Coronavirus update: U.S.'s newly diagnosed cases register an all-time high
The number of confirmed cases of the coronavirus illness COVID-19 edged closer to 14 million on Friday, as the U.S. counted a record number of cases in a single day and regions around the world resumed restrictions on movement in a battle to contain the spread.
iframe.twitter-tweet { width: 100% !important; } Texas added more than 10,000 new cases for a third straight day. In Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp sued Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and the city council to block the city from enforcing its mandate to wear a mask in public and other rules related to the pandemic, the Associated Press reported.
Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel of the University of Pennsylvania, an oncologist, bioethicist and senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, said the U.S. has squandered the last four months, with the possible exceptions of finding dexamethasone works and that Gilead Science Holdings Inc.’s remdesivir can shorten hospital-stay durations.
The document does not match the rhetoric from the White House, with Trump mostly focused on pushing for schools to reopen in the fall, against the advice of his own health experts. What’s the latest medical news? The National Governors Association is asking the Trump administration to delay a rapidly implemented rule that changes how hospitals report COVID-19 data to the federal government for 30 days, MarketWatch’s Jaimy Lee reported.
The randomized, placebo-controlled, conducted by the University of Minnesota Medical School, was published Thursday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. The trial enrolled people within the first four days of showing symptoms of an infection. The study’s authors said there was one limitation to the research; only about 60% of the participants were tested for COVID-19 due to “severe U.S. testing shortages” when the trial took place.
What are companies saying? The earnings season continued with the latest numbers from streaming giant Netflix Inc. NFLX, -7.04%, one of the clear winners of the pandemic as subscriptions have soared as stay-at-home orders encouraged many to turn to the service’s massive library of content. Deepening concerns, Netflix expects “paused productions” on original shows and films in the first half of 2021, based on its long lead-time content production schedule.
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