“Sure. Laugh. You idiots were drinking bleach.” https://t.co/2sc5xPBkU8 pic.twitter.com/NVyTWUYHw6
— Charles P. Pierce (@CharlesPPierce) July 14, 2020
#UPDATE US posts new daily record of 67,632 new #coronavirus cases in 24 hours, Johns Hopkins University tally shows.
For the past 10 days, the number of new cases being reported has been between 55,000 and 65,000 every 24 hours
? Queues for testing in Los Angles pic.twitter.com/KglmaSh0Pf
— AFP news agency (@AFP) July 16, 2020
The US reported +997 new coronavirus deaths today, the highest number since June 10th, bringing the total to 140,140. pic.twitter.com/LZL5vdMvGO
— Patrick Chovanec (@prchovanec) July 16, 2020
According to Johns Hopkins University's tally of cases in the United States, there are at least 3,478,009 cases of coronavirus in the U.S.; at least 137,106 people have died in the U.S. from coronavirus.
— Jake Tapper (@jaketapper) July 15, 2020
The latest modeling projects the number of COVID-19 deaths in the US to increase further, even as one research team suggests the near-universal use of masks could save 40,000 lives between now and November https://t.co/66B5thktJL
— AFP news agency (@AFP) July 15, 2020
======
AFP graphic highlighting the countries with the largest number of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the past week@AFPgraphics pic.twitter.com/CNffHYok6q
— AFP news agency (@AFP) July 16, 2020
In Spain, there were ~1 million hidden, asymptomatic #coronavirus cases. In an effort to understand the outbreak's scope, 61k randomly selected people were tested. ~1/3 positives showed zero symptoms. Extrapolating that data suggests ~1mln went undetected https://t.co/NXnzcTymnp
— delthia ricks ? (@DelthiaRicks) July 15, 2020
Russia's coronavirus case tally passes 750,000 https://t.co/6TjhDZkigA pic.twitter.com/6tPMLKXrO5
— Reuters (@Reuters) July 16, 2020
For Palestinians already hit financially by the coronavirus pandemic, a new round of restrictions has added to their woes as infections in the occupied West Bank spike again https://t.co/xXJhIdgZ5J
— AFP news agency (@AFP) July 15, 2020
Anatomy of a superspreading event: Mobile-phone & credit-card data helped identify hundreds of #coronavirus infections linked to a fast-moving outbreak that began in the nightclub district of Seoul. More than 40k tested & 246 were infected https://t.co/6DTfngfarJ
— delthia ricks ? (@DelthiaRicks) July 15, 2020
Thousands of Indians ignored social distancing rules to throng markets in Patna today, desperate to stock up on essentials before midnight when Bihar state's 125 million inhabitants go into #coronavirus lockdown #India @AFPhttps://t.co/VzKH5ceJXh
— AFP South Asia (@AFPSouthAsia) July 15, 2020
#InOtherNews A Bangladesh hospital owner accused of issuing thousands of fake negative coronavirus test results to patients at his two clinics was arrested Wednesday while trying to fleeing to India in a burqa, @AFP report https://t.co/OGpe66yNGK
— Bhuvan Bagga (@Bhuvanbagga) July 15, 2020
India's virus cases surge another 32,695, taking the nation closer to 1 million and forcing a new lockdown in the popular western beach state of Goa two weeks after it was reopened to tourists. https://t.co/zj6Edjverl
— The Associated Press (@AP) July 16, 2020
The #Maldives reopens its tourist resorts and welcomes its first international flight in more than three months even as the Indian Ocean holiday hotspot records a steady rise in #coronavirus infections @AFP https://t.co/gEymhGgWUg
— AFP South Asia (@AFPSouthAsia) July 16, 2020
Australia’s coronavirus hot spot Victoria state moves to increase its available hospital beds and reports a record daily high of 317 infections. https://t.co/NMlMMdhVFi
— The Associated Press (@AP) July 16, 2020
Cases of coronavirus are on the rise across Africa. But in some countries, people don’t believe the pandemic is real
The hospitals of Nigeria’s biggest city, Lagos, tell a different storyhttps://t.co/fGaVYhY9WR pic.twitter.com/ILxVC5A3Ss
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) July 15, 2020
Colombian soldiers patrol the streets in Bogota, Colombia.
Bogota on July 13 enforced a strict lockdown, affecting 2.5 million people, for the next two weeks to contain new outbreaks of COVID-19
? Juan Barreto pic.twitter.com/o7QryDDOeC
— AFP news agency (@AFP) July 16, 2020
Brazil's Bolsonaro tests positive for #coronavirus againhttps://t.co/EZkBs1tkzw pic.twitter.com/qhtTNBUdGv
— AFP news agency (@AFP) July 16, 2020
Mexico reports 317,635 total cases of coronavirus, 36,906 deaths https://t.co/ln6kYTuLX4 pic.twitter.com/tO3a4EOc6W
— Reuters (@Reuters) July 16, 2020
======
VIDEO: ????? Some cities and states around the world, from #Bangalore in India to #California, have re-imposed lockdowns and curbs to contain new #coronavirus outbreaks, as global cases surged past 13.2 million pic.twitter.com/5J8goXhRKm
— AFP news agency (@AFP) July 15, 2020
#Coronavirus research update: Severe #COVID19 has a telltale immune profile https://t.co/NdOcqGhbHe
— delthia ricks ? (@DelthiaRicks) July 15, 2020
Study finds global sentiments toward #COVID19 shifting from fear to anger https://t.co/Mj6jHLTyk1 via @medical_xpress
— delthia ricks ? (@DelthiaRicks) July 15, 2020
Moderna's Covid-19 vaccine produced antibodies to the coronavirus in all patients tested in an initial safety trial, federal researchers say.
The vaccine will move into a much larger late-stage trial later this month. https://t.co/uRDBt3Q1Nc (Video via @QuickTake) pic.twitter.com/WV6H3Ja4x6
— Bloomberg (@business) July 15, 2020
China is testing the most COVID-19 vaccines of any country. A state-owned drugmaker’s claim that employees got experimental shots before the start of human trials is raising ethical concerns. https://t.co/Hf5e0yUDCB
— The Associated Press (@AP) July 16, 2020
.@PennMedicine researchers studying immune responses of 125 hospitalized #COVID19 patients identified three distinct “Immunotypes,” work that could inform which therapeutic interventions may be most useful in specific patients. https://t.co/BJfWebA3qi pic.twitter.com/YsJjf8PS2P
— Science Magazine (@ScienceMagazine) July 15, 2020
Is #SARSCoV2 changing? Yes. Do those changes alter the way it acts in people, making it more infectious or more dangerous? Benign? Too soon to tell. @kakape dives in. https://t.co/rtxtQKq93D
— Helen Branswell (@HelenBranswell) July 15, 2020
There's a lot of debate over how deadly #Covid19 is. Rates will vary. Eg. overwhelmed health systems may lose more patients than those that can handle the load. New report from Geneva pegs the overall infection fatality rate there at 0.64%. https://t.co/nLKBMFNkyd pic.twitter.com/HCv3sKptBV
— Helen Branswell (@HelenBranswell) July 15, 2020
======
In the last week, California, Florida, North Carolina, Arizona, Alabama, and Texas have set one day records for COVID deaths.
— Radley Balko (@radleybalko) July 16, 2020
Bars may be off the menu and many schools look set to remain closed for months to come as the new coronavirus causes more illness and death in many countries and the U.S. South and West. https://t.co/MMAqQ6mUOq
— The Associated Press (@AP) July 16, 2020
Ohio's governor was hailed for his early and aggressive leadership approach to combating the coronavirus in the state. But now, as the number of virus cases in the state continues to rise, he is navigating a bumpy road out of the pandemic shutdown. https://t.co/gtBeCPgp58
— AP Eastern US (@APEastRegion) July 15, 2020
Florida has 9 of the 20 metro areas nationwide with the highest daily growth in coronavirus cases.
?? https://t.co/XwNpNQ5o8A pic.twitter.com/Uo1cKf4cbS
— Frank Luntz (@FrankLuntz) July 15, 2020
Amir Khalid
Malaysia’s daily numbers. Three new cases. Two from local infection, both non-Malaysian: a Vietnamese immigration detainee and an Indonesian worker screened at work. One case of imported infection, a Malaysian returned from Nigeria. Cumulative total 8,737 cases.
12 more patients recovered and were discharged, total 8,538 patients recovered or 97.7% of the cumulative total. 77 active cases are in hospital for isolation/treatment; three are in ICU, one of them on a respirator.
No new deaths. Total 122 deaths. Infection fatality rate 1.39%, case fatality rate 1.41%.
OzarkHillbilly
Karma is a beach in Oklahoma.
SiubhanDuinne
From Georgia:
W. A. S. F.
OzarkHillbilly
@SiubhanDuinne: He’s a coward.
mrmoshpotato
@SiubhanDuinne: A little early in the morning to have one’s mind boggled.
Unbelievable. So glad we kicked our Rethuglican governor to the curb in IL.
I wonder how the thieving bastard feels about rotten fruit, tar and feathers.
zhena gogolia
OT, but this is priceless:
Mary G
JPL
@SiubhanDuinne: That was after meeting with trump.
JPL
The AJC doesn’t have Luckovich’s cartoon up yet and I can’t figure out why.. Today’s cartoon
Amir Khalid
@SiubhanDuinne:
All measures against Covid-19 are okay, with the sole exception of requiring people to wear masks? I am mystified.
OzarkHillbilly
He is Republican.
Mary G
Just posted this on the last thread by mistake, so recopying it here:
Andy Slavitt, Obama’s healthcare head, took Ron DeSantis out behind the woodshed but good last night on Twitter. I am posting the whole thread compiled by @threadreaderapp, it is so good.
I need a cigarette after that. Hope all Florida jackals stay safe.
rikyrah
@Amir Khalid:
?????
He is a clown ?
prostratedragon
You can always find a reference in Twin Peaks: Three seconds of reality
Central Planning
@Mary G: Over the past 45 days, I’ve had two ‘rona tests, and each time I got the results in less than 24 hours.
i wonder how long it takes to run each test. I’m in western NY where the our infection rate is low.
edit: typo
WereBear
Florida. Proudly not coming to its senses since 1920.
NotMax
Most cases reported over past 24 hours.
U.S. ~66k
Brazil ~40k
India ~35k
South Africa ~13k
Russia ~8k
Colombia ~7k
Mexico ~6k
Mary G
@Central Planning: I’m just going by what my doctor told me, and things like the long line of cars at Dodger Stadium in LA in the tweet AL posted above.
Orange County’s Board of Health says that 329,001 people have been tested since the beginning in late February. That’s not that many for a population of more than 3 million.
terben
From the Australian Dept of Health:
‘As at 3pm on 16 July 2020, a total of 10,810 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Australia, including 113 deaths, and 8,036 have been reported as recovered from COVID-19.
New cases 330, reclassified 15, net increase 315. New cases in Victoria 307. A strange new case in my state today. A person who returned from overseas, tested negative twice during 14 day quarantine in Victoria and was tested upon arrival in SA…… and was positive. Possibly different tests. So two more weeks in quarantine.
NotMax
@Amir Khalid
Georgia’s governor is a four-letter word.
//
mrmoshpotato
@NotMax: He’s also a PRICK and a CHEAT.
Stacey Abrams was cheated in broad daylight.
Gvg
I ‘m in Florida. I’ve had coughing and cold symptoms so I got a test. It’s been 8 days and I don’t have the results. My county still has a low rate of infection, probably because the University students aren’t back yet.
The positivity rate has been in the news because it turned out that some of the newly hired private labs were only reporting positive test results. Reporters noted the 100% results from some labs and questioned it. Supposedly they know better going forward but also it’s estimated that won’t change the over all rate because these were all small labs hired to supplement the big labs and so there weren’t enough negative results to change the overall %. We’ll see, but watch for corrections.
prostratedragon
A facet grid of weekly average new cases per day for several States. The data are from Johns Hopkins. While looking at CA, FL, and TX especially it’s instructive to recall how locked down NY got even before hitting its peak. CA has moved in that direction as a State, but what in the great world is going to happen in FL or TX? I guess we’ll see whether piecemeal actions can be effective.
ETA: Data are through July 14.
Robert Sneddon
Scotland — the First Minister has announced eleven new confirmed cases and one death in the past 24 hours. The number of people in intensive care remains at six with 630 people in hospital receiving treatment.
Other worrying news is that a number of temporary visa agricultural workers from eastern Europe who are working on Scottish farms for the harvest season travelled to the UK on the same flight as some of the workers at an English farm in Herefordshire where there’s been a serious outbreak of COVID-19, with 93 confirmed cases out of 200 workers. Just to add to the fun we’ve now been told that three of the farm workers on the Herefordshire farm have absconded from quarantine. They have apparently been tracked down, tested and are supposed to be in isolation. Supposed to be, riiiiight.
The big thing here in Scotland is the decision to fully open the schools from the middle of August. Teachers will be required to wear masks etc. but the kids are thought to be safe given the low prevalence of COVID-19 generally in Scotland. Best estimates by the scientific community is that there are at most 700 infectious individuals in Scotland. We’ll see. My wild-assed guess is that this won’t work, there will be school-centred spreading events and all the schools will be closed in a panic in a few weeks time. The First Minister has repeatedly warned us that resumption of lockdowns will happen if things turn bad again.
Central Planning
@Mary G: In comparison, NY is not testing that many people. I get Cuomo’s daily email about the pandemic, and we are generally testing 60-70k people per day (one third of 1% of the population), and 1% of the tests are positive.
Cuomo has come out with guidelines for when it is safe to re-open schools. I’m still scared about sending my kids back, both to high school and college.
Enhanced Voting Techniques
So with 140,000 deaths that means the real number of infected is 21 million not 3 million, if I did the math right. 6% of the population. So “only” a million more deaths to go before herd immunity.
Enhanced Voting Techniques
Notice this bit?
Your county has a low rate of detected infections.
Enhanced Voting Techniques
That last graphic, the one for Arizona if that trend of hospitalizations peaking and going down keeps up is a bit inspiring. Even the idiot Right will do the smart thing and drop the Pown all Libertards if scared enough.
Uncle Cosmo
@zhena gogolia: “See, Donald? One hand.”
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
opiejeanne
@Enhanced Voting Techniques: Switzerland has reopened. My niece lives there, and she and her husband are on vacation, driving from Switzerland to Italy, with the baby. I’m guessing that they’re going to visit his family.
Before the baby, they both worked in Uganda for the UN but she got a job in Switzerland not long after the baby was born last year. Her husband got out of Entebbe and into Switzerland just before everything locked down this spring, but their dogs are still in Entebbe. They’re trying to get them onto a cargo flight but have had no luck so far. Her husband now has a new job in Italy, about an hour away from where she lives.
Their married lives have been so complicated I can’t imagine how they cope.
YY_Sima Qian
Yesterday, China reported 1 imported confirmed and 1 imported asymptomatic cases. The confirmed case was reported by Shanghai, a Chinese national returning from Zambia.
There are some negative developments in the past 24 hours, though. Yesterday, Shaoxing in Zhejiang Province reported an asymptomatic case introduced from Xinjiang in far northwestern China, a businessman from Urumqi in Xinjiang doing business in Shaoxing. Today, Urumqi reported a new domestic confirmed case and 3 new domestic asymptomatic cases, the numbers will show up in tomorrow’s data dump by the China National Health Commission.
The confirmed case at Urumqi is a saleswoman working at a shopping mall, who felt discomfort in the throat on 7/10, and was taken by ambulance to a designated COVID-19 hospital. She developed more severe symptoms on 7/14 (fever and headache), and tested positive on RT-PCR on 7/15. The 3 asymptomatic cases are found via contact tracing, and the businessman who traveled to Zhejiang Province was also alerted as a close contact and advised to get tested at Shaoxing immediately. The source of the cluster is unidentified, as of yet.
Much like the other outbreaks in China, finding a cluster of cases in rapid succession, with origin unknown, probably indicates that an outbreak of a few dozen cases has already occurred. We shall have to see. Xinjiang only reported a grand total of 76 confirmed cases (before today) for COVID-19, and none since late Feb. On the other hand, the Xinjiang “Autonomous” Region borders Russia, Kazakstan, Kirghizistan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Pakistan, none of whom have yet to bring COVID-19 under control. Of course, the borders are very mountainous and difficult to traverse, and the only major border crossings are with Kazakstan, and a treacherous one with Pakistan on the high Hindu Kush.
Xinjiang’s health care resources are significantly lower than the Han Chinese dominated core regions. This is especially true in the poorer and more rural Uighur hinterland in western Xinjiang, the cities, towns and oasis settlements along the western edge of the Tarim Basin. These relatively more insular regions have not reported any COVID-19 cases to date, nor have there been any remotely believable rumors concerning outbreaks there from within or outside of China. Urumqi, at least as the capital of Xinjiang, has the best medical facilities in the region. The city is majority Han Chinese. Nevertheless, a widespread outbreak in the Uighur dominated areas would be very bad. Uighurs in rural communities generally live in large multi-generation family dwellings. Tens, possibly hundreds of thousands, are still semi-interned in detention camps and/or factory dormitories under crowded conditions (and yet are still allowed to visit families on weekends). With the harsh oppressive measures taken by the CCP regime against Uighurs, I am not sure Uighurs are that eager to be tested at government run medical facilities.
We will also have to see if the authorities are willing to be as transparent with the situation in Xinjiang, as it has been in the rest of China with previous localized outbreaks.
YY_Sima Qian
I am currently on business travel at Xiamen, in Fujian Province on the southeastern coast of China. COVID-19 is almost like an afterthought here. The city has only reported 35 confirmed COVID-19 cases through the epidemic, and has not had any local transmission since Feb. While masking rate is high on public transportation, hotels, and industrial parks, it is much lower on the streets. Taking a stroll after dinner, masking rate is less than 20%, restaurants are packed.
I understand the human urge to return to normalcy. However, as Beijing has shown (and Urumqi just now, Harbin, Mudanjiang and Jilin City before), one never know when the virus will suddenly reemerge with a new cluster, even after weeks of zero reported local transmissions.
a thousand flouncing lurkers was fidelio
@Mary G:
For comparison, Tennessee has a population of over 6 million and by this point we’ve tested over a million.
Another Scott
On the Bloomberg video, on the Moderna vaccine tests – it’s still very early.
StatNews:
We need to remember that these were healthy volunteers. Older, sicker people will do worse.
If it turns out that one needs a high dose to get sufficient immune response for protection, and the side effects of the high dose are severe enough (compared to the very common asymptomatic infection), then the vaccine will be a hard sell to people.
We can only rush these things so much. It’s going to take time.
Fingers crossed that several of these vaccines work well. We’re going to need the knowledge and production capacity to keep costs under control and to know how to attack the next pandemic.
Cheers,
Scott.
The Pale Scot
Last night I saw a twitter with a graph showing that FL had more cases/deaths then the whole EU. I didn’t bookmark it and now I can’t find it. It looked like a FT graph (pale pink background). As anyone seen it?
Brachiator
@Mary G:
Smart thinking about the pandemic. Things will be much better if we can dump Trump in November.
WaterGirl
@zhena gogolia: Oh my god, that is brutal!
Well-deserved, of course!
WaterGirl
@Mary G:
It looks like no one else has responded to this yet, and I can only surmise that people were skimming and did not actually take in what you wrote. Yikes! That’s not the news you want to hear.
Did they just blurt that out to be… helpful?
To ensure that you know that you need to be really careful? (Like you don’t already know that.)
In answer to a direct question from you?
To give you information that might get your housemates’ attention?
In any case, that has to be unsettling, to say the least. Stay safe.
J R in WV
@Mary G:
Our family doc told both of us that wife is not at all likely to survive a Covid-19 infection. But she was 70-30 unlikely to survive Septic Shock 10 years ago, also. I am trying to deal with it.
Some nights I have bad dreams, imagine that.
Best wishes for good luck, Mary G ~!!!~
ETA: Pretty sure our doc intended for us to be extremely careful, which that’s sure working well… hard to deal with, tho!
prostratedragon
@WaterGirl:
Wow, those are very good questions to which Mary G. might want to insist upon an answer. For reference, I’ve talked this month to my cardiologist, pulmonologist, and nephrologist, and none of them was that blunt, beyond suggesting that I continue to stay safe.
(Note: I have professional relationship with at least that many specialists.)
Mary G
Just got back to the blog and wanted to say I don’t keep doctors that aren’t willing to be truthful and blunt. And treat me as an equal partner in our relationship. He said that in response to my saying that maybe I was being too cautious and regretted cancelling my 4th of July plans and feel awful not having a hug or any human touch in 4+ months. I needed the reinforcement and it’s typical. I couldn’t count all the doctors in my life who’ve told me how fascinating my many medical issues are. A couple have had interns practice taking a history from me and it’s fun to torture them.