October 1 coronavirus news | CNN

October 1 coronavirus news

Free testing being done the Wisconsin Army National Guard at the Winnebago County Health Department's new regional COVID-19 testing site on Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020, at the Sunnyview Expo Center in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.
States sound alarm over rising Covid-19 cases
03:21 - Source: CNN

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Pfizer CEO tries to distance his company from politics around coronavirus vaccine

In this Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2019 file photo, Albert Bourla, chief executive officer of Pfizer, prepares to testify before the Senate Finance Committee hearing on drug prices, on Capitol Hill in Washington.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, who has enthusiastically promised to know by the end of this month whether the company’s coronavirus vaccine will work, tried to distance himself and his company from politics Thursday.

“The amplified political rhetoric around vaccine development, timing and political credit is undercutting public confidence,” Bourla said in a letter to Pfizer employees posted online Thursday.

He said the debate this week between US President Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden made the issue too overtly political.

“Once more, I was disappointed that the prevention for a deadly disease was discussed in political terms rather than scientific facts. People, who are understandably confused, don’t know whom or what to believe,” Bourla wrote in the letter.

Bourla said Pfizer was racing to make a vaccine for the good of the world.

Bourla added: “We would never succumb to political pressure.”

“I can’t predict exactly when, or even if our vaccine will be approved by the FDA for distribution to the public. But I do know that the world will be safer if we stop talking about the vaccines’ delivery in political terms and focus instead on a rigorous independent scientific evaluation and a robust independent approval process.”

Trump has claimed a vaccine could be ready before Election Day on November 3. Most vaccine manufacturers and public health experts, including Trump’s own advisers, have said that’s unlikely.

But Bourla has repeatedly promised his company will know whether its vaccine protects people from coronavirus by the end of October. 

Trump tweets he and first lady will begin a "quarantine process"

US President Donald Trump said that both he and First Lady Melania Trump will begin their “quarantine process” until they get their coronavirus test results, following news that his top aide Hope Hicks tested positive for the virus. 

“Hope Hicks, who has been working so hard without even taking a small break, has just tested positive for Covid 19. Terrible! The First Lady and I are waiting for our test results. In the meantime, we will begin our quarantine process!” Trump tweeted Thursday night. 

Hicks traveled with the President multiple times this week, including to the presidential debate in Cleveland and a campaign rally in Minnesota on Wednesday. 

Everyone near Hope Hicks in past week should be quarantined, including Trump, infectious disease expert says

Anyone who’s been near US President Donald Trump’s top aide Hope Hicks for more than a few minutes should quarantine at home following her positive test for Covid-19, a leading infectious disease expert said.

Hicks traveled with Trump multiple times recently, including to the debate in Cleveland Tuesday.

“Everyone who’s associated with Miss Hicks in the recent past should be quarantined at home and stay at home and not go out anywhere. That would be routine public health policy,” Vanderbilt University’s Dr. William Schaffner told CNN’s Chris Cuomo Thursday night. 

White House staff are routinely tested for Covid-19. “This is another example where you can demonstrate that testing does not prevent infection,” Schaffner said. “They do a lot of testing in the White House, but you need to wear the mask.”

Who is at risk: Some White House staffers who were working with Hicks were notified Thursday in a development first reported by Bloomberg News, but it’s taken 24 hours for others, such as the media who cover the Trump administration, including flying to rallies and fundraisers, to learn of their potential exposure.

The odds are that Trump might have been exposed, too: “If the President were a normal person, they would stay at home, their symptoms would be monitored, they would be tested periodically. You would be sure then to shelter him from others, so he doesn’t potentially transmit this infection to others,” Schaffner said.

Trump supporters and staff have not always been doing what they need to do to prevent transmission and attending rallies and having staffers around is “exactly the wrong thing to do,” said Schaffner.

“This is not a political statement. The virus doesn’t care. This is a simple public health statement, the virus will spread and I promise you, in these large rallies, the virus is there, it’s contagious and it’s spreading, just as sure as the sun rises in the east and sets in the west,” he said.

President Trump says he and first lady have just been retested for Covid-19 after aide's positive test

US President Donald Trump confirmed that his top aide Hope Hicks has tested positive for coronavirus and said he and First Lady Melania Trump took a test Thursday evening. 

Trump said he doesn’t know whether he has contracted the virus, saying he spends “a lot of time with” Hicks but noted she wears a “lot of masks.”

“She did test positive, I just heard about this. She tested positive. She’s a hard worker, lot of masks, she wears masks a lot but she tested positive,” the President said. during a call-in appearance on Fox News’ “Hannity.”

“So whether we quarantine or whether we have it, I don’t know.”

Trump speculated that Hicks could have contracted the virus from an interaction with a supporter. 

“She’s a very warm person. She has a hard time, when soldiers and law enforcement comes up to her, you know, she wants to treat them great, not say, ‘Stay away, I can’t get near you.’ It’s a very, very tough disease,” he said. 

Trump said he wasn’t sure when he would get the test results back, but indicated it would most likely be tonight or tomorrow morning. 

Hicks’ positive test marks the fifth known White House coronavirus case and the closest to the President since the pandemic began.

She traveled with the President multiple times recently, including to the debate in Cleveland on Tuesday, and was seen boarding Marine One, along with several other of the President’s closest aides – Jared Kushner, Dan Scavino and Nicholas Luna – none of whom wore masks, on Wednesday as Trump was heading to a campaign rally in Minnesota.

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WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 11: U.S. President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump walk to the White House residence as they exit Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House on September 11, 2020 in Washington, DC. President Trump and the First Lady traveled earlier to the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pennsylvania to mark the 19th anniversary of the September 11th attacks. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Related article Close Trump adviser Hope Hicks tests positive for coronavirus, sources say

Diversity is important to potential Covid-19 vaccine trials, FDA’s Hahn says

Dr. Stephen Hahn testifies during a US Senate Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing to examine Covid-19 in Washington, on September 23.

It’s important that a diverse group of Americans, including the elderly, is part of the ongoing Covid-19 clinical trials now underway in the United States, US Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn said.

“We have been very clear about diversity,” Hahn told the National Consumers League during a discussion Tuesday.

Hahn said the FDA has discussed the importance of including different populations in clinical trials in vaccine development guidelines issued in June.

“We’ve talked a lot about ethnic diversity,” he said. “We also have talked about diversity with respect to those who are elderly, but also those who have comorbidities, other illnesses that put them at risk,” he added.

He continued that the agency has been looking at enrollment for the clinical trials “to ensure that there’s adequate representation of all groups so that the data are generalizable. That’s very important to the agency,” he said.

However, in the three large-scale vaccine clinical trials currently underway in the US, children are not part of those groups. Hahn did not address that during the discussion.

Moscow mayor orders employers to have 30% of staff working from home by October 5

Women eat lunch in an almost empty restaurant in Moscow on September 29.

Companies in Moscow must enforce remote working from October 5 for at least 30% of their staff to help stem a recent surge of Covid-19 cases, the Russian capital’s Mayor Sergey Sobyanin announced on Thursday.

Sobyanin wrote in a blog post that all employees over the age of 65 and people with chronic illnesses will also be required to work remotely. Exceptions will be made for staff whose presence in the workplace is critical to the functioning of the organization as well as for medical organizations and defense companies.

Moscow reported 2,424 new Covid-19 cases on Thursday, according to state media, bringing the city’s tally of cases to 295,025. Across the city, 5,282 people have died from the disease, including a further 28 people in the past 24 hours.

Hope Hicks, one of Trump's aides, tests positive for coronavirus, sources say

In this Sept. 12, 2020, file photo, Counselor to the President Hope Hicks arrives with President Donald Trump at Reno-Tahoe International Airport in Reno, Nev.

Hope Hicks, one of President Trump’s top aides, has tested positive for coronavirus, three sources told CNN.

Hicks traveled with the President multiple times recently, included to the debate in Cleveland on Tuesday and was seen boarding Marine One on Wednesday as Trump was heading to a campaign rally in Minnesota.

Some White House staffers who were in close proximity were notified of the positive test result today, the official said. 

This development was first reported by Bloomberg News. 

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03:06 - Source: cnn

House approves $2.2 trillion stimulus plan from Democrats with no bipartisan deal in sight

The House of Representatives on Thursday approved a $2.2 trillion coronavirus stimulus proposal put forward by House Democrats with no bipartisan deal in sight even as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin have continued talks in an effort to reach an agreement.

The measure passed largely along party lines amid GOP opposition with a final tally of 214-207.

Eighteen Democrats crossed party lines to vote against the bill, while Republicans were united in opposition.    

The legislation will give Democrats something to point to as lawmakers face pressure from constituents to deliver more aid as the pandemic continues to take a devastating toll across America. But the Democratic plan has been rejected by Republicans as too costly and is not expected to be taken up by the GOP-led Senate, and time is quickly running out to clinch a bipartisan agreement that could be signed into law ahead of the November elections. 

Pelosi, as she walked off the House floor, told a group of reporters Thursday evening ahead of the vote that there will be no agreement on any stimulus deal tonight, but talks with Mnuchin will continue.

Some context: Both the White House and House Democratic leaders are struggling with internal party divisions over how to move forward in the stimulus talks. 

For months, moderate Democrats in the House have been pushing their leadership to go back to the table and get a deal with the White House on stimulus rather than forging ahead with another Democratic-only package. 

Fourteen Democratic members voted against the original Heroes Act back in the spring, arguing it was not a plan that was going to be signed by the President. The legislation voted on Thursday has been referred to by House Democrats as an updated version of the Heroes Act. 

What we know about the surge of Covid-19 cases in parts of New York

The positivity percentage rate in 20 Covid-19 hotspots in New York has increased, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Thursday at a daily presser.

The positivity rate has increased from 5.5% to 6.5%, the governor said.

“There are increases primarily in Brooklyn,” Cuomo said.

The governor called on local government to move from compliance to enforcement and to start fining people if they do not wear a mask.

The governor reiterated that he spoke with people in the Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods in the hotspot area and told them enforcement would be stepped up.

Cuomo also announced that Covid Alert, an app to help with Covid-19 contact tracing, will launch in New York Thursday.

The app will allow users to know if they were in contact with someone who has tested positive for Covid-19, the governor said.

Using cellphone data and Bluetooth technology, the app will tell users if they have been within six feet of someone who tested positive for Covid-19. It will also tell users if they were near someone for longer than 10 minutes, Cuomo said.

The governor said he will make the app available to any other state that wants to use it. 

The state of Pennsylvania also launched a Covid-19 tracking app in September.

In New York City: The city is now tracking 11 zip codes where Covid-19 cases continue to grow and are outpacing the citywide average by 3.4 times over the past 14 days.

The 11 neighborhoods all have a positivity rate higher than 3% and are a part of four Covid-19 clusters the city is monitoring.

The cases in the 11 neighborhoods account for 29.9% of all Covid-19 cases in New York City over the past two weeks, despite representing 8.8% of the cities population.

The city of New York is additionally monitoring seven zip codes that have a positivity rating below 3% but “are quickly becoming an area of concern.”

FDA chief says agency's vaccine approval process won't be influenced by "pressure from anybody"

Dr.Stephen Hahn testifies during a US Senate Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing in Washington, on September 23.

The US Food and Drug Administration won’t allow political pressure to interfere with the agency’s decision-making on a potential Covid-19 vaccine, FDA Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn said. 

Hahn sought to reassure Americans about the FDA’s vaccine development process at a discussion recorded on Tuesday with the National Consumers League.

When it comes to authorizing or approving drugs and therapeutics, “science will guide our decisions,” he told the group. “FDA will not permit any pressure from anybody to change that.” 

Hahn has been responding in recent days to concerns about political pressure potentially influencing the approval or authorization of coronavirus treatments or vaccines in recent days after President Trump said last week that the White House could overrule FDA rules on vaccine development.

But even before that, Hahn was criticized for announcing an emergency use authorization for convalescent plasma at a news conference with Trump in August. The agency also revoked an EUA for the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine in June, a drug pushed by Trump, because it didn’t work in Covid-19 patients and in fact, may have caused harm, studies found.

“I know that there’s been particular attention paid to a few of the decisions reached by FDA scientists over the past few months,” Hahn admitted. “As Commissioner, it’s my responsibility to help explain why support for and confidence in the FDA is justified,” he added.

“I want to assure you that every one of the decisions we have reached has been made by FDA scientists based on science and data, not by politics.”

Hahn told the NCL that if and when a Covid-19 vaccine is authorized or approved, Americans “should have complete confidence in that decision.”

“I will fight for science and data to guide our decisions,” he said. 

Nancy Pelosi says there will be no stimulus agreement tonight

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi talks to reporters during her weekly news conference in the House Visitors Center at the U.S. Capitol on October 1 in Washington.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told reporters there will be no agreement on any stimulus deal tonight, but talks with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin will continue. 

Pelosi stressed that the central issue is less about whether they can reach a top line agreement in principle, but about whether they can nail down the actual details in legislative language. 

Pelosi said she was headed back to her office to review documents sent to her by Mnuchin and would figure out where things go next after that. 

As to the odds of reaching an actual agreement, Pelosi said, “I don’t know, it just depends.”

Wisconsin teachers unions demand virtual learning across the state for students

Wisconsin teachers unions are requesting that virtual learning be implemented from kindergarten through college across the state due to the increase of new Covid-19 cases, according to a release from Milwaukee’s teachers union.  

The Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association called on the Wisconsin Department of Health Services to begin virtual instruction until the community spread is contained, according to a statement posted on its Facebook page on Thursday.

“DHS should confirm that plans are feasible, and the district, school, college or university does in fact have the necessary PPE and resources to accomplish the reopening plan,” the statement said. 

Teachers believe authorities have not done enough to keep in-person learning safe.

“Families are knowingly sending COVID-19 positive sick symptomatic students to school,” said Amy Mizialko, a representative of the Milwaukee Teachers’ Education Association.

Traci DeSalvo, with Wisconsin Department of Health Services, told CNN affiliate WKOW they are providing information for schools to make safe decisions.

On Thursday, the state’s health department said that 45 of Wisconsin’s 72 counties “meet the threshold of very high activity” for Covid-19 infections, with 41 counties showing cases on the rise as reported in an earlier alert. 

Wisconsin has 122,274 confirmed Covid-19 cases and 1,327 total virus-related deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Pennsylvania House session canceled after state lawmaker tests positive for Covid-19

In this file photo from Nov. 19, 2019, a person is silhouetted in the shade as he walks by the Pennsylvania Capitol in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

The Pennsylvania House voting session was canceled this morning after a representative tested positive for Covid 19, according to a news release. 

State Rep. Paul Schemel, a Republican, tested positive for Covid-19 on Thursday morning after experiencing mild symptoms and quarantining on Wednesday, according to a statement. He was last in the Capitol on Tuesday, he said. 

The House voting session for Oct. 1 was canceled “out of an abundance of caution,” House Speaker Bryan Cutler said in a statement. He said human resources is working with Schemel to determine all interactions with members and staff, and those who were exposed will be contacted. 

Cutler also noted that the chamber, meeting rooms and staff work areas are professionally sanitized on a nightly basis. 

Defense contractor's CEO accused of coronavirus relief fund fraud

The CEO of a defense contractor in Hawaii has been charged with fraud and money laundering in connection with the government’s Paycheck Protection Program.

The US Attorney’s office says Martin Kao inflated the payroll figures of his company, Navatek LLC (which has since changed its name to Martin Defense Group).

Kao is also accused of applying for loans with two different banks, even though the program limited him to one application.

Five counts of money laundering relate to five checks written on the loan funds, two of which were made out to Martin Kao personally. Kao allegedly deposited $2 million into a personal investment account.

Martin Defense Group designs and produces specialty marine equipment.

Kao appeared in court Thursday. Federal prosecutors asked that he be held without bond because of what they say is a “serious risk defendant will flee.”

Kao’s attorney, Victor Bakke, did not respond to a request for comment from CNN.

Martin Defense Group also did not return CNN’s request for comment, but told CNN affiliate Hawaii News Now they were surprised by the charges.

“As a company, we will address the allegations and have retained legal counsel to review these claims,” the company said.

Maryland reports no Covid-19 deaths for the first time in 187 days

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan speaks during a press conference on Thursday, October 1.

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan reported that the state had no coronavirus-related deaths for the first time in 187 days.

Hogan said in a news conference Thursday afternoon that this is the first time since March 28 that the state has not had a Covid-19-related death. 

The statewide positivity rate is now at 2.8%, which is down from a high of 26.91% in April, according to Hogan. He said that all jurisdictions in the state currently have positivity rates under 5%. 

Hogan also announced that indoor visitation will begin in all nursing homes that are not experiencing a current outbreak or have not experienced a positive test in the past 14 days. Hogan said that based on federal guidelines, visitation will not be permitted in local jurisdictions that have a positivity rate over 10%. 

11 Ohio counties are reporting high Covid-19 spread while cases rise in the state

Gov. Mike DeWine said despite many Ohioans working hard to keep Covid-19 “in check, unfortunately, we are seeing a rebound in some areas of the state.” 

The governor announced 1,327 new Covid-19 cases on Thursday and said the daily positivity rate increased from 3% to 4%. 

Ohio health officials observed that 11 counties had a very high spread, or “red counties,” which is more than what the state had in September, DeWine said during a coronavirus briefing on Thursday. 

There were four counties added to the “red” list this week; including Clermont, Hamilton, Muskingum and Richland County.  

DeWine shared several coronavirus cautionary stories, including one of a woman in her 80s who went to a neighboring state to bury her husband and contracted the virus from a funeral director who did not wear a mask; the woman died shortly after.  

Ohio now has 155,314 coronavirus cases and 4,817 deaths, DeWine said.  

Wisconsin governor announces new public health emergency following "alarming trends" of Covid-19 

The Wisconsin Army National Guard administers free Covid-19 tests on Wednesday, September 2 at the Sunnyview Expo Center in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers announced Thursday a new order that allows out-of-state health care workers to practice in the state following “alarming trends” in coronavirus cases.

The governor urged residents to stay home, wear a mask, and practice social distancing.

Secretary-designee Andrea Palm reported 21 new fatalities Thursday in the state, bringing the number of total deaths to at least 1,348.

Palm said 45 of Wisconsin’s 72 counties “meet the threshold of very high activity” for Covid-19 infections.

This means that there are more than 350 cases per 100,000 people. Palm said 41 counties are showing growing trajectory, an indication that cases are on the rise.

Hospitalizations are increasing: ThedaCare president and CEO Dr. Imran Andrabi said his hospital communities are seeing the increases in Covid-19 infection rates and hospitalizations. He said 95% of hospital beds within his system are full at this point and 250 ThedaCare hospital workers did not show up for work Thursday. Andrabi said the workers are getting sick because people are not wearing masks out in the community.

“This is really a responsibility that we all have to take seriously because if some of us do it and others don’t, it doesn’t work,” Andrabi said.

Italy records its highest increase in Covid-19 cases since late April

Medical staff holds swabs for rapid Covid-19 tests on September 28 in Rome, Italy.

Italy on Thursday reported the highest daily increase in new coronavirus cases since April 24, figures from the country’s health ministry show.

The country recorded at least 2,548 new cases of Covid-19 on Thursday, bringing the total number of infections to 317,409.

The number of people that have died from coronavirus is at least 35,918 – an additional 24 fatalities were recorded in the past 24 hours. The number of patients admitted to intensive care has also risen by 11, bringing the total to at least 291.

Gilead now to oversee distribution of its Covid-19 drug remdesivir, US officials announce

A sign is posted in front of the Gilead Sciences headquarters in Foster City, California.

The US Food and Drug Administration has updated its emergency use authorization for the investigational antiviral drug remdesivir for the treatment of Covid-19.

The agency is no longer requiring remdesivir to be distributed through the US government, officials announced during a call with reporters on Thursday.

Starting on Thursday, the biopharmaceutical company Gilead — the maker of remdesivir — will be responsible for the distribution of the drug in the United States.

Gilead said in a news release the company is “now meeting real-time demand” for the drug, sold under the brand name Veklury in the United States.

The release also noted that AmerisourceBergen will continue to serve as the sole US distributor of remdesivir through the end of this year and will sell the product directly to hospitals. It costs about $3,200 for a five-day treatment course.

“We feel very confident in supply ramp up and that’s what we’ve been working through all year,” Johanna Mercier, chief commercial officer for Gilead Sciences, said during Thursday’s call. 

“By the end of the year we will have more than 2 million treatment courses available,” Mercier said. “We feel very confident that, even if there was a surge in the epidemic, that we can manage that.”

Loss of smell could be a highly reliable indicator of Covid-19 infection, research says

Loss of smell and taste are a strong sign that someone is infected with Covid-19, according to new research published Thursday. 

People who lose either smell or taste should consider self-isolating, even if they have no other symptoms, researchers in Britain said.

How the study was conducted: The team studied 590 volunteers who experienced a new loss of smell or taste. They tested 567 of them for coronavirus.

Of the 567, 77.6% tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 antibodies. In total, 80.4% of participants reporting smell loss and 77.8% of those reporting taste loss had a positive test result, the team reported in the journal PLoS Medicine.

Nearly 40% of those who tested positive for antibodies had neither a fever nor a cough.

Batterham and her colleagues also found that participants with a loss of smell alone were nearly three times more likely than patients with just a loss of taste to have Covid-19 antibodies, and participants with a combined loss of smell and taste were four times more likely to have antibodies.

“These findings suggest that a loss of smell is a highly specific symptom of Covid-19, in contrast to a loss of taste, despite their comparable frequency,” the researchers wrote.

The study recruited its volunteers between April 23 and May 14, during the peak of the Covid-19 outbreak in London. It did not include a comparison group of people who did not lose their sense of smell and/or taste.

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READ MORE

Task force continues to urge mask usage in states without mask mandates
Americans over 30 have been drinking more during the coronavirus pandemic, research shows
Early data shows promising results from Regeneron’s antibody cocktail for coronavirus
The collapse of global air travel is putting 46 million jobs at risk
Wisconsin reports record number of Covid-19 hospitalizations after task force warned of ‘rapid worsening’