April 30, 2020 coronavirus news | CNN

April 30 coronavirus news

fauci town hall
Here's what Dr. Fauci is concerned about as states reopen
02:30 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • Worldwide numbers: The novel coronavirus has infected more than 3.2 million people and killed at least 233,000, according to Johns Hopkins University.
  • In the US: More than 1 million Covid-19 cases have been recorded, and at least 63,000 deaths. More than half of all states will be partially reopened by the end of the week.
  • European economy drops: The EU economy shrank 3.5% in the first quarter of 2020 – the worst quarterly drop since the EU started collecting the data in 1995.
  • WHO warning: The global health watchdog warned that Europe remains “very much in the grip of this pandemic,” accounting for 46% of cases, and 63% of deaths globally.
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Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.

More than 63,000 people have died from coronavirus in the US

At least 1,069,534 cases of coronavirus have been recorded in the United States, including 63,001 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.

On Thursday, JHU reported at least 29,625 new cases and 2,035 deaths in the US.

The totals includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.

See CNN’s interactive map of cases in the US:

CNN's coronavirus town hall has ended

CNN’s global town hall on the coronavirus has now concluded.

Guests on the show, hosted by Anderson Cooper and Dr. Sanjay Gupta, included Bill Gates, Dr. Anthony Fauci, medical experts and CNN correspondents.

Scroll through our posts to catch up on what happened during the town hall.

Bill Gates: A big part of the pandemic could have been prevented

The United States and the world could have done a better job of mitigating the dire impact of the coronavirus pandemic, Bill Gates said.

In an article he wrote for The New England Journal of Medicine, Gates said it would likely cost billions of dollars in order to be better prepared for a pandemic like this one.

However, he said that compared to the cost of the US defense budget, such an investment would prove frugal.

Anderson Cooper announces he is now a father

CNN’s Anderson Cooper announced before the close of the network’s coronavirus town hall that he is a new father.

Wyatt was born three days ago and was named after Cooper’s father, he said Thursday night. 

Cooper added: “As I gay kid, I never thought it would be possible to have a child and I”m so grateful for those who paved the way. It’s an extraordinary blessing she and all surrogates to give to families. My surrogate has a beautiful family of her own, amazing husband. I’m so thankful for the support she has given Wyatt and me. She has kids of her own. My family is blessed to have this family in our lives. I do wish my mom and dad and brother were alive to meet Wyatt, but I like to think they can see him. I imagine them all around each other smiling and laughing and watching, looking down on us. Happy that their love is alive in me and Wyatt and that our family continues.”

Watch:

Hong Kong leader says city has been able to withstand pandemic but warns of protest violence

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam speaks during a news conference at the government headquarters in Hong Kong on April 22.

Ahead of expected Labor day protests, Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam said the city has been able to withstand the coronavirus pandemic but might not be able to bear a return of political violence.

Hong Kong was rocked last year by pro-democracy, anti-government protests with escalating violence and anger on all sides. The pandemic has put a damper on protests, but anger in the city has not gone away nor has the protest movement gone completely dormant – even as restrictions on gatherings and a desire to avoid infection has put a temporary halt to the kind of mass demonstrations seen in 2019.

Relaxing social distancing too soon will lead to unnecessary deaths, says Bill Gates

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates warned tonight that relaxing social distancing policies too soon would lead to unnecessary deaths and future peaks in US states that are moving too quickly to return to normal life.

“Because people are going to go back to more association in some places in the country it’s very likely that there’ll be future peaks as well,” Gates said, speaking at CNN’s global town hall.

Gates warned that if warm weather slows the spread of the virus in the summer, as some experts predict, it could cause Americans to be “lulled into complacency” that could prove dangerous in the fall.

“Very quickly you can get yourself back into exponential growth,” he said.  

"Poor countries will probably have it the worst," Bill Gates says of Covid-19 pandemic

Speaking at CNN’s coronavirus town hall, Bill Gates said he believes that the novel coronavirus pandemic is likely to affect poorer countries and communities much greater than wealthy ones.

“(A) low-income student probably is not getting online instruction as much as the suburban kid. The household you’re confined to is probably very different,” he said.

Watch:

1 in 6 in US state of Tennessee are currently unemployed

One in six residents in the US state of Tennessee are currently unemployed, according to Gov. Bill Lee.

Lee said that 400,000 of those job losses were a result of Covid-19 and its impact on the state, during a town hall sponsored by CNN affiliate WKRN.

Like many other states, Tennessee has faced challenges paying out unemployment claims. According to Lee, the state had to upgrade its system to accommodate what he described as the three different “pieces” or types of unemployment claims – state, federal and the self employed. 

The Tennessee system was upgraded last weekend and now expects to process and pay out 300,000 claims this week, said Lee. The governor acknowledged there are still claims that need to be processed but says a “majority of Tennesseans” are getting their claims this week. 

Some 30.3 million Americans have filed for unemployment over the past six weeks – representing roughly 18.6% of the US labor force – as businesses have laid off and furloughed workers during stay-at-home orders across the country.

Read more:

People who lost their jobs wait in line to file for unemployment following an outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at an Arkansas Workforce Center in Fort Smith, Arkansas, U.S. April 6, 2020. Photo by Nick Oxford/Reuters

Related article 30 million Americans have filed initial unemployment claims since mid-March

Bill Gates: Asia's testing and contact tracing ability is far better than that of the US

CNN's Anderson Cooper and Dr. Sanjay Gupta talk with Bill Gates.

Speaking at CNN’s coronavirus global town hall, Bill Gates said the United States’ ability to conduct mass testing and contact tracing is not yet at the same level as many countries in Asia that have been battling the pandemic for months now. 

“The United States does not prioritize who gets tested, and the United States does not make sure you get answers within 24 hours. We haven’t authorized kiosks or home testing. That’s still a regulatory thing that’s tied up. So our testing numbers should never be compared,” said Gates, the co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation – one of the world’s biggest charities and public health donors. 

The case of South Korea: The East Asian country has garnered significant praise for its handling of the pandemic, because of its early emphasis on mass testing, contact tracing and social distancing. 

To date, South Korea has recorded fewer than 11,000 Covid-19 cases and fewer than 250 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

The number of new cases have been steadily decreasing, and authorities in Seoul reported no new locally transmitted cases local yesterday, the first time that has happened in weeks.

Watch:

At-home coronavirus testing is needed, Bill Gates says

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation co-founder Bill Gates believes at-home coronavirus testing is crucial in fighting the pandemic.

The philanthropist and founder of Microsoft shared this insight Thursday night during CNN’s coronavirus town hall.

Some context on current testing: Gates said on April 26 that new testing machines and methods should soon be able to get the United States up to between 400,000 and 500,000 tests per day, though that’s “just barely enough for really doing the tracking.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci, a member of the White House coronavirus task force, estimated on Saturday that the country is conducting approximately 1.5 million to 2 million Covid-19 tests per week and said it is likely the testing capacity could be doubled within the next several weeks. So far, the United States has only performed about 4 million coronavirus tests.

Boeing says it will not need US federal aid after raising $25 billion

Boeing announced Thursday that it will not seek US federal funding to prop up its suffering business after a successful $25 billion bond offering. 

As CNN reported last month, lawmakers set aside $17 billion of the $2 trillion stimulus law for the aerospace company. But it was unclear whether the firm would apply for and take the funds, considering the Treasury Department had asked some other recipients for warrants.  

The company on Wednesday reported $1.7 billion in losses in the most recent quarter and plans to cut around 16,000 jobs.  

Should you change your clothes after coming home from outside?

Dr. Leana Wen.

One viewer asked CNN’s global town hall if people should change their clothes after coming home from public places like the grocery store to lower the chance of infection.

Dr. Leana Wen, the former health commissioner for the City of Baltimore, said the chances that someone transmitted the virus onto someone else’s clothes is “very low,” with the exception of healthcare workers or other people who may risk exposure at work.

Watch:

Why was a vaccine never finished for SARs and MERS?

A viewer asks CNN’s town hall: Why was a vaccine never finished during original SARS and MERS outbreaks?

Dr. Sanjay Gupta said that vaccines for those viruses were started and “some of the techniques they used for those vaccines are actually being built upon now.”

But the vaccines weren’t fully developed for those outbreaks because “we were able to make those epidemics, pandemics fizzle out,” he said.

The 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) outbreak infected more than 8,000 people, and killed 774 in Asia. There have been sporadic outbreaks of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) since it was first reported in Saudi Arabia in 2012.

Watch:

Why one model is predicting an increase in US coronavirus deaths

 Dr. Chris Murray.

A coronavirus model relied on by the White House task force is projecting that about 72,000 people in the United States will die from the virus by early August – an increase from earlier estimates.

Dr. Chris Murray, who leads the team that did the modeling at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, told CNN’s global town hall that the number has gone up “because we’ve seen these protracted peaks in some place,” citing New York City as an example.

How reopening factors in: Murray said the model assumes that many people will continue to practicing social distancing until the end of May. It does not yet account for certain states and cities partially reopening.

Murray said his team is working on factoring that in, but it’s not simple.

Fauci: Coronavirus second wave will likely lack "explosive" quality of first outbreak

CNN's Anderson Cooper and Dr. Sanjay Gupta speak to Dr. Anthony Fauci.

Top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci struck a hopeful note tonight, telling CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta that a second wave of the virus would likely lack the speed and ferocity that characterized the initial outbreak that hit some major metropolises in the United States.

Earlier in the week, Fauci said he was “almost certain” the virus would return, warning, “how we handle it … will determine our fate.”

Speaking this evening, Fauci also predicted a second phase of the virus could hit locations where social distancing is especially challenging such as nursing homes, factories and prisons.

A vaccine could be ready by January "if everything falls into place," Fauci says

Dr Anthony Fauci.

Top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said on CNN’s town hall that “if everything falls into place right” there could be a coronavirus vaccine by January – but there are “a number of situations that could go wrong.”

An assumption of safety: “It may all of a sudden have a safety signal,” he said. “If it doesn’t work, it doesn’t protect people. I’ve been involved in vaccine work for decades. Not every vaccine we went after worked. That’s an assumption that it’s going to be safe, that it’s going to be effective and we’re going to be able to do it quickly. I think each of those are not only feasible, but maybe likely. That’s what I mean when I say by January we’ll do it. But I can’t guarantee it.” 

Doing things differently: Fauci said that developing a vaccine without knowing it works first is “risky” but he said it “certainly is worth the risk given what’s at stake.”

Fauci says he's concerned that some US states and cities are "leapfrogging" guidelines

Dr Anthony Fauci runs the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and sits on the White House's coronavirus task force.

Top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said he is concerned that some areas in the United States are “leapfrogging” important steps in their virus control efforts by not waiting until they see 14 continuous days of a decrease in cases before starting to reopen their economies and societies.

Federal guidelines for social distancing are set to expire tonight, and some states and cities are planning on partially reopening.

Regional differences: Fauci said that some states and regions may be able to go back to normal quicker than others because they will see 14 days of decreasing cases quicker than other areas, but he cautioned that regions should not attempt to start reopening if the number of cases are still on the rise or have just plateaued.

Watch:

"A lot of things need to happen to get a vaccine on the market": CNN medical correspondent

CNN senior medical correspondent Elizabeth Cohen.

A lot of things need to happen to get a coronavirus vaccine on the market in the United States, CNN senior medical correspondent Elizabeth Cohen said on CNN’s town hall.

Seven companies in human clinical trials: “There are actually dozens of companies that have told the World Health Organization they are working on vaccines. Only seven of them that we know of are actually in human clinical trials,” Cohen said. “And that started awhile ago.”

Timeline: “There are so many ‘ifs’ here. The clinical trials have to go very quickly, the FDA has to move quickly. There are a lot of things that need to happen to get a vaccine on the market in the US by the end of this calendar year,” she said.

Remdesivir: One potential treatment that has gotten a lot of attention is remdesivir. Cohen said that preliminary data was released this week but caution should be taken. “We have not seen it published in a medical journal and that is an important point to make,” she said.

“It was developed for Ebola years ago and it didn’t work very well for Ebola and it’s never been on the market for anything,” she said. “When they gave it to very sick patients hospitalized with Covid-19, what they found was that it cut down on the amount of time it took for recovery.”

Read more on the drug here:

One vial of the drug Remdesivir lies during a press conference about the start of a study with the Ebola drug Remdesivir in particularly severely ill patients at the University Hospital Eppendorf (UKE) in Hamburg, northern Germany on April 8, 2020, amidst the new coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic. (Photo by Ulrich Perrey/Pool/AFP/Getty Images)

Related article Remdesivir drug shows promise -- but it is far from a coronavirus cure

CNN's global town hall on coronavirus will start soon

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, and Bill Gates will join CNN’s global town hall tonight and look at what lies ahead as some states begin to ease restrictions.

The town hall starts at 8 p.m. ET.

How to watch: The town hall will air on CNN, CNN International and CNN en Español. It will stream live on CNN.com’s homepage and across mobile devices via CNN’s apps, without requiring a cable log-in. You can also watch on CNNgo, and subscribers to cable/satellite systems can watch it on-demand.

We’ll also be covering it with live updates here.