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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.
Mark Schiefelbein/AP
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.
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Coronavirus deaths should begin to drop soon, CDC director says
From CNN Health’s Maggie Fox
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.
John Moore/Getty Images
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.
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Up to 60 million Americans may have been infected with coronavirus, CDC director says
From CNN Health’s Shelby Lin Erdman
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.
Saul Loeb-Pool/Getty Images
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.
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New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern wants to eliminate coronavirus. Is she setting herself up to fail?
Analysis from CNN's Julia Hollingsworth
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.
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.
Alfredo Estrella/AFP/Getty Images
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.
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Utah governor says opposition to face masks in schools "seems to be a little bit irrational"
From CNN’s Jennifer Henderson
Gov. Gary Herbert
Utah PBS
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.
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Superspreading, especially in rural areas, is driving the Covid-19 pandemic, Georgia study shows
From CNN's Maggie Fox
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.
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NIH director presses scientists to move quickly on Covid-19 antibody therapies: "Lives are at stake"
From CNN's Jen Christensen
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.
Gil Cohen-Magen/AFP/Getty Images/FILE
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.”
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Inmates receiving "inadequate" Covid-19 care, former corrections medical officer says
From CNN’s Lauren Mascarenhas
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.
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Covid-19 cases spike in Ohio's rural areas, governor says
From CNN’s Nakia McNabb
The Ohio Channel
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.
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Connecticut on track to reopen schools in 2 weeks, governor says
From CNN’s Alec Snyder
CT-N
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.
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More than 3.5 million Covid-19 cases reported in Brazil
From Márcia Reverdosa and Taylor Barnes
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.
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White House formally declares teachers are essential workers
From CNN's Sarah Westwood
A teacher disinfects desks in a classroom at a public charter school in Provo, Utah, on Thursday, Aug. 20.
George Frey/Bloomberg/Getty Images
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.
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East Carolina University pauses football activities after 10 positive Covid-19 tests
From CNN's Jill Martin
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.
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Health and education expert raises equity concerns about Covid-19 learning pods
From CNN's Lauren Mascarenhas
Annette Anderson, deputy director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Safe and Healthy Schools
Johns Hopkins
“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.
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2 New York Mets' games postponed due to positive Covid-19 tests
From CNN's Jill Martin
The New York Mets and Miami Marlins face off at Citi Field on August 9 in New York.
Mike Stobe/Getty Images
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:
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Florida county announces that about 300 students need to quarantine
From CNN's Adrienne Vogt
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:
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New York governor extends moratorium on Covid-19-related commercial evictions
From CNN's Kristina Sgueglia
Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during a press conference on August 20.
Pool
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.
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Mississippi governor issues limits on college football stadiums and game day events
From CNN’s Janine Mack
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.
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California reports 5th straight day of new Covid-19 cases below 14-day average
From CNN's Alexandra Meeks
Healthcare workers facilitate tests at a drive-in coronavirus testing center on August 11 in Los Angeles, California.
Mario Tama/Getty Images
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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North Carolina State University moves all undergrad classes online due to Covid-19 clusters
From CNN's Melissa Alonso
North Carolina State University students walk through campus on August 18 in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Robert Willett/The News & Observer/AP
North Carolina State University will move all undergraduate classes online starting Monday because of Covid-19 clusters from large parties, according to an announcement on the university’s website.
University officials have received “reports of large parties in off-campus apartments,” and identified “three Covid-19 clusters in off-campus and greek village houses” in the last two days alone, said the announcement.
The clusters “can be traced to parties and behavior outside of our community standards and the governor’s mandates,” the announcement said.
“The majority of NC State’s course hours are already online, but the remaining in-person and hybrid classes will move to online-only instruction for the remainder of the fall semester,” the school added.
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Philadelphia will allow indoor dining to resume next month
From CNN’s Rebekah Riess
Philadelphia will permit indoor dining to resume Sept. 8, under specific restrictions that are “largely consistent with indoor dining restrictions statewide,” Philadelphia Health Commissioner Dr. Thomas Farley announced today.
As part of the City’s new indoor dining restrictions, restaurants cannot be filled to more than 25% capacity and no more than four diners are allowed per table. There will be no bar service and alcohol can only be served with a meal. Last call for all indoor dining orders will be at 11 p.m. local time, as establishments will be required to be closed for service by midnight, among other things.
The Department of Public Health also announced that bowling alleys, arcades and other indoor games will be allowed to resume effective immediately.
Indoor theaters and movie theaters will be allowed to reopen on Sept. 8, with capacities not to exceed 50% and a maximum of 25 people allowed.
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People traveling from Portugal to the UK no longer have to quarantine
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite and Lauren Kent
The UK has added Portugal to the list of “travel corridor” countries — meaning people arriving no longer have to quarantine for 14 days, said UK transport secretary Grant Shapps in a series of Thursday tweets.
Meanwhile, people coming from Croatia, Austria and Trinidad & Tobago will now be required to quarantine for 14 days.
“Data also shows we can now add Portugal to those countries INCLUDED in Travel Corridors. As with all air bridge countries, please be aware that things can change quickly. Only travel if you are content to unexpectedly 14-day quarantine if required (I speak from experience!),” he added.
The new restrictions will go into effect for people arriving after 4 a.m. local on Saturday.
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At least 15 states reporting Covid cases at colleges and universities
From CNN's Elizabeth Stuart and Annie Grayer
Medical personnel work at the on-campus coronavirus testing lab at Boston University on July 23 in Boston.
Charles Krupa/AP
As students return to campuses, at least 15 states are reporting positive cases of Covid-19 at colleges and universities.
Remember: This list represents cases that CNN has reported so far. There could be many other universities and colleges with cases.
Here’s where cases have been reported:
Colorado: Colorado College
Connecticut: University of Connecticut
Georgia: University of Georgia
Indiana: University of Notre Dame
Iowa: Iowa State University
Kansas: 5 clusters at unnamed colleges
Kentucky: University of Kentucky and Western Kentucky University
Massachusetts: Boston University and Emerson College
Mississippi Northeast Mississippi Community College and University of Mississippi
North Carolina: East Carolina University, North Carolina State University and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Oklahoma: Oklahoma State University and University of Oklahoma
Pennsylvania: Temple University
Tennessee: University of Tennessee
Virginia: Virginia Tech
West Virginia: West Virginia State University
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How New York City is preparing to reopen schools in September
From CNN's Elizabeth Hartfield
Desks are spaced apart at an elementary school in Brooklyn, New York, on August 19.
Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg/Getty Images
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Thursday that the city is releasing a back-to-school pledge — a detailed list of everything that’s being done to get schools prepared to reopen safely next month.
Preparations include…
Disinfecting schools every day and night, including using electrostatic cleaning technology, which every school building will be equipped with
Providing face coverings to kids who do not have one
Making sure every building will have at least one certified nurse on site
Education Chancellor Richard Carranza, who joined de Blasio on Thursday, added that PPE deliveries are happening “every day” to schools across the city.
“We are going to make sure these schools are safe and ready, and if we don’t think they’re safe and ready, they won’t open,” de Blasio said.
De Blasio stressed that the reopening is moving ahead as scheduled. NYC schools are scheduled to reopen on Sept. 10, although various groups have called for that opening to be delayed.
New York City’s Covid-19 indicators remain below all the thresholds, and the city again reported a positivity rate below 1% on Thursday.
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Brazilian Congress makes masks mandatory, despite president's veto
From Fernanda Wenzel in Porto Alegre and Rodrigo Pedroso in Sao Paulo
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro speaks with the press in Brasília on May 22.
Andressa Anholete/Getty Images
The Brazilian Congress has decided that the use of masks is mandatory in closed places like commercial establishments, many workplaces, religious temples and schools. In a joint session of both houses — Senate and Deputies Chamber — the legislature overturned President Jair Bolsonaro’s veto on such requirements.
In votes on Wednesday, senators and deputies also upheld the right of mayors and governors to fine those who disobeyed the requirement.
The Congress also overturned Bolsonaro’s vetoes of a law that sets out the federal government’s duties to protect indigenous people during the pandemic. The legislators upheld aspects of the law assuring universal access to drinkable water, emergency access to beds in hospitals, the acquisition of ventilators and the delivery of free food to indigenous people and communities of slaves’ descendants.
On her Twitter account, Joenia Wapichana — the first indigenous woman to occupy a federal deputy seat in Brazil — celebrated the Congress’ action.
“With the Federal Law number 14.021 restored, the Government of Jair Bolsonaro is OBLIGED, by law and by the decision of the STF [Federal Supreme Court], to give due urgent and emergency attention to prevent a new genocide in indigenous peoples, due to the pandemic”.
Wapichana was referring to the Supreme Court’s decision which required the federal government to implement safety measures to contain the spread of the coronavirus.
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Scotland’s R-number "could be above one," official says. Here's why that matters.
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite in London
First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon visits a school on August 10 in West Calder, Scotland.
Fraser Bremner/Pool/Getty Images
Scotland First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said Thursday that the R-number — or reproduction number — in the nation “could currently be above one.”
A reproduction rate of one means each person with coronavirus will infect an average of one other person, so above one is the level at which each coronavirus patient infects more than one other person.
In the last 24 hours an additional 77 coronavirus cases have been confirmed with the total number of cases totaling at least 19,534.
The death toll in Scotland now stands at 2,492 and no new coronavirus deaths have been reported in the last 24 hours, Sturgeon added.
“The figures we have been reporting in recent weeks show that incidence and prevalence of the virus continue to be at low levels in Scotland as a whole. However, the range for our R-number has recently increased and our most recent estimate suggests that it could currently be above one,” Sturgeon said.
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American initial jobless claims above 1 million again
Economists were optimistic that the US jobs market would be on a steady trajectory toward recovery. But last week’s claims returned above 1 million after the previous week’s report was the first below 1 million since March, the Department of Labor reported Thursday
Continued jobless claims, counting people who have filed claims for at least two weeks in a row, remain very high at 14.8 million.
Some context: After months of shocking economic data, these eyewatering big numbers might not seem as shocking anymore as they really are. But the road to recovery remains long and arduous. The Federal Reserve said in its July meeting minutes Wednesday that any rebound of the jobs market depends on a reopening and businesses, which in turn depends on the path of the virus and what we do to contain it.
Watch:
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American Airlines plans to suspend service to 15 cities because of "low demand"
From CNN's Gregory Wallace
An American Airlines flight lands at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, on June 5.
Michael Brochstein/SOPA Images/Shutterstock
American Airlines announced Thursday it plans to suspend service to 15 cities in October citing “low demand.”
Airlines have thus far been mostly blocked from stopping service to a destination as a condition of accepting CARES Act payroll funding. But those restrictions expire on Oct. 1. Despite pressure from aviation worker unions, Congress has not extended the funding.
American said the cuts are not permeant and are “only in place for the October schedule.” The suspensions will be effective on Oct. 7.
Here are the 15 cities, according to the airline:
Del Rio, Texas
Dubuque, Iowa
Florence, South Carolina
Greenville, North Caroilina
Huntington, West Virginia
Joplin, Missouri
Kalamazoo/Battle Creek, Michigan
Lake Charles, Louisiana
New Haven, Connecticut.
New Windsor, New York
Roswell, New Mexico
Sioux City, Iowa
Springfield, Illinois
Stillwater, Oklahoma
Williamsport, Pennsylvania
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Where countries around the world stand in the coronavirus fight
The US has reported more than 5.5 million coronavirus cases since the pandemic began, and more than 22 million cases have been recorded worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University’s latest tally.
If you’re just reading in this morning, here’s the news you need to know from around the globe:
Hopeful signs — and a warning — in the US: President Trump’s Covid-19 testing czar said cases are declining across the United States. But despite the hopeful signs, now isn’t a time to let up or ease measures, Adm. Brett Giroir said, warning that the progress could “turn around very quickly if we’re not careful.”
Increasing daily cases in parts of Europe: France and Spain have reported new daily record increases in cases since coming out of lockdown. Germany recorded more than 1,700 new cases in 24 hours, marking the country’s highest number of daily infections since April.
Where some Asian countries stand: South Korea has seen a week of triple-digit daily case counts, and Japan learned that one-third of its total cases overall were reported just in August. Meanwhile, in the Chinese city of Wuhan, which was ground zero in the coronavirus pandemic, thousands of revelers gathered in an open air water park for an electronic music festival — without any masks or social distancing measures in sight.
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Kentucky Attorney General says state can't close religious schools complying with Covid-19 rules
From CNN’s Rebekah Riess
Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron said Wednesday that officials cannot order the closure of religious schools that are following the rules around Covid-19.
It came after Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear recommended that school districts delay in-person instruction until September 28, saying that he would issue an executive order to close schools where there was “a severe proven threat to the health of the people in the school, and a failure to take any action to address it.”
Religiously affiliated schools and concerned parents wondered whether the Governor, or other state and local officials, “may lawfully co-opt their informed decisions to reopen for in-person instruction,” and asked the Attorney General’s office to issue an opinion on the matter.
Cameron said officials could not close schools that were “in compliance with reasonable social distancing and hygiene guidelines set forth by recognized national or international health agencies and organizations.”
His opinion states that the Governor, the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, and other officials are prohibited from closing religiously affiliated schools because of the First and 14th Amendment of the US Constitution and state law.
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Movie theaters are reopening in the US. But will anyone show up?
From CNN's Frank Pallotta
A temporarily closed AMC movie theater in Tucson, Arizona, is seen on June 30.
Cheney Orr/Bloomberg/Getty Images
For the first time in roughly five months, AMC Theatres will pop the popcorn, dim the lights, and start the show.
But will anyone buy a ticket?
AMC, the world’s largest movie theater chain, is reopening more than 100 US locations on Thursday after closing their doors in March. Other major chains like Regal Cinemas and Alamo Drafthouse will also return this weekend, while Cinemark started its phased reopening last weekend. Roughly 1,400 of the 6,000 venues in North America are currently open, according to Comscore. (Track how box-office sales have been hit on our recovery dashboard.)
It’s a monumental moment for theaters and the film industry at large. The next few weeks and months will give Hollywood an idea of whether the movie theater industry can bounce back after being ravaged by coronavirus.
Teen girl with underlying health conditions dies of coronavirus in California, officials say
From CNN's Christina Maxouris
A teenage girl in Southern California has died from the coronavirus, Orange County health officials announced Wednesday.
The girl had “significant underlying medical conditions,” officials said in a news release without providing further details about the child or her health conditions.
Across the state, more than 638,000 people have tested positive for the virus, including 63,000 cases among children younger than 18, state data show.
“We’ve had 90 deaths in children in the United States already, in just a few months,” Dr. Sean O’Leary, vice-chair of the AAP Committee on Infectious Diseases, told CNN last week.
Europe recording 26,000 daily new virus cases since restrictions eased, says WHO
From CNN's Niamh Kennedy in Dublin
Europe has been reporting more than 26,000 daily new coronavirus cases on average since governments started relaxing measures implemented to stop the spread of the disease, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
The increase can be explained in part by the fact that “authorities have been easing some of the restrictions and people have been dropping their guard,” WHO Europe chief Hans Kluge said during a news conference on Thursday.
Kluge said that with 3.9 million coronavirus cases, the region accounts for 17% of the global total. While Europe made great strides in suppressing the virus after it was hit “early and hard,” Kluge affirmed that the “risk of resurgence has never been far away.”
He said that “new cases have been steadily increasing every week in the region” since restrictions began easing. Europe recorded 40,000 more cases in the first week of August compared to the first week of June, when cases were at their lowest, he added.
Kluge said that the key challenge was “that localized outbreaks and clusters are now occurring with greater frequency, often in closed settings.” The WHO Europe chief said that these outbreaks should not interfere with the plans for children to return safely to school, and announced a meeting for all 53 countries in the region on ensuring safe, high-quality education.
Suggested measures include opening schools in areas with low virus levels, adjusting schedules and keeping students numbers low in areas with widespread cases.
A new season: Kluge said it was “critical that countries monitor flu activity and restore and reinforce routine surveillance to include both viruses, and that they promote flu vaccination for at-risk groups.” He emphasized the greater stores of knowledge countries have for dealing with the virus in the fall.
Kluge said he was “very concerned that more and more young people are counted among reported cases,” telling Europe’s youth that they “have their part to play” in suppressing the virus and advising against large gatherings.
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Costa Rica to allow US residents from 6 northeastern states entry next month
From CNN's Jennifer Landwehr in Chicago and Sharif Paget in Atlanta
People arrive at Juan Santamaria airport where they are greeted by a tour operator with a sign saying "Welcome to Costa Rica, Pura Vida" in San Jose, on August 3.
Ezequiel Becerra/AFP/Getty Images
Costa Rica has announced that US residents flying from six northeastern states will be allowed entry next month to help revitalize its tourism sector, which has been negatively impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Starting in September, Costa Rica will allow six weekly flights for residents from New York, New Jersey, New Hampshire, Maine, Vermont, and Connecticut, the country’s tourism minister Gustavo Segura said at a news conference on Wednesday.
People entering Costa Rica must show an official identification from one of the six US states, Segura said. Travelers must also present a negative Covid-19 test result taken no more than 48 hours before the flight and have travel insurance to cover any possible medical care.
“This gradual opening is still slight, but it is a message of hope not to lose strength and to understand that there is light at the end of the tunnel,” Segura said.
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EU concludes talks to buy 225 million vaccine doses
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite in London
The European Commission has concluded exploratory talks with German firm CureVac to purchase a potential Covid-19 vaccine, the Commission said in a statement Thursday.
The Commission will have a contractual framework in place “for the initial purchase of 225 million doses on behalf of all EU Member States, to be supplied once a vaccine has proven to be safe and effective against COVID-19.”
The European Commission “will have an agreement soon with CureVac. This is the 4th company with which we enter into an agreement,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted Thursday, referring to the previous steps with Sanofi-GSK, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca.
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Sweden records highest death tally in 150 years in first half of 2020
From CNN's Hilary McGann
Sweden recorded its highest death tally in 150 years for the first half of 2020, according to the country’s official statistics office.
Between January and June this year, 51,405 deaths were registered in the country – more than 6,500 fatalities (or 15%) over the same period in 2019.
This is the highest number of deaths in Sweden during the first half of the year since 1869, when the country was struck by famine and 55,431 people died.
The country also experienced the lowest population increase since 2005, with a surplus figure of 6,860 in 2020 that was less than half that of the previous year.
Immigration figures also saw a reduction of 34.7% from the same period in 2019, with the figures primarily dropping in the second quarter between April and June.
But thanks in part to safety protocols like masks and social distancing, new case trends are now “going in the right direction,” said Adm. Dr. Brett Giroir, the Trump administration official overseeing US coronavirus testing.
Despite the hopeful signs, now isn’t a time to let up or ease measures, he cautioned.
The surge in cases over the summer came weeks after states lifted restrictions to curb the spread of the virus. Much of the progress made during stay-at-home orders was quickly lost,officials said, as some Americans celebrated the start of summer by packing beaches and parties with little distance between them.
It’s unclear what could happen next, but experts have offered grim predictions as flu season approaches. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, said the consequences of reopening the country too quickly could be devastating, noting Americans already saw what happened when states skipped over the guideposts.
The odds of catching Covid-19 on an airplane are slimmer than you think, scientists say
From CNN's Tamara Hardingham-Gill
Sitting squeezed between strangers on board an aircraft might feel like a risky position during these uncertain times.
But according to some experts who point to the very few documented cases of in-flight transmission, the chances of catching Covid-19 while on board a flight are actually relatively slim.
Fear of flying during the pandemic has drastically reduced global air traffic, which hasalso been restricted due to border closures. If new scientific claims are borne out, the perceived heightened risk of boarding an airplane could be unfounded.
In one case, about 328 passengers and crew members were tested for coronavirus after it was learned thata March 31 flight from the US to Taiwan had been carrying 12 passengers who were symptomatic at the time. However, all the other passengers tested negative, as did the crew members.
And while there have certainly been cases of infected passengers passing the virus on to an airplane’screw or fellow travelers in recent months, the transmission rates are low.
One explanation for the apparently low risk level is that the air in modern aircraft cabins is replaced with new fresh air every two to three minutes, andmost planes are fitted with air filters designed to trap 99.99% of particles.
Many leaders used Covid as cover to dent democracy. Trump may be the first to openly admit it
From CNN's Luke McGee
In the months since Covid-19 swept the globe, leaders the world over have been accused of exploiting the pandemic for political gain while laying waste to democratic norms. Few, if any, have gone as far as to reveal those plans publicly.
A notable exception is President Donald Trump, who has openly admitted that he is trying to block much-needed funding for the US Postal Service because he wants to limit the number of Americans who can vote safely by mail in November’s election.
The reason? Trump says postal ballots will hurt his campaign, and has repeatedly made the unfounded claim that widespread mail-in voting will result in the “most fraudulent election in history.”
By refusing to take steps to allow as many Americans as possible to participate in the election – and by openly casting doubt over the legitimacy of the poll – Trump is embracing tactics used by authoritarian leaders in countries with compromised democratic institutions, experts said.
Trump’s moves come at a time when some countries are expanding the availability of mail-in ballots and other early voting initiatives in an effort to allow people to take part in elections without risking their health at polling stations.
FDA warns about UV lights to disinfect coronavirus and other germs
From CNN Health’s Maggie Fox
Lamps that use ultraviolet light to kill germs can inactivate coronavirus, but they are not all safe and it is not clear how good a job they do at killing the virus, the US Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday.
The FDA said ultraviolet-C (UVC) wavelengths are better than UVA and UVB light at destroying viruses, but UVC lamps still have their limits.
Plus the lamps only work in limited circumstances.
There’s been an explosion of products on offer to fight coronavirus, including germicidal lamps. The World Health Organization warns against trying to use them to disinfect human skin, including the hands.
In addition, some UVC lamps generate ozone, which can irritate airways.
“Some UVC lamps contain mercury. Because mercury is toxic even in small amounts, extreme caution is needed in cleaning a lamp that has broken and in disposing of the lamp,” the FDA added.
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Germany records its highest daily number of Covid-19 cases since April
From CNN’s Sara Mazloumsaki in Atlanta
A rescue worker takes a swab at a drive-in test centre for students and teachers of several schools in North Rhine-Westphalia, Bielefeld, Germany on August 19.
Friso Gentsch/picture alliance/Getty Images
Germany recorded 1,707 new cases of Covid-19 in the past 24 hours – the highest number of daily infections since the end of April, according to the country’s infectious diseases department, the Robert Koch Institute.
The last time the number of new cases was this high was on April 26, when the country registered 1,737 new infections, according to German public broadcaster ARD.
Germany saw its peak in new daily Covid-19 cases at the beginning of April, when more than 6,000 infections were reported in one day. In the following weeks, the number of cases fell significantly.
But the number of positive tests has been increasing since the end of July.
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US FDA authorizes third antigen test to diagnose coronavirus quickly
From CNN Health’s Maggie Fox
A healthcare worker performs a swab test on a person at a Covid-19 drive-through testing site in Mesquite, Texas, on Tuesday, August 18.
Cooper Neill/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The US Food and Drug Administration said Wednesday it had authorized a new antigen test to diagnose coronavirus infection – the third test of its kind to receive emergency use authorization from the agency.
The British-made LumiraDx test can analyze a sample within 12 minutes, the FDA said.
What are antigen tests: Unlike time-consuming PCR tests, antigen tests look for specific parts of a virus rather than multiplying any viral genetic material present.
How it works: The test requires a nasal swab and can give results right away, instead of having to be sent off for analysis. Health officials hope such tests can help the US ramp up coronavirus testing.
Reliability: The FDA published data from company submission showing the test has 97.6% sensitivity, meaning it catches 97.6% of cases correctly, and 96.6% specificity, meaning it correctly rules out infection 96.6% of the time.
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Mental and physical health issues dismissed at Australian hotel quarantine, inquiry hears
From CNN's Zehra Jafree and Helen Regan
Health officials in Australia’s Victoria state allegedly refused requests for medication from people in pain, lost track of returning travelers and dismissed threats of suicide, an inquiry into Melbourne’s hotel quarantine system heard on Thursday.
The inquiry was launched amid allegations that a fresh coronavirus outbreak in the state of Victoria was sparked by some contracted workers not following protocols at hotels used to quarantine international arrivals.
A nurse contracted to work in three quarantine hotels, identified only as “Jen,” told Thursday’s hearing there were serious questions over the nursing staff’s training and experience to handle mental health issues among the returning travelers.
Suicide threat allegedly dismissed: In one incident, Jen said she followed up with the Department of Health and Human Services – which ran the quarantine program – to see if they were aware of a situation in which a guest was threatening suicide.
Jen said she tried to reach the guest via phone but couldn’t get through. When she went to check on the guest they were found to be unharmed but in an “anxious” state.
The employment agency that contracted staff, Your Nursing Agency (YNA), denies the allegation that staff were not trained to deal with mental health issues, and said that all of the mental health nurses provided by YNA Mental health were certified.
Lost and ripped up documents: Jen said that inadequate record keeping by DHHS meant travelers were not being tracked properly and she resorted to using her own spreadsheet to document who was staying in the hotel.
In one instance, a family had been in quarantine for a week without being contacted for a welfare check, she said.
“It was very obvious that DHHS were having a hard time of keeping track of who is in the hotel and when,” she told the inquiry.
She said that she had made complaints after finding documents ripped up.
The inquiry on Thursday also heard testimony from a second nurse and a returning traveler. Hearings will continue this week.
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Mystery surrounding source of New Zealand community cluster remains unsolved
From journalist Sol Han
Director-General of Health Dr. Ashley Bloomfield speaks to media during a press conference at Ministry of Health in Wellington, New Zealand, on August 17.
Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images
Five new locally transmitted cases have been reported in New Zealand according to the country’s Director-General of Health Dr. Ashley Bloomfield on Thursday.
Mystery over outbreak: 80 Covid-19 infections have been linked to the latest community outbreak, but authorities are investigating two cases where they have found no link to the original cluster in Auckland.
One of the cases of unknown origin is a maintenance worker from a managed isolation facility at a hotel in Auckland. The other was thought to have links to the original cluster but is now under investigation.
Health officials in Auckland have found a link to another positive case who used the same elevator as the maintenance worker.
Separately, the virus levels detected in the Americold workplace environment – an American temperature-controlled warehouse company that has had several employees test positive – and on packaging there was too low to be tested for genome sequencing.
“At the border nationwide, 7,649 workers have been tested at the airport and ports, all of them so far coming back negative,” New Zealand Health Minister Chris Hipkins said.
Almost all of the staff at the managed isolation facilities in Auckland have been tested – 2,891 of 2,900 all tested negative barring the one maintenance worker.
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Controversy over Australian PM's vaccine comments points to the next coronavirus nightmare
Analysis from CNN's James Griffiths
Prime Minister Scott Morrison addresses the media during a visit to AstraZeneca in Sydney, on August 19.
Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images
With one comment, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison managed to turn a positive coronavirus story into a public relations disaster, and highlighted the potential next nightmare of the pandemic: a fight over vaccines.
Speaking about a plan to provide free coronavirus immunization to all Australians as soon as that is possible, Morrison said Wednesday that he would “expect it to be as mandatory as you could possibly make it,” with some exemptions on medical grounds.
Morrison’s reversal came after his original comments had been seized on by anti-vaccination groups in Australia and around the world, many of which have long warned of supposed plans to force a coronavirus jab on people.
While his comments created something of an open goal for anti-vax campaigners, the scandal does point to the wider issue of “vaccine hesitancy,” which the World Health Organization identified last year (before the coronavirus pandemic hit) as one of the top 10 threats to public health around the globe.
It should concern everyone. Without an effective coronavirus vaccine, there currently appears to be no other viable way to return to pre-pandemic normality.
Brazil’s President may extend emergency unemployment payments amid pandemic
From journalists Fernanda Wenzel in Porto Alegre and Rodrigo Pedroso in Sao Paulo
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro delivers a speech in Brasilia, on August 19.
Evaristo Sa/AFP/Getty Images
Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro said on Wednesday he might extend emergency payments through the end of the year for the unemployed, but the payments will be at a lower rate than the current 600 reais ($108) a month.
The latest official figures on unemployment show that a total of 8.9 million people lost their jobs as the coronavirus pandemic swept through Brazil – representing the sharpest contraction on record for the country.
Brazil’s unemployment rate rose to 13.3% for the quarter ending in June.
Bolsonaro said continuing with 600 reais a month is not an option because it would plunge Brazil into debt, hurting the country’s fiscal credibility.
Brazil’s Economy Ministry talked about decreasing the amount to 200 reais ($36) a month, Bolsonaro said, but the President said he thinks the amount is too low and suggested they strike a deal somewhere in the middle.
“It is possible to reach a middle ground and we will seek to extend it for a few more months, perhaps until the end of the year,” Bolsonaro said.
Meanwhile, the economy minister Paulo Guedes said the economy is recovering in the shape of a Nike “swoosh.”
“All the indicators show the drop was sudden, rough and strong, but Brazil is coming back,” he said.
On Wednesday, Brazil confirmed 49,298 new Covid-19 cases and 1,212 deaths in 24 hours. At least 111,100 people have died in Brazil from coronavirus and the total number of confirmed cases now stands at 3,456,652, according to the Health Ministry.
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US reports more than 46,000 new Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Joe Sutton
The United States reported 46,436 new coronavirus cases and 1,356 new virus-related deaths on Wednesday, according to Johns Hopkins University.
The US has now recorded at least 5,529,824 Covid-19 infections, including 173,177 related fatalities, JHU reported.
The totals include cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.
CNN’s map is tracking the cases in the US:
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China says no hospitalized coronavirus patients have died in "almost four months"
Chinese health officials have said that no patients hospitalized due to Covid-19 in China have died in “almost four months.”
He made the comments at China’s Joint Prevention and Control Mechanism of the State Council on Wednesday.
The last time a virus death was reported by the NHC was April 14, when one fatality in Hubei province was recorded, according to data on its website.
Latest cases: On Wednesday, 22 imported cases and one locally transmitted asymptomatic infection were reported in the country, NHC figures showed. In addition, seven new imported cases were also recorded on Wednesday in the provinces of Jiangxi, Tianjin, Shanghai, Shandong, and Sichuan.
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Fauci says pharma companies should aim for higher minority enrollment in vaccine trials
From CNN Health’s Elizabeth Cohen
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, wears a Washington Nationals protective mask during a hearing in Washington, DC on July 31.
Kevin Dietsch/UPI/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the US’ top infectious disease doctor, told CNN on Wednesday that Phase 3 clinical trials for coronavirus vaccines should aim to include minorities at levels that are at least double their representation in the population.
So far, that’s significantly higher than the participation levels of minorities in the trial being run by Moderna, the first US company to start a Covid-19 vaccine trial.
The data: According to Census data, Black people represent 13% of the US population. Doubling that would mean 26% of participants should be Black for the trial.
But so far, Black people represent only 4.5% of Moderna’s study participants, according to data obtained by CNN.
Census data show Latinos represent 18% of the US population, and doubling that would mean 36% of participants should be Latino for the trial. However, only about 10% of Moderna’s trial participants are Latino.
Importance of minority representation: Fauci made clear these levels are goals, not requirements. But sufficient numbers of minorities are crucial in order to determine safety and efficacy for these groups, which are disproportionately affected by the virus in the US.
A study by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, examining reports of nearly 600,000 coronavirus cases where race was indicated, found that while 13% of the population is Black, 22% of cases were Black. The report also found that while 18% of the US population is Latino, 33% of cases were Latino.
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South Korea's latest church-linked coronavirus outbreak is turning into a battle over religious freedom
From CNN's Paula Hancocks in Seoul
A South Korean religious group at the center of a new coronavirus outbreak has been accused by the government of withholding key information and obstructing public health authorities in their fight against the pandemic.
It’s the latest clash between a religious group and the government of President Moon Jae-in, who is attempting to stem South Korea’s coronavirus outbreak while fighting off accusations he is curbing religious freedom.
What happened: The new outbreak has been linked to the Sarang-jeil Church in Seoul, which has reported hundreds of positive cases among its members, some 400 of whom have yet to be traced by the authorities.
Official reaction: Moon’s government on Tuesday announced a ban on all religious gatherings in churches in Seoul and the surrounding metropolitan areas, in a move that provoked immediate pushback from conservative religious groups.
Police in the capital have been enlisted to help identify and track individuals connected to the church, with the government acutely aware that time is of the essence to contain the spread and enable contact tracing.
Church leader denies claims, tests positive: The church’s pastor, Jun Kwang-hoon – who is already facing criminal charges for allegedly violating quarantine and obstructing contact tracing – has rejected claims the church obstructed contact tracing by concealing a list of its members.
While Jun and his church have attracted some sympathy from opponents of President Moon and conservative religious groups, his actions, along with photos of him sitting in the back of an ambulance after testing positive, wearing his mask like a chin strap, have sparked fury from others online.
Religious freedom: Underlying the latest controversy is the widespread suspicion many conservative religious groups have of President Moon, a liberal who has faced growing opposition from the right in recent months.
More than a third of Japan's total virus cases were reported in August
From journalist Kaori Enjoji in Tokyo
People cross a road in Tokyo, on August 17.
Carl Court/Getty Images
Japan has recorded at least 22,500 Covid-19 cases since August 1, more than a third of its nationwide total since the pandemic began.
In total, Japan has confirmed 59,213 cases and 1,157 deaths, according to the country’s Health Ministry.
Some background: There is an increasing sense of dissatisfaction with the Japanese government’s response to the virus and it comes as Japan appears to be on the brink of another major Covid-19 outbreak. For the past 12 days, the Health Ministry has recorded more than 900 daily infections and last Friday marked a new daily high of 1,601 new cases nationwide.
New cases: On Wednesday, Japan reported 1,085 Covid-19 cases and 16 new deaths. The number of patients in critical care has increased three-fold this month, from 80 patients on August 1 to 239 patients on Wednesday.
Heat wave: Meanwhile, a heat wave poses new challenges for mask wearers. The Fire and Disaster Management Agency said more than 12,800 people were taken to hospital with heatstroke from August 10-16, twice the number of people in the previous week.
South Korea reports triple-digit virus cases for seventh consecutive day
From CNN's Jake Kwon in Seoul
A medical worker, wearing protective gear, take samples from a police officer during Covid-19 testing at a temporary test facility in Seoul, South Korea, on August 19.
Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images
South Korea reported 276 local and 12 imported Covid-19 cases on Wednesday, Vice Health Minister Kim Ganglip said in a news briefing.
Most of the cases were detected in the capital Seoul and its surrounding areas.
It’s the seventh consecutive day that South Korea has reported cases in the triple digits.
Church clusters: A South Korean religious group is at the center of the new coronavirus outbreak. As of 6 p.m. local time Wednesday, 630 people linked to the Sarang-jeil Church had tested positive, Kim said.
The Health Ministry had acquired an additional list of visitors to the church, but there are around 700 people whose contact information has not been confirmed or are avoiding being tested, Kim said.
Kim added that the ministry is cooperating with the police and telecommunication companies to acquire their contact information.
Protest outbreak: As of Wednesday noon, 53 people had tested positive in relation to a mass anti-government rally on August 15, which was banned by authorities. Among the infected from the protest were 33 people related to the Sarang-jeil Church, Kim said.
Since the first case related to the church was found on August 12, more than 1,600 Covid-19 cases have been reported in South Korea.
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Mexico reports more than 5,700 new Covid-19 cases
From journalist Karol Suarez in Mexico City
Mexico recorded 5,792 new cases of Covid-19 and 707 new deaths on Wednesday, according to the Health Ministry.
The total number of confirmed infections in the country now stands at 537,031, with 58,481 deaths.
Mexico has reported the third-highest number of deaths in the world from coronavirus, following the United States and Brazil, according to Johns Hopkins University.
Only Brazil and Peru have recorded more Covid-19 cases than Mexico in Latin America, according to JHU.
CNN is tracking worldwide coronavirus cases here:
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President Trump again points out New Zealand's fresh coronavirus outbreak
President Donald Trump speaks during a White House news conference on Wednesday.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
United States President Donald Trump highlighted New Zealand’s fresh coronavirus outbreak for the second time this week, while claiming the US has done a good job of containing the virus.
New Zealand is currently grappling with a reemergence of cases, which came shortly after the country went more than 100 days with no local transmissions.
On Monday, Trump called New Zealand’s surge in Covid-19 cases “terrible.”
“Even New Zealand, did you see what’s going on in New Zealand? ‘They beat it, they beat it.’ It was like front page, they beat it, because they wanted to show me something,” he said.
In response, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said she didn’t see any real comparison between her country’s current cluster and the tens of thousands of cases that are reported daily in the US.
New cases: New Zealand recorded five new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, Director-General of Health Dr. Ashley Bloomfield said on Thursday.
That raises the country’s total to 1,304 confirmed infections – 101 of which remain active. New Zealand has also reported 22 coronavirus-related deaths.
The US has recorded at least 5,527,306 Covid-19 cases, including 173,114 related deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.
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Covid-19 cases are declining across the US but could "turn around very quickly," testing czar warns
From CNN's Amanda Watts
Adm. Dr. Brett Giroir testifies during a House subcommittee meeting on July 31.
Kevin Dietsch/Pool/AFP/Getty Images/File
Covid-19 cases are declining across the United States and it’s clear “trends are going in the right direction,” Adm. Dr. Brett Giroir said during a US Department of Health and Human Services telebriefing on Wednesday.
“We have very good data – theoretical and real data – that the plans that we’re implementing are working, and will continue to work – and will continue to work just about equivalently to a shutdown,” Giroir said.
Giroir says wearing a mask, staying a safe distance away, and washing your hands along with testing “continues to yield results.”
Giroir, the assistant secretary for health at HHS, said new cases are down 22% since their peak in July – but noted that “tragically,” deaths are the lagging indicator and still remain flat.
More data: Giroir said of the 56 US jurisdictions, 80% (45 out of 56) are currently in a declining pattern when it comes to new cases. Six of the 56 are flat. He said five are in an upward trajectory – Guam, Hawaii, California, Indiana and Vermont.
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France reports highest daily increase in Covid-19 cases since end of lockdown in May
From CNN's Eva Tapiero in Paris
France confirmed a new daily high in coronavirus cases since coming out of lockdown in mid-May, with 3,776 infections reported by the National Health Agency on Wednesday.
That brings France’s total number of confirmed cases to 225,043.
While the latest data released by the French National Health agency shows a decreasing trend of people hospitalized and in intensive care units, the agency said in a statement that “in mainland France, all indicators continue to increase and transmission of the virus intensifies.”
Mandatory masks: Following the surge in the number of new Covid-19 cases, the French government will make it mandatory to wear masks in enclosed shared spaces such as corporate offices from September 1, Minister of Labor Elisabeth Borne announced on Tuesday.
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Fauci urges people to stop speculating about the pandemic and focus on facts
From CNN’s Amanda Watts
Dr. Anthony Fauci.
George Washington University/Facebook
The US’ leading infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said health care professionals must continue to “make recommendations and policy based on data and evidence.”
“Speculations, anecdotal, those kinds of opinions, really need to be put aside,” he said while speaking during a George Washington University webinar on Wednesday.
Fauci said he and his public health colleagues do this every day, holding true to their ethical principles.
“You don’t change your ethics because of the situation you are in,” he said. “There are certain things that are constant; science, data and really good evidence are constant,” he said.
“If the situation changes, the data may change and you make your decisions. What doesn’t change are ethical principles. They are clear and immutable.”
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Spain reports highest daily increase in Covid-19 cases since the end of lockdown
From CNN's Duarte Mendonca
Spain reported 3,715 new coronavirus infections within the past day, the Health Ministry said on Wednesday, marking the highest increase in daily cases since the end of the country’s lockdown in late June.
Until Wednesday, Spain’s highest number of new cases since the lockdown ended was on August 14, with a total of 2,987 new cases – making the latest figures a significant increase of 728 cases in comparison to the previous high.
Spain’s cumulative case number, which includes antibody tests on people who may have already recovered from the virus, rose by 6,671 to 370,867.