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In just 4 months, 5.4 million fired U.S. employees lost their insurance. By comparison, 3.9 million lost their insurance one year of the Great Recession. (New York Times)
At 8:00 a.m.EDT on Tuesday, the unofficial U.S. count. It stood at 3,364,547 instances with 135,615 deaths, an increase of 59,605 instances and 1,410 deaths since yesterday. This is the number of deaths in a day since the end of May.
Latin America overtode the United States and Canada in COVID-19 deaths for the first time since the start of the pandemic. (Reuters)
The White House is stepping up its crusade to discredit Anthony Fauci, MD. (Endpoints News)
California Governor Gavin Newsom canceled plans to reopen the state; Maximum domestic operations, adding cinemas and bars, will close again.
The Texas GoP Convention, to be held in Houston, has been brought online as local hospitals face a “disastrous” situation. (Dallas Morning News, MSNBC)
An Amnesty International report estimates that 3,000 fitness staff have been lost in the pandemic, a “great understatement.”
More than two-thirds of parents surveyed do not need to send their children to school in person, and nine out of 10 black Americans are at risk, according to the Axios-Ipsos Coronavirus Index.
Providers are already starting to see symptoms of the next physical attention crisis: delay in non-COVID-related care. (Reuters)
COVID-19 test reports are loaded with older technologies, such as fax machines, and, like the facets of the physical care system, tons of paperwork. (New York Times)
Quest Diagnostics reported a developing call for testing and delays in results.
The Trump administration would propose that governors call the National Guard for hospitals to gather knowledge about COVID-19 patients and supplies. (The Washington Mail)
Health professionals say an internal report on new York’s COVID-19 reaction in retirement homes minimizes that of the state’s fitness department. (AP News)
Florida’s Walt Disney World reopened this week (despite record levels of new instances in the state), but Disneyland in Hong Kong will close as instances enter the territory. (CNN)
In England, where pubs have recently reopened, an owner installed an electric fence to keep visitors at the required distance from the bar. (Reuters)
India has approved itolizumab, the monoclonal antibody of Biocon, a T-cell activation inhibitor, for the moderate to severe COVID-19 remedy. (Economic times)
More than 40 new youth instances are connected to a house in Ann Arbor, Michigan, two weeks ago. (AP News)
A fellow in lung medicine and intensive care is trying to deal with the truth by treating COVID-19 patients at the former New York Public Hospital. (The Nation)
And an internal medicine physician provides anecdotal evidence that opposes the collective immunity hypothesis: a patient who was placed COVID-19 twice. (Vox)
In news:
Elizabeth Hlavinka covers clinical news and research articles for MedPage Today. It also produces episodes for the Anamnesis podcast. Follow
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