September 10 coronavirus news | CNN

September 10 coronavirus news

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See expert's response to viewer who won't take Covid-19 vaccine
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What you need to know

  • President Trump knew in early February coronavirus was dangerous, highly contagious, airborne and “deadly,” according to an audio recording from journalist Bob Woodward.
  • The decision to pause AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine trial because of a potential adverse event in one volunteer shows the safety monitoring system is working, Dr. Anthony Fauci said.
  • India reported a fresh highest daily spike of 95,735 new cases. Only the US has confirmed more infections.

Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.

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Mexico reports nearly 5,000 new Covid-19 cases

A worker gets his temperature taken prior to being tested for Covid-19 in Mexico City, on Thursday, September 10.

Mexico’s Health Ministry reported 4,857 new Covid-19 cases and 554 new virus-related deaths on Thursday.

That brings the total number of cases confirmed in the country to 652,364, including at least 69,649 fatalities.

The latest figures come as Mexico’s government responded to the pausing of the AstraZeneca vaccine trial.

What happened: The company put global trials of its coronavirus vaccine on hold this week over an unexplained illness in one of the volunteers. Mexico was a participant in the phase 3 trials of that vaccine candidate and is still offering volunteers for other vaccine trials. 

The reaction: Mexico’s Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said in a statement Thursday that Mexicans can be “assured” of a vaccine against the coronavirus in future. “We are not betting – as we say – all the eggs in one basket,” he said, adding that Mexico is involved in several vaccine projects.

Mexico has the world’s fourth-highest coronavirus death toll after the United States, Brazil, and India, according to Johns Hopkins University. It is ranked seventh by JHU, in terms of the highest Covid-19 case numbers in the world.

Florida bars will be allowed to reopen at 50% capacity next week

Bars in Florida will be able to reopen at 50% occupancy from Monday, Florida’s Secretary of Department of Business and Professional Regulation Halsey Beshears announced Thursday.

Florida is rescinding amended Executive Order 20-09, issued on June 26, which shut down bars amid rising Covid-19 cases in the state.

More than 28 million people have been infected with coronavirus worldwide 

At least 28,054,396 people globally have been infected with the novel coronavirus since the pandemic began, according to the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center.

JHU also reported that as of 10.30 p.m. ET on Thursday, 907,980 have died around the world. 

The United States is the worst affected country, with 6,397,132 cases. India, Brazil and Russia follow.

The US also leads the world in terms of the most deaths attributable to the coronavirus, reporting a total of 191,769 fatalities. 

CNN is tracking worldwide coronavirus cases here:

People shouldn't worry about safety of coronavirus vaccine trials, NIH director says 

A participant receives a Covid-19 vaccination as she takes part in a vaccine study at Research Centers of America on August 7 in Hollywood, Florida. 

The various vaccines being tested to fight coronavirus are undergoing several layers of testing and people should not worry about their safety, National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins said Thursday.

“We sped up this process in a variety of ways but not in a way to compromise safety. In fact, I would say these trials are more rigorous than any others that have ever been done for vaccines,” Collins told Dr. Sanjay Gupta and Anderson Cooper on CNN’s Global Town Hall.

The Data and Safety Monitoring Boards (DSMB), independent groups of mostly academic researchers who watch the data from the trials, are a firm line of defense keeping an eye out for any signal that an experimental vaccine is not working safely, Collins said.

In fact, a DSMB is more likely to stop a trial if there’s evidence of a problem – such as the illness in a volunteer that caused AstraZeneca to pause its vaccine trial this week, Collins said.

Hundreds of University of Alabama students have been issued sanctions for violating Covid-19 rules

There have been 639 University of Alabama students issued sanctions for violating Covid-19 regulations as of Sept. 8, according to a statement from the university.

One student organization is pending suspension, and three student organizations also received Covid-19 related sanctions, the statement said.

Of the 639 individual sanctions issued, 33 students have been issued “interim measures, effectively suspending them from campus while their conduct cases proceed through due process,” according to the statement.

The University of Alabama reported 846 new cases of Covid-19 among students between Aug. 28 and Sept. 3, for a total of 2,047 reported cases.

Get the flu shot "right now," emergency physician says

Dr. Leana Wen speaks during CNN's coronavirus town hall on Thursday, September 10.

Dr. Leana Wen, an emergency physician and public health professor at George Washington University, said Americans should get a flu shot “right now.”

Wen, who is also the former Baltimore city health commissioner, said “it has never been more important” to get a flu shot as the US face “the potential twin-demics of the flu and Covid-19 at the same time.”

“We don’t have a vaccine for Covid-19, but we do have for the flu and the flu ends up hospitalizing hundreds of thousands of people every year, tens of thousands die. So, if we can protect ourselves against one of these things we should,” she added.

Cousin of teacher who died after contracting Covid-19 says she "kept the family together"

Demetria “Demi” Bannister

Terrance Bannister, the cousin of Demetria “Demi” Bannister, a teacher who died after contracting Covid-19, called his late family member “a soldier” who will be greatly missed.

Some context: Demetria “Demi” Bannister was a third grade teacher at Windsor Elementary School in Columbia, South Carolina, who died on Monday from complications caused by Covid-19, according to a news release from Richland School District Two, which shared the information about the teacher’s death with permission from her parents, “who wish to remind others about the seriousness of this disease caused by the coronavirus.”

According to the school district, Demetria “Demi” Bannister began her teaching career five years ago and had just started her third year of teaching third grade.

Bannister’s last day at Windsor Elementary School was Aug. 28, the last workday for teachers before starting the school year teaching her students virtually from her home Aug. 31.

Watch:

Coronavirus vaccine "unlikely" to be available by Election Day, NIH director says

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, reiterated Thursday that it’s “very unlikely” a coronavirus vaccine will be made available by Election Day. 

“In fact, I would say these trials are more rigorous than ever been done for vaccines. Will we be likely to have results before November 3rd? All of us looking at those timetables say that’s very unlikely. But much more likely we’ll have a readout on one of more of these, maybe in December, possibly in November. But late October seems beyond the likelihood that we could predict.”

For context: President Trump told reporters Monday, “We’re going to have a vaccine very soon, maybe even before a very special date. You know what date I’m talking about.”

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Don't let "crazy conspiracy theories" about a coronavirus vaccine influence you, NIH chief says

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), wants Americans to wait for the science to determine the efficacy of a Covid-19 vaccine and not let “crazy conspiracy theories” influence them.

Collins acknowledged that there are a lot of people who “are skeptical and distrustful about where we are right now” but urged Americans to be patient, according to remarks he made tonight during CNN’s global coronavirus town hall.

Watch:

NIH chief says he is "puzzled and rather disheartened" when people don't wear masks

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), shared his shock and disappointment over the sight of Americans continuing to refuse to wear masks despite how effective they are at preventing the spread of Covid-19.

Collins added that “as a scientist, I’m pretty puzzled and rather disheartened.”

Watch:

NFL season opener sees limited fans and calls for social distancing

A CNN crew is at the 2020 NFL season opener in Kansas City, Missouri, today where a limited number of fans are at Arrowhead Stadium to watch the Super Bowl LIV champions, the Kansas City Chiefs, face the Houston Texans.

There are signs throughout the stadium highlighting that masks are required.

Ahead of the kickoff, the song “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” was played. The rendition was performed by Alicia Keys.

Before the song, which is referred to as the Black national anthem, was played, the entire Houston Texans team left the field to their locker room. The TV broadcast showed the Kansas City Chiefs standing arm-and-arm on the field while the song played out.

See the scenes from the stadium here:

Brazil reports more than 40,000 new coronavirus cases

Brazil’s health ministry has reported 40,557 new Covid-19 cases on Thursday, raising the countrywide total to 4,238,446.

The ministry also reported 983 new Covid-19 deaths, raising the country’s death toll to 129,522.

Brazil trails only the United States in the highest number of deaths in the world resulting from coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Brazil is ranked third in the world for the highest number of coronavirus infections, behind the US and India.

More than 1,300 Arizona State University students have tested positive for Covid-19 since August

A cyclist crosses an intersection on the campus of Arizona State University on Tuesday, September 1, in Tempe, Arizona.

A total of 1,305 students and 25 faculty and staff members at Arizona State University have tested positive for Covid-19 since Aug. 1, the university reported on Wednesday. 

ASU’s president Michael Crow had announced Wednesday the university would start releasing cumulative numbers of positive cases among students, faculty, and staff. The university was only sharing the number of current positive cases, meaning they were taking out the positive cases that have been medically cleared out of the total positive.

ASU also reported that a total of 610 students have been medically cleared since Aug. 1. A total of 138 faculty and staff members have been cleared — a number much higher than the total cumulative cases among employees. The university noted in its report this is because they have been keeping track of positive cases among employees since before Aug. 1.

Jay Thorne, the assistant vice president of media relations and strategic communications at ASU, expanded on this Thursday, telling CNN in a statement that “for employees who may have tested positive over the summer, there were – and are – very strict back-to-work protocols and there were positive cases who had not yet been released because the employee hadn’t finished their protocol process.”

“Those backdated/backlogged cases cleared as we entered August – but they were not cases that were recorded as positive post-August 1, which is what our reporting covers,” Thorne added.

Vaccine hesitancy hotspots around the world could undermine coronavirus vaccine efforts 

Vaccine hesitancy isn’t just a problem in the United States; a large, global vaccine confidence survey released Thursday found that there are hesitancy hotspots around the world.

Tracking attitudes towards vaccines is especially important at a time when one or more vaccines against the novel coronavirus are expected to become available soon. The large-scale acceptance and uptake of an effective vaccine could help end the pandemic sooner rather than later.   

The new research examines the beliefs of more than 284,000 adults from 149 countries about how safe, effective and important vaccines are. Data was collected from 290 nationally representative surveys conducted between September 2015 and December 2019; some countries were surveyed just once while others were surveyed several times. 

The study was published Thursday in The Lancet. 

Among the findings: vaccine confidence in Europe remains low compared to other regions, ranging from a low of 19% in Lithuania who strongly agree that vaccines are safe to a high of 66% in Finland.

But the researchers found signs that public trust in vaccine safety is increasing, particularly in Finland, France, Italy, Ireland and the United Kingdom.  

In contrast, six countries saw substantial increases in people strongly disagreeing vaccines are safe — not just being less convinced, but actively opposing the use of vaccines—between 2015 and 2019: Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan and Serbia.   

The researchers note that this “worrying trend” in negative attitudes mirrors trends in political instability and religious extremism. Poland saw a significant loss in confidence in vaccine safety, reflecting the growing impact of a highly organized local anti-vaccine movement. 

In the US: The percentage of respondents who strongly agree that vaccines are safe remained steady between 2015 and 2019, in the 50-59.9% range.

Those who strongly agreed that vaccines are important increased in the US to between 70 and 80% in 2019 while the percentage saying vaccines are effective went up to 60-69.9%.

At least 3 teachers in 3 states have died due to Covid-19 complications in recent weeks

At least three teachers in three states have died due to complications of Covid-19 in recent weeks, according to reports from CNN and local media outlets.

AshLee DeMarinis, a 34-year-old middle school teacher in at John Evans Middle School in Potosi, Missouri, died Sunday at Missouri Baptist Medical Center after battling complications related to Covid-19 for three weeks, CNN affiliate KMOV reported.

While McCaul would not confirm that DeMarinis, a social skills teacher, had passed away due to Covid-19, he told CNN that contact tracers had come to the school where DeMarinis taught, as was required by the local health department, and determined that she hadn’t had close contact with any teachers, staff or students. Students had not returned to the classrooms at John Evans Middle School when DeMarinis first became ill. 

Thomas Slade, a teacher at Vancleave High School in Jackson County, Mississippi, for 13 years died last week, district superintendent John Strycker said in a statement on Wednesday. 

“It is with a heavy heart that I send this letter to you. This past week, our school family lost one of our staff members — Vancleave High School teacher, Mr. Thomas Slade,” Strycker wrote. “Slade served the Jackson County School District honorably and with distinction as department chairman and history teacher at Vancleave High School. He was truly the personification of a public servant, devoting his life and career to serving the community where he was raised.”

CNN affiliate WLOX reported that Slade died on Sunday due to complications related to Covid-19.

Students began returning to the classroom in Jackson County on Aug. 6, according to the school district’s reopening guide.

CNN previously reported that a third grade teacher at Windsor Elementary School in Columbia, South Carolina, died on Monday from complications caused by Covid-19, according to a news release from Richland School District Two, which shared the information about the teacher’s death with permission from her parents, “who wish to remind others about the seriousness of this disease caused by the coronavirus.”

According to the school district, Demetria “Demi” Bannister began her teaching career five years ago and had just started her third year of teaching third grade.

Bannister’s last day at Windsor Elementary School was Aug. 28, the last workday for teachers before starting the school year teaching her students virtually from her home Aug. 31.

AstraZeneca says it could still have vaccine approval by end of this year, even with recent setback

AstraZeneca should still be on track to have a set of data to submit for approval of a Covid-19 vaccine before the end of the year, despite having to pause the trial because of an illness in a volunteer, company CEO Pascal Soriot said Thursday.

The company has been working with Britain’s University of Oxford to develop the vaccine. The trial has shown promising early results, but was paused Tuesday because of an unexplained illness in one of its volunteers.

Regulators will review the data to determine when and if the trial can proceed. Experts said it’s common for vaccine trials to pause for investigators to review results. The World Health Organization’s chief scientist said Thursday that it is a normal procedure that is good clinical practice.

Soriot said the company will be ready to resume manufacturing once the trial starts up again. He said he believes that the late stage trials being conducted by Pfizer and Moderna could also produce results quickly and that those vaccines also have the potential to be released before the end of the year.

Coronavirus vaccine standard will be higher than an emergency authorization, FDA official says

The standard for authorizing any eventual coronavirus vaccine will be like an “emergency use authorization plus,” a top US Food and Drug Administration official said Thursday.

FDA requirements will be stricter than for an emergency use authorization for an experimental drug, said Dr. Peter Marks, who heads FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. But it will not be as stringent as the requirements for full licensure.

Vaccines are not licensed as drugs, but rather as biologics under a Biologics License Application or BLA.

Emergency use authorization is a “relatively low bar,” Marks said. “It’s a product that may be effective,” he added.

A BLA requires substantial data from controlled clinical trials showing the product is effective. “Along that spectrum it is going to be closer to the BLA, even though that is not going to be exactly identical,” Marks said.

Usually, a full license requires details about how a product would be manufactured, along with extensive safety data from months of follow-up. “But the substantial information about efficacy and the most important information regarding safety will be there,” Marks said.

6 Ohio counties report sustained increases of Covid-19 case rates, governor says

Gov. Mike DeWine speaks during a news conference on Thursday, September 10.

Ohio is seeing consistently high positivity rates of Covid-19 in six counties, Gov. Mike DeWine said. Overall, Ohio’s transmission rates have stabilized, but Butler, Mercer, Preble, Putnam, Montgomery and Summit counties all meet the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s threshold for high instances. 

The governor also reported on the status of cases at a nearby University. DeWine said Butler County has specifically been affected by numbers influenced by Miami University, stating that between Sept. 2 and 8, there were 545 student positive cases and the previous week, there were 495 cases. In addition to the Miami University student cases, DeWine said there have also been small outbreaks at workplaces and long-term care facilities in Butler County.

“Mercer County continues as red because they meet the CDC threshold for high incidence. Their number is 206 cases per hundred thousand. Their per case number sadly increased this past week from 179 last week to 206 this week, so we’ve seen it coming down from Mercer County for a couple of weeks now we’re seeing it starting to go back up. Still a very high-level Mercer County continues to see spread throughout the community. They’ve had outbreaks at workplaces and long-term care facilities and they’ve got just pretty much spread throughout the county,” DeWine said.

Wittenberg University in Springfield is contributing to the increased number of cases in the area with an increase of more than 70 new cases this week. These cases are being associated with out of class social gatherings. To help combat the spread the university announced on Sept. 9, classes will be remote for two weeks.

Trump administration takes data seriously, White House coronavirus task force coordinator says

White House coronavirus task force coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said Thursday that when presented with data on the coronavirus pandemic, the Trump administration has taken it seriously.

President Trump told investigative reporter Bob Woodward that he purposely downplayed the danger of Covid-19, excerpts of interviews obtained by CNN show.

White House coronavirus task force coordinator urges people to get tested after Labor Day weekend

People who may have relaxed social distancing precautions over Labor Day weekend should get tested for Covid-19, White House coronavirus task force coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said Thursday.

Birx said that much of asymptomatic spread is happening between and within families and in settings like neighborhood parties.

“Just because we know someone, we think that there’s no way that they could have Covid, but I want to tell you, you can’t tell,” Birx said.

Birx urged those who socialized closely with others over Labor Day weekend, especially without a mask, to get tested.  

READ MORE

‘Play it down’: Trump admits to concealing the true threat of coronavirus in new Woodward book
AstraZeneca pauses coronavirus vaccine trial after unexplained illness in volunteer
New Jersey governor says he would have shut state down earlier if Trump was honest about coronavirus threat
Surgeon General and NIH director pledge to get Covid-19 vaccine in public once approved

READ MORE

‘Play it down’: Trump admits to concealing the true threat of coronavirus in new Woodward book
AstraZeneca pauses coronavirus vaccine trial after unexplained illness in volunteer
New Jersey governor says he would have shut state down earlier if Trump was honest about coronavirus threat
Surgeon General and NIH director pledge to get Covid-19 vaccine in public once approved