Coronavirus cases around the globe have surpassed 17.7 million. More than 4.6 million cases have been recorded in the United States.
A key coronavirus model now projects there will be more than 230,000 US deaths from Covid-19 by November, up 11,000 from its previous forecast.
Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.
46 Posts
GOP convention closed to press, portions will be livestreamed due to social distancing restrictions
From CNN's Jeremy Diamond and Ryan Nobles
2020 Republican National Convention (RNC) signage is displayed inside the Spectrum Center during a media walk-through in Charlotte, North Carolina on November 12, 2019.
Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg/Getty Images
The dramatically scaled-down Republican National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina, will be closed to the press, a convention spokesperson and Republican official familiar with the plans tell CNN.
Reporters will not be allowed on site as RNC delegates vote to formally nominate President Donald Trump as the 2020 Republican presidential nominee, but the vote will be livestreamed, the Republican official said.
The restriction is unprecedented in modern American political history, but Republican officials said they were forced to limit attendance due to social distancing restrictions imposed by the governor of North Carolina.
The coronavirus pandemic has forced numerous changes to the nominating process and RNC plans have repeatedly shifted – with more changes potentially to come. Trump canceled convention activities in Jacksonville, Florida, late last month.
A health worker carries out a Covid-19 test on a resident in a testing vehicle in Shenyang in China's northeastern Liaoning province on July 29.
Stringer/AFP/Getty Images
China registered 49 new coronavirus cases on Saturday, the National Health Commission said on Sunday morning.
Of those, 33 were classed as locally transmitted, with 30 cases in the far western region of Xinjiang.
The other three locally transmitted cases were reported in Liaoning, a northeastern province bordering North Korea.
Some 20 asymptomatic cases were also recorded, the NHC said.
The NHC also reported 16 imported cases, found in regions across China including Shanghai, Shandong and Hubei.
Link Copied!
Mexico reports highest single-day jump in coronavirus cases and deaths
From journalist Karol Suarez in Mexico City
Mexico recorded its highest daily increase of new coronavirus cases Saturday, with 9,556 infections reported in the past 24 hours, the country’s health ministry said.
The total number of Covid-19 cases in the country stands at 434,193.
The ministry also reported a new daily high of 784 fatalities related to the virus, bringing the death toll to 47,472.
This comes a day after Mexico surpassed the United Kingdom’s total number of coronavirus deaths, becoming the country with third highest number of Covid-19 fatalities, according to Johns Hopkins University data.
CNN is tracking worldwide coronavirus cases here:
Link Copied!
MLB officially postpones Sunday's Brewers vs. Cardinals game
From CNN's Kevin Dotson
Brewers players are shown warming up at Miller Park in Milwaukee on July 31.
Mark Hoffman/Milwaukee Journal Sentine via USA Today
Major League Baseball announced the postponement of Sunday’s scheduled doubleheader between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Milwaukee Brewers just hours after postponing Saturday night’s game between the two teams.
From the MLB’s press release:
Link Copied!
Delta flight returns to gate after travelers refuse to wear masks
From CNN's Jennifer Selva
A Delta flight was forced to return to the gate when two of their customers wouldn’t wear masks, according to Delta Air Lines spokesperson Emma Protis.
Protis told CNN in an emailthat Flight 1227 on July 23 was on its way from Detroit to Atlanta when they were forced to turn around.
Delta released the following statement to CNN:
The two passengers were removed from the plane, Protis said.
According to Delta’s website, “Delta customers and employees are required to wear a face mask, or appropriate cloth face covering over their nose and mouth throughout their travel, aligning with best practice guidelines from the CDC.”
Link Copied!
No one attending the scaled-back Hajj in Saudi Arabia has contracted Covid-19, health ministry says
From CNN’s Jomana Karadsheh and Sharif Paget
Muslim pilgrims maintain social distancing as they circle the Kaaba in the Islamic holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia on Friday, July 31.
AFP/Getty Images
No one attending this year’s scaled-back Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia has contracted Covid-19 so far, the country’s health ministry said Saturday.
The Muslim ritual, which started on Tuesday and ends on Sunday, normally hosts more than 2 million people, but after the coronavirus outbreak, Saudi authorities were forced to ban international visitors wishing to perform Hajj this year.
The Kingdom started preparing for the scaled down Hajj in February and after selecting 1,000 pilgrims – Saudis and foreign residents in the country, between the ages of 20 and 50 – enforced a 14-day pre-Hajj quarantine, tested them, provided trainings on social distancing and monitored the pilgrims, Dr. Abdullah Assiri, assistant deputy minister for preventative health at the Saudi Ministry of Health, told CNN in an interview on Wednesday.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, congratulated Saudi Arabia Thursday for the steps it took, calling it a “powerful demonstration of the kinds of measures that countries can – and must – take to adapt to the new normal.”
According to the Saudi health ministry, the kingdom registered 1,573 new coronavirus cases and 21 deaths on Saturday.
Saudi Arabia has the highest number of cases in the Arab world with 277,478 infections, according to the ministry’s latest tally.
Link Copied!
South Africa coronavirus cases surpass 500,000
From CNN's Jennifer Hauser
South Africa’s National Department of Health reported over 10,000 new Covid-19 cases Saturday, bringing the total number of infections recorded in the country to more than 500,000.
A total of 503,290 cases have been confirmed in the country, including more than 8,100 deaths, according to the Health Department.
South Africa is the hardest hit country on the continent. It has recorded the fifth highest number of cases in the world, according to Johns Hopkins University.
Link Copied!
Colombia records largest daily jump in new infections as total cases surpass 300,000
From journalist Stefano Pozzebon in Bogota
Health workers prepare to test people for coronavirus at a metro station in Medellin, Colombia, on July 6.
Joaquin Sarmiento/AFP/Getty Images
Colombia reported a new record of daily coronavirus cases after 10,673 new infections were recorded on Saturday, bringing the total to 306,181, its health ministry said.
The ministry also registered 225 coronavirus-related deaths, the lowest death toll in 10 days, raising the country’s deaths to 10,330.
Despite the surge of coronavirus cases in the past two weeks, the Colombian government is pushing for a lockdown of only the most affected communities, while large parts of the country have started partially reopening.
The state of emergency in Colombia is set to last through August 30.
Link Copied!
Brazil records more than 45,000 new coronavirus cases
From journalist Fernanda Wenzel in Porto Alegre
Brazil recorded 45,392 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 2.7 million, its health ministry announced Saturday.
The country reported 1,088 new deaths due to the virus, raising the nationwide death toll to 93,563.
Brazil has the second most Covid-19 cases and deaths worldwide after the United States, according to Johns Hopkins University data.
Link Copied!
Kuwait suspends flights from 31 countries due to coronavirus concerns
From CNN’s Sharif Paget
Kuwait suspended flights from 31 countries Saturday due to the coronavirus pandemic, just as the country reopened its airport for operations, the state-run Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) reported Saturday.
Citing a statement by Kuwait’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), KUNA reported the barred list included the following countries:
Brazil
China
Egypt
India
Iran
Iraq
Lebanon
Mexico
Spain
The DGCA was advised by Kuwait’s health ministry to suspend the flights until further notice, according to KUNA.
The Kuwait International Airport resumed commercial flights on Saturday as part of a phased reopening after a five-month suspension, KUNA reported.
Kuwait’s health ministry recorded an additional 491 Covid-19 cases on Saturday, bringing the country’s overall total to 67,448 confirmed infections.
Link Copied!
Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford placed on NFL's Reserve/Covid-19 list
From CNN's Kevin Dotson
Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford
Leon Halip/Getty Images
Detroit Lions quarterback Matthew Stafford has been placed on the NFL’s Reserve/Covid-19 list by his team. This move does not necessarily indicate that Stafford himself has tested positive for Covid-19.
The NFL describes the Reserve/Covid-19 category as a roster status created for a player who either tests positive for Covid-19 or who has been quarantined after having been in close contact with an infected person or persons.
If a player falls into either of these categories, their team is required to immediately place the player on the Reserve/Covid-19 list. Per the agreed upon NFL-NFLPA policy, clubs are not permitted to comment on player’s medical status other than referring to roster status. Clubs may not disclose whether player is in quarantine or is positive for Covid-19.
Link Copied!
Health experts recommend planning and caution when making decisions on sending kids back to school
From CNN's Lauren Mascarenha
Health experts are recommending planning and caution when making decisions about whether to send kids back to school, amid New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s announcement Saturday that he will make a decision on reopening schools in New York this week.
Cuomo noted that he is monitoring the infection rate across the state. Health experts have cautioned against reopening in areas across the US where Covid-19 transmission levels are still high.
Emergency medicine physician Dr. Daniel Fagbuyi said Saturday that planning is key when considering reopening. He recommends communities consider reopening once they have met certain requirements, including reaching a positivity rate less than 5%, mandating face masks, and implementing rapid testing, social distancing and regular hand washing.
Fagbuyi noted that the measures “seem basic, but if you don’t have any of these all in place at the same time, there’s always a loophole, and once you have a loophole, it’s game over.”
In this case, “game over” can be fatal.
Experts say considering these potential consequences of reopening can be helpful.
Saag said leaders have to be willing to act on plans that are made.
“Once a plan is made, the implementation has to follow in lockstep,” said Saag. “If it doesn’t, we should be expecting cases in schools, and it won’t be news that somebody in Mississippi or somebody in another school system became infected.”
Hotez recommended waiting for coronavirus cases to reach containment in states before schools reopen. Saag noted that New York’s cases dropped to near pre-epidemic levels before they considered reopening schools.
Cuomo said Saturday that even in New York, parents are understandably concerned.
Saag noted that it’s a tough decision, “The question is, what are we willing to live with?”
Link Copied!
MLB officially postpones Saturday’s Brewers vs. Cardinals game
From CNN's Jabari Jackson
The Milwaukee Brewers play an intrasquad game during summer workouts at Miller Park in Milwaukee on July 17.
Stacy Revere/Getty Images
Major League Baseball officially postponed Saturday’s game between the Milwaukee Brewers and St. Louis Cardinals in Milwaukee due to positive Covid-19 test results.
The announcement was made in a statement issued by the league on Saturday. After two Cardinals players tested positive, Major League Baseball said that rapid test results indicated “one additional Cardinals player and multiple staff members may be positive.”
The Philadelphia Phillies – whose games this week were postponed out of “an abundance of caution” surrounding the Miami Marlins outbreak – will resume play on Monday against the Yankees in New York. Two of the three positive results from Phillies staffers were “false positives,” according to the MLB. The league said it remains unclear whether the third individual “contracted COVID-19 from Marlins players and staff based on the timing of the positive test.”
The league’s statement added that the Marlins have reported no new positive test results on July 31. The team has been quarantining in Philadelphia since July 26. Miami is set to resume play against the Baltimore Orioles on August 4 in Baltimore.
Link Copied!
Milwaukee Brewers' Lorenzo Cain opts out of 2020 season
From CNN’s Homero De la Fuente and Jabari Jackson
Milwaukee Brewers center fielder Lorenzo Cain during a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks on July 21, 2019.
Christian Petersen/Getty Images
Milwaukee Brewers center fielder Lorenzo Cain has opted out of the remainder of the 2020 season, the team announced Saturday.
Cain’s decision comes after the team’s previous two games were postponed due to multiple members of the St. Louis Cardinals tested positive for Covid-19.
Cain also released a statement:
Link Copied!
Thousands gather in Berlin to protest against Covid-19 restrictions
From CNN's Trey Haney
Demonstrators gather in central Berlin to protest wearing masks and other coronavirus restrictions on Saturday, August 1.
The march, which was named by organizers as “Day of Freedom – The End of the Pandemic,” included anti-vaccine groups and some far-right and neo-Nazi organizations.
Link Copied!
Mississippi has the highest percentage of Covid-19 positive cases in the US
From CNN’s Deanna Hackney
A Mississippi National Guard member conducts a coronavirus test at a drive-thru testing center in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, in May.
Mississippi holds the highest percentage of Covid-19 positive tests in the country at 21.11%, according to Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.
According to the Mississippi State Department of Health, as of 7 p.m. on July 31, the state had a total of 59,881 positive coronavirus cases and 1,693 deaths.
Of the total positive cases, 53.9% were comprised of African-Americans, according to the Mississippi State Department of Health.
Link Copied!
California reports highest number of single day Covid-19-related deaths
From CNN’s Cheri Mossburg
Mend Urgent Care workers perform Covid-19 testing at Central City Value High School on July 31 in Los Angeles, California.
Kevin Winter/Getty Images
California’s Department of Public Health reported 219 Covid-19-related deaths, the most reported in a single day in the state.
The state previously reported a high of 197 deaths in one day on Tuesday, according to numbers released by the department.
A total of 9,224 people have died in California from complications due to Covid-19, based on numbers released by the department.
Note: Reporting from the department may include cases and deaths that occurred outside the most recent 24-hour period due to the possibility of reporting delays. These numbers were released by the California’s 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.
Link Copied!
Arizona congressman tests positive for coronavirus
From CNN’s Aileen Graef and Caroline Kelly
Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva speaks during a House Natural Resources Committee hearing on June 29 in Washington, DC.
Michael Reynolds/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
Rep. Raul Grijalva, of Arizona, has tested positive for the coronavirus, according to a statement from him released by his office.
Some context: Grijalva said earlier in the week that he would quarantine himself and get tested after fellow Congressman Louie Gohmert, of Texas, tested positive for coronavirus.
Gohmert is the ranking member of the House Natural Resources Committee, which Grijalva is chair of. Grijalva criticized Gohmert at the time for refusing to wear a mask in the hearing.
“This stems from a selfish act by Mr. Gohmert, who is just one member of Congress,” Grijalva said.
Link Copied!
New Jersey reports nearly 400 new Covid-19 cases
New Jersey has reported 393 new cases of Covid-19 and 11 deaths from the virus, according to a tweet from Gov. Phil Murphy.
The state has recorded a total of 182,029 Covid-19 cases 13,955 deaths from the virus, the tweet said.
Note: These numbers were released by the state of New Jersey and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.
Link Copied!
A Mississippi high school student tests positive for Covid-19 after returning to school
From CNN's Melissa Alonso
WREG
A Mississippi high school student has tested positive for coronavirus during the first week of classes, according to the Corinth School District.
“We have had an initial test positive at Corinth High school,” district officials said on Friday.
After conducting contact tracing at the school, anyone who came in contact with the student was asked to quarantine at home for 14 days, according to social media posts from the district.
Students who were asked to quarantine “should continue working digitally in order to be counted present,” the district said on social media.
Link Copied!
41 New York state establishments were given Covid-19-related violations Friday
From CNN's Kristina Sgueglia
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said 41 establishments were given violations last night in the downstate area for Covid-19-related violations.
Of the 41 establishments given violations last night, two were in the Bronx, one in Brooklyn, five in Queens, one in Staten Island, three in Nassau, two in Suffolk, and 27 in Manhattan.
The State Liquor Authority also did seven more suspensions yesterday – three in Manhattan, three in Queens, and one in Staten Island, the governor said.
Link Copied!
Florida reports more than 9,500 additional resident Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Melissa Alonso
A health care worker takes a nasal swab from a person at the new federally funded Covid-19 testing site at the Miami-Dade County Auditorium on July 23 in Miami, Florida.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
The state of Florida is reporting 9,591 new cases of Covid-19 among Floridians and 179 additional resident deaths on Saturday, according to Florida Department of Health (DOH).
This marks the fifth consecutive day that the state reported more than 9,000 new cases, according to CNN’s tally.
There are now 474,621 cases among residents and 480,028 total cases in the state, including out of state residents, DOH reports. Florida has reported 7,022 resident deaths to date, DOH data shows.
There are currently 7,942 people hospitalized in Florida with with Covid-19, down from above 8000 last weekend, according to the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA).
Link Copied!
Large demonstration underway in Berlin to protest against Covid-19 restrictions
From Fred Pleitgen in Berlin
People gather at the Brandenburg Gate for a demonstration against coronavirus restrictions in Berlin, Germany, on August 1.
Markus Schreiber/AP
A large crowd that includes members of the anti-vaccine movement, far-right and neo-Nazi groups have gathered for a “sit-in” at Berlin’s iconic Brandenburg Gate to protest against the German government’s coronavirus restrictions.
A march earlier Saturday that was criticized by police for not adhering to rules on social distancing and face masks was halted by organizers. Police filed a criminal complaint against one organizer for violating hygiene rules.
Current coronavirus guidelines in Germany stipulate that people must maintain a distance of 1.5 meters (around 5 feet). Where that is not possible, face masks must be worn.
Police warned the roughly 17,000 protesters who participated in the earlier march would only be allowed to participate in the demonstration at Brandenburg Gate if they wore face coverings and maintained social distance.
A live stream from the protest showed almost no one wearing a face mask although the master of ceremonies told the crowd from the stage to maintain physical distance so as not to give the authorities “a pretext” for breaking up the event.
Link Copied!
Pelosi says she hopes "that we make progress on a long-term deal" after arriving on Capitol Hill
From CNN's Ali Zaslav
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks during her weakly press conference at the US Capitol on July 31.
Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi arrived on Capitol Hill on Saturday morning and told reporters she’s hoping “that we make progress on a long-term deal.”
Pelosi reiterated that Democrats are not interested in a short term deal ahead of her and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s meeting with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.
Some context: The unemployment benefit that has kept millions afloat amid the worst economic crisis in decades officially expired at midnight Friday. Weekly jobless claims continue to rise. Economic forecasters are warning of another slowdown. The coronavirus has resurged across the country.
The US Senate has adjourned for the weekend.
President Trump said Mnuchin and Meadows would bring new options on unemployment benefits to the table Thursday night, and according to a person briefed on the talks, they did in the form of a longer-term extension of the enhanced unemployment benefits at the $600 level. Democrats again rejected the idea of decoupling the benefit extension from the broader talks.
There was tangential progress made in the sense that new proposals were put on the table and there was more depth in the talks about how to structure a proposal, the person said. But the separation between the two sides is still enormous.
Link Copied!
England may need to choose between pubs or schools, health expert says
From CNN’s Arnaud Siad in London
The United Kingdom may need to choose between keeping pubs open or allowing schools to reopen it if it wants to keep coronavirus infection rates down, a key member of the group advising the government on Covid-19 response told British media.
Medley’s comments were made a day after crowds were seen in bars and pubs in parts of northern England despite a spike in cases the reintroduction of some government restrictions in several areas.
Pubs were allowed to reopen across the UK on July 4.
“I think we’re in a situation whereby most people think that opening schools is a priority for the health and wellbeing of children,” Medley said.
On Friday: Prime Minister Boris Johnson said England would “squeeze the brake pedal” on the next phase of re-opening in a bid to slow down the rising rates of coronavirus infection.
New restrictions were announced for northern England late Thursday in an effort “to stop the spread of Covid-19.” Across the country, certain venues that were schedule to reopen Saturday – including , casinos, bowling allies, skating rinks and “the remaining close contact services – will remain shuttered until at least Aug. 15.
Link Copied!
Coronavirus cases continue to rise in Poland
From CNN’s Arnaud Siad in London
For the third day in a row, Poland reported the highest number of new daily coronavirus cases since the start of the pandemic, with 658 new infections reported on Saturday, according to the country’s health ministry.
The ministry also reported five new deaths, brining the country’s total to 1,721.
Some context: Poland reported 657 new infections on Friday and 615 on Thursday – both were new records at the time.
On Thursday, the Polish government told CNN it was considering different scenarios to bring the infection levels under control.
Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said at a news conference on the same day that he would like to avoid another lockdown due to the damage it can inflict on the economy.
Link Copied!
Covid-19 might affect hearing too, a small study shows
Some coronavirus survivors have been experiencing hearing problems that lasted until long after they had been released from hospital, a small study has revealed.
Audiologists at the University of Manchester surveyed 121 adults who had been hospitalized with Covid-19 eight weeks after they were released.
When asked about changes to their hearing, 16 people reported their hearing was worse. Eight reported deterioration in hearing and another eight reported tinnitus – hearing noises that are not caused by an outside source.
The researchers said the results, published in a letter to the International Journal of Audiology, add more anecdotal evidence to our understanding of the long-term effects of coronavirus on health.
Kevin Munro, professor of audiology and the Hearing Health Theme Leadat the Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, said scientists already knew that other viruses such as measles, mumps and meningitis can cause hearing loss and that coronaviruses can damage the nerves that carry information to and from the brain.
“It is possible, in theory, that Covid-19 could cause problems with parts of the auditory system including the middle ear or cochlea,” he said.
Link Copied!
Iraq reports another record increase in cases
A health worker administers a coronavirus test at a testing facility Najaf, Iraq, on July 15.
-/AFP/Getty Images
Iraq’s Ministry of Health reported 3,346 news coronavirus infections on Friday, a new record in daily cases.
More than 124,600 people have been infected in Iraq and 4,741 have died.
Iraq is one of several countries in the Middle East that have been fighting rising numbers of new infections while also struggling with a severe heatwave this week.
In the capital Baghdad, two people were killed and 11 others injured during protests over electricity shortages, and lack of basic goods, that erupted in the capital’s Tahrir square earlier this week as temperatures reached 50C (122F).
Iraq announced a 10-day curfew after the country surpassed 100,000 Covid-19 cases on Sunday. The announcement came just before the Eid al-Adha holiday, which started on Thursday night.
The four-day holiday is normally marked by congregational Eid prayers, family gatherings and large feasts. Eid al-Adha follows on from the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca in Saudi Arabia, which was also affected by coronavirus – instead of the usual 2 million, only 1,000 pilgrims were allowed to take part this year.
He heard about farmers ditching unsold produce. So he delivered 3 million pounds of it to food banks
From CNN's Gabriel Kinder
George Ahearn working on a delivery of eggs.
Photo: George Ahearn
George Ahearn, who grew up in the farming town of Othello, Washington, co-founded EastWest Food Rescue after learning that Covid-19 was costing local farmers so much business that they were willing to destroy their crops.
His non-profit has since moved three million pounds of produce from farms in eastern Washington to the western part of the state for distribution to hundreds of food banks and meal programs.
“I know these people that I grew up with on one hand, and on the other hand I know there is a need here; I’m just going to connect the two dots,” Ahearn, 45, who now lives in Bothell, Washington, and also runs a nursing business told CNN.
The "rock star" leader of the world's global health agency WHO
From CNN's Emma Reynolds in London
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus is not only the WHO's first African Director-General but also the first non-physician to lead the global health agency.
Photo: FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images
In a speech before he was voted in as the head of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that when he was seven, his younger brother died “from one of the many child killers in Africa.”
He said that could easily have been him, and it was “pure luck” that he was now on stage running for a global leadership position. He said he was committed to reducing inequality and ensuring universal health coverage because he had grown up “knowing survival to adulthood cannot be taken for granted, and refusing to accept that people should die because they are poor.”
Who is the man leading the WHO at the time of the worst health crisis in a century? Read more here.
This doctor just endured the deadliest week of his career
From CNN's Kyle Almond
Dr. Joseph Varon, the chief medical officer at Houston’s United Memorial Medical Center, gets home after a long day at work.
Callaghan O'Hare/Reuters
Dr. Joseph Varon hasn’t had a day off in months.
Friday was his 134th consecutive day leading the coronavirus unit at Houston’s United Memorial Medical Center.
“If you ask me how the hell have I been able to survive for 134 days nonstop, I guess it’s adrenaline,” he said. “But I’m running on fumes. It’s tough.”
And last week was his toughest yet. With Houston dealing with a surge in Covid-19 cases, he signed more death certificates than he has at any point in his career.
“People were dying every day,” he said.
Varon and his team go over patient files during a daily meeting. “I’m afraid that at some point in time I'm going have to make some very serious decisions,” Varon said in July. “I’m starting to get the idea that I cannot save everybody.”
Callaghan O'Hare/Reuters
Varon’s workday starts early. Around 4:30 or 5 a.m., he heads to the hospital and goes straight to the coronavirus unit where he and his team go over each patient’s case.
Then he starts making the rounds.
“He’s involved with everything and very, very personal,” said photographer Callaghan O’Hare, who shadowed him several times over the past month. “He will sit on the bed with people and give them hugs and have a chat. It’s pretty incredible to watch.”
Caring for the coronavirus patients takes a minimum of 10 hours each day, Varon said. After that, he meets with his other patients in the hospital — the ones who don’t have coronavirus.
“If I am lucky, I get home before 10 o’clock at night. If I’m not lucky, which is most of the time, I make it home around midnight,” he said.
Why Greece could be Europe's best holiday ticket right now
From CNN's Barry Neild in Vathia, Greece
Suzanne Plunkett/CNN
Greece has worked hard to adapt its tourism offering in an age of infection. For the time being at least, this seems to be paying off, even as a second wave of infections threatens other European destinations.
Thanks in part to the fact that it’s so far seen few cases, visiting many parts of Greece right now is almost like visiting a country where Covid-19 never happened.
Visitors need to complete paperwork before departure, giving details of where they’ll be staying. On arrival, they’re subject to random testing and could, if anyone on their flight tests positive, be quarantined for 14 days.
Germany is offering free Covid-19 tests for travelers coming from abroad.
Tobias Schwarz/AFP/Getty Images
Germany has on Friday recorded the highest number of new daily infections since early May, according to data published Saturday by Germany’s center for disease prevention, The Robert-Koch Institute.
The country saw 955 new coronavirus cases. The last time Germany recorded a higher number was May 9.
The pandemic had largely been brought under control in Germany earlier this summer, but the government has been warning about new outbreaks of the disease in recent weeks.
The Robert-Koch Institute said laxer enforcement of distancing and hygiene rules, as well as travelers returning from abroad are to blame for the steep rise in cases.
“The number of 955 new infections is alarming. Especially since it is not large ‘hot spots’ but smaller clusters of infections,” Germany’s economy minister Peter Altmaier said on Twitter on Saturday. “The main risks need to clearly be named so that more targeted prevention becomes possible,” he added.
Starting Saturday everyone coming to Germany will be able to get a free coronavirus test within 72 hours of arrival, according to a new directive from Germany’s health ministry.
Link Copied!
US coronavirus daily death totals topped 1,000 on 10 days in July
From CNN's Alta Spells
During the month of July, the United States’ coronavirus daily death totals exceeded 1,000 on 10 occasions, according to data gathered by Johns Hopkins University (JHU).
In June, the number of daily deaths topped 1,000 on three out of 30 days, representing a drop from previous months, JHU records show.
During May, daily death totals were greater than 1,000 on 23 of the 31 days.
In April, the number of deaths reported each day exceeded 1,000 for each of the 30 days of the month, with 17 days reporting more than 2,000 deaths according to data from JHU.
The highest recorded daily death total in the US is 2,614 set on April 17, according to information compiled by JHU.
Here’s July’s breakdown:
Date New Deaths
July 7 1,195
July 21 1,096
July 22 1,195
July 23 1,114
July 24 1,130
July 27 1,077
July 28 1,362
July 29 1,448
July 30 1,233
July 31 1,259
Link Copied!
India reports highest 24-hour increase in coronavirus cases, with over 57,000 new infections
From CNN's Swati Gupta
Health workers collect swab sample for Covid-19 tests in Kolkata, India on July 31.
Samir Jana/Hindustan Times/Getty Images
India reported 57,118 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, its highest daily increase to date, according to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.
As of this morning, India had a total of 1,695,988 confirmed cases of Covid-19, of which more than 565,000 are active cases.
The total number of recovered patients stands at over 1 million.
At least 36,511 people have died from the virus across the country, according to the health ministry.
The Indian Council of Medical Research said that they have tested more than 19.3 million samples.
Link Copied!
A variety of responses by US states hurt the country's ability to contain the coronavirus pandemic, Fauci says
From Madeline Holcombe and Dakin Andone
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC on July 31.
Kevin Dietsch/AFP/Getty Images
The “diversity of response” by US states hampered the country’s ability to contain the spread of the coronavirus, Dr. Anthony Fauci said at a congressional hearing on Friday, as the number of cases in the US topped 4.5 million.
When asked why Europe appears to have been more effective at controlling the spread of the virus, the nation’s top infectious disease expert said that it might have helped that about 95% of Europe had shut down much earlier.
Some states also followed reopening guidelines more closely than others, Fauci added, saying, “There are some states that did it very well and some states that did not.”
“I think there was such a diversity of response in this country from different states that we really did not have a unified bringing everything down,” he added later, in response to a similar question from Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland.
Frontline workers wearing PPE still at more than three times the risk of Covid-19 infection, new study finds
From CNN's Shelby Lin Erdman
Doctors and nurses wearing protective gear treat a patient in the Covid-19 intensive care unit at a hospital in Houston, Texas on June 29.
Go Nakamura/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) when caring for patients with Covid-19 isn’t enough to completely eliminate the threat from the virus for frontline workers, according to a new study from King’s College London.
Health care workers with adequate gloves, gowns and face masks still had 3.4 times the risk of contracting the coronavirus compared to the general population, the study found, and minority health care workers had an even greater risk of testing positive.
African American, Latino and other minority care providers were five times more likely to contract Covid-19 than their White counterparts, the study found.
“A little over 20 percent of front-line health-care workers reported at least one symptom associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection compared with 14.4 percent of the general population; fatigue, loss of smell or taste, and hoarse voice were especially frequent,” the researchers wrote.
The researchers used the COVID Symptom Tracker app to study the data of more than 2 million people, including almost 100,000 frontline health care workers in the United States and the United Kingdom between March 24 and April 23.
They found more than 2,700 cases of Covid-19 per 100,000 health care workers compared with just over 240 cases per 100,000 among the general population.
Researchers publish scathing critique of a hydroxychloroquine study touted by the White House
From CNN's Elizabeth Cohen
A pharmacy tech holds a pill of hydroxychloroquine at Rock Canyon Pharmacy in Provo, Utah, on May 20.
George Frey/AFP/Getty Images
Researchers on Wednesday published scathing critiques of a study President Trump repeatedly touted on Twitter. That study, published earlier this month in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases, claimed to show that hydroxychloroquine saved lives.
President Trump tweeted about it enthusiastically.
“The highly respected Henry Ford Health System just reported, based on a large sampling, that HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE cut the death rate in certain sick patients very significantly. The Dems disparaged it for political reasons (me!). Disgraceful. Act now,” the President tweeted on July 6.
But the study had multiple errors, flaws and biases, according to letters to the journal’s editors.
“As a result of the flaws in the analysis the conclusions reached in [the study] are invalid,” Graham Atkinson, an independent consultant in health care policy, wrote in one of the letters.
The study was conducted at the Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. It contradicts many other studies, which have found the drug does not help Covid-19 patients.
The United States reported 67,023 new coronavirus cases and 1,259 new deaths on Friday, according to Johns Hopkins University.
There are at least 4,562,038 Covid-19 infections in the US and at least 153,314 people have died.
The totals include cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.
CNN’s map is tracking the US cases:
Link Copied!
Japan sees highest daily coronavirus infections for a third day in a row
From CNN's Junko Ogura
Japan reported 1,579 new Covid-19 cases and five deaths on Friday, according to the health ministry.
It’s the third day in a row that the country has reported its highest daily infections.
The total number of confirmed cases in Japan stands at 36,548, with 712 from the Diamond Princess cruise ship. There have been 1,024 deaths, with 13 from the cruise ship.
The capital Tokyo also reported its highest daily increase on Friday, with 463 cases. That brings the total number of infections in the city to 12,691, with more than half of those from July.
Koike urged Tokyo residents to avoid unnecessary trips in summer holiday in August.
Link Copied!
Leading medical journal calls widespread false information on the coronavirus a “threat to public health”
From CNN Health’s Shelby Lin Erdman
Widespread disinformation about the coronavirus pandemic fueled by the internet “has resulted in difficulties in discerning truth from fiction” and is a growing problem, The Lancet wrote in an editorial published on Friday.
“This so-called infodemic, defined by World Health Organzation as an “overabundance of information – some accurate and some not – that makes it harder for people to find trustworthy sources and reliable guidance when needed,” has become a major threat to public health,” the leading medical journal wrote.
The Lancet compared dealing with “the infodemic” to the difficulty with handling the coronavirus pandemic itself.
These types of misinformation campaigns are nothing new. Recent examples include populist politicians, the anti-vaccination movement, climate change deniers and the tobacco industry, The Lancet said, and they’re often motivated by political and financial gain.
The journal is calling for a concerted, global effort by health organizations, governments and the media to combat the spread of disinformation.
Social media platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter, have recently started removing bogus accounts and posts containing false and dangerous information about the pandemic.
But The Lancet said too many “bogus cures and conspiracy theories” remain.
The pandemic will worsen with rising infection rates and deaths if people are confused about unproven treatments, fake cures or what is needed to get the outbreak under control.
“The key to infodemics is not to produce even more information, but to address the environmental and social factors that make spreading misinformation easy,” the publication concluded.
Link Copied!
There aren't enough Americans wearing masks, coronavirus researcher says
From CNN's Andrea Kane
Pedestrians wearing masks walk along the strand at the Muscle beach section of Venice in Los Angeles on Friday, July 3.
Richard Vogel/AP/FILE
There are not nearly enough Americans using masks to bend the curve on the coronavirus infection rate, the head of one of the main teams forecasting the pandemic said Friday.
The University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) revised its forecast this week for coronavirus deaths because of rising infection rates and because too few Americans were using face masks regularly, IHME’s Dr. Chris Murray told CNN.
This week’s IHME forecast of 230,822 US deaths from the virus by November is up about 11,000 from last week’s projection of 219,864 deaths.
The model projects that if almost all Americans wore face masks, the number of deaths by November would drop by around 32,000, to just below 199,000 deaths.
Murray says the “good news” is that cases are peaking in Florida, Texas, California and somewhat in Arizona, which is bringing their numbers down a bit.
“But we’re seeing numbers going up faster in a whole series of states in the Midwest. And that’s driving up our numbers. Places, also, like Georgia and North Carolina are going up faster than we expected,” he said.
Link Copied!
Mexico reports more than 8,400 new coronavirus cases
From Karol Suarez in Mexico City
Mexico recorded a new daily record of 8,458 new coronavirus cases on Friday bringing the total number of infections to 424,637, its health ministry announced.
The ministry also recorded 688 new coronavirus related deaths, raising the total death toll to 46,688.
Mexico surpassed the United Kingdom’s total number of coronavirus deaths, becoming the country with third highest number of Covid-19 fatalities globally, according to Johns Hopkins University data.
Link Copied!
Georgia governor extends public health state of emergency and renews Covid-19 restriction
From CNN’s Jennifer Henderson
In this Friday, July 17 file photo, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp speaks during a coronavirus briefing at the Capitol, in Atlanta.
John Bazemore/AP
Georgia Governor Brian Kemp signed two executive orders extending existing Covid-19 safety measures and extending the Public Health State of Emergency, he said today in a press release.
The Public Health State of Emergency now runs through Sept. 10.
The executive order extending existing Covid-19 safety measures requires social distancing, bans gatherings of more than 50 people unless there is six feet between each person, requires sheltering in place for those living in long-term care facilities and the medically fragile, and outlines mandatory criteria for businesses, among other provisions. The order runs through Aug. 15.
In the release, Kemp encouraged Georgians to wear a mask, wash their hands often and practice social distancing to help flatten the curve.
There is no mask requirement in Georgia. Earlier this month Kemp rescinded local mask mandates and sued Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms over her the mask requirement for the city.
Link Copied!
About 7% of participants in British study tested positive for coronavirus antibodies
From CNN Health’s Lauren Mascarenhas
Paramedic Jess Baddams poses while holding a blood sample during an antibody testing programme at the Hollymore Ambulance Hub of the West Midlands Ambulance Service in Birmingham on June 5.
Simon Dawson/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
About 7% of participants in a British study tested positive for coronavirus antibodies, according to results from the first month of the nationwide study.
The test results, which indicate previous infection with coronavirus, ranged from 10.4% of Londoners to about 4.4% of people living in the southwest of England and Scotland.
The widespread United Kingdom serology, or antibody, study uses volunteers for a much larger, ongoing health study called the UK Biobank. UK Biobank has collected samples and health information from 500,000 volunteers for research.
The researchers have recruited more than 20,000 volunteers from regions across the UK for the coronavirus antibody study. They are being asked to provide monthly blood samples that the Oxford University-based Target Discovery Institute will test for the antibodies.
The first round of results focused on 17,776 participant samples, taken in May and June. Nationally, 7.1% were positive for Covid-19 antibodies, the researchers reported on the Biobank website. Just under 11% of people under 30 had antibodies, compared to 5.4% of those over 70.
The results confirm other studies that indicate Black, Asian and minority ethnic groups appeared to be hardest hit by Covid-19, which is consistent with findings from the United States.
Among Black participants, about 11.3% tested positive for antibodies, as opposed to 6.9% of White participants. Researchers noted that the differences between ethnic groups could not be fully explained by age or place of residence. But previous infection was also higher among those living in lower socioeconomic areas.
The team says that their continued research will provide insight into the way antibody levels change over time, hopefully answering questions about immunity, reinfection and the impact of stay-at-home orders.
Link Copied!
Indiana student tests positive for Covid-19 on first day of school
From CNN's Rebekah Riess
As an Indiana school district welcomed students to the 2020-21 academic year, one of their students tested positive for Covid-19 on the first day of class, according to a letter sent to parents.
The Hancock County Health Department notified Greenfield-Central Junior High School Thursday afternoon that one of their students, who had attended part of the school day, tested positive for Covid-19, Superintendent Harold Olin said in a letter.
Olin said the school enacted its “Positive COVID-19 Test Protocol” once school officials became aware of the positive result.
School officials immediately isolated the student within the school’s clinic, and they examined the student’s schedule, including transportation and extracurricular activities, to determine who had come in close contact.