March 30, 2020 coronavirus news | CNN

March 30 coronavirus news

A Samaritan's Purse crew works on building an emergency field hospital equipped with a respiratory unit in New York's Central Park across from the Mount Sinai Hospital, Sunday, March 29, 2020. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
Temporary hospitals set up in Central Park and around NYC
01:23 - Source: CNN
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Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.

11 veterans have died at a Soldier's Home in Massachusetts. Five of them tested positive for coronavirus

Eleven veteran residents of the Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke, Massachusetts have died – and five of them tested positive for coronavirus, Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse confirmed to CNN.

Test results are still pending for five of the remaining veterans.

The status of the last veteran who died is unknown, according to Mike Bloomberg, Morse’s chief of staff. 

Soldiers’ Home houses 233 residents and is run by the state of Massachusetts. Eleven additional veterans and five staff members have also tested positive for Covid-19, Morse said. 

Bennett Walsh, the facility’s superintendent, has been placed on paid administrative leave, effective immediately, according to a statement from Massachusetts Health and Human Services Deputy Secretary Dan Tsai.

Walsh did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

All of the residents at Soldiers’ Home have been isolated and symptomatic employees have been advised to quarantine.

The Department of Homeland Security has moved its National Operations Center after an employee tested positive

The US Department of Homeland Security’s National Operations Center has temporarily moved to an alternate location after an employee tested positive for coronavirus, according to a source familiar with the situation.

Deep cleaning of the office is expected to be completed in the next couple days, the source said. 

According to DHS, the Operations Center operates 24 hours a day and serves as the “primary, national-level hub for situational awareness, a common operating picture, information fusion, information sharing and executive communications.”

The relocation was first reported by Yahoo News.

Doctors in California are "cautiously hopeful" that shelter at home measures could be working

Two weeks after San Francisco issued the country’s first shelter in place order for residents to prevent spread of the novel coronavirus, hospital emergency rooms throughout the region appear to be seeing the early effects.

As of Monday morning, the city reported a total of 374 confirmed infections and six deaths from the virus. While the availability of testing is still much lower than officials would like, the modest daily count compared to other major urban centers may be an encouraging sign that the early aggressive action in the country’s second most densely populated city is having its intended effect.

“We have already made a difference in saving lives,” San Francisco Mayor London Breed said during a news conference Monday, though she and other officials repeatedly cautioned that US communities are still in the early stages of the battle against the virus.

“We’re watching the data very carefully,” added Dr Grant Colfax, the city’s public health director, cautioning that the numbers could still explode rapidly.

The situation in Los Angeles: But that sense of hope has not necessarily reached Los Angeles County, where hospitals are seeing a steady increase in the number of patients.

Close to 2,500 people are confirmed to have been infected with the coronavirus in the county, with 342 new cases reported in the past two days.

Across town at the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, doctors expressed more optimism in the early efforts.

“We are cautiously hopeful that there has been a flattening of the steep curve because we have not seen the exponential rise of traffic coming in,” said Dr Anish Mahajan, the hospital’s chief medical officer, referring to the rate of new transmissions. 

Harbor-UCLA has seen a steady rise in coronavirus patients in recent days, increasing from 12 patients on Thursday to 35 on Monday.

What the authorities say: At a news conference Monday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom was asked if officials were beginning to see a flattening of the curve of coronavirus patients.

“We’re in the middle of this. It would be too easy to say what has or has not worked,” Newsom said. “The stay home effort has bought us time to prepare.”

California currently has at least 5,763 coronavirus cases, including 118 deaths.

The Los Angeles Convention Center could be used to house coronavirus patients

The Los Angeles Convention Center has been offered to hospitals in Los Angeles County to be used as an additional facility to house more patients, Mayor Eric Garcetti confirmed in a news conference Monday.

Initially, the convention center was going to be used for non-coronavirus patients, but they’ve been asked to use the space for coronavirus patients, Garcetti said.

Over 3,000 medical professionals have volunteered to help, according to Garcetti.

Hawaii orders quarantine for people traveling between the state's major islands

Hawaii has introduced strict new measures, requiring those who travel between the state’s eight major islands to self-isolate for 14 days, Gov. David Ige announced.

The order goes into effect on Tuesday and will last through at least April 30.

Last week, Ige ordered similar mandatory quarantine measures for anyone entering the state by air, regardless of whether they are a resident or a visitor. The orders do not apply to essential workers and flight crews.

Lt. Gov. Josh Green – a medical doctor who is the state’s coronavirus prevention liaison – said in a news conference on Monday that the rate of infection could increase dramatically if people don’t follow the quarantine orders. 

Hawaii has 204 confirmed coronavirus cases and no deaths.

The US federal government sent the wrong masks, says Illinois governor

The White House told the US state of Illinois that it would receive 300,000 N95 masks – but instead, the state got surgical masks, says Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

This was the third federal shipment of PPE Illinois has received and it arrived Sunday. But the governor said Illinois had so far received only a “small fraction” of what the state had asked for.

The state of Illinois currently has 5,057 confirmed coronavirus cases, including 73 deaths.

Pritzker also called on President Donald Trump to use the Defense Production Act to direct companies to increase PPE production.

Read more about the Defense Production Act here.

All farmers markets in Los Angeles will be suspended

All farmers markets in Los Angeles will be temporarily suspended, Mayor Eric Garcetti announced at a news conference today.

The farmers markets have become too crowded, he said.

The city will require all farmers markets to submit plans immediately that enforce physical distancing and ensure safe operations. Garcetti explained that it will likely result in one entrance and one exit with people safely lined up to enter.

He reminded Los Angeles residents that if there are too many people to simply wait before going.

Rent the Runway lays off retail workers after store closures due to coronavirus

Designer clothing rental company Rent the Runway is laying off retail staff during the coronavirus pandemic.

In a statement, the company said it has had “to make some difficult decisions in the short term to thrive in the long term which include temporary store closures and retail role eliminations.”

Rent the Runway primarily operates online, but has brick and mortar locations in New York, Chicago, Washington, DC, and San Francisco. 

The company did not provide CNN with the number of employees affected, but did say it would continue to provide health insurance coverage.

First coronavirus cases reported in Los Angeles homeless population

Two people experiencing homelessness in Los Angeles are infected with coronavirus – the first known cases among the homeless population in the county, according to Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer.

Additionally, a person who works in an L.A. County homeless shelter has also contracted the virus.

Gov. Gavin Newsom previously announced a homeless person had tested positive in California, according to the state’s Department of Public Health. It’s unclear where that person lives.

Ferrer also announced seven additional deaths and 342 new cases in Los Angeles County overnight. There are 2,474 confirmed Covid-19 cases in Los Angeles County, Ferrer said.

Nearly 60,000 people were counted as homeless in Los Angeles County in 2019 — a 12% increase over the previous year.

There are more than 160,000 coronavirus cases in US

Two members of the New York City Fire Department's EMS team wheel a patient into Elmhurst Hospital Center in Queens, on March 30.

There are at least 160,008 cases of coronavirus in the US and 2,948 people have died from the virus, according to CNN Health’s tally of US cases that are detected and tested. 

The total includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as all repatriated cases. Hawaii and Wyoming are not reporting a death from coronavirus. 

Hear more:

Fact check: Trump's past comments about the virus were not "all true"

CNN chief White House correspondent Jim Acosta asked President Trump what he has to say to Americans who are upset with him for having repeatedly downplayed the virus in February and early March.

Acosta read out a series of Trump quotes, including a February 23 remark in which Trump claimed the virus was “very much under control in this country” and a March 10 remark in which Trump said, “It will go away. Just stay calm, it will go away.” 

Trump responded, “If you look at those individual statements, they’re all true: stay calm, it will go away. You know it is going away.”

Facts First: Trump’s previous comments were not “all true.” The virus was clearly not “under control” in February – nor was it under control in mid-March, when Trump made another version of the claim, and nor is it under control today. 

And Trump was misleading when he said on March 10 that the virus “will go away.” While the virus may eventually be eliminated in the United States, Trump did not mention that thousands of Americans could die before this happened, nor that the country could have to implement drastic measures to try to slow its spread.

Experts also warn that there could be a second wave of the virus in the US even after the immediate crisis is over.

#COVID19 won’t go away. It’ll infect the southern hemisphere as they winter and will want to come back to U.S. in fall,” Dr. Scott Gottlieb, who formerly served as Trump’s Food and Drug Administration commissioner, wrote on Twitter after Trump’s comment on Monday. “But we’ll have a massive surveillance system by then, and I believe more than one drug to both prevent and treat infection. Our tool box will be very different.”

Fact check: Trump again touts unproven drugs for coronavirus

A packet of hydroxychloroquine pills.

President Donald Trump and members of his administration on Monday again mentioned two drugs that could potentially help combat the coronavirus. 

Over the weekend, large drugmakers announced that they were providing millions of doses of the drugs to the federal government, and the Food and Drug Administration issued emergency approval for the Trump administration’s plan to send the drugs to hospitals across the country. 

The medicines, chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine, are anti-malaria drugs that have been used off-label at hospitals to treat coronavirus patients. 

Facts First: While public health officials are hopeful that the drugs will work against coronavirus, Trump’s tone hasn’t matched the science, which is extremely limited and anecdotal at this early stage. 

Trump’s over-the-top optimism has been tamped down by the medical professionals on the White House task force handling the pandemic. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top public health official on infectious disease, said the proof is only anecdotal. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar was similarly careful with his language on Monday, and referred to the drugs as “potential Covid-19 treatments.”

Trump has repeatedly touted the drugs in recent weeks, even though there hasn’t been any clinical trials in humans proving that they work for coronavirus. Earlier this month, Trump tweeted that the drugs “have a real chance to be one of the biggest game changers in the history of medicine.”

CNN Health’s Arman Azad wrote about this on Sunday. He said: “Thus far, there is little scientific evidence that chloroquine, or its closely-related analogue hydroxychloroquine, are effective in treating Covid-19… While there’s limited evidence on the efficacy of chloroquine, or hydroxychloroquine, the FDA said the drugs’ benefits outweighed their risk.”

Coronavirus death rate is lower than previously reported — but it's still deadlier than flu, study says

How many people die after being infected with the novel coronavirus? Fewer than previously calculated, according to a study released Monday, but still more than die from the flu. 

The research, published in the medical journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases, estimated that about 0.66% of those infected with the virus will die.

That coronavirus death rate, which is lower than earlier estimates, takes into account potentially milder cases that often go undiagnosed – but it’s still far higher than the 0.1% of people who are killed by the flu. 

When unreported infections aren’t taken into account, the Lancet study found that the coronavirus death rate was 1.38%, which is more consistent with earlier reports.

That’s because death rates typically only consider reported coronavirus cases, which tend to be more severe, and thus brought to the attention of health care workers. Asymptomatic cases – or mild cases – may not always be counted.

That death rate, though, went up in older adults, with approximately 7.8% of those over age 80 estimated to die after infection. And deaths were estimated to be exceedingly rare in children younger than nine, with a fatality rate of just 0.00161%.

For age groups younger than 40, the death rate was never higher than 0.16%, according to the study. Out of 1,000 young adults infected, then, about 1 or 2 could die, with the youngest people facing the lowest risk.

Experts stress that it’s difficult to estimate a virus’ death rate during an epidemic.

78% of Americans are under stay-at-home orders

A person walks along a nearly empty street in Washington, DC, on March 27.

At least 256,008,318 Americans, or 78% of the US population, are under stay-at-home or shelter-in-place orders, according to a CNN count.

The US Census Bureau estimates the total US population at 328,239,523

This count includes local city and county orders as well. This count includes local city and county orders as well. The numbers were tallied using census data.

Unemployment claims could hit 4.5 million, Moody’s Analytics predicts

Moody’s Analytics predicts initial unemployment claims from last week could be 4.5 million, which would be the highest in history, as US businesses shutter to slow the spread of coronavirus.

The weekly data is set to be released Thursday morning. Initial jobless claims soared to a record 3.28 million in the week ended March 21, according to the Department of Labor.

However, Zandi said these high weekly numbers will not be reflected in this Friday’s upcoming March jobs report, which tracks job loss through the first two weeks of March.

“Though new filings surged over the past couple of weeks, the unemployment rate for March likely won’t increase that much. The household survey, which is the basis for the unemployment rate, is conducted in the week that includes the 12th; initial claims were up around 70,000 to 281,000 during that week,” Zandi said.

More than 500 coronavirus deaths reported in the US today

There have been at least 502 new coronavirus deaths reported in the US on Monday, according to a count by CNN Health.

This is the most reported deaths in the United States in a single day since the coronavirus outbreak.

There have been a total of 2,931 deaths reported in the US. 

Trump stands by previous comments that coronavirus "will go away"

President Trump grew combative with reporters during his news conference Monday when they asked about his past comments on the coronavirus pandemic and testing in other countries.

Trump stood by previous comments he made early on in the United States response to the coronavirus pandemic again saying that the virus “will go away.” 

“What do you say to Americans who are upset with you?” asked CNN’s Jim Acosta, who cited statements the President made in the past where he downplayed the crisis, including saying the virus would “go away.” 

“Isn’t that true it will go away?” the President asked. In his previous comments, Trump said the virus would “just go away,” as the weather got warmer. “It’s going to disappear,” Trump said in February. “One day, it’s like a miracle, it will disappear”

At his Rose Garden news conference Monday, the President implied that in his previous statements, he was simply trying to keep Americans calm.

“I do want them to stay calm,” he said, “and we are doing a great job.” 

Trump then said if he wanted to cause panic, he could. “I could cause panic much better than even you. I would make you look like a minor league player,” he said to Acosta. 

When PBS NewsHour’s Yamiche Alcindor asked about how the United States is still not testing per-capita as many people as other countries like South Korea, Trump said “it is very much on par.”

“Look, per capita, we have areas — I know South Korea better than anybody. It is very tight. You know how big the city of Seoul is? 38 million people, bigger than anything we have. 38 million people all tightly wound together. We have vast farmland, we have vast areas where they don’t have a problem. In some cases they have no problem whatsoever.”

He continued: “We have done more tests — I didn’t talk about per capita. We have done more tests, by far, than any country in the world. By far. Our testing is also better than any country in the world.”

Trump was wrong about the population of Seoul —the city has population of less than 10 million people.

Watch:

First US service member dies from coronavirus

The first US service member has died from Covid-19, the US military announced Monday. 

An army national guardsman from New Jersey died on Saturday, the Department of Defense said in a statement. The guardsman had been hospitalized since March 21.

“This is a stinging loss for our military community, and our condolences go out to his family, friends, civilian co-workers and the entire National Guard community. The news of this loss strengthens our resolve to work ever more closely with our interagency partners to stop the spread of COVID-19,” Esper added.

Trump says US has received supplies from other countries, including medical equipment from Russia

President Trump said Monday that the United States has received donations from other countries to deal with the spread of the coronavirus, including supplies from Russia and China.

“China sent us some stuff, which was terrific. Russia sent us a very, very large planeload of things, medical equipment which was very nice,” Trump told reporters in the White House Rose Garden.

He added: “Other countries sent us things that I was very surprised at, very happily surprised.”

Watch: