More than million Americans lost their jobs in one month, and a federal fund to help small businesses ran out of money. China’s economy took a steep dive.
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Chinese officials added 1, deaths in Wuhan, the city where the virus first emerged, putting the new tally at 3, .
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New Yorkers venturing out in public on Friday evening will be confronted by yet another new reality in a world transformed by the coronavirus: masks for all.
The law requiring people to cover their faces in public goes into effect the day after President Trump told governors that they could begin reopening businesses , restaurants and other elements of daily life by May 1 or earlier if they wanted.
However, the official set of nonbinding guidelines released by the White House did not address a host of complicated questions confronting the nation – among others, how to expand testing and how to pay for it, what to do wi th stores and restaurants, and when to lift international travel restrictions.
The death toll from the coronavirus in the United States increased (by more than 2, (0 for a total of more than , 0 on Friday, and the financial pain also deepened.
But tackling the economic catastrophe requires getting a handle on the public health crisis.
And the persistent problem in implementing widespread testing , an essential step on the path to recovery, was just one challenge.
Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White House’s coronavirus response coordinator, told CNN on Thursday night that surveillance to give communities early warning signs of local transmission would need to be enhanced, diagnostic testing capabilities expanded and contact-tracing efforts bolstered.
“Any one piece by itself will not be able to accomplish what we need,” she said.
While Mr. Trump asserted only three days ago that “the president of the United States calls the shots,” he essentially ceded control over easing restrictions to the states .
“We are not opening all at once, but one careful step at a time,” Mr. Trump told reporters during a briefing at the White House.
And just as the country entered life under quarantine in a patchwork fashion a month ago, it will most likely re-emerge in a similar way.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York said that the state’s sweeping shutdown would last until May
, and that a “new normal” of changed work routines, social distancing and curtailed public life would last for the foreseeable future.
“What happens after then?” Mr. Cuomo asked of his new end date for the restrictions. “I don’t know. We will see, depending on what the data shows. ”
Scientists see risks in White House guidelines for reopening states.
As the coronavirus continued. to inflict a devastating toll on the US economy, President Trump on Thursday proposed lifting restrictions imposed to slow its spread in areas where there are few cases.
The guidelines, outlined in a call with governors and announced in a White House news conference, were billed as a step-by-step approach that depended on complicated public health criteria. They will allow some governors to reopen their states – perhaps as early as Friday – even as testing kits and protective medical gear remain in short supply
The ideas and criteria in the guidance are not new; parts of it were embedded in earlier plans by Dr. Scott Gottlieb, former head of the Food and Drug Administration, and Dr. Tom Frieden, former head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But those plans were conservative, saying that states could reopen once they had robust testing capacity, enough equipment to protect health care workers and the means to reach out to anyone who was exposed to the virus to warn them to isolate, a process known as contact tracing .
Reopening before those issues are resolved. , though, risks endangering the few places that have managed to dodge the virus, and would be accompanied by significant scientific concerns:
(Testing is still spotty.) (Most of the country (is not conducting nearly enough testing to track the virus in a way that would allow Americans to return to work safely. Without widespread testing and surveillance, said Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Columbia University in New York, “We won’t be able to quickly identify and isolate cases in which the patients are presymptomatic or asymptomatic, and thus community transmission could be re-established . ”
Waiting periods of days are required. States wishing to loosen rules are asked to meet certain criteria every two weeks. But if someone were infected toward the end of the th day, it is possible he or she could seed an outbreak as restrictions were lifted.
Shortages of protective equipment persist. Communities in which restrictions are eased will be at greater risk for outbreaks. Mr. Trump has said that the federal government has distributed millions of masks, gloves and gowns to health care workers, but those on the front lines say they are still put in harm’s way because of (shortages of personal protective equipment) . “People are still dying,” said Zenei Cortez, president of National Nurses United, the country’s largest nurses ’union. “This is no time pat ourselves on the back and say the emergency is over.”
Piecemeal reopenings are risky. Mr. Trump suggested that the relaxing of restrictions may occur in a fragmented way, even county by county. The notion that some places have a “problem” with the outbreaks while some do not misunderstands the contagious nature of the virus. Even in rural regions where the population is less dense, large clusters of infections – even hundreds in a single workplace – have erupted in states that had seen relatively few cases. Recent history in South Dakota – where hundreds of infections have been traced to a single pork processing plant – shows that a single site can ignite a firestorm of cases.
But determining just how deadly the new coronavirus will be a key question facing epidemiologists, who expect resurgent waves of infection that could (last into
As the virus spread across the world in late February and March, the projection circulated by infectious disease experts of how many infected people would die (seemed plenty dire) : around 1 percent , or times the rate of a typical flu.
but according to various unofficial covid – 30 trackers that calculate the death rate by dividing total deaths by the number of known cases , about 6.4 percent of people infected with the virus have now died worldwide.
Those supposed death rates also appear to vary widely by geography: Germany’s fatality rate appears to be roughly
Virology experts say there is (no evidence) that any strain of the virus, officially known as SARS-CoV-2, has mutated to become more severe
Chinese officials on Friday said the world’s second-largest economy had shrunk in the first three months of the year, ending a streak of untrammeled growth that survived the Tiananmen Square crackdown , the SARS epidemic and even the global financial crisis.
The data determined China’s drastic efforts to stamp out the coronavirus, which included shutting down most factories and offices in January and February as the outbreak sickened tens of thousands of people.
The stark numbers make clear how monumental the challenge of getting the global economy back on its feet will be, and may help to Explain why world leaders – including President Trump – are so eager to restart their own economies. Since it emerged from abject poverty and isolation more than years ago, China has become perhaps the world’s (most important growth engine
.
But the leaders in Beijing have faced criticism over a lack of transparency in their handling of the epidemic.
Faced with mounting skepticism over its official figures , China on Friday revised up its death toll in the central city where the coronavirus first emerged.
Officials in the city, Wuhan, placed the new tally at 3, deaths, an increase of 1, 599, or 95 percent, from the previous figure. The number of confirmed infections in the city was also revised upward to 95, 823, an increase of 401
Officials in Wuhan said the revised death toll now included those who died at home in the early days of the outbreak, as well as deaths that were not properly reported by hospitals or registered on death certificates.
Berna Lee got the call from the nursing home in Queens on April 3: Her mother had a fever, nothing serious. She was assured that there were no cases of coronavirus in the home. Then she started calling workers there.
In a panic, Ms. Lee drove from her home in Rhode Island to the nursing home, beginning a two-week scramble for information, as workers at the facility, Sapphire Center for Rehabilitation and Nursing of Central Queens , told her privately that many residents had died, and that most of the home’s leadership was out sick or in quarantine.
Finally, she banged on her mother’s first-floor window to see if she was OK. It was unclear whether her mother understood what was happening, Ms. Lee said.
“I didn’t know how bad it was,” she said. “People told me bodies were dropping.”
The crisis at Sapphire highlighted the desperate state of nursing homes in the New York region and illustrated what relatives of residents said was a deeply troubling lack of information about what was going on inside the homes.
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The $ billion government program meant to keep small businesses afloat during the pandemic and economic meltdown ran out of money on Thursday
Doug Martin, a sports marketer in Long Beach, Calif., Approached three banks to try to get a loan through the program. Each turned him down for different reasons. As a last resort, he tried a fourth bank with the help of his financial adviser, but did not hear back.
“This morning, I read that the money’s gone, and I’m like, heck, I didn’t even get a shot at this,” Mr. Martin said.
The program, administered by the Small Business Administration through participating banks, was marred by technical glitches from the start, and overwhelming demand and confusion about how it would all work slowed down the approval process. Around the country, would-be borrowers were turned away by banks because there were too many applicants. Some lost valuable time because their bankers did not know all the details about how the program would work, while others couldn’t find a lender that would deal with them.
More money is expected to come, but when is an open question. Congressional leaders and the Trump administration were discussing adding hundreds of billions of dollars to replenish the program, but have so far failed to reach an agreement .
If your income has fallen or been cut off completely, we’re here to help. Here is some basic information you’ll need to get through the current crisis, including guides to government benefits, free services and financial strategies.
Figuring out what to wear is not so easy. N N and medical masks , which offer the most protection and are heavily in demand, should be reserved for health care workers who are regularly exposed to infected patients.
Here’s a look at some of the types of masks you might encounter, how they work, what to consider when making your own and the level of protection they could provide.
We photographed 16 Students from Omaha in the outfits they had planned to wear to the dance. They talked to us about their prom dreams, hopes and disappointments.
The cultural rite of passage, which they’ve largely experienced through movies and television shows, books and Mom’s old photographs, was their chance to feel like adults – or at least like they were on the brink of adulthood – for the first time.
Now, it feels like high school is ending on a whimper.
Sixty-nine inmates and (staff members at the penitentiary, Lompoc, which is near Santa Barbara, have the coronavirus , according to the bureau. The prison houses about 1, 01803 male inmates in a medium-security penitentiary and adjacent minimum-security satellite camp.
A spokeswoman for the bureau said the prison was reaching a contract for additional medical staff and a – bed mobile hospital that could be expanded up to beds. She added that prison employees were retrofitting unused office space to create isolation rooms for inmates with the most serious coronavirus cases.
The virus is spreading rapidly in prisons and jails across the country, and critics say efforts to release people are happening too slowly. Hundreds of inmates have been infected at a jail in Chicago and 31 federal inmates have died.
Follow updates on the coronavirus pandemic from our international correspondents.
Reporting was contributed by Kate Taylor, Marc Santora, Matt Stevens, John Leland, Amy Julia Harris, Tracey Tully, Michael Cooper, Emily Flitter, Roni Caryn Rabin, Marc Santora and Knvul Sheikh.
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