September 21, 2024

Coronavirus updates: US deaths surpass 1,000 for second straight day, jobless claims rise for first time since March; baseball is back

Baseball is Back #BaseballisBack

President Donald Trump says he is “100%” in favor of schools opening in the fall, amid the pandemic, and is “comfortable” with his son and grandchildren going back to school. Trump insists that young people “have very strong immune systems.” (July 22) AP Domestic

Major League Baseball’s opening day finally arrived Thursday, the virus-shortened season kicking off almost four months late and minus fans in the stands. 

The Washington Nationals, last year’s World Series champs, were hosting the venerable New York Yankees – with the equally venerable Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, tossing out the ceremonial first pitch.

In New York state, officials had to tighten guidelines for the mandate that bars serve food with their drinks. A handful of “Cuomo Chips” apparently does not meet the requirement. Gov. Andrew Cuomo, having fought off a deadly COVID-19 charge in the spring, is adamant that the state won’t go there again.

Nationally, the daily death toll surpassed 1,000 for the second straight day and hospitalizations were again peaking. The paralyzing coronavirus pandemic, beaten back by New York and a few other states, showed little sign of easing nationwide.

The Johns Hopkins University data dashboard reported 1,195 U.S. deaths Wednesday, high by standards of recent weeks but still only half of the daily toll during the outbreak’s deadly peak in the spring. The Covid Tracking Project, however, showed almost 60,000 people are currently hospitalized, less than 200 short of the highest totals from April. 

The Labor Department reported Thursday that 1.4 million people filed initial applications for unemployment benefits last week, the first weekly increase since March.

Here are some significant developments:

📈 Today’s stats: The U.S. has confirmed almost 4 million cases and more than 143,000 people have died, according to data maintained by Johns Hopkins University. Worldwide, there have been more than 15 million cases and more than 620,000 people have died.

📰 What we’re reading: How could a fall without football impact politics? President Trump is up for reelection as are governors in six states home to FBS football programs.

Our live blog is being updated throughout the day. Refresh for the latest news, and get updates in your inbox with The Daily Briefing. 

Iowa health officials draw scrutiny over meatpacking plant outbreak

The first confirmed coronavirus outbreak at an Iowa meatpacking plant was far more severe than previously known, with more than twice as many workers infected than the state Department of Public Health told the public, newly released records show. The department said in May that 221 employees at the Tyson Foods pork processing plant in Columbus Junction tested positive. But days earlier, Tyson officials told Iowa workplace safety regulators that 522 plant employees had been infected, documents show.The discrepancy adds to mounting questions state officials face about public information during the pandemic. Tyson spokesman Gary Mickelson said the number of infections announced by the state appeared to reflect only the first round of testing.

“Coordinating facility-wide testing and obtaining results is a complex process that takes time,” he said.

Moms with COVID-19 can safely breastfeed newborns, study suggests

Mothers with COVID-19 may be able to stay in the same room with their newborns after birth and not transmit the virus if certain precautions are taken. Researchers observed 120 babies born to mothers with COVID-19 and found no cases of transmission during childbirth or after two weeks of breastfeeding and skin-to-skin contact, according to the small study published Thursday in the journal The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.

“We know that skin-to-skin contact and breastfeeding are important both for mother-infant bonding and for long-term child health,” said Dr. Patricia DeLaMora, who co-led the study from the Weill Cornell Medicine-New York Presbyterian Komansky Children’s Hospital. “Our findings suggest that babies born to mothers with COVID-19 infection can still benefit from these safely.”

– Adrianna Rodriguez

Parent company of Ann Taylor, Lane Bryant, shuttering 1,600 stores

The parent company of Lane Bryant, Ann Taylor and the Justice brand is the latest in a line of retail corporations battered by the pandemic to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. New Jersey-based Ascena Retail Group, which also operates Ann Taylor Loft, Catherines, Lou & Grey and Cacique, plans to “reduce their store fleet from approximately 2,800 stores to approximately 1,200 stores,” the company said in court records Thursday. The planned closures are a 56% “reduction in the total store fleet.”

Brooks Brothers, Lucky Brand, J.C. Penney, Neiman Marcus, Sur La Table and J. Crew have all filed for Chapter 11 since May. As many as 25,000 stores could shutter this year as businesses continue to feel the impacts of the pandemic, according to a report from Coresight Research.

– Kelly Tyko

Middlemen banking billions off COVID-19 products

Middlemen seeking to profit from the pandemic have sprung up overnight to score billions of dollars in federal COVID-19 contracts, their stake as small as a mailbox rental or virtual office subscription. Some simply buy it from a manufacturer and resell it directly to the government at a steep markup. Global demand for personal protective equipment has attracted hundreds of construction, financing and technology companies to supplying health care products. One in 10 federal COVID-19 vendors are government contracting newcomers.

“It’s clearly opportunism,” said Benjamin Brunjes, an assistant professor at the Daniel J. Evans School of Public Policy and Governance at the University of Washington. “People are aware that there’s a huge amount of new money, and they’re taking a slice.” 

– Josh Salman, Nick Penzenstadler, and Dak Le

Fauci to hurl first pitch in the season of COVID-19

Dr. Anthony Fauci, arguably the most prominent figure in the COVID-19 crisis, joins the World Series champion Washington Nationals on the mound Thursday at Nationals Park as baseball kicks off its 60-game regular season. From Brooklyn, Fauci grew up a Yankees fan but says he roots for both teams since moving to the D.C. area. He’s worn a Nats-themed mask to testify before a House Committee with other members of the coronavirus task force.

“Dr. Fauci has been a true champion for our country during the COVID-19 pandemic and throughout his distinguished career,” the team said in a statement. “It is only fitting that we honor him as we kick off the 2020 season and defend our World Series Championship title.”

– Analis Bailey

‘Cuomo Chips’ won’t cut it as a food order in New York bars

Sorry, bars and restaurants: You can’t get around New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s food-with-alcohol order by offering a bag of “Cuomo Chips” or a few pieces of cheese. The State Liquor Authority updated its guidance to provide more clarity on Cuomo’s order, which prevents bars and restaurants from serving alcoholic beverages to patrons who don’t order food first. The order, issued last week, is meant to keep patrons in their seats and not congregating in groups around a bar or in an outdoor dining space. After bars began offering $1 chips and similar items as the food, the State Liquor Authority stepped in. Now the food must be “sandwiches, soups or other foods, whether fresh, processed, precooked or frozen.”

– Jon Campbell

USA TODAY panel of experts: We’re almost halfway to an available vaccine

Propelled by encouraging results from early experiments, the clock has ticked forward one hour since June in USA TODAY’s countdown to a vaccine against COVID-19. For July, the hands sit at 5 a.m., our panel of experts estimates. Midnight is the starting point of the pandemic in the U.S., and noon is the time a vaccine will be widely available to Americans. The panel includes experts in medicine, virology, immunology, logistics and supply chain issues.

“These first steps simply mean that we haven’t fallen at the first hurdle,” said Dr. Kelly Moore, associate director of immunization education with the Immunization Action Coalition. “That doesn’t change the number of hurdles ahead.”

– Elizabeth Weise and Karen Weintraub

Florida, Texas among states with deadliest weeks 

A USA TODAY analysis of Johns Hopkins data through late Wednesday shows 12 states set records for new cases over a seven-day period while six states had a record number of deaths over the period. New case records were set in Alaska, California, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Utah and Wyoming. Record numbers of deaths were reported in Florida, Idaho, Nevada, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.

In Florida, the week’s death toll was 824, more than twice the number of any week during the spring COVID-19 surge. Still, Gov. Ron DeSantis continued to press for in-classroom learning when schools open, some in less than three weeks. DeSantis stressed that young people face the least risk from the virus. 

“It is our kids who have borne the harshest burden of the controlled measures instituted to protect against the virus,” DeSantis said Wednesday.

– Michael Stucka

Remote learning gaining momentum as back-to-school season approaches

As COVID-19 cases rise in most states, the prospect of in-person learning this fall at the country’s major school districts is becoming increasingly remote. Eleven of the top 15 school systems by enrollment are already planning to start the fall semester online or implement a hybrid of in-person and online classes, according to Education Week magazine’s reopening tracker. In all, 11 of the 15 largest U.S. school systems are in communities adding COVID-19 cases at more than three times the rate they were in the two weeks ending May 1.

Among colleges, the Chronicle of Higher Education is tracking the reopening plans of more than 1,200 institutions. The findings: About half of universities plan to reopen, a third are proposing a mix of online and in-person classes, and 11% have committed to fully online learning.

– Elinor Aspegren and Chris Quintana

1.4 million jobless claims filed, first increase since March

After slowly dropping for over four months, the number of Americans filing new unemployment claims pushed higher last week, the Labor Department reported. as reopening of the economy stalls amid surges of the coronavirus. More than 1.4 million Americans filed initial applications for unemployment insurance last week. That’s far below the record 6.9 million who sought assistance in late March, but higher than the 1.3 million who filed claims the week before. The latest figure reverses the slow but steady slide that had occurred for 15 weeks in a row.

– Charisse Jones

California extends masks deal with Chinese firm

California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced an extension of a contract to buy medical masks from a Chinese company, saying U.S. firms are unable to produce enough protective gear. The $316 million deal with BYD comes as the state’s confirmed coronavirus cases surged to over 409,000, the most cases in the nation after barely surpassing New York. However, New York has 32,520 confirmed deaths, California about 8,000. California, with a population of 40 million, is about twice the size of New York. Scientists say reported coronavirus cases vastly underestimate the true number of infections because of the small number of tests.

COVID-19 data should drive decision to reopen schools, Arizona official says

Arizona schools Superintendent Kathy Hoffman wrote that “at a minimum,” Gov. Doug Ducey should set criteria for reopening schools using COVID-19 data and should only order that schools reopen if the number of confirmed cases declines. Hoffman joins teachers, students, school board members, physicians and parents calling on the governor to provide more clarity. Ducey, who has ordered schools to delay the first day of in-person classes until Aug. 17, is expected to make an announcement about schools this week. The rate of new coronavirus cases has been easing in recent days after some areas of the state began mandating masks in public.

“I want students back in our classrooms because that’s the best place for learning and growing,” Hoffman wrote in the message posted to Twitter. “However, we cannot ask schools to make decisions that will impact the teachers’ and students’ health and safety without first providing them with the necessary public health data and funding to make safe decisions.”

– Lily Altavena, Arizona Republic

Trump blames COVID-19 spike on protests, travel and Mexico

President Donald Trump blamed a dramatic uptick in U.S. coronavirus cases on young people who attended nationwide protests over police brutality, summer holidays, a “substantial increase in travel” and migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, even though his own advisers have also attributed the surge to some states’ early reopenings.

“There are likely a number of causes for the spike in infections. Cases started to rise among young Americans shortly after demonstrations, which you know very well about, which presumably triggered a broader relaxation of mitigation efforts nationwide,” Trump told reporters during a White House briefing, referring to mass demonstrations over the death of George Floyd.

“We’re also sharing a 2,000 mile border with Mexico as we know very well and cases are surging in Mexico … it’s a big problem for Mexico but cases are surging very sharply and all across the rest of the Western Hemisphere. “

– Courtney Subramanian and John Fritze

Princess Cruises cancels cruises through Dec. 15

Princess Cruises has canceled sailings across the globe through Dec. 15 – with one exception. “All cruises in and out of Australia will be paused until Oct. 31 and then all other sailings across all other countries are paused through Dec. 15,” Negin Kamali, spokesperson for Princess Cruises, told USA TODAY. Princess Cruises, which had major coronavirus outbreaks on two of its ships, the Diamond Princess and the Grand Princess, made the call to cancel more sailings due to COVID-19’s progression and decisions of government authorities, health authorities and airlines regarding travel restrictions around the world, the company said in a release. 

– Morgan Hines

US hospitalizations back to peak levels as confirmed cases surge

More than 59,000 Americans are hospitalized with COVID-19 related illness, a return to the peak that rocked the nation in April, according data from the COVID Tracking Project. Hospitalizations have been steadily rising since hitting a low point of 27,772 on June 15. Several days with more than 59,000 were reported in April before the number began dropping steadily. But it has been rising for more than a month, according to the data.

More COVID-19 resources from USA TODAY

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Contributing: The Associated Press

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