September 2 coronavirus news | CNN

September 2 coronavirus news

Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks in Wilmington, Del., Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020, about school reopenings. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
Biden on Covid-19 response: Talk about a know-nothing president
2:11 • Source: CNN
Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks in Wilmington, Del., Wednesday, Sept. 2, 2020, about school reopenings. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
2:11

What you need to know

  • The US continues to lead the world in total coronavirus cases with more than 6 million infections.
  • Iowa has the highest rate of coronavirus cases in the US, a White House coronavirus task force report sent to state officials warned.
  • The US will not participate in an international vaccine effort because the initiative is tied to the World Health Organization and China, the White House said.
  • A National Institutes of Health panel says doctors should not treat convalescent plasma as a standard of care for Covid-19 until more studies have been done. 

Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.

75 Posts

Tom Seaver, Hall of Fame pitcher, dies at 75

Hall of Fame pitcher Tom Seaver, a three-time Cy Young Award winner and 12-time all-star, has died at the age of 75, the National Baseball Hall of Fame, citing Seaver’s family, and Major League Baseball said Wednesday.

Seaver died Monday in his sleep of complications of Lewy body dementia and Covid-19, the National Baseball Hall of Fame said.

Seaver, known as “Tom Terrific,” won 311 games and had a 2.86 earned-run average over a 20-year major league career that spanned from 1967-1986.

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FILE - In this March 1968 file photo, New York Mets pitcher Tom Seaver poses for a photo, location not known. Seaver, the galvanizing leader of the Miracle Mets 1969 championship team and a pitcher who personified the rise of expansion teams during an era of radical change for baseball, has died. He was 75. The Hall of Fame said Wednesday night, Sept. 2, 2020, that Seaver died on Aug. 31 from complications of Lewy body dementia and COVID-19. (AP Photo, File)

Related article Tom Seaver, Hall of Fame pitcher, dies at 75

Soccer star Neymar is reportedly one of three PSG players to test positive for Covid-19

Neymar of Paris Saint-Germain is interviewed after the UEFA Champions League quarter final match between Atalanta and PSG at Estadio do Sport Lisboa e Benfica on August 12, in Lisbon, Portugal.

Brazilian soccer star Neymar is one of three Paris Saint-Germain players to have contracted coronavirus, according to multiple reports, including the New York Times which cited people familiar with the matter.

French media said that the 28-year-old, along with Argentine midfielders Angel Di Maria and Leandro Paredes, all tested positive after returning from a vacation in Ibiza, Spain.

Earlier on Wednesday, PSG had confirmed in a news release that three unnamed players tested positive and “have undergone the appropriate health protocols. All players and staff will continue to be tested over the next few days.” 

CNN has reached out to each of the three players’ representatives for comment. The club declined to confirm the identity of the players to CNN.  

Neymar is the world’s most expensive soccer player, having signed for PSG for $263 million in 2017. Ten days ago, the Brazilian was part of the PSG team that lost in the Champions League final.

Neymar, along with the other two players, now faces the prospect of missing the start of the new season, due to begin on September 10. There are strict protocols requiring players that have tested positive for the virus to self-isolate.

Fauci says herd immunity is not a strategy task force is using, despite comments from Trump

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the White House Coronavirus Task Force is not discussing herd immunity as a strategy to control the coronavirus pandemic, even though President Donald Trump frequently mentions it as a means of making the pandemic “go away.”

Herd immunity occurs when enough people are infected or vaccinated in a community that a pathogen stops circulating.

“That’s not a fundamental strategy that we’re using,” Fauci said in an interview Wednesday with MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell. “We’re not there yet.”

“The fundamental strategy that we clearly articulate and go by, through the task force, is to try to prevent as many infections as you possibly can prevent,” he added. “When you get someone who’s infected, you do the identification, isolation and contact tracing and you do the kinds of things to prevent infections.”

Fauci said he didn’t understand what Trump was referring to in his comments about herd immunity.

Mexico reports nearly 5,000 new coronavirus cases

Mexico’s Health Ministry recorded 4,921 new Covid-19 infections on Wednesday, bringing the country’s total number of cases to 610,957. 

The ministry also announced 575 new virus-related fatalities, raising Mexico’s death toll to 65,816.

Mexico trails only Brazil, Peru, and Colombia in terms of the highest number of total coronavirus cases in Latin America, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Economic blow: Addressing the nation on Tuesday, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador discussed the economic downturn resulting from the pandemic.

Compared to the first three months of the year, Mexico’s GDP fell more than 17% in the second quarter of 2020 – and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicts the country’s economy could fall another 10.5% before the year’s end. 

Despite the country having one of the highest death tolls in the world, Obrador said he believes the worst of the pandemic is over for Mexico, in terms of both the economy and public health.

Fauci wants Americans to continue coronavirus mitigation efforts ahead of Labor Day

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, testifies during a House Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis hearing on July 31 in Washington, DC.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, made a “plea” to Americans to continue coronavirus mitigation efforts as Labor Day weekend approaches.

Surges in coronavirus were recorded after Memorial Day weekend and the Fourth of July.

“You can have an enjoyable weekend, but you can do a couple of fundamental things that we talk about all the time,” he said. “Masks, distance, avoiding crowds, outdoors much more than indoors, washing your hands — those types of simple things.” 

Colombia reports more than 9,000 new coronavirus cases

A health worker checks the IV line of a coronavirus patient in the Intensive Care Unit at de La Samaritana University Hospital on August 28 in Bogota, Colombia.

Colombia’s health ministry reported 9,270 new Covid-19 infections on Wednesday for a total of 633,339 cases.  

The health ministry also reported 296 virus-related deaths, bringing Colombia’s total number of fatalities to 20,348.

Some context: Beginning Tuesday, restrictions on air travel, transportation between cities, and non-essential businesses in Colombia were partially lifted.

Bars and restaurants must remain closed to the public until the end of September, with the exception of areas designated for open-air dining. Colombia has reported fewer than 10,000 new daily infections each day in the past week.

In Latin America, Colombia continues to trail only Brazil and Peru in terms of the highest numbers of coronavirus infections in the region, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Actor Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson says he and his family have tested positive for Covid-19

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson tested positive for Covid-19, along with his wife and young children, the actor and former professional wrestler announced Wednesday in an Instagram video.

“I can tell you that this is one of the most challenging and difficult things we have ever had to endure as a family,” Johnson said.

Johnson married singer Lauren Hashian last year. The couple has two daughters, Jasmine and Tiana.

Johnson said they got the virus from “very close family friends” who are “devastated” that they unwittingly infected Johnson’s family. He and his family learned of their condition “two-and-a-half to three weeks ago.”

Johnson said his whole family is now fully in recovery.

“We are on the other side, we are no longer contagious, and we are – thank God – we are healthy,” the actor said.

Covid-19 vaccine "unlikely" by October, despite CDC distribution guidance, NIH director says

The director of the National Institutes for Health, Dr. Francis Collins, said it’s “unlikely” that a coronavirus vaccine will be ready by October. 

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has told public health officials around the United States to prepare to distribute a potential coronavirus vaccine as soon as late October. It’s also provided planning scenarios to help states prepare. 

“This is like the Boy Scout motto, ‘Be Prepared,’” Collins said. “Even if it’s very low likelihood, if everything happened to come together really beautifully and we had an answer by then and we knew we had a vaccine that was safe and effective, wouldn’t you want people to be ready to figure out how to do the distribution? That’s all that CDC is saying.”

“Now keep in mind that the likelihood of that is pretty low,” Collins added.

There are currently three vaccines in the US in phase 3 clinical trials.

Google shares Covid-19 symptoms search data to help in disease research

Google search’s data visualization programs now include a platform to see what coronavirus-related symptoms have been looked up by users around the world, the US, states, and counties.

Google has for years tried to refine algorithms to come up with ways to predict disease activity based on people’s searches for symptoms.

Google search has previously offered data to help researchers studying health impacts from heatwaves, prediction models for the seasonal flu and monitor Lyme disease incidence.

Brazil reports more than 46,000 new coronavirus infections

Brazil’s health ministry reported 46,934 new Covid-19 cases and an additional 1,184 virus-related deaths on Wednesday.

These new figures bring the country’s total number of cases to 3,997,865 and its death toll to 123,780.

Some context: According to figures released by the health ministry during a news conference on Wednesday, the number of deaths from coronavirus reported last week in Brazil reflected an 11% decrease from the week prior. 

Brazil has the second-highest number of coronavirus infections and deaths in the world, behind only the United States, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

University of Missouri has more than 450 students with Covid-19

The University of Missouri has reported that it has 483 active student cases of Covid-19. 

According to the university’s Covid-19 dashboard, a total of 683 student Covid-19 cases, which includes active cases, have been reported since the university began receiving data from the Boone County Department of Public Health and Human Services on Aug. 19.

CDC director says his job is "a real battle" against Covid-19

The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention contrasted his first two years as head of the agency with the last eight months in an interview with Yahoo Finance today.

The last eight to nine months, however, have been like being in the middle of “a real battle,” he said.

“This is one of the most critical, complicated public health crises that this nation has faced in over a century… and to sort of be in the middle of that, it’s a big effort. I mean it’s an honor, but I sure liked the first two years a lot more because I was seeing meaningful progress in making meaningful improvements in a variety of areas,” Redfield said, listing drug use disorder, Ebola outbreaks, the AIDS epidemic, nicotine use in children and maternal mortality.

Redfield recalled the time in late February and early March when he received the first models of the pandemic.

“It was a very difficult time for me because those models — by very smart people in my agency — told me that they anticipated one million to 2.4 million people would die from Covid before October 2020. That was catastrophic, if you start to think about that. I think we all committed to do all we can to try to save human life,” he said.

Los Angeles to allow K-12 in-person learning for students most in need

Los Angeles County health officials announced that K-12 schools can resume limited on-campus teaching for students most in need of in-person learning.

The decision allows for K-12 students with Individualized education plans, those requiring English as a second language instruction and others needing assessments or specialized in-school services to return to campuses for in-person learning starting on Sept. 14.

Under state guidelines, schools located in counties in California’s first reopening tier, where coronavirus risk remains “widespread,” cannot reopen to all students for in-person learning.

However, state rules allow for school officials to apply for a waiver to reopen grades K-6 only to students if the coronavirus daily case rate falls below 200 per 100,000 residents, a metric Los Angeles County now meets.

On Wednesday, health officials said they will not yet be opening the waiver program for elementary schools while it monitors the implementation of the new K-12 in-person learning program for students with specialized needs. 

Kentucky governor urges people to keep gatherings small over Labor Day weekend

Gov. Andy Beshear has urged Kentuckians to keep gatherings small over the upcoming Labor Day weekend, which will also feature the 2020 Kentucky Derby.

On Tuesday, the governor announced that he would not be presenting the trophy at the Kentucky Derby in person this year and would instead be watching the race from home, with a planned video presentation of the trophy. 

“So please, let’s not look back and say something as special as what this weekend can be, turned into the time when this virus got out of control,” Beshear added.

Turkey reports more than 1,500 new Covid-19 cases for the third day in a row

Turkish Health Minister Fahrettin Koca speaks during a press conference held after a meeting of Coronavirus (COVID-19) Scientific Advisory Board in Ankara, Turkey on September 02

Turkey reported 1,596 new Covid-19 cases over the last 24 hours, according to the Turkish health ministry, making this the third day the country has recorded more than 1,500 cases.

The Turkish health minister warned that the capital city of Ankara now leads with more cases than any other province, including the previous hotspot of Istanbul.

Last week, Turkey reintroduced remote and flexible hours for government workers who are densely based out of the capital.

While confirmed cases in Istanbul and the Aegean region have stabilized, Central Anatolia and Southeast Turkey are experiencing surges in cases, Koca said.

Los Angeles allows limited reopening of indoor hair salons and barbershops

Los Angeles County Health Officer Muntu Davis

Los Angeles County health officials on Tuesday announced that hair salons and barber shops are allowed to reopen for limited indoor operations, bringing those businesses in California’s most populous county in line with the state’s sweeping new reopening guidelines.

The announcement allows hair salons and barber shops in the county to immediately reopen with 25% indoor capacity, provided they are in compliance with health protocols to reduce spread of the coronavirus, which includes the use of face masks. 

The daily new coronavirus case rate in Los Angeles County has been reduced to 10 per 100,000, health officials said, placing it in the first tier of the state’s reopening plan, where viral risk is considered “widespread.”

In order for the county to advance to the second tier, where risk is considered “substantial,” it must reduce the infection rate to no more than seven daily new cases per 100,000.

By the numbers: The county reported 51 new coronavirus-related deaths on Wednesday, two of which were between the ages of 18 to 29, and three who were between the ages of 30 and 49, for a total of 5,878 deaths.

Health officials urged the public to be especially careful to avoid crowds and gatherings over the upcoming Labor Day weekend. 

Coronavirus deaths are really coronavirus deaths, CDC affirms

Coronavirus deaths are just that – deaths caused by Covid-19, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Wednesday. 

President Trump has retweeted social media conspiracy theories saying that only a small percentage of the people reported to have died from coronavirus really did die from the virus. They have pointed to death certificates that list other underlying causes.

But that doesn’t mean the patients did not die from coronavirus, Bob Anderson, chief of mortality statistics at CDC, said in a statement.

“The underlying cause of death is the condition that began the chain of events that ultimately led to the person’s death. In 92% of all deaths that mention Covid-19, Covid-19 is listed as the underlying cause of death,” the statement added.

Some context: Other top health officials, including National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci, have said that CDC mortality statistics are accurate, and have explained that just because a death certificate lists other conditions, it doesn’t mean one of those conditions caused a death.

What the other conditions do tell doctors, Anderson said, is that people who have chronic conditions are more likely to suffer severe disease and to die from coronavirus.

Death certificates may also include acute conditions caused by the viral infection, such as pneumonia or respiratory failure.

By the numbers: According to Johns Hopkins University, which uses independent data for its reporting on coronavirus cases and deaths, there have been more than 6 million coronavirus cases in the US and more than 184,000 people have died from it as of late Wednesday afternoon.

CDC data shows that as of Aug. 22, 161,392 death certificates listed coronavirus as a cause of death. CDC data often lags behind Johns Hopkins data. 

CDC documents say states should prepare to distribute Covid-19 vaccines as soon as late October

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has told public health officials around the US to prepare to distribute a potential coronavirus vaccine as soon as late October.

It’s also provided planning scenarios to help states prepare. The documents were first posted by the New York Times and the CDC confirmed to CNN it has sent them to city and state public health officials.

The scenarios offer details about distribution plans around two Covid-19 vaccines when supplies “may be constrained.” The documents prioritize particular populations for the vaccines, including health care professionals, essential workers, long-term care facility residents and staff and national security populations.

Some context: Last week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Robert Redfield asked states to speed through permits for a company the federal government has contracted with to help distribute any eventual coronavirus vaccine.

In a letter, Redfield asked them to waive any requirements that might get in the way of distributing vaccines by Nov. 1 — before Election Day— and weeks, if not months, before most experts expect any vaccine to be fully tested.

The documents do not necessarily mean a vaccine will be available by late October.

Pandemic planning exercises have for years included recommendations that the federal government ready a distribution network while scientists work on a vaccine. The Trump administration has said it’s doing this. Companies developing the vaccines are already ramping up manufacturing so that, in case one or more is found safe and effective in people, it could start going into arms immediately.

The federal government has a contract with medical and pharmaceutical supplies company McKesson to distribute coronavirus vaccines. But it will need permits and licenses from states and territories. 

“The Covid-19 vaccine landscape is evolving and uncertain, and these scenarios may evolve as more information is available,” one of the scenario documents advises.

The US approaches 185,000 coronavirus-related deaths

There are at least 6,094,562 cases of coronavirus in the US and at least 184,914 people have died from the virus, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally.

As of Wednesday afternoon, Johns Hopkins has reported 20,722 new Covid-19 cases and 250 reported deaths. 

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

Illinois seeing a rise in positivity rates in most of its regions, governor says

Gov. JB Pritzker

Nine of the 11 regions Illinois is divided into for the state’s Covid-19 response have seen an increase in positivity rates in the last two weeks, Gov. JB Pritzker said Wednesday.

Speaking during a news briefing, Pritzker said nine regions “have continued to see their positivity rates creep upward, with four seeing more than one full percentage point increase in positivity rate.”

New mitigations rules went into effect today for Region 4 — Metro East. Stricter restrictions had already been implemented in that region.

The new restrictions for the Metro East region include closing all indoor dining and bar service.

Outdoor restaurants and bars, gaming facilities and casinos will have to close by 11 p.m. local time. A new limit on gatherings of 25 individuals or less — or 25% of overall room capacity — has also been implemented, the governor said.

These rules were also implemented last week in Region 7 of Illinois’ coronavirus response plan, which includes Will and Kankakee counties. 

“These are not decisions that I make lightly. Nor would I impose these restrictions if there wasn’t evidence of increasing spread of the virus in these areas,” Pritzker added.

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