July 20 coronavirus news | CNN

July 20 coronavirus news

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Florida sees another day of surging coronavirus cases
03:05 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • More than 600,000 people worldwide have died from the novel coronavirus since the global pandemic began, according to a count by Johns Hopkins University.
  • In the US, stimulus negotiations between the White House, the House and Senate will begin today.
  • Fewer than a quarter of Japanese citizens surveyed were in favor of holding the next Olympic Games in Tokyo in, 2021. Remember: The games have already been postponed once.
  • The virus continues to rage through Latin America, with Brazil surpassing 2 million cases and Mexico reporting at least 300 people dead in a single day from the epidemic.
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Covid-19 test results could take as long as two weeks

A medical worker wearing PPE administers a nasal swab test at a free coronavirus testing location outside Washington Square Park in New York on July 18.

While the surge in coronavirus cases in the United States has amplified the need for timely testing, diagnostic companies continue to grapple with turnaround times of multiple days or more for coronavirus test results. 

Some labs have attributed the longer waits to extreme demand and strain on testing supply chains. There are now more than 3.8 million confirmed coronavirus cases in the US, with tens of thousands of new infections every day.

Quest Diagnostics said in a statement Monday that average turnaround time has increased to seven days or more for the general population, and that a “small subset of patients” may experience wait times of up to two weeks.

Prioritized patients, such as symptomatic healthcare workers and those who are hospitalized, get results in two days on average, the company said. Quest says that’s longer than the one-day average wait time priority patients had a week ago. 

On Saturday, the Food and Drug Administration authorized Quest to use its Covid-19 test with pooled specimens, where samples from multiple patients are tested together, which the company said should help increase capacity.

But Quest also said the biggest factors they face now are the limits of the complex machines that perform the tests, as well as limited supply of reagents, the chemicals used to perform the tests.  

US Assistant Secretary for Health Brett Giroir said on CNN’s “New Day” Monday the average turnaround time for tests in most states is longer than three days, though in 18 states the average is two to three days.  

European Union leaders have reached an agreement on a $858 billion coronavirus stimulus package

After five days of fraught discussions, the leaders of the European Union have agreed on a landmark 750 million euro ($858 billion) deal to fund the bloc’s recovery from the coronavirus crisis.

Announcing the agreement on social media, European Council President Charles Michel simply said, “Deal!”

French President Emmanuel Macron hailed it as a “historic day for Europe.”

The package, which will be used to assist countries hit hardest by the virus, comes alongside an agreement on the EU’s overall budget – an unprecedented 1.82 trillion euros ($2.1 trillion).

In response to the Brussels summit, Belgian Prime Minister Sophie Wilmes said that the European Union had “never before decided to invest so ambitiously in the future.”

Republican governor: There are “growing indications” Covid-19 funding “is no longer a priority” for White House

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan speaks at a news conference on Wednesday, July 15, in Annapolis.

In a series of tweets published on Monday night, the Republican governor of Maryland questioned the Trump administration’s commitment to dealing with the coronavirus pandemic.

Governor Larry Hogan said on his official Twitter that the US was at a “critical juncture” in the epidemic.

Hogan called for the Trump administration to extend the public health emergency, which expires on Saturday.

Greta Thunberg to donate 100,000 euros to fight Covid-19 in the Amazon

Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg takes part in a "Youth Strike 4 Climate" protest march on March 6 in Brussels.

Climate activist Greta Thunberg announced on Twitter on Monday that she would donate 100,000 euros ($114,000) to combat the spread of Covid-19 in the Brazilian Amazon.

The announcement came after the teenager was awarded the Gulbenkian Prize for Humanity, which has a prize amount of 1 million euros ($1.14 million.)  

The donation – which will come from the prize money – will be made through the activist’s Thunberg Foundation to SOS Amazonia, which is led by Fridays for Future Brazil, an organization that is helping to fight the coronavirus pandemic in indigenous territories. 

Another 100,000 euros will be given to the Stop Ecocide Foundation to “support their work to make ecocide an international crime,” she said in the announcement. 

In a video posted on her Twitter account, the Swedish activist said she would donate the full prize money but has not yet provided information on the other recipients.

Colombia surpasses 200,000 coronavirus cases

Health workers carry out Covid-19 coronavirus tests in Bogota, on July 8.

Colombia reported 6,727 new coronavirus cases on Monday, bringing the country’s total to 204,005, its health ministry said. 

The ministry also reported 193 new deaths from the virus, raising the nationwide tally to 6,929.

Despite the growing number of coronavirus cases, Colombian President Ivan Duque has so far resisted calls to reimpose strict lockdown measures that were first lifted at the beginning of June. 

Colombia’s capital Bogota and other main cities are instead following a localized approach by closing only the most affected neighborhoods. 

Southwestern Athletic Conference postpones fall sports

The Southwestern Athletic Conference announced Monday the postponement of all scheduled fall sports along with SWAC championships due to continuing concerns related to the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a news release.

The fall sports impacted are men’s and women’s cross country, football, women’s soccer and women’s volleyball.

The conference has started the process of formalizing plans to conduct a schedule for the fall sports during the 2021 spring semester.

For football, the plan includes a seven-game conference schedule beginning with an eight-week training period in January 2021. Each member institution will play a total of six conference games (four divisional/two non-divisional) with the option to play one non-conference game. 

Additional details on scheduling women’s soccer, women’s volleyball, men’s and women’s cross country along with the SWAC football championship game will be released at a later date. 

Multiple NCAA conferences have announced postponements of many or all fall sports or have moved to conference-only competition.

Republicans push back on White House proposal to zero out funding for Covid testing and tracing

Key Republicans are pushing back on the White House proposal to zero out funding for Covid-19 testing and tracing in the next stimulus bill.

GOP Sens. Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins, Bill Cassidy, Shelley Moore Capito, Mitt Romney and Lamar Alexander told reporters today they disagree with the White House posture to deny additional money for testing and tracing in the next stimulus package.

Here’s what they said:

  • Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski said more money for testing was essential. “I think we need it. Easy questions today,” she said. She also said she has faith in Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert.
  • Maine Sen. Susan Collins also said it was unreasonable not to have more money for testing in the next stimulus. “I certainly want to see money for testing. Testing is essential to the reopening,” she said.
  • Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy echoed his faith in Fauci and said more testing is needed. “I don’t think we get out of the public health crisis unless we get out of the economic crisis,” Cassidy said. “We need more tests, and we need the money for it too.”  
  • Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander, a leading GOP voice for more testing, said, “Well, my view is we should we should do whatever we need to do to make sure we have adequate tests. All roads opening school opening going back to work and childcare go through tests. We ought to provide whatever financial support we should to make it safe for schools to open and that includes widespread testing.”
  • West Virginia Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, a member of the Senate GOP leadership, said, “I think we should spend more money for testing especially for getting people back to school and universities open.” 
  • Utah Sen. Mitt Romney said he’d like to see coronavirus testing done in a “much more rapid manner,” when asked whether he’d support more funding for testing in the next relief bill. He called it “very frustrating” how long it takes for coronavirus test results to come back, and argued that it essentially removes “the whole value of testing.”

Half of Americans wouldn't get a Covid-19 vaccine if it were available today, former US surgeon general says

A lab technician holds a dose of a Covid-19 vaccine candidate ready for trial on monkeys at Chulalongkorn University in Saraburi in Thailand on May 23.

If a coronavirus vaccine were available today, half of all Americans wouldn’t get it because of a lack of trust, former US Surgeon Gen. Dr. Vivek Murthy told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer Monday.

One of the most important assets government should have in a pandemic response is public trust, and it must be cultivated at all costs, Murthy said.

“That’s a shocking number and deeply concerning.”

President Trump has spent the past few months telling his supporters not to wear masks and questioning scientists and public health officials’ guidance on reopening the country.

“We know that distributing vaccines is going to be hard enough and if people aren’t willing to take it because we haven’t built enough public trust, that’s going to seriously impair our ability to build herd immunity,” Murthy said.

The former US surgeon general said leaders have to tell the truth, especially when mistakes are made, they need to lead with science and scientists, and communicate frequently and consistently.

Murthy said resumption of the White House coronavirus task force briefings might help improve trust. “That could really help the cause, because the truth is that how you communicate determines whether you build or destroy public trust,” Murthy said.

Trump ended the daily White House coronavirus briefings several months ago, but announced Monday he’s resuming them.

Brazil's coronavirus death toll surpasses 80,000

Cemetery workers in protective suits carry a coffin at the Caju cemetery amidst the coronavirus pandemic on July 16, in Rio de Janeiro.

At least 80,120 people have died from coronavirus in Brazil since the pandemic started, according to new figures from the country’s health ministry on Monday.

Since yesterday, 632 people are reported to have died. The total number of infections in Brazil is now 2,118,646 – an increase of 20,257 since Sunday. 

Along with President Jair Bolsonaro, two members of his cabinet announced they tested positive for the virus on Monday. The Brazilian Minister of Education, Milton Ribeiro, announced he tested positive for Covid-19 and just hours earlier, Brazil’s Minister of Citizenship Onyx Lorenzoni tweeted that he had tested positive.

Some state health secretaries in Brazil have reported issues in sending local data to the national health ministry in recent days.

On Friday, Mato Grosso’s state health secretary said a systems migration of data did not affect its disclosure of the number of confirmed cases and deaths reported. On Saturday, Rio de Janeiro state did not register numbers for the national tally. Rio de Janeiro’s state health secretary said the issue has been fixed. 

The state health secretaries of Goias and Rondonia said difficulties in registering their data may have been caused by problems in the health ministry system.

NFL and players union agree on daily Covid-19 testing to start training camps

The National Football League and the players union have agreed on a daily Covid-19 testing protocol that will commence at the start of training camps and last for two weeks.

Results from those weeks of testing will dictate a move to test every other day.

On Monday, the NFL’s chief medical officer, Dr. Allen Sills, outlined the guidelines on a conference call with select media including NFL.com and ESPN. Sills is quoted by ESPN as saying, “This is ongoing work. There’s no finish line with health and safety, and I think these protocol are living, breathing documents, which means they will change as we get new information. They will undoubtedly be changing over time, which is what we usually see in medicine.”

A league source confirmed to CNN that every player will need to test negative for Covid-19 multiple times before entering team facilities for the first time.

Teams will be reporting to training camp on July 28. 

Sills outlined some of the testing specifics on the media call. If after two weeks of daily testing the results for all team members are below 5%, testing will shift to every other day.

NFL.com reported that players will “wear proximity recording devices during all team activities.” The league will use the data gathered from the devices to help with Covid-19 contact tracing.

The National Football League Players Association confirmed the agreement in a statement on Monday.

More than 2,400 new Covid-19 cases reported in Georgia

Georgia reported 2,452 new cases of Covid-19 on Monday, bringing the total number of cases to 145,575 statewide, according to data release by the state’s Department of Public Health. 

The Department of Public Health also recorded three additional deaths, bringing the state’s death toll to 3,176.

The state reported 37 additional hospitalizations and a total of 2,829 intensive care admissions. 

Note: These numbers were released by the Georgia Department of Public Health and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

More than 140,000 people have died from coronavirus in the US

A funeral worker pushes the coffin of a Covid-19 victim at St. John Cemetery in Queens on June 5 in New York.

There are at least 3,814,463 cases of coronavirus in the US and at least 140,855 people have died from the virus in the country, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally. 

So far on Monday, Johns Hopkins has recorded 41,203 new cases and 321 reported deaths. 

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

Health minister warns coronavirus circulation is increasing in France

French Health Minister Olivier Veran arrives at the Grand Palais prior to a reception gathering 800 medical staff that helped during the novel coronavirus crisis in Paris, on July 13.

The circulation of coronavirus in France is “increasing,” according to the Ministry of Health, with at least 400 active “clusters” of the virus reported across the country.

“This is reflected in an increase in the number of calls to SOS doctors, visits to the emergency room, the number of clusters and hospitalizations,” the French health ministry said Monday in a statement. 

“This moderate increase is due to the fact that a very insufficient proportion of patients with symptoms carry out a virological test and isolate themselves,” the statement added. 

Speaking during a televised interview on Monday, French Health Minister Olivier Veran said that there are concerns of a possible resurgence in the national health crisis, but affirmed that the country is “very far” from a second wave. 

“We are on an increasing slope in the circulation of the virus, even if we start from low contamination rates,” Veran said. 

“We are very far from the [second] wave,” he added. 

According to Veran, the national reproduction rate of the virus is now “more than one,” meaning infection rates are likely to increase again following months of decline as a result of social distancing and confinement measures. 

As of Monday, a total of 176,754 coronavirus cases have been confirmed across France, with 30,177 deaths since the beginning of the outbreak.

At least 6,589 patients remain hospitalized with coronavirus, including 467 patients in intensive care. 

NBA says there's been no new positive Covid-19 test results since July 13

The NBA and the players union have jointly announced that there have been zero positive Covid-19 test results from the 346 players tested since July 13. 

Back on July 13, the two sides announced that two players of the 322 tested had positive Covid-19 results within the Disney World Resort bubble.

Read the joint statement:  

Houston mayor says coronavirus has "taken a toll" on the city's workforce

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner

There are at least 884 new Covid-19 cases in Houston, Texas, and at least seven people have died from the virus in the city, Mayor Sylvester Turner said Monday.

The total number of Covid-19 cases in Houston stands at 36,985, and a total of 329 people have died from coronavirus, he said at a news conference.

The positivity rate in the city is at about 25.5%, according to the Houston Health Department.

The virus, Turner said, has “taken a toll on the city of Houston workforce.

At least 5% of employees from the Public Works Department are out due to testing positive, waiting for their test result or quarantining due to exposure to Covid-19, the head of the department said at the news conference.

Houston Fire Chief Samuel Peña said that 162 firefighters are in quarantine and 38 firefighters are currently positive. In total, 189 firefighters have tested positive and 151 are back at work. 

Peña went on to say that all fire stations are open and the fire department is doing all it can do to ensure they are there for the community. 

Note: These numbers were released by the Houston Heath Department, and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

Bill Gates will take questions at a CNN coronavirus town hall this week. Ask yours here.

Microsoft founder Bill Gates — whose foundation has pledged millions in Covid-19 relief efforts — will answer some viewers’ questions during CNN coronavirus town hall this Thursday.

Leave your questions for Gates below, and tune in to the one-hour special on Thursday at 8 p.m. ET.

Jacksonville sheriff expresses "significant concerns with the viability" of hosting RNC

With the Republican National Convention just over one month away, Jacksonville, Florida, Sheriff Mike Williams issued a statement Monday questioning whether the event can still be held safely in his city.

Williams, a Republican, cited the short time-frame to organize the event, communications issues and concerns over reimbursement, as well as the surge in coronavirus cases as his reasons for trepidation.

“With a timetable that was aggressive to say the least, the communication required to make the critical steps come together just never seemed to gel. And still has not,” Williams said. “My team identified the key resources critical to this plan and, to date, I can only confirm that twenty-five percent (25%) of the ask has been answered. Some of this is due to concerns for reimbursement, while additional issues are related to the pandemic we are still facing.”

“At this point, we are simply past the point of no return to execute the event with safety and security that is our obligation,” the sheriff added.

CNN is reaching out to both the RNC and the Trump campaign for comment.

Fauci to throw out ceremonial first pitch on MLB Opening Day

Major League Baseball’s Washington Nationals have announced that the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, is set to throw out the ceremonial first pitch on Opening Day on Thursday.

More breast and colorectal cancer deaths projected due to pandemic, Fauci says

Coronavirus won’t just kill people directly, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said Monday.

He noted that people may die from preventable cancers because the pandemic has interrupted routine health care.

Fauci, who is director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, cited the number from a June editorial written by US National Cancer Institute Director Norman Sharpless, published in the journal Science. The editorial also noted that Covid-19 has caused an “unprecedented disruption” in cancer research.

Two studies presented at the conference found that routine breast and prostate cancer screening rates have gone down due to Covid-19-related disruptions of care. Another study associated unemployment — rates of which skyrocketed between February and May — with drops in breast and colorectal screening compared to employed people, as the authors noted that unemployed adults often lack health insurance.

Cancer patients of any age are at increased risk for severe illness from Covid-19, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Los Angeles County breaks daily record for hospitalizations

Los Angeles County has surpassed its record for daily hospitalizations for the fourth time in the past week, according to Dr. Barbara Ferrer, director of the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

There are 2,232 patients currently hospitalized with 26% of them in the intensive care units and 19% on ventilators, Ferrer said.

The county reported nine deaths Monday, but Ferrer said that low reporting is often seen over the weekend. So far, L.A. County has recorded 4,104 Covid-29 deaths and 92% of those had underlying conditions.

Ferrer announced 3,160 new cases on Monday.

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85 infants under age 1 tested positive for coronavirus in one Texas county
Florida coronavirus patient went from diagnosis to dying in her daughter’s arms in a matter of days
These are the states requiring people to wear masks when out in public
From farmed mink to your pet cat, here’s what we know about coronavirus and animals
Covid-19: What we now know about the disease caused by the novel coronavirus