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Ohio State pauses all voluntary workouts following latest positive coronavirus tests
From CNN's Homero De La Fuente
Ohio Stadium, also known as the Horseshoe, at The Ohio State University.
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The Ohio State Department of Athletics announced today that the school has paused all voluntary workouts, “following the results of its most recent Covid-19 testing of student-athletes.”
The school is not sharing infection data publicly because “it could lead to the identification of specific individuals and compromise their medical privacy,” the university’s athletics department said in its statement.
The pause affects men’s and women’s basketball, field hockey, football, men’s and women’s soccer and women’s volleyball.
Earlier Wednesday, the University of North Carolina suspended its football program’s voluntary workout program after 37 players and staff tested positive for Covid-19.
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Coronavirus may have arrived in the US from China, but most of the spread was domestic, model suggests
From CNN’s Naomi Thomas
Coronavirus was probably spreading widely across the US in February, new modeling data suggests, and it only took a few imported cases from other countries to set off rapid spread inside the borders.
While direct imports from China and other countries may have been responsible for the early introduction of Covid-19 to the US, most spread was state to state, researchers led by a team at Northeastern University in Boston reported.
“We estimate widespread community transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in February, 2020,” a team led by Northeastern’s Laboratory for the Modeling of Biological and Socio-technical Systems wrote on MedRxiv, a pre-print server. Their work has not been peer-reviewed.
The US announced restrictions on travel from China on Jan. 31. The researchers say their modeling study suggests the restrictions came far too late.
“Importations from mainland China may be relevant in seeding the epidemic in January, but then play a small role in the COVID-19 expansion in the US because of the travel restrictions imposed to/from mainland China after January 23, 2020,” they wrote.
The model jibes with evidence from several studies that suggest there were already a significant number of infections in the US by the time the travel restrictions were announced on January 31, the researchers wrote.
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University of Wisconsin reports new Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Kevin Dotson
Bascom Hall and a statue of Abraham Lincoln are seen on the campus of the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
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The University of Wisconsin athletic department has announced that more student-athletes have tested positive for Covid-19 since the school’s initial round of testing a month ago.
Seven Wisconsin student-athletes in total have now tested positive after two initially tested positive last month.
Wisconsin Athletics says it is isolating individuals who have tested positive, and the UW Athletics’ Infection Response Team is monitoring them.
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Fauci defends Pence's optimism on coronavirus, says he's doing "a very good job"
From CNN’s Shelby Lin Erdman
Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, listens during a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing in Washington, DC, on June 30.
Al Drago/Pool/Getty Images
The nation’s leading infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said White House coronavirus task force leader Vice President Mike Pence is doing “a very good job.”
Fauci and task force coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx regularly sound the alarm about the pandemic at briefings or in interviews while Pence has touted what a good job the Trump administration is doing.
“In fairness to the vice president, the vice president understands that but he is trying in his role as the vice president to really, in a certain sense, also point out some of the things that are going well,” Fauci told the Wall Street Journal in a podcast Wednesday.
“I look at the data, I analyze the data and I give my best opinion based on the evidence,” Fauci said.
He said there are many facets to the task force discussions on the pandemic and that he and his colleagues are primarily focused on public health. Pence, he said, has other concerns.
“There’s the issue and the need, from an economic standpoint, to get open. So all of that goes into the mix and then you see the kind of recommendations that go out but you know as a member of the task force, I’m telling you that we have a serious situation that we really do need to address.”
Fauci said the public health and economic policies need to work in tandem. Other health experts worry that President Trump has pushed his economic priorities at the expense of American lives. So far more than 132,000 Americans have died from Covid-19.
“We shouldn’t think of it as one against the other because once you start thinking there’s public health and there’s the economy opening it looks like they’re opposing forces,” Fauci said.
“So, what we’re trying to do is to get the public health message, if heard and implemented, be actually a gateway to facilitate opening and an easier way instead of there’s guys are on this side and those guys and ladies are on the other side.”
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Atlanta mayor says she is signing an order to mandate masks in the city
From CNN's Pierre Meilhan
Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms.
Source: CNN
Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said she will be signing an order on Wednesday to mandate masks in her city to try to slow down the number of coronavirus infections.
“We’ve seen other cities in Georgia mandate masks. And we’ve decided to give it a moment just to see what the governor and the state’s response would be to these other cities mandating masks. I am signing an order today to do the same in Atlanta,” Bottoms told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer in The Situation Room.
She said Covid-19 numbers are going “through the roof” and local hospitals are filling up very quickly.
“All of the experts that I’m hearing from are saying that to help slow the spread we need to mandate masks. And that is what we’re going to do in Atlanta and hopefully it will help some,” Bottoms said.
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Pomona College will not welcome back students in the fall
From CNN's Elizabeth Hartfield
Pomona College, located in Los Angeles County, California, will not be welcoming back students for the fall semester and will continue remote learning, the president of the college announced in a letter Wednesday.
The college said that the school would be reaching out to international students in the coming days with updates on how they planned to address the guidance issued by Immigration and Customs Enforcement earlier this week.
In a news release Monday, ICE said that students who fall under certain visas “may not take a full online course load and remain in the United States,” adding, “The U.S. Department of State will not issue visas to students enrolled in schools and/or programs that are fully online for the fall semester nor will U.S. Customs and Border Protection permit these students to enter the United States.”
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Ivy League postpones all fall sports
From CNN's Homero De La Fuente
In this November 17, 2018 file photo, Yale quarterback Griffin O'Connor, left, tries to elude Harvard linebacker Cameron Kline (52) while scrambling for a gain during the first half of an NCAA college football game at Fenway Park in Boston.
Charles Krupa/AP
The Ivy League Council of Presidents announced on Wednesday the conference will be postponing all fall sports for the 2020 season due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The Ivy League Council of Presidents becomes the first Division I conference to postpone its fall sports, including college football and basketball until January 1. Division II’s Morehouse and other Division III schools have canceled their seasons completely.
In March, the conference faced criticism for being the first to cancel its men and women’s basketball conference tournaments because of the concerns of Covid-19, but other major conferences shortly followed suit.
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Texas reports highest number of Covid-19 deaths in a single day
From CNN's Ashley Killough and Raja Razek
A man gets tested for coronavirus at a Covid-19 testing center on July 7 in Austin, Texas.
Sergio Flores/Getty Images
Texas reported 98 Covid-19-related deaths on Wednesday, the highest single-day increase in coronavirus fatalities.
The total number of Covid-19 deaths in the state now stands at 2,813.
The state also hit a 15% Covid-19 positivity rate, a record high.
Texas also recorded 9,979 new coronavirus cases — the second highest number on record for the state. The total number of Covid-19 cases in the state is 220,564.
To note: These numbers were released by the Texas Health and Human Services, and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.
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Brazil is not removing employees who had contact with Bolsonaro from the office
From CNN's Rodrigo Pedroso
The Brazilian government said it will not remove employees who recently had contact with President Jair Bolsonaro from the office after he tested positive for Covid-19.
Brazil’s General Secretary of the Republic released an official statement saying, “There is no medical protocol, either from the Ministry of Health or the WHO, that recommends isolation measures by simple contact with positive cases.”
The government offered guidance to public employees, telling them “to seek medical assistance when they experience symptoms related to Covid-19, to assess the need for testing.”
If someone is suspected to have symptoms, the government said, “The employees are advised to stay at home until the exams results.”
More on this: According to the World Health Organization (WHO), an infected person can start transmitting the virus in the six days before the onset of symptoms. WHO recommends that a person who has had close contact with an infected person should spend 14 days in social isolation and away from the workplace.
Bolsonaro announced Tuesday that he tested positive for Covid-19 after having a reported fever the day before.
The Brazilian president participated in his normal agenda over the past week, holding meetings with businessmen, politicians and public authorities.But after announcing his diagnosis Tuesday in person in front of media, Bolsonaro has worked via video conferences, according to the president’s press office.
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Study finds a wide variety of symptoms in kids with coronavirus
From CNN's Lauren Mascarenhas
Coronavirus causes a wide variety of symptoms in children, and targeted testing of kids may miss cases, a study published in an American Academy of Pediatrics journal finds.
Dr. Rabia Agha and colleagues from Maimonides Children’s General Hospital in Brooklyn studied 22 children with coronavirus who were admitted to the hospital over four weeks between March and April, when local transmission was widespread.
They found that most of the patients did not have classic coronavirus symptoms, in contrast to what is seen in adults and some pediatric reports from China.
The patients had a wide variety of symptoms and circumstances. Almost half of the 22 patients were less than a year old. Fifteen patients had a fever. Nine had respiratory symptoms. Two had seizures. Sixteen had no known contact with a Covid-19 patient, and two were entirely asymptomatic. None of the patients in the study died.
The researchers initially followed guidelines from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only testing patients with fever, cough and shortness of breath, those who had traveled to high risk countries and those who had close contact with a confirmed coronavirus case. As the rate of infections increased, they started testing all admitted patients, regardless of their symptoms.
Of the four patients who required mechanical ventilation, only one did not have an underlying health condition – an otherwise healthy child who suffered a cardiac arrest. Three of the patients on ventilators qualified for compassionate use of the antiviral drug remdesivir and were eventually taken off the ventilators.
Seven patients who were hospitalized for non-Covid symptoms, including bacterial infections, appendicitis and inflamed muscles, tested positive for the virus. The researchers say it is unclear how large a role coronavirus played in their illness.
The youngest patient in the study, who was 11 days old with a healthy mother, was likely infected by asymptomatic family members at home.
The Maimonides team said infection rates at a particular time and region, rather than confirmed contact alone, should drive testing strategies, noting that 41% of the patients they studied would have been overlooked because they did not meet the then-recommended coronavirus testing criteria.
“Testing of all hospitalized patients will not only identify cases early in the course of their admission process, but will also help prevent inadvertent exposure of other patients and health care workers, assist in cohorting infected patients and aid in conservation of personal protective equipment.”
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37 football players and staff at University of North Carolina test positive for Covid-19
From CNN's David Close
The University of North Carolina has suspended the football program’s voluntary workout program after 37 players and staff tested positive for Covid-19.
The Orange County Health Department in North Carolina determined the number of results to be a cluster forcing the Tar Heels to halt activities. The school says it administered 429 tests to players, coaches and staff with roughly 12% returning positive for coronavirus.
The university did not disclose the severity of symptoms of the 37 people who contracted the virus.
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Website to volunteer for Covid-19 vaccine trials in US is now live
From CNN's Elizabeth Cohen
A new website that allows people to volunteer to take part in Covid-19 vaccine clinical trials in the US is now live.
The website – coronaviruspreventionnetwork.org – will handle registration for the four large vaccine studies expected to start this summer and fall, and any others that follow.
The US Department of Health and Human Services announced the website Wednesday, along with the appointment of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle as the coordinating center for vaccine clinical trials run by the Covid-19 Prevention Network, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health.
On the new website, anyone interested in joining a vaccine study can fill out a quick questionnaire. After registering, your information will be sent to the study site closest to you.
Several of the questions are designed to assess how likely you are to become infected and sick with Covid-19, including your race, what kind of work you do, and how many people you come into contact with on a daily basis. Based on those answers, you might be rejected.
People who don’t get out much, and who wear a mask when they do leave home would not make the best study subjects. That’s because the point of the study is to see if the vaccine protects people from getting sick with Covid-19. If people who mostly stay home get vaccinated, and they don’t get sick with Covid-19, it’s hard to know if the vaccine protected them or if their lifestyle kept them away from the virus in the first place.
Some context: It’s unclear exactly how many volunteers will be needed for all the vaccine trials.
In a June interview, National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins told CNN each trial would have around 30,000 volunteers, but a statement Wednesday from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center said there will be 10,000 to 30,000 volunteers per trial.
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Brazil surpasses 1.7 million coronavirus cases
From CNN's Rodrigo Pedroso
Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro stands with his arms crossed outside the official presidential residence, Alvorada Palace, in Brasilia, Brazil, Wednesday, July 8.
Eraldo Peres/AP
The number of coronavirus cases in Brazil surpassed 1.7 million on Wednesday after the country’s health ministry recorded 44,571 new cases in the past 24 hours.
The country’s total number of confirmed cases is 1,713,160, according to the Brazil’s health ministry.
The ministry also reported 1,223 new Covid-19 fatalities, bringing the nationwide death toll to 67,964.
This comes after Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro announced Tuesday he tested positive for the virus, maintaining his less serious approach to the pandemic by taking his mask off during the news conference and telling young people, “if you are affected by the virus, rest assured that, for you, the possibility of something more serious is close to zero.”
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Covid-19 rates are rising in Los Angeles County
From CNN's Cheri Mossburg and Jenn Selva
Coronavirus cases, infection rates, and hospitalizations are rising in Los Angeles County, Health Director Barbara Ferrer said today.
The average daily case count is up a staggering 84% in the past month, going from 1,300 in the beginning of June to 2,400 today.
“Our cases are rising, the rate of infection is increasing, and the number of hospitalizations is up,” she added.
Even a small increase in the fatality rate is worrisome, Ferrer said, as deaths tend to lag behind case increases.
Additionally, the intensive care unit at a Southern California hospital has reached full capacity after receiving an influx of coronavirus patients, prompting the medical facility to open a surge space for additional room.
“There is a limit to how much we can serve, and we can’t continue on the path we are on right now,” Dr. John Fankhauser, CEO at Ventura County Medical Center, said today, adding that the ICU at the facility is now “full.”
There are currently 71 coronavirus patients hospitalized in the county’s eight hospitals, and 31 are currently in ICUs, Ventura County Health Director Rigo Vargas said.
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CDC guidelines are the minimum of what should be done to reopen schools, says health expert
From CNN's Andrea Kane
Public health expert Dr. Ashish Jha.
Source: CNN
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for reopening schools are the minimum of what the country should be doing to make sure that schools can reopen and stay open, public health expert Dr. Ashish Jha told CNN today.
Jha added that the spread of Covid-19 in the community must be kept under control for schools to open safely – something that is not happening in multiple hotspots around the country.
“We, in those hotspots, can’t afford to have indoor gatherings of 10 or more,” Jha said.
Jha said it is “cavalier” to say it would be safe to open schools because the virus does not make children sick as often as it does adults. Kids can and do get sick, and kids can spread the virus to adults, Jha noted.
Jha also disputed remarks made by Vice President Mike Pence and Coronavirus Task Force Response Coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx, who said they are seeing encouraging trends in hotspots like Texas, Arizona and Florida.
Jha said he sees the numbers as going up, not down.
“I’m looking at the same data that they are, and I’m not seeing it. I wish they, I hope that they’re right,” he said. “But positivity rates in my mind are continuing to go up in Arizona and Texas and Florida. Cases are going up, hospitalizations are going up, and now I think we have very clear evidence that death rates are starting to go up in these in these places as well.”
Across the country: Jha said national coronavirus infection numbers do not give a complete view.
He said while infection rates are going down in some places, like New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts, they are spiking in other parts of the country, such as Texas, Arizona, Florida, South Carolina, Mississippi and Nevada.
“If you put both of them together in the same picture, it looks flat,” he said.
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White House says Trump and CDC are "very much" on the same page, despite tweets
From CNN's Allie Malloy
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany.
Win McNamee/Getty Images
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins that President Trump and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are “very much” on the same page — despite Trump tweeting: “I disagree with the CDC.”
“I would note that the CDC is very much on the same page as the President — which is why you heard the CDC director today underscore these are not prescriptive, these are not requirements and that there will be supplemental guidelines. So they’re on the same page,” McEnany said Wednesday.
Trump tweeted seven hours earlier: “I disagree with @CDCgov on their very tough & expensive guidelines for opening schools. While they want them open, they are asking school to do very impractical things. I will be meeting with them!!!”
Collins also asked McEnany why the President won’t attend task force meetings so he can talk about guidelines and other issues.
“(Trump) is routinely briefed about the coronavirus each and every day that relevant information is brought to him on the big decisions and then he moves forward in the way that’s best for our country,” McEnany responded.
CNN has reported that Trump has not attended a coronavirus task force meeting since April.
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New Orleans issues stricter guidelines for bars and restaurants following increase in Covid-19 cases
From CNN's Kay Jones
A waitress takes an order during lunch at Royal House Oyster Bar on May 22, in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Sean Gardner/Getty Images
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell announced new restrictions on bars and restaurants in the city as cases of Covid-19 steadily increase across the city.
Cantrell said during a news conference today that bars and restaurants will be limited to 25 patrons in total inside and that no bar seating will be allowed.
She also said masks will be required at all times, other than when patrons are eating and drinking.
The new restrictions go into effect at 6 a.m. on July 11.
Videos taken on Bourbon Street last weekend showed it crowded with people, many of whom did not have masks on.
More context: There were 81 new cases reported in Orleans Parish on Wednesday for a total of 8,287 cases, according to the state’s Department of Health.
The city has a 10.03% positivity rate of tests conducted to date.
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Los Angeles health director hopes schools can reopen in August
From CNN's Cheri Mossburg
Los Angeles County expects to issue guidance on reopening schools within the week, according to Health Director Barbara Ferrer.
Ferrer said she remains hopeful that cases stabilize by the end of July so districts can resume classes in mid-August.
The county plans on reopening schools once the data shows it is safe to do so, she said.
“We would never open any other sectors without looking at our data. You absolutely would not want to open a sector when you thought that the result of reopening would be an explosion of outbreaks within that sector,” Ferrer said.
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Rhode Island governor calls Trump's remarks on reopening schools "dishonest and reckless"
From CNN's Lauren del Valle
Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo sits during a news conference Monday, June 22, in Providence.
David Goldman/AP
Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo announced 41 new cases and two deaths related to Covid-19 Wednesday while denouncing President Trump’s remarks about reopening schools.
Asked about Trump’s comments threatening to fine states that don’t reopen schools, Raimondo said, “I just, I think it’s irresponsible, dishonest and reckless.”
The governor said $50 million has been allocated to assist school districts in taking necessary precautions due to Covid-19.
About the state’s reopening: Rhode Island beaches were crowded over the July 4 holiday, but no beach parking lots were ever at capacity, according to Raimondo. State officials handed out masks at beach entry points and asked beachgoers to disperse in the event of large groups congregating, she said.
As food and drink establishments have reopened in Rhode Island, state officials have found 10% are not in compliance with social distancing advisories and allow too much crowding.
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26 Mississippi legislators have tested positive for Covid-19, officials say
From CNN's James Froio and Jamiel Lynch
Mississippi legislators, staff and Capitol employees take advantage of a drive-thru Covid-19 testing center on the Capitol grounds in Jackson, Miss., on Monday, July 6.
Rogelio V. Solis/AP
Mississippi Health Department Dr. Thomas Dobbs said the state is continuing to work on an outbreak that resulted in several legislators testing positive for coronavirus.
More on this: Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves has tested negative for Covid-19, his office announced on Tuesday, while the Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann and State House Speaker Philip Gunn have both tested positive.