July 15 coronavirus news | CNN

July 15 coronavirus news

TOPSHOT - Medical personnels take medical samples of patients at a "drive-thru" coronavirus testing lab set up by local community centre in West Palm Beach 75 miles north of Miami, on March 16, 2020. (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA / AFP) (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)
Alabama becomes 36th state to require masks in public
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Latin America and the Caribbean top 3.5 million Covid-19 cases and more than 150,000 deaths

A nurse plays the violin for patients infected with Covid-19, at a hospital in Santiago, Chile on July 9.

Latin American and Caribbean countries have now recorded more than 3.5 million Covid-19 cases and more than 150,000 deaths, according data from Johns Hopkins University.

The 33 countries in the region have reported a total 3,524,908 cases and 150,973 deaths.

The following 33 countries are included in this region:

White House defends Trump after Atlanta mayor accuses him of breaking mask law

Congressman Rick Allen, from left, President Donald Trump, Congressman Doug Collins, Senator David Perdue, and Senator Kelly Loeffler greet each other at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta on July 15.

The White House said Wednesday evening that President Donald Trump followed guidelines from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention during his trip to Atlanta, after the city’s mayor accused him of breaking the law by not wearing a mask at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.

Trump was spotted not wearing a mask during his visit to Atlanta on Wednesday, and Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms told CNN that Trump broke the law.

Hartsfield-Jackson airport is owned and operated by the city of Atlanta and thus included in her executive order requiring masks, Bottoms said.

When asked for a response, the White House did not directly address Bottoms’ accusation and said Trump was instead following CDC guidance.

“The President takes the health and safety of everyone traveling in support of himself and all White House operations very seriously,” deputy press secretary Judd Deere said in a statement to CNN.

An administration official added that the President and all those in close proximity to him are tested and he also never left the airport.

Read more here:

keisha lance bottoms atlanta protest 06042020

Related article White House says Trump followed CDC guidance after Atlanta mayor accuses him of breaking mask law

Moderna chief medical officer says chances of Covid-19 vaccine working is "pretty good"

Moderna Therapeutics headquarters is seen here in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Moderna’s chief medical officer said Wednesday that he’s “cautiously optimistic” about the biotechnology company’s Covid-19 vaccine developed in partnership with the National Institutes of Health.

The results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Tuesday, showed that the vaccine worked to trigger an immune response with mild side effects — fatigue, chills, headache, muscle pain, pain at the injection site — becoming the first US vaccine candidate to publish results in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

Zaks insisted that an independent body of experts will continue to monitor the study as it enters a large phase three trial — the final trial stage before regulators consider whether to make the vaccine available.

New Mexico records its second-largest single-day Covid-19 case increase 

New Mexico reported its second-largest single-day Covid-19 case increase today, according to a tweet from New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham.

Hospitalizations in New Mexico have gone up 37% in the last two weeks, she added. 

The New Mexico Department of Health announced 330 new Covid-19 cases totay for a total of 15,841 cases statewide, according to a news release from Lujan Grisham’s office. There have been six additional deaths to bring the total to 557 deaths.

There are currently 174 people hospitalized with Covid-19 in the state.

To note: These figures were released by the New Mexico Department of Health, and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

Mexico reports more than 550 new Covid-19 deaths

Crematorium workers place the body of a person who died of COVID-19 into the oven to be cremated at the San Isidro Crematorium in Azcapotzalco,  on Wednesday, July 15,  in Mexico City.

Mexico’s health ministry recorded 6,149 newly confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus Wednesday, bringing the country’s total to 317,635.

The ministry also reported 579 new deaths from the virus, bringing Mexico’s death toll to 36,906.

Some context: On Wednesday, Latin American and Caribbean countries surpassed more than 3.5 million Covid-19 cases and more than 150,000 deaths, according to a CNN tally based on data from Johns Hopkins University.

Chile reports lowest daily increase of Covid-19 cases in more than 2 months

People queue outside a Health Ministry van to be tested for COVID-19 in Santiago, Chile, on July 10.

Chile’s Ministry of Health reported 1,712 new cases of novel coronavirus Wednesday, its lowest daily increase since May 12, when the country reported 1,658. 

Wednesday’s daily increase rate of 0.54% is also the lowest percentage since early May, according to CNN’s tally of cases. 

Chile’s total number of confirmed Covid-19 cases now stands at 321,205. 

Health authorities also reported 117 new deaths from the virus on Wednesday, bringing the nationwide death toll to 7,186. 

“The variation of confirmed cases nationwide continues to decrease. It decreased 14% in the last 7 days and 36% in 14 days. The positivity rate is 16% and the number of deaths in the last days –the moving average, is 88. This is the lowest number of deaths in the last 32 days,” Chile’s Minister of Health Enrique Paris said during Wednesday’s news conference.

Georgia governor extends emergency restrictions through the end of the month

Gov. Brian Kemp

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is extending the state’s emergency coronavirus restrictions, but is not requiring citizens to wear a mask.

The order, which was signed Wednesday, also continues to prevent local governments from enacting rules that are stricter than the state’s restrictions.

“To flatten the curve, I urge all local elected officials to enforce the terms of this order,” Kemp wrote on Facebook. Without the extension, state guidance would have expired at the end of the day Wednesday.

Under Kemp’s order, face coverings are recommended, but not required.

ICU deaths from coronavirus are lower than we thought, study finds

Registered Respiratory Therapist Niticia Mpanga looks through patient information in the ICU at Oakbend Medical Center in Richmond, Texas, on July 15.

The reported death rates of patients being treated for coronavirus in intensive care units around the world have fallen by almost a third since the beginning of the pandemic, from 60% of patients to 42% at the end of May, according to new research published Wednesday.

It doesn’t appear that there’s been a dramatic change in the virus or specific treatments for patients that lowered death rates, and it could be that hospitals were reporting only the worst outcomes at first, British researchers reported in the journal Anaesthesia.

“Our analysis is reassuring in that in-ICU mortality is lower than early reports suggested,” Dr. Tim Cook of Royal United Hospitals in Bath, UK, and colleagues wrote.

“This is the first systematic review and meta-analysis of outcomes of patients admitted to ICU with COVID-19.” 

The researchers looked at the data from 24 observational studies, including 10,150 patients in Asia, Europe and North America. They reported mortality rates of between 0% and 85% for coronavirus patients treated in the ICU.

“Sub-group analysis by continent showed that mortality is broadly consistent across the globe,” they wrote. But it has changed over time.

“As the pandemic has progressed, the reported mortality rates have fallen from above 50% to close to 40%” as of May 31, they wrote. Yet no specific treatment for coronavirus was found over the time. There is still no cure, and doctors are applying various cocktails of drugs – including steroids and blood thinners – to keep patients alive.

“There are several explanations for this finding. It may reflect the rapid learning that has taken place on a global scale due to the prompt publication of clinical reports early in the pandemic. It may also be that ICU admission criteria have changed over time, for example, with more non-invasive ventilatory management outside ICU,” they wrote. 

“There is a possibility, too, that early studies, which were smaller, were prone to overestimating mortality,” they added.

Psychiatric groups describe steps needed for reopening schools during the pandemic

A teacher collects personal belongings and supplies needed to continue remote teaching through the end of the school year at Yung Wing School P.S. 124 on June 09, in New York City.

The American Psychiatric Association and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry said that school is an “essential component of successful and healthy development” for all children and that is especially true when so many have had their education interrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic.

To reopen, the associations suggest that schools proceed with the utmost care for student, teacher and staff health, according to a joint statement on Wednesday, and provide “appropriate protections” for all.

The associations said that public health agencies must make recommendations about how schools reopen based on scientific evidence and make decisions that are “devoid of politics” with the best interest of students, teachers and staff.

“One size cannot fit all,” the statement said.

When classroom education isn’t possible, schools should use techniques that will still encourage social interactions alongside educational goals. Students also need equal access to equipment to make remote learning possible for all. 

Special needs children will require extra resources, as will children who need English language instruction, and children who live in foster homes or whose families live in poverty. Schools should set aside funding to create safe environments for all childrenthe groups said.

Since mental health is a key part of a child’s overall health and well-being, these issues need to be addressed by the school both in the classroom and in people’s homes, if remote learning is needed.

Students in California's Sacramento County will not return to campus this fall

A reminder for people to wash their hands is displayed on a sign outside Theodore Judah Elementary School in Sacramento, California on April 1.

Sacramento County students will not return to public school campuses in the fall, joining several other California counties that will start the academic year with online distance learning only. 

Following similar announcements from Los Angeles County, San Diego County and San Francisco County, the addition of Sacramento County means more than 1 million students in California will not return to school classrooms in August. 

By the numbers: Sacramento County’s coronavirus case rate has recently increased by more than 1,000 new cases each week, Sacramento County Health Director Dr. Peter Beilenson said.

In comparison, Sacramento reported 2,000 total cases in the first 19 weeks of the pandemic. 

“The disease continues to spread among young people,” Beilenson said. “In collaborating with the school system, we agreed it made sense not to start right now.” 

Supplemental CDC recommendations on schools expected as early as Friday

A senior official at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tells CNN that the American public should expect to see two sets of supplemental recommendations to existing guidance related to schools safely reopening as early as Friday.

The first set of supplemental guidance is from the CDC and is still going through the interagency review process, but CDC officials were told that Friday was the target release date, the senior official said.

The second set of supplemental guidance is expected to come from the newly created White House work group, the official said.

The newly minted school reopening work group, requested by White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx, includes officials from the US Department of Health and Human Services, the Domestic Policy Council, as well as an official from the US Department of Education. The guidance documents expected from this group will be geared towards parents, the senior CDC official said.

About the guidance: Asked what the public should expect to be included in the CDC’s guidance, the official said that the new version will reiterate the most up-to-date science on the novel coronavirus. 

“That’s what we will always do. In everything that the CDC does, we go for balance based on science. We are not offering opinions,” the official said. 

Stressing the plan to “safely reopen,” the official said safety is the CDC’s top priority. Acknowledging that some areas of the US still have high community transmission of the virus, the official said “it’s not feasible to open” in those areas.

The official added that areas that don’t have a lot of cases and can institute social distancing and have school staff wear masks can probably reopen safely.

“Our science is more well-informed about the risk to kids and adults in schools, the efficacy of masks and social distancing. We know more as the science gets better,” the official said. 

Harvard says Covid-19 surge across South did not come from northern vacationers, as CDC director claims

Dr. Robert Redfield

Coronavirus cases are surging in the South because states reopened too soon, not because northerners traveled to Southern destinations over Memorial Day, the Harvard Global Health Institute asserted in a statement Wednesday

The institute is pushing back against comments made by US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director Dr. Robert Redfield on Tuesday, blaming travelers from the north for the Southern surge.

“Northerners are not the cause of big outbreaks in the south,” the Institute said in a statement. “What the states that are seeing large outbreaks have in common is that they relaxed COVID-19 regulations around the same time in May, leading to the surge of cases seen in early June.”

The institute pointed to Virginia as an example, noting that the state remained in phase one of its reopening through the end of May and has, as a result, managed to contain the spread of coronavirus “significantly better than its neighbors.”

Redfield, in an event Tuesday, said the early reopenings in May are not to blame for a spike in coronavirus cases in mid-June between the 12-16, saying instead, “we’re of the view that there was something else that was the driver.”

He suggested it was a result of travel over Memorial Day. “A lot of northerners decided to go South for vacations. The Southern groups had never really taken the mitigation steps that seriously, because they really didn’t have an outbreak,” he said.

That is not true, the Harvard Institute said.

“That is not the case: In Southern states that are currently seeing large outbreaks, infections started rising around June 1st,” it countered. That was well before mid-June and too soon to blame Memorial Day travelers. 

Coronavirus cases in Latin America and the Caribbean top 3.5 million

Latin American and Caribbean countries have recorded more than 3.5 million Covid-19 cases and more than 150,000 deaths as of Wednesday, according to a CNN tally based on data from Johns Hopkins University’s Coronavirus Resource Center.

The 33 countries in the region have reported a total 3,524,908 Covid-19 cases and 150,973 deaths.

Tennessee governor will attend NASCAR race tonight

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee tweeted that he will be attending the NASCAR All-Star Race in Bristol tonight.

Lee said he will be wearing a mask to the event.

The event, which could attract up to 30,000 NASCAR fans, will be the largest sporting crowd since mid-March. The stadium holds 160,000 people, but will only allow 20% of its capacity. Organizers say seats will be assigned and positioned six feet apart.

Ohio governor calls on people to wear masks as Covid-19 continues to spread

Gov. Mike DeWine called for Ohioans to show unity and take action against the rapid spread of Covid-19 in the state.

At the beginning of the pandemic, it took Ohio 20 days to reach its first 1,500 total Covid-19 cases, DeWine said during a briefing Wednesday.

Last week, Ohio saw over 1,500 cases in a single day.

“And to think, just a month ago, we were at only 400 new cases per day,” DeWine said.

DeWine emphasized that the number of new cases is not just the result of increased testing.

He encouraged Ohioans to wear masks, adding that masks are not enough.

“Let’s be honest, some have started to let our guard down. I know I sometimes have. We’re tired. We want to go back to the way things were – and that’s very understandable. But when our guard is down, we’re playing Russian Roulette with our lives,” DeWine said.

There are at least 137,000 coronavirus-related deaths in the US

There are at least 3,478,009 cases of coronavirus in the US and at least 137,106 people have died from the virus in the country, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases

So far on Wednesday, Johns Hopkins recorded 46,435 new cases and 640 reported deaths. 

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

American Airlines to warn 25,000 workers of potential furloughs

In a memo to employees Wednesday, American Airlines’ top two executives say it will issue WARN notices to 25,000 employees that they face potential furloughs on Oct. 1.

The memo, from CEO Doug Parker and President Robert Isom, also said that the airline hopes to avoid some of those furloughs. 

The two executives also said the airline supports a union-led effort to lobby Congress to extend the CARES out relief money, which is set to expire at the end of September, through March 2021. They note the longer timeline is necessary due to the “much longer impact of the pandemic than was anticipated when the CARES Act was enacted.”

“We know American will be smaller going forward and we must right-size all aspects of our airline to adjust to that new reality,” they said.

The possible furloughs include 10,000 flight attendants and 2,500 pilots.

Additional staff and protective equipment could have helped reduce staff anxiety, top doctors say

Some extra staffing and a lot of extra personal protective equipment would have helped overwhelmed hospital workers cope better with the onslaught of coronavirus, top doctors said Wednesday.

During the coronavirus crisis, Ozuah said is staff has dealt with “anxiety about getting sick, and the worry about inadequate supplies of PPE, and the worry about having to reuse masks.”

Ozuah said he is proud of the way his staff rose to the challenge, despite an unmet demand for additional PPE and staff when the pandemic hit New York hard in March.

“We went from consuming a handful of such masks a day to over 100,000 a day,” said Ozuah. “On March 11, we had one patient in the hospital with coronavirus. By March 31, we had 2,000, so it blew up so quickly that there was no time to ramp up staffing.”

The loss of fellow physicians contributes to the burden faced by many health care workers. Ozuah said his staff lost 27 colleagues to the virus.

“These are folks that you work with, and you see them in that state, struggling to breathe,” said Ozuah. “And some colleagues we lost despite weeks, and weeks, and weeks of heroic efforts on the part of other coworkers of ours trying to save them,” he added.

“The demand on our people’s time was so extreme that there was no time to reflect, no time to grieve. There were so many people who needed our help.”

Quitting WHO is like "firing the firefighter in the midst of the fire," public health experts say

World Health Organization (WHO) Health Emergencies Programme head Michael Ryan, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and WHO Technical lead head Covid-19 Maria Van Kerkhove attend a press conference organized on July 3, at the WHO headquarters in Geneva.

President Trump’s decision to withdraw US support for the World Health Organization is like firing a team of firefighters in the middle of a raging forest fire, three prominent public health experts argued Wednesday.

They compared the missteps in the coronavirus pandemic to a forest fire that goes badly wrong.

“Unfortunately, the models are imperfect. The wind turns in an unexpected direction. As a result, several towns are destroyed, and there are billions of dollars in damage,” Barry Bloom, Dr. Paul Farmer and Dr. Eric Rubin of the Harvard School of Public Health wrote in a commentary in The New England Journal of Medicine.

Trump and aides have blamed WHO and the Chinese government for the rapid spread of the coronavirus. The US now has more cases by far than any other country – 3.4 million, according to Johns Hopkins University. Brazil comes in second with 1.9 million. And the US has more deaths, with nearly 137,000.

“At some point there should be a reckoning, an evaluation of why the United States has done so poorly and who is responsible for the tens of thousands of excess deaths and billions of dollars in economic damage that have resulted,” the three experts wrote.

“But today, in the middle of the outbreak, we must take stock of where we are and how we can do better. To do that effectively, we need the WHO. We must not make the mistake of firing the firefighter in the midst of the fire,” they added.

WHO will struggle to survive without US support, they said.

“The United States is responsible for the largest amount of funding for the WHO, 22% of assessed dues, and provides the largest voluntary contributions – to polio eradication, nutrition, and vaccine programs, for example,” they added.

Virginia is the first state to adopt workplace safety standards for Covid-19 pandemic, governor says

Gov. Ralph Northam

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam has announced the adoption of statewide emergency workplace safety standards in response to Covid-19, according to a statement from the governor’s office.

The standards will require all employers to mandate social distancing measures and face coverings for employees in customer-facing positions and when social distancing is not possible, provide frequent access to hand washing or hand sanitizer, and regularly clean high-contact surfaces. 

In addition, new standards require all employees be notified within 24 hours if a coworker tests positive for the virus. Employees who are known or suspected to be positive for Covid-19 cannot return to work for 10 days or until they receive two consecutive negative tests.

The governor’s office called the standards the first-in-the-nation safety rules due to an “absence of federal guidelines,” the statement said.

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READ MORE

Pandemic’s perfect storm: Uptick in cases this winter may be more serious than the initial outbreak
Coronavirus cases soar by more than 1 million over 5 days
Hawaii delays quarantine lift until September 1
Miami is now the coronavirus epicenter as cases surge, expert says
3 Arizona teachers caught coronavirus but only 2 survived. This is what they want you to know