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American Airlines will avoid flights to 15 cities after government assistance ends.
The state of Florida reached a low point on Thursday when its death toll from coronavirus exceeded 10,000, according to a New York Times database.
Florida is the fifth state to report 10,000 or more deaths. The others are New York, New Jersey, California and Texas.
It’s a highly anticipated turning point. Florida on Thursday morning had known more than 588,000 instances, and although the number of new instances consistent with the day has declined since mid-July, the state is still identifying more than 4,700 new instances per day, on average, over the more than seven years. – consistent with the period of days ending on Wednesday.
Public and personal sector efforts to succeed the persistent crisis have been highly analyzed in the third most populous state in the United States, where a quarter of the population of more than 21 million is more than 60 years old.
Governor Ron DeSantis, a Republican, has been criticized for waiting until April 1 to consider a statewide maintenance order after many states have done so. Disney World opened to visitors in July, but the Jacksonville Republican National Convention canceled. And last week, more than a dozen counties reopened their schools under a state order for all schools to offer instruction in person until the end of the month.
The state’s most populous county, Miami-Dade, had the number of cases, with 1 in 18 more people positive.
DeSantis is under pressure that the state’s viral crisis was largely limited to older ones. But the disease appears to have a relatively small but developing effect on other young people: in July more Floridians over the age of 25 to 44 died than deaths in the last 4 months of the combined pandemic, according to a review of the Knowledge of the Florida Department Health Screens. Records also show that others who died from the virus in Florida, among other young people, were disproportionately black.
Across the country, the pandemic has killed so many Americans that mortality patterns in almost every single state seem out of the way compared to recent history. Nationwide, 223,900 more people died the same age between March 15 and August 8, according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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