August 20 coronavirus news | CNN

August 20 coronavirus news

COLUMBIA, SC - AUGUST 10: College students walk to dinner at the University of South Carolina on August 10, 2020 in Columbia, South Carolina. Students began moving back to campus housing August 9 with classes to start August 20. (Photo by Sean Rayford/Getty Images)
At least 17 states report coronavirus cases at colleges
02:41 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • The number of Covid-19 cases worldwide has surpassed 22 million, according to Johns Hopkins University.
  • President Trump’s Covid-19 testing czar said cases are declining across the United States — but that could “turn around very quickly if we’re not careful.”
  • France and Spain both reported new daily highest increases in coronavirus cases since coming out of lockdown.

Our live coverage of the coronavirus outbreak has moved here.

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It's official -- citizens in China's capital don't have to wear masks outside anymore

Delivery drivers wearing face masks to protect against the coronavirus wait to cross an intersection in Beijing, on Wednesday, August 19.

Beijing residents going out in public won’t have to wear a mask from Thursday, according to new government guidelines, as long as they aren’t in close contact with other people.

The Beijing Center for Disease Prevention and Control released the new rules on Thursday, the latest sign that China’s coronavirus epidemic is under control.

China reported just 22 new Covid-19 cases in the past 24 hours on Friday, with no new infections reported in Beijing.

Under the new rules, residents in the Chinese capital only have to wear masks if they are going to have “close contact with other people.”

Children should be accompanied by adults and encouraged to use proper hygiene, while spitting is not allowed.

Coronavirus deaths should begin to drop soon, CDC director says

EMS medics from the Houston Fire Department try to save the life of a nursing home resident in cardiac arrest on August 12, 2020 in Houston, Texas. Heart failure, especially in seniors, is a common result of Covid-19 and medics treat most such cases as if they are Covid-positive.

Coronavirus deaths should start dropping around parts of the United States by next week, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Robert Redfield said Thursday, because people are doing more to control the virus by social distancing, staying out of crowds, wearing masks and washing hands.

But Redfield said not every region is improving. “There’s a warning sign … Middle America right now is getting stuck,” he said. “We don’t need to have a third wave in the heartland.”

States have to stick with the interventions meant to slow the spread of the virus, Redfield said. 

According to Johns Hopkins University, more than 5.5 million people in the US have been diagnosed with coronavirus and more than 174,000 have died, although Redfield has said testing has likely caught only about one in 10 cases.

Up to 60 million Americans may have been infected with coronavirus, CDC director says

Dr. Robert Redfield, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), testifies during a US Senate Appropriations subcommittee hearing on July 2, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.

As many as 60 million Americans could have been infected with coronavirus, Director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Dr. Robert Redfield told the Journal of the American Medical Association Thursday.

The CDC released a report in June, published in JAMA, showing an infection rate in the United States of about 10%. Redfield said at the time he believed testing had missed 90% or more of cases. 

Redfield said Thursday an infection rate of between 10-20% translates into as many as 60 million people who may have already been infected, but there’s not really any good data on the numbers yet.

“We’re in the process of obviously following up with the report that we did in JAMA that kind of let us understand that maybe for the 2 million cases we diagnosed, we had an estimated 20 million people infected,” Redfield said in the video interview.

“We’ve now expanded that throughout the country, so very large surveillance work in progress,” he said.

Redfield said he didn’t want to speculate on the number of Americans who may actually be infected with the virus, but he did offer an estimate.

“I really want to be data driven but there is enormous geographic variation. I can tell you that we have some areas that we’re looking at less than 1% and we have other areas we’re looking at 20%,” he said.

Confirmed cases: As of Thursday night, at least 5,573,501 coronavirus cases have been recorded across the US, according to Johns Hopkins University. The total includes at least 174,248 deaths.

New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern wants to eliminate coronavirus. Is she setting herself up to fail?

In mid-March, as the coronavirus pandemic began to take hold in Europe and the United States, New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern presented her country with a choice.

They could let coronavirus creep into the community and brace for an onslaught, as other countries around the world had done. Or they could “go hard” by closing the border – even if that initially hurt the island nation’s hugely tourism-dependant economy.

Ardern opted for the second path. When New Zealand had only reported 28 cases, Ardern closed borders to foreigners, and when there were 102 cases, she announced a nationwide lockdown.

In effect, Ardern offered New Zealanders a deal: put up with some of the toughest rules in the world, and in return, be kept safe – first from the deadly coronavirus, and later, from potential economic devastation.

For a while, it seemed that deal had paid off. New Zealand spent seven weeks under lockdown, five of them under strict rules that meant even takeaway food and traveling outside of their immediate neighborhood were off limits. But by June, life was basically back to normal – and in August, New Zealand marked 100 days without any community transmission.

Then, last week, that changed.

Read the full analysis:

WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND - AUGUST 17: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks to media during a press conference at Parliament on August 17, 2020 in Wellington, New Zealand. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced that New Zealand's General Election will be delayed until 17 October due to disruptions caused by COVID-19 restrictions. Restrictions are in place across the country following the discovery of a coronavirus cluster in Auckland. Auckland is at Level 3 lockdown restrictions, while the rest of New Zealand is operating under Level 2. The restrictions will be in place until 11:59pm Wednesday 26 August, with Cabinet to review those settings on 21 August. COVID-19 restrictions were reintroduced across New Zealand on Wednesday 12 August in response to the discovery of a COVID-19 cluster in Auckland. (Photo by Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images)

Related article New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern wants to eliminate coronavirus. Is she setting herself up to fail?

Mexico reports more than 6,700 coronavirus cases

A paramedic prepares to move a patient suspected of having the novel coronavirus, at the Covid-19 triage area of the General Hospital in Mexico City on August, 20. 

Mexico reported at least 6,775 new cases of Covid-19 on Wednesday, bringing the total to approximately 543,806. 

The health ministry also reported at least 625 new deaths yesterday, bringing the total number of fatalities in the country to approximately 59,106 since the beginning of the pandemic. 

Some context: Mexico has the third-highest number of deaths from coronavirus in the world following only the US and Brazil, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Mexico is ranked third in Latin America by Johns Hopkins in terms of its number of total coronavirus cases, behind only Brazil and Peru. 

Utah governor says opposition to face masks in schools "seems to be a little bit irrational"

Gov. Gary Herbert

Utah Gov. Gary Herbert said people who were opposed to wearing masks in schools were “a little bit irrational.”

Herbert, who said his own grandchildren would be wearing masks while at school, said the state has tried to create an environment that is safe for students to learn, and to also keep teachers who might be more susceptible to health issues safe.

Herbert said at a news conference Thursday that he understands the safety concerns and that people want zero risk when going back to school, but he said “we certainly can minimize the risk and mitigate the chances of you catching the coronavirus at school” and one of the best ways to do that is to wear a mask, he added. 

While Utah does not have a statewide mask mandate, a state public health order was issued on July 17 requiring all students, teachers, staff and visitors on school property to wear a mask.

If K-12 students, teachers, staff and visitors are not wearing a mask, they can now be charged with a class B misdemeanor that is punishable by a sentence of up to six months in jail and a fine of $1,000, according to the Utah Judiciary. The class B misdemeanor for violating the masks at school order would be the same as violating any mandate. Enforcing the mask mandate in schools is left up to local jurisdictions, Herbert said.

“The mask mandate is not intended to penalize students, parents or teachers — it’s intended to create a universal standard of a safe, common sense practice. All mandates make a Class B misdemeanor the default penalty, but any enforcement of this would be on the local level,” Anna Lehnardt, director of communications for Herbert, said in a statement to CNN.

Herbert also announced he issued a new state of emergency order that will take effect tonight upon the expiration of the state’s current one.

Superspreading, especially in rural areas, is driving the Covid-19 pandemic, Georgia study shows

Superspreading events – when one or a few infected people cause a cascade of transmissions – may be especially important in driving the coronavirus pandemic in rural areas, researchers reported Thursday.

Their study of five counties in Georgia also showed shelter-in-place orders worked fast to bring cases down – usually within about two weeks. And younger people were more likely to spread the virus than people over age 60.

Biostatistician Max Lau of Emory University and colleagues analyzed state health department data in more than 9,500 coronavirus cases in four metro Atlanta area counties plus Dougherty County in rural southwestern Georgia between March and May.

Health officials across the country have reported superspreading events related to birthday parties, funerals, conferences and other large gatherings.

People under 60 were almost three times as likely to spread the virus as people over 60, and tended to be responsible for superspreading, they said.

They also used location data from Facebook users to estimate how much people moved around and applied mathematical models to figure out how the reported cases fit in with behavior. 

But the data is likely skewed, the Emory team said. Early on in the pandemic, especially, older people were more likely to be reported with infections because they were more likely to have serious symptoms.

“Due to the lack of widely available testing, the underreporting rate was almost surely high during earlier phases of the pandemic,” they added.

NIH director presses scientists to move quickly on Covid-19 antibody therapies: "Lives are at stake"

A medical worker at Magen David Adoms Blood Services collects blood samples donated by recovered novel coronavirus patients for plasma extraction, contributing to Israel's new experimental antibodies treatment, in Sheba Medical Center Hospital near Tel Aviv, on June 1.

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, encouraged scientists to work on Covid-19 antibody treatments with the same urgency he has already seen the community bring to research during this pandemic. 

Collins’ focus in an online discussion Thursday was on the latest science behind monoclonal antibody treatments and convalescent plasma. Both are under investigation in a variety of clinical trials to treat and possible prevent Covid-19.

With monoclonal antibody treatments, scientists clone antibodies that they think will be most effective at fighting a disease and put that into a treatment.

Eli Lilly Inc., whose treatment uses one potent antibody, is currently putting its antibody treatment through a few late-stage human trials. Regeneron Inc. uses two antibodies in the treatment it’s testing in late-stage trials. Several other companies’ antibody treatments are in earlier stages of development.

In the discussion Thursday, scientists presented evidence that they think these treatments will not cause antibody-dependent enhancement – where a treatment makes a disease worse. Collins said the government will be monitoring the trials closely to see if the problem develops or if there is any evidence of viral resistance to the treatments. 

A cocktail approach reduces the risk of a treatment becoming ineffective if the virus were to mutate, studies have shown. Some companies have been reluctant to use more than one antibody in a treatment because it may slow the manufacturing process. 

Collins said if the treatment was well-designed, that may not be as much of an issue.

Dr. Janet Woodcock, therapeutic lead for Operation Warp Speed, said the government is committed to making sure these therapies work in head-to-head clinical trials.

“We hope to be testing the efficacy of a number of neutralizing monoclonal antibodies and possibly other types, so perhaps polyclonal antibodies in parallel, in randomized clinical trials,” Woodcock said. “This provides, I think, a tremendous opportunity.”

Inmates receiving "inadequate" Covid-19 care, former corrections medical officer says 

Prisons are hotspot for the spread of coronavirus, but inmates are not getting the medical attention they need, Dr. Homer Venters, former chief medical officer of New York City Correctional Health Services, said Thursday. 

Venters said his investigation of Covid-19 responses in 40 jurisdictions around the country, including federal prisons, local jails and immigration detention centers, showed “systematic racism.”

Agencies such as the US Department of Health and Human Services or the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which would normally provide quality assurance in care facilities, “are all essentially AWOL when it comes to the health and health care of people who are detained and that’s not an accident. It is really one of the most poignant ongoing representations of systematic racism in our nation,” he said.

Research has shown that people of color are disproportionately represented in the US prison system.

Covid-19 cases spike in Ohio's rural areas, governor says

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine said there has been a significant decrease in coronavirus cases in urban areas, but the state has experienced an increase in cases in rural areas.

“We’ve seen in the urban areas that a bigger percentage of people will wear a mask for a longer period of time, and we’ve seen those numbers come down. Unfortunately, we’re seeing the numbers go up in our rural areas,” DeWine said at a news conference Thursday.

The latest numbers: The governor says 22 more people died and 86 were hospitalized in the last 24 hours. That brings the current total of confirmed cases to at least 106,063 and at least 3,650 people have died in the state so far. Mercer County has the highest number of cases in Ohio with at least 718, two times what the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers high incidence.

DeWine announced that he is issuing an order for all 765 assisted living facilities in the state. The order requires participation in a rapid saliva test for all residents and staff at no cost. The self-performed test will offer results within 48 hours of lab receipt. 

“The value in this initiative is tied to four things, the accuracy and sensitivity of the test, how quickly you get test results, consistent to repeat testing and high-risk settings and modifying behavior based on the results data,” he said. “Our focus has been and remains, protecting Ohio and navigating through this pandemic. To achieve this, we must have 100% participation of all assisted living facilities in Ohio,” he added.

Connecticut on track to reopen schools in 2 weeks, governor says

Connecticut is currently trending at a 0.8% positivity rate for Covid-19 and is well within the self-imposed metrics to reopen schools in two weeks, Gov. Ned Lamont said Thursday.

In a news conference, Lamont said the seven-day average per 100,000 people is the key metric he is using to evaluate safely reopening schools. As of Thursday, that statewide percentage stood at 2.1 new cases per 100,000 population.

The “breakpoint” for positivity would be 10 new cases per 100,000, Lamont said, at which point the state would have to reconsider reopening.

Part of the state’s phase three plan for reopening includes schools and colleges, but Lamont said there are “no plans” for implementing the other portion, which includes increasing capacity in restaurants and bars.

Connecticut will extend its eviction freeze until Oct. 1 and will increase rent relief for landlords to negotiate with tenants, Lamont said.

More than 3.5 million Covid-19 cases reported in Brazil

Brazil’s health ministry on Thursday reported at least 45,323 new Covid-19 cases in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to approximately 3,501,975.

The ministry also reported at least 1,204 new Covid-19 fatalities, raising the country’s death toll to approximately 112,304.

White House formally declares teachers are essential workers

A teacher disinfects desks in a classroom at a public charter school in Provo, Utah, on Thursday, Aug. 20.

The White House has formally declared that teachers are essential workers as part of its effort to encourage schools around the country to reopen for in-person learning.

The move is just the latest in the administration’s campaign to pressure districts into bringing back students this fall. The essential worker designation provides guidance for educators that is only voluntary; it calls on teachers to return to the classroom even after potential exposure. 

Some context: Vice President Mike Pence announced the decision to governors on a call earlier this week, a person familiar with the decision said.

Under Department of Homeland Security guidance issued this week, teachers are now considered “critical infrastructure workers,” and are subject to the same kinds of advisories as other workers who have born that label – such as doctors and law enforcement officers.

The guidance for essential workers states that they can continue to work even after exposure to a confirmed case of Covid-19, provided they remain asymptomatic. Schools’ contribution to community spread has already been a top concern for districts making the decision to open or close, so pushing teachers to continue working after potential exposure could prove controversial.

White House officials made the move in part to convey how seriously its believes the schools question should be taken, the person said, but also to try to stabilize the teaching workforce and streamline guidance at a time of confusion about the future of classrooms.

East Carolina University pauses football activities after 10 positive Covid-19 tests

East Carolina University has paused football activities indefinitely after evaluating results from the latest rounds of Covid-19 testing, according to news release citing director of athletics Jon Gilbert.

Separately, a news alert on the university’s website Thursday said the school has identified a cluster of Covid-19 cases within the university’s football team and Clement Hall, which is a university residence hall. There are currently seven positives related to Clement Hall and 10 positives associated with the football team, the alert stated.

Health and education expert raises equity concerns about Covid-19 learning pods

Annette Anderson, deputy director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Safe and Healthy Schools

“Learning pods” may help families pool resources while keeping kids safe, but not every family has the means to take part, one expert said Thursday. 

Some parents are even sharing resources to hire tutors, but it’s something not many families can do, Anderson told a briefing sponsored by Johns Hopkins.

She urged parents to carefully consider plans for their children this upcoming school year.

“They need to really think about how they’re going to balance the academic needs but also some of the social emotional learning needs to students, so that they can make sure that it’s fair and balanced for everyone,” Anderson said.

Anderson also noted concerns that some people may have trouble getting the supplies and equipment their kids need for online learning.

“Despite the redoubling of efforts in districts to try to get devices to children, there’s still a backlog in the number of devices and hotspots that are available to some of our students, so we need to make sure that we are being more consistent and bringing everyone up to the same level if we’re going to deliver online content this fall,” she said. 

2 New York Mets' games postponed due to positive Covid-19 tests

The New York Mets and Miami Marlins face off at Citi Field on August 9 in New York.

Major League Baseball has announced that because of two positive tests for Covid-19 in the New York Mets’ organization, Thursday’s Mets game against the Miami Marlins at Marlins Park has been postponed.

Additionally, Friday’s scheduled game between the Mets and New York Yankees at Citi Field has been postponed “out of an abundance of caution.”

Here is the statement from the MLB:

Florida county announces that about 300 students need to quarantine

Just over one week into the school year, more than 300 students and teachers have had to quarantine in Martin County, Florida, over concerns of possible coronavirus cases.

Laurie Gaylord, superintendent of the county school district, told CNN’s Jake Tapper that schools decided to open on time following the emergency order from the state education commissioner to reopen all brick-and-mortar schools.

Gaylord said “it’s a possibility” that she would’ve kept school closed to in-person learning if there wasn’t an emergency order. There is a digital option for students, and Gaylord said they’ve shipped out at least 12,000 laptops. 

She said it’s important for kids to be back in school, citing not just teacher-student interaction but mental and physical wellness for students. 

Gaylord said there are safety guidelines like social distancing, masks, outdoor lunches, one-way hallways and more. 

Watch:

New York governor extends moratorium on Covid-19-related commercial evictions

Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during a press conference on August 20.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo signed an executive order Thursday extending the moratorium on Covid-19-related commercial evictions and foreclosures until Sept. 20.

Essentially the extension “gives commercial tenants and mortgagors additional time to get back on their feet and catch up on rent or renegotiate their leasing terms to avoid eviction proceedings and foreclosures moving forward,” a release from Cuomo’s office said.

Mississippi governor issues limits on college football stadiums and game day events

Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves has issued social distancing measures for college and university outdoor stadiums and game day events during the Covid-19 pandemic. 

According to the order, everyone 6 years old and up must wear a mask. Everyone must practice social distancing with people not in their household, and capacity is limited to 25%. No pregame tailgating or rallies outside the stadium are permitted, concession stands are open for grab-n-go food and drink, and contactless and touchless transactions when possible. Elevators occupancy is limited to no more than five people at a time.

The governor said Southern Mississippi has a game in two weeks and that the new rules are meant to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

The new order is in effect until Aug. 31 at 8 a.m., according to a press release.

Mississippi’s health department has reported 75,449 positive cases of coronavirus and 2,190 deaths. 

To note: The numbers above were released by the Mississippi Department of Health and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

California reports 5th straight day of new Covid-19 cases below 14-day average

Healthcare workers facilitate tests at a drive-in coronavirus testing center on August 11 in Los Angeles, California.

California reported 5,920 new cases of coronavirus Thursday, marking a fifth straight day of confirmed infections below the state’s rolling 14-day average, according to data from the state’s health department.

The health department also reported 163 new deaths for a cumulative total of 11,686. Yesterday, California marked its fifth highest number of deaths reported in single-day at 181.

Hospitalization and intensive care unit rates are also slightly down. The number of positive hospital patients in the state is now 4,890 and the number of ICU positive patients is 1,557.

California’s rolling 14-day average of new cases is 8,198. The seven-day positivity rate and two-week positivity rate both stand at 6.6%.

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A person with Covid-19 may have exposed others at a bar during Sturgis motorcycle rally
A 3-year-old whose mom died of Covid-19 still asks her dad about when ‘mommy was coming home’
CNN Poll: Most Americans embarrassed by US response to coronavirus
Lavender sales are surging during the coronavirus pandemic
Japan’s coronavirus fatigue is fueling defiance in Tokyo, even as the case count rises