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The latest on the coronavirus pandemic

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Only 4 states trending down in Covid-19 cases
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What you need to know

  • The US recorded nearly 115,000 new coronavirus cases in a single day for the first time, with some states and cities implementing tougher restrictions to curb the spread.
  • The CDC says it is time to develop a testing strategy to identify asymptomatic cases, while Pfizer has opted out of the government’s vaccine distribution system.
  • As infections across Europe rise exponentially, Italy will impose a new stay-at-home order, England has entered a new national lockdown and France, Poland and Russia are reporting record case numbers.
  • The global case count has surpassed 48 million, according to WHO.

Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.

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Japan adds over 1,000 Covid-19 cases in a day for first time since August

Japan has reported over a thousand Covid-19 infections in a single day for the first time since August 21, according to Japan’s Health Ministry. 

Japan gained 1,054 new cases on Thursday with 12 new deaths. 

The total number of the infections throughout Japan now stands at 105,494 (this figure includes 712 on the Diamond Princess cruise ship) and the death toll has now reached 1,819 (including 13 on the cruise ship). 

Patients in critical condition raised to 183, this is up 18 from Wednesday.

Tokyo announced 269 news cases of virus on Thursday. The total number of infections in Tokyo has reached 31,893 and 38 patients are in serious condition as of Thursday.

Italian regions lock down and Paris tightens rules as Europe smashes virus records

People walk by Piazza Palazzo di Città in Turin, Italy, on November 5.

The Italian regions worst-hit by the second coronavirus wave entered a new lockdown Friday after the country tallied its highest daily number of both infections and deaths the previous day.

Italy is under a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. nationwide curfew, with bars and restaurants closing at 6 p.m., while certain areas face harsher restrictions.

Residents in “red zone” regions – Lombardy, Piedmont, Valle d’Aosta and Calabria – may only leave home for necessities, health or work. Those in “orange zones” are banned from leaving their towns except for work or health reasons – and bars and restaurants are closed except for delivery and takeout.

Italy reported 35,505 new cases and 445 deaths Thursday, taking its case total to 824,879 and fatalities to 40,192, according to health ministry data.

Meanwhile in France: Paris also announced stricter measures as the country reported a record 58,046 new cases Thursday, according to the French health agency. The country has Europe’s highest case number, at 1.6 million infections.

From Friday, food delivery, takeout and alcohol sales are banned in Paris between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m., police said.

Véran urged people to respect the national lockdown, or face “a high risk of saturation” of hospitals by mid-November.

Read the full story:

People wearing masks drink coffee at Piazza San Carlo in Turin on Thursday, the last day before new lockdown measures for the Piedmont region.

Related article Italian regions lock down and Paris tightens rules as Europe smashes virus records

Statistically "worst day yet" for North Dakota during Covid-19 pandemic

North Dakota Governor Doug Burgum said in a news conference, “today, statistically, marks the worst day yet for North Dakota during the pandemic.”

Thursday’s 9,224 active cases record is the first time the US state surpassed a daily count of 9,000, he said. The 16.4 positivity over the last seven days and hospitalization of 231 people are also record highs, he added.

The Covid-19 risk level was raised in a number of North Dakota counties, according to Burgum. 

“At the point we are right now,” he said, “no county in the state will have a designation lower than yellow,” which approaches the lower end of the Covid-19 risk level. 

At the same press conference, the Department of Human Services Executive Director Chris Jones said that due to an increase in hospitalizations across the country, there is no additional staff to bring in. 

“The level of surge is constrained by the number of available health care workers,” Jones said. 

Some hospital capacity constraints in the state are because of transfers in from Minnesota, South Dakota and Montana, according to Jones. 

Visibly emotional, Jones also discussed the strain being put on health systems, physicians, nurses and other hospital staff.

“For those of you who do not believe, go and talk to them. Ask them what it is like. Ask them about the impact it has on their family. Ask them about the impact it has on them as they treat patients with Covid and other citizens seeking care,” Jones said. 

The North Dakota Department of Health reported Thursday 1,540 new COVID-19 cases and 29 coronavirus related deaths, bringing the total number of deaths to 596 in the state. 

These numbers were released by the North Dakota Department of Health and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project

Track Covid-19 cases in the US here:

Denmark announces new coronavirus restrictions amid mink-related outbreak

Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen addresses a press conference in the Prime Minister's Office in Copenhagen, Denmark, on November 5.

The Danish Government has announced new restrictions in seven municipalities after scientists there identified a mutated strain of coronavirus linked to the mink population.

According to the government, the mutated form of the virus has been passed back to humans.

Under the new restrictions, restaurants, cafes and pubs are to close from Saturday – with an exception for food outlets selling takeaways. Indoor sporting venues – including gyms –are also being shut, as well as cultural centers, including theaters, cinemas, museums, music venues and libraries.

The government has also announced it is shutting down public transport in the affected municipalities, with the exception of school buses.

The municipalities are Hjorring, Frederikshavn, Bronderslev, Jammerbugt, Thisted, Vesthimmerland and laeso.

The Danish Government is encouraging people in these regions to avoid travel outside their area, and to limit contact with others.

Under the new rules, public gatherings will be further restricted with gatherings of 500 people at seated events now cancelled. Gatherings of 50 people at sporting events or at children’s activities is also cancelled.

Everyone living in the affected municipalities is encouraged to get tested while the new measures are in force. People with links to mink farm operations are being encouraged to be tested every 3-4 days.

US hits another new high in daily coronavirus cases

The United States has so far recorded 120,921 new Covid-19 cases for Thursday, the highest single-day rise in infections since the pandemic again, according to Johns Hopkins University.

New cases are still being reported and the total tally for Thursday will continue to climb up through the night.

Thursday’s number has already eclipsed Wednesday’s new high of 102,831, which was the first time daily infections had surged past 100,000 in the US.

CNN is tracking Covid-19 cases in the US here:

Ohio and Minnesota see record high daily increases in Covid-19 cases

Ohio reported a record 4,961 Covid-19 cases Thursday and Governor Mike DeWine warned that community spread was possible statewide.

“It is everywhere, we can’t hide from it, we can’t run from it,” DeWine said in a Thursday press briefing. “We’ve got to face it.”

DeWine said that every county in the state is seeing significant community spread.

Ohio also reached record hospitalization and ICU numbers, with 2,075 Ohio residents hospitalized with the virus, 541 of those in intensive care. Additionally there were 33 additional Covid-19 deaths reported Thursday.

DeWine attributed the rise in community spread of Covid-19 in the midwestern state to social gatherings like weddings, funerals and private parties. He said in-person education did not appear to be contributing to spread, which he attributed to mandated mask use in schools.

Minnesota also reported its highest daily total with 3,956 new cases, bringing the state’s overall total to 164,865. It’s the third day in a row the state has reached a daily high of new cases, according to the US state’s dashboard. 

The Minnesota Department of Health also reported 25 new deaths, with 2,555 total deaths since the pandemic began, and 9 days in a row of over 100 hospitalizations per day. The latest charts released by the state’s health department shows a steady rise of hospitalizations. 

As the US continues to shatter daily case records, so do states across the nation: Colorado, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Utah and Wisconsin are among those that set new daily records for infections on Thursday.

New Jersey Governor says he won't rule out another Covid-19 shutdown

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy outlined what possible new Covid-19 restrictions could look like while not ruling out another shutdown in the northeastern US state, during an on-camera interview with the Washington Post.

Murphy said that the restrictions he is evaluating include sports-related tournaments in other US states, bars, and the possibility of closing non-essential businesses at a certain time.

“We got a number of bartenders who have showed up as of late testing positive so we’re looking at our bar policy,” Murphy said. Some communities have put a stoppage time on non-essential businesses, which he said the state was looking into.

When asked during the interview if a shutdown similar to some European countries could be coming, Murphy said he wouldn’t rule it out. 

This comes as New Jersey reported 2,104 new positive cases of Covid-19 and a positivity rating of 7.74% from tests done Sunday November 1. Murphy called the uptick in positivity rating “unacceptable.”

There are 1,224 people currently hospitalized due to Covid-19 in New Jersey. The number of hospitalizations has nearly tripled since seven weeks ago when the rolling average was 420 people. There were 12 new lab reported deaths due to the virus in the state, according to the New Jersey Covid-19 dashboard.

Murphy also announced that New Jersey has traced 36 total Covid-19 cases to in-school transmission since schools opened roughly two months ago.

Ahead of the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday, Murphy urged New Jersey residents not to travel out of the state unless it is for work, school, worship or essential travel.

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.

Covid-19 cases close 4 NFL facilities Thursday

Four National Football League (NFL) teams closed their facilities Thursday after learning of a positive Covid-19 test related to each.

The following are statements form the Kansas City Chiefs, Indianapolis Colts, Houston Texans and Chicago Bears:

Chiefs:

“The club was notified this morning that a staff member has tested positive for COVID-19. The individual is self-quarantining, under the team’s medical care, and contact tracing is taking place. The team is now in the NFL’s Intensive Protocol and working closely with the league and medical experts.

“The health and safety of our players, coaches and staff members remains our number one priority.

“The Chiefs will hold practice this morning and then out of precaution, the facilities will be closed this afternoon and meetings will be held virtually.

“We’ll continue to monitor the situation and take any appropriate action necessary to protect the team and those around us.

“The team will continue its preparation to play the Carolina Panthers on Sunday.”

Colts:

“This morning, we were informed that a member of the Colts staff has tested positive for COVID-19. The team is in the process of contact tracing and has entered the NFL’s intensive protocol. The individual has self-quarantined and is under the care of team doctors. The Colts will conduct today’s scheduled practice at the Indiana Farm Bureau Football Center, but all meetings will be held virtually and away from the practice facility. We are working closely with the NFL, its medical staff and our team doctors.”

Texans:

“We were informed last night that a Texans player has tested positive for COVID-19. In consultation with the NFL and medical experts, we have made the decision to close the facility and conduct all operations virtually today. The player immediately self-isolated and contact tracing has begun. We will follow the NFL’s intensive protocols and guidance regarding the team’s operations. The health and safety of our team, as well as our entire staff, are of highest priority.”

Bears:

After learning Thursday that another player tested positive for the coronavirus, the Bears closed Halas Hall and released the following statement: 

“This morning we were notified that another Bears player has tested positive for COVID-19. As a result, the club has decided to pause all in-person football activities and close Halas Hall. Today’s practice has been canceled and all meetings will be conducted virtually. The player who tested positive and all close contacts have been contacted and have already begun self-isolation. We will continue to work closely with the NFL medical experts and follow the league’s intensive protocol. The health and safety of our team, players and staff are the highest priority.”

The Bears are scheduled to play the Titans Sunday in Tennessee. It’s unclear how Thursday’s events will affect that game.

Antibody treatment trial in UK hospitalized patients can continue, monitoring committee says

An independent data monitoring committee reviewed safety and efficacy data from Regeneron’s Covid-19 antibody therapy trial in the UK and recommended the trial continue recruiting volunteers, according to a letter from the committee.

The committee said it had reviewed the records for 15,545 total patients in what is known as the RECOVERY trial, one of the world’s largest efforts to determine what treatments may help hospitalized patients with Covid-19.

That review included 325 patients in the part of the trial evaluating whether Regeneron’s antibody therapy helps patients more than placebo.

In October, a separate Regeneron trial in the US put a hold on enrolling patients who needed mechanical ventilation or high-flow oxygen. Regeneron said that trial’s data-monitoring committee made the recommendation “based on a potential safety signal and an unfavorable risk/benefit profile at this time.” That trial is still enrolling patients that don’t need extra oxygen or need only low-flow oxygen. 

Regeneron has multiple trials underway. 

The company has a trial testing if its therapy could prevent new infections. Another trial is looking at the impact the treatment has on mild to moderate cases. That trial is the basis for the company’s submission to the US Food and Drug Administration for an emergency use authorization, which it submitted in October. 

There are at least 79 monoclonal antibody treatments for Covid-19 under investigation.

Louisiana extends its statewide mask mandate

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, right, speaks during a press conference on November 5.

Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards (D) announced Thursday that he will be signing a new executive order keeping Louisiana in Phase 3, with the same Covid-19 mitigation measures in place, including the statewide mask mandate. The order will be in place for 28 days, until December 4, the Governor said.

Louisiana reported 740 new cases of Covid-19 on Thursday for a total of 185,825 cases in the state and 20 additional Covid-19 related deaths, for a total of 5,766 deaths, the Governor said.

The Governor said while Louisiana currently has the 44th highest rate of Covid-19 cases in the country, “it is not because we have improved our standing – it’s because of deterioration of other states’ standing and the increase in cases that they’ve had elsewhere.”

The state’s concerns include an increase in Covid-19 hospitalizations, with 636 hospitalizations reported Thursday, the most since September 18, according to Edwards.

Both the Governor and Louisiana’s interim assistant secretary of the Office of Public Health, Dr. Joseph Kanter, said many recent outbreaks in the state have been coming from small gatherings of people “letting their guards down.”

Air Force-Army football game called off due to Covid-19

Falcon Stadium is seen on October 31 at Air Force Academy, Colorado.

The US Air Force Academy has announced their football game at Army, scheduled for this Saturday, has been postponed due to Covid-19 cases at the Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The school issued statement cited “upward trends” of coronavirus cases on campus and “in the surrounding community” as reasons to call off the contest.

No make-up date was announced as the two service academies try to reschedule the game. 

Earlier on Thursday, Navy announced the postponement of their Saturday game against Tulsa due to positive Covid-19 cases at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.

Colorado and Utah see highest number of daily Covid-19 cases

A Salt Lake County Health Department public health nurse performs a coronavirus test outside the Salt Lake County Health Department on November 3 in Salt Lake City.

Colorado reported 3,369 new cases of Covid-19 on Thursday, the highest daily count since the pandemic began, Governor Jared Polis said during a news conference.

The state also reported the highest number of hospitalizations, with 894 patients currently in the hospital for the virus.

The governor urged Coloradans to wear masks and avoid gatherings with people outside of their households.

According to the governor, Colorado has reported 121,000 coronavirus cases to date and 2,158 total deaths.

Utah also reported its largest single daily increase in new Covid-19 cases with 2,807 new cases on Thursday according to Utah State Epidemiologist Dr. Angela Dunn.

When asked if he would consider closing businesses to curb the spread, Herbert said, “We don’t want to close down the economy… we think that’s maybe the wrong direction to go. Maybe some modifications of behavior that need to take place to keep those businesses open.”

Utah has a total of 124,292 confirmed coronavirus cases and 632 deaths according to Utah’s Department of Health.

As more states see record-high numbers of daily Covid-19 cases, the United States reported its highest number of new coronavirus infections in a single day – 102,831 on Wednesday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

The state-level numbers were released by the Colorado governor’s office and Utah Department of Health respectively and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project

CDC’s ensemble forecast projects up to 266,000 US Covid-19 deaths by November 28

An ensemble forecast published Thursday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) now projects there will be 250,000 to 266,000 coronavirus deaths in the United States by November 28.

Unlike some individual models, the CDC’s ensemble forecast only offers projections a few weeks into the future. The previous ensemble forecast, published October 29, projected up to 256,000 coronavirus deaths by November 21.

At least 234,300 people have already died from Covid-19 in the United States, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Track Covid-19 cases in the US here:

French Health Minister says second wave of Covid-19 is "brutal"

French Health Minister Olivier Veran speaks during his weekly press conference on the Covid-19 pandemic in Paris on November 5.

The second wave of coronavirus is already severely hitting France, the country’s Health Minister Olivier Véran warned Thursday.

France surpassed another record on Thursday, with 58,046 new cases of the virus registered in 24 hours, according to numbers published by the National Health Agency.

France is “the European country that has the highest number of cases: 1.6 million,” the Director of the Health Agency Jérôme Salomon said during the same press conference.

The Health Minister urged French people to respect lockdown measures, otherwise “we will see, as early as mid-November, a high risk of saturation” of hospitals.

The number of patients hospitalized for coronavirus has increased by 892 in 24 hours, for a total of 28,403 on Thursday, according to health agency numbers and 4,221 coronavirus patients are in intensive care units.

The coronavirus death toll in France currently stands at 39,037 according to the health agency.

Earlier this week, the World Health Organization (WHO) said France accounted for the third-highest number of new cases globally. “With more than 275,000 cases reported in the past week (4,200 cases per million population): that is a 27% increase from the previous week,” WHO said Tuesday.

Minks appear to be ‘reservoir’ for coronavirus, WHO official says

Minks are seen at a farm in Gjol, Denmark on October 9.

A World Health Organization (WHO) official has praised Denmark’s decision to cull the country’s herd of mink, saying the animals appear to be a good reservoir for coronavirus and have infected people with a mutated strain.

“It seems that mink are susceptible to the virus and quite good at becoming a reservoir for the virus,” Catherine Smallwood, a senior emergency officer at the World Health Organization (WHO) in Europe said Thursday. 

“So there is a risk of course that this mink population could contribute in some way to the transmission of the virus from minks into humans and onwards from humans to humans.”

She said the transmission of Covid-19 from humans to animals and back to humans is not new. However, she said Danish researchers had tracked mutations of the virus in the mink.

“We’re of course very interested in this specific variant and then the genetic changes that are being reported, and we need to understand more about it but it doesn’t change right now what’s going on, epidemiologically.”

On Wednesday, the Danish Prime Minister announced the findings of the research and that all mink would be culled. 

WHO European regional director Hans Kluge on Thursday described the decision as “commendable,” especially given the economic impact it will have.

Pfizer opts out of US government distribution of Covid-19 vaccine 

A health worker injects a person during clinical trials for a Covid-19 vaccine at Research Centers of America in Hollywood, Florida, on September 9.

Pfizer will not use the government’s vaccine distribution partner, McKesson, to distribute its Covid-19 vaccine in the US if it is authorized, the company said in a statement on Thursday.

Instead, it will use its own distribution system to deliver the vaccine directly to health care providers.

Once the vaccine is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, the company plans on shipping out 7.6 million doses per day from its facilities in Kalamazoo, Michigan, and Puurs, Belgium. 

Distribution will be challenging because the Pfizer vaccine must be kept at a temperature of negative 103 Fahrenheit while being stored. Pfizer has designed shipping containers roughly the size of a suitcase that can maintain that temperature for up to 10 days.

Pfizer says its distribution plan was approved by the US government and is built on what the company calls a “flexible just in time system which will ship the frozen vials directly from our plants to the point of vaccination.” 

In a statement provided to CNN, the company reported that for the US market, “our distribution will be direct from Kalamazoo to point-of-use (POU), or our distribution center at Pleasant Prairie, WI to the points of vaccination or equivalent location. We continue to work very closely with the US Government on ensuring an effective distribution model.”

Speaker Pelosi moves to expand COVID testing on Capitol Hill

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi speaks to media at the Democratic National Committee headquarters on Capitol Hill on November 3 in Washington, DC.

House Speaker Pelosi told members of her leadership team on Thursday that she will expand Covid-19 testing in the House.

According to a Senior Democratic aide, the United States Air Force will provide up to 2,000 high-quality tests per week for the entire Congress at no cost for the next six weeks.

The turn-around time on the tests is 6 to 12 hours. A requirement of this option is that if the traveler receives a positive test, the attending physician will perform an additional test to confirm the results. 

A longer-term solution is being explored.

People who tested positive for Covid-19 were more likely to report going to a workplace, rather than teleworking, study says 

Employed adults who tested positive for Covid-19 were almost twice as likely to report regularly going to a workplace than those who tested negative, underscoring the importance of teleworking and workplace safety measures, according to research published Thursday in the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 

A CDC-led team looked at 314 US adults; 153 were symptomatic and had positive Covid-19 PCR tests and 161 were symptomatic people with negative test results. The participants were identified in outpatient health care facilities in July 2020. 

Of the 248 participants who reported their telework status in the two weeks before illness onset, the percentage who teleworked full- or part-time was lower among those with positive coronavirus tests. In these two weeks, those who had positive Covid-19 test results were also more likely to report going exclusively to a school setting or an office. 

These associations were also present when the analysis was restricted to those who did not represent critical infrastructure workers.  

The findings highlight socioeconomic differences among participants who did and did not telework, the authors wrote. Non-white employees and those who earned less had less opportunity to telework. 

“This investigation provides evidence of the potential health benefits of teleworking associated with the Covid-19 pandemic,” wrote the authors. 

“Allowing and encouraging the option to work from home or telework, when possible, is an important consideration for reducing SARS-CoV-2 transmission,” they said. 

When teleworking isn’t possible, worker safety measures should continue to be scaled up, they said. 

The research does have some limitations, including that the study population may not be representative of the US population and that different types of telework were not operationalized and participants weren’t asked about specific alternative work site policies provided by their employer. 

Some US states and cities have been upping restrictions such as mandatory mask-wearing in stores, offices and schools in response to the spike in cases across the country.

Italy hits two new Covid-19 records as situation worsens

A medical staffer performs swabs to test for coronavirus in the Military barracks of Cecchignola in Rome on October 27.

Italy has hit new records for the number of new Covid-19 infections and deaths in a single day, according to Thursday’s data from the country’s Health Ministry.

There were 35,505 new cases recorded, taking the total to 824,879 since the start of the pandemic. A further 445 people have died in the past 24 hours, taking the total to 40,192.

The total number of patients requiring intensive care now stands at 2,391, an increase of 99 in the past 24 hours. 

Thursday’s figures “are not a good sign,” said Gianni Rezza, director of the Prevention Department at the Health Ministry, adding that the worsening situation is why new restrictions are taking effect from Friday.

A “stay at home” order from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. will be enforced across the whole country.

In four regions with a higher contagion rate (Lombardy, Piedmont, Valle d’Aosta and Calabria), people will not be allowed to leave their homes unless it is for essential necessities, health or work. 

“The virus is running and we have to stop it,” Rezza added.

This post has been corrected to reflect that Valle d’Aosta – not Liguria – is one of the four regions where people will not be allowed to leave home except for essential trips.

As England begins its second lockdown, Boris Johnson says there's "light at the end of the tunnel"

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson answers questions during a briefing in Downing Street on November 5 in London.

There is “light at the end of the tunnel” as England begins a four-week lockdown to try to contain a second wave of Covid-19 infections, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said.

New restrictions took effect at the start of Thursday, requiring people to stay home in most circumstances.

“The UK government and the devolved administrations are working together on a joint approach to the Christmas period, because all of us want to ensure families can come together, wherever they live,” Johnson said at a press conference from Downing Street.

“The advice I’ve received suggests that four weeks is enough for these measures to make a real impact so these rules will expire and on the 2nd of December, we will move back to a tiered approach. There is light at the end of the tunnel.

“I have every confidence – if we follow this package of measures in the way that we can, and as have done before – I’ve no doubt that people will be able to have as normal a Christmas as possible.”

As coronavirus infections spike across Europe, Johnson said earlier this week that UK deaths in the second wave of the pandemic could potentially exceed those recorded in the spring, with the number of coronavirus patients in some hospitals “already higher than at the peak of the first wave.”