or youre wary of travel during the COVID-19 pandemic, it might feel as if your phones map app is just sitting there gathering digital dust. But even if youre not tappingApples MapsorGoogle Mapsto explore an exotic vacation spot or to belt out turn-by-turn directions on a long road trip this summer, your interactive travel aid can be useful. Here are a few things you can do.

Find whats open or closed

Major U.S. cities have been in varying stages of closure for months, and it may be hard to remember which businesses are open. While a local governments website should have general guidelines posted, both the iOS Maps app from Apple and Google Maps (forAndroidandiOS) have been updating their map labels and listings pages for specific businesses to note adjusted hours, any curbside pickup service and temporary closures.

But what if you find outdated details? In Apples Maps app, tap the name of the business on the map and, when its information page opens, scroll down and tap Report an Issue; you canreport other cartographic issues by tapping the encircled i in the top-right corner of the map itself. In Google Maps, select a business and scroll down on its information page to the Suggest an edit option.

Find restaurants

Many dining establishments have struggled during the pandemic, as some have stayed open with reduced service while others have been forced to close. Apples Maps app often notes temporary or permanent closures and operating hours on its Yelp-assisted restaurant listings pages. As part of itsCOVID-19 updates, Google now adds a line on a restaurants info page that lists the status of dine-in, takeout and delivery service.

Like Google Maps, Apples Maps includes the restaurants phone number and website for details straight from the source. Use this contact information to confirm current delivery and takeout services along with any outdoor-dining options.

Find a COVID-19 testing site

State and local health departments manage testing, but if you have coronavirussymptomsor your medical provider advises you toget tested, find a facility. Apple and Google now include the locations of COVID-19 testing sites in their maps apps using data gleaned from government agencies, public-health departments and health care institutions.

Read the full story here.

The New York Times

After a Mexican orchard worker died earlier this month from COVID 19 complications, the state Department of Labor & Industries is demanding changes in the farm labor camps of a major eastern Washington fruit grower that employed the man in Okanogan County.

The order and notice of restraint results from several site visits in an investigation of a Gebbers Farms labor camp where the worker, who died July 8, was lodged. The notice requires Gebbers to either remove bunk beds in this and other company labor camps, or comply with a state rule that requires camp workers to be in groups that live, travel and labor together.

We take this very seriously. The choice is pretty simple. Stop using bunk beds or follow all the requirements, said Tim Church, a Labor & Industries spokesman who added that the unusual action reflects the risks of the disease spreading to other workers.

Failure to comply with the order carries the risk of criminal penalties.

In a statement, the family-own companys chief executive officer, Cass Gebbers, disputed the Labor departments description of their COVID-19 protocols, which he said were reviewed by a consultant who also serves as a program officer of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The accusations are simply false, Gebbers said in the statement that declared workers already are properly separated into distinct groups that live and work together, although the company cannot dictate what happens during off-duty hours.

Read the full story here.

Hal Bernton

State health officials reported 1,025 new COVID-19 cases in Washington as of Friday night, but the number of deaths dropped by one, from 1,495 to 1,494, when the state removed one death from its official tally.

State Department of Health spokesman Frank Ameduri was checking with state epidemiologists about the reason for the lower number, but said that over time, some causes of death are found to be unrelated to COVID-19.

The update brings the states totals to 51,849 cases and 1,494 deaths, meaning that 2.9% of people diagnosed in Washington have died, according to the state Department of Health (DOH). The data is as of 11:59 p.m. Friday.

So far, 903.674 tests for the novel coronavirus have been conducted in the state, per DOH. Of those, 5.7% have come back positive.

In King County, the state most populous, state health officials have confirmed 14,249 diagnoses and 644 deaths in King County, accounting for a little less than half of the states COVID-19 death toll.

Nicole Brodeur

Washington'sstatewide face covering order expands Saturday to require face coverings in any indoor setting outside of people's residence and not just in public buildings.

The order expands the outdoor requirement to nonpublic settings when people can't maintain at least 6 feet of distance from nonhousehold members, including common areas in apartment buildings, condos, Greek houses and assisted living facilities.

"The current orders about face coverings are intended to increase the use of face coverings and emphasize their critical importance to our overall strategy to slow the spread of COVID-19," the state Department of Health (DOH) said in a statement released Saturday.

As many as 30 to 50% of infections occur before people have symptoms, according to DOH.

"You could be infected and not know it, but a cloth face covering greatly reduces the distance respiratory droplets travel, and that protects everyone."

The department asked people to keep staying home even if it's hard and said hanging out and socializing in close proximity to others "is one of the worst things we can do right now."

Christine Clarridge

The tallies for people hospitalized in New York with the coronavirus are continuing to drop to the lowest levels since the pandemic began, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Saturday.

There were at least 646 people hospitalized in the state on Friday, a new low since March 18 and down slightly from the previous day, the Democratic governor said in a statement. The number of reported deaths in the state rose by one, to 10.

Daily statewide statistics show New York with more than 750 newly confirmed cases, representing only about 1% of all tests performed. The true number of cases is likely higher because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected and not feel sick.

New York, once a pandemic hot spot, has so far avoided a surge in new cases like those plaguing other states in the South and West. But Cuomo has repeatedly warned New Yorkers could be at risk if they abandon social distancing, face coverings and other practices adopted to stop the spread of the virus.

The Associated Press

The governor of Lombardy, Italys hardest-hit region in the pandemic, acknowledged Saturday that he is being investigated by Milan prosecutors over a lucrative contract to obtain protective medical gowns from his brother-in-laws company.

The contract for 75,000 gowns reportedly was awarded without public bidding in April, when the coronavirus outbreak was devastating Italy, Italian news reports said.

Gov. Attilio Fontana said in a Facebook post about the probe that he represents the region responsibly and was confident about the correctness of Lombardys actions.

The governor insisted that the region never paid for the gowns, which were reportedly eventually donated to Lombardy.

Fontanas wife has a minor stake in the company, according to Italian media.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

Frances coronavirus infection rate crept higher Saturday and Spain cracked down on nightlife but German authorities were confident enough to send a cruise ship out to sea with 1,200 passengers for a weekend test of how the cruise industry can begin to resume.

French health authorities said the closely watched R gauge is now up to 1.3, suggesting that infected people are contaminating 1.3 other people on average. That means the virus still has enough victims to keep on going instead of petering out.

Frances daily new infections are also rising up to 1,130 on Friday.

We have thus erased much of the progress that wed achieved in the first weeks of lockdown-easing, health authorities said, adding that the French appear to be letting down their guard during their summer vacations and those testing positive are making less of an effort to self-isolate.

In Spain, Catalonia became the latest region to crack down on nightlife, trying to tamp down on new infection clusters.

India, which has the worlds third-highest infections behind the United States and Brazil, reported its death toll rose by 740 to 30,601. It saw a surge of more than 49,000 new cases, raising its total to over 1.2 million.

South Africa, Africas hardest-hit country, reported more than 13,000 new cases, raising its total to over 408,000.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

What if these are the good old days?

Depressing as that might seem after the coronavirus pandemic has claimed well over 630,000 lives worldwide, cost tens of millions their jobs and inflicted untold misery across the planet, its entirely possible increasingly likely, some say that things will get worse before they get better.

Americans in particular have been optimists by nature for the better part of four centuries. But even here, a bleak dystopian vision is emerging in some corners. Its not pretty.

It imagines a not-too-distant future where well all look back with nostalgia at 2020 as a time when most of us had plenty of food and wine, could get many of the goods and services we needed, and could work from home at jobs that still paid us.

This could be as good as it gets, so lets take pleasure in what we have now, Katherine Tallman, the CEO of the Coolidge Corner Theatre, an indie cinema in Brookline, Massachusetts, told a recent Zoom roundtable.

The pandemic continues to buffet the planet economically, dashing hopes that the worst of the joblessness might be behind us.

For 18 consecutive weeks now, more than a million Americans have sought unemployment benefits. New infections have been surging in states like Florida and California that power the economy, threatening peoples health and livelihoods for the foreseeable future.

Thats bad. But in online forums and on social media, futurists see the potential for worse. Much worse. Their musings arent for the faint of heart.

Read the story here.

William J. Kole, The Associated Press

A skilled nursing and rehabilitation center in Puyallup is in the middle of a COVID-19 outbreak,with 61 confirmed cases. All 61 cases are still positive, company spokesperson Timothy Killian said.

Life Care Center of South Hill has reported the death of at least one client from COVID-19 as of July 21, The News Tribune of Tacoma reported.The death occurred three weeks ago.

Killian said 28 patients and 33 staff members have tested positive as of Friday at the center on 7th Street Southeast. The test results were received in the past week.

Of 31 patients, only three have not been infected with the coronavirus.

Killian said Life Care staff at the South Hill facility have worked at only the one building since early March.

Josephine Peterson, The News Tribune

By his estimation, Stephen Santa took Pennsylvanias coronavirus lockdown seriously: He pretty much went only to grocery stores and picked up takeout once a week to help Pittsburghs restaurants.

Whatever Santa and everyone else in Pittsburgh did, it seemed to work: The city racked up a fraction of the coronavirus cases during the spring shutdown, while the other side of Pennsylvania flared up into a hot spot.

With a state-mandated masking order in place, Pittsburghs gyms, salons, bars and restaurants got permission to reopen in early June, ahead of many parts of Pennsylvania, as part of the so-called green phase in Gov. Tom Wolfs three-step stoplight-colored reopening plan.

Santa promptly went to a nearby Italian restaurant for a meal in its outdoor courtyard with a couple relatives.

When they got there, around 5 p.m. on a Tuesday, it was practically empty. When they left, it was packed inside: every table full, no masks and nobody keeping 3 feet (1 meter) apart, never mind 6 feet (2 meters) apart.

I think partly a lot of people saw the word green and it meant go and were going back how things were,' Santa said.

Barely three weeks later, officials in Allegheny County home to Pittsburgh and 1.2 million residents raised the alarm over a spike in COVID-19 cases.

The culprit? Primarily, people in their 20s, 30s and 40s who told contact tracers that they had been visiting bars and restaurants or working in them, county officials said.

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The Associated Press

If Black, Hispanic and Native Americans are hospitalized and killed by the coronavirus at far higher rates than others, shouldnt the government count them as high risk for serious illness?

That seemingly simple question has been mulled by federal health officials for months. And so far the answer is no.

But federal public health officials have released a new strategy that vows to improve data collection and take steps to address stark inequalities in how the disease is affecting Americans.

Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention stress that the disproportionately high impact on certain minority groups is not driven by genetics. Rather, its social conditions that make people of color more likely to be exposed to the virus and if they catch it more likely to get seriously ill.

To just name racial and ethnic groups without contextualizing what contributes to the risk has the potential to be stigmatizing and victimizing, said the CDCs Leandris Liburd, who two months ago was named chief health equity officer in the agencys coronavirus response.

Outside experts agreed that theres a lot of potential downside to labeling certain racial and ethnic groups as high risk.

You have to be very careful that you dont do it in such a way that youre defining a whole class of people as COVID carriers. said Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

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Coronavirus daily news updates, July 25: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world - Seattle Times