November 18 coronavirus news | CNN

November 18 coronavirus news

John King 1118
Coronavirus cases on the rise in 94% of states
2:05 • Source: CNN
John King 1118
2:05

What you need to know

  • New York City schools will close tomorrow as coronavirus cases rise in the city. Meanwhile, the US has recorded more than 100,000 daily infections for two weeks straight, prompting more states to announce new restrictions to slow the spread.
  • Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine is 95% effective, the company announced today. Earlier this week, Moderna announced its vaccine is 94.5% effective.
  • Experts are encouraged by early Covid-19 vaccine findings, but warn the world still faces challenging months ahead.

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48 Posts

Coronavirus spreads fast through mink farms, Danish study shows

Mink look out from their cage during a coronavirus outbreak at a farm near Naestved, Denmark, on November 6.

The novel coronavirus appears to have been introduced to Danish mink farms by a single infected person, but once it got into the densely packed animals it spread fast, Danish researchers reported Wednesday.

The virus doesn’t make the animals very sick but can circulate well among them and they can then pass it back to people, the researchers said.

Silent spread: Hammer’s team tested mink and people at three Danish mink farms, as well as the air around the cages and the minks’ feed. They found 95% of the mink at one farm were infected, 66% of the mink at the second farm were infected and 3% of the mink at the third farm were. 

“The infections we describe here occurred with little clinical disease or increase in death, making it difficult to detect the spread of infection; thus, mink farms could represent a serious, unrecognized animal reservoir for SARS-CoV-2,” they wrote.

“There is no evidence for spread of the virus outside of farm buildings, either in Denmark or in the Netherlands except by infected persons. However, there appears to be some risk of virus transmission to persons working with infected mink as well as for their contacts and thus, indirectly, for the public.” 

Coronavirus outbreaks on mink farms have caused an uproar in Denmark, where farming the animals for their fur is big business. The government ordered a cull of all 15 million mink on 1,500 farms, then rolled back the order.

West Virginia reports new high in hospitalizations

West Virginia on Wednesday reported its highest number of hospitalizations and Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admission rates since the pandemic began, the state’s health department dashboard shows.

There were 429 coronavirus patients hospitalized in the state as of Tuesday, including 126 in ICU wards.

The state reported 953 new Covid-19 cases on Wednesday, bringing its total to 36,277. It also reported 14 new coronavirus-related fatalities, bringing the death toll to 612.

Currently, the state has 11,172 active cases, accounting for 31% of the total caseload. Over the past seven days, 6,097 cases have been reported, according to the health department.

Note: These numbers were released by the state’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.

A coronavirus test is not a "free pass" this Thanksgiving, says White House testing czar

Adm. Brett Giroir listens during a hearing of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee n Washington on September 16.

A coronavirus test is not a “free pass” this Thanksgiving, Adm. Brett Giroir, the White House’s coronavirus testing czar, said Wednesday.

Giroir offered some practical advice for those who do decide to gather this Thanksgiving.

“Try to keep the gatherings within your household or a couple of households that adhere to the rules. Try to have good ventilation,” he said. “Yes, you may need to mask indoors. That’s very, very important.” 

Japan on "maximum alert" as daily Covid-19 cases surge to highest peak

Yoshihide Suga speaks during a debate ahead of the Liberal Democratic Party's (LDP) leadership election on September 12, in Tokyo.

Japan’s Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga said the country is on “maximum alert” as it reported its highest number of new Covid-19 cases in a single day since the pandemic began.

The country’s Health Ministry recorded 2,191 new coronavirus cases and nine new deaths for Wednesday.

Suga asked the public to wear masks, even at the dinner table, and to abide by prevention measures. He also told ministers to increase testing in high-risk facilities.

Tokyo recorded 493 new cases for Wednesday, the highest since the last peak of 472 cases on Aug. 27. Japan’s capital city has now reported a total of 35,723 cases.

Japan’s total caseload stands at 123,578, with 1,935 deaths.

The US may see a "graded rollout" of vaccines in the coming months, says Fauci

The United States may see a “graded rollout” of vaccines in the coming months, Dr. Anthony Fauci told the USA Today editorial board Wednesday.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which both require two doses, “will be going into people sometime towards the end of December 2020 and into January 2021,” said Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

He said people can expect to have “good degree of immunity” about one week after receiving the second dose.

Fauci said that potentially by late January or February, “some of the other candidates will be available, like the Janssen one or the AstraZeneca one.” The Sanofi and Novavax vaccine candidates may be available “a couple months later,” he added.

Largest prison in Alaska reports Covid-19 outbreak

Inmate transfers at the largest prison in Alaska are suspended as the facility has a rapidly increasing outbreak of Covid-19.

There are 204 confirmed coronavirus cases at the Goose Creek Correctional Center in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley, as of Wednesday evening. The prison has capacity for 1,535 inmates.

Staff at Goose Creek are now required to wear surgical quality face masks rather than cloth masks, according to Gallagher.

“Additionally, DOC continues to test and quarantine all newly remanded inmates, screen all staff prior to every shift, provide face coverings to offenders and staff, maintain a heightened level of cleaning, and treat each housing unit as a family in order to keep inmates ‘bubble’ as small as possible,” she said.

Los Angeles health officials warn of "dangerous" Covid-19 surge

In an aerial view from a drone, cars line up at Dodger Stadium for Covid-19 testing on November 14, in Los Angeles.

Los Angeles County health officials are warning of steep increases in Covid-19 case counts and hospitalizations, and are making plans for even tighter restrictions should the area fail at once again reining in the virus.

Hospitalizations are projected to exceed capacity “without a rapid change in behavior,” she said.

By the numbers: The seven-day case average has doubled in Los Angeles since the beginning of November, according to county supervisor Kathryn Barger, and hospitalizations are following closely behind. The county added 3,944 new cases Wednesday for a total of 348,336.

To mitigate the spread, the county’s public health order has been strengthened, requiring all nonessential businesses to shut down between the hours of 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. local time beginning Friday.

“This is not a curfew or a lockdown, but a precautionary measure,” Barger said.

US surpasses 250,000 reported deaths from Covid-19

There have been at least 250,029 reported deaths from Covid-19 in the US since the pandemic began, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University

There have been at least 11,485,176 total coronavirus cases in the US, university data showed.

Johns Hopkins recorded the first death from Covid-19 on Feb. 29 in Washington state. Two earlier deaths in California were posthumously confirmed to be from Covid-19 later in the spring.

US military reported record high of Covid-19 cases on Tuesday

The US military reported a record high number of Covid-19 cases in one day, with 1,314 new cases on Tuesday, according to a US defense official familiar with the latest statistics from the Defense Department.

There are currently about 25,000 cases in the ranks and another 44,390 service members have recovered from coronavirus, according to the Pentagon. The increase in military cases has been taking place over the last few weeks as cases have also increased in the general population.

A US defense official told CNN that the US military has a positivity rate of 6.8%, compared to a 9.98% positivity rate in the civilian population. The military has claimed since the beginning of the pandemic that it can maintain a lower positivity rate because the military has a younger, healthier population without the co-morbidities. It also can mandate restrictions in a way the civilian world can’t.  

Some context: This comes as several military bases across the country have had to once again tighten health measures to protect the force and military families.

In the Air Force, since Nov. 10, some 10 installations have instituted stronger measures known as Health Protection Condition Level Charlie just one step below the most stringent level.

While commanders can make detailed decisions about their bases, under this Charlie measure, schools, daycare and community activities may be canceled, there will be travel restrictions and more personnel may be ordered to work from home. In addition, family activities may be restricted to homes for a prolonged period of time. 

The impact is being felt at installations across the country and around the world.             

14 college football games called off due to Covid-19 this week

There are now 14 college football games that have been canceled or postponed this week due to Covid-19.

It’s the second straight week college football has lost double-digit games on its schedule. The latest games to be called off are Texas at Kansas and University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV), at Colorado State.

The University of Kansas announced today that Saturday’s game against the University of Texas has been rescheduled to Dec. 12 due to Kansas’ “inability to meet to meet the minimum position requirements,” which were established by the Big 12 conference.

Before the season, the Big 12 conference announced, “football cancellation thresholds,” where the minimum number of players required to play in a game was 53 with other minimum requirements for specific position groups.

The affected position group in the Kansas program has a combination of injuries and contact tracing. 

The school said in a statement that since Nov. 8, the team has performed 825 Covid-19 tests, with five returning positive. 

The Jayhawks next scheduled game is on Nov. 28 against Texas Christian University in Lawrence, Kansas.

The Mountain West Conference (MWC) also announced on Wednesday that UNLV will not travel to Colorado State for Saturday’s game due to positive cases within the UNLV program.

“Over the past six weeks, more than 2,600 tests have been administered to UNLV football student-athletes, coaches, and staff with a positivity rate of less than 0.6 percent,” UNLV director of athletics Desiree Reed-Francois said. “Unfortunately, with a surge in cases in the Las Vegas community and despite the efforts of our student-athletes, coaches, and staff to adhere to health and safety protocols, the decision to not play this weekend is in the best health and safety interests of all involved.”

The 14 college football games affected this week so far are:

  • Ohio at Miami University (Ohio)— Canceled
  • University of Alabama at Birmingham at University of Texas at El Paso – Canceled
  • Ole Miss at No. 5 Texas A&M — Postponed
  • Georgia Tech at No. 12 Miami — Postponed
  • Charlotte at No. 15 Marshall — Postponed
  • Arizona State at Colorado — Canceled
  • University of Louisiana Monroe at Louisiana Tech — Canceled
  • Wake Forest at Duke — Postponed
  • Navy at South Florida — Postponed
  • Houston at Southern Methodist University — Postponed
  • Central Arkansas at Louisiana-Lafayette — Canceled
  • Utah State at Wyoming — Canceled
  • Texas at Kansas — Postponed
  • UNLV at Colorado State — Postponed

2 more House members say they've tested positive for Covid-19

Rep. Dan Newhouse and Rep. Doug Lamborn.

Two more House members have tested positive for Covid-19, bringing CNN’s tally of lawmakers who have been Covid-19 positive to 34. 

So far, 26 House members and eight senators have tested positive for the virus.

The latest are Republican Reps. Doug Lamborn of Colorado, and Dan Newhouse of Washington state.

New York City mayor will announce new Covid-19 public school reopening standards later this week

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio as he welcomed elementary school students back to the city's public schools for in-person learning on September 29, 2020 in New York City. 

New Covid-19 standards for reopening New York City public schools will be announced later this week, but will have a heavy emphasis on testing, Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

In terms of when schools will reopen, de Blasio said, “the week after Thanksgiving is the earliest but I’m not yet able to say that will be then or a point after but we have real work to do, which I think we can do quickly, to finish those standards and then put together the action plan to make them come to pass.”

De Blasio added: “Again, heavy emphasis on testing, we are going to be deploying a lot of our testing capacity toward the schools under this new model, even much more than we’ve done previously.”

Stocks close lower as coronavirus infections rise

A person walks past the New York Stock Exchange at Wall Street on November 16, 2020.

US stocks closed lower on Wednesday after spending most of the session in the red.

Pfizer’s announcement that its Covid-19 vaccine is 95% effective did little to soothe the market, as the pandemic continues to rage on, and infection numbers are on the rise.

Here’s how the market closed today:

  • The Dow finished 1.2%, or 345 points, lower.
  • The S&P 500 also fell 1.2%.
  • The Nasdaq Composite closed down 0.8%.

New York governor says he’d prefer to "keep schools open" but understands decision to close

New York state Gov. Andrew Cuomo at a news conference in September.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo reacted to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio closing the city’s schools on a radio interview on WAMC, saying the mayor was “within his prerogative” but that he would have preferred to keep schools open. 

On one hand, he says de Blasio was “totally within his prerogative” for closing the schools because he set a 3% Covid-19 city positivity rate as a threshold for closing schools.

Cuomo emphasized that he doesn’t feel de Blasio closing schools was a mistake. But he says his preference would have been to keep schools open. 

“Schools right now are safer than kids on the street in a high-infection community,” Cuomo said. “The schools often have a lower infection rate than the surrounding community. So, my preference is always to keep the schools open, unless there was a high infection rate – which there’s not.”

Cuomo said at the time de Blasio set the 3% infection rate as a threshold for closing schools, it seemed “reasonable.” But now, he advises New York City to re-confer with parents and adjust the threshold. 

“When he set the 3 (percent positivity rate threshold) it sounded fine,” Cuomo said. “In retrospect, it turned out that it was low.”

Closure of New York City schools is a setback but the system will overcome, education official says

The closure of New York City public schools is a setback, but one the system will overcome, Chancellor of New York City Department of Education Richard Carranza announce Wednesday afternoon.

The school system, however, has done a remarkable job at keeping the school positivity rate at .19%, Carranza added, noting this is a temporary closure.

School is still in session, he said, students are just pivoting to remote instruction.

“We feel a deep sense of commitment to making sure we can open for in-person learning again, as soon as it is physically safe to do so,” Carranza said.

NYC schools head: We have reached the point "that requires all students to transition to remote learning"

New York City School Chancellor Richard Carranza sent a letter to families and students that confirms all school buildings will be closed beginning tomorrow, and students will transition to remote learning. 

CNN has obtained a copy of the letter.

Regarding free meals for students and families, the chancellor’s letter indicated all families and students can continue to go to any school building between 9 a.m. and noon ET to pick up three free grab-and-go meals. 

“We have been the only major school district in the nation to reopen our buildings. The benefit to hundreds of thousands of students is incredible, as school communities have reconnected in person for learning, growing, and supporting one another,” Carranza added.

New York City public schools will close tomorrow as coronavirus cases rise

An empty hallway is seen at Yung Wing School P.S. 124 on March 17 in New York City.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Wednesday that schools will be closed tomorrow.

Here is the tweet he sent moments ago:

Connecticut governor fears new Covid-19 wave as students return for Thanksgiving

Gov. Ned Lamont speaks to reporters on August 7 in Westport, Connecticut.

Connecticut’s Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont on Wednesday urged caution, saying he is very concerned students returning from college for Thanksgiving might usher a new wave of coronavirus into his state.

“I’ll tell you what I’m really nervous about… is Thanksgiving,” Lamont told CNN’s John King this afternoon. “We’re going to have tens of thousands of kids coming back to our region from colleges in states where they have an infection rate… that could be 10 times ours.” 

Lamont urged anyone returning to the Constitution State for the holidays to take proper precautions both before boarding flights and once they arrive. 

“Please test and quarantine before you get on that plane and test again when you get here so you keep your families safe and communities safe,” he said. 

Lamont, who is is currently directing his state’s Covid-19 response from quarantine after one of his top aide tested positive for the virus, added he believes another wave of the virus might be inevitable, regardless of the precautions they take. 

Watch the moment:

eeb85fce-bd89-4cea-9c4a-9a2376d882cd.mp4
1:19 • Source: cnn
1:19 • cnn

Health secretary says US will have 40 million doses of Covid-19 vaccine available by end of December

The United States plans to have about 40 million doses of Covid-19 vaccine available to distribute by the end of the year, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said during a briefing on Wednesday.

The companies Pfizer and Moderna this week both announced that their vaccine candidates were about 95% effective in Phase 3 trials. Pfizer on Wednesday said final Phase 3 data confirmed the efficacy and it’s planning to apply for emergency use authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration on Friday.

The FDA must authorize any vaccine, but doses have already been manufactured in the hope that one or more would get authorization.

“By the end of December, we expect to have about 40 million doses of these two vaccines available for distribution pending FDA authorization — enough to vaccinate about 20 million of our most vulnerable Americans,” Azar said. “And production of course would continue to ramp up after that.”

Second straight week of double-digit college football games called off due to Covid-19

There are now 10 college football games that have had to be postponed or canceled this week due to Covid-19. It’s the second straight week college football has lost double-digit games to its schedule.

On Wednesday, the American Athletic Conference (AAC) announced that Saturday’s games featuring Houston at Southern Methodist University (SMU) and Navy at University of South Florida (USF) have been postponed due to Covid-19.

In a statement Wednesday, USF vice president of athletics Michael Kelly said, “Our student-athletes are continuing to work hard with energy and enthusiasm and look forward to the opportunity to compete and get better each week.”

According to AAC officials, the conference will work with all four schools involved on potential dates to reschedule the games.

Here are the other games affected so far this week:

  • Ohio at Miami (Ohio) — Canceled
  • UAB at UTEP – Canceled
  • Ohio Ole Miss at No. 5 Texas A&M — Postponed
  • Georgia Tech at No. 12 Miami — Postponed
  • Charlotte at No. 15 Marshall — Postponed
  • Arizona State at Colorado — Canceled
  • UL Monroe at Louisiana Tech — Canceled
  • Wake Forest at Duke - Postponed

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