OT Coronavirus: America in chaos, News and Updates. One million Americans dead and counting (1 Viewer)

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yeah, it's pretty clear that any relaxation in policies and restrictions leads to a surge in cases and deaths. Not just in the USA but everywhere

the pandemic is still going strong and we're entering fall & winter when more time is spent inside and individual resistance to disease naturally drops. It could be a bad winter.
 
yeah, it's pretty clear that any relaxation in policies and restrictions leads to a surge in cases and deaths. Not just in the USA but everywhere

the pandemic is still going strong and we're entering fall & winter when more time is spent inside and individual resistance to disease naturally drops. It could be a bad winter.

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Today Texas passed California for total deaths. Texas now has 15,861
California 15,607
New York has the most with 33,216 and New Jersey has the second most with 16,221
Florida is working hard to take the lead but remains in 5th place with 14,033
 
The Coronavirus US Total
From worldmeters This is where they get their numbers.
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/about/#about

The US total number is now 209,453 though it will be lower on most news stations as they are using a little different system and each has their own way of interpreting.
Regardless they are all well over 200,000 now and heading toward 210,000.
This one here does the US and breaks it down by states. It also has a page for the entire world.
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/
 
Today Texas passed California for total deaths. Texas now has 15,861
California 15,607
New York has the most with 33,216 and New Jersey has the second most with 16,221
Florida is working hard to take the lead but remains in 5th place with 14,033
Let's see if Ron DeSantis can pull out a win!
 
This 2nd surge is coming faster and stronger than I thought it would.

Positive COVID-19 test rates top 25% in some U.S. Midwest states

(Reuters) - The number of tests coming back positive for COVID-19 is topping 25% in several states in the U.S. Midwest as cases and hospitalizations also surge in the region, according to a Reuters analysis.

North Dakota’s positive test rate has averaged 30% over the past seven days compared with 6% the prior week. The positivity rate has risen to 26% in South Dakota, up from 17% the previous week, according to the analysis using testing data from The COVID Tracking Project.

Minnesota and Montana are averaging 7% of tests coming back positive, but Montana’s positivity rate rose on Sunday to 20%, according to the analysis.

The World Health Organization considers rates above 5% concerning because it suggests there are more cases in the community that have not yet been uncovered.

Several states such as New York, Massachusetts, Vermont and Maine have positive test rates of less than 1%.

At the same time that positive test rates are climbing in the Midwest, cases and hospitalizations are setting records in those states.


In the past week, seven states in the Midwest and western region have reported record one-day rises in new infections - Minnesota, Montana, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin and Wyoming.


Wisconsin set records for new cases twice last week and is now reporting more new infections each day than Florida. South Dakota set records for new cases three times last week.

While a recent increase in testing might explain some of the increase in cases, hospitalizations have also surged in the Midwest and are not influenced by the number of tests performed.

Wisconsin’s hospitalizations set new records seven days in a row last week, rising to 574 on Saturday from 362 a week ago. South Dakota’s hospitalizations have set records six of the last seven days, rising to 216 on Sunday from 170 seven days earlier. Wyoming and North Dakota also had record numbers of COVID-19 patients in their hospitals last week.

All Midwest states except Ohio reported more cases in the past four weeks as compared with the prior four weeks, according to the Reuters analysis.


The United States is reporting 46,000 new infections on average each day, compared with 40,000 a week ago and 35,000 two weeks ago. (Graphic: here)

Deaths have generally been trending downward in the United States for about six weeks. Deaths are a lagging indicator and can take several weeks to rise after an increase in cases.

https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSKBN26I10Y
 
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Let's see if Ron DeSantis can pull out a win!

"Florida reported a spike in new coronavirus cases Tuesday, just days after Gov. Ron DeSantis signed an executive order allowing restaurants and bars to operate at full capacity.

New cases surged to 3,266 from the 738 reported Monday, according to the state's health department. That's the highest one-day number since September 19."

Yup
 
Fauci pushes back against Trump for misrepresenting his stance on masks.


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Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the leading U.S. official on infectious diseases, hit back at President Trump on Wednesday for what he called the misrepresentation of his stance on using masks to curb the coronavirus.

In the presidential debate on Tuesday, Mr. Trump claimed that Dr. Fauci initially said “masks are not good — then he changed his mind.” And when former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. said wearing masks could save tens of thousands of lives, Mr. Trump contended that “Dr. Fauci said the opposite.”

Dr. Fauci, whose relationship with his boss has often seemed tenuous at best, took issue with his claims the day after the debate.

“Anybody who has been listening to me over the last several months knows that a conversation does not go by where I do not strongly recommend that people wear masks,” he said in an interview on ABC News’s “Start Here” podcast. The full interview can be heard Thursday, ABC said.

Dr. Fauci explained that “very early on in the pandemic,” the authorities did not recommend masks to the general public because they were worried about shortages and hoarding. But that changed, he said, as it became clear that asymptomatic transmission was spreading the virus and that masks helped stop it.



“I have been on the airways, on the radio, on TV, begging people to wear masks,” Dr. Fauci said. “And I keep talking in the context of: Wear a mask, keep physical distance, avoid crowds, wash your hands and do things more outdoors versus indoors.”

Mr. Trump has often signaled his displeasure with Dr. Fauci, especially as the scientist’s stock has risen with many Americans. He once called him “a major television star” — apparently a compliment — but it was not clear that the president enjoyed sharing the spotlight.

In April, under fire for his slow initial response to the pandemic, the president reposted a Twitter message that said “Time to #FireFauci.” And in July, Trump advisers undercut Dr. Fauci by anonymouslyproviding details to various news outlets about statements he had made early in the pandemic that they said were inaccurate.

Mr. Trump, watching the economy crumble in a re-election year, has been a cheerleader for state officials to reopen. Dr. Fauci has been rather the opposite. Just this week, he was ringing the alarm on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

“We’re not in a good place,” he said when asked about the nation averaging 40,000 new coronavirus cases a day.

Dr. Fauci said the increases some states are seeing were especially ill timed, given the approach of flu season.

“You don’t want to be in a position like that as the weather starts getting cold,” he said. “So we really need to intensify the public health measures that we talk about all the time.”
 

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