March 19, 2020 coronavirus news | CNN

March 19 coronavirus news

TOPSHOT - This photo taken on February 19, 2020 shows laboratory technicians testing samples of virus at a laboratory in Hengyang in China's central Henan province. - The death toll from the COVID-19 coronavirus epidemic jumped to 2,112 in China on February 20 after 108 more people died in Hubei province, the hard-hit epicentre of the outbreak. (Photo by STR / AFP) / China OUT (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)
Here's how the novel coronavirus outbreak unfolded
02:32 - Source: CNN
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Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here

CNN's Town hall has finished. Here's a quick recap

CNN’s town hall on the coronavirus, addressing facts, fears, and medical guidance, has now finished. Here’s what was discussed:

Vaccine trials: CNN medical analyst Dr. Celine Gounder, a clinical assistant professor of infectious diseases, said it is just the “very beginning” of a long process of research and studies.

Reinfection: Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said while “there is no design study that has proven that you are ‘protected’” from getting reinfected, “projecting what we know about viruses, I would say that there is a very good chance that you’re protected.”

Young people need to take pandemic seriously: “We are getting more and more information that someone can transmit even when they are asymptomatic. So in order to protect oneself, society and particularly the vulnerable people, we’ve really got to adhere to the physical separation,” said Fauci.

Increased contact tracing can help save lives: Mike Ryan, director of the World Health Organization’s Health Emergencies Program said that, “it is possible to do contact tracing even under the most difficult circumstances, but it does require a real scale-up in public health capacity.”

Assessing your own mental health: Psychologist and author Dr. Gretchen Schmelzer  likened the public’s response to the coronavirus to the stages of grief, and encouraged people to find “coping strategies” to keep their stress levels down.

How do you assess and manage your own mental health?

Question: At CNN’s coronavirus town hall Thursday, CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta asked psychologist and author Dr. Gretchen Schmelzer about the best ways for people to manage and assess there own mental health, especially considering that for many, the pandemic is not a single traumatic even but rather a long period of significant change.

Answer: Schmelzer likened the public’s response to the coronavirus to the stages of grief, and encouraged people to find “coping strategies” to keep their stress levels down.

BREAKING: California governor orders all 40 million residents to stay at home to limit outbreak

All 40 million residents in the state of California have been ordered to stay home to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

The state is one of the worst affected in the US after Washington and New York. There are now 910 coronavirus cases in California, including 19 deaths.

New York has at least 5,298 cases, while Washington has at least 1,376 confirmed cases.

California is the most populous US state and is the country’s largest state economy.

Watch:

Town hall: How should grandparents explain social distancing to their young grandchildren?

Question: Jackie Stephens, a 65-year-old grandmother with underlying health conditions from Idaho, wants to know how best to explain to her “timid, easily frightened” 3-year-old grandson that he can’t come into physical contact with her.

Answer: Psychologist and author Dr. Gretchen Schmelzer recommended telling Stephens’ grandson that “right now, grandma needs a special bubble.”

“Young children can understand that there is a way to stay connected, even if they can’t be be held,” Schmelzer said, though she acknowledged it is “hard for both parties.”

Schmelzer recommended talking and maybe reading stories to each other online through video messaging apps like Skype or Facetime.

She added that it’s important the grandchildren “are still feeling the love.”

“There’s different ways of staying connected.”

Town hall: Will the Tokyo 2020 Olympics go ahead?

CNN Correspondent Will Ripley is joining the town hall from Tokyo, Japan – where a debate is ongoing on the future of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

“In less than an hour the Olympic Torch is going to be arriving here in Japan. And officials continue to insist they’re moving forward to host the Olympics on schedule at the end of July,” Ripley said. “Can the world feel confident given, you know, we’re seeing such limited testing here?”

Will the Olympics go ahead? The coming weeks will tell: “I have no reason to believe they’re not making progress in Japan,” said Mike Ryan, director of the World Health Organization’s Health Emergencies Program.

“And the Olympics is a major global event. And I think Japan still has hope the Olympics will happen, but that is going to be based on a risk management decision. And obviously the government of Japan will not make a decision to go ahead if there is danger to athletes, danger to spectators. And a lot of that will depend on how the disease evolves in the coming few weeks.”

Watch:

India prohibits export of masks and ventilators

The Indian government has prohibited the export of masks, ventilators and raw textile materials for masks and coveralls.

India’s Minister of Commerce, Piyush Goyal, confirmed the news in a tweet, and said the action has been taken in a “bid to utilize the nation’s resources for the well being of Indian citizens.”

The news comes a day after the country issued fresh guidelines, banning all international commercial passenger flights from landing in India from March 22.

The directive will be in place for a week. 

What other measures is India taking? The Indian government is directing state governments to advise citizens above 65 and children below 10 to stay home. This excludes public representatives, medical professionals and government employees. 

States have also been requested to enforce work from home for private sector employees, except those working in emergency or essential services.

There are more than 190 confirmed cases in India and four deaths.

Town hall: Increased contact tracing can help save lives in this crisis

CNN’s Anderson Cooper and Chief Medical Correspondent Sanjay Gupta speak to Mike Ryan, director of the World Health Organization’s Health Emergencies Program about the US’ capacity to test for the coronavirus and do contact tracing.

Learning from Italy: “I think other countries really, really need to step up and learn the lessons that are being learned in Italy right now. We have to push this virus back. It’s not just enough to do social distancing. It’s good to have that, it’s great to separate people, but we have to be able to go after the virus,” Ryan said.

Tailoring responses: “You’ve got 50 states. You’ve got a different situation in each of those states. And you need to tailor the responses in each of those states. And if you’ve got a chance you need to go after the virus. And contact tracing and isolation of cases is still a strategy that can be used,” Ryan said.

Question on problems with testing in US: “If you don’t test people, you don’t know they’re positive. Therefore, they may be positive and you don’t have time to contact trace them because you don’t know they have it,” Cooper said.

Need to identify cases: “It’s really important we identify all confirmed cases. We need to test suspected cases. We need those cases to be isolated, and it is difficult in a very intense environment. It’s difficult to do the kind of detailed contact tracing. In Ebola, at the peak of the outbreak, we were tracing 25,000 contacts a day in the middle of a war zone. It is possible to do contact tracing even under the most difficult circumstances, but it does require a real scale-up in public health capacity. And where that can be done and the virus can be pushed back, we can save lives,” Ryan said.

People in San Francisco are heeding advice to stay home. It's different at a Georgia spring break hot spot

CNN’s Dan Simon and Gary Tuchman joined the coronavirus town hall from San Francisco and Georgia’s St. Simons Island.

Things were very different in the two locations.

The scene in San Francisco: “What police are looking for, is they want voluntary compliance. And I have to tell you, for the most part, they’re getting it,” Simon said.

The city’s busiest districts and streets are very empty. People can go outside to get groceries or grab fresh air – as some were seen doing behind Simon on the city’s shoreline looking out toward the Golden Gate Bridge.

The scene in St. Simons: Things are much different in Georgia’s beach towns, which are popular spring break destinations, according to Tuchman.

Bars and restaurants were still open tonight.

“The major partying will take place after 10-11 o’clock tonight. And the beaches, they are crowded,” Tuchman said.

Tuchman said a minority of beachgoers were attempting to distance themselves, but most were not.

“It’s not just college students. There were also families, children, and I saw many people in their 70s and 80s,” he said.

Watch:

The Daytime Emmy Awards have been canceled due to the coronavirus outbreak

The 2020 Daytime Emmy Awards are canceled, according to a release from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

The Academy’s chairman Terry O’Reilly announced the decision in a letter to members, saying: “Today, I am writing to let you know that we have made the hard decision to cancel this year’s Daytime EMMY Awards.” 

O’Reilly said his team is “working on alternative ideas to celebrate those who would normally have received their EMMYs.”

The awards were due to be held in June.

The US state of Illinois plans to test more than 2,000 people a day

The state of Illinois can now test more than 1,000 people a day for coronavirus, the state’s governor J.B. Pritzker said in a press conference Thursday afternoon.

In a few days, they’ll be able to do more than 2,000, he said.

As the state’s testing abilities grow, the governor expects the case count will continue to grow. “The tests are only discovering people who have the virus,” Pritzker said.

More than 420 people have been diagnosed with coronavirus in the state, and four have died.

Addressing what he called “rumors,” Pritzker said, “essential services will not close, interstates, highways and bridges will stay open.”

“Grocery stories, pharmacies and gas stations will continue to operate,” he said. “We will never shut these services down.” 

Mexico's ambassador to the US is in self-quarantine

The Mexican ambassador to the US, Martha Barcena, said Thursday that she was self-quarantining after meeting with Republican congressman Mario Diaz-Balart last week.

This week, Diaz Balart became one of the first members of Congress to test positive for coronavirus.

Barcena said she took the Covid-19 test today and feels fine.

We're about an hour into CNN's coronavirus town hall. Tune in here

CNN’s town hall on the coronavirus, addressing facts, fears, and medical guidance, is just over halfway through – it will run until 10 p.m. ET.

We’re covering the town hall here with live updates – but you can also stream it live.

Where can I watch it?

The town hall will air exclusively on CNN, CNN International, CNN.com, across mobile devices via CNN’s apps for iOS and Android, via CNNgo apps, and on Facebook.

The executive director of the World Food Programme says he has been diagnosed with coronavirus

The executive director of the United Nations’ World Food Programme says he has coronavirus.

David Beasley tweeted a statement confirming the diagnosis.

He said he was tracing back who he may have had contact with before he was aware of his infection.

Town hall: Vaccine trials the start of a long process

Discussion on CNN’s coronavirus town hall has moved to a vaccine trial in the US that gave the first dose to its first participant on Monday.

CNN medical analyst Dr. Celine Gounder, a clinical assistant professor of infectious diseases, said it is just the “very beginning” of a long process of research and studies.

Different phases: “Those studies are done over the course of months. You are going to look at people who get the vaccine, don’t get the vaccine, and among those who get it, do you see lower rates of infection? That means it needs to be done in the context of a community transmission, among communities of risk.

A long process: “That will not happen overnight, it takes time, and it’s a process. When Dr. Fauci says we are looking at 18 months for a proven vaccine, that is really fast if we can achieve that.”

Town hall: Can you contract the coronavirus through food packaging?

Question: Zofia Scully, a communications executive, asked if someone who works in a restaurant has the virus – but is not aware they have it – then comes in contact with the food or the packaging, is it then possible for the person receiving the food to catch the virus?

Answer: CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta and Dr. Celine Gounder, a CNN medical analyst and professor at New York University, both agreed that the biggest risk is contracting the virus from whoever is delivering the food.

Gupta said when he and his family have been ordering food, they’ve been taking it out of the packaging on the porch, wiping down any surfaces of any remaining packaging, then washing their hands.

Gounder said the “highest-risk” moment is the “face-to-face” interaction.

“Ideally, you would be able to pay them online, tip them online on whatever platform you’re using for ordering food and then have them leave it outside your door,” she said.

Why this matters: Restaurants around the globe have closed their doors, either voluntarily or due to orders from government. Many have switched to a delivery-only model and use third-party services like Uber Eats or Deliveroo. Some of them are now offering users the option of asking delivery people to leave the food outside their doors.

Watch:

The US state of Vermont announces its first coronavirus-related deaths

Two people from Vermont who tested positive for the coronavirus have died, the state’s governor and health commissioner announced.

Both died Thursday and were “very elderly,” Health Commissioner Mark Levine said. They were the first coronavirus-related deaths in the state.

One was from Windsor County and treated at the Veterans Affairs Hospital, officials said. The woman lived at The Burlington Health and Rehab nursing home.

When asked about whether Vermont has enough hospital beds, ventilators and other medical equipment to deal with a possible surge of patients in the future, Levine noted, “If there’s a scenario we’re planning for, it’s a worst-case scenario.”

More than 20 people have been diagnosed with coronavirus in Vermont.

More than 21 million people in California are now being ordered to stay home

The number of Californians being ordered to stay home has risen to more than 21 million people.

On Thursday evening, Los Angeles County officials told more than 10 million residents to stay home. When added to the roughly 11 million Californians under similar orders, it brings the total number to more than 21 million. That means more than half of all Californians are now living under what equates to a shelter in place order.

The revised emergency order – dubbed “Safer at Home” – goes into effect at midnight.

Those restrictions will not apply to emergency workers and food workers. But it does mean that all non-essential businesses are being closed.

LA County Supervisor Kathryn Barger had no estimate on how long the restrictions would last, but assured the public that this is only temporary.

Mexico and Israel have evacuated citizens stranded in Peru. Americans are still waiting for help

The Mexican and Israeli foreign ministers tweeted on Thursday that their respective nationals were on special flights exiting Peru.

Peru announced a sudden border closure on Sunday that left many foreigners stranded. Peru has 234 reported coronavirus cases and one confirmed death.

On Thursday, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz tweeted a video showing a cheering group of passengers, many wearing face masks, aboard a plane in Lima. Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard retweeted Subsecretary Maximiliano Reyes Zúñiga, who wrote that a flight from Lima to Mexico City took off late on Thursday with 154 passengers aboard.

The situation for Americans: Meanwhile, Americans stranded in Peru have been calling on US authorities for help. A Google spreadsheet maintained by a user who says her father is among the passengers stranded in Peru currently has more than 1,600 entries for stranded Americans.

Here’s what President Donald Trump said about the Americans currently stuck in Peru at a news conference on Thursday: 

Another way out? However, information on the US Embassy in Lima’s website appears to suggest that private airline carriers could take the stranded Americans home. The Embassy published a link to an Avianca Airlines signup page for passengers in need of international flights and wrote that anyone interested in the offer “should respond immediately.” The Embassy also listed phone numbers for major airlines that operate flights between Peru and the United States.

American students stranded in Cusco, Peru told CNN on Thursday that they are eager for the US State Department to assist them in returning home.

“Bring us home,” student Erin Hill told CNN: “Thank you (State Department) for the work and hours you’re putting in. Everybody here wants to get home.”

Four unaccompanied children in the US have been tested for coronavirus

Four unaccompanied children have been tested for coronavirus, according to the US Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), the federal agency tasked with the care of migrant children.

Two of the children tested negative, and two tests are pending, the agency said.

The office is also limiting the placement of unaccompanied children in New York, adding that a staff member of a New York program tested positive. 

There are approximately 3,600 unaccompanied children in ORR custody. ORR stopped placement of children in California and Washington last week.

“The situation remains extremely fluid and can change rapidly,” the agency said.