December 8 coronavirus news | CNN

December 8 coronavirus news

Nurses care for a COVID-19 positive patient at UMass Memorial Hospital on December 4, 2020 in Worcester, Massachusetts. - UMass Memorial Hospital had to convert one of their cardiac step down units into a COVID-19 ICU due to the surge in patients. The United States recorded more than 210,000 Covid-19 cases in 24 hours on Thursday, according to Johns Hopkins University, in an all-time high for the country since the start of the pandemic. (Photo by allison dinner and Allison Dinner / AFP) (Photo by ALLISON DINNER/AFP via Getty Images)
US tops more than 15 million coronavirus cases
02:15 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • The UK has started vaccinating citizens with the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine, becoming the first Western nation to administer Covid-19 shots outside of clinical trials.
  • The US, which surpassed 15 million cases Tuesday, is adding cases at the fastest rate during the pandemic.
  • President Trump signed a largely symbolic executive order aimed at prioritizing the shipment of Covid-19 vaccines to Americans before other nations.

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Fauci expects another Covid-19 surge after the holidays

Dr. Anthony Fauci is urging Americans to stay home for the holidays.

“We’re in a tough situation because of our baseline level of infections,” the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said Tuesday in a discussion with the National Urban League. 

Before the fall surge, the Unites States was already recording anywhere between 40,000 to 70,000 new coronavirus cases a day as the fall weather forced more people indoors, Fauci said.

The country is now seeing hundreds of thousands of new cases every day and Fauci said the US hasn’t even seen the spike that’s expected from travel and gatherings from the Thanksgiving holiday yet.

But Fauci said it doesn’t have to be that way. He urged continued mitigation efforts such as mask usage, social distancing and avoiding crowds.

“We’re going to be asking people to do something that is difficult and maybe even painful, particularly at the family level, is to tell people, unless it’s absolutely necessary, not to travel,” he said. “We said that over Thanksgiving and we’re saying the same thing over Christmas.”

Fauci said that it would be best for Americans to stay away from travel – especially trains and airports – and remain home with their families “as difficult as it may be.”

“It’s better to say this is an unusual year, hopefully we’re going to have a lot more Christmases, a lot more New Years,” Fauci said.

Iran plans to import 42 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines

Pedestrians walk past closed shops along a street in Iran's capital Tehran on Nov. 21.

Iran plans to import 42 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines from abroad, Iranian Food and Drug Administration (IFDA) spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said Tuesday, according to state TV.

The imported vaccines are meant for high-risk groups, while the public will receive a locally produced vaccine, PressTV reported. Jahanpour said that Iran had pre-ordered about 16.8 million shots through COVAX, an initiative led by the World Health Organization, which aims to provide worldwide access to effective Covid-19 vaccines. 

He also said another 4 million doses of vaccine would be supplied through joint manufacturing ventures between Iranian and foreign companies and that the foreign supply of vaccines would be exclusively dedicated to high-risk groups, including the elderly, those with debilitating diseases and health workers.

“The rest of the country’s need would be met through domestic manufacturing,” Jahanpour said.

Accusations against US: Last Thursday, Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif accused the United States of waging an economic war and preventing Iran from making a payment to COVAX. 

“The United States even prevents us from using our own money in different countries to pay COVAX for the vaccine,” Zarif said, adding, “We’ve been trying, our Ministry of Health has been trying, our Central Bank has been trying to transfer money we have in billions in other countries to WHO for COVAX and we haven’t had much success.” 

People who recovered from Covid-19 should still get a coronavirus vaccine, Fauci says

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, recommends people who have recovered from Covid-19 should still plan to get vaccinated when a coronavirus shot becomes available.

Immunity may only last a year or two and not decades, Fauci said.

“So that’s the reason why we make no distinction,” he said. “If a person gets infected and then wants to get the vaccine, it’s perfectly fine. It doesn’t have any impact on other underlying conditions.”

Rhode Island leads the US for highest average of new Covid-19 cases per 100,000 people 

A stretcher is loaded back into an ambulance after EMTs dropped off a patient at a newly opened field hospital operated by Care New England to handle a surge of Covid-19 patients in Cranston, Rhode Island, on Tuesday, Dec. 1.

Rhode Island is currently reporting an average of 123 new coronavirus cases per 100,000 people, according to JHU data – the highest number by this metric in the United States.

The states with the top five averages in the US currently are:

  1. Rhode Island: 123 new cases per 100,000 people
  2. Indiana: 102 new cases per 100,000 people
  3. Utah: 98 new cases per 100,000 people
  4. South Dakota: 97 new cases per 100,000 people
  5. Alaska: 97 new cases per 100,000 people. 

According to JHU data, the average number of cases per 100,000 people is rising in more than half the country. Rhode Island, Connecticut, California, and Tennessee are some states seeing this metric rise the quickest.

North Korean leader's sister warns South Korea's foreign minister could "pay dearly" for Covid-19 remarks

Kim Yo Jong, sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, attends a wreath laying ceremony at the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum in Hanoi, Vietnam, on Saturday, March 2, 2019.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s powerful sister Kim Yo Jong has accused South Korea’s foreign minister of making “reckless remarks” on the emergency anti-epidemic measures in North Korea, adding that she “might have to pay dearly for it.”

Kim also accused South Korean Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha of speaking “without any consideration of the consequences.”

Kim’s statement, her first in public for several months, was made on the state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on Wednesday.

What did Kang say? The South Korean foreign minister’s comments about the coronavirus situation in North Korea were made on Dec. 5 at a conference in Bahrain hosted by the International Institute For Strategic Studies.

North Korea has said it doesn’t have any confirmed Covid-19 cases but many experts are doubtful. The country closed its borders in January and raised its anti-epidemic measures to the highest level again on Dec. 2, according to the KCNA.

In late November, South Korea’s spy agency reported that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ordered executions of at least two people due to Covid-19 and economic pressure, according to a South Korean lawmaker briefed by the country’s spy agency.

Biden details plan to combat coronavirus pandemic in first 100 days

US President-elect Joe Biden on Tuesday laid out his three-point plan to combat the coronavirus pandemic, an approach in dealing with the virus that continues to contrast with President Donald Trump.

The plan, announced as he introduced the team he has designed to get the pandemic under control, would aim to get at least 100 million Americans vaccinated in his initial 100 days in office, his pledge to sign a face mask mandate on his first day in office and efforts to get kids back to school safely.

Biden’s plan came the same day that Trump signed a largely symbolic executive order aimed at prioritizing the shipment of the coronavirus vaccine to Americans before other nations.

Last week, in an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper, the President-elect said he will ask Americans to wear masks for the first 100 days after he takes office.

Read the full story:

WILMINGTON, DELAWARE - DECEMBER 08: U.S. President-elect Joe Biden announces the members of his health team, including his pick for secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra, at the Queen Theater December 08, 2020 in Wilmington, Delaware. With the novel coronavirus pandemic continuing to ravage the country with daily records for infections and deaths, members of Biden's health team said they will make fighting COVID-19 the priority. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Related article Biden details plan to combat coronavirus pandemic in first 100 days

Raid of former Florida Covid data scientist's home could affect other state employees, legal experts warn

The former Florida state data scientist whose house was raided by police on Monday says she isn’t just worried about the legal ramifications she’s facing, but also for other state employees who leaked her damaging information on Florida’s coronavirus response.

Rebekah Jones, who was fired after accusing Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration of minimizing the pandemic and skewing state data, attracted national attention after her house was raided by armed state police on Monday morning. State authorities are investigating whether she accessed a government messaging system without authorization to send a message urging her former colleagues to speak out about coronavirus deaths.

Jones has denied sending the message, but she told CNN she fears the computers and phone that state police seized from her Tallahassee home could expose her sources in the government to retaliation.

Read the full story:

Rebekah Jones appears on CNN.

Related article Raid of former Florida Covid data scientist's home could affect other state employees, legal experts warn

US hits record number of Covid-19 hospitalizations

The United States reported 104,600 Covid-19 hospitalizations on Tuesday, setting a new record high since the pandemic began, according to the Covid Tracking Project.

According to CTP data, these are the highest hospitalization numbers:

  1. Dec. 8: 104,600 people hospitalized
  2. Dec. 7: 102,148 people hospitalized
  3. Dec. 6: 101,501 people hospitalized
  4. Dec. 4: 101,276 people hospitalized
  5. Dec. 5: 101,192 people hospitalized

Pence renews calls for mask wearing and social distancing

Vice President Mike Pence called for Americans to remain patient during his remarks at a White House summit on the Covid-19 vaccine Tuesday, renewing calls for social distancing and mask wearing. 

Pence urged Americans to “save lives” by practicing good hygiene.

“Wash your hands. Practice social distancing or wear a mask when it’s not possible or whenever local authorities indicate that it’s appropriate. The way that we got through the early days of this pandemic,” he said, adding later, “it’s the way we’ll see our way through the months ahead between now and when the coronavirus vaccine that will likely be approved this week will be widely available for every American.”

Pence’s remarks and tone were significantly different than that of President Trump, who spoke at the same event earlier in the day. Trump’s speech was much more focused on taking credit and claiming victory for the development of a vaccine. When asked by a reporter about advice for Americans on avoiding the spread of Covid in the holiday season, Trump commented that “the vaccine was our goal.” 

The vice president also did something else Trump did not in his speech: he offered his sympathies to those who had lost loved ones to coronavirus.

“Before I reflect on all the we’ve heard today and the extraordinary professionalism and cooperation that you’ve witnessed,” Pence said, “I want to extend my – my sympathies to the families that may be looking on at this very hour. Families that have lost loved ones over the course of this year.”

“Even as we enter a time of great promise in this country,” he continued, “I want families that have lost loved ones, and those that are still struggling in the midst of this pandemic to know There’s not a day gone by, that you haven’t been on the hearts of all of us working at every level. And, and we will never forget your families, or your loved ones, as we hasten the day that we put this pandemic in the past.”

Pennsylvania records its highest number of Covid-19 hospitalizations since pandemic began

More than 5,561 Pennsylvanians were hospitalized with Covid-19 on Tuesday, the highest since the pandemic began, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Health.

The department said it was expecting “to see case counts and hospitalizations increase into the winter and during flu season,” spokesperson Maggi Mumma told CNN.

Pennsylvania has 1,160 residents in intensive care. Earlier Tuesday, the Commonwealth announced that it had 10,170 new Covid-19 cases on Monday, reaching a total of 436,614.

Messaging on Covid-19 needs to be uniform "from the top right down," Fauci says

Dr. Anthony Fauci said he has had some conversations with President-elect Joe Biden as well as with Ron Klain and with Jeff Zients, and will likely have more detailed discussions soon. 

Fauci said that that was the most important thing to him, “a uniformity of approach and not disparate were some groups do one thing and other groups do another. That’s my main message.” 

Operation Warp Speed knows "exactly" where states want Pfizer vaccine to be distributed, general says

Gen. Gustave Perna, chief operating officer of Operation Warp Speed

Operation Warp Speed knows where states want the Pfizer vaccine to be distributed, Gen. Gustave Perna, chief operating officer of Operation Warp Speed, said during a White House summit on Tuesday. And as of Friday, it will know where states want Moderna vaccine to go, he said.

Perna said that the goal of Operation Warp Speed was to start moving vaccines throughout the entire United States within 24 hours after emergency use authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration. 

“We know the locations by address, we know the populations, based on the amounts that they want at each location. We know this as a fact,” he continued. 

Perna said that this information was already being shared with vaccine makers and distributors “so that they can plan, package and prepare to distribute.” 

“This week, we’re working on the Moderna vaccine initial allocations with the states and by this Friday, we will have all the locations for the Moderna vaccine allocation from the states,” Perna said. “We’ll know where they want it and we’ll know how much they want it.” 

Within a one-week period, he said, “we’ve been able to accumulate, process, inform and collaborate where the vaccines going to, key to our success.” 

Michigan governor orders flags to lower as state surpasses 10,000 Covid-19 deaths

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer ordered US and Michigan flags across the state to be lowered to half-staff for 10 days, in remembrance of the now more than 10,000 Michiganders who have died from Covid-19, according to a release from the governor’s office. 

The state reported 5,909 new cases of Covid-19 Tuesday, bringing the total to 410,295. At least 191 new Covid-19-related deaths were reported Tuesday, bringing the total to 10,138.

Flags are to be returned to full staff on Dec. 19, the release said.

France reports rise in new Covid-19 infections but fewer patients in intensive care 

France recorded a rise in Covid-19 cases with more than 13,000 new infections on Tuesday, according to France’s Public Health Agency.

The increase in cases means France is getting further away from President Emmanuel Macron’s target of 5,000 or fewer daily cases, which is the government’s requirement to lift the lockdown. 

The average number of new daily cases in recent days was about 10,000, France’s public health agency chief said on Monday. 

With 804 new deaths recorded on Tuesday, fatalities were higher than Monday’s toll of 366. However, the number of deaths tends to be higher on Tuesdays and Fridays, when care homes share their data with public health authorities. 

On Tuesday, 3,078 patients were in intensive care units, which is a decrease of 110 patients compared to Monday and closer to the target of 3,000 ICU patients set by the government as a benchmark to lift restrictions.

A total of 25,882 coronavirus patients remain hospitalized, which is a decrease of 451 compared to Monday.  

US will likely have a third Covid-19 vaccine in February, Operation Warp Speed official says

Moncef Slaoui, chief scientific adviser for Operation Warp Speed

The United States will likely have a third Covid-19 vaccine in February, Moncef Slaoui, chief scientific adviser for Operation Warp Speed, said Tuesday.

The Pfizer and Moderna coronavirus vaccines could both be authorized for emergency use before the end of December. The US Food and Drug Administration’s Vaccine and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee will meet on Thursday to discuss Pfizer’s application for emergency use authorization for its coronavirus vaccine candidate.

A similar meeting is scheduled next week for Moderna’s vaccine candidate.

Slaoui noted that other vaccines are in development, including Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, which is in Phase 3 trials and requires only one dose. Slaoui said that a one-shot vaccine is “a major advantage,” especially in the context of a pandemic. 

“That vaccine is likely to complete its efficacy trial, in terms of assessing efficacy of the vaccine, probably early in the month of January, and hopefully would file for emergency use authorization either late in January or early in February,” Slaoui said.

He added that AstraZeneca’s vaccine, which uses similar technology, is also in Phase 3 trials.

“We project that efficacy may be achieved somewhere in the end of January or early February, and maybe by late February or early March, that vaccine could become available, if approved by the FDA,” he said.

Pentagon planning to prioritize medical personnel in coronavirus vaccine rollout

The Pentagon has drafted a list of the groups that it will provide the coronavirus vaccine to first. It is prioritizing health care workers and then “critical national capabilities,” which will include the country’s nuclear forces, elite military units and senior Pentagon leaders, according to two defense officials familiar with the list.

Officials have said that the Defense Department will receive a tranche of the vaccine and has been delegated responsibility to decide who will receive it. 

The military is expected to initially receive significantly fewer vaccine doses than there are military and civilian personnel working for the US Department of Defense, meaning they have to prioritize who will get the initial doses.

The list of senior leaders to receive the vaccine will likely include acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller and Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. 

The senior leaders are being prioritized due to their seniority but they are also at higher risk from the virus because they are older than the average military service member. Miller is 55 and Milley is 62.

It was not clear whether the list of priority recipients had been finalized, but the draft seen by CNN Tuesday has been widely circulated within the Defense Department. The Pentagon did not respond to a request for comment on the draft.

The vaccine rollout could begin in the next few days with the US Food and Drug Administration due to meet on Thursday to consider approving the authorization of Pfizer’s vaccine.

The Pentagon list is divided into three “phases,” and several sub-phases, according to the defense official familiar with the list.

The first phase will involve the vaccination of “health care providers, health care support, emergency services and public safety personnel.” Personnel working in intensive care units, emergency rooms, urgent care centers, and first responders such as emergency medical services, police, search and rescue, and firefighters will be among the first to receive the vaccine. Residents in Armed Forces retirement homes will also fall into this first category. The coronavirus has proven deadly to nursing home communities.

The next priority group will include inpatient health care and support personnel as identified by their institutions. 

National Guard and Reserve personnel on active duty supporting Covid response efforts, patient care, Urban Augmentation Military Task Forces supporting civilian hospitals, and administering of the vaccines or testing will be next to receive the vaccine.

Thousands of National Guard and Reserve personnel have been called up to support virus response efforts across the country.

After the vaccination of military health care workers, the next high priority group — designated Phase 1b.1 — will include “Critical National Capabilities” such as strategic and nuclear deterrence forces, homeland defense forces, “national leadership/senior staff as defined by Joint and Service staff principals,” the Special Operations Command national mission force, and the Cyber Command national mission force.

After senior leaders and elite units are vaccinated, the next group to receive the vaccine will include personnel preparing to deploy within the next three months, including military, civilian and contractors who would normally receive Defense Department vaccines in pre-deployment.

The next group to receive the vaccine will include “other critical and essential defense department personnel,” including select members of the military, staff working in Defense Department schools, child and youth services, and food handlers on military installations. 

Phase 2 will include “high risk” beneficiaries, and Phase 3 healthy uniformed military personnel.

Covid-19 deaths in California top 20,000

Drivers with appointments wait in line to get a free COVID-19 self-test at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, Tuesday, December 1.

California reached a grim milestone Tuesday, recording more than 20,000 deaths as the result of Covid-19 infections.

The state’s Department of Public Health added 112 fatalities Tuesday, bringing the total to 20,047 since the pandemic hit the Golden State. 

Daily case counts have more than doubled in the past two weeks. Today, 23,272 new infections were reported statewide. California has seen a 55% increase in test positivity rate over the past two weeks, which currently stands at 8.7%.

That surge in cases continues to haunt the state’s health care system. A record high of 10,500 admitted patients are receiving treatment today, Ghaly said. Over the past two weeks, hospitalizations are up 71%, with new intensive care admissions close behind with a 68.7% increase. Ghaly expressed concern that highly trained health care workers will “not be able to provide the kind of care Californians have come to expect.”

As intensive care unit capacity in Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley has dipped below 15%, residents in those areas are under a new stay-at-home order. Much of the Bay Area joined the order, despite not falling under the same threshold. Restrictions will remain in place for at least three weeks. Intensive care unit capacity in Southern California is 10.1%, and only 5.6% in the San Joaquin Valley.

Under the order, residents can still go to doctor visits, buy groceries and worship outdoors. Retail is still open as well. California is still under a travel advisory, and Ghaly is urging people to cancel all travel with the exception of that which is deemed essential. 

“Together we can stop the surge. “I know that you’re all tired I know that it’s exhausting. I certainly share some of that exhaustion, as well,” he said.

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. 

White House task force warns states that vaccines will not reduce spread until late spring

US President Donald Trump speaks at the Operation Warp Speed Vaccine Summit on Tuesday, December 08, in Washington, DC.

The White House coronavirus task force is warning states that current vaccination plans won’t reduce the spread of the disease until at least the late spring.

Even as President Trump said Tuesday the US vaccination plan would “quickly and dramatically reduce deaths and hospitalizations and within a short period of time, I think we want to get back to normal,” his task force told states in a weekly report that mitigation measures were still essential to preventing further contagion.

The reports, which are distributed to states on a weekly basis, said that while the “imminent arrival of vaccines provides hope,” the effect of the effort would takes months to materialize.

“Large-scale benefits of lower deaths and hospitalizations will only come after months of immunization,” the report said. “Difficult but temporary changes in personal behavior are key to limiting disease and death until we bring the pandemic to an end with immunization; this messaging must be delivered frequently and by all effective modalities.”

The report said the current surge was continuing in “every corner of the US, from small towns to large cities, from farms to beach communities.”

It went on to lament that “many state and local governments are not implementing the same mitigation policies that stemmed the tide of the summer surge; that must happen now.”

It said mitigation efforts in Europe had resulted in “clear improvement” but warned “the majority of the United States is not mitigating similarly.”

North Carolina announces new stay-at-home order as Covid-19 cases spike in the state

Gov. Roy Cooper

Effective on Friday, North Carolina is entering into a modified stay-at-home order, Gov. Roy Cooper announced today during a news conference.

The modified order will be from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. local time. All residents must stay at home. 

Cooper said that all businesses and most retail stores must also be closed by 10 p.m. local time.

“Our new modified stay at home order aims to limit gatherings and get people home where they are safer, especially during the holidays. It’s also a reminder that we must be vigilant the rest of the day,” Cooper said. 

The state’s latest numbers: North Carolina has reported 404,032 cases and 5,605 deaths since the start of the pandemic. The state is also seeing the highest number of hospitalizations since the pandemic began.

Note: These numbers were released by the state’s 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.

Switzerland plans to ban public events and limit private gatherings as coronavirus infections rise

A view of the market with the town hall in the old town of Saxony, Pirna, Switzerland on Monday, December 7.

Switzerland plans to ban nearly all public events and place further restrictions on private gatherings starting Saturday, as coronavirus infections rise, the Swiss government announced Tuesday.

The new measures follow the Swiss government’s announcement last week that ski resorts can remain open for domestic tourism but stricter Covid-19 restrictions would be imposed. 

Starting Dec. 12 to Jan. 20, the government plans to halt all public events, except church services and legislative meetings, and will order restaurants, shops, markets, and sports facilities to close at 7 p.m. local time.

The government also plans to restrict private household meetings to five people from two households, apart from on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Boxing Day, and New Year’s Eve, when a maximum of 10 people can meet for the holidays. 

Meanwhile, each local cantonal authority can authorize ski resorts to open, according to the Federal Department of Home Affairs last Friday. 

Switzerland’s 26 cantons will now consult with the federal government on the proposed measures, with the final decision to implement them taking place on Friday.

The new restrictions come as the Federal Office of Public Health recorded 92 more deaths in Switzerland and neighboring country Liechtenstein Tuesday, bringing the death toll to 5,116. Health authorities also recorded 4,262 new Covid-19 infections Tuesday, bringing the total cases to 358,568 since the pandemic began.  

“If the situation worsens next week, the Federal Council plans to take additional measures on December 18, such as the closure of restaurants and shops,” said Simonazzi. “Compensation measures for businesses that are most affected by the restrictions are under consideration.”

Swiss Confederation President Simonetta Sommaruga added, “With this package, we want to create clarity and planning security. And we want to provide security in these uncertain times.”

READ MORE

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READ MORE

As US average of daily cases nears 200,000, experts say ‘behavior and cold weather’ are behind Covid-19 surge
Man fined $3,500 for breaking Taiwan coronavirus quarantine for 8 seconds
Senators express optimism about a Covid-19 stimulus proposal coming early this week
Navajo Nation implements another three-week lockdown as ICUs reach capacity amid coronavirus surge
Los Angeles restaurateur says politicians are ‘living in la-la land’ as Covid measures hit