The world runs on remittances. Covid-19 could end that for many – CNN

The funds don't only support Lpez Aceves, a graphic designer in Mexico's southern Chiapas state -- they also go to support her five-year-old daughter and her grandmother. Never before have they found themselves without the extra help of remittances, like millions of other Mexican families.

When the money dried up, it came at the worst possible time -- Lpez Aceves' clients were also dwindling amid the pandemic and economic shutdown. "I don't have a lot of work right now," Lpez Aceves told CNN in a phone interview. "The truth is, the salary I make is not enough."

The money her mother sent had helped with food, savings, and paying for her daughter's education. With it, they "live okay," she said. But in the wake of the coronavirus, her mom can no longer afford to send money home.

Ninety-four percent of those transfers come from the US, according to a November 2018 report by the think tank Inter-American Dialogue.

"Remittances from the US are unfortunately a very important part of Mexico's economy, more for the most vulnerable part of the citizenship," Larry Rubin, President of the American Society of Mexico told CNN.

Lpez Aceves' mom lost her full-time cleaning job in March, and found herself without work for the first time in seven years. "If she didn't have some savings, she would have returned to Mexico," the daughter said. "And I was worried about myself, but also about my mother. She is alone up there with no one," she added. Her mother declined an interview with CNN.

As the pandemic swelled and lockdowns expanded, remittances have slowed back to normal rates in April and May, with nearly $2.9 billion and $3.4 billion respectively.

A global pause on remittances?

Remittances to El Salvador, for example, dropped 40% in April 2020, compared to the same month last year, according to the country's central bank.

"The ongoing economic recession caused by Covid-19 is taking a severe toll on the ability to send money home and makes it all the more vital that we shorten the time to recovery for advanced economies," said World Bank Group President David Malpass in a recent statement.

As unemployment skyrockets across Latin America, the UN's World Food Programme (WFP) is already worried about hunger in the region. "[Latin America] has seen an almost three-fold rise in the number of people requiring food assistance," WFP said in a statement at the end of June.

Lpez Aceves' mother has found a new part-time job. But she is not yet able to resume sending money home. So Lpez Aceves moved an hour away to look for work, leaving her daughter in the care of her sister, and hoping the change will help make ends meet.

"We tried to quarantine but I couldn't completely because the situation here in Mexico is different," she told CNN. "I have to go look for workto find a way to make money to help with the indispensable, which is food."

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The world runs on remittances. Covid-19 could end that for many - CNN

COVID-19: The Great Reset – World Economic Forum

The COVID-19 coronavirus crisis has wrought economic disruption on a monumental scale, contributing to a dangerous and volatile global upheaval politically, socially and geopolitically while raising deep concerns about the environment and the extending reach of technology into our lives.

World Economic Forum Founder and Executive Chairman Klaus Schwab and Thierry Malleret, Co-Founder of Monthly Barometer, explore these themes in their new book, COVID-19: The Great Reset.

The books main objective is to help us understand whats coming: it has three main chapters, offering a panoramic overview of the future landscape. The first assesses what the impact of the pandemic will be on five key macro categories: the economic, societal, geopolitical, environmental and technological factors. The second considers the effects in micro terms, on specific industries and companies. The third hypothesizes about the nature of the possible consequences at the individual level.

Last month, the World Economic Forum launched the Great Reset initiative: a commitment to jointly and urgently build the foundations of our economic and social system for a fairer, sustainable and more resilient post-COVID future. Find out more here.

Tune in at 14:00 CET later today to join in a virtual briefing about COVID-19: The Great Reset.

Professor Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum

Dr. Thierry Malleret, Co-Founder, Monthly Barometer

Saadia Zahidi, Managing Director, World Economic Forum

Adrian Monck, Managing Director, World Economic Forum

The book can be ordered here, and you can leave a review here.

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COVID-19: The Great Reset - World Economic Forum

Coronavirus update: Global cases of COVID-19 climb above 13 million as California, Hong Kong and India reimpose restrictions on movement – MarketWatch

The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus illness COVID-19 climbed above 13 million on Tuesday, and the worlds eighth biggest economy, California, moved to again temporarily shut down higher-risk businesses such as bars and restaurants after a spike in hospitalizations.

World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that there is no way to return to normal for the foreseeable future and that there are no short cuts out of this pandemic, at a news conference, as the Guardian reported.

In the U.S., a growing chorus of voices lamented the tensions between President Donald Trump and his own expert advisers, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute for Allergies and Infectious Diseases, who is increasingly being targeted by administration officials over alleged mistakes make in handling the pandemic.

Trump accused his most experienced infectious-disease expert of mistakes in a Fox News interview at the weekend, and administration officials gave the Washington Post a series of talking points outlining failures such as mixed messaging on wearing face masks.

Arne Duncan, former education secretary, said the war on science will cost lives.

The real travesty here is that there is no body count high enough for the president to actually pay attention to science, Duncan said in an interview with MSNBC. We could lose another 10,000. We could lose another 50,000. We could lose another 100,000. Nothing would compel him to listen to Dr. Fauci and others who are actually fighting to try and save lives.

See also: New York Gov. Cuomo says President Trump has put politics above public health throughout pandemic

The U.S. now has 3.39 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 and at least 135,984 people have died, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University. Forty one states and territories have seen cases rise over the last 14 days, according to a New York Times tracker.

Florida is the new hot spot and Miami is the state epicenter. Florida counted more than 12,000 new cases on Monday, after more than 15,000 on Sunday. The Sunshine State has 282,427 confirmed cases and 4,276 people have died, the New York Times tracker shows.

Miami-Dade County accounts for 67,712 of those cases and 1,143 of the deaths, for a mortality rate of 42 per 100,00 people.

See: White House virus task force member says none of us lie

Carlos Migoya, chief executive of Miami-based nonprofit Jackson Health System, said Miami has about a three-week window before hitting the peak, and is missing vital equipment to cope including staff: That is a very tough three weeks, Migoya said on MSNBC. Weve already been going at it for a full four months, and our staff are very, very tired and stressed, and, of course, nervous.

See:Coronavirus slashes deal-making globally: What to expect next

Miami currently has a testing positivity rate of 25% to 28%, he said, which makes reopening schools in the fall unviable, he said. Multigenerational housing in Miami is causing young people to infect their parents and grandparents, he said, urging the public to wear face masks in public and socially distance.

Were finding an awful lot of people that are extremely aggressive and against complying to those environments that is not really understandable at all, he said.

That message was echoed by Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos A. Gimnez: Unless we change behavior, you can do all the tests in the world you want, we can get all the contact tracers in the world we want, its not going to make a difference, said Gimnez. We have to change our behavior.

Robert Redfield, head of the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control, agreed. Redfield said at a Monday news conference that if every American agreed to wear a mask, over the next six weeks we could drive (the virus) into the ground.

There are now 13.2 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 world-wide and at least 574,615 people have died, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University. At least 7.3 million people have recovered.

Brazil is second to the U.S. with 1.88 million cases and 72,833 deaths.

India is third measured by cases at 906,752, followed by Russia with 738,787 and Peru with 330,123.

The U.K. has 45,053 fatalities, the highest in Europe and third highest in the world. China, where the illness was first reported late last year, has 85,117 cases and 4,641 fatalities.

France will celebrate this years Bastille Day national holiday, not with the usual dignitaries attending a military parade but with a smaller ceremony honoring all of the front-line workers in the pandemic, from health care staff to supermarket workers and postal workers.

See also: Rich countries may try to stockpile coronavirus vaccine, according to global health partnership founded by Bill and Melinda Gates

Post-it maker 3M Co. MMM, +1.84% is developing a rapid diagnostic test for COVID-19 that would be used at the point of care, MarketWatchs Jaimy Lee reported. The test, which is being jointly developed by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has been selected by the National Institutes of Health for commercial support and has received $500,000 from the U.S. government.

Rigel Pharmaceuticals Inc. RIGL, +98.38% will test a drug used to treat an autoimmune disorder in a clinical trial in the U.K. as a treatment for COVID-19 pneumonia. The Imperial College London will operate the open-label, controlled trial for Tavalisse, which received Food and Drug Administration approval for chronic immune thrombocytopenia in 2018.

Patients will receive Tavalisse, the chemotherapy ruxolitinib, or the standard of care, with a goal of understanding whether the drug can prevent the progression of mild or moderate COVID-19 pneumonia to more severe disease.

Shares of Moderna Inc. MRNA, +4.70% soared on the news that the company, which is developing a COVID-19 vaccine, will join the Nasdaq-100 Index before the market opens on July 20.

Read now:Race for a COVID-19 vaccine has drugmakers scaling up manufacturing before one is developed

The second--quarter earnings season kicked off early Tuesday with earnings from three of the biggest U.S. banks and Delta Air. Bank earnings predictably showed gains from trading volatile markets and fees from underwriting debt and equity deals offsetting weakness in consumer banking and a big boost in loan loss provisions.

See:S&P 500 earnings set to plunge as the coronavirus batters all sectors with Wall Street counting on a bounce that may not come

JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM, +0.15% and Citigroup Inc. C, -3.41% managed to beat analyst estimates, even as profits fell, while Wells Fargo swung to a wider-than-expected loss, its first in more than a decade.

Wells Chief Executive Charles Scharf said the bankwas extremely disappointed in its results and need to cut its dividend.

Our view of the length and severity of the economic downturn has deteriorated considerably from the assumptions used last quarter, which drove the $8.4 billion addition to our credit loss reserve in the second quarter, he said.

Delta DAL, -2.14% also reported a bigger-than-expected loss as the pandemic grounded flights and recession destroyed demand.

Elsewhere, companies continued to update guidance and analysts continued to adjust models for the new COVID world.

Heres the latest news about companies and the pandemic:

Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.s BBBY, +9.45% June same-store sales were positive for reopened stores and digital channels. Cash flow during June was also positive. Nearly all stores have reopened, following closures because of the pandemic. Separately, the company believes there is between $350 million to $450 million it could get from asset sales and the plan to reduce up to $1 billion of inventory at retail is slightly more than halfway complete.

Analyst James Hardiman at Wedbush cut his price target on Carnival Corp. CCL, -1.89% to $20 from $29 while reiterating his neutral rating, in the wake of the cruise operators announcements last week that three of its AIDA Cruises will start resailingin August, and that cumulative advance bookings for 2021 remained within historical ranges, although at lower prices. While a legitimate target for the restart of the AIDA brand is encouraging, we cant help but think that we remain a far distance away from operations resuming in the United States given a resurgence in COVID-19 cases as well as halted (in some instances reversed) economic reopenings, Hardiman wrote in a note to clients.

Delta Air Lines Inc. DAL, -2.14% reported second-quarter losses that were wider than expected, although revenue beat lowered expectations. Passenger revenue for the quarter fell 94% to $678 million, and cargo revenue was down 42% to $108 million. Given the combined effects of the pandemic and associated financial impact on the global economy, we continue to believe that it will be more than two years before we see a sustainable recovery, said Delta Chief Executive Ed Bastian, emphasizing the staggering impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our business. Delta ended the quarter with $15.7 billion in liquidity, and reduced its daily cash burn in June by 70% compared to late March, down to an average of $27 million. The airline has received $5.4 billion in grant funds and unsecured loans through the CARES Act, which will be paid in installments through July 2020. Maturities on $1.3 billion in borrowings on revolving credit facilities have been extended to 2022 from 2021. Delta has taken additional sanitation steps in the face of the coronavirus pandemic, has limited load factor at 60% and is blocking off middle seats. The company has provided more than $2.2 billion in cash refunds in 2020. Delta is positioning itself to be a smaller airline over the next couple of years, retiring MD-88 and other planes, and reducing head count through early retirement and other programs. The company is also accelerating airport construction projects in New Yorks LaGuardia Airport, in Los Angeles and other cities. At the end of the quarter, the company had total debt and finance lease obligations of $24.6 billion. Delta took a write down of $1.1 billion on its investment in LATAM Airlines and a write down of $770 million on its investment in AeroMexico after those companies losses and bankruptcy filings. The company took a $200 million write down in its investment in Virgin Atlantic, a $200 million charge.

BS analyst Eric Sheridan downgraded Netflix Inc.s NFLX, -1.39% stock to neutral from buy, writing that while the company looks poised to report a strong June quarter as it continued to benefit from COVID-19 lockdowns, investors seem to have already priced in these benefits to Netflixs shares. Unlike prior periods over the last few months (with debates centered around competition with Disney, balance sheet vs. free-cash flow generation, content costs/competition), investor fears seem to have disappeared and the current stock price increasingly reflects many of the long-term business moat dynamics including sustained growth in users/revs and steady state margin expansion, Sheridan said in his note to clients. He sees tough subscriber comparisons ahead for the company next year and wrote that he would rather be constructive at levels when a mix of potential subscriber volatility, FCF dynamics & competition are better reflected in the share price. Sheridan kept his $535 price target unchanged.

Tesla Inc. TSLA, +1.67% extended their seemingly unstoppable rally, after Piper Sandler analyst Alexander Potter raised his price target on the stock to $2322 from $939, writing of faster-than-expected share gains and big opportunities in software. Though Tesla shares have rocketed nearly 260% on the year and the stocks valuation is 88 times higher than it was after its 2010 initial public offering, Potter said that resoundingly his conclusion is to stick with the stock. While deliveries are a key driver of our increased near-term estimates, software is the biggest driver of our increased DCF-based price target, he wrote in a late Monday note to clients. Tesla has noted the possibility for 30%+ gross margins if/when more customers opt-in for purchasing the companys full self-driving (FSD) software. That could help Tesla record operating margins in the mid-20s by the end of Potters 20-year forecast period, even if only half of customers go for the full self-driving software. Thanks to the high-margin nature of the FSD package, we think that by the 2030s, Tesla could conceivably be selling vehicles at cost - or even below cost - while still achieving higher operating margins, he wrote. Tesla shares have rallied even though its main California plant was closed for much of the recent quarter because of the pandemic.

See:Teslas earnings on tap next week: Will a loss end its blowout stock rally?

The Travelers Cos. Inc. TRV, +2.66% expects to report a net loss per share of 16 cents for the second quarter, weighed down by a high level of catastrophe losses, mostly stemming from severe storms in the U.S., along with claims related to social unrest. The New York-based insurer is expecting net investment income of $268 million pretax, or $251 million after-tax, including $511 million from its fixed income portfolio and a loss of $234 million in the non-fixed income portfolio. That is equal to $438 million after-tax and $180 million after-tax respectively. The company is expecting the pandemic to have a modest impact on its underwriting result. Insurance losses directly caused by the pandemic are expected to come to $114 million pretax. The company will report second-quarter earnings on July 23.

Wells Fargo & Co. tumbled 6.5%, enough to pace the large-capitalization banking sectors decliners, after the bank reported second-quarter results that missed expectations. The stock is on track to suffer the biggest one-day post-earnings decline since it tumbled 8.4% on Oct. 17, 2011, after third-quarter 2011 results were released.

Additional reporting by Tim Rostan

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Coronavirus update: Global cases of COVID-19 climb above 13 million as California, Hong Kong and India reimpose restrictions on movement - MarketWatch

The future of workplaces: how Covid-19 will transform office life – The Guardian

As the coronavirus pandemic continues to surge in parts of the US, some companies have moved forward with plans to let their employees re-enter the office after months of working from home.

In the absence of federal guidelines around best practices, office managers will probably need to rely on an abundance of caution. This may turn offices into ghost towns of their former selves, with gatherings by the water cooler, big meetings and buzzing shared spaces disappearing for the foreseeable future.

If your office decides to move forward with reopening, you may start to hear the phrase de-densifying in conversations about how to do so safely. The term, which many schools have used when laying out plans for reopening in the fall, refers to restricting the number of people who have access to a given space at any one time, in order to ensure social distancing.

For offices, that could mean phased reopenings. It is important to note that not all employees will return to a location at the same time, said JPMorgan Chase in a May memo to employees, obtained by the Guardian. It will happen in waves over a period of time, with business leaders prioritizing who returns when.

It could also mean major changes to the physical layout of your office. The 100-person tech firm Submittable reports experimenting with different seating arrangements to avoid clustered workspaces. It is also planning staggered workdays, with teams rotating between designated days in the office.

With health officials predicting another wave of the virus in the fall, this staggered standard will likely continue over the next six to twelve months.

While big office meetings may not officially be a thing of the past yet, they most certainly arent a thing of the immediate future, said Asta So, Head of People at Submittable. We may have smaller groups in large meeting rooms, while everyones wearing a face mask. The virtual meetings and social gatherings that have developed over the last two months will probably remain the norm.

Stations for personal protective equipment, like hand sanitizer, masks and gloves, will be new permanent fixtures in offices, placed at entrances, exits and other strategic locations. Forward-thinking businesses may have stations for you to recycle your masks and gloves as well. Branded, individual back-to-work safety kits will now be as common as zip drives and pens: companies like iPromo, a Chicago-based bulk supplier, have been selling personal kits to offices by the thousands. Some of these include sanitizer, masks, gloves, tissues, soap, a stylus pen for use on high-touch surfaces like printers and elevator buttons, and brass antimicrobial hook-style keys that can open door handles.

Even though we now believe the virus is not as easily transmitted via contact with contaminated surfaces, workers will probably need to get into the habit of wiping down their desk and other office supplies. Most janitorial services cant keep up with the now-constant disinfectant requirements of things like elevator buttons and faucet buttons.

We might add wiping high-touch surfaces to office task lists, So said. And well be asking employees to make choices that avoid touching potentially contaminated surfaces, like taking the stairs instead of the elevator.

No-touch infrared thermometers have already been spotted in certain businesses, including airports and restaurants. Even though experts have said these tools have limitations for curbing the spread of Covid-19, including reporting false positives and user error, workers can still expect these to make more frequent appearances in the office.

The state of Connecticut, for example, announced in May that it would distribute 50,000 infrared thermometers to small businesses and non-profits. Some businesses may even spring for a body thermal scanner at office entrances, like Amazon has done at its warehouses. High-tech fever detectors are coming, said Friedman.

A recent survey of employers conducted by Willis Towers Watson found that almost half of companies surveyed (47%) are enhancing healthcare benefits for employees in the face of Covid-19. Forty-five per cent of respondents reported expanding wellbeing coverage, and 33% reported planning changes to paid time off policies. While coverage of Covid-19 treatment for employees isnt federally mandated, new legislation, effective 18 March, required group health plans to cover testing and related services without cost sharing.

At the same time, experts predict that health insurance premiums for employers will rise in 2021 anywhere from 4% to 40%, based on recent filings from health insurance companies with the District of Columbias department of insurance, securities and banking. A report from Covered California predicted employers no longer being able to offer affordable coverage, or dramatically shifting costs to employees.

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The future of workplaces: how Covid-19 will transform office life - The Guardian

COVID-19 hotspots have formed in counties across SWFL – Wink News

FORT MYERS

As of Tuesday, much of Southwest Florida is red if you look at the Department of Healths COVID-19 map, marking much of the area as a hot spot. But what does that mean?

You hear the word hotspot all the time, and all that means is a particular zip code has registered 300 cases or more.

In the zipcode 33916, more than 700 cases have been recorded, which is enough to classify the area zip code as a hotspot.

But across Colonial Blvd, there are only 130 cases.

WINK News looked at the top three zip codes in our local counties and Charlotte County has no recorded hotspots. In Lee County, the zip codes include 33905, which is in Tice and Buckingham has 772 cases. The zip code 33916 has 706 cases, and 34135 in Bonita Springs has 620 cases.

In Collier County, the zipcode 34142 in Immokalee has recorded 1,744 cases.

34116 in Golden Gate has 847 cases, and 34120 in the Immokalee and Orangetree neighborhoods have 617 cases.

We asked Kaiser Family Foundation who tracks cases across the country and what these numbers mean for all of us.

That clearly appears to be community spread in Florida and we are showing a positivity rate close to 19%, once you were that high there is clear evidence of community spread and this is not simply just about an increase in testing, said Jennifer Tolbert, Director of State Health Reform at the Kaiser Family Foundations.

As cases continue to spike in Florida, scientists and health experts continue to stress the importance of wearing a facemask, because the moment you put one on, you are reducing your chance of inhaling contagious particles.

To view the number of cases in your zip code click here.

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COVID-19 hotspots have formed in counties across SWFL - Wink News

Oregon And West Virginia Will Shrink Social Gatherings To Combat COVID-19 – NPR

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced a statewide ban on indoor dining at bars and restaurants at a press conference in Portland on March 16. Nearly four months later, with COVID-19 cases on the rise after a phased-in economic reopening, she announced new restrictions including a 10-person limit on social gatherings. Gillian Flaccus/AP hide caption

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced a statewide ban on indoor dining at bars and restaurants at a press conference in Portland on March 16. Nearly four months later, with COVID-19 cases on the rise after a phased-in economic reopening, she announced new restrictions including a 10-person limit on social gatherings.

As coronavirus cases continue to climb in the U.S., two governors on opposite sides of the country took a similar step on Monday: reducing the number of people allowed at social gatherings, among other restrictions.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced that indoor social get-togethers of more than 10 people will be prohibited starting Wednesday.

Gatherings of up to 25 people were allowed in Phase One of the state's reopening plan, and indoor limits increased to 50 for counties that reached Phase Two.

Brown also extended the statewide face covering requirement, which took effect earlier this month, to outdoor public spaces where six feet of distance cannot be maintained.

Oregon recorded 332 new cases on Sunday, bringing its cumulative total to 12,170. Brown said on Monday the state reported more cases in the past week than the entire month of May.

"Today we are sounding the alarm because we are at risk of letting the virus spiral out of control," she said. "The question now is whether Oregon will be the next New York or the next Texas."

In West Virginia, Gov. Jim Justice imposed several new statewide restrictions, including reducing the social gathering limit from 100 to 25 people, effective Tuesday. The same executive order also closes all fairs, festivals and similar events, and prohibits both indoor and outdoor concerts.

Justice also ordered all bars closed for ten days in Monongalia County, which has seen a significant uptick in infections and had 340 active cases as of Monday.

"We want everyone to know this is not playtime stuff," Justice told viewers at a daily briefing. "We now, in West Virginia, have 1,338 active cases. We have grown 206 active cases since I saw you the last time on Friday."

Governors in both states stressed that the new limits apply only to social gatherings.

Justice said the new order does not cover any activity, business or entity designated as essential, such as religious services or group conferences. Attendees of such events must practice social distancing based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations, he said.

And Brown said Oregon's new rule would not change the operation of businesses or churches "at this time." She added failure to comply will lead to more outbreaks, as well as more restrictive closures.

"We need to do absolutely everything we can to reduce transmission in ways that do not require us to close down businesses again," Brown said. "The proof here will be in the numbers. Either people will adhere to this requirement and be a positive force for stopping COVID-19, or I will be forced to take more restrictive measures."

Governors across the country are reimposing certain restrictions to combat the spread of the virus, though few have officially rolled back limits on social gatherings.

Many of the latest measures have been aimed at bars and other indoor establishments.

On Monday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the statewide closure of all bars and indoor operations of several types of businesses. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott closed bars and tightened business restrictions in June, and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis also previously ordered bars to close. South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster imposed an 11 p.m. curfew on bars and restaurants last week.

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Oregon And West Virginia Will Shrink Social Gatherings To Combat COVID-19 - NPR

NYC Has Its First Day In Months With No COVID-19 Deaths – NPR

New York City had its first 24-hour period since March without a death from the coronavirus on Saturday. Here, people dine outdoors on July Fourth in Manhattan's Little Italy. Byron Smith/Getty Images hide caption

New York City had its first 24-hour period since March without a death from the coronavirus on Saturday. Here, people dine outdoors on July Fourth in Manhattan's Little Italy.

For the first time in months, there was a 24-hour period in which no one in New York City died of the coronavirus.

The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene reported zero deaths on Saturday, but that number could change as death data can lag and new deaths could be confirmed retroactively at any point. The city's first confirmed coronavirus death was March 11.

Mayor Bill de Blasio called the milestone a statement about "how this city fights back and people do not ever give in."

"It's something that should make us hopeful, but it's very hard to take a victory lap because we know we have so much more ahead. This disease is far from beaten," de Blasio said during a news conference Monday. "And we look around the country and we look at what so many other Americans are going through and so many other states and cities hurting so bad right now. So no one can celebrate, but we can at least take a moment to appreciate that every one of you did so much to get us to this point."

New York City has had 18,708 confirmed deaths due to COVID-19 as well as 4,615 probable deaths.

"Twenty-four hours where no one died," the mayor said. "Let's have many more days like that."

De Blasio also called upon President Trump to invoke the Defense Production Act to speed up the processing of coronavirus tests:

"Mr. President, all you have to do is say, 'I am now invoking the Defense Production Act to expand lab capacity in the United States of America, to make sure we have everything we need to get tests to people quickly.' You can do that with the stroke of a pen. We need it not only here in New York; we need it all over this country."

Trump previously invoked the act in March to boost production of masks and ventilators.

"The federal government has to step up now, because now it's becoming a national crisis," the mayor said. "We used to have almost no testing. Now we have more testing, but if you can't get the results in real time, it doesn't help you enough."

Amid the huge reduction of coronavirus cases in the city, there is one worrying trend: a rising infection rate among young adults, particularly 20- to 29-year-olds.

"I understand for so many younger adults it has been a really difficult time cooped up, disconnected, away from loved ones," de Blasio said. "I understand that people are just yearning to break out of that, but we've got to keep telling everyone, particularly our younger adults, how important it is to stick to what has worked: the social distancing, the face coverings, getting tested."

The city plans to expand its outreach to young people through social media influencers, mask giveaways and mobile testing vans. There will also be 10 new free, walk-up testing sites in the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens.

As more people return to work indoors and go back to using the subways, de Blasio urged New Yorkers to wear face coverings whenever they are indoors outside their homes, even if other people aren't in close proximity.

On Monday, the city reported a 2% positivity rating for coronavirus testing. Fifty-six patients were admitted to the hospital, and 279 patients were in intensive care units.

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NYC Has Its First Day In Months With No COVID-19 Deaths - NPR

WHO: Aggressive action needed to turn COVID-19 around – CIDRAP

The World Health Organization (WHO) said today that the global number of COVID-19 cases has more than doubled over the last 6 weeks, and there's a lot of work ahead.

Meanwhile, a WHO team is on its way to China to meet with researchers to plan a joint mission to probe the zoonotic source of the virus, and health officials are looking into a pneumonia surge in Kazakhstan. The global COVID-19 total today grew to 12,376,147 cases, and 556,895 people have died from their infections, according to the Johns Hopkins online dashboard.

At a WHO media briefing today, Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, PhD, said the pandemic is testing people across all walks of life to their limits. "For those in poverty, with little or no access to quality health services, it's not only COVID-19 that threatens lives and livelihoods," he said, adding that other diseases like measles, polio, and malaria thrive when immunization is paused and drug supply chains are interrupted.

Some countries are experiencing exponential growth in COVID-19 cases, while others are starting to see cases rise after loosening their restrictions, Tedros said, but the underlying message is that aggressive action with national unity and global solidarity can turn the pandemic around. "We need leadership, community participation, and collective solidarity."

Tedros said there are many examples of countries turning their outbreaks around, even when activity was very intense. Alongside Italy, Spain, and South Korea, he highlighted Dharavi, a densely packed part of Mumbai. "A strong focus on community engagement and the basics of testing, tracing, isolating and treating all those that are sick is key to breaking the chains of transmission and suppressing the virus."

In another development, Tedros said two WHO experts are en route to China to learn about progress in investigating the zoonotic source and how the virus jumped to humans. He also said the experts and Chinese scientists will lay the groundwork for a WHO-led mission into the outbreak's origin.

The mission is part of a multipart resolution passed by WHO member countries in May at the World Health Assembly.

Meanwhile, Mike Ryan, MD, head of the WHO's health emergencies program, said the WHO is aware of reports based on Chinese embassy social media posts about a surge of pneumonia in Kazakhstan that is deadlier than COVID-19. He said the country has reported a big spike in lab-confirmed COVID-19 cases, more than 10,000 over the past 7 days.

Kazakhstan's government has dismissed the Chinese report as being incorrect, Reuters reported.

Ryan said atypical pneumonia cases can arise anywhere in the world, and though WHO officials are keeping an open mind, most cases are believed to be COVID-19.

He said one possibility is incorrectly diagnosed cases and that the WHO will review patient lung x-rays and illness patterns to see if they are consistent with the pandemic virus.

Kazakhstan recently reimposed restrictions for 2 weeks following a surge in cases, and COVID-19 activity has also picked up again in some other countries in central Asia.

In a separate WHO development today, the group announced the launch of the Access Initiative for Quitting Tobacco, which has a goal of helping tobacco users quit during the pandemic. Smokers are more vulnerable to severe COVID-19 illness than their nonsmoking peers.

The initiative includes resources to quit tobacco, including 40,000 nicotine patches donated by Johnson & Johnson and a digital health worker named Florence who helps people form a personalized quit plan and dispels myths surrounding COVID-19 and tobacco.

Cases in Hong Kong have significantly increased in the past week, and today officials reported 38 more cases, all but 6 thought to reflect local transmission. In a related development, education officials citing an exponential growth in COVID-19 cases over the past 2 days announced the closure of schools, which had reopened in May.

On Twitter today, Ben Cowling, PhD, professor in the School of Public Health at the University of Hong Kong, said there are worrying signs that a second wave of activity is under way in Hong Kong. His group estimates that the reproductive number is close to 3which means each patient will infect three othersa number he said is concerning. "It will take a lot of effort to bring down such a high reproductive number."

He added that clusters have been reported in a nursing home, public housing, and restaurants, despite a test-and-trace strategy and universal mask use, similar to the first wave.

Measures such as telecommuting, closing bars and other public spaces, and enhancing social distancing in restaurants were needed to control the first wave and may be needed to stop the second wave, Cowling said.

Though it's not clear how the new wave started, the absence of cases for about 3 months hints at more recent introductions, he said, adding that the uptick in cases underscores the importance of effective testing and quarantine of people entering Hong Kong.

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WHO: Aggressive action needed to turn COVID-19 around - CIDRAP

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-9-2020 – 10 AM – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR)reports as of 10:00 a.m., on July 9, 2020, there have been 195,955 totalconfirmatory laboratory results receivedfor COVID-19, with 3,751 total cases and 95 deaths.

In alignment with updated definitions fromthe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the dashboard includes probablecases which are individuals that have symptoms and either serologic (antibody)or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to a confirmed case) evidence of disease, but noconfirmatory test.

CASESPER COUNTY (Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour(17/0), Berkeley (490/18), Boone (27/0), Braxton (3/0), Brooke (16/1), Cabell(179/6), Calhoun (4/0), Clay (11/0), Fayette (78/0), Gilmer (13/0), Grant(15/1), Greenbrier (67/0), Hampshire (42/0), Hancock (32/3), Hardy (45/1),Harrison (97/0), Jackson (148/0), Jefferson (244/5), Kanawha (364/10), Lewis(19/1), Lincoln (10/0), Logan (31/0), Marion (92/3), Marshall (52/1), Mason(23/0), McDowell (7/0), Mercer (61/0), Mineral (61/2), Mingo (24/2), Monongalia(388/14), Monroe (16/1), Morgan (19/1), Nicholas (16/1), Ohio (117/0),Pendleton (13/1), Pleasants (5/1), Pocahontas (36/1), Preston (76/16), Putnam(74/1), Raleigh (65/1), Randolph (171/2), Ritchie (2/0), Roane (11/0), Summers(2/0), Taylor (18/1), Tucker (6/0), Tyler (7/0), Upshur (21/1), Wayne (120/1),Webster (1/0), Wetzel (26/0), Wirt (5/0), Wood (152/8), Wyoming (7/0).

As case surveillance continues at thelocal health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certaincounty may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individualin question may have crossed the state border to be tested.Such is the case of Kanawha County in this report.

Please visit thedashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 7-9-2020 - 10 AM - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Attacks on schools in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic – World – ReliefWeb

Between 2015 and 2019, the Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack (GCPEA) found 11,000 reported attacks on education globally. The 2020 report profiles 37 countries with a systematic pattern of attack. Violence against schools continues in 2020 with dire consequences for children.

During January to May 2020, monitoring by Insecurity Insight identified 67 incidents across 13 countries where schools were damaged or destroyed.

Schools were stormed, damaged, set on fire and vandalised either in wider attacks on civilians and infrastructure, as part of collateral damage during fighting between state and non-state actors, or in ideological attacks on education. These incidents violate childrens right to education.

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought new challenges. By the end of May, UNESCO reported 142 country-wide school closures aimed at reducing the spread of the virus affecting over 1.1 million learners. In some countries, schools that have been closed as preventive measures, have been earmarked as quarantine centres, a move frequently met with protests from locals in the surrounding school area.

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Attacks on schools in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic - World - ReliefWeb

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-9-2020 – 5 PM – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

TheWest Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR)reports as of 5:00 p.m., on July 9, 2020, there have been 197,081 total confirmatory laboratory results receivedfor COVID-19, with 3,826 total cases and 95 deaths.

In alignment with updated definitions fromthe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the dashboard includes probablecases which are individuals that have symptoms and either serologic (antibody)or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to a confirmed case) evidence of disease, but noconfirmatory test.

CASESPER COUNTY (Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour(17/0), Berkeley (499/18), Boone (29/0), Braxton (3/0), Brooke (18/1), Cabell(180/6), Calhoun (4/0), Clay (11/0), Fayette (79/0), Gilmer (13/0), Grant(15/1), Greenbrier (68/0), Hampshire (42/0), Hancock (32/3), Hardy (45/1),Harrison (104/0), Jackson (149/0), Jefferson (247/5), Kanawha (372/12), Lewis (19/1),Lincoln (10/0), Logan (31/0), Marion (93/3), Marshall (54/1), Mason (23/0),McDowell (8/0), Mercer (61/0), Mineral (60/2), Mingo (25/2), Monongalia(405/14), Monroe (14/1), Morgan (19/1), Nicholas (15/1), Ohio (122/0),Pendleton (13/1), Pleasants (5/1), Pocahontas (36/1), Preston (78/16), Putnam(77/1), Raleigh (66/2), Randolph (174/2), Ritchie (2/0), Roane (12/0), Summers(2/0), Taylor (19/1), Tucker (6/0), Tyler (7/0), Upshur (22/1), Wayne (120/1),Webster (1/0), Wetzel (26/0), Wirt (5/0), Wood (154/8), Wyoming (7/0).

As case surveillance continues at thelocal health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certaincounty may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individualin question may have crossed the state border to be tested.Such is the case of Mineral, Monroe, and Nicholas counties in this report.

Please visit thedashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 7-9-2020 - 5 PM - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

DHHR confirms 3 new cases of COVID-19 in Tuesday morning report – WBOY.com

CHARLESTON, W.Va. The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources has reported three new cases in its Tuesday morning report.

The DHHR reports as of 10 a.m., on July 14, 2020, there have been211,915totalconfirmatory laboratory results received for COVID-19, with4,316total cases and 97 deaths.

In alignment with updated definitions from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the dashboard includes probable cases which are individuals that have symptoms and either serologic (antibody) or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to a confirmed case) evidence of disease, but no confirmatory test.

According to theDHHRs website, there are currently 1,330 active cases and 2,889 recovered cases in the state.

CASES PER COUNTY(Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour (20/0), Berkeley (518/19), Boone (34/0), Braxton (5/0), Brooke (27/1), Cabell (192/7), Calhoun (4/0), Clay (12/0), Fayette (84/0), Gilmer (13/0), Grant (21/1), Greenbrier (71/0), Hampshire (42/0), Hancock (41/3), Hardy (46/1), Harrison (122/0), Jackson (148/0), Jefferson (253/5), Kanawha (420/12), Lewis (21/1), Lincoln (9/0), Logan (39/0), Marion (106/3), Marshall (65/1), Mason (25/0), McDowell (8/0), Mercer (63/0), Mineral (66/2), Mingo (29/2), Monongalia (557/14), Monroe (14/1), Morgan (19/1), Nicholas (19/1), Ohio (147/0), Pendleton (15/1), Pleasants (4/1), Pocahontas (37/1), Preston (81/21), Putnam (90/1), Raleigh (80/3), Randolph (188/2), Ritchie (2/0), Roane (12/0), Summers (2/0), Taylor (22/1), Tucker (7/0), Tyler (10/0), Upshur (31/2), Wayne (127/1), Webster (1/0), Wetzel (37/0), Wirt (6/0), Wood (179/9), Wyoming (7/0).

As case surveillance continues at the local health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certain county may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individual in question may have crossed the state border to be tested. Such is the case of Kanawha County in this report.

Editors note: The numbers received from the West Virginia DHHR may include cases that have already been resolved. Therefore, these counts may need to be viewed as historical cases, rather than active cases.

Editors note 2: The total number of cases confirmed by the DHHR now includes probable cases, which are individuals that have symptoms and either serologic (antibody) or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to a confirmed case) evidence of disease, but no confirmatory test.

More detailed information and statistics is available at the DHHRs COVID-19 Dashboard.

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DHHR confirms 3 new cases of COVID-19 in Tuesday morning report - WBOY.com

The people who say they’re not boarding an airplane until there’s a Covid-19 vaccine – CNN

(CNN) With airlines introducing new measures like face masks and intensive sanitization routines to reassure passengers, people have been cautiously returning to air travel even while the coronavirus pandemic continues to spread around the world.

But for some, the notion of climbing aboard an airplane now or in the near future, remains unthinkable. Nothing that airlines, government officials or fellow travelers can say will convince them to step on board.

CNN spoke to some of these self-grounded travelers to find out their biggest concerns about air travel at the moment and what it would take to get them back above 30,000 feet.

For Chris Trinh, a 41-year-old father of four based in Minnesota, the decision to stay off airplanes is partly because of his kids -- his youngest child is only 10 months old and he says he'd be worried about her crawling on the aisle.

It's also, he says, because he feels that no matter how careful he is, he can't guarantee others will be similarly conscientious.

"It's hard to trust other people," he tells CNN.

Trinh's wife is Japanese, and the family usually spend extended vacations in Japan over the summer months. This is the first year they'll be staying in the United States.

"The risk is just too high, and we just don't want to travel," he explains.

Trinh and his family aren't alone. Retired CVS Health engineering manager Vincent Marseglia, 70, is also avoiding flying.

"You're going to be near people, even if they leave the middle seats open," Marseglia tells CNN, speaking from his home in Rhode Island.

Chris Trinh is worried about traveling with his young children.

Courtesy Chris Trinh

"There's no way I'm going to get on a plane. Even before that, you have the crowds at the airports going through security, so you're just exposing yourself."

Wisconsin-based Dean Calin, 60, who's worked in the commercial aircraft industry for more than three decades, has similar trepidations.

Calin says his extensive aviation knowledge makes him more, rather than less, cautious about flying in the age of coronavirus.

"Even though airlines are taking steps to clean the interiors and the air is filtered thoroughly as a process of the air conditioning system, all of that can't counteract the potential contamination that passengers will bring every time the plane is loaded," Calin tells CNN.

"I just don't think that, without a vaccine, there's any safe way to travel yet."

Rethinking plans

Vincent Marseglia and his wife on a train traveling through France in 2016. Right now, they're remaining at home in Rhode Island.

Courtesy Vincent Marseglia

Ruling out air travel means rethinking vacation plans.

Marseglia says that, because of his age, he's being careful in all aspects of his life. He's socially distancing during meetups with his grandkids and wouldn't go on a train either -- nor would he share a car without anyone other than his wife.

Marseglia lives by the ocean in Rhode Island, and he's swapping out dreams of vacations in Italy for local, socially distanced outings in coastal Jamestown.

He's cautious about traveling to other states, given that different regions in the United States have adopted different strategies for quarantining and handling the virus.

But while pouring over photographs of previous adventures in Europe is currently bittersweet, Marseglia's conscious that he's in a privileged position, and so many have been more adversely impacted by Covid-19.

"Even when a vaccine comes available, I'm not going to be the first one to run out and get it," says Marseglia, who points out he's lucky to be able to stay at home and not worry about returning to a workplace.

"I'm willing to wait as long as it takes to get the vaccine, so if it's next year or the year after, I won't make any plans to do any kind of extensive travel until I know that's out there, and it's available and it's effective and I can get it."

Marseglia and his wife in Florence, Italy.

Courtesy Vincent Marseglia

Dean Calin tells CNN he's been self-isolating for over 100 days now, due to concerns about the impact of the virus on his asthma.

As well as working in the aerospace industry, Calin is also a singer in a group. At the beginning of 2020, he was looking forward to aviation-focused business travel trips alongside music gigs across the world. That's all on hold for now.

"It's a sacrifice that we have to make, if we intend to go on living" is Calin's perspective. "It's challenging and it's a different way to live your life, but the alternative is to ignore it is to court death."

Like Marseglia, Calin says would only return to the skies if he'd been vaccinated and he knew the rest of the population had also had time to get the vaccine.

Right now, he calls those who're traveling again "either very brave or very foolish."

"I just don't think that without a vaccine. There's any safe way to travel yet," he says.

How safe is it to travel?

Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University, tells CNN he does not currently advocate traveling by airplane, particularly in the United States.

"We have been recommending to our patients only really essential travel at present, because in this country, the virus is not under control. It's all over the country and continuing to spread in an inhibited fashion," Schaffner tells CNN.

Schaffner's perspective is people should only travel for personal reasons, in unavoidable circumstances.

"Even then, we ask them to do that very, very cautiously, wearing their masks at all time, keeping social distance," he adds.

Schaffner is principally concerned about the potential for the virus to spread in crowded airports, where it's difficult to maintain social distancing. He also expresses worries about travelers being tightly packed in the cabin.

While some are being cautious, others are returning to air travel.

CNN

"All the hullabaloo having to do with travel often brings you in very close proximity with others in enclosed spaces," he says.

Schaffner is also worried about the impact of traveling back and forth from a spot where there might be a particularly high number of cases.

The infectious disease expert has a vacation home in Florida, where he and his wife usually spend the summer months. They won't be going there this year, he explains. The couple are in the at-risk category due to their ages, which adds to their hesitance, but they're also concerned about the high infection rate in Florida.

"Once we get a vaccine or vaccines, and they can be shown to be reasonably effective and safe and they start to be distributed, then -- if we were vaccinated -- then we can travel," says Schaffner.

Dean Calin, former frequent flier

"And we would be even more comforted if we realize that the large majority of the population out there also received the vaccine," he adds. "I think that will reduce the transmission of this Covid virus, so that then things truly can start to return to normal."

That said, Schaffner's conscious this could be some time off.

"I think this period of caution will be quite extensive, over a period of months, extensive months," says Schaffner.

In the US, Operation Warp Speed is a vaccine program that aims to deliver a Covid-19 vaccine by 2021.

Temporary reality

Trinh is remaining optimistic that his family will one day be able to travel comfortably again.

Courtesy Chris Trinh

Trinh is willing to play the long game when it comes to returning to global travel.

On the day that they would've flown out to Japan, Trinh's wife and kids were upset about the plans that weren't to be. They weren't just sad about the canceled vacation; they don't know when they'll next see their extended family.

But Trinh says he's cautiously optimistic about the future.

"I feel it's just a temporary thing, right? I mean, if it lasts a year, maybe two years, that's just what we have to do," he says. "For me, it's unfortunate that it's happening, but at the same time it's hopefully a once in a lifetime kind of thing."

Trinh is also diplomatic when it comes to reports of other travelers returning to the skies in packed planes.

"I see it as each person's choice," he says. "I mean, as long as everybody accepts the risks that they're taking, I think it's okay."

He's confident there will be a solution, eventually, and his family will board an airplane once again.

"Hopefully it gets better at that point, that we're back to traveling on a yearly basis," he says.

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The people who say they're not boarding an airplane until there's a Covid-19 vaccine - CNN

This Tennessee doctor caught coronavirus at a meeting about coronavirus. He nearly died. – USA TODAY

R-0 may be the most important scientific term youve never heard of when it comes to stopping the coronavirus pandemic. USA TODAY

NASHVILLE It was mid-March when Dr. Daniel Lewis, the chief medical officer at a Tennessee hospital, attended a small meeting about how to keep the coronavirus from spreading within the medical center.

One of his colleagues had a mild cough. They assumed it was allergies. It was not.

That night, the man spiked a fever. A few days later, Lewis developed a fever of his own, then he got tested. Even before his results came back positive, he knew.

Over the next month, the coronavirus dragged Lewis to the brink of death. He was hospitalized in isolation and spent 10 days unconscious while hooked to a breathingmachine. When he finally awoke, he was plagued by hallucinations, blood clots and muscle atrophy that left him unable to walk, eat or go home.

Lewis doesn'trevel in the story of his brush with death, but as the pandemic worsens, he feels compelled toshare itwith anemphatic message: Everyone should wear a mask and avoid crowds to protect themselves from a virus that is dangerous to all.

Coronavirus does not respect your person. You dont have to be elderly, Lewis said. Its an apolitical virus that can strike anyone. While there are certain risk factors that may predispose some people to being more ill than others, it can strike people like myself that otherwise were healthy.

Dr. Daniel Lewis, seen here while hospitalized at Johnson City Medical Center, nearly died from coronavirus earlier this year.(Photo: Provided by Dr. Daniel Lewis)

As the coronavirus escalates across the nation, some have attempted to downplay the pandemic by insisting the virus is less deadly than anticipated. This claim is prevalent in Tennessee, where the fatality rate has laggedbehind most other states for reasons that are not entirely understood.

Lewis infection kept him from his familyfor more than five weeks. Today, two months after he finally was healthy enough to return home, he is still working reduced hours while recovering and likelysuffers fromlong-lasting damage to his lungs. Lewis hospital treatment also cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, and while his care is covered by workers compensation, another person with the same infection could be buried in medical debt.

I absolutely did not die from the virus, and I praise God for that daily, Lewis said. But Ive now spent three months of life recovering from the virus with more to go I will continue to seek care for this in follow up visits probably for the rest of my life.

Lewis, 42, who does not have any serious prior health conditions, got his positive test results for coronavirus on March 30 while the Tennessee outbreak was still young.

The state had recorded only 1,800 infections at that point, and Lewis was one of the first dozen cases in Greene County, a blue-collar Appalachian community in northeast Tennessee. He has been a doctor in Greene County since 2008.

People walk past a downtown mural Friday, April 12, 2019, in Greeneville, Tenn. (Photo: {sn_um}, Courtney Pedroza/The Tennessean )

At the time Lewis tested positive, he was already isolating from his family, as do many medical professionals who know they face a high likelihood of infection. Lewis moved into the basement to keep a distance from his wife and five children. He chatted with his wife by standing in the driveway and shouting to her through a window. When his kids went to bed, he sent them air hugs from the bottom of the basement steps.

Isolation was difficult, Lewis said, but it would prove more justified than he ever expected.

It is an apolitical virus that can strike anyone.

Two days after he got his positive test results, Lewis virus symptoms dramatically worsened. He recorded audio messages for his children in case things didnt turn out well, then checked himself into Greeneville Community Hospital.

Lewis found himself as a COVID-19 patient at his own hospital, subjected to the same isolation processes he helped create as an administrator. Staff wearing protective gear met him at a side entrance and took him directly to negative pressure room that was prepped just for this purpose. Visitors were forbidden.

It was surreal, Lewis said. Once I was in the hospital, I knew that every time I called for a nurse or a staff member I was potentially exposing them to a deadly virus. It was scary, and it was daunting, but it was also reassuring because I knew we had put processes in place to protect us.

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Lewis was quickly transferred to a larger hospital with a dedicated COVID-19 unit, where he would spend the next few weeks isolated to a single room. After about four days, his infection progressed and oxygen levels in his blood dropped until he required 6 liters of oxygen to be piped into his nose every minute.

Medical training told Lewis what would happen next.

Because of my unique situation, the medical staff did consult with me, Lewis said. And I was the one that brought up the ventilator first.

Lewis was sedated and attached to a ventilator on April 6. These life support machines, which breathe for a patient whose lungs are too weak or damaged to do so on their own, are one of the last hopes for severely-ill coronavirus patients.

Many patients never return from this point. Early reports from China and Europe suggested that as many as 90% of coronavirus patients who need a ventilator will not survive. More recent studies from the University of Michigan and Emory University have placed the fatality rate at closer to 30%.

Lewis was dependent on a ventilator for 10 days. He was detached from the machine on April 17, then struggled for a week from ICU delirium,a form of intensive confusion caused by the powerful drugs used for medical sedation.

'COVID hallucinations saved my life': Coronavirus-induced vision told a woman near death to call 911

Lewis said he remembers being visited by his wife in the hospital, although he learned this was a hallucination. His first real memory is attempting to diagnosis his own delirium during a check-up with a neurologist.

My medical background was a blessing and a curse, Lewis said. It was a blessing to know and understand what was going on to an extent, but I also knew all the things that could go wrong."

Dr. Daniel Lewis poses for a selfie with his wife Jessica and five children during a recent family outing. Lewis spent five weeks away from his family after he became infected with coronavirus in March.(Photo: Provided by Dr. Daniel Lewis)

It took a week for Lewis mind to recover from his time on a ventilator, and his body lagged behind. The muscles in his legs and throat atrophied during weeks in a hospital bed, sowas no longer able to walk or swallow safety.

Lewis leftthe larger hospitalto goa rehabilitation facility on May 2. He was wheeled out of the hospital on a stretcher while his family watched from a distance. It was the first time they had seen each other in a month.

Thirty-eight days after Lewis was first admitted to a hospital, he finally got to go home. His wife picked him up from the rehab center and they drove past the Greeneville hospital he worked at, where a crowd of friends held up signs to welcomehim back.

Back at his house, he was greeted by the members of his Sunday school class and his five children he had not hugged in two months.

It felt like the weight of the world had been lifted off my shoulders, Lewis said. It was exhilarating.

Follow the reporter on Twitter:@brettkelman.

COVID survivors' main symptoms can linger for weeks or even months, causing pain, trouble breathing, nightmares and even organ failure. USA TODAY

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/07/14/tennessee-doctor-caught-coronavirus-at-a-meeting-about-covid/5433351002/

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This Tennessee doctor caught coronavirus at a meeting about coronavirus. He nearly died. - USA TODAY

Thomas Sowell: Joe Biden win could signal ‘point of no return for this country’ – Washington Times

Economist and libertarian conservative philosopher Thomas Sowell warned Sunday that the country could reach the point of no return if presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden wins the election and ushers in the radical left.

If the election goes to Biden, Mr. Sowell told Fox News, theres a good chance that the Democrats will then control the two branches of Congress and the White House. And considering the kinds of things that theyre proposing, that could well be the point of no return for this country.

The Hoover Institution senior fellow expressed disbelief that adult human beings in the Democratic Party had openly supported the Defund the Police movement, calling it utter madness.

What is frightening is how many people in responsible positions are caving into every demand that is made, repeating any kind of nonsense that youre supposed to repeat, Mr. Sowell said. I do believe that we may well reach a point of no return. I hope that, of course, will never happen. But there is such a thing as a point of no return. The Roman empire overcame many problems in its long history but eventually it reached a point where it could no longer continue on, and much of that was from within, not just the barbarians attacking from outside.

Mr. Sowell also said that Democrats pushing the concept of systemic racism in the U.S. reminded him of the propaganda tactics of the Nazis.

It really has no meaning that can be specified and tested in the way that one tests hypotheses, he said of the phrase systemic racism.

It does remind me of the propaganda tactics of Joseph Goebbels during the age of the Nazis, in which he was supposed to have said people will believe any lie if its repeated long enough and loud enough, he added. And thats what were getting. Its one of many words that I dont think even the people who use it have any clear idea what theyre saying. Their purpose is served by having other people cave in.

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Thomas Sowell: Joe Biden win could signal 'point of no return for this country' - Washington Times

By Freeing Mary Trump To Publicize Her Book, Judge Greenwald Upholds First Amendment Sensibilities – Forbes

Judge Hal B. Greenwald ordered that Mary Trump, Donald Trumps niece, will not be prevented by her 19-year-old confidentiality agreement from publicizing her book. The book surveys President Trumps flawed mentality, and his ill-use of his family. The ruling came out at 7 p.m. this evening, just in time for the release of the book tomorrow.

The book, Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the Worlds Most Dangerous Man, is expected to be a blockbuster combination.It will feature Mary Trumps revelations about Trumps development and his nastiness toward his niece and family. Also, Mary Trump practices as a clinical psychologist. The book will feature her analysis of President Trumps personal infused with her uniquely close vantage, while it is not hidden that she presumably has complex reasons for writing it.. .

This ruling was not a foregone conclusion. Mary Trump had signed a confidentiality agreement as part of a 2001 settlement of bitter family litigation. Judge Greenwald had issued temporary restraining orders blocking her and her publisher, Simon & Schuster, from publishing or distributing the book. A judge of the Appellate Division quickly terminated the order with respect to the publisher, allowing it to proceed with printing and publishing over 600,000 copies.However, the Trump family had contested whether to renew the order against author Mary Trump from speaking out.His ruling opens the way for Mary Trump to become a blockbuster media exponent herself of her books revelations and analysis.

The judge said the confidentiality clauses in the 2001 agreement, viewed in the context of the current Trump family circumstances in 2020, would offend public policy as a prior restraint on protected speech' Although the main general interest in this matter concerns the substantive content of her writing and statements, the case and the judges ruling deserves attention.

Judge Greenwalds use of the key term, that blocking her would be a prior restraint on protected speech taps a rich vein in First Amendment law.A prior restraint is a court order chronologically in advance of the speech in question.It orders the entirety of the speech not even to be made.It silences the speaker, without the speech being concretely put out without the actual text being known.

Classic examples of prior restraints were the court orders obtained by the Nixon Administration against the publication by the New York Times NYT and the Washington Post of the famous Pentagon Papers about how three administrations took the country into the Vietnam War. The orders were dissolved by the Supreme Court, with opinions including attention to the doctrine against prior restraints.

An aspect so obvious it may escape attention is that Judge Greenwald called Mary Trumps statements protected speech and viewed the 2001 confidentiality clauses in the context of the current Trump family circumstances. It is not at all completely specious to understand the different perspectives for viewing Mary Trumps legal situation.

After all, Judge Greenwald himself started out issuing a temporary restraining order against Mary Trump.From the Donald Trump side, the 2001 agreement could have been viewed as simply a contract that Mary Trump was seeking to breach. Explaining the argument, Roger J. Bernstein, an experienced New York State litigator, noted that in a run-of-the-mill situation, a contract dispute between two private parties, would not be decided on the basis of public interest considerations.Here, though the case of course involved larger circumstances., he said. He added that the publishers freedom to publish the book meant that there was no longer any confidentiality to protect.

The title of the book refers to President Trump as the Worlds Most Dangerous Man.Whether that is reality or hyperbole probably varies with whom one asks. However, significantly, the title reinforces the strength of Judge Greenwalds order.The 2020 context, not the 2001 context, governs a case like this one.

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By Freeing Mary Trump To Publicize Her Book, Judge Greenwald Upholds First Amendment Sensibilities - Forbes

First Amendment Bright Line in the Digital Age – Courthouse News Service

A First Amendment line that grows steadily brighter is being drawn between American courts in the digital age.

It is the line between e-filing courts that give on-receipt access to reporters and e-filing courts that fight on-receipt access like it was the devils handiwork. In that second group, clerks want to first docket the new filings, which results in delay, which is the enemy of news.

On the access side of the line are the federal courts and state courts in Alabama, Connecticut, Hawaii, New York and Utah, all on a statewide basis, plus individual courts in California, Georgia and Nevada.

On the delay side of the line are e-filing state courts that are spread around the nation, including Illinois, Florida, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri and Texas. A few individual clerks in California also have also opted for delay.

The evolution in state courts of a restrictive policy on public access roughly matches up with a wave of interest in privacy from administrators over the last decade.

The movement crystallized in a set of conferences in Williamsburg from 2013 to 2016 called Privacy and Public Access, sponsored by the Conference of State Court Administrators and attended by state clerks and administrators from all parts of the nation.

At that conference, the notion of practical obscurity emerged as a dominant theme. The idea behind practical obscurity is that court records in paper form are often difficult to find. Therefore paper records are different from electronic records which are easy to search. And therefore this is the big leap access to electronic records should be restricted.

That train of thought can be translated as saying the public record should be hard to see.

The intellectual dust storm that originated in Williamsburg has lingered in the restrictionist views of many state court administrators. In contrast, it is almost entirely absent from the federal courts.

I have never heard a federal official talk about practical obscurity.

And the state court opposition to on-receipt access is not isolated, it is organized. Williamsburg sponsor COSCA worked with the National Center for State Courts to oppose a 2016 ruling out of Californias Central District that said the First Amendment right of access attaches to newly filed court records upon the clerks receipt.

I recently saw a survey sent out by COSCA and the national center in support of that opposition. The survey asks administrators across the nation to opine on the terrible things that might result from on-receipt access. One answers that the public might see unfounded allegations. Oh my goodness!

But also scattered within the survey are answers from administrators who say on-receipt access is no problem.

Question: What is the timing: are documents provided upon submission or after acceptance.

Answer from Utah state court administrator Dan Becker: Public documents are available upon filing.

Q: If you were required to provide same-day access to civil complaints and all exhibits and other attachments when filed (before any review or acceptance process by the court) on paper or electronically, could you do so?

A: Yes.

Q: What challenges would this pose?

A: None.

The survey was intended to support an amicus brief arguing that no right of access existed to court pleadings before a court hearing none at all. That argument was sent packing by the Ninth Circuit in its Planet III ruling.

But, in reviewing the brief recently, what I found most telling was its view of the press as simple scandal mongers. The brief concludes by saying on-receipt access is an open invitation for those who would use such records to gratify private spite or promote public scandal.

The rational answer to that bit of derision comes fromJudge Henry Coke Morgan Jr. in the Eastern District of Virginia. His conclusions were forged in the fires of a four-day trial where he was looking at me from about ten feet away while I testified under oath.

I think he had a good idea of why I pursue First Amendment access, in the face of just about the entire administrative apparatus of state courts in America.

Plaintiff, and other members of the press and public, have historically enjoyed a tradition of court clerks making most newly filed civil complaints publicly available on the day that they are filed, said the judge.

I think that the point the plaintiffs making is that it has its news value as soon as it happens, he added. If you dont get it when its fresh, its like stale bread. So I think the plaintiffs point on that is well-taken.

His court as well as the appellate court above provide on-receipt, public access to new pleadings.

_____

More stories and columns on the Virginia trial:

National Press Corps Enter First Amendment Fray to See Court Filings on Same Day * U.S. Judge Slaps Virginia Clerks With $2 Million Fee Award in First Amendment Case*E-Filing and the First Amendment* Matter of Choice *The Dicta: Guesswork About Press Access * Presumption and Fact: The Ask for Access *CNSs View Accurately Told*Access Solution: The E-Inbox *Access Law in the Electronic Age * Bread and News * Flip Side of Court Tech * First Amendment Right to See Court Documents on Day of Filing * Tradition of Same-Day Access * The News Cycle

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First Amendment Bright Line in the Digital Age - Courthouse News Service

RCFP statement on investigation into Asbury Park Press reporter’s arrest – Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press is calling for a New Jersey county prosecutors office to publicly clarify that Reporters Committee resources do not support the findings from an investigation into the arrest of reporter Gustavo Martnez Contreras.

Law enforcement officers tackled and arrested Martnez Contreras, who is a reporter for the Asbury Park Press, and slapped his phone out of his hand while he was live streaming the violent arrest of two teenagers at a June 1 protest that was part of the nationwide demonstrations demanding justice, an end to violence against Black Americans and greater police accountability. An investigation into the arrest improperly cited Reporters Committee resources in concluding that the arresting officers did not know they were apprehending a reporter.

In a letter sent today to Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni, Reporters Committee attorneys note that the guide and tip sheet investigators cited in their findings only detail practical safety tips for reporters covering protests not the legal standard for when officers should know someone is a journalist. The letter asks the prosecutors office to both update its investigative findings and issue a statement clarifying that the Reporters Committees resources do not support the conclusion that officers could have believed Contreras was a protester.

Reporters Committee resources are intended to help journalists stay safe while covering protests, and its improper for the prosecutors office to use them to conclude officers acted reasonably under the law when arresting Gustavo Martnez Contreras, said Bruce Brown, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. Our resources dont support the finding that a reasonable officer wouldnt have known Mr. Martnez Contreras was a journalist. Both his account of the incident and the investigations findings illustrate that he identified himself as a journalist, and was complying with law enforcements orders while displaying his press credentials, when officers tackled and arrested him.

Arrests of journalists are particularly egregious violations of the First Amendment, as they dont just chill reporting, they shut it down entirely. We urge the prosecutors office to clarify that the Reporters Committees guide and tip sheet do not support its conclusions.

Read the full letter to the Monmouth County prosecutors office.

The Reporters Committee regularly files friend-of-the-court briefs and its attorneys represent journalists and news organizations pro bono in court cases that involve First Amendment freedoms, the newsgathering rights of journalists and access to public information. Stay up-to-date on our work by signing up for our monthly newsletter and following us on Twitter or Instagram.

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RCFP statement on investigation into Asbury Park Press reporter's arrest - Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

COVID-19 Analysis | Malignant Mesothelioma Market by Trends, Dynamic Innovation in Technology and 2025 Forecasts – Jewish Life News

In developed countries, discretionary research funding for cancer is on a rise. Increased investments towards development of better treatment against malignant mesothelioma is observed globally. Persistence Market Researchs new report on global market for malignant mesothelioma predicts that governments will increase their focus towards creating awareness about mesothelioma in the future.

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In 2017, the global malignant mesothelioma market is expected to reach a value of US$ 338 Mn. The report observes that increasing use of asbestos for commercial purposes is fuelling the incidence of malignant mesothelioma among people.

By the end of 2025, the global market for malignant mesothelioma is anticipated to have soared at 7.5% CAGR, reaching an estimated US$ 604 Mn in value.

Global Malignant Mesothelioma Market Prominent Trends

Studies focused on cause of malignant mesothelioma are being publicized to boost awareness. Through such work, people are becoming more aware, particularly with respect to association of the HOXB4 gene is stopping the maturation of mesothelioma tumor.

Overall, the global market for malignant mesothelioma is also witnessing an increased adoption of combination therapies. Many companies are promoting the cumulative use of chemotherapy and immune-oncology procedures in treatment of malignant mesothelioma.

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In addition to this, malignant mesothelioma is gaining incidence among men. Exposure to asbestos is likely to remain concentrated to male demographics of the world. Increased exposure to such toxic elements is aggravating the incidence of mesothelioma in men.

Key players in the global malignant mesothelioma market are also collaborating with leading research organizations to develop combination drugs on mesothelioma, the approval of which is drawing highest regard of authorities such as the FDA.

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COVID-19 Analysis | Malignant Mesothelioma Market by Trends, Dynamic Innovation in Technology and 2025 Forecasts - Jewish Life News

Malignant Mesothelioma Market: Quantitative Analysis From 2019 To 2023 To Enable The Stakeholders To Capitalize On The Prevailing Market Opportunities…

Malignant Mesothelioma Market 2018: Global Industry Insights by Global Players, Regional Segmentation, Growth, Applications, Major Drivers, Value and Foreseen till 2024

The recent published research report sheds light on critical aspects of the global Malignant Mesothelioma market such as vendor landscape, competitive strategies, market drivers and challenges along with the regional analysis. The report helps the readers to draw a suitable conclusion and clearly understand the current and future scenario and trends of global Malignant Mesothelioma market. The research study comes out as a compilation of useful guidelines for players to understand and define their strategies more efficiently in order to keep themselves ahead of their competitors. The report profiles leading companies of the global Malignant Mesothelioma market along with the emerging new ventures who are creating an impact on the global market with their latest innovations and technologies.

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segment by Type, the product can be split intoOralParenteralMarket segment by Application, split intoHospital PharmaciesRetail PharmaciesOncology CentersOther

Market segment by Regions/Countries, this report coversNorth AmericaEuropeChinaJapanSoutheast AsiaIndiaCentral & South America

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Chapter 1: Methodology & Scope of Malignant Mesothelioma Market

Chapter 2: Executive Summary of Malignant Mesothelioma Market

Chapter 3: Malignant Mesothelioma Industry Insights

Chapter 4: Malignant Mesothelioma Market, By Region

Chapter 5: Company Profile

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Malignant Mesothelioma Market: Quantitative Analysis From 2019 To 2023 To Enable The Stakeholders To Capitalize On The Prevailing Market Opportunities...