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Covid-19 cases are stabilizing in Australian state of Victoria thanks to strict lockdowns
From CNN's Angus Watson in Sydney
A lone passenger walks along a platform at Southern Cross Station in Melbourne, Australia on August 7.
William West/AFP/Getty Images
The number of new Covid-19 patients identified each day in the Australian state of Victoria has begun to stabilize thanks to strict lockdown measures, the government said Saturday.
A total of 446 new cases and 12 deaths were recorded Friday, according to Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews. Sutton said that the government’s models showed the lockdown measures prevented about 20,000 cases.
In May, Australia was held up as a global model for its handling of the outbreak, which started with early measures to bar entry from high-risk countries. Stricter curbs on social gatherings, expanded testing, restaurant and bar closures followed as cases rose, with some states sealing their borders.
But Covid-19 cases in Victoria rose suddenly in recent weeks, with many new infections in aged care homes and among healthcare workers. Authorities responded by instituting some of the most stringent movement restrictions in Australia’s history.
Sutton said the government will not see the results of an even stricter lockdown for another week.
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Public schools in Hawaii's Oahu will move to distance learning for first 4 weeks of academic year
From CNN’s Jennifer Henderson
Public schools on the Hawaiian island of Oahu are going to employ distancing learning for the first four weeks of this academic year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the Hawaii Department of Education said in a statement.
Schools will begin preparing to transition to distance learning next week and then implement “full distance learning models” on August 17.
Authorities in Hawaii have identified 3,115 cases since the pandemic began. Of those, 2,741 are in Honolulu County on Oahu.
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Vermont plans to allow for all school sports to move forward in some capacity
From CNN’s Rebekah Riess
Middlebury's #8 Owen Palcsik and Stowe's #10 Jackson Seivwright battle for the ball during the Div. 2 Vermont boys soccer championship at South Burlington High School in Vermont on November 2, 2019.
Ryan Mercer/Free Press/Burlington Free Perss/Imagn
Vermont Gov. Phil Scott today said his administration is working with the Vermont Principals Association, the Superintendent’s Association of School Athletic Directors and Coaches, “with a goal that will allow for all sports to move forward in some fashion.”
“Like so many things during this crisis, fall sports won’t be exactly what we’re accustomed to,” Scott said.
Scott said his plan includes cross country running, soccer, field hockey, football, cheerleading, volleyball, bass fishing, and golf, and practice will start at the same time classes start, which is now Sept. 8.
This guidance will also cover Vermont’s recreational sports leagues, the governor said.
“Kids, coaches, and parents should prepare themselves. Things will look much different, especially when it comes to high contact sports. Now again, this won’t be a normal season, but our goal is to offer a path forward for each of these sports, to give our kids some sense of normalcy and normal times,” the governor added.
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Trump details potential executive actions if Congress doesn't reach agreement on relief package
From CNN's Maegan Vazquez
President Donald Trump speaks at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in Bedminster, New Jersey, on August 7.
Susan Walsh/AP
President Trump on Friday laid out the executive actions he would pursue “if Democrats continue to hold” a relief package “hostage.”
The actions would include a payroll tax deferment, extending unemployment benefits, extending an eviction moratorium and deferring student loan payments and forgiving their interest.
“If Democrats continue to hold this critical relief hostage I will act under my authority as President to get Americans the relief they need,” he continued.
Some context: Negotiations over the next stimulus package stalled on Capitol Hill today as Democrats and Trump administration officials walked away after talks broke down and devolved into partisan finger-pointing.
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All Princeton undergraduates will be fully remote for fall 2020 semester
From CNN's Dave Alsup and Bianna Golodryga
Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey
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Princeton University has decided to have all undergraduate students fully remote for the fall 2020 semester, according to an update sent by Princeton President Christopher L. Eisgruber on Friday.
According to Eisgruber’s letter, the decision was made due to the pandemic’s impact on New Jersey which “has led us to conclude that we cannot provide a genuinely meaningful on-campus experience for our undergraduate students this fall in a manner that is respectful of public health concerns and consistent with state regulations and guidance.”
Some context: Princeton had announced July 6 that it planned to welcome back first-years and juniors for the fall semester, and sophomores and seniors for the spring semester, however, that plan was always subject to change according to the public health situation.
According to the announcement, Princeton hopes to bring students back to campus in the spring, and said seniors in the class of 2021 will be its top priority.
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Americans are moving around too much, coronavirus forecaster says
From CNN’s Lauren Mascarenhas
People in many parts of the US are moving around as much as they did before the pandemic started, a top disease forecaster said Friday.
That’s not good, said Dr. Christopher Murray, director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, which issues regular forecasts about the coronavirus pandemic.
More movement predicts more spread of the virus.
“If you look at the mobility data collected from cell phones in many parts of the country, we’re almost back to pre-Covid levels of mobility, so we’re just not being as cautious as other people are in other countries,” Murray told CNN on Friday.
Murray said that when cases start to come down, people tend to start interacting more, resulting in the up and down phenomenon many states have experienced with Covid-19 cases.
There are other things people can do to slow the pandemic besides staying put, Murray said.
“Our view about this is that there should be a universal mask mandate in the US, that should come with some penalty if you’re caught without a mask, because we know penalties actually increase mask-wearing even more than just a mandate,” Murray said.
The latest prediction: The IHME released a model Thursday projecting nearly 300,000 deaths in the US from coronavirus by Dec. 1.
The model calculated that if 95% of the people in the US wore masks, that number could decrease to 228,271 deaths, saving more than 66,000 lives.
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California releases guidance for reopening colleges and universities
From CNN's Sarah Moon
California colleges and universities reopening this fall will need to follow guidelines issued on Friday by the California Department of Public Health (CDPH), which includes the use of face coverings, social distancing and intensified cleaning protocols.
While indoor lectures are currently prohibited in counties on the state’s monitoring list, courses offered in specialized indoor settings like labs and studio arts will be permitted as long as substantial physical distancing measures are in place based on the nature of work performed in the space, the guidance says.
Here’s what else the state said:
CDPH recommends closing nonessential shared spaces and prioritizing single room occupancy for housing, as well as limiting nonessential visitors and campus activities.
Grab-and-go options must be provided for meals and dining halls will need to serve individually plated meals instead of any self-serve or buffet-type stations, according to the guidance.
The newly released guidance also provides information on college sports.
“Teams must require masks for coaches, staff, media and any players not engaged in play at each match,” the guidance stated. Practice may only resume if athletes and staff get regular periodic Covid-19 testing.
The state said competitions for high contact sports may be held without spectators only if the college can provide Covid-19 testing and results within 72 hours of a game.
“As colleges and other institutions of higher education plan to resume in-person instruction, it’s critical that campuses make modifications to reduce risk,” State Epidemiologist Dr. Erica Pan said in a news release. “This guidance aims to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 among our students, families, and the communities where they study.”
Some context: Many campuses in the state, including the University of Southern California and schools within the University of California system, have announced they will start the school year with mostly online classes.
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Some coronavirus cases in California have been underreported due to glitch in registry system
From CNN's Sarah Moon
A nurse seals a specimen bag containing a Covid-19 test swab at a mobile clinic on July 15 in Los Angeles, California.
Mario Tama/Getty Images
A glitch in California’s disease registry system (CalREDIE) has created a backlog of 250,000 to 300,000 records causing an underreporting of some coronavirus cases, California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said in a briefing on Friday.
While the majority of these records may be coronavirus results, Ghaly explained that it includes duplicate records, both positive and negative test results, and records for any other reportable diseases.
A server outage on July 25 created a delay in lab records going into the state’s lab reporting system, Ghaly said. While temporary technical changes were implemented to allow the records to flow into the system more quickly, these changes were not disabled later which caused a further delay in reporting lab data and creating an extensive backlog, he explained.
The state also learned that they were not receiving data from one of its largest commercial lab for five days between July 31 through Aug. 4, “due to a certificate that the state neglected to renew timely,” Ghaly said.
According to Ghaly, Gov. Gavin Newsom has directed a full investigation into the issue.
Ghaly expects to see a normalization of data in 24 to 48 hours. After working through the backlog, the state will have a better understanding of the statewide epidemiological curve and the future state of hospitalizations.
The glitch in the system did not impact any data on hospitalizations or deaths, according to Ghaly who believes the trend line has been “stabilizing and coming down.”
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Italy extends coronavirus safety measures through September
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite
The Italian government will extend its coronavirus safety measures until Sept. 7, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said Friday during a news conference.
The council of ministers approved a decree related to the health emergency, which will be in force from Aug. 10 through Sept. 7.
“The rate of infections in Italy is among the lowest in the European Union,” Conte added, recalling how bad the virus hit the country.
Among the measures that will be extended, the obligation of wearing face masks in closed places accessible to the public, the one-meter distance rule on social distancing and the ban on gatherings.
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6 football players at the University of Maryland opt out of season, coach says
From CNN's Jill Martin
University of Maryland head football coach Mike Locksley announced that six players would be opting out of the 2020 season due to the pandemic.
The players are defensive lineman Jalen Alexander, offensive guard Austin Fontaine, offensive lineman Johnny Jordan, quarterback Josh Jackson, defensive back Vincent Flythe and linebacker TJ Kautai.
Jackson, Jordan and Fontaine were starters last season.
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Sharp increase in Covid-19 data in Virginia is due to backlog from previous 2 days, state says
From CNN’s Rebekah Riess
The Virginia Department of Health (VDH) announced that the Covid-19 data numbers posted today contain “a significant increase due to a data backlog from earlier in the week.”
The state reported 2,015 new cases Covid-19, but according to VDH, that number includes information that should have been reported on Wednesday and Thursday of this week, as well as the regular numbers for Friday.
Note:These numbers were released by the state’s public health agency and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.
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Chief adviser for Operation Warp Speed says US is focused on inclusion and diversity in vaccine trials
From CNN's Lauren Mascarenhas
The chief adviser for Operation Warp Speed, Moncef Slaoui, attends a news conference at the White House on May 15 in Washington, D.C.
Drew Angerer/Getty Images
The chief adviser for Operation Warp Speed, Moncef Slaoui, said Friday that coronavirus vaccine trials will be representative of those most impacted by the virus.
Slaoui also addressed plans to distribute a vaccine, once it is approved.
“We are extremely cognizant of the importance of making sure that the vaccines, if and when they become available, are appropriately allocated in the population, on the basis of data…and on the basis of need,” he said.
More details: Slaoui said his team’s role in the operation is to deliver up to 300 million doses in the US, beginning January 2021 or earlier.
They hope to have completed that process by mid-2021. He added that they have an agreement with the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to review all data “quickly, but totally independently.”
He said the aim is to receive full FDA approval of a vaccine, adding that it will be the FDA’s decision to grant emergency use authorization (EUA) of a vaccine, which would greenlight the vaccine for use before it receives full approval. The FDA has said that any vaccine that receives an EUA must meet efficacy requirements first.
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US ranks near the bottom in assessment of global pandemic response
From CNN's Jen Christensen
The US response to Covid-19 ranks near the bottom of the list of countries assessed by Foreign Policy Magazine.
The magazine’s Covid-19 Global Response Index puts the US among the six worst-performing countries in the world, alongside Turkey, Iran, Mexico and Indonesia.
China ranked last, in part, for its failure to report reliable test data, its minimal financial response, and its failure to communicate clearly and honestly with the public.
But, the US got the lowest score for “fact-based communication.”
Foreign Policy described the US government as “relatively weak” in this category, as “it has engaged in misinformation as much as any country in the Index.”
Best on the list is New Zealand with a perfect score. Senegal came in second.
How the scoring works: The index assesses 36 countries for pandemic performance based on its public health and financial response, along with how well the country’s leaders communicate using facts and science. The US came in at 31.
Countries that scored higher in the index generally have a lower death and case rate and a lower number of positive test results. Countries that reacted quickly and had a targeted response tended to have better outcomes, the index showed.
The magazine singles out President Trump specifically for “amplifying misinformation and conspiracy theories about the virus.”
It highlights his remarks during the July 4 celebration in which he claimed 99% of the cases are “harmless.”
The US also got low marks for its lack of testing and for how little it has spent on emergency healthcare, compared to other countries.
The US’s financial response to the pandemic was just above the median. That score may not tell the whole story though, according to one of the authors of the index, Fouad Pervez. Just because the US has an unemployment system, doesn’t mean families can access that money, Pervez said.
“Versus in a European country where they have the same policy, but the mechanism, it works, and people don’t lose their jobs or benefits, they just get less salary, but they get enough salary that they can put food on the table,” Pervez said. Pervez is the senior quantitative and policy analyst on the project.
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Ohio State athletes write letter in support of safety protocols put out by the school
From CNN's Jabari Jackson
Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio
Shutterstock
A group of athletes at Ohio State University issue a letter to fans voicing their support of the health and safety protocols set by the institution ahead of their upcoming season.
The letter, released on social media on Friday, was in response to the #BigTenUnited statement which called for more safety assurances from the conference.
The OSU athletes’ letter showed support for their fellow conference athletes and their university, including Athletics Director Gene Smith.
Big Ten student-athletes released a unity letter earlier this week calling for more details to be given surrounding safety precautions for the fall sports season.
“We feel comfortable and trust that the decisions by Gene Smith (Athletic Director), Dr. Borchers (Head Physician), our coaches, and health and safety professionals are made in our best interest,” added the OSU athletes.
Football captains Tuf Borland and Wyatt Davis among others posted the letter to their social media expressing their views on the matter at hand.
“We respect that these thoughts about safety and protocols may not be shared by all student-athletes across the country, but as Ohio State Buckeyes, we stand with the decisions of our athletic department and conference,” the statement said.
Read the letter:
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MLB announces 13 positive Covid-19 tests in the past week
From CNN's Kevin Dotson
Mitchell Leff/Getty Images
Major League Baseball announced that 13 people have tested positive for Covid-19 after one week of league testing. Seven of the positive results came from players, and six came from team staffers.
Here’s how that breaks down:
The MLB said it tested 13,043 people in the past week as part of their monitoring process. At least 13 of these 13,043 people tested positive – which is about 0.1%.
The MLB said it has performed 53,826 total monitoring tests. Of those, 71 came back positive, which is also about 0.1%.
So far, 19 different teams have had someone test positive.
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Ireland prime minister announces new regional lockdowns due to increasing coronavirus cases
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite
Ireland Prime Minister Micheál Martin attends a roundtable discussion at the European Council in Brussels, Belgium, on July 21.
Johanna Geron/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
Ireland Prime Minister Micheál Martin announced Friday that the government will introduce new coronavirus restrictions in three counties – Kildare, Laois and Offaly.
In these three counties, “everyone should restrict their movements to within their own county except for the purposes of work and for other essential journeys,” he added.
Kildare is the county west of the Irish capital of Dublin.
Some context: Over the past two weeks, at least 289 coronavirus cases have been reported in Kildare, Laois, and Offaly.
“These represent close to half of all cases detected in Ireland during that time,” the Irish Department on Health said Friday in a statement.
The department said on Twitter that as of Thursday, at least 1,772 coronavirus-related deaths and approximately 26,470 total coronavirus cases have been confirmed in the country.
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Here are some tips on how to manage anxiety during the pandemic
Clinical psychologist Andrea Bonior speaks with CNN on August 7.
CNN
It has been about six months since the coronavirus pandemic began, and this time of uncertainty and anxiety can take a toll on your mental health.
Andrea Bonior, a clinical psychologist, said there are a few things you can do to make sure you are staying healthy.
First, she said it is important to break the stigma and encouraged people to “think about their mental health as they would their physical health”
Two things she says that can help with that: sleep and spending time outside.
“The data is there. These two things significantly can help us deal with crisis situations,” Bonior said.
Next, she said you should think about controllability and predictability. When you wake up in the morning ask yourself, “What can I control today?” she said.
“Just because I don’t know when this will end, doesn’t mean that it won’t end,” Bonior said.
Connecting yourself to a sense of purpose and finding ways to connect to your personal values will also help with that anxiety, she said.
“When we can connect with a sense of purpose – what are our values here, what are we teaching our children or how are we helping our neighbors – that can help us rise above the stress and connect with that greater sense of purpose,” she said.
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Howard University to be conducted fully online in the fall
From CNN's Adrienne Winston
Howard University in Washington, D.C.
Shutterstock
Howard University President Dr. Wayne Frederick said in a statement on Friday that the upcoming fall semester, which is set to begin Aug. 24, will be fully online.
“After consultation with our public health faculty experts, District of Columbia officials, University leadership, and monitoring the status of the COVID-19 pandemic locally, regionally and nationally, we have made the very difficult decision to move all undergraduate courses for the Fall 2020 semester fully online, and non-residential,” the statement said.
Frederick said the decision was based on nationally rising Covid-19 cases in young people and the consideration of racial disparities.
Frederick said that a decision about the Spring 2021 semester will be made later this year.
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There needs to be a long-term commitment to fix systemic issues in health, Fauci says
From CNN's Gisela Crespo
There has to be a long-term commitment to correct the “decades-old dilemma of the social determinants of health” that affect African Americans, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said on Friday.
Speaking with Dr. Ashish Jha during a virtual discussion hosted by the Brown School of Public Health, Fauci said the coronavirus pandemic could be a wake-up call for society to change this.
Fauci explained that Covid-19 has been a “double whammy” against communities of color.
As an example, Fauci explained said Black Americans are more likely to have jobs that are considered essential.
“Already from square one, you have a greater risk of getting infected than someone who can sit behind the computer and telework all day,” he said.
He said this means making sure that resources – immediate testing and results and access to health care – are concentrated in African American communities and other demographics at higher risk of infection is one of the things that can be done to address racial disparities during the pandemic.
Fauci added the health disparities in the Black population that have come to light during the pandemic are maybe a “wake-up call” for society to change them.
“Take HIV. I’ve devoted most of my life to that. The African American community – 13% of the population is African American, 45% of the new infections are among African Americans. That’s unacceptable. We’ve got to do things societally that change that. Maybe it’ll be a wake-up call to society to change,” he said.
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Fauci says when percent positive starts to tick up, states need to change what they're doing
From CNN's Amanda Watts
Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, removes his Washington Nationals protective mask during a House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis hearing on July 31 in Washington.
Erin Scott/Pool/Getty Images
Dr. Anthony Fauci said states should look closely at their percent positive rates to gauge how their state is doing.
Fauci told Dr. Ashish Jha and the Brown School of Public Health on Friday that Dr. Deborah Birx has been looking closely at this metric.
Fauci said, “What’s happening now was triggered two weeks ago,” so making changes right when states see the points click up is key.
“So when you see that little tick going up, that means that you were doing something not particularly good,” he added. “So what you need to do is to change what you’re doing.”
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Arkansas to allow absentee ballots for Covid-19 concerns, governor says
From CNN’s James Froio
During a news conference on Friday, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced he is signing an executive order that will allow people with “COVID-related concerns about going to the polls in November” to qualify for absentee ballots.
“So currently, they have a week before that they can prepare the absentee ballots without opening up the envelope, but still getting prepared so that on Election Day it is quicker to count,” he added.
Some context: Mail-in voting and absentee ballots have become a point of controversy after President Trump, without evidence, claimed that mail-in voting is particularly susceptible to fraud, casting it as a lawless, unregulated exercise where ballots are stolen from mailboxes, voter signatures are routinely forged and even the ballots themselves are illegally printed.
Trump tweeted that “there is NO WAY (ZERO!) that Mail-In Ballots will be anything less than substantially fraudulent.”
Facts First:While rare instances of voter fraud from mail-in ballots do occur, it is nowhere near a widespread problem in the US election system.
In both 2016 and 2018, approximately 25% of US voters cast mail ballots, which includes the handful of states that conduct elections entirely by mail and traditional absentee ballots.
There are two big problems with contract tracing in the US, former government official says
From CNN’s Naomi Thomas
In this September 19, 2017 file photo, Dr. Rajiv J. Shah, President of The Rockefeller Foundation speaks at The 2017 Concordia Annual Summit at Grand Hyatt New York.
Riccardo Savi/Getty Images for Concordia Summit
There are two big problems holding America back when it comes to contact tracing and response for Covid-19: the length of time it takes to get a test result and the American drive for liberty, according to Dr. Rajiv Shah, president of the Rockefeller Foundation and former United States Agency for International Development (USAID) administrator.
“First and foremost is that it is taking four, five, six, seven days to get a test result,” he said during an Aspen Ideas webinar on Friday.
Asking someone who they had contact with in the last 24 hours is completely different than asking someone who they had contact with in the 24 hours prior to getting their test a week ago, Shah said.
The second problem is what Shah referred to as “the sort of American drive for liberty” – something he said he holds very dearly.
“But, at the time of a pandemic, threatens all of us,” he said. “Asking people to sacrifice a little bit of their privacy in order to keep the country safe from a disease that is otherwise out of control should be something that our leaders ask of all of us in a measured and appropriate way.”
Having initially been asked about the use of technology in contact tracing, Shah said that there are safe ways that technology can be used that can improve contact tracing “that really do not reflect a major sacrifice in privacy beyond what we already have granted simply for the conveniences of life.”
He highlighted the system in place if someone goes to South Korea, where someone is joined into a system when they land, gets a test, goes to where they are quarantining, where they are sent food and a care package, and test results are sent within hours. This is all tied into a system that allows people to very easily report their contacts, he said.
“That’s what you need to have everywhere in order for this to work,” he said.
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Houston municipal courts to suspend all jury trials through September due to the pandemic
From CNN’s Pierre Meilhan
Houston has extended the suspension of all jury trials in its municipal courts through Sept. 30 because of the spread of Covid-19, the city said Friday.
The city came to this conclusion “due to changing circumstances regarding the COVID-19 pandemic and to encourage the health and safety of the public and court staff members,” according to a statement from the city.
The decision was also made in conjunction with the Texas Supreme Court’s order. The city added that its municipal courts remain open for all other proceedings.
By the numbers: Harris County, where Houston is located, has the highest number of Covid-19 cases in Texas with over 80,000 cases so far.
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Georgia reports more than 4,100 new coronavirus cases
From CNN’s Dianne Gallagher and Pamela Kirkland
The Georgia Department of Public Health reported 4,177 new cases of Covid-19 and 92 deaths on Friday.
The statewide Covid-19 case total is now 209,004.
The total number of deaths attributed to Covid-19 in Georgia is now 4,117.
Note: These numbers were released by the Georgia 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.
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US surgeon general: Do these 3 things to lower the positivity rate
From CNN's Gisela Crespo
Surgeon General Jerome Adams speaks during a round table on donating plasma at the American Red Cross national headquarters on Thursday, July 30, in Washington.
Evan Vucci/AP
US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams urged residents of Baltimore to take safety precautions to slow the spread of Covid-19 in that city.
In a news briefing with Baltimore Health Commissioner Dr. Letitia Dzirasa, Adams said people can lower the positivity rate with “three Ws.”
“We don’t need to wait for a vaccine. We don’t need to wait for a miracle therapeutic. New York City and the state of New York have a positivity rate of less than 1% right now. And they’ve done it with three things – what I call my three W’s,” he said.
The three Ws, according to Adams, are:
“Wash your hands”
“Watch your distance – meaning stay at least six feet from others and avoid crowded places.”
Adams reminded the public that Baltimore can lower its numbers of new coronavirus cases “in a matter of weeks” by following public health safety measures.
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France reports more than 2,200 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours
From CNN's Pierre Buet and Sharon Braithwaite
A medical technician administers a nasal swab to a woman People at a mobile testing site in Paris, Thursday, August 6.
Michel Euler/AP
France’s health ministry reported 2,288 new Covid-19 cases in the past 24 hours and 9,330 over the past week.
A total of 30,324 people have died from coronavirus in France since the beginning of the pandemic. The ministry has reported 12 deaths in the past 24 hours.
Some details: The health ministry said 5,011 people are currently hospitalized for coronavirus symptoms, with 136 new admissions in past 24 hours. There are 383 patients in intensive care units, with 20 new admissions in the past 24 hours.
More than 5.3 million Covid-19 tests have been done so far, including 593,640 in the past seven days.
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California tops 10,000 coronavirus deaths
From CNN's Sarah Moon
California reported 142 new coronavirus deaths on Friday, bringing the statewide total to 10,011 deaths, according to data from the state’s Department of Public Health.
While California has the highest number of cases in the nation, the death toll is still well below that of New York and New Jersey.
The state has a total of 538,416 positive cases, including 8,436 new cases added on Friday. The health department also warned that there has been an underreporting of cases due to issues with the state’s electronic laboratory reporting system.
The positivity rate over a 14-day period is now 6.1%, according to the health department.
Note: These numbers were released by the California 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.
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Covid-19 vaccine before the election is "highly unlikely," senior administration official says
From Jim Acosta
French engineer-virologist Thomas Mollet looks at 24 well plates adherent cells monolayer infected with the Sars-CoV-2 virus at the Valneva SE Group headquarters in Saint-Herblain, France, on July 30.
Jean-Francois Monier/AFP/Getty Images
It is “highly unlikely” a Covid-19 vaccine would be ready by election day, a senior administration official close to the coronavirus task force told CNN.
The official added there is reason to be hopeful for a vaccine in the coming months as progress continues to be made.
“There will be lots to talk about, for sure,” the official continued. “The trials are going very well.”
A vaccine could come in early 2021, around inauguration day in January, said the official who also described that timeline as “optimistic.”
More about vaccine timing: Last week, Dr. Anthony Fauci said he is cautiously optimistic that human trials of a coronavirus vaccine being developed by Moderna might show whether it’s both safe and effective by late fall or early winter.
Fauci — who as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases helps lead federal vaccine development efforts — has repeatedly said he hoped the vaccine could start to be available by early next year, and then widely available in the spring and summer of next year if things go well.
President Trump on Thursday suggested a vaccine could be available by Election Day, saying he is “optimistic that it’ll be probably around that date.”
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Fauci says he'll repeat the importance of public health principles "until I'm exhausted"
From CNN's Amanda Watts
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said he will continue to repeat himself “until I’m exhausted” on the importance of public health principles for fighting Covid-19.
Speaking during a webinar with the Brown School of Public Health, Fauci said there are five or six things every American can do to help bring Covid-19 case numbers down, which he calls the “fundamental principles.”
Fauci said the message needs to be strong: The fundamental principles he outlines are not in conflict with opening up the country.
“If we can somehow get the country unified to do that together, I don’t think we need to go into the fall and the winter thinking we’re going to have a catastrophe. We could go into the fall and the winter, coming out of it looking good, if we do certain things,” Fauci said.
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Massachusetts governor tightens restrictions indefinitely after "slight uptick" in Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Melissa Alonso
Governor Charlie Baker speaks during a state update on the coronavirus pandemic in Boston on July 24.
David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images
Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker indefinitely postponed the state’s reopening plan and decreased the limits on gatherings after a “slight uptick in positive cases,” he said Friday.
He also authorized state and local police to enforce shutdown orders.
Baker said contact tracers have documented several pool parties, house parties and holiday celebrations with people not adhering to state guidance. “We cannot move forward at this time, or anytime soon in the near future,” he said.
Additionally, Baker will sign an executive order that will reduce the limit on outdoor gatherings from 100 to 50 people starting Tuesday, he said.
The governor updated state restaurant guidance “to make absolutely clear that alcoholic beverages may only be served for on-site consumption if accompanied by food prepared on site,” Baker said.
“Bars masquerading as restaurants also need to be closed,” he said.
To execute the orders, a covert enforcement and intervention team has been created to ramp up enforcement in key communities, Baker said.
The state added 162 positive cases Friday and the seven-day positivity average saw a 0.4% increase, it currently stands at 2.1%, state health officials said.
More details: Baker said the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission (ABCC) and local government officials are cracking down on bars serving chips in an attempt to comply with food service requirements.
“One of the things that’s come up a number of times, is that pretzels and potato chips meets the food service requirement. It clearly doesn’t,” Baker said.
“What we tried to do with the amendment of the order is make absolutely clear. You need to be serving food that’s prepared on site and the people who are in your venue need to order and eat food if they’re gonna order a drink,” Baker said. “That is clearly not consistent with the spirit or the intent of what we put in place when we authorized outdoor dining and indoor dinning.”
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More than 160,000 people have died from Covid-19 in the US
There are at least 4,895,868 cases of coronavirus in the US and at least 160,255 people have died from the virus, according to Johns Hopkins University.
So far on Friday, Johns Hopkins has recorded 12,286 new cases and 151 reported deaths.
The totals include cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.
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Fauci says he knows the situation is "highly divisive," but vows to keep Americans informed
From CNN’s Amanda Watts
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, testifies before a House Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis hearing on July 31.
Kevin Dietsch/Pool/Getty Images
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, said he “never would have ever imagined” a time in his long career that his family would be threatened because of his messaging.
“Of all the outbreaks that I’ve been involved with way back from the day of HIV and Ebola, Zika, pandemic, flu, and anthrax — there’s always a little bit of people that might push back on a message, but it was never with threats against you and your family, your wife, and my daughters,” Fauci said in an interview with The Washington Post’s Jacqueline Alemany.
“I mean, harassing my daughters? Wow. No, I never would have ever imagined that,” he added.
Fauci said he knows the situation is “highly divisive” across the country, but he has vowed to keep the public informed.
“I think that we might be able to prevent people from acquiring infection if they listened to my public health message and I could do that effectively without getting into the political divisiveness,” he added.
He also feels for Dr. Deborah Birx, who is under the same scrutiny.
“I am fully supportive of my colleague, Dr. Birx. I have been a colleague and a friend for over three decades. And that hasn’t changed one bit. She’s a very talented person and she’s an extremely hard worker and I support her fully,” Fauci said.
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NYC education head says officials will be watching case numbers "like hawks"
From CNN's Adrienne Vogt
All school districts across New York state of New York are cleared to open, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said today.
Following the announcement, New York City Department of Education Chancellor Richard Carranza said there are different models that city schools can put into effect for in-person learning, and the city will revert to remote learning if there is an uptick in cases.
“We are in a place where we can even consider now in-person learning, and that why we’re happy that the governor given us the green light. We’ve been preparing foe every eventuality since we pivoted to remote learning in March,” Carranza said in an interview with CNN’s John King.
New York City is the country’s largest school district, with more than one million students.
Carranza said he’s asking parents to monitor any symptoms in their children and for employees to stay home if they feel sick. There will be temperature checks, mask requirements and cleaners sanitizing high-touch areas. No more than 9 to 12 students will be allowed in one classroom at a time.
The school system has different models for schools to implement, including rotating students on different days, Carranza said.
“It’s impossible to have 100% of the students in a school building at the same time on any given day and still adhere to the safety protocols and the social distancing. So we’ve put forward three to five models that we’ve asked our schools to kind of try on for size,” he said.
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Georgia teacher on plan to reopen schools for in-person learning: "It has been a catastrophe"
From CNN's Adrienne Vogt
Some teachers in Georgia’s Gwinnett County protested yesterday by honking their car horns over their school district’s plans to reopen.
Twelfth-grade teacher Aireane Montgomery said the plan “hit us with a shock, to be honest.” Teachers were planning for remote learning, but now students are set to be in classrooms on Aug. 26.
“It has been a catastrophe,” she said in an interview with CNN’s Jim Sciutto.
She said the Covid-19 plan looks different at every school, which she called “unnerving.” She would like to see schools begin the school year remotely and ease into in-person learning.
Montgomery said she thinks state politics is playing a part in reopening the schools.
“I absolutely believe that [the decision] is being made on politics, and I know there’s no way that this could be made due to scientific research, absolutely,” she said.
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Italy records most new coronavirus cases in a single day since May
From CNN's Valentina Di Donato in Rome
Italy recorded 552 new coronavirus cases on Friday, the highest daily increase since May 28, according to the Italian Ministry of Health data.
Veneto region in northeast of the country had the most cases, with 182.
Three more fatalities were recorded on Friday, bringing the total death toll from coronavirus in Italy to at least 35,190.
The total number of coronavirus cases overall — including deaths and recoveries — now stands at 249,756.
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All New York school districts are authorized to open for in-person learning, governor says
From CNN's Elizabeth Hartfield
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during the daily media briefing at the Office of the Governor of the State of New York on July 23.
Jeenah Moon/Getty Images
All school districts across New York state are cleared to open, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced in a telephonic news conference Friday.
Each school district across the state was required to submit their proposed plans for reopening by this week, and the plans differ across the state, but they are all authorized to open.
There are 749 school districts in New York state that are required to submit plans to the Department of Health and the state’s Education Department, Cuomo noted. He said 127 districts still have not submitted plans.
Cuomo added that they will watch the infection rates between now and the dates schools are scheduled to open, and if the rates spike, they will revisit the plans.
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Trump adviser dismisses idea of a slowdown: "These job numbers will go up and down"
From CNN's Aditi Sangal
The latest numbers in the July jobs report show that the US will see unemployment drop “well into single digits as we move through the summer and fall,” White House chief economic adviser Larry Kudlow tells CNN’s Poppy Harlow.
“To go through a tough month like that and still get 1.8 million new jobs and most importantly the unemployment rate back down to 10.2%, I would just say to you, Poppy, that the idea that we won’t get a single-digit unemployment rate is off the boards now.”
The US added another 1.8 million jobs in July, which is a sharp slowdown from June and a small step for an economy that’s still down nearly 13 million jobs. But Kudlow says it’s a “solid number beating expectations.”
He dismissed the idea of a slowdown and said the surge in coronavirus cases in July impacted the numbers.
“I don’t know that there’s a slowdown. These job numbers will go up and down.”
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Illinois issues new emergency rules to enforce mask mandate compliance
From CNN's Pierre Meilhan
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker announced new rules Friday designed to better enforce mask requirements and give local authority guidelines to enforce compliance.
The new emergency rules were set up by the Illinois Health Department and consist of multiple steps to enforce wearing face coverings, including a warning and fines for non-compliance, Pritzker told reporters in Chicago. The rules are designed to provide local authority guidelines to enforce compliance.
The governor also said he signed legislation to enhance workers’ rights and increase disability pay and paid leave when their pay has been altered due to Covid-19-related reasons.
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Florida reports another 7,600 new coronavirus cases
The state of Florida is reporting 7,686 additional coronavirus cases and 180 additional deaths, according to data released by the Florida Department of Health on Friday.
There has been a total of 518,075 cases in the state since the pandemic began, including out-of-state residents, the department said. Florida has reported at least 7,927 resident deaths to date.
White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said President Trump could pick up “the slack” on unemployment benefits as stimulus negotiations in Congress are on the brink of collapse.
“The President is looking very, very carefully… about using executive authority to take up the slack” on unemployment benefits, a payroll tax cut, extending the eviction moratorium, and providing a benefit for reemployment, Kudlow said in an interview on Fox Business.
Trump said he could sign an executive order on these issues as early as this afternoon.
Specifically, Kudlow said a draft of a potential payroll tax cut “is basically completed,” and he believes Trump will use executive authority to implement it. A payroll tax cut has faced bipartisan opposition on the Hill.
Trump had been pushing for a payroll tax cut — which would reduce the amount taken out of workers’ paychecks tofund federal programsincluding Social Security and Medicare — to be included in the congressional stimulus package. But many Republicans and most Democrats don’t support it.
Kudlow said he can’t predict when federal unemployment benefits might be back due to the stalled negotiations on Capitol Hill. The $600 benefit expired last week.
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Stocks fall despite better-than-expected jobs report
From CNN’s Paul La Monica
The market opened lower Friday morning even though the US government reported a solid rebound in the labor market.
Continued fears about tension between the US and China may be weighing on sentiment after President Trump threatened to ban Tencent-owned WeChat unless it is sold.
Here’s where things opened today:
The Dow fell 0.3%, or more than 75 points.
The S&P 500 was down 0.3%.
The Nasdaq Composite edged 0.3% lower.
About the jobs report: While the US economy added another 1.8 million jobs in July, it’s a sharp slowdown from June and a small step for an economy that’s still down 12.9 million jobs during the pandemic.
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Americans could save 70,000 lives by wearing masks, official says
From CNN's Madeline Holcombe
Fans wearing face masks and face coverings enter the race track prior to the NASCAR Cup Series All-Star Race at Bristol Motor Speedway on July 15 in Bristol, Tennessee.
Patrick Smith/Getty Images
More than 160,000 have died of coronavirus in the US so far and that number could nearly double by December, the director of a leading model said Thursday.
But consistently wearing masks could save nearly 70,000 of the 295,000 people projected to die of the virus by December 1, the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) director Dr. Christopher Murray said on CNN’s Global Town Hall.
The latest on masks in the US: At least 39 states as well as Washington, DC and Puerto Rico have implemented mask requirements of some kind. Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear extended his state’s mask mandate by 30 days yesterday, saying “It’s working.”
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated mask recommendations on its website, urging people not use masks with valves or vents. While the one-way valve keeps people cooler by allowing air to escape, that also means respiratory droplets that carry the virus can escape and infect others.
Watch:
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New York governor expected to announce plans for schools today
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during the daily media briefing at the Office of the Governor of the State of New York on July 23 in New York.
Jeenah Moon/Getty Images
Governor Andrew Cuomo is expected to announce his decision today on whether or not New York state schools can reopen this fall.
It will include New York City school district, which is the largest public school district in the country with more than 1.1 million students.
However, ultimately, the decision will be made by the state as to whether schools will open in the fall.
It is state law that governs the opening and closing of schools during the pandemic, not local government, Cuomo’s communications director Dani Lever said in a statement.
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How the US plans to use celebrities in coronavirus PSAs
From CNN's Elizabeth Cohen and Dana Vigue
Dr. Anthony Fauci listens during a House Subcommittee hearing about the coronavirus on Friday, July 31, on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Kevin Dietsch/Pool/AP
New government public service announcements will use conversations between public health experts and actors, musicians and athletes to educate people about Covid-19.
Michael Caputo, assistant secretary for public affairs at the US Department of Health and Human Services, wouldn’t release the names of the celebrities who will be featured in the new PSAs.
He said there will be several government health experts involved, including Dr. Anthony Fauci and US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams.
Messages will be tailored to specific cities and communities. Here’s how Caputo described the ads:
The conversations will be 45 minutes to an hour long, and they will not be scripted. Several minute-long PSAs will be cut from each conversation and will be placed on radio, TV, online platforms and digital billboards.
“They will be conversations between trusted figures and trusted scientists,” Caputo said.
The topics will be varied and include prevention measures such as wearing masks, washing hands and social distancing.
The other public health experts featured in the PSAs will be…
Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Dr. Stephen Hahn, commissioner of the US Food and Drug Administration
Alex Azar, secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services
Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
Rear Admiral Dr. Erica Schwartz, deputy surgeon general
Rear Admiral Michael Weahkee, director of the Indian Health Service
“There will be no politicians. Zero politicians,” Caputo said.
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US economy added 1.8 million jobs in July — but it's still down nearly 13 million during the pandemic
From CNN's Anneken Tappe
Job seekers exercise social distancing as they wait to be called into the Heartland Workforce Solutions office in Omaha, Nebraska, on Wednesday, July 15.
Nati Harnik/AP
The US economy added another 1.8 million jobs in July, a sharp slowdown from June and a small step for an economy that’s still down 12.9 million jobs during the pandemic.
It was the third-straight month of improvement after the spring lockdown to stem the spread of the disease decimated the labor market. But the economy added far fewer than the 4.8 million jobs added in June.
The unemployment rate fell to 10.2%, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday, but remains above the Great Recession high of 10% that it reached in October 2009.
Hear more:
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Baltimore health chief says she wouldn't eat indoors as city restaurants reopen
From CNN's Adrienne Vogt
Restaurants in Baltimore will be allowed to reopen at 5 p.m. ET today, with indoor dining limited to 25%, despite White House coronavirus task force coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx naming the Maryland city as an area of concern.
Baltimore City Health Commissioner Dr. Letitia Dzirasa said she herself wouldn’t advise going out to eat indoors at a restaurant, instead encouraging residents to eat outside or order takeout.
She said officials are facing “very tough” decisions to balance health and economic concerns.
Dzirasa said the city’s Covid-19 positivity rate is at about 5.8%. “At the beginning of July, it was 5.1%, and it’s well above the state’s average, which was around 4%,” she said.
Dzirasa attributed the rise to larger gatherings.
“I think that particularly in young people, which is where we’re seeing this higher rate of cases and this higher positivity rate, they could be asymptomatic and getting together and potentially spreading it,” she said.
The country often records more than 40,000 new cases daily — and sometimes more than 60,000. That means the US is on track to soon surpass 5 million total cases.
Here’s a look at new daily cases for the past two weeks:
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Libya reports record increase in cases
From CNN's Jomana Karadsheh in Istanbul
A Libyan doctor tests for the novel coronavirus with a blood sample taken from a shopkeeper in the Tajura area, a coastal suburb east of the capital Tripoli, on June 1.
Mahmud Turkia/AFP/Getty Images
Libya reported 404 new coronavirus cases Thursday, a record high for the country.
Libya has a total of 4,879 confirmed cases and 107 deaths, according to its National Center for Disease Control (NCDC) and Johns Hopkins University, but officials fear the case count could be much higher due to the country’s extremely limited testing capability.
Last week, local authorities in the port city of Misrata declared a state of emergency after a significant increase in the number of cases there.
Libya’s UN-backed Government of National Accord extended a curfew for all areas under its control by another ten days, starting on Friday.
The daily curfew will be from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. local time, with a 24-hour curfew on Friday and Saturday.
On Thursday, the government announced new preventative measures, including making the wearing of masks mandatory in public places and on public transport.
Businesses have been ordered not to accept customers without face masks and must have clear social distancing instructions.
Firms that do not comply with these measures or the curfew hours will face fines and suspension of licenses for repeated violations, the government said.
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Two German schools shut again after new cases
From CNN's Fred Pleitgen in Berlin
Goethe High School in Ludwigslust-Parchim, Germany, is pictured on August 7.
Iris Leithold/dpa/picture alliance/Getty Images
Two schools in northeast Germany have closed due to coronavirus infections, state authorities announced on Friday. Both schools, the Ostsee elementary school and the Goethe High School, are in the state of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania. This was the first German state to re-open for classes, at the beginning of this week following the summer holidays.
In one of the schools, the Goethe High School, a teacher tested positive for the virus but had not yet given any lessons to students, the district of Ludwigslust-Parchim, where the school is located, announced on its website.
The school will remain shut until next Wednesday and all 55 teachers will be also be tested, local authorities said.
In the second school, the Ostsee Elementary School in the district of greater Rostock, a student tested positive for Covid-19, according to local authorities.
Rostock district said in a press release that all students and staff will be quarantined.
On Thursday the German government voiced concern over a recent spike in infections across the country, and urged citizens to follow pandemic rules like social distancing, mask wearing and sanitizing more closely.
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It's 1 p.m. in London and 8 a.m. in New York. Here's what you need to know
The novel coronavirus has infected more than 19 million people worldwide and caused more than 715,000 deaths. Here’s the latest on the pandemic:
Hong Kong to launch universal testing: The city will offer voluntary, universal testing as officials scramble to contain a third wave of the virus.
Cases soar among young: The World Health Organization says the proportion of cases in young people has gone up six-fold during the pandemic.
Hawaii reinstates inter-island quarantine: Officials are tightening restrictions after a surge in Covid-19 cases statewide – with the majority of the cases on the island of Oahu.
Young women more likely to experience poor mental health in lockdown: A study from University College London suggests that women aged 30 experienced an increase in mental health problems due to Covid-19.
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CDC shuts buildings after virus shutdown leads to Legionnaire's disease risk
From CNN Health's Maggie Fox
Legionella colonies are seen illuminated using ultraviolet light, cultured on an agar plate.
Centers for Disease Control/Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says it has closed several buildings it leases in Atlanta because Legionella bacteria have been found in their water systems – bacteria that likely grew because of the prolonged pandemic shutdown.
It’s a problem that people across the country need to be on the lookout for, the CDC says. The bacteria, which can cause deadly pneumonia, grow in warm or stagnant water.
The plumbing in buildings that have been closed for months because of the coronavirus pandemic could provide a perfect breeding ground for Legionella and other waterborne pathogens, the CDC cautions.
Passports for sale: How the super-rich have boosted their travel options in a pandemic
From CNN's Kate Springer
For most people, the pandemic has meant fewer travel options. Not so for super-rich families who are increasingly using their money to cross borders that would otherwise be closed to them.
This is the elite world of investment migration, where passport applications are based not on nationality or citizenship, but on wealth and the willingness to move it around the planet.
These so-called citizen-by-investment programs, or CIPs, are currently a growth industry, as are residence-by-investment arrangements, also known as “golden visas.”
They’re a way for ultra-rich individuals to not only diversify their portfolio by moving their money into a country, but also receive the benefits of citizenship, including a new passport.
Over the past five to 10 years, the primary motivations amongst CIP participants – who tend to have a net worth of anywhere from $2 million to over $50 million – have been freedom of movement, tax benefits and lifestyle factors, such as better education or civil liberties.
But with Covid-19 dramatically transforming our 2020, some elite families are also considering healthcare, pandemic responses and potential safe havens to ensure they have a backup plan for the future.
Hawaii reinstates inter-island travel quarantine as Covid-19 cases surge
From CNN's Hollie Silverman
Visitors are seen at Ala Moana Beach in Honolulu, Hawaii, on July 29, amid the novel coronavirus outbreak.
Kyodo News/Getty Images
Hawaiian officials are tightening restrictions after a surge in Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations statewide – with the majority of the cases on the island of Oahu.
About 200 new cases and two new deaths were reported Thursday, Gov. David Ige said.
Ige announced that a 14-day inter-island travel quarantine will be in place starting August 11 to stop further spread to other islands.
Bruce Anderson, Director of Hawaii Department of Health, said 117 Covid patients are in the hospital statewide, with 115 of them on Oahu.
More than 53% of the ICU beds on the island are filled, he said.
Virus cases are soaring among younger people, WHO says
From CNN's Madeline Holcombe
The Covid-19 pandemic is moving into younger populations, health experts said Thursday, with cases skyrocketing among children, teens and young adults.
Early in the outbreak, health experts stressed that older adults were most at risk for the virus that has infected more than 4.8 million people in the United States, but new data from the World Health Organization (WHO) shows that most cases – by far – are reported in people aged 25 to 64. The proportion of cases in teens and young adults has gone up six-fold, and in very young children and babies the proportion has increased seven-fold, WHO said.
The increase might be explained by broader testing, greater detection of milder cases and shifting demographics of hotspots, but “a rise in risky behavior after easing of public health and social measures” is also to blame, WHO said.
From CNN's Barbie Latza Nadeau and Valentina Di Donato
An empty classroom is pictured in Trieste, Italy, on May 26.
Jacopo Landi/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Italy, the first Covid-19 epicenter outside of China, has used an aggressive testing regime and face coverings to beat back a second wave of the pandemic so far. But as the nation’s children prepare to return to the classroom, many schools are taking matters into their own hands – by chopping up the furniture.
Social distancing is vital to mitigate the spread of coronavirus, but most Italian schools still use old-fashioned “banchi,” or benches, that seat multiple students to save space in their cramped classrooms. Single desks are rare, especially in the lower grade levels.
Italy’s Education Ministry put out a Europe-wide tender earlier in July for three million single-seat desks. A decision is expected on that soon – for delivery by September 8, so schools can assemble the new furniture by the time students return in the middle of the month.
But many districts are concerned the new desks won’t arrive in time, so they are preparing to take matters into their own hands by sawing up the old benches.
US school district announces virtual classes after more than 90 staff members quarantine
From CNN's Alta Spells
Schools in a district in the US state of Georgia will operate remotely after dozens of staff members were placed in quarantine.
The Barrow County School System (BCSS) will work virtually instead of offering some in-person learning as originally planned, officials announced in a statement Wednesday.
Education officials came to the decision after more than 90 BCSS staff “had to quarantine due to a confirmed case of Covid-19, a suspected case, or direct contact with a confirmed case,” the statement said.
He called the decision a “very difficult” one based on the “increasing number of Covid-19 cases in our county.”
In the statement, the district acknowledged “the difficulties that 100% online learning will cause for families” and said it was planning a phased approach to bring students back into the classrooms as quickly as possible.
The school year is scheduled to begin for all students in the Barrow County School System on Monday, August 17.
Hong Kong to launch voluntary universal coronavirus testing
From Phoebe Lai in Hong Kong
Pedestrians wearing masks are seen in Hong Kong's Central district on August 6.
Isaac Lawrence/AFP/Getty Images
Hong Kong will offer universal, voluntary coronavirus testing for all citizens, the city’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam announced Friday.
Lam said she hoped the testing scheme would launch in two weeks time.
Hong Kong officials have moved to contain a third wave of the virus, as cases continue to rise across the city.
Officials requested support from Beijing in late July to help increase its virus detection capability and its community treatment resources, Lam said Friday.
Sitting in front of backdrop reading “Fight the Virus with Central Government’s Full Support,” Lam added that Hong Kong will build an additional temporary hospital near the city’s Asia World-Expo treatment center.
Beds are seen at a temporary field hospital set up at Asia World Expo in Hong Kong on August 1.
Anthony Kwan/Getty Images
A new testing lab will also be built at the Sun Yat Sen Memorial Park Sports Centre, in an effort to ease pressure on hospitals.
Hong Kong confirmed 89 new cases of Covid-19 in the city on Friday, bringing its total number of confirmed cases to 3,939.
The city has been reporting between 80 and 95 cases daily since Monday this week.
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Young women more likely to experience poor mental health in lockdown, UK study suggests
UCL researchers surveyed more than 18,000 people in four cohorts – those aged 62, 50, 30 and 19 – in research conducted in May 2020 during Britain’s coronavirus lockdown.
They found that poor mental health during the lockdown was most common among the 19-year-olds, followed by the 30-year-old bracket. Women were more likely than men to experience difficulties with mental health across all four age categories.
Over a third of women and a quarter of the men among the 19-year-olds had symptoms of depression during lockdown in May, and 45% of women and 42% of men said they felt lonely during this time, according to the study.
The researchers had data on the three older cohorts across several years, predating the pandemic. They found the 30-year-old women displayed a significant increase in poor mental health during the lockdown, when compared to when they were last surveyed at the age of 25.
UCL noted that the study was limited by the fact that it includes people at specific ages rather than at all ages.
“However the findings about high levels of difficulties especially among young women at the ages of 19 and 30 are likely to apply to young women in their twenties too,” the university said in a statement.
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Catch up on the latest coronavirus headlines
It’s nearing 11 a.m. in Berlin and 2:30 p.m. in New Delhi. If you’re just tuning in, here’s the latest on the pandemic.
Bleak thresholds passed: Total worldwide coronavirus topped 19 million on Friday, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally. Africa has surpassed 1 million cases across the continent, while India became the third country to record more than 2 million infections.
Germany’s cases jump: Thursday marked the first time in almost three months that Germany recorded more than 1,000 new Covid-19 cases in a single day amid a spike in new infections.
A spike in Peru: Authorities identified 7,785 new Covid-19 patients Thursday, the highest number of cases reported in a single day in Peru since the pandemic began. The country has the third-highest caseload in Latin America, behind only Brazil and Mexico.
More cases in Japan: The Health Ministry recorded 1,490 Covid-19 infections on Thursday, the second-highest number of cases Japan has identified in a single day. More than half of Japan’s 44,527 cases have been reported since the beginning of July.
Pakistan’s plan to reopen: Authorities are allowing tourist hot spots, restaurants, salons and movie theaters to reopen next week due to a continued downturn in coronavirus infections. Data from the Ministry of Health shows that cases and fatalities have both dropped 80% since their peaks in June.
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A South Korean NGO is sending Covid-19 test kits to North Korea
From CNN's Yoonjung Seo in Seoul, South Korea
The South Korean government has approved a private organization’s request to send Covid-19 relief products to North Korea.
The group, the Inter-Korean Economic Cooperation Research Center (IKECRC), said it plans to send 10,000 virus test kits, 20 thermal cameras and a real-time PCR test set to Pyongyang. Kim Han-shin, who leads IKECRC, said the South Korean Unification Ministry approved the shipment on Friday.
North Korea has not publicly confirmed the existence of a single case of Covid-19, but experts are dubious that the virus did not cross into its borders at some point. However, Pyongyang is taking the virus’ threat very seriously. The city of Kaesong was placed under lockdown last month after reports that a North Korean defector might have returned to the country from South Korea while possibly infected.
The goods are worth about $1 million, he said. The shipment is not a violation of the punitive United Nations sanctions levied on North Korea for its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile program.
The UN Security Council approved IKECRC’s sanctions exemption requests last month, shortly before the South Korean government gave its own assent.
According to Kim, his group was able to raise funds for these products through help from a local government, but he didn’t reveal which local government that was.
Since the coronavirus outbreak, 40 tons of disinfectant and 20,000 hazmat suits have been sent to North Korea by private groups from South Korea, a Unification Ministry official said. The disinfectants and hazmat suits arrived in North Korea in early May and late July, respectively, according to the ministry.
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Whoever finds a Covid-19 vaccine "must share it," Australian prime minister says
From CNN's Jadyn Sham in Hong Kong
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison speaks to the media at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, on July 30.
Sean Davey/Getty Images
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said at a Friday news conference he believes any country that eventually produces a viable Covid-19 vaccine needs to share it with the world.
Morrison also pledged that if Australia finds the vaccine, “we will share it.”
He also said that Australia is well-positioned to take advantage and be “in a position to be able to manufacture and supply vaccines should they be developed.”
Where Australia’s vaccine efforts stand: Australia’s research and development for a coronavirus vaccine around the world are happening at “warp speed,” said Paul Kelly, the country’s acting chief medical officer.
Kelly also said the Australian government is looking “very clearly and carefully” into advance purchasing options, as well as local manufacturing options for potential vaccines.
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Germany reports more than 1,100 new coronavirus cases
From CNN’s Fred Pleitgen in Berlin
Germany reported 1,147 new coronavirus cases on Friday, according to the country’s center for disease control, the Robert Koch Institute.
The death toll rose by eight to 9,183, the center reported.
Germany is currently experiencing a spike in coronavirus infections. Thursday marked the first time in almost three months that more than 1,000 new infections were recorded in a single day.
To date, more than 215,000 cases of Covid-19 have been identified in Germany, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.
Starting on Saturday, visitors to the country arriving from high-risk areas will be required to undergo a coronavirus test.
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Pakistan relaxes lockdown measures as Covid-19 case numbers fall 80% from peak
From CNN’s Sophia Saifi in Islamabad
Pakistan’s government has announced plans to reopen tourist hot spots, restaurants, salons and movie theaters next week due to a continued drop in coronavirus infections in the country.
The country has identified 281,863 cases of Covid-19 since the pandemic began, and at least 6,035 patients have died. Authorities reported Friday that 727 cases and 21 fatalities had been identified in the previous 24 hours.
However, numbers are down overall. Data from the Ministry of Health shows that coronavirus cases and fatalities have both dropped 80% since their peaks in June.
What’s opening when: Movie theaters, restaurants and businesses in the hospitality industry can open Monday. Tourism activities can restart tomorrow, Umar said.
All outdoor and indoor non-contact activities will also be allowed from Monday.
Umar said all the educational institutions in the country will be opened September 15 pending a final review by the Ministry of Education on September 7.
Marriage halls will be allowed to function from September 15, and train and airline restrictions will be lifted in October, Umar said.
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The novel coronavirus may suppress key immune cells, study finds
From CNN's Maggie Fox
Covid-19 appears to suppress the function of important immune system cells, preventing the body from fighting off the infection, researchers in Hong Kong reported Thursday.
The team at the University of Hong Kong (HKU) said their findings, published in the peer-reviewed journal Immunity, indicate that boosting immune response with certain drugs might help patients recover better. It’s an approach already being tested by several groups.
The researchers looked at the blood of 41 patients treated for coronavirus in Hong Kong early in the pandemic, and compared their immune function to that of healthy volunteers.
Immune system cells known as dendritic cells, along with T-cells and natural killer cells in patients with Covid-19 all appeared to be suppressed. All these cells are part of the body’s response to an infection.
One of the drugs tested was interferon beta-1b. It was initially developed as a treatment for multiple sclerosis, but because it targets the body’s immune system, it is also being tested in coronavirus patients.
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Nearly 60,000 cases of Covid-19 were reported in the US on Thursday
From CNN's Joe Sutton
A total of 59,692 new cases of Covid-19 and 1,250 virus-related deaths were reported in the United States on Thursday, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.
Since the pandemic began, the US has reported 4,883,582 coronavirus cases. At least 160,104 people have died of the virus.
These figures include cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.
CNN is tracking worldwide coronavirus cases here:
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Africa surpasses 1 million cases of Covid-19
From CNN's Maija Ehlinger and Jonny Hallam in Atlanta
Africa has recorded more than 1 million Covid-19 cases, according to a CNN tally based on data from Johns Hopkins University.
As of early Friday morning, the continent has seen a total of 1,008,154 confirmed coronavirus infections.
South Africa accounts for more than half the continent’s reported cases, with 536,184 confirmed infections as of early Friday morning.
On Thursday, World Health Organization Regional Director for Africa Dr. Matshidiso Moeti warned that the lack of testing across Africa remains a “constant and concerning challenge.”
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Australian troops knocked on more than 1,100 doors Thursday
From CNN's Jadyn Sham
Australia’s military visited 1,150 homes yesterday in the state of Victoria to conduct contact tracing, part of the country’s renewed effort to stop a renewed spread of Covid-19.
State Premier Daniel Andrews said it was the largest single-day effort by the Australian Defense Force (ADF) since the military began going door-to-door.
Victoria is under renewed cororonavirus restrictions, including a lockdown in the state capital, Melbourne, following a spike in cases.
Authorities said more than 150 people were not home when the ADF visited, all of whom could face heavy fines for potentially flouting lockdown rules.
More cases identified: Authorities in Victoria said Friday that they had identified another 450 new coronavirus cases, bringing the statewide total to nearly 13,500, according to Australia’s Department of Health.
Across Australia, 19,862 people have been diagnosed with Covid-19. Of those, 255 have died and 11,112 have recovered.
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The world has now surpassed 19 million cases of Covid-19
More than 19 million cases of Covid-19 have now been diagnosed across the planet since the pandemic began late last year, according to a global tally by Johns Hopkins University.
Cases are spiking again in many countries. The United States, India and Brazil are the hardest hit nations and do not appear to be close to containing their outbreaks.
CNN is tracking worldwide coronavirus cases here:
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China recorded 27 locally transmitted cases of Covid-19 on Thursday
People visit an art exhibition on the fight against Covid-19 at the National Museum of China in Beijing on August 5.
Stringer/AFP/Getty Images
Health authorities in China recorded 37 new cases of the novel coronavirus on Thursday, 27 of which were locally transmitted.
All but one of the local cases were identified in the western province of Xinjiang, which has seen a fresh outbreak of the virus in its capital Urumqi since July 15, after nearly five months of no new infections.
China also identified 14 new asymptomatic cases, which the country’s National Health Commission categorizes separately.
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India has surpassed 2 million cases of Covid-19
From CNN's Manveena Suri in New Delhi
More than 2 million cases of Covid-19 have been identified in India since the pandemic began, authorities said.
India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare said Friday morning that it had identified 62,538 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide total to 2,027,074. Of those, 41,585 patients have died while more than 1.3 million have recovered.
In India, patients with mild and moderate symptoms are considered no longer active after 10 days of symptom onset if they meet certain conditions. A test to confirm that they no longer have the virus is not required. Severe cases can only be discharged after one negative coronavirus test
Accelerating epidemic: India recorded its first case of Covid-19 on January 30 and hit 1 million cases on July 17.
Since then, cases have been spiking. It took just 12 days for the country to go from 1 million cases to 1.5 million, and then another nine days to reach 2 million cases.
To date, only Brazil and the United States have identified more coronavirus cases than India.
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Peru reports nearly 8,000 new coronavirus cases
From CNN’s Claudia Rebaza
Relatives of a Covid-19 victim mourn during a funeral at a graveyard in Comas, in the northern outskirts of Lima on August 5.
Ernesto Benavides/AFP/Getty Images
Peru’s health ministry announced 7,785 daily cases of Covid-19 Thursday, bringing the total to 455,409. This is the second day in a row of cases above 7,000.
The death toll Thursday reached 20,424, an increase of 194 deaths.
Peru has seen an acceleration in the number of new cases over the past two weeks and has the third highest number of cases in Latin America after Brazil and Mexico.
The country’s highest number of cases recorded in one day is 8,805, on May 31.
This post has been updated to reflect Peru’s highest number of daily cases.
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President Jair Bolsonaro says Brazil is "going to get on with life" as it nears 100,000 Covid-19 deaths
From journalists Rodrigo Pedroso and Fabio Zuker from Sao Paulo
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro said in a Facebook Live appearance that his country is “going to get on with life,” as it inches closer to recording 100,000 deaths connected to the pandemic.
Brazil’s Covid-19 death toll reached nearly 98,500 on Thursday. More than 2.9 million cases have been identified in the country since the pandemic began.
Bolsonaro later attributed the high number of fatalities to what he described as an error in diagnosing the cause of deaths in Brazil.
More hydroxychloroquine: Bolsonaro also said he might ask US President Donald Trump for more of the controversial drug hydroxychloroquine to help him combat Covid-19.
Hydroxychloroquine is an anti-malarial drug that some have touted as a treatment for Covid-19, but more evidence has been emerging recently that it does not help coronavirus patients. Several studies have found no benefits to treating Covid-19 patients with the antimalarial drug and Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, said last month there was “no evidence” that the drug helps treat Covid-19.
Bolsonaro mentioned that Trump donated the drug to the Brazilian government in May and said he can ask for more.
“I accepted the donation of the pills, which have not yet been distributed. I have no problem calling the American president. If (he) has more, send it to us. We will send a plane to get it, or he will send a plane here. And we can distribute this material,” he said.
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Japan has now identified more than 900 cases of Covid-19 for 10 days in a row
From CNN's Yoko Wakatsuki in Tokyo
A mother and her daughters pray at the Students Peace Monument on the 75th anniversary of the Hiroshima atomic bombing, on August 6, in Hiroshima, Japan.
Carl Court/Getty Images
Japan’s Health Ministry recorded 1,490 Covid-19 infections on Thursday, the second-highest number of cases the country has identified in a single day during the pandemic and yet another worrying sign that its latest outbreak shows no signs of abating.
Thursday marks the 10th straight day the country has recorded more than 900 cases of the novel coronavirus. Authorities have now identified at least 44,527 cases of Covid-19, more than half of which have been reported since the beginning of July.
Seven deaths were reported Thursday, bringing the nationwide death toll to 1,046.
Trouble in Tokyo: Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike urged people in the Japanese capital to refrain from traveling during the upcoming Obon summer vacation season to stop the infection spread.
Authorities reported 360 new infections in Tokyo on Thursday, the 10th consecutive day of more than 200 cases in row.
To date, more than 14,500 cases of Covid-19 have been identified in the Japanese capital.
Infections spiking elsewhere: Kanagawa, a prefecture that neighbors Tokyo, crossed the triple digit threshold for the first time Thursday, reporting 119 infections. Osaka also posted its highest number of cases in a single day Thursday, with 225.
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5 former CDC directors call for increased leadership in the coronavirus pandemic
From CNN Health’s Lauren Mascarenhas
Five former directors of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criticized the contradictory messages put out by President Donald Trump’s administration Thursday.
Here’s what some of them said:
Dr. Thomas Frieden said that the CDC had been sidelined early on in the pandemic and described Trump’s contradictory messages as “chaotic leadership,” which has led to partisanship, confusion and increased spread of the virus.
Dr. Jeffrey Koplan said that “every one of those falsehoods” damages the nation’s mitigation efforts against the virus.
Frieden added that Americans want information from the CDC. “Americans are voting with their clicks. There have been 1.6 billion clicks on the CDC website,” said Frieden. “The more we learn, the more we know, the better we can control it.”
Dr. Richard Besser said the federal response to the pandemic has been “absolutely unacceptable” considering the US is the wealthiest nation on the planet.
He also criticized politicians for viewing CDC guidelines as an obstacle.
“If you have politicians saying that CDC guidance is a barrier to getting children back into school, instead of the roadmap for doing it safely, the whole system breaks down,” said Besser, who was an acting CDC chief during the H1N1 swine flu pandemic in 2009.
Dr. Julie Gerberding, who headed the CDC under former president George W. Bush, said she hopes that the government can learn from this crisis.
“I really do hope that finally it’s gotten so bad that we will reinvent how we think about our health security in the context of our national security,”
Dr. David Satcher, a former US Surgeon General who headed the CDC under former president Bill Clinton, said communities of color that have been hit harder by the pandemic are going to require particular attention during recovery efforts
“It’s going to say a lot about us as a nation, whether we step up to this challenge, and remove many of the structural barriers to health that people in this country face,” he said.
CORRECTION: An earlier version of this story misattributed Dr. Thomas Frieden’s remarks to Dr. Jeffrey Koplan. Frieden said that Americans want information from the CDC, and “Americans are voting with their clicks. There have been 1.6 billion clicks on the CDC website. The more we learn, the more we know, the better we can control it.”
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Stimulus talks on the brink of collapse as two sides trade blame and are no closer to a deal
From CNN's Manu Raju, Lauren Fox and Kristin Wilson
US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi speaks to reporters following continued negotiations with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows on a new economic relief bill in response to the coronavirus pandemic on Capitol Hill on August 6, in Washington, DC.
Samuel Corum/Getty Images
A three-hour meeting between senior administration officials and Democratic leaders yielded little progress tonight as both sides seemed resigned to the likelihood that Congress won’t reach a major stimulus deal amid an economic crisis.
Both sides emerged trading blame for the sputtering talks – and the administration officials warned that US President Donald Trump would take executive action if no deal is reached by Friday.
It’s unclear if the two sides will meet on Friday.
“We had a consequential meeting that was one way we could see the difference in values that we bring to the table,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said.
Pelosi said that White House chief of staff Mark Meadows slammed his hand on the table and stormed out of the room at one point, something that Meadows denied.
The differences remain as they have been: Democrats want to do “something big,” in the words of Pelosi, and the Trump administration wants a “skinny bill,” in the words of Meadows.
One of the biggest sticking points: Aid to state and local governments.
Schumer said, “We are very disappointed in the meeting …They were unwilling to meet in the middle.”
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Meadows indicated they are “very far apart” on some major issues.
“I think there’s a lot of issues we are close to a compromise position on and I think there’s a handful of very big issues that we are still very far apart,” Mnuchin said.
Trump called the two officials three times during the meeting and urged them to continue negotiating, Meadows said.
Mnuchin said that if “they could conclude tomorrow without a deal,” Trump will take executive action.
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Key coronavirus model projects nearly 300,000 people could die in the US by December
From CNN's Amanda Watts
A woman wearing a protective mask walks while looking at a cellphone on August 6, in New York City.
Cindy Ord/Getty Images
Researchers behind an influential model at the University of Washington are now projecting that the US death toll could reach nearly 300,000 by December 1 – but that can be changed if consistent mask-wearing occurs.
“America’s Covid-19 death toll is expected to reach nearly 300,000 by December 1; however, consistent mask-wearing beginning today could save about 70,000 lives, according to new data from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington’s School of Medicine,” a statement said.
According to Johns Hopkins University, nearly 160,000 people have died in the United States since the pandemic began. “The US forecast totals 295,011 deaths by December,” the IHME statement said.
The model doesn’t have to come true, said IHME director Dr. Christopher Murray: “The public’s behavior had a direct correlation to the transmission of the virus and, in turn, the numbers of deaths.”
In its previous forecast, published July 7, IHME projected there would be 230,822 US deaths from Covid-19 by November.
“Since July 15, several states have added mask mandates. IHME’s statistical analysis suggests that mandates with no penalties increase mask wearing by 8 percentage points. But mandates with penalties increase mask wearing by 15 percentage points,” the statement said.
This new model assumes that 50% of school districts will have online school in the fall. When schools make their final decisions, this will impact the forecast and IHME “will incorporate them into our future revisions of forecasts.”
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US State Department lifts worldwide "Do Not Travel" advisory
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
The US State Department lifted its global level 4 travel advisory Thursday after more than four months of warning US citizens against traveling abroad.
The State Department issued the level 4 “Do Not Travel” advisory – the highest level of travel advisory – on March 19, urging US citizens not to travel overseas due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The State Department will return to its previous system of assigning country-specific advisories since health conditions are “improving in some countries and potentially deteriorating in others,” according to a note from the department. This will “give travelers detailed and actionable information to make informed travel decisions.”
Despite the lifted State Department advisory, American travelers continue to face travel restrictions in countries worldwide due to rising cases of the deadly disease in the United States.
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Covid-19 "pushed the limits of health systems" and left "no country untouched," WHO chief says
From CNN's Naomi Thomas
Covid-19 has been “a tragic reminder to the world of the insecurity and instability disease can cause,” and has shown how critical it is to invest in health, the World Health Organization’s director-general said on Thursday.
“The Covid-19 pandemic has changed our world. It has stress tested our political, economic, cultural and social infrastructure,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at the Aspen Security Forum.
The world has learned the lesson that it needs to invest in pandemic preparedness and climate crisis the hard way, Tedros said, and that unless this happens, “we leave ourselves open to enormous harm.”
All countries have been hit hard, he said, high- and low-income alike, with the Americas remaining as one of the epicenters of the virus.
“No single country can fight this virus alone. Its existence anywhere puts lives and livelihoods at risk everywhere,” Tedros said.
It is never too late to turn it around, though he said; using “science solutions and solidarity” together it is possible to overcome the pandemic.
The first coronavirus pandemic has shown how critical health investment is to national security, Tedros said, with universal health coverage being essential for global health security.
WHO’s highest priority is to support all countries in strengthening their health systems so that everyone can access quality services when they are needed, he said.
Tedros finished by urging all leaders to choose the path of cooperation, and to act now to end the virus. “It’s not just the smart choice,” he said, “It’s the right choice, and it’s the only choice we have.”