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
From CNN's Curt Devine
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.
Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images
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.
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European Union leaders have reached an agreement on a $858 billion coronavirus stimulus package
From CNN's James Frater in Brussels
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.”
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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.
Brian Witte/AP
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.
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Greta Thunberg to donate 100,000 euros to fight Covid-19 in the Amazon
From journalist Rodrigo Pedroso in Sao Paulo and CNN’s Iain Smith in Atlanta
Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg takes part in a "Youth Strike 4 Climate" protest march on March 6 in Brussels.
John Thys/AFP/Getty Images
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.
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Colombia surpasses 200,000 coronavirus cases
From CNN’s Stefano Pozzebon and Taylor Barnes
Health workers carry out Covid-19 coronavirus tests in Bogota, on July 8.
Raul Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images
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.
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Southwestern Athletic Conference postpones fall sports
From CNN's Jill Martin
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.
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Republicans push back on White House proposal to zero out funding for Covid testing and tracing
From CNN's Manu Raju, Phil Mattingly, Lauren Fox and Ali Zaslav
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:
AlaskaSen. 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.
MaineSen. 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.
LouisianaSen. 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.”
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Half of Americans wouldn't get a Covid-19 vaccine if it were available today, former US surgeon general says
From CNN’s Shelby Lin Erdman
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.
Mladen Antonov/AFP/Getty Images
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.
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Brazil's coronavirus death toll surpasses 80,000
From journalist Rodrigo Pedroso in São Paulo
Cemetery workers in protective suits carry a coffin at the Caju cemetery amidst the coronavirus pandemic on July 16, in Rio de Janeiro.
Luis Alvarenga/Getty Images
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.
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NFL and players union agree on daily Covid-19 testing to start training camps
From CNN's David Close
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.
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More than 2,400 new Covid-19 cases reported in Georgia
From CNN's John Murgatroyd
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.
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More than 140,000 people have died from coronavirus in the US
From CNN's Haley Brink
A funeral worker pushes the coffin of a Covid-19 victim at St. John Cemetery in Queens on June 5 in New York.
Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images
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.
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Health minister warns coronavirus circulation is increasing in France
From Pierre Buet in Paris
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.
Raphael Lafargue/AFP/Getty Images
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.
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NBA says there's been no new positive Covid-19 test results since July 13
From CNN's David Close
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:
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Houston mayor says coronavirus has "taken a toll" on the city's workforce
From CNN’s Kay Jones
Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
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.
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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.
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Jacksonville sheriff expresses "significant concerns with the viability" of hosting RNC
From CNN's Keith Allen
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.
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Fauci to throw out ceremonial first pitch on MLB Opening Day
From CNN's David Close
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.
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More breast and colorectal cancer deaths projected due to pandemic, Fauci says
From CNN's Marisa Peryer
AACR
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 byUS 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.
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Los Angeles County breaks daily record for hospitalizations
From CNN’s Jenn Selva
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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Kentucky reports highest single-day total of Covid-19 cases
From CNN’s Rebekah Riess
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear on Sunday announced the largest single-day total of new Covid-19 cases in the state, with 979 newly reported cases.
According to the governor’s office, 30 cases were from children 5 years old and younger.
On Monday, the state announced 258 new cases of Covid-19.
“I expect that number will grow some tomorrow while it’s still catching up and unfortunately I expect the number to be much higher by Wednesday or Thursday,” the governor said.
Beshear said the state also issued a travel advisory. The state is asking anyone who goes to a state with over a 15% positivity rate to quarantine for 14 days when they return.
“This is a request,” Beshear said. “Let’s make sure that we’re not bringing this back into our communities.”
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Some hair salons and barbershops in California can reopen outside under new guidance
From CNN's Sarah Moon
Ricardo Rivera, left, has his hair cut Wednesday by Anthony Acosta while Braunson McDonald has his hair cut by Luis Lopez in Huntington Beach, California.
Ashley Landis/AP
Hair salons and barbershops in 33 counties under the California’s monitoring list may now reopen outside under new guidance from the state, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced in a news conference on Monday.
According to the guidance updated on Monday, “outdoor operations may be conducted under a tent, canopy, or other sun shelter as long as no more than one side is closed, allowing sufficient outdoor air movement.”
“Salons and barbershops should not perform a service that would require a customer to have to enter the establishment,” it adds.
In addition, businesses will need to have an effective heat illness prevention plan that includes access to water and shade, cool down breaks, emergency procedures for heat illness cases, and training on heat illness prevention and symptoms.
The use of face coverings, physical distancing, and proper cleaning and sanitization is also required.
Last week, Newsom asked counties on his watch list to close all indoor activities which included hair salons and barbershops.
Latest numbers: Earlier today, California reported 6,846 new cases of coronavirus and nine additional deaths, according to updated data from the California Department of Public Health.
Hospitalizations and intensive care admissions have slightly increased in the state, with 22 more patients hospitalized and 22 more patients in the ICU. There are a total of 6,921 Covid-19 positive hospital patients and 1,943 ICU patients.
As of Monday, California has a total of 391,538 confirmed cases and 7,694 deaths.
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Trump tweets photo of himself wearing a mask
From CNN's Nikki Carvajal
President Trump tweeted a photo Monday of himself wearing mask and said “many people say that it is Patriotic to wear a face mask when you can’t socially distance.”
“There is nobody more Patriotic than me, your favorite President!” the President added.
The photo was taken during his trip to Walter Reed on July 11, which was the one and only time the President has worn a mask in front of television cameras.
CNN has previously reported that Trump’s agreement to don a mask in public was the result of heavy “pleading” by aides, who urged the President to set an example for his supporters by wearing a mask on the visit.
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US stocks finish higher after positive vaccine reports
From CNN’s Anneken Tappe
US stocks ended higher on Monday and the Nasdaq Composite once again finished at a record high.
The University of Oxford and drug maker AstraZeneca reported positive findings for their Covid-19 vaccine, which helped investor sentiment. That said, earnings season is in full swing, and the market could be volatile in the next days.
Here’s how the market closed:
Tech stocks drove Monday’s bounce higher. Even the Dow, which had opened in the red, eked out the slightest gain, closing up 9 points.
The S&P 500 closed 0.8% higher.
The Nasdaq rallied 2.5%, exceeding its all-time high from July 10.
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Pence offers full-throated endorsement of mask-wearing in public and social distancing
From CNN's Kevin Liptak
Vice President Mike Pence wears a mask Tuesday as he visits the state Emergency Operations Center in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Gerald Herbert/AP
At the beginning of Vice President Mike Pence’s call with the nation’s governors, he offered a full-throated endorsement of mask-wearing in public and social distancing as ways to reduce the spread of coronavirus — steps President Trump has stopped short of mandating on a national level.
Citing falling case counts in Arizona, Pence listed steps starting with masks that have helped improve the situation.
Those actions are “a clear example of transmitting science into action and proving this works,” Pence said.
At the top of the call, Pence told governors they had the White House’s “unqualified” support in taking steps to limit the spread of coronavirus.
“You have our full and unqualified support for the steps you are taking in your state,” he said.
“At President Trump’s direction, we are running a national response that is federally supported, state managed and locally executed,” Pence said. “We are here to support the steps that you deem appropriate.”
Pence highlighted efforts to send point-of-care testing kits to every nursing home in the US (something that’s already been made public) and noted travel this week to South Carolina, Indiana and Massachusetts.
He said if governors felt it would be helpful for him or another member of the task force to travel to their state, they stood ready to move out.
“Having been a former governor, I know the value of, particularly, in educating the public about your efforts,” he said. “We will be there and can move out very very quickly.”
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Statewide mask mandate has begun in Arkansas, governor says
From CNN’s Janine Mack
Office of Gov. Asa Hutchinson/YouTube
Arkansas’ statewide face covering mandate has begun, Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Monday.
According to the mandate, every adult in Arkansas must wear a face covering that covers their mouth and nose in all indoor environments, where they are exposed to non-household members, distancing of six feet or more cannot be done, and in all outdoor settings where there is exposure to non-household members, unless there is ample space of six feet or more.
The governor added that if it’s going to compromise your own safety then obviously common sense has to dictate in those circumstances.
More context: Last week, Hutchinson said the mandate was needed due to the number of coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths.
Arkansas Department of Health has recorded 33,927 cases of coronavirus and 357 deaths since the pandemic began.
At least 471 patients have been hospitalized and 111 are on ventilators, according to Dr. Jose Romero, the acting secretary for the state’s Department of Health.
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At least 53 Florida hospitals are out of ICU beds
From CNN’s Randi Kaye
As of Monday afternoon, 9,508 people are hospitalized in the state of Florida due to coronavirus related illness, according to data released by Florida’s Agency for Healthcare administration (ACHA).
There are now 53 hospitals in Florida without any ICU beds, according to the ACHA. That number is up from 50 this morning.
Statewide, Florida stands at 18.12% capacity for “available adult ICU hospital beds.”
Earlier today, Miami-Dade County’s Covid-19 dashboard showed ICU capacity in the county was at 130.20%, up from 127% on Sunday. And as of Monday, 513 Covid-19 ICU admissions were recorded. The ICU bed capacity in the county is 394, according to county data.
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West Virginia governor reports Covid-19 outbreaks in seven churches
From CNN's Laura Dolan
Gov. Jim Justice’s Office/TV Everywhere
West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice reported multiple Covid-19 outbreaks in seven churches across seven counties in the state.
At his news conference Monday, Justice said there was a total of 75 cases reported at churches in Boone, Grant, Logan, Kanawha, Raleigh, Taylor and Wood counties.
He warned churchgoers to be cautious, “Please, please know that a church setting is the ideal setting to spread this virus.”
State Health Officer Dr. Ayne Amjad said at the news conference that one church in each county has an outbreak with five to eight cases per church.
The governor said the state had 89 new positive Covid-19 cases and no new deaths since last Friday.
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Second Brazilian minister tests positive for Covid-19
From journalist Rodrigo Pedroso in São Paulo
Brazil’s Minister of Education Milton Ribeiro tested positive for Covid-19 on Monday, just hours after another cabinet minister revealed he was infected earlier in the day.
“I’ve just received a positive Covid-19 result this morning. I am already medicated, and I’ll work remotely,” Ribeiro tweeted.
The minister’s spokesperson told CNN affiliate CNN Brasil that Ribeiro is working from a hotel in the capital Brasília.
Ribeiro did not specify what medication he is taking.
More top Brazilian officials are infected with coronavirus: Brazil’s Minister of Citizenship Onyx Lorenzoni tweeted Monday that he tested positive for Covid-19. In a series of tweets, Lorenzoni wrote that he was tested after his symptoms started last Friday.
Earlier this month, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro tested positive for Covid-19, following months of downplaying the virus.
Three other high-ranking government officials have also previously tested positive. In March, after returning from a trip to the United States for meetings between the Brazilian and US presidents, Mines and Energy Minister Bento Albuquerque, and Institutional Security Minister General Augusto Heleno tested positive, along with Bolsonaro’s communication secretary Fabio Wajngarten and another 15 members of the Brazilian delegation.
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Baltimore police suspend in-service training after positive Covid-19 tests
From CNN’s Rebekah Riess
Mitchell Layton/Getty Images
The Baltimore Police Department (BPD) has temporarily suspended in-service training after four trainees and two staff members tested positive for Covid-19 since Friday, according to a release from the department.
Baltimore’s police department is working with the University of Baltimore to have their training facility cleaned and disinfected, and the training academy will continue through remote learning in the meantime, according to BPD.
Some context: Since the beginning of the pandemic, 65 members of the department have tested positive for Covid-19. An additional 42 members are currently out on quarantine, and 638 department employees have been quarantined for some amount of time due to potential Covid-19 exposure since the start of the pandemic, the release said.
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Florida educators file lawsuit after state forces schools to reopen this fall
From CNN's Annie Grayer and Randi Kaye
Middle-school teacher Brittany Myers takes part in a protest Thursday in front of the Hillsborough County Schools District Office in Tampa, Florida.
President of the Florida Education Association Fedrick Ingram announced the suit against Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran, Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Giménez, the Florida Department of Education and the Florida State Board of Education. The suit was filed in the 11th circuit court in Miami.
Corcoran issued the emergency order earlier this month, requiring all “brick and mortar schools” to open “at least five days per week for all students.”
“No one wants to be back in a classroom and reopen our school more than educators,” Ingram added. “But we want to do it safely. And we don’t want to put people at risk.”
Leaders of the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association both joined the news conference in support of the lawsuit. AFT President Randi Weingarten said DeSantis, who has been pushing for schools to reopen, is in “intense denial.”
“As a national affiliate, we’ll do everything we can do to make sure not only our members are safe, but our community is safe, and that we do not lose a generation of children because of the denial and the recklessness,” Weingarten said.
NEA President Lily Eskelsen García said “it is a false choice to either keep schools close stop learning or open them unsafely.”
In addition to union leaders, teachers from Florida also joined the virtual news conference to issue their support.
Stefanie Miller, who had Covid and was on a ventilator for 21 days, has been a teacher in Broward County for 22 years.
“I don’t wish this on anyone,” Miller said of her recovery from the virus. “I, of course, want to go back to teaching, but it needs to be safe. There’s no way that children can sit in their seat for six hours, wearing a mask and not feel the stress of this situation. Teaching online is not optimal, but it’s best to keep teachers, personnel, and families safe.”
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World Health Organization "very concerned" that Covid-19 cases may accelerate in Africa
From CNN's Marisa Peryer
People walk past coronavirus guidance in Soweto, South Africa, on July 13.
Themba Hadebe/AP
South Africa has reported 364,328 coronavirus cases as of Monday. Officials from the World Health Organization are concerned that the country’s rising numbers could signal greater Covid-19 spread throughout Africa.
South Africa has the fifth most confirmed Covid-19 infections in the world, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Ryan said South Africa is experiencing an acceleration in Covid-19 cases, which have increased by about 30% in the last week.
“Sometimes, this disease can take off very quickly,” Ryan said. “And sometimes, in other situations, it takes off more slowly, and then accelerates – and it’s difficult to understand fully why that is the case.”
Ryan noted other countries in the region have seen Covid-19 increases, though their total case counts are still lower than South Africa’s. In the past week, cases in countries such as Madagascar, Namibia and Botswana have increased by 50%, 69% and 66%, respectively, according to Ryan.
“I’m very concerned right now that we’re beginning to see an acceleration of disease in Africa,” Ryan said. “And we all need to take that very seriously and show solidarity and support to those countries who may now be experiencing increasing numbers of cases and deaths.”
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More than 140,000 people have died from coronavirus in the US
From CNN's Brandon Miller
There have been at least 3,794,355 cases of coronavirus in the US, and at least 140,716 people have died since the start of the pandemic, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.
On Monday, Johns Hopkins reported 21,095 new cases and 182 deaths.
The totals include cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.
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South Carolina's health department says state exceeded July testing goal
From CNN’s Natasha Chen
Medical professionals conduct a drive-thru testing site in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, on Friday.
Josh Bell/The Sun News/AP
The South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control said that between July 1 and July 16, the state exceeded its monthly Covid-19 testing goal by completing more than 140,000 tests.
The department also announced 1,445 new confirmed Covid-19 cases and nine new confirmed deaths.
The positivity rate of those tested Sunday was 17.7%.
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Dominican Republic declares state of emergency due to "concerning increase" in Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Jessica Hasbun, Claudia Rebaza and Tim Lister
A worker fumigates an area of San Cristobal, Dominican Republic, in June.
Erika Santelices/AFP/Getty Images
Dominican Republic President Danilo Medina declared a state of emergency in the country for the next 45 days due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Medina issued a presidential decree on Monday announcing the decision due to “the concerning increase of Covid-19 transmission and in order to avoid our public and private health system from overflowing.”
The president has not specified yet which restrictive measures will be taken during this period.
On Sunday, the country’s civil defense announced the closure of beaches across the country in order to enable social distancing, the agency said via Instagram.
Dominican Republic reported a total of 53,956 Covid-19 cases on Sunday, with 1,101 new cases in the last 24 hours. The country’s death toll has now reached 993.
Some background: While the number of deaths has consistently averaged about a dozen per day this month, the number of infections reported has begun to move upwards. The daily average in the first week of July was 1,002. The daily average over the last week (to July 19) is 1,346 — an increase of one third in the number of new infections since the beginning of the month.
The director for the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), Dr. Carissa F. Etienne, had warned about an increase of cases “in hotspots on the border of Haiti and the Dominican Republic as well as within the Guianese Shield.”
PAHO has also reported “a significant increase of cases” in Haiti, expecting they will continue to rise in the coming weeks, Dr. Ciro Ugarte, director of Health Emergencies, said last week.
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California reports more than 6,800 new cases and 9 deaths
From CNN's Sarah Moon
California reported 6,846 new cases of coronavirus and nine additional deaths on Monday, according to updated data from the state’s Department of Public Health.
Hospitalizations and intensive care unit admissions have slightly increased. A total of 6,921 Covid-19 positive patients are hospitalized and 1,943 patients are in the ICU.
As of Monday, California has a total of 391,538 confirmed cases and 7,694 deaths.
One thing to note: These numbers were released by California 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.
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Here's the latest coronavirus update from Spain
From CNN’s Al Goodman in Madrid
People walk along Las Ramblas in Barcelona, Spain, on Thursday.
Emilio Morenatti/AP
Spain has tallied 4,581 new coronavirus cases since last Friday as outbreaks intensify, especially in the northeastern region of Catalonia, including Barcelona, and in the neighboring region of Aragon, the health ministry reported Monday.
That brings the total number of cases to at least 264,835 since the pandemic began, with at least 28,422 deaths, an increase of nine in the past week, the ministry reported.
Some background: Spain’s nationwide confinement order was lifted June 21. Spain’s 17 regional governments now directly manage the situation in their territories and the Spanish government stopped issuing daily coronavirus updates on weekends.
Since then, there have been 201 outbreaks, and new cases tripled from late June to mid-July, said Maria Jose Sierra, a deputy head of the Center for Health Emergencies, at the news conference.
The latest surge is in metropolitan Barcelona, where Catalan officials have asked Barcelona residents to stay home except for essential business, although it’s not mandatory.
Illa expressed confidence in the containment measures in Catalonia and Aragon adding, “we have to give a few days to see the evolution of the epidemic with these measures in place.”
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Georgia reports more than 3,200 new Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Tina Burnside
Georgia is reporting 3,243 new cases on Sunday for a total of 143,123 coronavirus cases statewide, according to data released by the Georgia Department of Health (DOH).
The state also recorded five additional deaths, bringing the state’s death toll to 3,173, according to the DOH.
More than 15,000 Covid-19-related hospitalizations were also recorded.
The state reported 2,822 intensive care unit admissions.
This post has been updated with details about the new cases.
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Louisiana reports more than 3,100 new Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Tina Burnside
The Bourbon Cowboy bar is boarded up in New Orleans' French Quarter on Tuesday.
Sean Gardner/Getty Images
The Louisiana Department of Health reported 3,187 Covid-19 cases since Sunday bringing the total number of cases reported to the state to 94,892, according to data released by the department of health on Monday.
Of the 3,187 cases, 1,583 cases are attributed to a backlog collected between May 18 and July 13. The cases will be assigned to those dates on the LDH’s dashboard.
Because of the daily removal of newly identified duplicates and out of state cases, the new case increase may not match the difference between today’s and yesterday’s total case count.
Since yesterday, 33,620 new tests have been reported to the state. That brings the total number of tests to 1,102,924.
Here are more details about the cases:
99% of the cases reported to the state today were community spread.
45% of the cases reported today are of individuals aged 29 and under.
There have been 29 deaths reported to the state today. The current total death count is 3,462.
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National Zoo and Smithsonian Museum in Virginia to reopen Friday
From CNN's Lindy Royce
A young boy watches a California sea lion at the National Zoo in Washington, DC.
Alex Wong/Getty Images
The National Zoo in Washington, DC, and National Air and Space Museum’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia, will reopen on Friday, the Smithsonian announced today.
Both buildings will reopen with multiple safety measures in place.
Here are some of those safety measures:
Visitors ages six and older will be required to wear face coverings inside the zoo and Udvar-Hazy Center. Social distancing will also be implemented, and hand-sanitizing stations will be provided.
The number of people inside the facilities will be limited. Visitors will be able to reserve free passes ahead of their visit. The Smithsonian will make available 5,000 passes to the zoo and 1,500 passes for the Udvar-Hazy Center daily.
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WHO "deeply concerned" by Covid-19's impact on indigenous people in the Americas
From CNN's Mia Alberti
Indigenous nurses from the Special Secretariat for Indigenous Health (Sesai) of the Arapiuns ethnic group and Tapuia ethnic groups perform rapid COVID-19 testing on the banks of the lower Tapajos River in the municipality of Santarem in western Para on Sunday, July 19.
Tarso Sarraf/AFP/Getty Images
Indigenous people in the Americas are especially vulnerable to Covid-19, the World Health Organization said on Monday.
As of July 6, more than 70,000 indigenous people in the Americas had been infected with Covid-19 and more than 2,000 had died, according to WHO.
“Like other vulnerable groups, indigenous peoples face many challenges. This includes a lack of political representation, economic marginalization, and lack of access to health, education, and social services. Indigenous people often have a high burden of poverty, unemployment, malnutrition, and communicable and incommunicable diseases, making them more vulnerable to Covid-19 and its serious outcomes,” Tedros said.
Tedros said WHO is working with regional indigenous organizations in the Amazon river basin “to step up the fight against Covid-19” and urged governments to invest in contact tracing strategies.
“One of the key tools for suppressing transmission in indigenous communities and all communities is contact tracing. No country can take control of its epidemic if it doesn’t know where the virus is,” Tedros added.
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UK health secretary reiterates call for global access to coronavirus vaccine
From CNN's Nada Bashir
Parliament TV
UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock has reiterated the government’s call for global access to a successfully developed coronavirus vaccine, telling lawmakers in the House of Commons on Monday that the government “rejects narrow nationalism” in the race to find a vaccine.
“We reject narrow nationalism. We support a global effort because this virus respects no borders and we’re all on the same side,” he added.
The health secretary’s remarks come after preliminary results from trials carried out by the University of Oxford showed that a newly developed vaccine induced a strong immunity response in patients.
“I can report to the House that the trial shows that the Oxford vaccine produces a strong immunity response in patients, in terms of both antibody production and T-cell responses, and that no safety concerns have been identified,” Hancock told members of parliament.
“This is promising news and it takes us one step closer to finding a vaccine that could potentially save lives all around the world,” he added.
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ICU bed capacity in Florida's Miami-Dade County is at 130%
From CNN's Randi Kaye
Intensive care unit capacity in Miami-Dade County, Florida, is now at 130.20%, up from 127% on Sunday, according to the county’s Covid-19 dashboard.
As of Monday, 513 Covid-19 ICU admissions were recorded. The ICU bed capacity in the county is 394, according to county data.
Data released by the county on Monday also shows 2,278 Covid-19 patients are currently hospitalized in Miami-Dade. Out of the 513 patients in ICU beds, 293 of those are currently on ventilators.
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Masks are not a substitute for other public health measures, WHO official says
From CNN's Naomi Thomas
Achmad Ibrahim/AP
The World Health Organization supports the use of masks as part of a comprehensive strategy for Covid-19, but they cannot be used as a substitute for other public health measures, said Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead for Covid-19.
Van Kerkhove said WHO is hearing about changes in policies from many governments, who are applying mask use as part of their Covid-19 strategy, particularly in areas with active transmission or where physical distancing is not possible.
Everything has to be done as a part of a comprehensive approach, Van Kerkhove said.
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Protesters shout throughout Florida governor's coronavirus briefing
WFTV
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ coronavirus news conference was met with loud protests this afternoon.
DeSantis is currently holding a news briefing about his state’s response to the pandemic, and shouting can be heard throughout the governor’s remarks.
Protesters chanted “Shame on you Ron DeSantis!” and “You are lying to the public!” during the news conference.
DeSantis stopped speaking momentarily while the men were escorted out by sheriff’s deputies. “We will not be defunding the police,” the governor quipped when he began speaking again.
Watch the moment:
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Venezuela returns to lockdown, with 20% of country's total Covid-19 cases reported in past week
From CNN’s Stefano Pozzebo
A city worker sprays disinfectant in a building in the Chacao neighborhood of Caracas, Venezuela, Saturday, July 18.
Matias Delacroix/AP
Venezuela is returning to planned lockdown measures, as the country reported 20% of its total number of coronavirus infections in just the past week, according to data collected by the government of embattled President Nicolas Maduro.
Venezuela reported more than 1,000 cases of coronavirus in the past three days and more than 2,000 cases in the past week.
In total, the country has reported 11,891 coronavirus cases. More than 20% of those – 2,426 cases – were reported in just the last seven days. At least 112 people are reported to have died from the coronavirus in Venezuela.
The majority of cases and deaths reported are concentrated in the two main urban areas of Caracas and Maracaibo, according to data collected by the Maduro government.
The Venezuelan opposition and international organizations have questioned the government’s capacity to trace and report coronavirus cases.
Speaking on Sunday in Caracas, Maduro urged Venezuelans to respect social distancing measures as the country returned to total lockdown from Monday. Venezuela has established a planned “7+7 lockdown approach” under which lockdown measures are relaxed for seven days and reintroduced for the following seven days.
Maduro also defended his government policy to limit the number of migrants allowed to return to Venezuela. The Maduro government has previously labeled illegal migrants as “biological weapons” and “bioterrorists.”
Some background: Since the beginning of the pandemic, the Maduro government has allowed only a few hundred Venezuelan migrants to return home each day, as an estimated tens of thousands have been attempting to return with lockdown measures imposed across South America.
More than 70,000 migrants have returned since March, Maduro said Sunday. He said migrants who crossed the border illegally will “infect” Venezuela with coronavirus.
At least 1,136 Venezuelan citizens have been detained after returning to the country illegally, the Armed Forces Chief of Staff Admiral Remigio Ceballos said Sunday.
President Trump says he’ll resume regular coronavirus briefings as the country experiences a resurgence of cases.
The acknowledgement came as Trump’s advisers debate a return to the daily briefings, which were a hallmark of the pandemic’s earlier days. They ceased after Trump repeatedly found himself sparring with reporters and going on tangents, including one about ingesting disinfectant.
Now, however, many of Trump’s aides worry he appears absent as the crisis continues to rage. Trump no longer attends daily coronavirus task force meetings and hasn’t held an event specifically focused on the virus in two weeks.
Trump said the revival of briefings would allow him to tout advancements on therapeutics and vaccines and explain the “positive things” his administration is doing to combat the virus.
“I think it’s a great way to get information out to the public,” Trump said, adding they would likely resume on Tuesday at 5 p.m. ET — the same time he typically briefed in the spring.
“We had a good slot. A lot of people were watching,” Trump said, using television ratings lingo to describe the sessions: “We had record numbers watching,” he said. “In the history of cable television there’s never been anything like it.”
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US Treasury Secretary says phase four stimulus package will start at $1 trillion dollars
From CNN's Jason Hoffman
Kevin Dietsch/Pool/AP
Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said the Trump administration hopes to pass a phase four stimulus package before the end of the month, and said that negotiations for the package will start with “another trillion dollars.”
Mnuchin said the focus of this package will be “kids and jobs and vaccines,” echoing Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s repeated framing of the forthcoming Republican proposal. Mnuchin also claimed there will be a vaccine before the end of the year for emergency use.
Mnuchin said they want to tweak the enhanced unemployment insurance so they “don’t pay people more money to stay home than go to work.”
He also said the new package will have “tax credits that incentivize business to bring people back to work. We’ll have tax credits for PPE for safe work environments, and we’re going to have big incentives, money to the states, for education for schools that can open safely and do education.”
Mnuchin added that the administration wants liability protection in the new package.
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Brazilian minister tests positive for Covid-19
From journalist Rodrigo Pedroso
Brazil’s Minister of Citizenship Onyx Lorenzoni attends a meeting in Brasília on January 29, 2019.
Mateus Bonomi/AGIF/Sipa/AP
Brazil’s Minister of Citizenship Onyx Lorenzoni said he tested positive for Covid-19, in a Twitter post on Monday.
In a series of tweets, Lorenzoni wrote that he was tested after his symptoms started last Friday. He said he started the so-called “Covid-kit” treatment, a cocktail of drugs promoted by some medical doctors who back Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro’s claim that it’s an effective treatment in the early stages of the novel coronavirus.
“I have been following the azithromycin, ivermectin, and chloroquine protocol since Friday and I already feel the positive effects,” Lorenzoni wrote on his Twitter account.
About the drugs: The Brazilian Society of Infectious Diseases (SBI), in a report published Friday, urged medical professionals to stop using hydroxychloroquine to treat coronavirus, because it has been proved ineffective and can cause collateral damage.
A week earlier, Brazil’s National Health Surveillance Agency which regulates pharmaceuticals, ANVISA, released a statement saying there is no conclusive proof that ivermectin is effective as Covid-19 treatment.
In addition to Bolsonaro, who tested positive on July 7, three other high-ranking government officials have previously tested positive.
After Bolsonaro tested positive for Covid-19, several of his close ministers were tested in the following days. None of them tested positive.
Lorenzoni did not have any official meetings with Bolsonaro in recent weeks.
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Florida reports more than 10,000 new Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Tina Burnside
Health care personnel work at a walk-up Covid-19 testing site in Miami Beach, Florida, on July 17.
Lynne Sladky/AP
The state of Florida is reporting at least 10,347 new cases of Covid-19 and 90 additional deaths on Monday, according to data released by the Florida Department of Health.
This brings the state’s total cases to more than 360,000 since the pandemic began, according to the state department of health. The statewide resident death toll is now at least 5,072.
Here’s a look at new daily cases in Florida over the past two weeks:
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Miami-Dade police issue more than 100 citations to people and businesses not complying with Covid-19 rules
From CNN's Randi Kaye
The Miami-Dade Police Department has issued 115 civil citations for noncompliance of county mask and social distancing orders.
Last week, the Board of Commissioners unanimously voted to approve an emergency order that allows fines to be issued to people not complying with the guidelines.
Authorities issued 67 individual citations and 48 business citations, according to the Miami-Dade Police Department.
Individual citations are $100 and $500 for businesses.
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This Georgia mayor is enforcing a mask mandate, despite pushback from the governor
From CNN's Aditi Sangal
Mayor of Athens, Georgia, Kelly Girtz on CNN's "New Day" on July 20.
CNN
When Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms enforced a mask mandate in Atlanta, Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp filed a lawsuit against her, calling the mandate a violation of his emergency orders that prohibits local leaders from adding to the state’s requirements to protect against coronavirus.
Despite this action, Mayor Kelly Girtz also mandated masks in Athens, Georgia. However, he says he has not been sued yet.
He highlighted the importance of how a mask mandate creates a “level playing field” that ensures equal safety for everyone alike.
In addition to the residents, Athens also hosts about 40,000 university students, which is of concern to the mayor.
“I know that young people think of themselves as invulnerable, but the reality is that they are not,” he said. “Young people are by nature, again, loosey-goosey.”
“What we want is for everyone to take this deeply seriously, because in order for us to come out of this pandemic, we are going to need to all be practicing the best behavior possible. And frankly, when I ride down some of the college-occupied streets in this town, I don’t see the best behavior right now, and we are going to need to step up our game.”
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Contingency plans may be needed as coronavirus cases rise, CEO of Miami-area health system says
From CNN's Aditi Sangal
Carlos Migoya, president and CEO of Jackson Health System, on CNN's "New Day" on July 20.
The hospital staff is also under strain during this surge. At least 200 employees have tested positive for Covid-19 and aren’t coming in to work currently, he said. Out of those 200, 37 are nurses.
“Gov. DeSantis has helped us out quite a bit by providing an extra 200 nurses to us at this point in time, and actually been extremely important for us. We’ve also hired another 90 or 100 nurses but all of that is influx at this point in time. It’s a big challenge and a lot of anxiety for everyone,” he said.
Under this strain, health care workers at the Jackson Health System have asked for hazard pay. However, Migoya says they’re not able to provide it at this point.
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New York reports 519 new cases and 8 deaths from Covid-19
From CNN's Kristina Sgueglia
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the state’s progress in beating back Covid-19 is still “all very good.”
Here’s a look at the numbers in New York:
Hospitalizations continue to hit new lows since March 18, now at 716
New York added 519 positive tests, with a positivity rate at 1.05%
New York reported 8 deaths from Covid-19
One thing to note: These numbers were released by New York State’s public health agency, and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project
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New York governor says it was a "mistake" for other states to listen to Trump's calls to reopen
From CNN's Kristina Sgueglia
New York Gov. Cuomo said it was a mistake for other state governments to listen to the President’s calls to open up during the pandemic.
Cuomo said the federal government has been “incompetent” and “in denial” on the situation and has “pressured” states “to reopen recklessly, which they did.”
“Liberate, liberate, liberate,” he said harkening to the President’s tweets on the matter.
He said people are fleeing from other states to New York to find a safe haven from the virus. “Those other states have to get the virus under control,” he said.
New York has police in the airport and a form individuals flying from impacted states need to fill out. It’s illegal to leave the airport without doing so.
There is no enforcement mechanism for people driving into the state, Cuomo said.
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University of Oxford vaccine is safe and induces early immune reaction, early results suggest
From CNN Heath’s Jamie Gumbrecht
Preliminary results of a Phase 1/2 trial of a coronavirus vaccine developed by the University of Oxford suggest that it is safe and induces an immune response.
The vaccine provoked an antibody response within 28 days and a T-cell response within 14 days, according to a release from the medical journal The Lancet.
The trial included 1,077 people age 18 to 55 with no history of Covid-19 and took place in five UK hospitals from late April to late May. Participants received the Covid-19 vaccine or the meningococcal conjugate vaccine, as a control group.
“However, we need more research before we can confirm the vaccine effectively protects against SARS-CoV-2 infection, and for how long any protection lasts,” the statement added.
There were no serious adverse event related to the vaccine; fatigue and headache were the most commonly reported reactions. Other common side effects included pain at the injection site, muscle ache, malaise, chills, feeling feverish and high temperature.
The vaccine is one of 23 Covid-19 vaccines currently in clinical trials globally, according to the World Health Organization.
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The New York governor is traveling to Georgia to help with coronavirus response
From CNN's Kristina Sgueglia
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo holds a briefing in New York on July 13.
Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket/Getty Images
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is heading to Savannah, Georgia, today, he said speaking from John F Kennedy International airport.
He will meet with the mayor and his team to share what New York did, help them with testing and tracing programs, and will transport thousands of items of personal protective equipment.
“Whatever they need from us they’re going to get,” Cuomo said.
He said when New York was “in the thick” of it, 30,000 health professionals from around the country offered to come to the state. He said he was honored and touched by the generosity and said New Yorkers “don’t forget.”
Per the law, Gov. Cuomo will not have to quarantine upon his return because he is an essential worker, he said.
Georgia is among the states where an incoming individual is required to quarantine upon arrival to New York for 14 days, per state mandate.
Cuomo said he will take a test upon his return.
Secretary to the governor Melissa De Rosa added the law also has an exception if you are passing through a state for less than 24 hours.
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New York governor threatens to rollback reopening if people don't follow the rules
From CNN's Kristina Sgueglia
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued a warning to revelers appearing to congregate in spite of the state mandates: “Don’t be stupid.”
He also threatened to roll back the opening plan if this continues.
“We have to protect the progress we have made,” he said. “We are not in a static environment, a lot is going on.”
He said one main threat to New York’s progress is the number of congregations, primarily in downstate, and primarily involving young people.
He said this with a slide showing images from Astoria, Queens, and the Lower East Side of Manhattan. “It has continued unabated and it is getting worse,” he said.
“We cannot allow those congregations to continue,” Cuomo said, adding, “if it happens.. we’re going to have to roll back the opening plan, and we’re going to have to close bars and restaurants.”
He also called on local governments to enforce the law, not naming any governments in particular.
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New York City enters phase 4 of reopening today — but it's not the same as the rest of the state
New York City is entering phase four of reopening today, but it’s a slightly different phase four than other parts of New York state experienced.
Mayor Bill de Blasio announced last week that indoor dining would not be allowed to resume in phase four since it’s considered a “high risk” activity.
In other parts of the state, indoor dining was allowed to resume in phase three.
De Blasio also announced that museums will also be “still closed for now.” But shopping malls are included in phase four for areas of the state outside of New York City, according to state guidelines.
So here’s a look at what will open in New York City’s phase four, according to the mayor:
Low-risk outdoor entertainment activities, including things like botanical gardens and zoos, can reopen at a reduced capacity of 33%.
Production of movies and TV shows can proceed.
Sports can come back but without audiences.
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At least 10 ICUs in Florida's Miami-Dade are at capacity
At least 10 adult ICUs in Miami-Dade County, the epicenter of Florida’s coronavirus pandemic, have no beds available, according to Florida’s Agency for Health Care Administration website as of 9 a.m. ET today.
For context, there are at least 24 hospitals in Miami Dade County with adult ICU bed capabilities. Ten of them — more than 40% — are at capacity.
Nearby Broward County has at least six ICUs with 0% of bed available, according to the website.
These two Atlanta colleges will shift to digital learning this fall, students will not return to campus
From CNN's Tina Burnside
Morehouse and Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia, announced on Monday that students will not be returning to campus for the Fall 2020 semester due to the recent spike in Covid-19 cases.
Both colleges had fully anticipated that they would open campuses for in-person instruction for the fall semester however due to the worsening health crisis in both the city of Atlanta and Fulton County, the colleges changed course, according to a news release.
It remains unclear if the schools will reopen their campuses for students for the Spring 2021 semester.
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Iraq nears 100,000 Covid-19 cases
From CNN’s Hamdi Alkhshali and Aqeel Najim
Iraq on Monday recorded 2,163 new coronavirus cases, according to the country’s health ministry.
This brings the total number of Covid-19 cases in Iraq to 94,693 according to the ministry.
The health ministry also reported 88 new Covid-19-related deaths, bringing the total to 3,869 deaths across the country.
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Bankers association urges America's banks to adopt mask policy
From CNN’s Cristina Alesci
The American Bankers Association (ABA), which represents large and small banks, joined other business groups in calling for its members to adopt national mask mandates “to protect the health of bank employees and customers.”
Last week, The National Retail Federation urged all retailers to adopt a nationwide masks policies for customers.
Other groups, including the Business Roundtable and the US Chamber of Commerce, lobbied President Trump and governors to enact a “national mask standard, implemented locally.”
CNN’s Matt Egan contributed to this report
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Getting retested for Covid-19 multiple times is completely unnecessary, US health official says
From CNN Health’s Naomi Thomas
US Assistant Secretary for Health and Human Services Admiral Brett Giroir told CNN’s Alisyn Camerota that getting retested multiple times for Covid-19 is unnecessary, if someone has been symptom-free for three or more days, or if it has been 10 or more days since the onset of their symptoms.
“We have lots of data now that shows after eight or nine days, you cannot transmit the virus – the virus is gone,” he said. “What we’re seeing now is people getting retested four, five, six, eight times – and that’s completely unnecessary.”
Giroir also said that it is known that PCR tests can be positive and a person not be infectious. This can keep people out of schools and workplaces unnecessarily.
“It wastes resources, clogs up the system and it’s unnecessary,” Giroir said. “You do not need to be retested if you follow those clinical guidelines.”
The exception is if you’re in the hospital, very sick or immunocompromised, as you can shed the virus for a lot longer and that is a different situation, according to Giroir.
WATCH:
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There's "hope" for an agreement on EU coronavirus recovery fund, German chancellor says
From CNN's Nadine Schmidt and Fred Pleitgen
German Chancellor Angela Merkel makes a statement at the European Council building in Brussels, Belgium, on July 19.
Francisco Seco/Pool/AP
European Union leaders have come up with a “framework” for a possible agreement on the EU coronavirus recovery fund after overnight negotiations, German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters in Brussels.
EU leaders have been locked in heated negotiations about the economic recovery plan for three days, including overnight Sunday into Monday, with the sticking points including the size of loans versus grants.
Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden, the so-called “Frugal Four,” had vehemently opposed the idea of 500 billion euros ($571 billion) in grants over concerns of loading their countries with national debt to fund the spending of other countries.
Whereas countries like Spain and Italy said they couldn’t accept a reduction in the volume of grants.
Merkel said it was “clear negotiations would be incredibly tough” but that negotiations continue.
“But extraordinary situations also require extraordinary efforts. So far we have lived up to this and I hope we will be able to make it the rest of the distance, which will not be easy,” Merkel told reporters.
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Peru records slight increase in Covid-19 cases since lockdown eased, health minister says
From CNN’s Claudia Rebaza
Workers disinfect streets in Puno, Peru, on July 17.
Carlos Mamani/AFP/Getty Images
Peru’s Health Minister Pilar Mazzetti admitted Covid-19 cases have increased in the country since the government eased the total lockdown and resumed some economic activities on July 1.
“At the moment we are seeing a slight increase” Mazzetti told a local TV station on Sunday evening.
On Sunday evening, Peru’s Health Ministry reported 4,090 new Covid-19 cases bringing the total number to 353,590. The number of new cases in the last 24 hours is the highest increase in the last 10 days. Lima region, Peru’s capital, continues to be the area with the highest number of infections.
Peru’s government has extended the country’s state of emergency until July 31 and allowed localized lockdowns in 7 of 24 regions, permitting some economic activities to resume gradually. On Monday, restaurants in these regions are expected to reopen with a limit of 40% of their capacity.
Peru has the second-highest number of Covid-19 cases in Latin America, after Brazil.
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Walmart will require all customers to wear face masks starting today
From CNN's Nathaniel Meyersohn
People shop at a Walmart in Burbank, California, on July 15.
Etienne Laurent/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Walmart will require customers at all of its US stores to wear masks beginning today, becoming the largest retailer to mandate facial coverings as coronavirus cases continue to rise.
About 65% of Walmart’s more than 5,000 stores, including its Sam’s Club locations, are located in areas where there is a government mandate on face coverings.
Although no federal mandate to wear a mask exists, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says everyone “should wear a cloth face cover when they have to go out in public.” The CDC said “face coverings are meant to protect other people.”
Walmart said it will enforce the new policy by stationing“health ambassadors” near the entrance to remind shoppers of the requirement.
Some background: Other national chains have made similar moves as Walmart. Kroger and Kohl’s announced they would start requiring all customers to wear masks, signaling that more retailers are lining up behind mask-wearing mandates. The National Retail Federation, the main lobbying group for the industry, also called on retailers to require masks for customers.
Most major retailers and grocers initially hesitated to enact their own mask mandates for customers during the pandemic, partly over fears of antagonizing shoppers who refuse to wear them. Retailers have said they are reluctant to put their employees in the position of enforcing mask requirements.
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Stimulus negotiations begin in DC today. Here's where things stand now.
From CNN's Phil Mattingly
The Trump administration has been engaged in discussions on the next stimulus bill for the past week, but negotiations will start “in earnest” today on Capitol Hill, the White House said.
Where Republicans stand: GOP senators CNN has spoken to say the plan is to present the pieces of the GOP proposal at the closed-door Senate GOP policy lunch. The proposal itself would be released publicly sometime midweek.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has stuck to a simple framing for the forthcoming GOP proposal for weeks: it’s about jobs, kids and health care. It’s messaging, sure, but it also encapsulates the stated approach for each of the committee chairs who drafted pieces of the bill.
What the Democrats want: Democrats already have their proposal on the table — the $3 trillion House-passed measure known as the Heroes Act. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has made clear that’s what Democrats will be fighting for in the negotiations — and that any talks must include House Democrats.
As one Democratic senator told me this weekend: “The onus is on them. We’ve been clear about where we are and how crucial it is that this be taken seriously for months. We’re here and have been her. It’s time for them to get in the game.”
Remember: The time window is tight, but get ready for a slog. Democrats and Republicans are far apart on central details, but the impetus to get something done, while not unanimous as it largely was in March, is still quite palpable. But the road between now and Trump signing something into law is filled with hurdles, road blocks and potential pitfalls.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said last week she is “absolutely” willing to delay the August congressional recess for Covid-19 aid package negotiations.
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US Covid-19 surge being approached with "extreme seriousness," White House task force member says
From CNN's Naomi Thomas
Admiral Brett Giroir on CNN's "New Day" on July 20.
CNN
“Yes, we are having increased cases, predominantly in the sunbelt,” Admiral Brett Giroir told Alisyn Camerota on CNN’s New Day Monday. “We are having more cases that we did a week ago, two weeks ago, three weeks ago, four weeks ago – that is very clear,” he added.
Giroir, a member of the White House coronavirus task force, said he would like to point out that there are probably fewer cases compared to April because of more testing, but “there is no question we are having a surge right now. We are approaching this with extreme seriousness.”
According to Giroir, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention teams have been sent into every state, surge teams have visited 19 sites, surge testing is happening and medical professionals are being deployed across the country.
Giroir said that masks, physical distancing and hand washing are all incredibly important.
WATCH:
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These US virus hotspots broke records over the weekend
From CNN's Christina Maxouris
People visit Alamitos Beach in Long Beach, California, on July 18.
Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News/Getty Images
As US cities and states navigate their next steps to combat the rapid spread of Covid-19, unwanted records keep getting smashed.
Here are some hotspots that broke records over the weekend:
Los Angeles reported the highest number of hospitalizations in a day, with at least 2,216 people hospitalized. More than half of the 2,848 new cases reported Sunday in Los Angeles were in people under 41 years old, officials said.
At least two states reported record single-day case increases Saturday, according to data from Johns Hopkins. Georgia reported 4,688 new cases for a total of 139,880 statewide while North Carolina reported 2,522 new cases, reaching 98,092 infections across the state.
Arizona reported its highest death count since the pandemic on Saturday, with a total of 147 deaths, according to the Covid Tracking Project and Johns Hopkins. The state’s previous one-day record, set on July 7, was 117 deaths, according to the Covid Tracking Project.
In Florida, a state that has broken its own single-day case record several times in recent weeks, there were at least 49 hospitals with no ICU beds available Sunday, according to data from a state agency.
Meanwhile, at least 31 states are seeing an increase in new cases compared to the previous week. Here’s a look at where cases are rising across the country:
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Nearly 9,400 coronavirus patients hospitalized in Florida
From CNN's Randi Kaye
As of Monday morning, 9,362 people are hospitalized in the state of Florida due to coronavirus related illness, according to data released by Florida’s Agency for Healthcare Administration (AHCA).
The three hardest hit southern counties in the state are: Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County. Miami-Dade has recorded 2,008 hospitalizations. Broward County is seeing 1,240 hospitalizations and Palm Beach has recorded 618, according to AHCA.
More than 3 million people in Florida have been tested for Covid-19, with at least 350,047 testing positive.
The overall positivity rate as of 7:30 a.m. ET today is 18.7% up from 18.2% on Sunday, according to the John Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center.
Watch Jackson Health System President & CEO:
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US surgeon general says national mask mandate isn't necessary
From CNN's Jason Hoffman
US Surgeon General Jerome Adams holds a face mask during a coronavirus briefing at the White House on April 22.
Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
Surgeon General Jerome Adams echoed President Trump, saying he does not think a national mask mandate is necessary, but at the same time urged all Americans to continue to wear face coverings.
Asked about a national mask mandate, Adams said “in many cases we are letting the politics and the policy get in the way of the actual practice.” Adams said that the science shows that wearing masks will allow for America to reopen and stay open sooner.
The surgeon general said he believes a mandate would work better at a local and state level than a federal level because if there was a federal mandate, there would need to be a way for the federal government to enforce it.
“If you are going to have a federal mandate you have to have a federal enforcement mechanism and right now as scientist and an educator, I would rather help people understand why they should cooperate with wearing a mask and how they benefit from it, versus just simply saying we are going to force you to do it, particularly by sending in federal troops or using federal mechanisms,” Adams said.
Trump said over the weekend that he does not believe the disease will go away if everyone wears masks.
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It's just past 1 p.m. in London and 8 a.m. in New York. Here's what you need to know
A health worker, left, takes the temperature of a resident during a door-to-door medical screening drive in Mumbai on Monday, July 20.
Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty Images
The novel coronavirus has infected 14.5 million people worldwide and killed at least 606,000, according to the Johns Hopkins University tally. Here’s the latest on the Covid-19 pandemic.
India cases surge: The country has recorded 40,425 new virus cases in the past 24 hours, the highest daily increase since the outbreak began.
Brazil’s leader greets supporters despite being positive for Covid-19: Jair Bolsonaro took a walk on the grounds of his presidential palace Sunday and greeted crowds despite his diagnosis. Supporters were separated from the President by a small water canal, but two people crossed over to his side. One man helped another, who appeared to have a physical disability, walk close to the President for a greeting.
Hong Kong reports 73 new cases Monday: City officials are struggling to get new outbreaks under control. Among 66 locally transmitted cases, 27 were untraceable.
Demonstrators protest mask law in London: Hundreds of people gathered in the city on Sunday to protest against the wearing of face masks, days before it becomes mandatory to wear them in stores in England.
Xinjiang capital in “wartime” lockdown: A “wartime” state has been declared in the capital of Xinjiang, home to China’s persecuted Muslim-majority Uyghur ethnic group, after 17 local infections were recorded on Sunday.
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China's $9-billion movie box office is reopening after six months of shutdown
From CNN Business' Jill Disis and Shanshan Wang
People watch a movie as they sit socially-distanced at a cinema in Hangzhou, China, on July 20.
Stringer/AFP/Getty Images
China’s massive box office began to reopen on Monday after the coronavirus pandemic spurred a shutdown lasting roughly six months.
The China Film Administration announced late last week that movie theaters in “low-risk” areas could reopen from Monday with a few precautions. Audience members are required to wear masks and take temperature checks, and cinemas are expected to operate at 30% capacity. Eating and drinking in the theater is also prohibited.
The “low-risk” requirement effectively means that most of the country should be able to reopen cinemas, according to the Global Times, a state-run tabloid.
Ticket sales for Monday’s box office surpassed 2.8 million yuan ($400,000) just before 5 pm local time, according to Maoyan, a major Chinese ticketing platform.
The Chinese film “A First Farewell,” about a boy from Xinjiang, along with the 2017 Pixar film “Coco” and the Chinese thriller “Sheep Without A Shepherd” grossed the most in pre-sales, according to the Global Times.
China is home to a huge movie industry that generated more than $9 billion in box office sales last year — second only to the United States.
Hundreds of demonstrators, some wearing masks, protest against mask-wearing in London
From CNN's Rob Picheta
'Cassie Sunshine' speaks during the Keep Britain Free movement anti-mask protest in London on July 19.
Hollie Adams/Getty Images
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered in London on Sunday to protest against the wearing of face masks, days before it becomes mandatory to wear face coverings in stores in England.
A small crowd descended on Hyde Park in central London to voice their opposition to masks after Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced it will become compulsory to wear them in shops from Friday.
Some protesters waved placards referring to masks as “mind control” devices, while others were pictured promoting baseless conspiracy theories including the flat earth theory and a supposed link between 5G and Covid-19. Several demonstrators wore masks to illustrate their opposition to face masks.
The gathering was organized by a group called Keep Britain Free, which claims on its website to support: “Freedom of speech, choice and thought.”
Workers clean and disinfect a wet market in Hong Kong on July 19.
Anthony Kwan/Getty Images
Hong Kong reported 73 new coronavirus cases on Monday, seven of which were imported, bringing the city’s tally to 1,958, health officials said.
Among the 66 locally transmitted cases, 27 were untraceable.
The newly confirmed cases are mainly related to previous cluster outbreaks in the city. Two of the new cases were linked to a large birthday party, one case was linked to an outbreak centered on a clinic and more were recorded in the city’s Tsz Wan Shan neighborhood.
Twenty-four of the new cases were transmitted between family members.
Cases are rising sharply in Hong Kong, which recorded more than 170 cases over the last weekend.
Dr. Chuang Shuk-kwan of the Centre for Health Protection said officials needed a few more days to understand the trend in numbers.
She added that if cases continued to rise, more stringent measures for epidemic control will be enforced.
Over the weekend, Hong Kong’s leader Carrie Lam extended social distancing measures and announced non-essential civil servants will be required to work from home.
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French President Macron "slammed his fist on the table" during tense EU talks on virus recovery fund
From CNN's Pierre Bairin
French President Emmanuel Macron makes a statement as he arrives for an EU summit at the European Council building in Brussels, Belgium, on July 19.
Francisco Seco/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
French President Emanuel Macron “slammed his fist on the table” in anger during crunch overnight talks on the EU coronavirus recovery fund, French officials told CNN.
The officials said there had been a “tough moment last night” as European leaders struggle to reach an agreement on the recovery plan after three days of talks.
The Elysee Palace later claimed that Macron had only “metaphorically” slammed the table, but acknowledged that he had lost his patience during negotiations.
The bloc’s members have so far failed to reach a deal.
At the center of discussions is a proposal put forward by the European Commission in May. That plan would see the Commission raise €750 billion ($857 billion) on financial markets, alongside the regular EU budget for 2021-27.
Under that plan, two-thirds of the recovery funds would be distributed to countries via grants, while the remainder would be offered as loans.
But Austria, Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden – the so-called “frugal” countries - opposed the idea of issuing grants and now want strict conditions attached to them.
France and Germany have worked together to “mobilize their partners for an agreement” French officials said, with Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel doing “everything to bring the most reluctant countries to agree to €400 billion ($450bn) [in subsidies].”
The officials claimed that after the Franco-German intervention the “frugal” countries started to “budge slightly,” and that there was now an avenue open for a possible agreement.
A short plenary session was held at 5:30 a.m. local time in Brussels (11:30 p.m. ET Sunday) and a new proposal will be presented at 4 p.m. in Belgium (10 a.m. ET) on Monday, French officials said.
This post has been updated.
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Xinjiang capital in "wartime" lockdown over spike in cases
From CNN's Nectar Gan
Residents undergo nucleic acid testing in Urumqi, in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China, on July 19.
Shi Yujiang/China News Service/Getty Images
A “wartime” state has been declared in the capital of Xinjiang, home to China’s persecuted Muslim-majority Uyghur ethnic group, as authorities implement strict and sweeping measures to stem a spike in coronavirus cases.
The city of Urumqi reported 17 local infections Sunday, meaning that 47 cases have been identified since last Wednesday. Before that, it had not recorded a single case in nearly five months, according to the Xinjiang health authorities.
Since last week, Urumqi has also recorded 50 asymptomatic cases. In China, these are not considered confirmed cases under government guidelines.
To stop the outbreak escalating, authorities are now implementing the so-called Beijing model.
UK government admits test and trace program does not meet privacy rules
Britain's National Health Service Test and Trace form is displayed at the entrance of a pub in Rochdale, England, on July 4.
Anthony Devlin/Getty Images
The UK government has admitted that it launched its Covid-19 test and trace program without complying with a key aspect of data protection law.
Under British law, officials were required to conduct a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) before launching the program on May 28, but failed to do so.
The impact assessment is a “legal requirement for any type of processing, including certain specified types of processing that are likely to result in a high risk to the rights and freedoms of individuals,” according to the UK’s information commissioner’s office.
The UK Department of Health made the admission in a letter to the privacy campaigning organization Open Rights Group (ORG).
The government also maintains that there is no evidence that the information that has been collected has been used unlawfully.
ORG had threatened to proceed with legal action over the breach.
In the letter, dated July 15, the government conceded that the assessment was required and had not been in place when the test and trace scheme was launched.
“Such a DPIA is currently being finalised, drawing on the extensive data protection compliance work,” the letter says.
A Department of Health spokesperson said: “There is no evidence of data being used unlawfully. NHS Test and Trace is committed to the highest ethical and data governance standards – collecting, using, and retaining data to fight the virus and save lives, while taking full account of all relevant legal obligations.”
“We have rapidly created a large scale test and trace system in response to this unprecedented pandemic. The programme is able to offer a test to anyone who needs one and trace the contacts of those who test positive, to stop the spread of the virus.”
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Why North Korea says it's joining the coronavirus vaccine race, even though it has no cases
Analysis from CNN's Joshua Berlinger
Students wearing face masks disinfect their hands and undergo a temperature check as they arrive for a lecture on preventative measures against coronavirus at the Pyongyang University of Medicine in Pyongyang, North Korea, on April 22.
Kim Won Jin/AFP/Getty Images
North Korea says it is joining the race to develop a Covid-19 vaccine, a global contest that has already drafted in some of the world’s best medical minds and is shaping up to cost billions of dollars.
Just don’t expect it to take the lead anytime soon.
If North Korea’s State Commission of Science and Technology is to be believed, clinical trials for the country’s domestic vaccine candidate are already underway – and a debate is now happening about how to proceed with the third phase, which involves human testing.
To the outside world, the claim could appear dubious.
The race to develop a vaccine for a disease that has infected nearly 14.5 million people and killed more than 605,000 globally is one of the most daunting and pressing technological and scientific challenges the world has faced in recent memory. It will likely cost huge sums of money, and nations are investing heavily to win what’s shaping up to become a competition of scientific superiority and national pride.
Yet North Korea has one of the most dilapidated health care systems on the planet, and for decades it has relied on assistance from the World Health Organization to supply its people with vaccines and immunizations. Then there’s the fact that Pyongyang has not publicly admitted to any infections inside the country.
In a further move to contain the epidemic, face masks have become mandatory in more enclosed spaces in France as of Monday morning.
The measure imposed by the French government will require the use of face masks in shops, banks and shopping malls. They were already compulsory in many other indoor spaces like cinemas, museums and places of worship.
There are exceptions to the law.
Employees who interact with the public are included in the law and will have to wear masks. But other companies are free to impose their own rules on mask wearing, following guidelines from the Labor Ministry.
Enforcement is left to the people running the various establishments, with authorities only providing them with a sign saying that masks are compulsory.
Police can fine people who don’t wear masks when required a sum of €135 ($155).
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10 additional Covid-19 cases linked to US military personnel in South Korea
From CNN's Paula Hancocks and Yoonjung Seo
Six members of US Forces Korea (USFK) and four dependants have tested positive for coronavirus after arriving in South Korea from the US, USFK said in a statement Monday.
This brings the total number of USFK-affiliated individuals with Covid-19 to 98, the military organization confirmed.
Among the fresh spate of cases are five service members and four dependants who arrived at the Osan Air Base on US government chartered flights on July 12, 14 and 15.
Another service member who landed at Incheon International Airport on a commercial flight on July 13 also tested positive for Covid-19.
Six of the 10 individuals tested positive on a mandatory initial test. The remaining four tested negative on their first test, but later developed symptoms and were retested with positive results.
All 10 have been transferred to isolation facilities on either South Kora’s Camp Humphreys or Osan Air Base.
All personnel entering South Korea are tested and quarantined for 14 days, USFK previously said in a tweet.
General Robert Abrams, Commander of USFK, told American Forces Network radio that 74 cases among the total 98 cases were imported.
There has been no domestic transmission within USFK since mid-April, it confirmed.
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India records more than 40,000 new Covid-19 cases in largest 24-hour increase yet
From CNN's Manveena Suri in Delhi and Eric Cheung in Hong Kong
A health worker takes a swab test for the coronavirus of a woman in Mumbai, India, on Saturday, July 18.
Rafiq Maqbool/AP
India has recorded 40,425 new Covid-19 cases in the past 24 hours, the highest daily increase since the outbreak began, the country’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare announced today.
The total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in India has now reached 1,118,043, the third-highest in the world, according to the Indian government.
India reported 681 new deaths today, raising the country’s death toll to 27,497.
Delhi said it has so far tested more than 14 million people countrywide for coronavirus, in an attempt to get a handle on the country’s expanding epidemic.
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UK government secures early access to millions of vaccine doses
From CNN’s Arman Azad in Virginia, Fred Pleigten in Berlin and Vasco Cotovio in Lisbon
AstraZeneca's building in Luton, England on May 18.
Tim Ireland/Xinhua/Getty Images
The British government has secured early access to more than 90 million vaccine doses as well as Covid-19 neutralizing antibody treatments, Business Secretary Alok Sharma announced today.
The announcement follows an existing global licensing agreement signed with AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford to research, develop and manufacture 100 million doses of a Covid-19 vaccine for the UK public.
France-based Pharmaceutical Valneva confirmed the “agreement in principle” with the British government saying it would “provide up to 100 million doses of its SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate.”
Sharma encouraged people to sign up for a newly created NHS website which aims to make it “quicker and easier” for volunteers to join studies and trials.
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US records more than 61,000 new coronavirus cases in a single day
According to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases in the United States, there were 61,487 new cases of the novel coronavirus reported on Sunday.
To date, there are at least 3,773,260 confirmed cases of coronavirus in the US.
There were 415 new fatalities recorded on Sunday, bringing the US death toll to at least 140,534.
The totals include cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other U.S. territories, as well as repatriated cases.
For regular updates, follow CNN’s map which refreshes every 15 mins:
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EU leaders still haven't agreed on coronavirus recovery deal
From CNN's James Frater in Brussels
German Chancellor Angela Merkel (2nd R), President of the European Council Charles Michel (R) and Prime Minister of Denmark Mette Frederiksen (L) and Prime Minister of Portugal Antonio Costa (L) attend EU summit to discuss EU's long-term budget and coronavirus recovery plan in Brussels, Belgium on July 18.
Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
After three days of marathon talks, European leaders have been unable to reach an agreement on a landmark initiative to fund Europe’s recovery from the coronavirus crisis. Leaders will reconvene in Brussels on Monday afternoon.
After all-night discussions, talks stalled early Monday after leaders couldn’t find a way to break through on long list of disagreements including the size of loans and grants required for the EU’s economic recovery plan.
European Council President Charles Michel had proposed that countries would be able to access a recovery package of more than $857 billion (€750 billion) from which $571 billion (€500 billion) would be paid as grants.
Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark and Sweden, the so-called “Frugal Four,” had vehemently opposed the idea of €500 billion in grants over concerns of loading their countries with national debt to fund the spending of other countries.
Countries like Spain and Italy said they couldn’t accept a reduction in the volume of grants.
“For us, we don’t believe in this grants-based system,” said Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, speaking to journalists on Friday. The Netherlands had proposed linking access to grants to an increased governance mechanism to ensure that countries met the requirements for receiving money.
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Trump insists he's 'right' on the virus as more Americans get sick and die
Analysis by CNN's Stephen Collinson
President Donald Trump just offered a telling glimpse into his priorities as the coronavirus lengthens its trail of death and sickness.
Not bothering to hide his indifference and contempt for science, the President made clear on Sunday that it’s more important to him to be ultimately proven right about the pandemic than to reconsider his disastrous approach that is doing little to stop its deadly spread.
Until then, America must endure crammed ICUs in virus-ravaged states, thousands more deaths and the prospect of cities slumping back into economically crippling lockdowns that crush hopes of a return to work and school with normal life as only a memory.
Trump’s passive leadership becomes more neglectful the worse the crisis gets – with more than 140,000 Americans now dead.
Mexico reports almost 300 dead from coronavirus in a single day
From journalist Karol Suarez in Mexico City
Workers from the Crematorio San Isidro prepare a person for cremation who died from the coronavirus on July 17, in Mexico City, Mexico.
Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Mexico’s coronavirus epidemic is continuing to grow, with the country’s death toll now nearing 40,000 people.
The Health Ministry reported 296 people died of the novel coronavirus in the past 24 hours on Sunday. To date, a total of 39,184 people have died of the coronavirus since the pandemic began.
Mexican authorities also announced 5,311 new confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus on Sunday, bringing the country’s total number of infections to 344,224.
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Australian state reports 275 new coronavirus cases, only 28 linked to known outbreaks
From CNN's Eric Cheung in Hong Kong
Medical workers conduct testing for the coronavirus (COVID-19) at a drive-thru testing site in Melbourne, Australia on July 10, 2020.
Recep Sakar/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
The Australian state of Victoria has reported 275 new coronavirus cases in the past day, most of which are still under investigation, State Premier Daniel Andrews announced at a press conference today.
Of the 275 new cases, 28 were linked to known outbreaks, while 247 are still being looked into by Victorian authorities.
Andrews also announced that a woman in her 80s had died due to Covid-19, bringing Victoria’s death toll to 35.
The number of coronavirus-related patients in hospitals in Victoria has risen to 147 with 31 in ICU, Andrews said.
On July 8, Metropolitan Melbourne and Mitchell Shire, a regional area of Victoria, returned to a Stage Three lockdown for six weeks amid a rise in cases.
People are only allowed to leave their homes to buy food, go to work, receive or give care and exercise, according to the Victoria government.
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Japan records 510 new Covid-19 cases, including Osaka's highest number since April 9
From Junko Ogura in Tokyo and Eric Cheung in Hong Kong
Workers disinfect inside of Osaka City Juso Hospital ahead of reopening of outpatient care in Osaka, Japan, on July 9.
The Yomiuri Shimbun/AP
Osaka, the second largest prefecture in Japan, announced its highest daily total of new coronavirus cases yet, half of which it said were still untraceable.
Japan recorded 510 coronavirus cases on Sunday, the Health Ministry said in a statement released today. Osaka confirmed 89 infections on Sunday, including 59 untraceable cases.
This is the highest daily figure reported in the prefecture since April 9.
Another 188 cases were reported in Tokyo on Sunday, the first time in four days that the number fell below 200, the statement read.
No new deaths were reported on Sunday.
The total number of confirmed cases across Japan is now 25,808, which includes 25,096 land cases and 712 cases from the Diamond Princess cruise ship.
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Fewer than a quarter of Japanese in favor of holding Tokyo Olympics next year, survey finds
From Eric Cheung in Hong Kong and Yoko Wakatsuki in Tokyo
Ls than a quarter of Japanese are looking forward to the Tokyo Olympics next year amid the Covid-19 outbreak, according to a survey published by Kyodo News on Sunday.
The survey showed only 23.9% of Japanese residents supported holding the Summer Games beginning on July 23 next year as scheduled.
Meanwhile, 36.4% of respondents believed the games should be further postponed, while another 33.7% said the event should be canceled amid the pandemic.
Respondents said the main reasons were because the virus was unlikely to be contained anytime soon, and that the Japanese government should prioritize its fight against Covid-19 in the country.
Organizers have rescheduled the 2020 Tokyo Olympics to start July 23 next year due to the Covid-19 outbreak.
Kyodo said the survey sampled 1,041 respondents, who were chosen from randomly selected eligible voters’ households and mobile numbers.
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Delta Airlines to begin asking passengers unable to wear face mask to consider staying home
From CNN's Pete Muntean
Dta is strengthening its policy on face masks starting Monday – telling passengers who can’t wear a mask because of a health condition to consider staying home.
The airline said if not, the passenger must complete a health screening before being allowed to fly.
The consultation will be conducted in private, over the phone. Depending on the outcome of that screening, Delta will decide whether the passenger will be allowed to travel without wearing a mask.
Delta will partner with STAT-MD for the consultations.
STAT-MD “provides inflight emergency consultation as well as fitness to fly ground screening,” according to its website.
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87 doctors sign letter to Arizona governor urging him not to reopen schools until at least October
From CNN's Miguel Marquez in Phoenix
Ehty-seven doctors have signed a letter to Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey urging him not to reopen schools until at least October.
Ducey has pushed the traditional August 1 school opening to an “aspirational” date of August 17. He has indicated that he’ll make a decision on school reopenings next week.
When the governor shut schools down and issued a Safer at Home order on March 30 there were about 1,000 positive cases a week. Last week Arizona logged about 26,000 cases.
Currently, the seven-day average positivity rate is the highest in the country at 24.4%.
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Golf legend Jack Nicklaus reveals he and his wife tested positive for Covid-19 in March
From CNN's Homero De la Fuente
Gf legend Jack Nicklaus announced Sunday he and his wife, Barbara, tested positive for Covid-19 in March. The 80-year-old, who is hosting this week’s Memorial Tournament in Dublin, Ohio, told Jim Nantz on Sunday’s CBS telecast he dealt with a sore throat and a cough and that his wife was asymptomatic.
Nicklaus said he and his wife tested positive on March 13 and stayed at their home in North Palm Beach, Florida, until they recovered April 20. Nicklaus tested positive for the virus four times and his wife tested positive three times, but both have since tested negative for the virus and positive for the antibodies.
This week’s Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club, where Nicklaus designed the course, has been played without spectators in attendance.
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Los Angeles reports highest number of hospitalizations in a day
From CNN's Paul Vercammen and Jennifer Selva
Health officials in Los Angeles have reported the highest number of hospitalizations in a day with 2,216 people hospitalized, up from the previous record of 2,193, set July 15.
Eleven people died and 2,848 new cases were reported Sunday, according to a Los Angeles Department of Public Health news release. This is a significant drop in both of those numbers from the past week.
More than half of all new cases reported in Los Angeles were in people younger than 41, the release said.
Across the state, the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) reports that both hospitalizations and the positivity rate continue to trend upward in the 14-day average.
The seven-day average number of new cases has surpassed 9,000, with 9,127 per day.
The 32 counties on the state’s “watch list” that have shut down most indoor activities are home to 80% of California’s population, according to CPDH.
California has 384,692 confirmed cases and 7,685 deaths due to coronavirus.
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Brazil's President greets crowd of supporters despite being positive for Covid-19
From CNN’s Taylor Barnes and journalists Rodrigo Pedroso and Juliana Arini
Jair Bolsonaro, the far-right President of Brazil and his country’s highest-profile Covid-19 patient, took a walk on the grounds of his presidential palace Sunday afternoon and greeted a crowd of supporters, video broadcast live on his Facebook page showed.
While Bolsonaro was wearing a mask, he was closely flanked by a number of aides who did not appear to consistently maintain a significant social distance from him. He repeatedly lowered his mask while talking, including when aides were nearby.
Supporters were separated from the President by a small water canal, but two people crossed over to Bolsonaro’s side. One man helped a second man, who appeared to have a physical disability, walk close to the President for a greeting.
Bolsonaro also raised what appeared to be a small box of medicine. During the pandemic, Bolsonaro has repeatedly endorsed the use of the drug hydroxychloroquine, even though the Brazilian Society of Infectious Disease issued a report Friday calling for medical professionals to stop using the drug for Covid-19 patients. Bolsonaro has said he has taken it since testing positive for the novel coronavirus.
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Brazil reports over 20,000 new coronavirus cases
From journalists Rodrigo Pedroso in São Paulo and Juliana Arini in Cuiabá and CNN’s Taylor Barnes in Atlanta
Brazil’s Health Ministry reported 23,529 new cases of the novel coronavirus Sunday, bringing the country’s total to 2,098,389.
The Health Ministry also reported 716 new Covid-19 deaths, raising the country’s death toll to 79,488.
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Older children can transmit Covid-19 just as much as adults, research finds
From CNN's Naomi Thomas
Researchers in South Korea have found that children between the ages of 10 and 19 can transmit Covid-19 within a household just as much as adults, according to new research published in the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.
Researchers also found that children ages 9 and younger transmitted the virus within their household at rates that were a lot lower.
Researchers from the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked at reports of 59,073 contacts of 5,706 coronavirus patients.
Overall, the researchers detected Covid-19 in 11.8% of 10,592 household contacts. For 48,481 non-household contacts, 1.9% tested positive for Covid-19.
When the initial patient in a household was younger than 10, the researchers found that 5.3% of household contacts tested positive for Covid-19. When the initial patient was between the ages of 10 and 19, 18.6% of contacts tested positive.
Researchers also found that the highest Covid-19 rate for household contacts of school-age children and the lowest rates for children younger than 9 was the middle of school closures.
“Although the detection rate for contacts of preschool-aged children was lower, young children may show higher attack rates when the school closure ends, contributing to community transmission of Covid-19,” the study said.
Jha said that, ultimately, what you want to do is get the virus suppressed in the community so schools can reopen safely.
“You might have a different threshold for getting kids kindergarten through 5, let’s say, back in at an earlier level,” Jha said. “And you may need to wait a little bit longer until the virus levels really are down before you open up high schools.”
There are some limitations to the study, the authors said, including that the number of cases may have been underestimated and that they were unable to assess the true difference in transmissibility between household and non-household contacts because of the different testing thresholds.