October 23 coronavirus news | CNN

October 23 coronavirus news

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New study: If 95% Americans wear masks it would save 130K lives
02:31 - Source: CNN

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As Covid-19 cases surge, Fauci says the US needs to double down on public health measures

As coronavirus cases surge across the US, the country needs to “double down” on public health measures, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Friday.

Covid-19 cases in the US are nearing a daily record and the death toll is closing in on 224,000.

Fauci said that doesn’t mean shutting down the country.

“Whenever I talk about amplifying and just stressing the public health measures, people think that that means we’re going to shut down,” he said. “It doesn’t mean that. It means there are some fundamental things that you can do.”

Fauci stressed the public health basics: wearing a mask, social distancing, avoiding crowds and frequent hand washing.

“They sound very simple, but we’re not uniformly doing that and that’s one of the reasons why we’re seeing these surges,” he added. “We can control them without shutting down the country.”

People need to avoid gathering in crowds, especially indoors, he said.

Watch the moment:

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01:22 - Source: CNN

Fauci thinks the US should mandate mask use as the pandemic persists

Dr. Anthony Fauci said the country should probably mandate mask use, even if people complain about the trouble with enforcing it.

Fauci is the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Watch the moment:

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00:44 - Source: CNN

Returning to remote learning was "one of the hardest decisions," Boston mayor says

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh speaks with CNN on Friday, October 23.

Making the decision to switch all Boston public schools to remote learning starting Thursday following a rise in Covid-19 cases was “probably one of the hardest decisions I’ve had to make since the coronavirus pandemic began,” Mayor Marty Walsh told CNN.

Boston’s seven-day Covid-19 positivity rate had increased from last week’s rate of 4.5% to 5.7% 

Families will be provided with in-home services and locations throughout the district are giving out meals for these kids, the mayor added. The increase in positivity rate took the mayor by surprise, he admits, adding that people are relaxing their coronavirus safety measures.

“We are seeing a lot of house parties, both in and outdoors. We’re seeing 25-30 people there, and that’s a problem. We are seeing people a little lackadaisical with their masks, maybe putting them down around their chin and not having their nose covered. That’s a problem,” he said.

Johnson & Johnson is taking steps to resume its US Covid-19 vaccine trial

This September 2020 photo provided by Johnson & Johnson shows vials for a single-dose Covid-19 vaccine being developed by the company.

Johnson & Johnson said Friday the independent monitoring board overseeing its phase 3 Covid-19 vaccine trial in the United States has recommended resuming the trial, which was paused earlier this month after a participant became ill.

Preparations to resume the trial in the US are now underway, the company said, including submissions for approval by Institutional Review Boards. Johnson & Johnson’s statement did not specify when the trial would begin again. 

Some context: The trial was put on hold Oct. 12 due to a study participant’s “unexplained illness,” the company said. Johnson & Johnson said Friday “no clear cause” was identified for a trial participant’s “serious medical event.”

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine trial started Sept. 23 with a plan to recruit 60,000 patients in eight countries, including the United States. In its statement Friday, Johnson & Johnson’s said discussions with regulators around the world are “progressing.”

The trial’s full safety and efficacy results will be shared when the trial concludes, the company said.

During an Operation Warp Speed briefing on Friday, US Health and Human Services Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Paul Mango said they were “very optimistic” the Johnson & Johnson trial would resume “as quickly as possible.”

Resumption of AstraZeneca's Coid-19 vaccine trial is "good news," Operation Warp Speed officials say

The resumption of AstraZeneca’s paused coronavirus vaccine trial is good news, Operation Warp Speed officials said Friday.

Some context: AstraZeneca said Friday the US Food and Drug Administration had cleared it to resume its phase 3 clinical trial in the US after it was paused last month when a volunteer in the United Kingdom developed a serious health condition.

The company restarted its trials in other countries but the US arms have been on hold while the Food and Drug Administration examined safety data. 

“This process of rigorous evaluation of the safety for each volunteer, particularly in this trial, was closely followed,” Hepburn said during a briefing.

“This is going to be the most scrutinized vaccine ever produced,” US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams added.

NIH director says Covid-19 vaccine authorization "might not happen" by end of year

Dr. Francis Collins, Director of the National Institutes of Health, is seen after a Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing to discuss vaccines and protecting public health during the coronavirus pandemic on September 9, 2020 in Washington DC. 

While he remains “cautiously optimistic” that the United States could have a Covid-19 vaccine authorized by the end of the year, the National Institutes of Health’s Dr. Francis Collins warned on Friday that “it might take longer.”

Collins added that it remains “a good thing” the US has more than one vaccine candidate in development.

“It’s a good thing we have this menu of diverse scientific approaches,” Collins said. “If you were betting the whole thing on one vaccine I’d be a lot more worried.”

Additionally, a potential Covid-19 vaccine will need to have at least 50% effectiveness to be considered for approval by the US Food and Drug Administration, Collins said.

“FDA is not going to approve a vaccine that has less than 50% effectiveness,” he added.

AstraZeneca will resume its Covid-19 vaccine trial in the US

Drugmaker AstraZeneca will resume the trial of its experimental coronavirus vaccine in the United States, which has been on hold since September.

The company said the US Food and Drug Administration authorized the restart Thursday after reviewing all of the global safety data and concluding it was safe to resume. The trial had already resumed in other countries.

The trial was paused after a volunteer in Britain developed a neurological condition suffered by one of the participants in its coronavirus vaccine clinical trials around the world.

Government health officials, as well as outside experts, have said the hold is an example of how the safety process is working and protecting Americans from any potentially dangerous vaccines. Regulators wanted to check to make sure any problems could not have been caused by the vaccine. 

The company has been working with Britain’s University of Oxford to develop the vaccine, one of four that started late-stage, Phase 3 trials in the US.

An internal AstraZeneca safety report obtained by CNN last month showed the study volunteer, a previously healthy 37-year-old woman, “experienced confirmed transverse myelitis” after receiving her second dose of the vaccine, and was hospitalized on Sept. 5. The woman was enrolled in the UK arm of the trial, which is run by the University of Oxford.  

The document, labeled an “initial report,” described how the study participant had trouble walking, weakness and pain in her arms, and other symptoms. 

The company said in the release Thursday that results from late-stage trials are expected later this year, depending on infection rates where the trials are being conducted.

Covid-19 "could be here for years" if only half of Americans take the vaccine, NIH director says

A volunteer receives a COVID-19 vaccination from RN Jose Muniz as part of a vaccine study at Research Centers of America on August 07, 2020 in Hollywood, Florida.

The percentage of Americans willing to take a Covid-19 vaccine appears to be falling – and if only half of the country is willing to get vaccinated, Covid-19 could stick around for years, Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, warned on Friday.

“When I look at the attitudes that are out there now about this vaccine and about who would be interested in taking it – it’s really, really troubling,” Collins said, speaking at a National Press Club in a virtual event.

Only 51% of Americans said they would try to get a Covid-19 vaccine once one is widely available at a low cost, according to a CNN poll conducted by SSRS earlier this month, and that percentage has dropped since May.

Watch:

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02:12 - Source: CNN

Colombia's vice president tests positive for Covid-19

Marta Lucía Ramírez, Vice President of Colombia, on May 14, 2019 in Bogota, Colombia.

Colombian Vice President Marta Lucía Ramírez confirmed she tested positive for Covid-19 on her Twitter account Friday.

“Yesterday I took the #COVID19 test,” she tweeted. “I inform all Colombians that the test result was positive. Thank God, I am in a good state [of health] and I am complying with a thorough quarantine.”

The vice president called on all Colombians to remain steadfast in following the biosecurity measures put in place to stop the spread of Covid-19, adding that the “pandemic is a reality, which can affect us all.”

Colombia has 990,373 confirmed cases and 29,637 deaths as of Friday afternoon, according to Johns Hopkins University. This is the third highest case tally in Latin America after Brazil and Argentina.

France sets new record for Covid-19 infections​ with more than 42,000 new cases in 24 hours

French President Emmanuel Macron (2nd L) chairs a meeting with the medical staff of the René Dubos hospital center, in Pontoise, in the Val d'Oise, on October 23, 2020, as the country faces a new wave of infections to the Covid-19.

France reported a new daily record for coronavirus infections with 42,032 new cases in the past 24 hours, according to numbers released by country’s health agency on Friday.

This brings the total number of confirmed cases in France to 1,041,075, according to French government statistics, and marks the first time the government’s coronavirus case tally has surpassed 1 million. 

France also recorded 298 additional coronavirus deaths, bringing the death toll to 34,508, according to the French Health Agency. 

According to government data, an additional 976 coronavirus patients have been admitted to the hospital, and a further 122 coronavirus patients entered intensive care in the last 24 hours. 

Speaking at a health center this afternoon, French President Emmanuel Macron said he expects France will have to live with the virus until at least the summer of 2021.

Macron added that the government aims to implement new restrictions in the most targeted way possible. 

From midnight on Friday, France’s nighttime coronavirus curfew will be extended more widely, with 46 million French people affected, announced French Prime Minister Jean Castex on Thursday. 

To note: According to the latest data from Johns Hopkins University, France has recorded 1,048,924 coronavirus cases and 34,236 deaths. CNN’s Paris Bureau is working on clarifying the discrepancy between state statistics and the university’s numbers.

More than 100 Covid-19 cases tied to Charlotte church event

The number of Covid-19 cases tied to a church convocation event in Charlotte, North Carolina, now stands at 101, according to a news release from the Mecklenburg County Department of Health. 

In the release, the county said 99 coronavirus cases are in Mecklenburg County and two additional cases in Iredell County are linked to convocation events at the United House of Prayer for All People on Oct. 4 through Oct. 11.

The county says at least three deaths and one cluster of 12 residents at a senior living community are also connected with this outbreak. 

Public health officials have also attempted to contact more than 137 close contacts of the 99 confirmed cases, the release stated. 

More than 223,000 people have died from Covid-19 in the US

A cyclist takes pictures of the public art project “IN AMERICA How could this happen…” on the DC Armory Parade Ground October 23, 2020 in Washington, DC. The art piece, created by local artist Susanne Brennan Firstenberg, will be on display for two weeks with flags planted to represent lives that have been lost to COVID-19. 

There are at least 8,440,895 cases of coronavirus in the US and at least 223,381 people have died from the virus, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.

So far today, Johns Hopkins has recorded 33,193 new cases and 349 reported deaths.

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

Canadian government will invest $214 million in Covid-19 vaccine development, Trudeau says

Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arriving at a press conference to discuss the COVID-19 pandemic in Ottawa, Ontario, on Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2020.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pledged $214 million Friday toward efforts to develop a Covid-19 vaccine in the country.

Of that money, Trudeau said his administration is providing “up to $173 million” toward Quebec-based Medicago Inc.’s vaccine candidate, and their Quebec City-based factory.

Trudeau also announced $18.2 million for Vancouver-based Precision NanoSystems, and an additional $23 million towards various early-stage vaccine candidates. 

The prime minister said the Canadian government had begun distributing hundreds of thousands of rapid Covid-19 tests to provincial governments. 

The investment comes as Covid-19 cases in Canada are on the rise. 

“Yesterday, Canada had the highest ever number of new cases of Covid-19,” Trudeau said. “We have to get these numbers down. This is serious, and everybody must do their part.”

Trump and Mnuchin say differences still remain in stimulus talks

US President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington, DC, on October 23, 2020.

President Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said during an Oval Office meeting on Friday that some significant differences between the Trump administration and Democrats still need to be resolved before reaching a stimulus deal.

Asked for an update on the stimulus talks, Mnuchin told reporters, “The President’s been very clear in his instructions to me. That if we can get the right deal we’re going to do that.” 

The President, speaking from the Resolute Desk for an announcement on the normalization in relations between Israel and Sudan, claimed that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi “wants to bail out poorly run Democrat states.” 

“We just don’t want that. We want Covid-related,” Trump said, later adding, “We don’t want to reward areas of our country who have not done a good job.” 

The President also asserted that Pelosi wants to wait until after the election to strike a stimulus deal. “I don’t think she wants the people to get the money before the election,” Trump said.

Meanwhile, Pelosi on Friday continued to express optimism about a potential coronavirus stimulus package, saying negotiators “could be very close.”

“We’re writing the bill, and hopefully we’ll be able to resolve some of the differences,” she said during an interview on MSNBC.

“I think the President wants a bill. I really do,” she said, adding that it’s still possible lawmakers could approve the legislation before the election, depending on how the GOP Senate reacts.

“We could be very close,” Pelosi said. “As I say, we’re close enough to put pen to paper.” 

Nashville-area hospitals report 40% increase in Covid-19 hospitalizations

As the number of active Covid-19 cases in Tennessee continue to rise, hospitals in metro Nashville are reporting a 40% increase in patients admitted for the virus.

In a joint news release, Vanderbilt Health, Ascension St. Thomas, Tristar Health and Meharry Medical College say new cases of coronavirus have increased by 50% over the last two weeks.

Over the same two-week period, hospitals in the Nashville area have experienced a 40% increase in patients admitted for Covid-19, the release stated. 

Hospital officials say a major surge of new Covid-19 cases could threaten their ability to serve patients with many diagnoses requiring hospitalization.

Officials caution that the surge in cases along with the annual flu season would add more strain, potentially overwhelming hospitals. They are strongly urging residents to wear masks, wash hands, and stay socially distant. 

“We must do everything we can to prevent our hospitals from being overwhelmed and safeguard the reopening of our economy,” Vanderbilt University Medical Center said in the release.

On Friday, Metro Nashville Health Department recorded 32,722 Covid-19 cases. The statewide total as of Thursday was 237,907, according to the Tennessee Department of Health. 

Army-Navy game will be played at West Point for the first time since World War II due to Covid-19

The famed football game between Army and Navy has been moved from Philadelphia to West Point, home of the United States Military Academy in New York.

The 121st edition will still be played on Dec. 12. Attendance limits within the state of Pennsylvania was the reason given for the move.

Both academies are planning on allowing the entire Brigade of Midshipmen and Corps of Cadets to attend the annual “America’s Game.” 

This will be the first Army-Navy football game played on a home campus since the early 1940s, when the two schools hosted consecutive years during World War II.

Navy leads the all-time series with 61 wins, 52 loses, seven ties. Army has won three of the last four games.

French first lady Brigitte Macron tests negative for coronavirus

French President's wife Brigitte Macron at the Elysée Palace in Paris on October 8, 2020.

French first lady Brigitte Macron has tested negative after a potential coronavirus exposure, the Elysée told CNN on Friday. She will resume her activities. 

On Monday, the French first lady was identified as a contact of someone who tested positive for coronavirus and she began self-isolating. 

This did not change President Emmanuel Macron’s schedule, the Elysée said. He was not in close contact with the person who later tested positive.

Italy has recorded more than 19,000 new Covid-19 cases in last 24 hours

Milan on October 20, 2020 in front of the Duomo shows people walking across and wearing protective face masks.

Italy reported another record high with 19,143 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours, according to the Italian health ministry on Friday. That’s up from Thursday’s record of 16,079 new coronavirus cases.

Italy also reported 91 coronavirus deaths on Friday.

The governor of Campania, Vincenzo De Luca, has asked the government for a national lockdown and has announced he will close the region “for 30 to 40 days” to mitigate the spread of the virus.

“Said in a brutally clear way, I don’t want to find ourselves in front of military trucks that carry hundreds of coffins,” De Luca said in a video message.

The governor of Lombardy, Attilio Fontana, said it is a “dramatic situation.”

One hundred scientists have written an open letter to Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte asking for “drastic measures” to be taken in the next two to three days.

Here are the latest coronavirus numbers from Florida

The Florida Department of Health is reporting 3,689 additional coronavirus cases on Friday and 73 new deaths.

To date, Florida has recorded a total of 771,780 Covid-19 cases statewide and 16,543 deaths, according to data released by the health department. 

On Thursday, the state recorded more than 5,500 cases, its highest single-daily increase in more than two months.

Note: These numbers were released by Florida’s public health agency and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

Wearing masks could save more than 100,000 US lives, new study suggests

Former Clark County Democrats Chairwoman Donna West looks on as an observer as Clark County election workers scan mail-in ballots at the Clark County Election Department on October 20, in North Las Vegas, Nevada.

If 95% of Americans wore masks in public, more than 100,000 lives could be saved from Covid-19 through February, a new modeling study suggests.

The study – from the Covid-19 forecasting team at the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation – notes that, as of Sept. 21, only about 49% of US residents reported that they “always” wear a mask in public.

If mask-wearing remains 49% through February and states continue with removing social distancing mandates, the Covid-19 death toll across the United States could reach about 1 million deaths by Feb. 28, according to the study, published in the journal Nature Medicine on Friday. 

Yet, under the assumption that states shut down when their daily death rate exceeds eight deaths per 1 million people in the population but mask-wearing doesn’t change, the study’s model projections forecast the death toll could reach 511,373 deaths by Feb. 28.

The scenario that 95% of people in each state wear masks – in addition to states reinstating social distancing mandates if their daily death rates exceed eight deaths per 1 million people – resulted in the lowest death toll projection, with 381,798 deaths by Feb. 28, according to the study.

For the study, the researchers analyzed data on Covid-19 cases and deaths in the United States from Feb. 1 through Sept. 21. That analysis – along with other factors, such as pneumonia seasonality, testing rates and mask use – helped inform model projections for the course of the pandemic through Feb. 28.

The study had some limitations, including that the findings are only forecast projections from models and not definitive of what the future holds.

IHME Director Dr. Chris Murray emphasized during a virtual news briefing on Friday that the institute’s weekly modeling projections provide more updated data than what is provided in the study. However, the study still helps offer insight into how mask-wearing can make a difference.