October 22 coronavirus news

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Wisconsin using overflow facility to keep up with Covid-19 cases
03:07 - Source: CNN

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Data shows Covid-19 treatment remdesivir isn't a "home run," says former vaccine director?

One vial of the drug Remdesivir lies during a press conference at the University Hospital Eppendorf (UKE) in Hamburg, Germany on April 8.

Data on the Covid-19 drug remdesivir show that it has only modest benefits and isn’t a “home run,” former US Health and Human Services official-turned whistleblower Dr. Rick Bright said Thursday.

The US Food and Drug?Administration?approved remdesivir Thursday?to treat hospitalized Covid-19 patients?– the first drug to be approved for coronavirus.?

Bright said it’s not an impressive drug.

A?World?Health?Organization-sponsored global study found?that?remdesivir?did not help Covid-19 patients survive or recover faster.?

“The FDA clearly has reviewed all of the data that they have available to them from the company to review the efficacy and safety of that drug,” Bright said.?

“It’s not too surprising that another, perhaps even larger, well-controlled study from the WHO would refute that data,” he added.

Bright said that it’s likely that larger studies, like the WHO’s, would show that the marginal benefit of remdesivir may become even more marginal, depending on the population of those using the drug.

Coronavirus outbreak reported at Los Angeles megachurch that defied public health orders

Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, as seen on September 4.

A coronavirus outbreak has been reported at a Los Angeles megachurch that has defied the county’s public health orders and held indoor services since August.

The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health on Thursday confirmed three positive cases linked to Grace Community Church in the Sun Valley neighborhood of L.A.’s San Fernando Valley.

Over the past two months, Grace Community Church was cited nine times by the public health department for failing to comply with health officer orders, according to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health’s website.

Grace Community Church did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for a comment.?

Despite the county’s public health order, which prohibits indoor services in any house of worship, Grace Community Church announced in July it would remain open to congregants for in-person worship.

Instead of listening to government or public health officials, the church said it would choose to follow “the authority of our Lord Jesus Christ.”

“We gladly choose to obey Him,” the church added.

While no further details of the outbreak or investigation were provided, the public health department said it will “work closely with the church to support outbreak management strategies that can limit transmission of COVID-19.”

Religious groups have been linked to coronavirus outbreaks in several countries, including South Korea.

Vaccine advisers urge FDA to encourage diversity in Covid-19 vaccine trials?

A sign for the Food And Drug Administration is seen outside of the agency's headquarters in White Oak, Maryland, on July 20.

Vaccine advisers are urging the US Food and Drug Administration to do as much as possible to encourage pharmaceutical companies to enroll diverse populations in their clinical trials of experimental coronavirus vaccines.?

Diversity is needed to make sure the vaccine works in the groups hardest hit by the coronavirus pandemic, and to ensure that those groups trust the vaccine enough to get it once one or more are available, members of the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee said at the group’s first meeting to discuss a potential Covid-19 vaccine.

Dr. Luigi Notarangelo, chief of the Laboratory of Clinical Immunology And Microbiology at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Black Americans already have a strong distrust of vaccines and drug companies. If minorities don’t enroll in vaccine trials in enough numbers, “their trust will diminish even further,” Notarangelo said.

NIAID Director?Dr. Anthony Fauci?has said that about 37% of the volunteers in coronavirus vaccine clinical trials should be Latino, and 27% be Black.

Vaccine maker Moderna said Thursday?it has enrolled 30,000 volunteers in its coronavirus vaccine trial and says 20% of them are Latino and 10% are Black.

Vaccines and medicines can work differently in different racial and ethnic groups, so diversity in clinical trials is important.??

Black people are 2.6 times more likely to get Covid-19 than White people, and Latinos are 2.8 times more likely to get Covid-19 than White people, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Greater Manchester has entered England's toughest level of lockdown restrictions

Empty tables and chairs on the eve of new Tier-3 Covid-19 restrictions in Manchester, England, on October 22.

The northern city of Manchester is now under the toughest level of coronavirus restrictions in England following the collapse of testy talks between local leaders and the national government earlier this week.

The?“very high” Covid alert level – which came into force in the early hours of Friday morning local time – covers the Greater Manchester area, home to more than 2.5 million people.

The restrictions mean that people living in Greater Manchester are not allowed to socialize inside houses with anyone they do not live with, nor meet in private gardens. Outdoor social events in places like parks are limited to groups of six.

All pubs, bars, gyms, and casinos that don’t serve food must close. People can continue to visit restaurants and pubs that serve “substantial meals,” but can only eat there with people that they live with.?

In addition, Mancunians have been told to avoid all but the most essential travel outside of the Greater Manchester region.?

Convalescent plasma did not reduce Covid-19 deaths or keep patients from severe illness in new study

A bag of blood plasma from a donor who has recovered from Covid-19 is seen at The Blood and Tissue Bank Foundation in Palma de Mallorca, Spain on October 5.

In a new study, convalescent plasma did not reduce deaths among Covid-19 patients or prevent moderate disease from becoming severe.

The study, conducted in India and published in?the medical journal the BMJ?on Thursday, suggests that “as a potential treatment for patients with moderate Covid-19, convalescent plasma showed limited effectiveness.”

Convalescent plasma is the antibody-rich serum taken from the blood of people who recovered from Covid-19. The idea is that the plasma can help the immune response of patients still fighting the disease.

In August, the US Food and Drug Administration?authorized the emergency use of convalescent plasma?as a treatment option for hospitalized Covid-19 patients. However, data were still being collected in randomized controlled trials – the gold standard – to study the safety and effectiveness of the treatment.

Last month, a?National Institutes of Health panel said?there’s no evidence backing the use of convalescent plasma to treat coronavirus patients and that doctors should not treat it as a standard of care until more study has been done.

Read the full story:

SEATTLE, WA - APRIL 17: Phlebotomist Jenee Wilson carries COVID-19 convalescent plasma from a donor at Bloodworks Northwest on April 17, 2020 in Seattle, Washington. The plasma will be used in a new experimental treatment in hopes that the antibodies will help others still battling the COVID-19 disease. The plasma donation process, called plasmapheresis, separates blood plasma, from red and white blood cells and platelets, and returns the cells and platelets back to the donor. (Photo by Karen Ducey/Getty Images)

Related article Convalescent plasma did not reduce Covid-19 deaths or keep patients from severe illness in new study

Montana reports highest single-day number of new Covid-19 cases

Charlotte Skinner, an Emergency Room nurse at St. Peter's Health, speaks at a Covid-19 press call hosted by Gov. Steve Bullock at the State Capitol, Tuesday, Oct. 20.

Montana reported Thursday 932 new Covid-19 cases, the highest number of daily new cases since the pandemic began, according to state data.

The previous record for daily new cases, 734, was reported on Oct. 14.

Holzman added officials are also concerned about hospitals amid the increase in cases.

“A lot of the hospitals are more stressed than they usually are at this time of [the] year and that puts more panic into us, knowing that we’re now going into cold and flu season, which is the typical time of the year that hospitals see more people coming through,” Holzman said.?

Montana has reported 25,640 coronavirus cases to date and 278 total deaths.

To note: These numbers were released by the Montana Department of Health & Human Services and the state’s library and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

White House coronavirus?task force reports warn of "deterioration" in Sun Belt, Midwest and Northern states

CNN has obtained 22 state reports from the White House coronavirus task force this week. The reports show, as CNN has reported all week, a?cumulative worsening of cases across the country.?

The task force is warning of?surging cases in the Sun Belt, Midwest and Northern states?in several reports:

New this week: the reports now show charts with hospital admission data. Next week, the reports say, there will be personal protective equipment data.?

There are at least 31 states in the task force-defined “red zone” for cases.

Here are some state-specific findings:

  • Vermont, still in the yellow zone, is the state with the lowest new case rate in the nation. There was a cluster of cases “among participants of recreational hockey and broomball leagues.” There is “cause for concern given the recent uptick in the state,” the task force warned, calling for increasing “public education about social distancing.”
  • North Dakota?has the highest rate of new cases in the country. “There is no substantial improvement in North Dakota. There must be increased mitigation,” the report said.
  • The task force is sounding the alarm on “early deterioration” in gains against the virus in?Alabama?and said it “must be addressed aggressively as the spread is very broad based in rural and urban areas.”
  • In?Louisiana, there is “very early evidence of increasing test positivity and cases.”
  • In?Ohio, there is “significant reemergence of community spread.”
  • In?Illinois, there is “high and worsening transmission affecting the entire state” after “sharp” increases in cases and test positivity over the last week.
  • Delaware, the task force said, “remains vulnerable” and is “at an important inflection point,” calling on the state to increase social distancing until cases decline.
  • ?There is concern in?Utah, which has the sixth highest case rate, about large gatherings: “Super-spreader events are still likely in areas where social distancing isn’t practiced and use of face coverings is low; impose or recommend restriction on the size of public or social gatherings to limit the ongoing possibility of such events.”
  • ?Colorado, the state’s task force report said, is “at a critical juncture” that will depend on “increased observation of social distancing mitigation measures.”
  • ?California?and?Maryland, meanwhile, won praise from the task force for “strong success with the gradated series of mitigation measures” and a “well-developed, gradated set of social distancing measures,” respectively.

Remdesivir receives FDA approval to treat hospitalized Covid-19 patients

A bottle containing the drug Remdesivir is held by a health worker at the Institute of Infectology of Kenezy Gyula Teaching Hospital of the University of Debrecen in Debrecen, Hungary, on October 15.

The antiviral remdesvir has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of patients hospitalized with Covid-19, Gilead Sciences announced Thursday.

The drug, sold under the brand name Veklury, has been used under emergency use authorization (EUA) in the US. It is the first drug to be approved in the US for treating Covid-19.

Some context: Earlier this month, a World Health Organization-sponsored global study found remdesivir did not help patients survive or even recover faster, but a US study found the infused drug shortened recovery time for some patients by about a third.

Emergency approval of a Covid-19 vaccine won't stop or undermine clinical trials, FDA official says

If one of the experimental coronavirus vaccines gets emergency use authorization (EUA) from the US Food and Drug Administration, clinical trials examining the safety and efficacy of that vaccine will continue as planned, a senior FDA official said Thursday.

The FDA has said it would consider EUA for coronavirus vaccines in the works – a quicker route to getting one distributed than full approval would be. But that would mean beginning vaccination of the populace before clinical trials have finished. Some people have worried that would mean the clinical trials would end before all the data was collected.

Dr. Doran Fink, deputy director of the FDA’s division of vaccines and related products applications, said that won’t happen. Companies still will have to continue their formal clinical trials to get full licensing approval, Fink told a meeting of the FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee.

The FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research does not consider the authorization of a vaccine as reason to “unblind” ongoing trials and offer the vaccine to volunteers who received a placebo, Fink said.

“CBER does not consider issuance of an EUA for a Covid-19 vaccine, in and of itself, as grounds to unblind ongoing clinical trials and offer vaccine to placebo recipients,” Fink said.

Mississippi health official: White, maskless people causing uptick in Covid-19 cases

Mississippi State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs

Dr. Thomas Dobbs, a Mississippi state health official, said that while the state’s Black communities were hit hard during the beginning of the pandemic, since the summer and fall, that trend has shifted to impact the state’s White population.

“Now it’s over 60% of new cases are in Caucasians and the deaths are mirroring that also,” Dobbs told CNN’s Brianna Keilar.

Dobbs suggested that the shift may be attributed to the African American population taking social distancing and mask measures more seriously.

“Nothing’s perfect, but the message seems have hit more fertile ground, right now, in the Black community,” he added.

Watch the full interview:

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cc57cd7d-c5e9-4a8b-980d-a0fcfd331dc4.mp4
04:20 - Source: cnn

These are all the places reporting a new daily record of Covid-19 cases

People wearing face masks are seen in downtown Porto, Portugal on October 21.

Coronavirus cases continue to soar in both Europe and the United States.

There are currently at least?8,354,300?cases of Covid-19 in the US and at least?222,416?people have died from the virus, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.

Spain reported another new daily record of Covid-19 cases on Thursday, after surpassing the grim milestone of one million coronavirus cases on Wednesday. Numbers across the continent continue to rise.

Today, many states and countries around the world reported a record high in the daily number of Covid-19 cases counted. Here’s a look at some of them.

Europe:

  • Spain reported a record 20,986 new Covid-19 cases on Thursday evening, the highest daily increase since the pandemic started.?The total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the country is now 1,026,281.
  • France reported a new record for daily coronavirus infections, with 41,622 new cases in the past 24 hours,?according to numbers released by the French Health Agency. This brings the total number of confirmed cases in France to just under one million, currently at 999,043 cases.
  • Italy reported another daily record with 16,079 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours — up from yesterday’s record of 15,199 new cases,?according to Italy’s health ministry.
  • Portugal reported a record 3,270 new Covid-19 infections on Thursday, the highest daily increase since the pandemic first reached the country.
  • Germany reported?a record 11,287 new cases?on Thursday, also the highest rise since the start of the pandemic.
  • The?Netherlands recorded 9,283 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours, marking a new daily record, according to data released Thursday by the Dutch National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM).

US:

  • Oklahoma recorded 1,628 new cases — the highest daily total of new cases since the pandemic began. A total of 112,483 cases have been reported in Oklahoma so far, according to the state’s dashboard.
  • Ohio reported 2,425 new Covid-19 cases, the highest number of daily new cases since the pandemic began. The state’s previous record was reported yesterday, with 2,366 new cases.
  • Florida reported its highest daily increase of Covid-19 cases in two months, with 5,557?new cases.?
  • Wisconsin had recorded its deadliest day in coronavirus deaths, Gov. Tony Evers said. Health officials said the addition of 48 new deaths underscores the severity of the pandemic in Wisconsin. The total number of deaths from the virus in Wisconsin now stands at 1,703.

Coronavirus cases are rising in Oklahoma

More than 1,600 new Covid-19 cases were reported in Oklahoma, according to the state’s Department of Health.

The department recorded 1,628 new cases — the highest daily total of new cases since the pandemic began. A total of 112,483 cases have been reported in Oklahoma so far, according to the state’s dashboard.

At least 11 new deaths were reported, bringing the total to 1,221.??

Hospitalizations have steadily increased over the past seven days, according to the dashboard.?The department said 991 patients with Covid-19 are currently hospitalized statewide.

Note: These?numbers?were released by?Oklahoma’s public?health?agency and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database, drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

Spain reports more than 20,000 new coronavirus cases

People walk past a restaurant closed due to sharpest resurgences of the new coronavirus in Barcelona, Spain on October 22.

Spain’s health ministry reported a record 20,986 new Covid-19 cases on Thursday evening, the highest daily increase since the pandemic started.?

The total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the country is now 1,026,281. Spain surpassed 1 million cases on Wednesday.?

The country’s death toll now stands at 34,521, with 155 new fatalities recorded today.

During a news conference Thursday evening,?Fernando Simón, the director of the Spanish Center for Health Emergencies,?admitted the evolution of the pandemic is not favorable.?

“We don’t know what will happen in the next few days, but yes we are going upwards,” Simón said.?

Spain’s Health Minister Salvador Illa told reporters his country is facing difficult weeks ahead.?

“There is a lot of concern, we have very tough weeks ahead,” he warned.

Illa also announced that Spain’s central government and the 17 regional governments have agreed on a document containing?the main criteria for a joint response to a second wave of the pandemic.?

Utah governor warns hospitals filling up as Covid-19 cases continue to spread

Utah Gov. Gary Herbert said?hospitals are “starting to fill up” in the state as Covid-19 cases continue to spread.

He said 20% of the patients currently in intensive care units are Covid-19 patients. Herbert warned that ICUs are becoming crowded.

“I would hope that people will take this seriously and do the best they can,” the governor said.?

Dr. Angela Dunn, state epidemiologist, said the state’s health care system “is at capacity.”

“I don’t know what to do anymore,” Dunn said during the briefing.

“I’m really not trying to scare anyone, I’m just trying to inform you of what’s going on and give you the facts,” she said.

Watch:

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02:10 - Source: cnn

University of Toledo halts men's basketball program following positive Covid-19 cases

Ohio’s University of Toledo announced they are pausing the men’s basketball activities for two weeks after head coach Tod Kowalczyk and six players on the team tested positive for Covid-19.?

The Rockets head coach, Tod Kowalczyk, confirmed he tested positive for the virus on Sunday. On Tuesday, the school revealed six players tested positive for Covid-19 during regular weekly surveillance testing, in compliance with NCAA Covid-19 protocols.?

According to the school, the men’s basketball program is following all university Covid-19 protocols, including isolating those who tested positive, partnering with the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department to conduct contact tracing and arranging for additional Covid-19 testing of all close contacts.

Greece imposes nighttime curfew in Athens

A medical worker collects a swab from a commuter during rapid tests for COVID-19 at a suburb in Athens, on October 22.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced new restrictions Thursday to curb the spread of coronavirus. They include a nighttime curfew in high-risk areas and a mask mandate.

The nighttime curfew will be imposed in high-risk areas in an effort to limit outdoor parties and gatherings. The cities of Athens and Thessaloniki are considered high-risk areas in the country’s four tier-system along with more than a dozen other regions, including Zante and Heraklion.

Officials are seeing a significant rise in cases among young people, Mitsotakis said.

Along with the curfew, masks will now be mandatory outdoors.

The new measures will take effect at 6 a.m. local Saturday.

Mitsotakis went on to say Greece is in better shape than most European countries but warned of tough months ahead.?

Greece recorded 882 new coronavirus cases and 15 deaths on Thursday.

The country has recorded 28,216 cases and 549 deaths in total since the pandemic started, according to Greece’s National Public Health Organization.

More than 222,000 people have died from coronavirus in the US

There are at least?8,354,300?cases of coronavirus in the US and at least?222,416?people have died from the virus, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.

So far today, Johns Hopkins has recorded?18,269?new cases and?240?reported deaths.

The totals include cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.?

UK chief scientific adviser says widespread vaccine rollout not possible until spring 2021

UK Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance during a press conference on October 22.

Some coronavirus vaccine doses may be available before Christmas, but a widespread rollout would not be realistically possible before spring 2021, said UK Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance during a news conference on Thursday.

“Things are progressing well, there are vaccines that produce an immune response, they’re in Phase III clinical trials. .. but I remain of the view that the possibility of sort of wider spread use of vaccines isn’t going to be until spring or so next year by the time we get enough does and enough understanding of the outputs to use them,” Vallance said

Vallance also refused to speculate on how effective the vaccines are going to be and said scientists would have to wait for the results from clinical trials in the next couple of months.?

“Once we know how effective the vaccines are, and how applicable they are to different groups, we can start to work out how to use them best. But you can’t do that until you’ve seen the results of safety and efficacy,” Vallance said.

Asked about the possibility of a vaccine, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said, “It may happen, we’re working flat out to ensure it does, but we can’t just rely on that. And that’s why we’ve got to do all the other things we’re doing.”

Johnson also pushed back on questions about another national lockdown in the UK.

“I think that really would be economically, socially, psychologically really difficult for the country. We all remember what it was like in March and April — there were lots of costs,” Johnson said. “We do think that the local measures are right. And I repeat my gratitude to local leaders across the country — people who are helping to get the R down, get the virus down in their neighborhoods.”

Bulgaria makes face coverings mandatory in public places

Passenger wear protective masks inside a tram in Sofia, Bulgaria on October 9.

As of today people in Bulgaria will be required to wear face coverings in open public places, the health ministry announced.

The measures apply when there are crowds or when people are unable to keep a physical distance of about five feet.

Exceptions will be made for customers dining in restaurants, people exercising, conference participants while speaking and children under the age of six.

Health Minister Kostadin Angelov said there will be discussions with deans of medical universities in Bulgaria around the possibility for medical students to assist doctors.?

According to Johns Hopkins University, Bulgaria recorded 1,472 new Covid-19 cases and 29 deaths in the last 24 hours – both record high figures for the country.?

To date, Bulgaria has had 33,335 Covid-19 cases, according to the country’s health ministry.

CDC to roll out cell phone-based monitoring system?for Covid-19 vaccine recipients

Once a Covid-19 vaccine becomes available, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention plans to monitor vaccine recipients for any health problems through text messages and online surveys, as part of a new program called V-SAFE.

“V-SAFE is a new cell phone-based active surveillance program for Covid-19,”?Dr. Tom Shimabukuro,?deputy director of the CDC’s Immunization Safety Office, said during?a US Food and Drug Administration open meeting on Thursday.

Through V-SAFE, which stands for “vaccine safety assessment for essential workers,” health checks can be conducted via text messages and email. This would happen daily in the first week after a person receives the vaccine, and then weekly thereafter for six weeks, according to the CDC’s website.

If a vaccine recipient reports any adverse events, the program will help submit a report to the US Department of Health and Human Services’ Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System or VAERS.

“It includes active telephone follow-up,” Shimabukuro said. It’s a more active way to monitor for adverse events, instead of merely waiting for patients to report them.

Thursday’s open meeting was held to discuss the development, authorization and licensure of Covid-19 vaccines in the United States.

Massachusetts governor announces $774 million economic recovery plan?

Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker announced Thursday the advancement of a $774 million economic recovery plan intended to offer relief to the battered state economy.??

While Baker acknowledged the state’s offering cannot compare with the size and scope of a federal aid package, he said it seems unlikely, and “we certainly don’t believe we can wait.”??

Baker said the funds will be invested to get people back to work, assist small businesses, revitalize main streets, foster innovation, and promote housing equity through the state’s eviction relief program.??

Baker said there is about $115 million available right away for small businesses and workforce development and an additional $25 million that will be deployed to get people back to work.???

Highlighting their importance to the state’s economy, Baker said in 2019, small businesses employed 1.5 million workers and accounted for 45% of the workforce.?The initial funds will be deployed to give small businesses capital and technical support through a grant program.?Baker said the state will also be offering help to the workforce through reskilling or skilling up.

UK rolling out Covid-19 tests to deliver results in "minutes" to schools and universities

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson at a press conference on October 22.

UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock said Thursday that Britain has begun the roll out?of “lateral-flow” tests to schools and universities.

He said the test kits do not require a lab or machine and deliver results within “minutes.”?Hancock said that millions of these tests have been purchased and they aim to reduce the disruption that virus control measures create.?

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson reiterated at a news conference on Thursday that the UK does not wish to implement another national lockdown and will continue with its regional approach.

Patrick Vallance, the government’s chief scientific adviser, said “in some areas” the growth of the virus “has slowed down a bit.”

“But overall this is growing, continues to grow, R is above 1 and therefore we should expect to see bigger numbers,” Vallance added.

He highlighted England’s northwest, northeast, Yorkshire and Midlands as having the “highest number of people in hospital” but added there is “some possibility of beginning to see a decrease in the rate of increase due to the measures that people are taking.”

“London is increasing but at a lower level,” Vallance said.

Indian officials pledge to provide free Covid-19 vaccines to two states

A health worker in an auto-rickshaw collects a swab sample for a coronavirus test outside a commercial centre in Chennai, Tamil Nadu, on September 12.

The chief minister of the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu has pledged to provide free Covid-19 vaccines to residents of the state, once a vaccine is available.

Earlier in the day, India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman made similar remarks when speaking at the manifesto launch of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party in the eastern state of Bihar, which holds state elections on Oct. 28.

India reported at least 7,706,946 cases of Covid-19 and at least 116,616 people have died from the virus, according to the Indian health ministry.

Florida reports its highest daily increase of Covid-19 cases in two months?

The Florida Department of Health is reporting 5,557 new cases of coronavirus on Thursday, the highest single daily increase in more than two months, according to the department’s data.

The last time the state of Florida reported more than 5,000 cases was on Aug. 14 when the state recorded more than 6,300 Covid-19 cases.?

On Thursday, Florida recorded 57 additional deaths, bringing the statewide total to 16,470.?

To date, Florida has recorded a total of 768,091 Covid-19 cases, including resident and non-resident infections.?

Note: These?numbers?were released by?Florida’s public?health?agency and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

46 million people affected by France's nighttime curfew

Street lights illuminate vacant tables and chairs on a restaurant terrace ahead of a curfew in Toulouse, France, on October 19.

France’s nighttime coronavirus curfew will be extended more widely in the country, with 46 million French people affected, French Prime Minister Jean Castex announced on Thursday.

Castex said 38 French administrative areas would be added to the 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew, which starts Saturday. French Polynesia and at total of 54 administrative areas will be under the curfew, he added.

The prime minister said the measures are needed because “in France, and in Europe, the second wave is upon us,” adding that the number of deaths will keep increasing.

Violating the curfew could lead to a fine of about $160 for a first offense, and about $1,760 for the second offense.

“These measures are heavy … but they are being respected,” Castex said.?“If we do not succeed in collectively curbing the epidemic, we will have to take even stronger measures. We still have time to avoid it, but time is running out.”

Italy records at least 16,000 new coronavirus cases in last 24 hours

A medical worker in personal protective equipment sits on the floor of the COVID 3 level Intensive Care Unit for coronavirus cases, at the Casal Palocco hospital, near Rome on October 22.

Italy reported another daily record with 16,079 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours — up from yesterday’s record of 15,199 new cases,?according to the Italy’s health ministry on Thursday.

The health ministry also reported 136 Covid-related deaths and 66 more patients in intensive care.

“A lockdown can be avoided if quick, urgent and strong measures are taken now,” Minister of Health?Roberto Speranza said.

The region of Lombardy will begin its coronavirus curfew tonight, with movement prohibited from 11 p.m. until 5 a.m.

El Paso County in Texas reports a new daily record of Covid-19 cases??

El?Paso, Texas, county health officials reported a record 1,161 new Covid-19 cases on Thursday, according to their?daily Covid-19 report.

The rolling seven-day positivity rate average is currently?14.86%.

The report shows that cases began trending upward in the?county?this month,?but they had not surpassed 1,000 until Thursday.?There are now a total of?36,025 cases across the county.?

Four additional Covid-19-related fatalities were also reported on Thursday, bringing the death toll in El Paso County to 567, health officials reported.??

The state of Texas has the second highest Covid-19 case count in the US, behind California, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.?

Here are the latest coronavirus numbers from New York City

People walk through Manhattan, New York on October 21.

The percentage of people who tested positive for Covid-19 in New York City is at 1.77%, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Thursday.

That figure falls under the 5% threshold. The seven-day rolling average is 1.76%, he said.?

The daily number of people admitted to hospitals for Covid-19 is at 103, a jump from 76 yesterday. This is under the 200 threshold. The confirmed positivity rate for Covid-19 for those patients is 24.2%

With regard to new reported cases on a seven-day average, NYC reported 523 cases, also up from yesterday.?The threshold is 550 cases.

Note: These numbers were released by the city’s public health agency, and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

Vaccine could be available to "all Americans" by early April, Azar says

Alex Azar, US Health and Human Services secretary, speaks at a Covid-19 briefing in Atlanta on October 21.

A coronavirus vaccine could be available to “all Americans” by early April, according to US Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar.?

“By the end of January, enough vaccine for all of our seniors as well as our health care workers and first responders,” Azar said in an interview Thursday with “CBS This Morning’s” Anthony Mason. “By the end of March and early April – enough for all Americans.”

Azar said HHS will have enough vaccines authorized by the US Food and Drug Administration to vaccinate “our most vulnerable people” by the end of the year.

Boston mayor calls suspension of in-person learning "devastating"

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh on CNN's "Newsroom" on October 22.

After a rise in the coronavirus positivity rate, all Boston public schools are going remote starting today. ?

The seven-day coronavirus positivity rate in the city jumped from 4.5% to 5.7% in just one week. ?

Special-needs students will be the first to go back to in-person schooling once the city gets to 5% for a two-week consecutive period, Walsh said. The city is looking into setting up at-home services for the students, he said.?

“It was devastating?for me to have to close the?schools yesterday,” Walsh said.

“I feel sad we’re at this?situation.?But we need people to protect?themselves.?We need people to wear masks,?we need people to stop congregating, we need people to take this?virus seriously,” he said. “…We’re asking people,?particularly people under the age of?30, to really look out for?each other.?You might not be worried about?the virus, but you’re impacting?other people.”?

Portugal reports a record 3,270 new Covid-19 infections

A nurse names people being tested for Covid-19 in Cascais, Portugal, on September 14.

Portuguese health authorities have reported a record 3,270 new Covid-19 infections on Thursday, the highest daily increase since the pandemic first reached the country.?

It is also more than double the highest daily increase seen at the peak of the first wave –1,516 on April 10, according to CNN records.?

Most new infections were reported in the northern part of the country where most industries are concentrated. Earlier on Thursday, three municipalities in Northern Portugal were placed in a partial lockdown to curb the spread of the virus.?

Health authorities in the country also reported an additional 16 fatalities in the past 24 hours, with the death toll from Covid-19 rising to 2,245.?

Germany will require travelers from the UK to quarantine

Germany will require arrivals from the UK to quarantine for 14 days starting Saturday, according to guidance released Thursday by the German Missions in the United Kingdom.

Starting Saturday, Germany will classify the UK as a “COVID high-risk area,”?with the exception of the Isle of Man, Jersey and Guernsey.

“The United Kingdom has been strongly affected by COVID-19,” according to the?German Missions in the United Kingdom.?“Passengers travelling from these high risk areas must therefore undergo a 14-day quarantine upon entering Germany, unless they can provide a COVID-19 test that is no older than 48 hours, or get a test done upon arrival and it is negative. Those who get a test done upon arrival, must undergo quarantine until the result has arrived.”

Southwest Airlines says it will sell every seat?

A Southwest Airlines plane prepares to land at McCarran International Airport in Nevada on May 25.

Southwest Airlines is about to sell every seat on board its flights.

The news comes on the heels of the airline?announcing?record financial losses because of the pandemic.

In a Thursday?earnings report, Southwest announced it will no longer limit capacity on flights starting Dec. 1. The change marks an end to Southwest’s pandemic policy and allows it the opportunity to fill planes through the typically busy holiday travel season.

“This practice of effectively keeping middle seats open bridged us from the early days of the pandemic, when we had little knowledge about the behavior of the virus, to now,” Southwest said. “Today, aligned with science-based findings from trusted medical and aviation organizations, we will resume selling all available seats for travel beginning December 1, 2020.”

That leaves Delta Air Lines as the final remaining big four carrier to limit capacity in aircraft cabins.?Executives have said that policy will continue until next year.?United Airlines and American Airlines have been selling every seat for months.

Alaska Airlines?announced?Thursday it will extend its policy of blocking middle seats until Jan. 6.

A?recently-released Defense Department study?found that among mask-wearing airplane?passengers, the risk of airborne droplet transmission in airplanes is limited due to specialized air flow and filtration systems.

New Jersey governor will continue to quarantine despite negative Covid-19 test

Gov. Phil Murphy speaks at an event on October 21 in Blackwood, New Jersey. He told attendees that he must leave the event after just finding out that he'd been in contact with someone who had tested positive for Covid-19.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said he would continue to quarantine and test after a senior communications adviser tested positive for Covid-19 on Wednesday.

The governor told MSNBC’s Stephanie Ruhle that while he had tested negative twice, “we’re going to test a couple more times negative before we get back out and start reengaging with people.”

Noting the rise in cases in his state, Murphy said he hopes with all of his “heart” the state does not have to shut down again. In terms of mitigating the rise, he thinks the best approach is with a “scalpel” rather than a “hammer,” pertaining to potential targeted action.

Murphy added that the state was concerned about “COVID fatigue,” but that enforcement had become complicated by a rise in indoor gatherings instead of large, visible public ones.

He said most of the challenge is not in the “public square.”?

“It is much more often now in private homes, beyond your ability to, you know, regulate or more importantly, enforce compliance,” Murphy said.

The governor said he had offered prayers for the recovery of his predecessor, Chris Christie, who was recently hospitalized for coronavirus, and who wrote an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal urging people to wear masks.

Puerto Rico closes 911 centers after employees test positive for Covid-19

Puerto Rico has closed the island’s 911 emergency call centers after employees at both locations tested positive for coronavirus, Public Health Secretary Pedro Janer said in a statement.?

Janer said the island will be using central control as a point of contact in order to ensure operations and emergencies are tended to correctly. This will operate 24 hours a day with appropriate staffing, he added.?

For emergency situations residents are being told to call the Puerto Rico Emergency Management Agency. Personnel there will then launch all calls to the respective municipalities or state, Janer said.?

All employees who may have come into contact with a positive case have been asked to quarantine and will be tested in the coming days.?

Parts of Portugal are under partial lockdown

The Portuguese government has placed three municipalities in the northern part of the country under partial lockdown after a surge in new infections.?

Residents in the municipalities of Felgueiras, Lousada and Pa?os de Ferreira must stay indoors except to go to work, acquire goods or services, for health reasons, to assist vulnerable family members or to take children to school, the Portuguese government said in a statement on Thursday.

The restrictions require all business to close no later than 10 p.m. and all gatherings and events are restricted to no more than five people.

Those who can work from home must do so, the statement reads. Visitations at care homes will also be suspended.

Moderna enrolls all 30,000 participants in US Phase 3 Covid-19 vaccine trial

A man in DeLand, Florida, receives an injection on August 4 as part of a Phase 3 Covid-19 vaccine clinical trial, sponsored by Moderna.

Moderna, the first company to start US clinical trials of a Covid-19 vaccine, finished enrolling all 30,000 of its participants on Thursday.

All 30,000 have received their first shot, and most of them have also received the required second shot.

Dr. Stephen Hoge, Moderna’s president, said the company is now on track to apply to the US Food and Drug Administration for authorization to put the vaccine on the market in early December “if all the stars align.”

Hoge said enrolling 30,000 participants is “just a milestone – it’s not the mission.”?Half of the participants received the vaccine and half received a placebo, or a shot of saline that does nothing. The participants receive a second shot four weeks later.

Some background: Moderna is one of four US Phase 3 trials of coronavirus vaccines, each involving tens of thousands of participants.??

Moderna started its Phase 3 trial on July 27, and Pfizer started its trial that evening. AstraZeneca started its US trial Aug. 31 and paused it about a week later when a participant fell ill. Johnson & Johnson started its trial Sept. 23 and paused it less than three weeks later for the same reason. Both of those pauses are still in effect.

Pfizer has said it could apply for emergency use authorization after the third week in November

What happens next: Hoge said three things needs to happen before Moderna applies to the FDA for emergency use authorization.

  1. Of the 30,000 participants, 53 need to become sick with Covid-19. The company expects that to happen in the second half of November.
  2. The second milestone is that of the 53 participants who become ill with Covid-19, at least 40 of them need to be participants who received the placebo. That would show the vaccine is 75% effective.
  3. The third milestone is a requirement by the FDA to ensure that enough time has passed to see if participants develop side effects. (The FDA rule is that at least eight weeks must pass after half the participants have received their second shot before a company can apply for emergency use authorization.) So far, 25,650 participants have received their second shot, and Hoge said Moderna expects to hit this safety milestone in the second half of November.

Moderna also released the racial breakdown of its study participants on Thursday. Of the 30,000 participants, 20% are Latino and 10% are Black. Those are higher than the percentages the company was achieving early in its trial, but still lower than the percentages sought by Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institutes for Allergies and Infectious Diseases.

"There's nobody here": Independent restaurants face bleak future without more federal aid

The Playwright Irish Pub in midtown Manhattan.

As winter approaches, small restaurants face an uncertain future.

“We are back where we started?in March.?We really are,” said John Doherty, who owns the Playwright Irish Pub in midtown Manhattan. “There’s nobody here.”

He laid off nearly all of his 25 employees and used up his?Paycheck Protection Program?loan.

According to the National Restaurant Association, nearly half of the 660,000 US restaurants say they won’t make it another six months without federal aid, CNN’s Vanessa Yurkevich reports.?

It has a ripple effect on other businesses, as well. Ivan Mendez, a printer who used to print signs for the Playwright and 30 other businesses, now had to lay off half his staff and dip into his 401(k), he said. He said he thinks he will have to close.

Doherty said he is investing in preparing his bar for winter patrons, “because I think tomorrow has?to be a better day than today.”

Watch:

CDC's?ensemble?forecast?now projects up to 247,000 US Covid-19 deaths by Nov. 14

An?ensemble?forecast?published Thursday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now projects there will be 235,000 to 247,000 coronavirus deaths in the United States by Nov. 14.

Unlike some individual models, the?CDC’s?ensemble?forecast?only offers projections a few weeks into the future. The previous?ensemble?forecast, published Oct. 15, projected up to 240,000 coronavirus deaths by Nov. 7.?

At least?222,176?people?have already died from Covid-19 in the United States, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

US stocks open higher

US stocks inched higher at the opening bell in New York Thursday, despite investors growing more skeptical that a new stimulus deal will be worked out before the election.

Jobless claims data showed a mixed picture, with lower than expected first-time and continued claims for unemployment benefits. On the flip side, the number of people on the Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation program, which provides money for those who have maxed out state benefits, rose by half a million to 3.3 million people.

Here’s where things stand:

  • The Dow opened 0.1%, or 27 points, higher.
  • The S&P 500 rose 0.2%.
  • The Nasdaq Composite opened up 0.4%.

Coronavirus pandemic is causing "unacceptable" shortages in US drug supplies, report says

The coronavirus pandemic is causing “unacceptable” shortages of US drug supplies in the United States, according to a report from the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP) at the University of Minnesota.

The report says shortages have limited 29 of 40 drugs critical for treating Covid-19 patients, including propofol, albuterol, midazolam, hydroxychloroquine, fentanyl, azithromycin and morphine,?according to the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, while the FDA, which has more stringent criteria for shortages, show 18 of 40 are on the drug shortage list.

Another 67 out of 156 critical acute drugs are in short supply, the report said, including diazepam, phenobarbital, lidocaine and acetaminophen.

“Drug shortages can be a matter of life and death, and some shortages mean that a life-saving drug is not available to U.S. patients at any price,” the authors wrote.????

“This, in turn, will dramatically increase the need for specific COVID-19 treatment drugs, while at the same, COVID-19 is having a major impact on two of the three key drug manufacturing areas of the world, India and Italy,” Osterholm added.???

The pandemic has “jolted the global pharmaceutical market at all levels and production points” and exacerbated a problem that dates back several decades, researchers said.

Closed factories, shipping delays or shutdowns and trade limitations or export bans have severely impacted the supply side of the chain, the analysis concluded, while the pandemic has caused a dramatic increase in the global demand for Covid-19 therapies.?

The report also suggests recommendations for combatting drug shortages, including creating a new federal entity to track, analyze, predict, prevent and mitigate drug

Airline groups ask Trump administration for coronavirus?testing plan

The airline industry is telling the federal government that travelers need a way around pandemic quarantines that “are decimating our industry.”

Airline trade groups and worker unions sent a letter Thursday to the heads of the Department of Transportation, Health and Human Services, and Homeland Security. The industry plea calls on the Trump administration and governors to create a uniform system of pre-departure testing and contact tracing “so that the travel network can be safely re-opened.”

Airlines see rapid coronavirus testing of passengers as the way to safely speed up air travel’s lethargic rebound, still hovering at roughly 40% of last year’s passenger levels.

United and American Airlines have started coronavirus testing passengers on limited routes in order to bypass mandatory 14-day quarantines in places such as Hawaii and Jamaica.

On Wednesday, United Airlines passengers flying from Newark to London were the first to participate in a trial of a mobile health pass app that securely stores a passenger’s Covid-19 status, including the results of recent coronavirus tests.

Pelosi: "We're on a good path" for a stimulus package

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi holds a news conference in Washington, DC, on October 8.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday morning that negotiators are still working toward an agreement for a coronavirus stimulus package, but “we’re on a good path.”

She said she still hopes a stimulus package can be passed before Election Day.?

She added, during an interview with MSNBC, that she and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin will soon be ready to “put pen to paper” for the legislation.

“We’re coming closer to what we must do,” Pelosi said.

She said she’ll be speaking with Mnuchin again later on Thursday.

Asked what she would tell Americans who need aid today, Pelosi said, “Help is on the way. It will be better, it will be bolder, it will be safer, and it will be retroactive.”

Chris Christie urges people to wear masks: "Wear it or you may regret it – as I did"

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie attends a news conference at the White House on September 27.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie wrote about how his Covid-19 experience changed his perspective in a Wall Street Journal op-ed published Wednesday.

Christie, who was hospitalized and?spent seven days in intensive care after?contracting coronavirus, admitted to letting his guard down and not wearing a mask to the Rose Garden event when President Trump announced Judge Amy Coney Barrett as his Supreme Court nominee, or during debate preparations with Trump.?

Christie said he hopes Americans learn from his experience, as it was a “serious failure” to not wear a mask.

Rheumatoid arthritis drug falls short as treatment for hospitalized Covid-19 patients in three studies

Tocilizumab, a repurposed rheumatoid arthritis drug once considered a promising treatment for hospitalized patients with Covid-19, generally did not increase patients’ chances of survival or help them get better faster, according to three trials published this week.

However, a fourth trial did find the drug increased the chances of survival, but because it was an observational study, the results are considered less definitive.

Three of the trials were published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association and the other was published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

While this leaves the picture for tocilizumab use a bit muddy, the studies taken together show the drug isn’t a magic bullet that should be used in all hospitalized patients with Covid-19, but they leave the door open for possible use in specific patient groups.

Read more here.

American jobless claims fall below 800,000 for first time since mid-March

Claims for unemployment benefits inched lower last week, the Department of Labor said Thursday. Still millions of Americans continue to rely on government aid to make ends meet.

Last week, 787,000 workers claimed first-time benefits on a seasonally adjusted basis. That’s lower from the prior week.

It was the first time jobless claims fell below 800,000 since mid-March.

But not everyone is eligible for regular state benefits. Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, which Congress created as part of the CARES Act in the spring, provides benefits for the self-employed and gig workers. Last week, 345,440 people applied for PUA.

Adding these first-time claims together, initial applications for benefits stood at 1.1 million last week without seasonal adjustments.

Continued jobless claims, which count people who have applied for benefits for at least two weeks in a row, stood at 8.4 million, about 1 million lower than the prior week.

Contact tracing in England reaches record low, as UK government announces more economic aid

People walk by The Edinburgh Woollen Mill shop in Oxford, England, on October 19.

England’s beleaguered test and trace system reached the lowest percentage of people who had come into contact with a Covid-19 infectious person, according to the latest weekly figures.?

Just 59.6% – a record low – of close contacts were told to self-isolate in the week of October 8 to 14, compared with 63% the week before.

During this week, 101,494 people tested positive for coronavirus in England. Turnaround times for receiving test results have also declined. In the week up to 14 October, just 15.1% of test results were received within 24 hours compared to 32.8% the previous week.?

The weekly report said there has been a downward trend in the percentage of in-person test results received within 24 hours since the end of June when 94.3% were received within this time frame.

Economic aid: This comes as the UK government announced plans on Thursday to further boost support for businesses by expanding its Jobs Support Scheme due to come into effect on November 1,?when the current furlough scheme runs out.

UK finance minister Rishi Sunak said he would be increasing support through the existing Job Support and self-employed schemes, and expanding business grants of up to £2,100 ($2,749) per month to support companies in high-alert level areas.

As part of the new economic measures, the UK government will increase its contribution to wage costs to help businesses keep staff on, while the employer contribution will drop to 5%.

Grants for the self-employed income support will also double from 20% to 40%.

It's 12:30 p.m. in London and 7:30 a.m in New York. Here's what's happening in Europe

Europe’s second wave has seen some of its biggest countries report record rises in infections. A trend has also emerged that more older people are becoming infected, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). Here’s the latest:

Spain: The country topped 1 million cases on Wednesday after 16,973 new cases and 156 deaths were added to the tally for Tuesday.

Ireland: The nation went into Europe’s strictest coronavirus lockdown on Thursday for six weeks to deal with the outbreak. It recorded an increase of nearly 2,000 new cases last week over the week before, prompting the government to impose the stringent measures.

Germany: The country reported a record 11,287 new cases on Thursday, the highest rise since the start of the pandemic.

Belgium: Deputy Prime Minister Sophie Wilmès was admitted into intensive care during treatment for Covid-19. Her spokesperson told CNN that she is conscious, stable and able to communicate with her team. “Her condition is not alarming,” the spokesperson added.

According to CNN analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University and the World Health Organization, Belgium?and the Czech Republic are seeing the highest number of new coronavirus cases worldwide when measured against their populations.

Czech Republic: The European Union is sending 30 ventilators to the Czech Republic as the country deals with record numbers of coronavirus cases, the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said.

The Czech Republic registered 14,968 new coronavirus cases – a new daily record – according to new data from the Ministry of Health released Thursday.

UK: It recorded 26,688 new infections on Wednesday – the highest daily increase in cases since the pandemic began. Authorities also reported 191 new Covid-19 fatalities?

Italy: Italy recorded 127 coronavirus deaths on Tuesday, marking the first time since May the country’s daily death toll has reached triple digits.?Almost a third of cases reported on Wednesday were from the northern Lombardy region, the epicenter of Italy’s outbreak in the spring.

Poland: Poland reported 12,107 new Covid-19 cases on Thursday, hitting a record high for the second day in a row. It also registered a record 168 deaths related to Covid-19, four times larger than the largest daily increase during the first wave in spring. It recorded a further 15,199 new cases on Wednesday.

Russia: Health Minister Mikhail Murashko is self-isolating after one of his family members tested positive for the virus.

Read more:

Healthcare workers wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) care for Covid-19 patients in an intensive care unit (ICU) at Thomayer hospital on October 14, 2020 in Prague. - The Czech Republic has the European Union's highest rate of coronavirus infection, according to the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. (Photo by Michal Cizek / AFP) (Photo by MICHAL CIZEK/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article The number of older people getting coronavirus in Europe is rising again. That's really bad news

UK lawmaker quits over free school meals, as soccer star says he'll keep fighting for "vulnerable children"

England and Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford speaks at a press conference in Surrey, England, on October 13.

A lawmaker from the UK’s governing Conservative Party has quit her government position after siding with the opposition to support free meals for school children in low-income homes during the pandemic.

It comes after Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford called for the government to extend a scheme to provide 1.5 million children with food vouchers during holidays until Easter 2021. But the motion, called for by the opposition Labour Party, was voted down on Wednesday – 261 votes to 322.

Caroline Ansell, who was Parliamentary Private Secretary at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, said in a statement announcing her resignation from the role that the government should be doing all it can to help those struggling with the impact of Covid-19 pandemic.

“I do not consider this extension could be in any way a long-term solution to this need, which is complex. There are better ways to help children, including linking meals to activities so they can also benefit from extra-curricular learning and experience,” the statement read.

Ansell was one of five Conservative Party lawmakers who voted with Labour.

Fight continues: Footballer Rashford, who was recently awarded an MBE?for his work tackling food poverty, promised to keep representing “vulnerable children” and urged politicians to unite behind the effort.

“Put aside all the noise, the digs, the party politics, and let’s focus on the reality. A significant number of children are going to bed tonight not only hungry but feeling like they do not matter because of comments that have been made today,” he?wrote?on Twitter on Wednesday.

Read the full story here:

NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 17: Manchester United player Marcus Rashford in action during the Premier League match between Newcastle United and Manchester United at St. James Park on October 17, 2020 in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. Sporting stadiums around the UK remain under strict restrictions due to the Coronavirus Pandemic as Government social distancing laws prohibit fans inside venues resulting in games being played behind closed doors. (Photo by Stu Forster/Getty Images)

Related article Rashford clashes with lawmakers as UK parliament votes against free school meals proposal

Poland's daily death count is now four times higher than during its first virus wave

Poland reported 12,107 new Covid-19 cases on Thursday, hitting a record high for the second day in a row, according to a series of tweets by the country’s health ministry.?

The ministry added that Poland also registered a record 168 new deaths related to Covid-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the total of fatalities to 4,019.?

That daily death count is more than four times the largest daily increase recorded by the country’s authorities during spring’s first wave of Covid-19. On April 24, Poland recorded 40 deaths due to Covid-19, according to data from the health ministry.?

The country has seen an exponential rise in cases over the past couple of weeks, reporting on Wednesday more than 10,000 cases for the first time since the pandemic started. The total of confirmed cases has now reached 214,686.

Russian health minister self-isolates after family member tests positive for coronavirus

Russian Health Minister Mikhail Murashko is seen before a meeting in Moscow on February 14.

Russian Health Minister Mikhail Murashko is self-isolating after one of his family members tested positive for the virus, his aide told state-run news agency RIA Novosti.

Several high-ranking Russian officials previously either had coronavirus or had to isolate due to possible exposure to it.

Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin spent several weeks in a hospital after testing positive for coronavirus in late April. About a month later, a spokesperson for President Vladimir Putin, Dmitry Peskov, was also hospitalized with coronavirus and pneumonia.?

Russia has the fourth highest number of confirmed cases in the world since the outbreak began with more than 1.4 million reported infections, according to Johns Hopkins University data.

Faulty US Covid-19 response meant 130,000 to 210,000 avoidable deaths, report finds

President Donald Trump walks to board Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on October 20.

The Trump Administration’s faltering response to the coronavirus pandemic has led to anywhere between 130,000 and 210,000 deaths in the United States that could have been prevented, according to a report released Thursday by a team of disaster preparedness experts.

Insufficient testing, a lack of national mask mandates or guidance,?a delayed overall response and outright mocking of basic public health practices by the administration has put the US at the top of the global coronavirus death toll, the report from Columbia University Earth Institute’s National Center for Disaster Preparedness finds

“We estimate that at least 130,000 deaths and perhaps as many as 210,000 could have been avoided with earlier policy interventions and more robust federal coordination and leadership,” the report reads.

“Even with the dramatic recent appearance of new COVID-19 waves globally, the abject failures of U.S. government policies and crisis messaging persist. U.S. fatalities have remained disproportionately high throughout the pandemic when compared to even other high-mortality countries,” it adds.

“The inability of the U.S. to mitigate the pandemic is especially stark when contrasted with the response of high income nations, such as South Korea, Japan, Australia, Germany, France, and Canada, as well as low- and middle-income countries as varied as Thailand, Pakistan, Honduras, and Malaysia. All of these nations have had greater success in protecting their populations from the impact of the coronavirus.”

According to Johns Hopkins University, the US has tallied more than 8.3 million coronavirus cases and more than 222,000 deaths.

“The data establishes that a significant number of lives could have been saved if the Trump administration acted on the advice from the scientific and public health community,” said Dr. Irwin Redlener, founding director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness?at Columbia. “As the country faces a second wave of this virus, we need to hold leadership accountable. The magnitude of loss, caused by a disorganized response, will have devastating and long-lasting consequences for millions of American families.”

When measured by deaths per 100,000 population, the report calculates that the US mortality rate is 50 times higher than Japan’s, and more than twice as high as Canada’s.?“Although both the U.S. and South Korea confirmed their first case of coronavirus?on January 20, South Korea was able to institute an aggressive diagnostic testing strategy and isolate infected patients, leading to a proportional mortality rate today that is 78 times smaller than that of the United States,” the report reads.

“From the moment the pandemic was first identified, President Trump and his team have downplayed the crisis and ignored basic and widely known public health guidelines to curb the spread of COVID-19,” said Jeffrey Sachs, a professor of health policy and management at Columbia. “To stop the ongoing epidemic in the U.S., it is urgent to examine the available data, identify the failures, call out the Administration’s relentless misinformation, and hold the Trump Administration accountable for its failure to slow the virus’s spread and the more than 200,000 lives that have been unnecessarily lost.”

The research team compared the US response to the policies in other countries. If the US had followed the policies and protocols of Australia, as few as 11,699 people may have died, the report estimates.

Following Japan’s policies would have led to as few as 4,315 deaths in the US, the Columbia team calculated. Even France did better and had the US followed France’s lead, 162,240 Americans would have died – around 60,000 fewer than the current total.

India slowly opens up as it lifts suspension on work, student, and medical visas

The Indian government has lifted a months-long suspension on issuing work, student and medical visas. Under the relaxation, all existing visas, except for electronic, tourist and medical visas, will be restored with immediate effect.

For those with expired visas, new ones in the appropriate categories can be obtained from Indian embassies and high commissions.

Foreign nationals intending to visit India for medical treatment can apply for a medical visa, including for their medical attendants.?

International flights remain suspended to and from India except for those operating as part of the country’s Vande Bharat repatriation program and flights that have been authorized by the country’s civil aviation ministry to operate within a travel bubble.?

In recent months, India has established travel corridors with several countries. Many of these are due to be extended in the coming days for the winter season, including the United Kingdom and Germany.

A new travel bubble agreement has also been set up with Bangladesh to resume flights for the first time between the neighboring countries from October 28.?

Princess Diana interviewer Martin Bashir "seriously unwell" with Covid-19

Martin Bashir arriving for the Pride of Britain Awards held at the The Grosvenor House Hotel, London, on October 28, 2019.

BBC journalist Martin Bashir, well known for his interviews with Princess Diana and Michael Jackson, is “seriously unwell with Covid-19 related complications,” the corporation says.

“Everyone at the BBC is wishing him a full recovery. We’d ask that his privacy, and that of his family, is respected at this time,” a BBC spokesperson said in a statement.

The British journalist made headlines in 1995 with his interview with Princess Diana, in which she confirmed Prince Charles’s affair with Camilla.

“Well, there were three of us in this marriage, so it was a bit crowded,” she told Bashir.

He also famously interviewed Jackson over an extended period, during which the entertainer granted rare access to his private life.

Bashir later moved to the US where he worked for cable news channel MSNBC. However, he resigned over controversial remarks he made about former Alaskan governor Sarah Palin in 2013.

He re-joined the BBC in 2016.

Belgium's deputy prime minister in ICU with Covid-19

Belgium’s Deputy Prime Minister Sophie Wilmès has been admitted into intensive care during treatment for Covid-19, her spokesperson says.

Wilmès was admitted to the ICU on Wednesday night.

The news comes days after the country’s health minister said the outbreak in the Belgian region of Wallonia and the capital Brussels is “close to a tsunami.”

Frank Vandenbroucke warned “the health situation in Wallonia and in Brussels is the worst and the most dangerous in the whole of Europe.”?

However, during a Sunday news conference, the health minister defended the government’s policy of installing a curfew from midnight, and not earlier in the evening, saying that the government “did not want to make life impossible.”?

As of October 16, both countries were reporting a daily average of more than 800 new cases per million of their populations, with the Czech Republic at 817 and?Belgium?tallying 811.

Czech Republic posts another daily high increase in Covid-19 cases, as restrictions tighten

A healthcare worker conducts a Covid-19 test at a drive-in testing station in Prague, Czech Republic, on October 10.

The Czech Republic registered 14,968 new coronavirus cases on Wednesday, according to new data from the Ministry of Health released Thursday.

The increase is 2,842 more than yesterday’s update. To date, at least 208,915 people have been infected in the country since the beginning of the pandemic.?

Some 4,417 patients are being treated in hospital for the virus. At least 1,739 have died.

The country was previously hailed as a success story during Europe’s first wave of Covid-19 in March. But authorities are now struggling to cope with the rising number of infections throughout the country, and the government is enacting further restrictions on movement in order to stop the virus from spreading further.

Those measures went into effect at 6 a.m. local time and are expected to last until November 3.

Experts worry the worst of the fall surge in the US is yet to come

The US reported more than 1,100 new Covid-19 deaths?on Wednesday – the highest daily toll recorded in more than a month.

The toll follows a pattern of other concerning trends across the country, including climbing cases and hospitalizations?that are reminiscent of previous surges. Only this time,?doctors say Americans will likely see the worst surge yet.

At least 31 states are now reporting more new Covid-19 cases than the previous week and only one state – Hawaii – is trending in the right direction. Hospitalizations are also on the rise, with tens of thousands of patients nationwide and hospital systems already taking a hard hit.

And some experts predict the country’s daily death toll, which usually lags behind rising cases,?will also begin creeping upward. More than 2,300 Americans could be dying daily by early January, according to?a model by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington.

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Oct. 13, 2020; Phoenix, Arizona; Delta Air Lines has no-touch boarding at Sky Harbor International Airport. Delta Air Lines is promoting their health and safety practices in the COVID-19 air travel era.

Related article The US topped 1,000 daily Covid-19 deaths and experts worry the worst of the fall surge is yet to come

Police drones will monitor Australia's Victoria state while local sporting heroes clash over 1,000 miles away

The Geelong Cats line up for the national anthem during the 2020 AFL Second Preliminary Final match with  the Brisbane Lions at The Gabba in Brisbane, Australia, on October 17.

Police in the Australian state of Victoria plan to use drones to ensure that members of the public are following social distancing rules during the Australian Football League (AFL) Grand Final on Saturday.

The game, between Victoria-based clubs Geelong and Richmond, will take place at The Gabba in Brisbane, Queensland and is expected to host a 30,000 crowd, according to the AFL’s official website.

The AFL final is one of the most watched televised sporting events in the country. Victoria is easing lockdown measures that were put in place to stop the spread of Covid-19, but indoor gatherings are still banned in Melbourne, the state’s biggest city. No more than two households, up to 10 people, can gather outdoors in public spaces.

Assistant Commissioner Luke Cornelius of Victoria Police said drones give authorities ” a real-time appreciation of crowd numbers, crowd behavior.”

The annual AFL grand final is traditionally played in Melbourne on the last Saturday of September but was moved this year to Brisbane – more than 1,000 miles away – because of the pandemic.

Tokyo airport to open Covid-19 testing center that returns results in 2 hours

A woman walks past the departure board at Narita airport near Tokyo, on April 3.

Tokyo’s Narita Airport will open a Covid-19 testing center next month that will return results within two hours.

International passengers arriving at Terminal 1 and 2 will be routed to a testing reception center, where they will take a PCR test. Those who test negative will be issued with a certificate.??

The test and certificate cost $380. Asahiko Tamura, the president of Narita Airport, said the center will open on November 9.

Germany reports fresh single-day high in new Covid-19 cases

A medical worker takes a nasal swab at a coronavirus testing center in Cologne, Germany, on October 15.

Germany identified a new high of 11,287 cases of Covid-19 in a single day, the country’s center for disease control, the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), reported Thursday. Another 30 people died from the virus.

More than 392,000 coronavirus cases have been diagnosed in Germany since the pandemic began, killing 9,905 people, according to the RKI.

Germany is one of several countries throughout Europe battling a new wave of Covid-19 cases.

Brazilian senator dies of Covid-19

Brazilian Senator?Arolde de Oliveira died?Wednesday from complications related to Covid-19, according to a statement published on his official Twitter account. He was 83.?

Oliveira died from multiple organ failure caused by Covid-19, the statement said. He had been hospitalized for more than 15 days in Rio de Janeiro, according to CNN affiliate CNN Brasil.?

Oliveira?is?the first member of the Brazilian Congress to die from coronavirus.???

Oliveira, a conservative senator from Rio de Janeiro state with close ties to President Jair Bolsonaro, served in Congress for more than 35 years. He?was in his first term in the Senate after being elected in 2018. He had previously served nine consecutive terms in the lower house of Congress.??

The state of Rio de Janeiro declared three days of mourning in honor of Oliveira, according to a statement from the governor’s office.????

Rheumatoid arthritis drug falls short as treatment for hospitalized Covid-19 patients in three studies

Tocilizumab, a repurposed rheumatoid arthritis drug once considered a promising treatment for hospitalized patients with Covid-19, generally did not increase patients’ chances of survival or help them get better faster, according to three trials published this week.

However, a fourth trial did find the drug increased the chances of survival, but because it was an observational study, the results are considered less definitive.

Three of the trials were published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association and the other was published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

While this leaves the picture for tocilizumab use a bit muddy, the studies taken together show the drug isn’t a magic bullet that should be used in all hospitalized patients with Covid-19, but they leave the door open for possible use in specific patient groups.

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A medic prepares to transfer a patient on a stretcher from an ambulance outside of Emergency at Coral Gables Hospital where Coronavirus patients are treated in Coral Gables near Miami, on July 30, 2020. - Florida has emerged as a major new epicenter of the US battle against the disease, with confirmed cases recently surpassing New York and now second only to California. The state toll has leapt over the past week and more than 6,500 people have died from the disease there, according to health officials. More than 460,000 people have been infected with the virus in Florida, which has a population of 21 million, and a quarter of the state's cases are in Miami. The US has tallied a total of 151,826 deaths from COVID-19, making it the hardest-hit country in the world. (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA / AFP) (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article Rheumatoid arthritis drug falls short as treatment for hospitalized Covid-19 patients in three studies

Only?6,000 participants have so far received both doses in Russian vaccine's Phase 3 trial

Only 6,000 participants have so far received both doses of the Russian vaccine for Covid-19 that are necessary to complete the vaccination, the drug’s developers said.

To date, 17,000 people have received the first component of the Sputnik V vaccine, Alexander Gintsburg, director of the Gamaleya Institute that created the vaccine, told CNN in an exclusive interview Wednesday.??

By comparison, as of October?6,?the vaccine cooperation of Germany’s BioNTech and US drugmaker Pfizer reported to have enrolled?approximately 37,000 participants in the Phase 3 trial for their vaccine candidate. More than 28,000 participants in that trial have received their second dose.

Russia approved the Sputnik V vaccine for emergency use ahead of key Phase 3 trials. Moscow claimed it was the first certified coronavirus vaccine, despite only having been tested on several dozen people,

So far,?about 40,000 doses of Sputnik V have been supplied to the general population under emergency use authorization decree – mostly doctors, Covid-19 patients and teachers,?Gintsburg said.?

Gintsburg?said that his institute and the Russian Direct?Investment?Fund, which sponsored the vaccine, plan to scale up production of Sputnik V in the next month using private sector sites, with the goal of producing 5 million vaccines a month by next year.

More than 62,000 coronavirus cases were reported in the US on Wednesday

The United States reported 62,735?new cases of Covid-19 and?1,124 virus-related deaths on Wednesday, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.

To date, at least?8,336,031?cases of coronavirus have been diagnosed in the US. At least?222,176?people have died.

The totals include cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.?

Track cases here:

Always tell truth to power, Fauci says, even if it could cost you your job

Dr. Anthony Fauci testifies before a House Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis hearing on July 31 in Washington.?

Dr. Anthony Facui, the United States’ leading expert on infectious diseases, advised people during a recent interview that they should “always tell the truth,” even if it’s something others don’t want to hear or it could cost you your job.

“At least you maintain your integrity,” said Fauci, who heads the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Fauci also is a member of the White House’s coronavirus task force.

The comments come as Fauci has found himself on the receiving end of public and private criticism by US President Donald Trump.

Fauci never mentioned Trump by name and used himself as a leading scientist as an example of how he views leadership, but his comments follow Trump’s recent derogatory remarks about him.

“The one thing that is so clear when you’re, you’re a leader, you’ve got to first of all be very consistent,” Fauci said in response to a question about his leadership and past role models.

Manchester United reports more than $30 million in losses due to Covid-19

The corner flag inside the stadium prior to the Premier League match between Manchester United and Norwich City at Old Trafford on January 11, in Manchester, United Kingdom.

Manchester United, one of the world’s most iconic and valuable sports teams, reported financial losses of $30.3 million this year, a slump largely attributed to the global pandemic.

The English Premier League soccer club said its finances were severely impacted by a loss of broadcasting income. The league enacted a three-month suspension of play from March until June as the first wave of the pandemic took hold. Premier League stadiums have been closed to fans since mid-March as a result of the pandemic.

The club was valued at $3.81 billion in July by Forbes, making it the world’s 10th most valuable sports team.

Revenue as a whole dropped by $664 million – down almost 19% on the previous year – but the losses were partially offset by lower match-day costs and reduced travel, among other things.

Debt at the club has also grown to $618 million – an increase of 132.9% on the previous year in the club’s latest round of financial results.??

More than 5,600 people were diagnosed with Covid-19 in Iran in a 24-hour period

Iran’s Health Ministry said Wednesday that 5,616 new Covid-19 cases were diagnosed over a 24 hour-period – a new daily high for the second consecutive day in the country.

Another 312 coronavirus-related deaths were reported, bringing the nationwide total to 31,346, Health Ministry spokeswoman Sima Sadat Lari said Wednesday on state television.

Wearing masks in public is mandatory in the capital Tehran and a restriction on travel in and out of Tehran province is in place until at least Friday.?

Coronavirus vaccine volunteer in Brazil's AstraZeneca trial dies -- but authorities say trial to continue

A volunteer in Brazil’s trial of AstraZeneca’s experimental coronavirus vaccine has died, the Brazilian health agency Anvisa announced on Wednesday, but organizers said there was no reason to stop the trial – an indication that the death is not linked to the vaccine.

Anvisa said that it was notified of the death on Monday but the International Evaluation and Security Committee overseeing the trial recommended that the trial continue. It was not clear whether the volunteer received the vaccine or a placebo shot as part of the trial, and Anvisa said no more information was being released for reasons of medical privacy.

Read more:

A man receives an injection as UCLA and AstraZeneca begin phase three trials in a potential COVID-19 vaccine.

Related article Covid-19 vaccine volunteer in Brazil's AstraZeneca trial dies

Here's the latest coronavirus update from Italy

Medical staff transfer a patient with Covid-19 to hospital in Milan, Italy on October 19.

Italy recorded 127 coronavirus deaths on Tuesday, marking the first time since May the country’s daily death toll has reached triple digits.?

The country recorded a further 15,199 new cases on Wednesday, a considerable increase on the day before, when 10,871 cases were reported.?

Speaking on Tuesday, Italy’s Health Minister Roberto Speranza said the government is “working day and night” to avoid a second lockdown.

“It depends on what we will be able to do in the next few weeks,” he said.

Speranza also called on people to avoid “needless movements” and “going out when it is not necessary.”?

Troubles in Lombardy again: Almost a third of cases reported on Wednesday were from the Lombardy region – where Milan is situated – in northern Italy.?Lombardy was the epicenter of Italy’s outbreak in the spring.

Curfew in Rome: An overnight curfew will be imposed in the Italian region of Lazio, where the capital Rome is situated, starting midnight on Saturday October 24. Authorities hope the measure will help stop the virus’ spread.

The curfew, which will be in effect from midnight to 5 a.m. each night, will be imposed for 30 days on the region’s almost 6 million residents, according to local authorities.

All movement will be prohibited, except for where there are health or work reasons, or emergencies.

The UK reported a highest single-day increase in new Covid-19 cases on Wednesday

The United Kingdom?recorded 26,688 new coronavirus infections in 24 hours, according to the government’s Covid-19 dashboard Wednesday – the highest daily increase in cases since the pandemic began.

A total of nearly 790,000 people have been diagnosed with the disease in the UK.

Authorities also reported 191 new Covid-19 fatalities on Wednesday, bringing the nationwide death toll to 58,164.

The UK is currently one of many European countries battling a second wave of the pandemic, and it appears to be among the hardest hit. The higher numbers also may be due to the fact that more testing is being carried out now compared to the first wave of the pandemic in the?UK.?

Spain has now surpassed 1 million Covid-19 cases

Spain topped 1 million Covid-19 cases on Wednesday, according to data released by the country’s Health Ministry.

Spanish authorities say a total of 1,005,295 of Covid-19 cases have now been diagnosed since the pandemic began. At least 34,366 people have died.

Another 16,973 new cases and 156 deaths were added to the tally Tuesday.

CNN is tracking worldwide cases:

A Covid-19 vaccine should be available in "next couple of months," NIH director says

The United States should have a viable vaccine against the coronavirus in the “next couple of months,” Dr. Francis Collins, the director of the National Institutes of Health, said Wednesday.

Collins said it’s “truly breathtaking” that a Covid-19 vaccine will have been developed in under a year given that it can take a decade to create a successful vaccine.?

Collins told the Milken panel that the development of therapeutics for Covid-19 is also moving along. Some of those include the antiviral drugs remdesivir and the steroid dexamethasone, both of which were used to treat President Donald Trump after he was diagnosed with Covid-19.

Ireland?imposes strictest coronavirus lockdown in Europe??

A pedestrian wearing a face mask walks past a pub in Dublin on October 19.

Ireland has now moved to “Level 5” measures — in what is now Europe’s strictest coronavirus lockdown.?

Taoiseach Micheál Martin announced the restrictions on Monday when the country’s case count topped 50,000. The restrictions?are set to be in place for six weeks to deal with the “deteriorating situation with the disease across the country.”??

Under the new measures, people are asked to work from home, unless providing an essential service. Social gatherings at homes and gardens are prohibited, but people will be allowed to exercise in parks close their homes. Schools, childcare services and “essential retail” services will remain open under the restrictions.?Bars and restaurants are allowed to be open only for take-away and delivery service during the period.???

Ireland recorded an increase of nearly 2,000 new cases last week over the week before, prompting the government to impose the stringent measures.

Covid-19 hospitalizations continue to rise in several states, and Wisconsin is now using an overflow facility

With the number of people with?Covid-19 being admitted to hospitals rising, several states are looking at their supply of beds.

On Wednesday, an overflow medical facility set up at the Wisconsin State Fair Park in the Milwaukee suburb of West Allis received its first patient.

The facility will take patients who meet specific criteria, and doctors and nurses there can give remdesivir and oxygen treatment, according to the governor’s statement.

The seven-day average for the number of people in the hospital has risen from 749 two weeks ago to 1,098 as of Tuesday,?according to data from?the state health department.

Wisconsin is not alone in rising numbers. Over the past two weeks, 42 states have seen hospitalizations increase by more than 5%, according to the Covid Tracking Project.

Ten states recorded their highest number of Covid-19 hospitalizations Tuesday: Arkansas, Iowa, Kentucky, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, West Virginia and Wisconsin, according to the researchers.

Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb said Wednesday the hospitalizations in his state are rising and still disproportionately affecting elderly residents and those at long-term care facilities.

He said the state will use National Guard troops to work with staff members at those facilities to help them do things such as screen employees and administer tests “so that the facility staff members can rightly focus on what they do best and that’s caring directly for the residents.”

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Reading, PA - October 13: People in cars wait in line for COVID-19 testing. At the state run free COVID-19 testing site setup on Front Street in Reading, PA outside FirstEnergy Stadium Tuesday morning October 13, 2020. The site will be there for 5 days and was setup in response to an increase in cases in Berks County. (Photo by Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images)

Related article US is nearing 'rapid acceleration' of Covid-19 cases, expert warns, as daily infections top 60,000

READ MORE

Covid-19 hospitalizations continue to rise in several states, and Wisconsin is now using an overflow facility
Coronavirus vaccine volunteer in Brazil’s AstraZeneca trial dies – but authorities say trial to continue
A Tennessee town is discouraging trick-or-treating this Halloween because of Covid-19
Vermont coronavirus cluster traced to hockey teams and a broomball league
The Czech Republic is bringing back a mask mandate that saved it from coronavirus in spring. But is it too late?

READ MORE

Covid-19 hospitalizations continue to rise in several states, and Wisconsin is now using an overflow facility
Coronavirus vaccine volunteer in Brazil’s AstraZeneca trial dies – but authorities say trial to continue
A Tennessee town is discouraging trick-or-treating this Halloween because of Covid-19
Vermont coronavirus cluster traced to hockey teams and a broomball league
The Czech Republic is bringing back a mask mandate that saved it from coronavirus in spring. But is it too late?