THE LATEST U.S. NUMBERS (AS OF MAY 18, 2020, AT 6:58 P.M. EDT)
U.S. cases have surpassed 1.5 million and
the country’s death toll is more than 90,000. The Johns
Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center maintains an ongoing count of the COVID-19 cases and deaths
in the United States and worldwide. As of May 18, the tally is:
·
Total cases worldwide: 4,786,672
(up from 4,516,360 Friday)
·
Total deaths worldwide: 317,695
(up from 306,051 Friday)
·
Total recoveries: 1,776,641 (up
from 1,622,354 Friday)
·
Total cases in the United States:
1,506,732 (up from 1,432,045 Friday)
·
Total deaths in the United
States: 90,236 (up from 86,851 Friday)
New York has added another region to
reopen Tuesday, with many beaches set to reopen Memorial Day weekend. On Monday, New York State Governor Andrew
Cuomo told the media that the region around Buffalo could reopen on
Tuesday, making it the sixth of 10 regions in New York State to meet the
criteria to lift lockdown measures, according
to CBS News. The
Finger Lakes, the North Country, the Southern Tier, the Mohawk Valley, and
Central New York reopened last week. Cuomo said that these areas have met the
required benchmarks, including declines in infections, deaths, and
hospitalizations, and having sufficient numbers of hospital beds to handle a
surge.
The governor also announced Friday that
state beaches in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Delaware will reopen
the Friday before Memorial Day. As
of June 1, horse racing tracks
statewide can resume races without fans.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio,
however, said Sunday that city beaches will not reopen Memorial Day weekend or
in the near term, and that fences will be built if people start gathering on
beaches, according
to CBS New York. On
Monday, he said that if the current downward trending of infections and
hospitalizations continues, the city could ease social distancing restrictions
and permit nonessential businesses to reopen by June, according
to Newsday.
Texas recorded its highest single-day
rise in cases as the state continues to reopen. Over the weekend, Texas reported its biggest
daily case count to date of 1,801, according
to Newsweek. The surge may be partially due to outbreaks at meat
plants and increased testing capacity. The state allowed stores and restaurants
to resume business on May 1; gyms are set to reopen today.
More than two-thirds of states have begun
to reopen. According
to The New York Times, this week Minnesota is set to reopen stores and
malls, Kentucky is looking to lift restrictions on restaurants and stores, and
Connecticut is allowing salons, museums, and office buildings to resume
activities.
More than 11.8 million Americans have
been tested so far. A
total of 11,834,508 individuals have been tested in the United States for the
detection of SARS-CoV-2 as of May 18, according to the Johns Hopkins
Coronavirus Resource Center.
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New Developments
Initial human trials of a vaccine have
yielded encouraging results. Phase 1 results of Moderna’s mRNA vaccine trial show that all
participants who received varying dose amounts of the potential treatment
produced antibodies for the novel coronavirus, according to data
released on Monday by
the biotechnology company.
In the study, led by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID), three
groups of 15 healthy participants ages 18 to 55 received dosing at either a
low-level amount (25 micrograms), a medium level (50 micrograms), or a high level
(100 micrograms). Low- and medium-level doses were shown to be safe, but those
in the high dose group had significant “systemic symptoms.”
Moderna will discontinue the high dosing
in its Phase 2 trials and expects to move to Phase 3 trials in July. If those
trials go well, The New York Times reported that a vaccine could become available for
widespread use by the end of this year or early 2021, according to Tal Zaks,
MD, Moderna’s chief medical officer.
David
Bernstein, MD, vice
chairman of medicine for clinical trials at Northwell Health in Manhasset,
New York, who is not involved in the research, told Everyday Health: “It is
important for the public and researchers to have realistic expectations, and I
would estimate that at best we are looking at a possible vaccine 12 to 18
months from now, assuming current trials are successful.”
The Federal Reserve chair said the
economic downturn could go through the end of next year. On 60 Minutes on Sunday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome
Powell said that the
economic slump “could stretch through the end of next year.” He added, however,
that the country will get through the recession. “In the long run, and even in
the medium run, you wouldn’t want to bet against the American economy,” he
said. “This economy will recover.”
Vitamin D may help beat the virus. A recent
statistical analysis published in MedRXiv of coronavirus patient data from hospitals and clinics across
China, France, Germany, Iran, Italy, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, the
United Kingdom, and the United States found a strong link between severe
vitamin D deficiency and mortality rates. An
article in Forbes reviewing the latest research regarding vitamin
and COVID-19 concluded that the “jury’s still out on its effects.”
Trump announced that he is taking
hydroxychloroquine. President
Trump said he is taking daily doses of the antimalarial drug
hydroxychloroquine, according
to CNN. The president has
touted the drug as a potential coronavirus treatment amid questions about its
effectiveness and potential side effects.
A study suggests summer weather could
help the slow virus spread. A
working paper posted last week from researchers at Harvard Medical School and the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology indicates that the warmer summer months
could have some positive effects in blocking COVID-19. Temperatures above 77
degrees were linked to a reduction in transmission. The authors found a
“negative association between temperature and humidity and transmission.” They
warned, however, that the “estimated effects of summer weather are not strong
enough to seasonally control the epidemic in most locations.”
Japan’s economy fell into a recession in
the first quarter. The Wall Street Journal on Sunday
reported that Japan’s
economy, the third-largest in the world, contracted by 3.4 percent in the first
three months of the year. The economy minister, Yasutoshi Nishimura, warned on
Monday that data for the second quarter is expected to be worse, and he expects
the economy to “shrink substantially
for the time being.”
China supports a WHO investigation of the
outbreak’s origin. Chinese
leader Xi Jinping on Monday told the World Health Organization’s annual
assembly that he backs an international review of the pandemic led by the WHO
once the emergency has ended, reported The Guardian. Jinping also announced that China would donate $2 billion to the
international fight against COVID-19 and offered to help establish hospitals
and health infrastructure in Africa.
Trump officially unveiled Operation Warp
Speed. On Friday,
President Trump announced that Moncef Slaoui, the ex-head of GlaxoSmithKline’s
vaccines division, and four-star Army General Gustave Perna will lead Operation
Warp Speed, the administration’s effort to have a coronavirus vaccine ready by
the end of the year, according
to CNN. “Operation Warp
Speed means big and it means fast,” Trump said.
Retail sales and industrial production
dropped dramatically in April. The
Census Bureau released data on Friday showing that retail sales fell 16.4 percent from a month
earlier. This plunge comes on the heels of an 8.3 percent drop in retail sales
in March. The Federal Reserve also reported that industrial production plunged
a record 11.2 percent in April, according
to the Associated Press.
A Gallup poll shows social distancing has
dropped significantly. A Gallup
poll released Friday revealed
that 58 percent of U.S. adults report completely (17 percent) or mostly (41
percent) isolating themselves, continuing a decline from a high of 75 percent
the week of March 30 through April 5. The results come as more states are
taking steps to reopen their economies.
Tens of thousands of autoworkers are
returning to jobs. The Associated Press
estimated that 133,000
autoworkers are due to pour back into auto plants that are reopening next week.
Ford is predicting stronger sales in the future in Europe, China, and the
United States as the lockdowns ease.
Loud talking may leave viral droplets in
the air for up to 14 minutes, a study found. A single minute of loud-speaking generates at least 1,000
virus-containing droplets, according to a study published this
week in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. Researchers found that infectious droplets may hang
in the air for 8 to 14 minutes. “These observations confirm that there is a
substantial probability that normal speaking causes airborne virus transmission
in confined environments,” write the study authors.
At 108, she may be the country’s oldest
coronavirus survivor. Sylvia
Goldsholl, who is 108 years old, maybe the nation’s oldest COVID-19
survivor, according
to USA Today on Friday. The resident of the Allendale Community for Senior
Living in New Jersey had the virus but made a full recovery. Goldsholl has also
lived through the Spanish Flu Pandemic of 1918, which struck when she was 6
years old.
Almost three million people filed jobless
claims, and the unemployment rate has hit 15.7 percent. The
Department of Labor released data last Thursday showing that 2.9 million new claims for
unemployment insurance were filed in the previous week. About 36.5 million
Americans have filed applications in the past eight weeks. CNBC
called it the biggest job
loss in U.S. history. The unemployment rate has now rocketed to 15.7 percent,
up from about 3.5 percent in February.
The ousted vaccine director warned
lawmakers that the country lacks a vaccine plan. In testimony before the House Energy and
Commerce Committee last Thursday, Rick Bright, Ph.D., former director of the
Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, told representatives
that the United States lacks a plan to produce and fairly distribute a
coronavirus vaccine when it becomes available, according to the Associated
Press. He warned that the
nation could face “the darkest day in history” unless decisive action is taken.
Dr. Bright was removed from his post last
month after pushing for rigorous vetting of hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria
drug embraced by President Trump as a coronavirus treatment. He filed a
whistleblower complaint saying
he was reassigned because he tried to “prioritize science and safety over
political expediency.”
The CDC has confirmed the link between a
mysterious syndrome in kids and COVID-19. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has confirmed the link between a rare
syndrome in children with COVID-19, according
to NBC New York. New York
City has found at least 145 cases of children sickened by the illness.
The CDC
issued a health advisory regarding
multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C). The condition has been
seen in several U.S. states and European countries.
“Healthcare providers who have cared or
are caring for patients younger than 21 years of age meeting MIS-C criteria
should report suspected cases to their local, state, or territorial health
department,” according to the CDC advisory.
According
to the American Heart Association (AHA), children with this syndrome have symptoms resembling Kawasaki
disease, including “persistent fever, inflammation, and evidence of single or
multi-organ dysfunction (shock, cardiac, respiratory, renal, gastrointestinal,
or neurological disorder), and may or may not test positive for COVID-19.” Read more..
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