December 7 coronavirus news | CNN

December 7 coronavirus news

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John King: Latest coronavirus trends are not positive
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Operation Warp Speed's coronavirus vaccine allocation platform can track inventory, officials say

Operation Warp Speed says its vaccine allocation IT platform, Tiberius, can track inventory at zip code level.

Maddox said the system pulls material from multiple federal databases into one place, down to zip-code-specific hospitalization data and vaccine inventory. 

The system can help compute each jurisdiction’s vaccine allowance based on population and the number of doses available, Maddox said. States can then place orders with OWS weekly for any amount of doses, up to their maximum allocation. 

The system can also populate a microplanning application for each state or jurisdiction. Tiberius contains information about hospitals, pharmacies, long-term care facilities, ultra-cold storage locations, and Covid-19 case rates and death rates broken down by zip code or county, to help states decide how much vaccine they need. 

All pertinent information in the federal data inventory has been made available to states in the microplanning portion of the system – including the Census Bureau, the HHS Protect data hub, and the CDC’s VTrckS database, Maddox said.  

Once states place an order, the platform can track where vaccine shipments are physically located. “We already have agreements in place with FedEx, UPS, McKesson to bring this data into the platform,” he said. “Jurisdictions – all 64 plus entities – have at least one account to receive and view their allocations,” he said. 

Health agencies need to clarify whether people who've recovered from Covid-19 should get vaccinated, Azar says

It’s unclear whether Americans who have had coronavirus and have antibodies to the virus should get a Covid-19 vaccine when one becomes available, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said Monday.

“That’s something that the FDA (United States Food and Drug Administration) has not ruled on and CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) has not ruled on, yet, in terms of providing guidance,” Azar said during an interview with NBC News host Lester Holt.

Azar clarified that he was not saying people who have had the virus and recovered either should or should not get vaccinated.

In fact, it came up at an Operation Warp Speed meeting Monday, according to US Surgeon Gen. Dr. Jerome Adams. 

“Right now we don’t know how long people’s antibodies are going to last,” Adams said in an interview with Fox News Monday. “And we know that in the studies they vaccinated people who did have antibodies, and so it’s not going to harm you, based on what we know about the vaccines, if you’ve had the virus and you get vaccinated again.”

Adams encouraged people who have recovered to donate plasma. “Convalescent plasma is a treatment out there that has potential to really help individuals recover if they’ve gotten Covid, particularly in this surge,” he added.

South Korea announces plans to buy Covid-19 vaccines for 44 million people

Health Minister Park Neung-hoo speaks during a meeting of the Central Disease Control Headquarters at the government complex in Seoul on July 20, to discuss measures to prevent the spread of the novel coronavirus.

South Korea plans to buy coronavirus vaccines for 44 million people, Health Minister Park Neung-hoo said in a news briefing on Tuesday. 

The government is allocating 1.3 trillion won ($1.2 billion) for vaccines from COVAX, AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Moderna and Janssen.

The vaccines are expected to be brought in from March, Park added, and will be prioritized for those considered high risk – the elderly, medical workers, those with chronic illness and essential workers.

New cases: South Korea recorded 594 new Covid-19 cases Monday, 566 of which were locally transmitted, according to a news release by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) Tuesday. 

South Korea has now reported a total of 38,755 cases, including 552 deaths, according to KDCA.

Florida police raid home of former state Covid data scientist

Rebekah Jones posted video of state law officers raiding her home to her Twitter account.

Florida police raided the home of a former state coronavirus data scientist on Monday, escalating a feud between the state government and a data expert who has accused officials of trying to cover up the extent of the pandemic.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement executed a search warrant Monday morning at the home of data scientist Rebekah Jones, who was fired by the state Department of Health in May. The agency is investigating whether Jones accessed a state government messaging system without authorization to urge employees to speak out about coronavirus deaths, according to an affidavit by an agent working on the case. 

Jones told CNN that she hadn’t improperly accessed any state messaging system and that she lost access to her government computer accounts after she was removed from her position. 

About 10 officers with guns drawn showed up to her Tallahassee home around 8:30 a.m., Jones said. A video taken from a camera in her house, which she posted on social media, showed an officer pointing a gun up a stairwell as Jones told him her two children were upstairs. Jones said that the officer was pointing his gun at her 2-year-old daughter, 11-year-old son and her husband, who she said were in the stairwell, although the video doesn’t make that clear.

Officers also “pointed a gun six inches from my face” and took all of her computers, her phone and several hard drives and thumb drives, Jones said.

Gretl Plessinger, a spokesperson for the law enforcement department, said that agents knocked on Jones’ door and called her “in an attempt to minimize disruption to the family.” Jones refused to come to the door for 20 minutes and hung up on the agents, and Jones’ family was upstairs when agents did enter the house, Plessinger said. She didn’t respond to questions about why the officers drew guns.

Read the full story:

Rebekah Jones appears in an CNN interview on June 24.

Related article Florida police raid home of former state Covid-19 data scientist

China's Chengdu reports first local Covid-19 infections in nine months

Chengdu, the capital of southwestern China’s Sichuan province, is on high alert after the city reported its first locally transmitted cases of Covid-19 in nine months, according to local authorities. 

Chengdu’s Health Commission said a total of five people have tested positive.

A large-scale screening program was launched after one person tested positive, with nucleic acid samples collected from 24,598 people.

Of those, four came back positive and were either close contacts of the first patient or living in the same village in the Pidu district of the city. The results of 541 more tests are still pending.

West Virginia attorney general diagnosed with Covid-19 and pneumonia

In this Feb. 6, 2020 photo, Patrick Morrisey, attorney general of West Virginia, arrives before an event with President Donald Trump at the White House in Washington.

West Virginia’s Attorney General Patrick Morrisey tweeted on Monday evening that he was diagnosed with Covid-19 and pneumonia last week.

The Attorney General, a Republican, said he is currently quarantining at home, where he is receiving breathing and medical treatments.

Giuliani's decision to attend state hearing without mask was "incredibly reckless," says Michigan governor

Rudy Giuliani looks on during an appearance before the Michigan House Oversight Committee in Lansing, Michigan on Dec. 2.

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Monday said it was “incredibly reckless” for Rudy Giuliani to attend a state legislative hearing last week without a mask. 

The state House committee hearing lasted more than four hours, where Giuliani pushed misleading claims that the presidential election was stolen from President Donald Trump. The President announced days later Giuliani had tested positive for Covid-19. 

“We’ve been telling the people of Michigan, the people of America, this virus is still very present. If you’re inside with people from outside your household, you’ve got to be masked up, and you’ve got to limit the amount of time that you are, and you certainly should not be unmasked at all,” Whitmer said. 

The governor called the hearing “unnecessary,” adding it was a “potentially spreading event that we may not see the ramifications from for another week or two.” 

Faced with crumbling hospitals, many Covid-19 patients in Venezuela prefer their chances at home

A young woman sits by a hospital bed as she gently strokes the hair of a withered figure. At first glimpse, it looks like it could be a child, but the gray hair finally gives a man away.

Lying, face down, is her 69-year-old father. His thin, frail, shivering body is nearly disappearing beneath a thick set of blankets. “He’s very cold,” she says, without stopping stroking his hair, barely turning to face us. “They gave a treatment and he said it was very cold,” she added, referencing the IV drip he had just been given. 

Her father suffers from malnourishment, a plight that has become common among Venezuelans. He needs iron supplements, but Vargas Hospital in Caracas, where he is being treated, simply doesn’t have any. His daughter will have to get hold of the medicine herself or doctors say his hemoglobulin levels will remain low. 

His immune system is compromised, yet medical staff tell us he shares this ward with patients with diseases so contagious that, in most countries, they would be isolated from the rest. Among them, medical staff tell us, is a patient with Covid-19. 

It’s the dangerous overlap of the malady the impoverished Venezuelan state has imposed on its citizens, with a global health emergency that has largely ground the world to a halt.

Years of government mismanagement have left Venezuelan healthcare grossly unprepared and under-resourced to handle the Covid-19 pandemic. Over the past decade the country has squandered most of its oil wealth, plunging into a deep economic crisis and humanitarian crisis. Venezuela boasts the largest proven crude oil reserves on the planet, but a sharp drop in oil prices in 2016 sparked an economic implosion, leading to hyperinflation as well as shortages of basic goods, such as food and medicine.

Read the full story:

At Los Magallanes hospital, which serves some of the poorest in the capital Caracas, most of the wards are now empty, their doors chained, and electricity and water cut off.

Related article Venezuela's hospitals are crumbling. Many Covid-19 patients prefer their chances at home

Federal government will release facility-level coronavirus hospitalization details

The federal government said Monday it will start releasing new data about coronavirus hospitalizations on a hospital-by-hospital level.

“Previously released data about hospital capacity that had been released was aggregated at the state level,” the Health and Human Services Department said in a statement.

“This new, more granular, data release aggregates daily hospital reports into a ‘week at a time’ picture to protect patient privacy, while providing a view of how Covid-19 is impacting hospitals and local communities across the country,” HHS added.

“With this data release, how hospitals are impacted by Covid-19 will be shown on a per-hospital basis, allowing researchers, policy makers, and others to have greater insights into local Covid-19 response efforts. This time series data will update weekly, going back to August 1, 2020.”

The new information, available at healthdata.gov, will include details on the race or ethnicity of patients; how severe their illness is; hospital capacity; geographical patterns and other data.

“Entrepreneurs and researchers can use these datasets to build novel data analysis tools and approaches. Data scientists are encouraged to detect, predict, and visualize insights and patterns in this high-resolution data. Such Covid-19 insights can identify what works, what is failing to work, and how we might scale best practices in one locality for other regions to collectively optimize the U.S. data-driven response,” HHS said.

US hits record number of Covid-19 hospitalizations

The United States has reported at least 102,148 current Covid-19 hospitalizations on Monday, setting a new record high since the pandemic began, according to the Covid Tracking Project. 

Here’s a look at where things stand:

  1. Dec. 7: 102,148 people hospitalized
  2. Dec. 6: 101,501 people hospitalized
  3. Dec. 5: 101,192 people hospitalized
  4. Dec. 3: 100,755 people hospitalized
  5. Dec. 2: 100,322 people hospitalized

Wyoming issues statewide mask requirement

Medical Assistant Savannah Dela Vega places a nasal swab in a container for coronavirus testing at the drive-thru clinic in Casper, Wyoming, on Friday, October 9, 2020.

Wyoming will now require people to wear masks in indoor public spaces across the state, Gov. Mark Gordon’s office said in a statement on Monday.

Previously, the governor had left decisions on mask mandates to county governments and 16 of the state’s 23 counties had local orders.

The decision to extend the face covering requirement statewide was endorsed by the Wyoming Medical Society, Wyoming Primary Care Association, and Wyoming Hospital Association, according to the statement.

The new health orders go into effect Wednesday through Jan. 8.  

Several other restrictions were also included in the new measures. They are…

  • Bars and restaurants must close from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. for onsite consumption.
  • Only six people will be allowed to sit together at a time.
  • Workout classes at gyms will be capped at 10 people.
  • Gatherings where people cannot social distance will be limited to no more than 10 people.

“I want to thank the majority of Wyoming counties who have taken the lead, and the people who are working hard to protect their friends, neighbors, and colleagues by wearing face coverings. They will make a big difference, but it will take time,” Gordon said.

The latest numbers: Wyoming reported at least 128 deaths in November – that’s the highest number of deaths from Covid-19 in a month since the pandemic began in March, the statement said.

Gordon tested positive for Covid-19 on Nov. 25 and his wife tested positive for the virus on Dec. 3. 

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

White House says vaccine drug companies won't attend summit because FDA regulators will be there

Drug makers Pfizer and Moderna will not attend a White House summit on Covid-19 vaccines and their distribution Tuesday, despite being two of the companies behind developing those vaccines.

The White House said that’s because the administration felt it was more important for regulators to attend and explain the authorization process to the American people. 

During a background call with reporters Monday, a senior administration official said that while both companies were involved with “initial discussions” of the planning of the summit, “there was a change of direction in light of the fact we would have the regulator participating in the event.” 

Dr. Peter Marks, the FDA official in charge of which Covid vaccines get authorized, will attend to, “explain to the audience how the FDA goes about reviewing vaccines, and how thorough they are just why the FDA review process is the gold standard for the world.” 

“We thought it was quite important to come for his session he’s going to leave shortly after that to get back to work,” another official said later. 

The White House claimed that “several vaccine manufacturers” had contacted organizers, some unsolicited, and had early discussions about participating. 

“We thought Peter Marks, if we’re trying to instill greater confidence, would be an independent voice for quality and effectiveness. And that would be more effective than the companies who are producing the vaccines themselves,” an official said, adding that, “from a regulatory perspective we cannot have the person in the room who is going to adjudicate emergencies use authorization with those who have submitted it during that evaluation period.”  

Also absent from the list of participants is Dr. Anthony Fauci. A senior administration official said Fauci was invited and wanted to participate, but wasn’t able to because of an “important scheduling issue.” 

Trump administration denies turning down opportunity to buy more Pfizer vaccine doses earlier this year

Trump administration officials denied Monday they turned down an opportunity to buy more doses of the Pfizer vaccine months ago.

The New York Times reported Monday that Pfizer had made the offer to sell the US government additional doses in late summer, but the newspaper said the administration turned it down.

Senior members of the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed spoke about the issue on a background briefing call with reporters.

One senior administration official who did not want to be identified said the administration is “in the middle of a negotiation right now” and can’t talk publicly about it.

“But we feel absolutely confident” that there will be a “sufficient number of doses to vaccinate all Americans who desire one before the end of the second quarter of 2021,” the official said.

The initial US contract, an advanced purchase agreement with Pfizer, was signed on July 22, the administration official said. That agreement was for 100 million doses with the option to purchase more. The 100 million doses would be enough to vaccinate 50 million people, because it’s a two-dose vaccine.

The administration said it is continuing to negotiate with several companies working on Covid-19 vaccines. The US has the opportunity to purchase 3 billion doses of vaccine, among all the contracts the federal government currently has with various companies. That would in theory be enough to vaccinate the US population several times over.

Operation Warp Speed announces federal data system to track Covid-19 vaccinations

Operation Warp Speed officials outlined a new federal system Monday to track information about who has been vaccinated against coronavirus, but said it will not include information that can personally identify people who have been immunized.

The data clearinghouse will be populated with information provided by states. 

State immunization systems will provide information about who has been vaccinated, and those systems will feed into a federal data system, Army Col. RJ Mikesh, the program’s information technology lead, told reporters. 

“The data clearinghouse is something we established. It’s new as part of this pandemic response,” Mikesh said.

The program is signing data use agreements with jurisdictions that will allow it to receive details such as who the patient is, which vaccine they received, and which administration site provided the vaccine. It can handle personal identifying information, but the plan is not to include such information, Mikesh said.

Each state or jurisdiction can decide what information to share, so the information will not be uniform. Identifying information such as Social Security numbers and driver’s license numbers will not be shared, but states can share information like date of birth, race and ethnicity. 

“The information that’s personal, if that is allowed to be shared, is really there to help us with that first dose verification so that we can understand what vaccine the person received, and when they receive it,” he said.

Most states have submitted their data use agreements, but a handful are still being worked out, and should be finished this week, officials said on the call. 

Trump will sign executive order tomorrow to prioritize shipment of Covid-19 vaccine to Americans 

President Trump is expected to sign an executive order Tuesday aimed at prioritizing the shipment of the coronavirus vaccine to Americans before other nations, a White House official confirmed.

Trump is planning on signing the order at a vaccine summit at the White House Tuesday. 

“The priorities of the administration and this President since day one have been to put America first. This executive order reemphasizes that saying that, saying that we are going to ensure access to free, safe, and effective Covid vaccines to the American people,” the official said. 

“Once we’ve ensured the ability to meet the needs of the American people, it would be been in the interest the United States to facilitate international access to Covid vaccines. That’s what we’re doing. The executive order also comes with accompanied framework, which provides the guidelines for the interagency to execute that that directive,” the official added.

It is hoped the executive order will allay fears that there will not be enough doses of the vaccine to go around after distribution begins. 

Pennsylvania will run out of hospital beds and have to turn people away if infections continue to climb

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf spoke bluntly Monday, describing an increasingly “dire” scenario where sick Pennsylvanians could be turned away from hospitals due to lack of beds if Covid-19 hospitalizations continue to increase.

The Commonwealth reported that at least 5,421 people were hospitalized due to the virus as of noon Monday, according to the state’s Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine.

The 14-day moving average of hospitalized patients per day had increased by 4,000 since the end of September, she added.

Wolf warned of hospitals that were already diverting patients to other facilities due to “full emergency rooms and overwhelming needs.”

The latest numbers: There were at least 6,330 new cases of Covid-19 from Sunday, and approximately 8,630 from Saturday. There were a total of 111 new deaths over the weekend, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Health.

The statewide positivity rate for the week of Nov. 27 through Dec. 3 was 14.4%, according to the department. 

Note:These numbers were released by the Pennsylvania Department of Public Health and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project. 

Here's why there probably won't be a more detailed stimulus proposal today

Sen. Joe Manchin speaks alongside a bipartisan group of Democrat and Republican members of Congress as they announce a proposal for a Covid-19 relief bill on Capitol Hill on December 1, in Washington.

The bipartisan group of senators working on a coronavirus relief package will have another call this evening in an attempt to iron out differences on liability insurance, a Democratic aide tells CNN. That remains the key sticking point in the negotiations.

As a result of the call, don’t expect to see a more detailed proposal, outline or summary of the other pieces of the bill they are working on today. 

The thinking is that there really is not a full agreement until everything is worked out. While aides feel good about the progress that has been made to settle state and local funding, the liability piece is still unresolved. And, without liability, there isn’t likely to be a deal. 

Remember, last week Sen. Joe Manchin said the goal was release legislative text today. But, now that there is going to be a one-week continuing resolution, that does give the bipartisan group more time to figure out a path forward on liability.

South Dakota resident says nearby facilities were so full, she was sent out-of-state for Covid-19 treatment

South Dakota resident Rose Mary Kor was rushed to the ER when she was struggling to breathe.

At the ER, Kor was diagnosed with Covid-19-related pneumonia and was told she needed to be treated in a more sophisticated facility, but because the nearest facility was full, she would need to be sent for treatment in Wyoming, CNN’s Brooke Baldwin reported.

“They said, ‘we’re going to try to send you to Wyoming and the two options are Gillette and Casper, we’ll see who will take you.’ And as it turned out, Wyoming Medical Center in Casper was the one that could take me,” Kor explained.

The facility is about a 3-hour drive from Kor’s home and 200 miles away, she said.

Kor added that she doesn’t know what would happen if she required additional treatment.

Kor said she would have to see her doctor at the nearby clinic, but doesn’t know “what would happen, if they would have to ship me somewhere else. It just seems like our system is not prepared for the scope of what this virus is doing.”

Kor’s message to fellow residents in South Dakota is to take the pandemic seriously.

“If you’re not thinking this is real, that you don’t need a mask, that you don’t need to be careful, you’re living in some sort of alternate reality,” she said.

Former FDA commissioner says he "will not eat indoors in a restaurant" during the pandemic 

Dr. Scott Gottlieb, former commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration, told CNBC’s Andrew Sorkin on Monday that he has avoided indoor dining and will continue to do so during the coronavirus pandemic. 

“On a personal level, I’ve gone to many big box stores properly masked, and I wear a high-quality mask when I go out. I will not eat indoors in a restaurant,” Gottlieb said.

Gottlieb said he has been eating outdoors since the summer. The risk is too high to be in a confined space without a mask on, he said.

“We need to understand what we’re looking at right now is going to get progressively worse over the next four to six weeks. Infections are going to continue to grow for at least four weeks, and the number of deaths and hospitalizations are going to continue to grow for probably the next six weeks,” Gottlieb said. 

Fauci wants Biden administration to focus on "efficient and equitable" distribution of Covid-19 vaccines

Dr. Anthony Fauci said on Monday that the first thing he would like the incoming Biden administration to do is “get the efficient and equitable distribution of vaccines” to as many people as possible.

“Because if we could get 75% to 85% of the people in the United States vaccinated, we could crush this outbreak,” Fauci said. “We really have the capability of doing it.”

Under the Biden administration, Fauci will be staying in his current role and will also become a chief medical adviser for Biden on the Covid-19 pandemic.

Read more

Trump rants about his election grievances in Georgia, even though it may hurt the GOP
White House vaccine chief praises Biden’s plan to ask Americans to wear masks for first 100 days
Democratic senator says a Covid-19 stimulus proposal could come ‘as early as tomorrow’

Read more

Trump rants about his election grievances in Georgia, even though it may hurt the GOP
White House vaccine chief praises Biden’s plan to ask Americans to wear masks for first 100 days
Democratic senator says a Covid-19 stimulus proposal could come ‘as early as tomorrow’