CDC Report: Dinner at the Restaurant, Has a Coronavirus

ATLANTA, GA – Adults who test positive for coronavirus are roughly twice as likely to have eaten at one place to eat in the past two weeks, according to a test released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta .

The effects of the was reported through various media both nationally and in Georgia.

The CDC test followed 314 adults with COVID-19 symptoms who were evaluated in ten other states, and about part tested positive for coronavirus.

Participants were then asked how they wore the mask and where they were within 14 days of the onset of symptoms.

About three-quarters of participants said they still wear a mask in public. In addition, everyone reported visiting gyms, hairdressers and meetings at approximately the same pace.

The only difference is that those who tested positive were approximately twice as likely to have reported eating on site to eat within two weeks of the onset of symptoms. Eating is the only activity among indexes that the mask requires. .

The head of a Georgian organization of restoration professionals, which has already been affected by pandemic restrictions, rejected the CDC report.

“I don’t understand why this report was written or published,” Karen Bremer, executive director of the Georgia Restaurant Association, told WAGA-TV in Atlanta.

Bremer noticed the small length of the CDC pattern and characterized them as non-scientific. He also criticized him for unnecessarily punishing the food venue industry.

“Every day I communicate with people, grown men, who cry, who lose their business,” Bremer said. “People who have invested their savings. “

Bremer pleaded with those who did not need to dine on site to follow local restaurants asking for food on the sidewalk or takeaway.

Coronavirus numbers in Georgia

The Georgia Department of Public Health reported that a total of 292905 showed instances of COVID-19 at 2:50 p. m. Saturday. According to the Department of Health’s website, these 2143 new instances have shown in the last 24 hours.

Georgia has also reported 6287 deaths to date after COVID-19, with 40 more deaths recorded in the following 24 hours. In addition, the state reported 26,327 hospitalizations – 164 more than the following day – and 4,818 admissions to the care unit to date.

No data are available in Georgia on the number of patients cured.

Counties in or near the Atlanta metro continue to have the number of positives, with Fulton County still leading the way.

Fulton County: 26108 – 86 new

Gwinnett County: 25726 instances – new

Cobb County: 18433-178 new

DeKalb County: 17477 instances – new

Hall County: 8,341 – 35 new

Counties in or near the Atlanta metro also continue to have the highest number of deaths from COVID-19. The only exception is Dougherty County, Georgia’s first primary outbreak.

Fulton County: 554 deaths – new

Cobb County: 410 deaths – 1 new

Gwinnett County: 72 deaths – new

DeKalb County: 335 deaths – 1 new

Dougherty County: 181 deaths

On Saturday, Georgia administered nearly 2. 9 million COVID-19 tests, and approximately 10% of those tests were the least reliable used to find antibodies.

For the maximum reliability control of the virus itself, 10. 3% of the controls yielded positive results; for less reliable antibody control, 8% produced positive results.

While more and more Georgians have been revised over the next month, the percentage of positive controls has increased slightly, from about 8% to more than 10%. However, in recent weeks, the percentage of positives has stabilized by just over 10% and is now slowly starting to decline. According to the World Health Organization, positive control effects do not exceed 5% for two weeks before reopening as usual. Georgia reopened largely in April and May, and since then Governor Brian Kemp has encouraged the use of face masks, but has categorically refused to demand them.

All Georgia statistics can be obtained on the state’s COVID-19 website.

Worldwide, more than 28. 5 million people tested positive for COVID-19 and nearly 917,000 people died from it, Johns Hopkins University reported Saturday.

In the United States, more than 6. 4 million other people were inflamed and more than 193,000 people died from COVID-19 on Saturday. The United States has only about 4% of the world’s population, yet more cases showed cases and deaths than any other country. .

This article was originally published in the Cartersville patch.

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