May 19, 2020 coronavirus news | CNN

May 19 coronavirus news

Zhong Nanshan CNN intv
This health expert is called the Dr. Fauci of China
05:31 • Source: CNN
05:31

What you need to know

61 Posts

Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.

Brazil sees record surge of coronavirus deaths and cases in one day

An aerial view of open graves amidst the coronavirus pandemic at Vila Formosa Cemetery on Monday, May 18, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. T

Brazil recorded its highest number of coronavirus deaths and cases in one day, according to the country’s Health Ministry Tuesday.

The numbers: From Monday to Tuesday, Brazil confirmed 1,179 more deaths, bringing the country’s total to 17,971. 

Brazil also recorded 17,408 more Covid-19 cases, bringing the country’s total to 271,628. 

The increase in cases and deaths are both the highest jump in numbers in a day for Brazil since it confirmed its first case in February. 

Sao Paulo state alone reported a record number of deaths on Tuesday, with 324 deaths in the last 24 hours.

Yesterday, Brazil became the country with the third highest number of coronavirus cases in the world, behind the US and Russia.

President Trump said today he is considering a travel ban on Latin America, and Brazil in particular.

US ventilators destined for Russia to be ready for shipment on Wednesday

A batch of 50 ventilators destined for Russia as part of a package of US aid was expected to be ready for shipment Wednesday, aa US administration spokesperson confirmed to CNN Tuesday.

Here’s what the official said in a statement:

Iraq will reimpose full curfew during Eid al-Fitr holiday

Shiite Muslims gather at the Imam Ali shrine in the central Iraqi holy city of Najaf on May 16, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, to mark Lailat al-Qadr, a night in the Muslim holy month of Ramadan during which the Koran was first revealed to the Prophet Mohammed in the seventh century.

Iraq will reimpose a full curfew on vehicles and pedestrians during the Eid al-Fitr holiday, starting Sunday through May 28, according to statement released by Iraq’s Council of Ministers today.

Since the start of Ramadan, Iraq partially lifted its curfew, which is currently set between 5 p.m. and 5 a.m. local time.

The country witnessed a relative increase of confirmed coronavirus cases since the curfew was partially lifted.

More than one billion Muslims around the world will celebrate Eid al-Fitr this weekend as the month-long Ramadan fast ends and the festivities begin.

Spain coronavirus deaths under 100 for third day as protests for reopening grow

Healthcare workers tend to coronavirus patients at the Intensive Care Unit of the La Paz University Hospital in Madrid on April 23.

The number of daily deaths in Spain due to Covid-19 rose slightly by 83 on Monday, but were still less than 100 for the third consecutive day, figures reported by the Spanish Health Ministry on Tuesday show.

The most recent three daily death tolls are the lowest reported in more than two months in the country, where the total number of deaths stands at more than 27,700.

Meanwhile, in a sudden pivot, the Spanish government said on Tuesday it will seek a two-week extension for its state of emergency order during the coronavirus crisis, but not the one-month extension that the Prime Minister had announced just last weekend.

Some background: The last-minute change comes as the Socialist minority government scrambles to garner enough votes in Parliament on Wednesday to approve any extension of the confinement order, which has been subjected to increasing attacks from opposition leaders.

For weeks, people opposed to the government have been loudly banging pots from their windows and balconies in the evenings. But starting in an upscale conservative Madrid neighborhood last week, the protests took to the streets, with the support of right-wing groups and parties. People draped in Spanish flags, and others, have demanded that their basic right to free movement which is restricted by the state of emergency, be restored.

But Finance Minister Maria Jesus Montero, also the chief government spokesperson, told a press conference today that the protesters “are asking for freedom of movement. That’s the freedom to get infected” with coronavirus, she said.

Vaccine maker backs off priority access for US, France says

French pharmaceutical giant Sanofi Tuesday backed off its CEO’s apparent suggestion that the United States would have priority for a coronavirus vaccine if the company develops one, French President Emmanuel Macron’s office said.

Sanofi executives “confirm to the President that the group share France’s approach to universal access to the vaccine with the aim of making it a global public good,” the Elysee Palace said in a statement.

Macron summoned the company’s chairman of the board, CEO and president to a meeting Tuesday after CEO Paul Hudson said last week that the “US government has the right to the largest pre-order because it’s invested in taking the risk.”

Hudson was speaking to Bloomberg News.

French officials responded angrily to the comments from Hudson, with deputy finance minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher saying: “It would be unacceptable for Sanofi to reserve its Covid-19 vaccine as a priority, if it were to find one, to one country or another for financial reason.”

Jean-Baptiste Froville, a spokesman for Sanofi, said in a statement on Friday that Hudson’s comments had been misinterpreted.

Sanofi Chairman of the Board Serge Weinberg, President Olivier Bogillot, and CEO Hudson met with Macron for 45 mins Tuesday, Macron’s office said.

The Elysee statement added that Sanofi “is fully committed to its presence in France.”

There was no immediate statement from Sanofi following the meeting.

France orders 1 billion masks from local producers

The French government Tuesday announced an order of one billion masks made by French producers.

The masks will be delivered over time until the end of 2020, according to a statement from the country’s Economy and Health ministries.

French mask production reached 10 million a week in April and is to come up to 20 million by the end of May, President Emmanuel Macron announced earlier.

The government says that by the end of 2020, production in France should be up to 50 million masks per week.

Some background: In March, Macron said France needs to “produce more in France, on our own soil. Certain materials, such as masks, are of a strategic nature.”

Macron also promised to give 4 billion Euros to Sante Publique France, a public health agency, to purchase masks and ventilators.

Italy's coronavirus death numbers rise slightly as the country starts to reopen

The number of daily coronavirus deaths in Italy rose slightly Tuesday to 162, after four days of declining numbers, authorities said.

Italy has now recorded 32,169 Covid-19 deaths, the Italian Civil Protection Agency reported.

This comes as bars, restaurants, retail stores, hairdressers and museums reopened Monday in most Italian regions after nearly 10 weeks of lockdown.

Italy has the third largest number of deaths from the virus in the world, behind the United States and United Kingdom, according to a tally from Johns Hopkins University.

The total number of Covid-19 cases in Italy, including deaths and recoveries, is now over 226,000, according to the national agency.

UK will need British workers to help pick summer harvest

Seasonal workers tend to raspberries at a farm in Rochester, England.

The United Kingdom will need Britons to help pick the summer harvest because the novel coronavirus has prevented the arrival of many of the seasonal workers that usually travel from Eastern Europe, the country’s Secretary of State for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, George Eustice, said on Tuesday.

“Probably only about a third of the people that would come are already here,” Eustice said, conceding that small numbers would continue to travel. “This year we will need to rely on British workers to lend a hand to help bring that harvest home.”

The British government had been working with the industry to try to pair up people looking for a second job, particularly those who had been placed on furlough, with businesses looking for workers, and announced the launch of a new “Pick for Britain” website, Eustice said.

“We believe that those who are furloughed may be getting to the point where they’d want to lend a hand and play their part, they may be wanting to get out, they may be wanting to supplement their income with an additional job,” he said.

Hong Kong's Tiananmen Square vigil in doubt after coronavirus restrictions extended

People gather during the annual Tiananmen Square vigil at Hong Kong's Victoria Park in 2019.

The Hong Kong government announced it would extend a ban on public gatherings – established as part of coronavirus distancing measures – an extra two weeks through June 4, the day Hong Kong pro-democracy advocates mark the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

In light of concerns of experts, it is not the time for Hong Kong to relax the measures, Chan added.

Hong Kong recently reported its first community transmission cases in weeks, calling into question the containment of the virus.

Organizers of the annual Tiananmen Square massacre vigil held in Hong Kong’s Victoria Park could still apply for permits to hold the event, but those are unlikely to be approved by the government on grounds of public health.

Hong Kong is the only place on Chinese soil where major mass commemorations are held for the event.

Model suggests that cough could go further than 6 feet, scientists say

A sign in New York's Central Park encourages people keep a distance of at least six feet apart.

The little particles of mucus and saliva that people eject when they cough or sneeze could travel further than six feet – in theory at least, researchers reported Tuesday.

A computer model — not a real-life experiment — shows that a light breeze could carry some droplets as far as 18 feet.

It’s something to consider when setting up social distancing recommendations, said Dimitris Drikakis, an engineering professor at the University of Nicosia in Cyprus, and Talib Dbouk, his colleague.

“The work is based on modeling. We have not done experiments with people,” Drikakis told CNN.

Writing in the journal Physics of Fluids, Drikakis and Dbouk said their computer models suggested that current recommendations that people keep six feet apart might not provide safety under certain outdoor conditions.

“At a mild human cough in the air at 20 degrees C (68 degrees F) and 50% relative humidity, we found that human saliva-disease-carrier droplets may travel up to unexpected considerable distances depending on the wind speed,” Drikakis said in an email.

“Our findings imply that depending on the environmental conditions, the two meters social distance may not be sufficient.”

The coronavirus is carried in the small particles ejected when people cough, sneeze or talk. What’s not known is how much virus is carried in each particle, how much it takes to infect a person, and how well the virus survives in a particle that has traveled a longer distance and broken up as it goes.

“It is not yet known the amount of dosage required to affect a person,” Drikakis said. “The dosage would vary from one person to another. Further research and closer interaction between bio-medicine and engineering fluid physics are necessary to understand the conditions under which patients are being infected.”

6 English football players and staff test positive for coronavirus

Six English Premier League players and members of club staff have tested positive for Covid-19 in the league’s latest round of testing, the Premier League said in a statement Tuesday. 

At least 748 tests were performed on Premier League players and club staff. There were six positive results across three clubs, according to the statement.

Those who tested positive will self-isolate for a period of seven days. The Premier League did not provide any specific details as to clubs or individuals, citing legal and operational requirements.

About the sport: All 20 English Premier League clubs on Monday voted unanimously to return to small-group training beginning from today.

The protocol is widely reported to include training in groups of no more than five players, getting changed at home and driving to the training ground on their own.

The Premier League told CNN the hypothetical start date for the resumption of play is June 12 is the earliest.

More than 42,000 people have died from Covid-19 in the UK

Coffins are seen in the mortuary at Emslie S. Collier and Son Funeral Directors in Montrose, east Scotland on Monday, May 4.

More than 42,000 people have died from coronavirus in the United Kingdom, according to data released by England’s office of national statistics and numbers published by NHS England.

According to the provisional data, at least 42,402 people have died from the disease since the outbreak started in the United Kingdom.

The latest numbers from England’s Office of National Statistics, comprising data collected by institutions across the four UK nations, indicate that there were 41,020 deaths where Covid-19 was mentioned in the death certificate up until May 8. 

In addition to these deaths, between May 8 and May 18 inclusive, 1,382 people died after testing positive for Covid-19 in hospitals in England.

The number is considerably higher than that reported by the UK Government’s Department of Health and Social Care of 34,796.

More about these figures: The total people figure number does not include deaths from the novel coronavirus in hospitals in Northern Ireland, Scotland or Wales between May 2 and May 11, nor does it include people who may have died from COVID-19 in care homes during that same period, in any of the four UK nations. 

When added to deaths in hospitals in England between May 8 and May 18 inclusive, which currently stand at 1,382, the total stands at 42,402 deaths. The number of Covid-19 deaths in hospitals in England between May 14 and May 18 is still provisional.

Data from the ONS includes all deaths where Covid-19 is mentioned in the death certificate and differs from the numbers published by the Department of Health and Social Care, which include only deaths occurring among those who have tested positive for Covid-19.

WHO chief affirms commitment to “transparency, accountability and continuous improvement”

World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus affirmed his commitment to “transparency, accountability and continuous improvement,” as he addressed the 73rd World Health Assembly (WHA).

Speaking on Tuesday at the virtual summit, Tedros said, “WHO’s focus now is fighting the pandemic, with every tool at our disposal.”  

On Monday, Tedros said he would “initiate an independent evaluation” of WHO’s response to the global pandemic. “As always, WHO remains fully committed to transparency, accountability and continuous improvement. We want accountability, more than anyone,” he said. 

“At the end of the day what matters is life - that should be at the center of everything we do and everything we say,” Tedros added.

During the Tuesday speech, Tedros wore an unusually casual short-sleeved blue and teal button-down shirt to honor a Tongan choir of nurses who were supposed to perform at the WHA, before it was moved to a virtual event. 

Covid-19 lockdowns drop global carbon emissions to lowest level in 15 years

People gather on a clear day as they stand on a viewing platform in Tamar Park overlooking Victoria Harbour and the Kowloon skyline in Hong Kong on Tuesday, May 5.

An international study of global carbon emissions found that daily emissions declined 17% between January and early April, compared to average levels in 2019, and could decline anywhere between 4.4% to 8% by the year’s end. Emissions haven’t been this low since 2006. 

The study, which appeared today in the journal Nature Climate Change, centered on 69 countries, all 50 US states and 30 Chinese provinces, which account for 85% of the world population and 97% of all global carbon dioxide emissions.

By the numbers: By the end of April, carbon emissions are estimated to have declined by 1,048 metric tons, according to the researchers – that’s roughly 2,312,649 pounds. 

The decline is largest in China, where the pandemic began, where emissions dropped 533,500-plus pounds. In the US, carbon emissions declined by 456,350-plus pounds. China and the US are the two largest carbon emitters globally.

By the end of the year, emissions will have declined somewhere between 4.4% and 8%, the researchers predict. It’s the most significant decline in over a decade, but it’s the result of forced changes, not the restructuring of global economies and energy.

According to United Nations Environment projections, to keep global temperatures from rising more than 1.5 degrees Celsius, we need to reduce emissions by 7.6% every single year between now and 2030.

Unclear trend: It’s not clear how long or severe the coronavirus pandemic will be, which makes it difficult to predict how emissions will be affected long-term. And, because the changes driving reduced emissions haven’t fundamentally changed the economy or the energy much of the world relies on, the declines are likely to be temporary. Plus, 2020 is still on track to be one of the top five hottest years on record.

Germany says over 20,000 health care workers contracted coronavirus

More than 20,400 health care workers in Germany have contracted coronavirus since the beginning of the outbreak, the country’s center for disease control said Tuesday.

Out of the infected workers, 61 have died and an estimated 19,100 have recovered from it, according to the Robert Koch Institute.

Around 11% of the total coronavirus infections in Germany have been among the group, official data shows.

More than 8,000 people have now died of Covid-19 in Germany as of Tuesday, according to the institute.

Bavaria, Germany’s largest federal state, remains the worst hit area, with 26% of Covid-19 infections in the country and 29% of the overall death tally.

Wuhan officials said they tested more than 1 million people in a week

A medical worker prepares to perform a coronavirus test in Wuhan on Tuesday.

The central Chinese City of Wuhan conducted more than 467,000 coronavirus tests on Monday, authorities said today.

Wuhan started conducting city-wide coronavirus testing on its citizens last week after health officials detected several new locally transmitted cases despite a strict 76-day lockdown that was intended to eliminate Covid-19 from the city where the virus is thought to have first emerged.

Wuhan has now conducted over 1.3 million coronavirus tests since May 12, the city’s Municipal Health Commission said.

The latest numbers: China reported six new cases of novel coronavirus Monday, including three locally transmitted cases, the National Health Commission said Tuesday.

The three locally transmitted cases include two infections in Jilin province, and one infection in Wuhan, Hubei province, authorities said.

In addition, 17 new asymptomatic cases have been reported, it said.

The total number of reported cases in the country is now more than 84,000, according to a Johns Hopkins tally.

Prestigious medical journal rejects Trump's virus report allegation

One of the world’s most prestigious medical journals, the Lancet, has responded to US President Donald Trump’s recent letter to the World Health Organization.

In a letter to WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, threatening to permanently withdraw funding and cancel US membership, Trump also name-checked The Lancet as warning of the virus in early December. In a statement today, the Lancet said it did not publish a report about the new virus in December.

“The Lancet published no report in December, 2019, referring to a virus or outbreak in Wuhan or anywhere else in China,” the statement read.

Trump threatened to pull funding from WHO. Here's how health officials have responded to the letter.

Delegates attend the 73rd World Health Assembly via video conference in Beijing on Monday.

A resolution sponsored by the EU, among others, calling for a global inquiry into the coronavirus pandemic response has been adopted with no objections at the WHO’s World Health Assembly today.

The part of the resolution that had been considered contentious called for “a stepwise process of impartial, independent and comprehensive evaluation” at “the earliest appropriate moment”, with the purpose “to review experience gained and lessons learned from the WHO-coordinated international health response to Covid-19”.

About Trump’s letter to WHO: Meanwhile, President Trump on Monday redoubled his criticism of the WHO, threatening to permanently withdraw funding and cancel US membership even as it deals with a devastating global pandemic.

In a letter to WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Trump said he would permanently halt financial contributions if the WHO does not “commit to major substantive improvements in the next 30 days.” Trump temporarily suspended funding to the organization last month.

The World Health Organization today acknowledged receipt of the letter from Trump.

China called on the US to “stop the blame game” on Tuesday, while the EU said “it is not the time for finger pointing”. Leaders of several countries, including France and Germany, also stressed the importance of the WHO’s work in battling the pandemic during the World Health Assembly meeting.

Germany and neighbors agree to gradually remove border restrictions

German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks to the media during a press conference in Berlin on Monday.

German chancellor Angela Merkel and the central European leaders on Tuesday agreed on gradually reopening border crossings and lifting controls as soon as the coronavirus pandemic allows.

The announcement came after Merkel and the Prime Ministers of the Visegrad nations — Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia — spoke today, according to a statement by the German Chancellor’s spokesperson Steffen Seibert.

The leaders ”had an intensive exchange of views on the respective measures for further containment of the Covid-19 pandemic’,” the statement said, adding that ”they agreed it was in their interest to gradually remove existing border restrictions and controls as soon as the pandemic situation allows.”

In a subsequent bilateral meeting between Merkel and Czech Republic Prime Minister Andrej Babiš, the two leaders confirmed they want to reduce restrictions on people and businesses in border regions as soon as infection rates allow. The two countries share a 817-kilometer (or 506-mile) border.