Coronavirus daily news updates, July 12: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world – Seattle Times

As COVID-19 continued to ravage the nation and the world, President Donald Trump wore a mask in public Saturday for the first time. In other news, Disney began reopening its Florida resorts even as that state continued to report high numbers of cases.

The Washington state Department of Health did not report new numbers on Saturday as its system was down for maintenance; an update is expected Sunday afternoon.

Throughout Sunday, on this page, well be posting 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 following graphic includes the most recent numbers from the Washington State Department of Health, released Friday afternoon.

Washington health officials confirmed 1,438 additional coronavirus cases over the weekend, including 14 more deaths.

Thestate Department of Health'sdata system was shut down for maintenance on Saturday, so this data is for Friday and Saturday, and is current as of 11:59 p.m. Saturday.

The update brings the states totals to 40,656 cases and 1,438 deaths, meaning about 3.5% of people diagnosed in Washington have died,according to the state Department of Health (DOH).

So far, 686,005 tests for the novel coronavirus have been conducted in the state, per DOH. Of those, 5.9% have come back positive since testing began slightly higher than the percentage of positive tests in the past week, whichthe state reportsis at 5.2%.

Overall deaths are concentrated in King County, Washington's most populous county, where DOH has confirmed 11,866 diagnoses and 637 deaths.

Scott Greenstone

Andrea Dragnas pre-pandemic pastime of scouting new makeup colors at Sephora has given way to a new, more socially distant ritual: trying on lipstick, eye shadow and blush through the webcam on her phone.

Its easy and surprisingly accurate, she says, and most importantly, doesnt require setting foot in a store. Its the perfect way to shop in the days of COVID, said Dragna, 40, who ordered nearly $300 worth of cosmetics last weekend after a virtual try-on session.

The coronavirus pandemic is reshaping the way Americans shop. Stores are reopening but being reoriented to avoid interaction: Fitting rooms are taped off, sample counters are closed and product testers have been put away.

Thats set off a scramble to re-create an integral part of the shopping experience, allowing people to virtually try on clothing, shoes, cosmetics, eyeglasses, even a new haircut or eyebrow shape, on their smartphones and computers. If consumers are presented with an authentic representation of themselves, analysts say, they are more likely to buy and less likely to make a return. But privacy experts warn the technology could also form a pipeline to valuable personal and biometric information.

Read more here.

The Washington Post

Mountlake Terrace, a city of 21,338 north of Seattle, plans to mail two masks to every address in the citys ZIP code.

Using CARES Act funding from the federal government, the city will mail cloth masks to roughly 9,700 addresses in Mountlake Terrace, meaning business addresses will receive them as well, according to the citys Community Relations Director, Virginia Olsen. The masks cost almost $40,000, and mailing them to every address using a local distributor will cost $8,500, Olsen wrote in an email.

The city hopes the mailing will go out by the end of the month, Olsen said.

Separately, the city received 8,000 free masks from Snohomish County, which the city has been giving away at food banks and at Edmonds School District schools.

Scott Greenstone

Protective face coverings wont be out of sight when Major League Baseball resumes in less than two weeks. Some players and coaches are planning to wear them on the field.

MLBs safety protocols require masks in clubhouses to prevent the spread of COVID-19, and coaches and managers are required to wear them in dugouts, but theyre optional on the field. Some are going to wear them during games as well.

Read more here.

Topofficials in Houston are calling for the city to lock back down as areahospitals strain to accommodate the onslaught of patients sick with the newcoronavirus.

HoustonMayor Sylvester Turner and Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo, both Democrats,said this weekend that a stay-at-home order is needed for Americas fourthlargest city to cope with the surge of COVID-19 cases.

Thecall comes after a week in which Texas continued to break records for confirmedCOVID-19 cases and deaths linked to the disease. State health officialsreported 8,196 new cases Sunday, another 80 deaths and a total of 10,410 peoplehospitalized due to the virus.

Thetrue number of cases is likely far higher because many people have not beentested, and studies suggest people can be infected and not feel sick.

The decision over a lockdown, however, rests with Republican Gov. Greg Abbott who has resisted this step, saying it should be a last resort.

Read the full story.

Associated Press

JOHANNESBURG (AP) South African President Cyril Ramaphosa says the country will immediately return to a ban on the sale of alcohol to reduce the volume of trauma patients so that hospitals have more beds open to treat COVID-19 patients.

Confronted by surging hospitalizations due to the coronavirus, South Africa is also reinstating a night curfew to reduce traffic accidents and made it mandatory for all residents to wear face masks when in public.

Ramaphosa said, in a nationally televised address Sunday night, that top health officials warn of impending shortages of hospital beds and medical oxygen as South Africa reaches a peak of COVID-19 cases, expected between the end of July and September. He said some hospitals have had to turn away patients because all their beds are full.

Read more about the decision here.

The Associated Press

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) First and second class midshipmen will begin to return to the Naval Academy in Annapolis in about a week under a staggered plan.

The midshipmens return will start on or about July 20, Naval Academy spokeswoman Cmdr. Alana Garas told the Capital Gazette on Friday. The fall semester will feature in-person and online classes.

Students will be tested for the coronavirus when they return to campus. Their movements will be restricted for 14 days, and they will undergo another test at the end of that period.

Garas said midshipmen will be six feet apart and wear masks during classes. Tents will soon be set up on campus to expand the space where students can eat their meals.

Click here to read the full story.

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) The federal Bureau of Prisons said Sunday that a staff member involved in preparing for the first federal executions in nearly two decades has tested positive for coronavirus.

The Justice Department said the development will not mean an additional delay in the governments timetable, already stalled by a federal court, because the worker had not been in the execution chamber and had not come into contact with anyone on the specialized team sent to the prison to handle the execution.

The agency made the disclosure in court filings in response to lawsuits that have sought to halt executions scheduled to resume Monday.

Click here to read the full story.

Michael Balsamo, The Associated Press

Floridahas broken the record for a single-day increase in COVID-19 cases in a singlestate.

Health officials reported 15,300 new cases in Florida on Sunday.

The last state to report a single-day record in cases was California, which reported 11,694 just this past Wednesday.

The totalnumber of cases has now reached 269,811 in Florida, where bars, restaurants and gyms began reopening in May.

The staggering increase in cases in one day comes as more testing in Florida is underway.

The state reported Sunday that 99,003 more tests were conducted. The latest for positive cases in Florida cases was 11.25%, according to the Florida Department of Health.

Forty-fiveadditional deaths were posted by the state Sunday, bringing the death toll to4,242.

With 104 nonresident deaths included, the toll is 4,346.

Read the full story.

Orlando Sentinel

The push in New York to tame the nations deadliest outbreak in the spring could offer a blueprint for other states now swamped by the disease.

It could also soon come in handy for leaders in New York as the region prepares for a potential second wave of infection.

As coronavirus rages in the South and West, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, D-New York, warned Friday it would eventually rear up again in his state.

A widely cited University of Washington model doesnt project spikes at least through its Nov. 1 time frame in New York, New Jersey or Connecticut, whose Democratic governors have coordinated on traveler quarantines and, earlier, some shutdown policies. But that doesnt mean the densely populated tri-state area is in the clear.

We expect the virus to return in all of those states, said Dr. Christopher Murray, head of the universitys Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. The question is one of timing.

Cuomo has offered advice, ventilators, masks, gowns and medicine to states dealing with spikes in cases and hospitalizations and, in some places, rising deaths.

At the same time, the Democratic governor has ordered travelers from more than a dozen states to quarantine for 14 days, while urging New Yorkers not to let up on wearing masks or social distancing.

Others are preparing, too.

Mount Sinai Hospital expanded from 94 intensive-care beds to 235 and converted an atrium and lobby into wards for less-critical patients at the height of the crisis. Now, its developing a coronavirus playbook of sorts, so clinicians will have how-tos immediately at hand, said Dr. Roopa Kohli-Seth, who oversees intensive care.

Read the full story.

Associated Press

Public health experts warn that a one-size-fits-all to reopening schools could drive coronavirus infection and death rates higher.

Theyre urging a more cautious approach ahead of the next academic year, as the Trump administration seeks to pressure schools to resume in-person education.

The American Academy of Pediatrics, whose guidance the Trump administration has cited to support its demands, says the goal is for all students to be physically present in school. But it says school districts need to be flexible, consult with public health authorities and be ready to pivot as virus activity waxes and wanes.

It is not that the American Academy of Pediatrics thinks this is a done deal because we have put out guidance, said Dr. Nicholas Beers, a member of the academys school health council. But what we do know is that we need to have a more realistic dialogue about the implications of virtual learning on the future of children. We have left whole swaths of society behind, whether its because they have limited access to a computer, or broadband internet, or because of other challenges that online education cant address.

President Donald Trump has threatened federal funding cuts for districts that dont fully reopen.

While most funding typically comes from state and local sources, experts say schools will need more federal funding, not less, to reopen safely.

Masks, extra cleaning supplies or janitors, additional classroom space, mental health support for students and staff traumatized by the pandemic are among potential costs. And with more parents out of work, more children will qualify for federally funded school lunches.

Read the full story.

Associated Press

The cruise ship industry is facing an array of challenges during the coronavirus pandemic as it tries to ensure vessels worldwide remain operable.

Sincemid-March, only a small handful of the worlds 400-or-so cruise ships have beenable to accept passengers all on hyperlocal itineraries. A few dozen aresailing the world with purpose, repatriating crew members from every corner ofthe globe.

Therest are sitting idle, unable to sail commercially for the foreseeable future. (Inthe U.S., the industry has agreed not to resume businessat least untilSept. 15. Princess Cruises, Holland America Lines and Carnival Cruises in Maycanceled their remaining Alaska cruises from Seattle for the season.)

But idlingthrough the pandemic present huge issues for cruise ship companies, from findinga place to park vessels and dealing with mechanical issues to hurricane risks andregulatory hurdles.

Theexpense is staggering. In a recent SEC filing, Carnival whose nine brandscomprise the worlds largest cruise company indicated that its ongoing shipand administrations expenses would amount to$250 million a month once allits ships are on pause.

With the company saying its unable to predict when cruises resume, thats a long-term line item on a balance sheet that logged $4.4 billion in losses in the second quarter alone.

Read the full story.

Bloomberg

Read the rest here:

Coronavirus daily news updates, July 12: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world - Seattle Times

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