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Assessing the actual mortality rate of the virus can provide clues about what can be expected below. Knowledge shows how the pandemic is affecting African Americans and Latinos the most.
This report is over. Read the coronavirus updates here.
Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego said Sunday that with the increase in the number of instances and deaths in Arizona, checkpoints in and around her city and Maricopa County rule are overwhelmed, but the Federal Emergency Management Agency has rejected her calls for help.
She raised the factor on ABC’s “This Week,” saying it “feels like they’re signaling victory while we’re in crisis mode. “
In an interview later that day, Ms. Gallego, a Democrat, said she had been looking since April to get more check resources for Phoenix, whether from FEMA and the personal sector, but verification, she says, remains woefully inadequate, especially for those who don’t have fitness insurance.
“We are the largest city that has won this kind of investment,” Gallego said, and said FEMA had established control sites in Houston, Los Angeles and elsewhere. “And you can see that in the growing rate of positive results. “
More than 20% of arizona tests are now positive, he said. “Public servants tell me that when you do the right amount of evidence, it’s about 2 percent,” he said.
An assistant mayor said FEMA had responded to the city’s recent top request by saying the company was “withdrawing from the testing area. “Maricopa County officials learned the same thing when they asked FEMA for help, the mayor said.
Cases have doubled in Arizona in weeks; More than 3,400 new cases were announced on Sunday and the state set a record Saturday with 3,182 hospitalizations shown and suspected by the virus.
“I hope you sense what it is here, ” said Mayor Gallego. “I wish I could have the president with me while other people fill their cars with fuel so they can queue for 8 hours while they’re in bad shape and it’s 110 degrees outside,” to pass a test.
“It’s not just a Phoenix problem,” he says. “I think many communities and other people from both parties would like the federal government to play a role.
Vice President Mike Pence, who visited Phoenix on Wednesday, said last week that the tests were readily available to those in the country who needed them.
An administrative official said the federal government was running to deal with Arizona’s desires for proof and that the city works across the state to get the assistance it wants.
“We have a note of hope, ” said Ms. Gallego on Sunday afternoon. After raising the factor on television, he said: “The White House has come up and said it needs more data and will see what it can do. . “
On Sunday, experts and public aptitude challenged President Trump’s characterization of the severity of the coronavirus.
In a White House Independence Day speech Saturday, Trump tried to dismiss the widespread complaint about his administration’s slow and useless reaction to the virus and repeated his false claim that abundance made the country’s cases worse, and said that 99% of the country’s instances were “totally harmless. “
Cases have increased dramatically in recent weeks and infections announced in the United States last week amounted to more than 330,000, a record that includes the five totals on a pandemic day. By Sunday, more than 40,000 new cases had been announced nationwide through the night.
On Sunday, former FDAC communication Dr. Scott Gottlieb said “certainly more than 1% of others get a serious illness” if they are inflamed. Speaking as a component of CBS’s “Face the Nation” program, he estimated that when all cases were counted, adding asymptomatic cases, between 2 and 5% of the inflamed have deteriorated enough to require hospitalization.
Dr. Stephen Hahn, the Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, has departed from repeated questions about this in 3 TELEVISION news programmes. “I’m not going to happen to who’s right and who’s not, ” he said in one. Point.
Dr. Hahn told CNN’s Dana Bash that it was “too early to say” whether it was for Republicans to have their lecture in Jacksonville, Florida, next month. “We’ll have to see how it goes in Florida and other parts of the country. country, ” he said.
Even some Republicans have rejected the president’s claims.
“The virus is harmless,” Said Miami Mayor Carlos Giménez in “Face the Nation,” noting that positivity rates in Miami-Dade County, the percentage of coronavirus tests that test positive, now exceed 20%. Florida has reached record levels of new instances several times in the last 10 days, reporting more than 11,400 new instances on Saturday, according to a New York Times database. More than 10,000 new instances were announced Sunday in Florida and the state now has more than 200,000 instances in total.
Trump and management officials also highlighted the decline in the country’s mortality rate.
Dr. Ashish Jha, director of Harvard’s Global Health Institute, said advanced care could have caused the decline, but he also described the deaths as a “delayed indicator. “
“By the time a user is infected, it takes a few weeks to be hospitalized and sick, and a week or 10 days before they die,” he said.
He also claimed that many of those who had become inflamed lately were young adults and less likely to expand a serious illness.
Studies that have calculated the death rate in broader antibody tests that take silent cases into account recommend a death rate from infection of less than 1%, said Dr. Jha.
“It’s hard to do this in the middle of a pandemic,” Dr. Jha said. “There are many points that come into play. But let’s just say he randomly caught 1,000 Americans who were all infected. Our most productive estimate is that between six and ten more people would likely die from the virus. “
And the mortality rate does not account for all the damage caused by the disease, according to some estimates, 15 to 20% of patients known as Covid-19 would possibly require hospitalization, and from the group admitted, 15 to 20% are transferred to extensive care.
And many of those who have recovered are still suffering to return to their lives before illness and may face long-term fitness problems.
Hospitals in Austin, Texas, may be “overwhelmed” within two weeks if existing trends continue, Mayor Steve Adler warned Sunday.
“If we don’t replace the trajectory, we’re two weeks away from our hospitals overflowing,” the mayor said on CNN’s State of the Union program. He said extensive care teams can be filled even earlier, within 10 days.
Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner issued the same two-week warning when he appeared on CBS’ “Face the Nation” program, noting that about one in 4 virus tests in the city is now positive and the test request exceeds capacity.
The virus is spreading in Texas, one of the first states to pick up house orders and reopen businesses. You have corrupted daily records of new cases several times during the following week. More than 195,000 cases were known during the pandemic in the state, which peaked. on a singles day on Wednesday with more than 8,100 new instances. Texas broke some other record this weekend with 8,181 patients hospitalized on Sunday.
Travis County, Austin’s home, has shown more than 11,000 cases since the start of the pandemic, according to a database maintained through the New York Times. Harris County, the home of Houston, reported 35,913 people.
But the virus has moved beyond the liberal cities of Texas, achieving deep red spaces of the state that have resisted competitive regulation of public aptitude.
In Lubbock, more people tested positive in the last 3 weeks than in the last 3 months combined. Two months ago, on the day Governor Greg Abbott began reopening the state, the city yielded 8 positive results. On Wednesday, there were 184.
Mayor Adler said the most important thing about the order that Governor Abbott signed Thursday makes the mask mandatory in most counties is that other people would now get the same recommendation from national and local authorities.
“That’s the message, ” he said. It’s the singular voice of the parties that tells our community, “It’s important, you have to do it, it works. “
Transcription
“We have a Covid imaginable. 52-year-old male. 10 minutes. H. F. D. , shortness of breath. Covid, possibly it would be. “I’ll be fair to you, I can stay up a bit. ” This is Dr. Aric Bakshy. He is a primary care physician here at Houston Methodist Hospital. And I asked him how many patients have you noticed here on your shift since 1pm this afternoon? “One two 3 4 five. I mean, I have at least more than a dozen people here. And they are all Covid. A lot of them are Covid. “It was actually trained at Elmhurst Hospital, which has become one of the worst-hit hospitals in New York. I’m Sheri Fink. I’m a New York Times correspondent. I’ve been reporting in New York hospitals since the beginning. I took a look at the emergency room, the new ICUs, the pregnant mothers who had coronavirus and now I’m in Houston. So here we are at Houston Methodist Hospital, which is the largest hospital in Houston. And in Right now, the number of coronavirus cases is literally expanding dramatically in the city. How are you feeling? Similar or otherwise to March? Aleven, although they had a moderate peak in April, they are now more than double the peak they ‘had reached at that point. And the numbers seem to keep increasing. “In March, we had a trickle of patients. Everyone was there, everyone and everyone stayed at home. People were not literally ill in health in amounts that would overload the system. Dr. Bakshy here. In fact, some of us reduced our operating hours because there weren’t enough patients to see. Since probably Memorial Day, there have been many more people. Every patient who comes to the hospital now, we check for Covid. Deep breathing. “So this is Carlos Clara. He has a proven case of coronavirus. He went to an outpatient checkup, and he is here in the emergency room because he has trouble breathing. ” Body aches? Do you have chest pain? “Like many patients we know, he is part of a family circle where several members have tested positive. His wife is ill, one of his children has tested positive, and even though he faints every day to work, he suspects that the virus has entered his circle of relatives through his son’s cashier task. “His oxygen is a little low. Good? We passed by to have to stay there. hospital for treatment, okay? But each and every thing will be fine. Actually, for the maximum of those patients, we can take care of them; you can take care of them medically. But I think a big challenge is that many ‘among them are literally scared’. And it’s not just that they’re afraid. They are also alone. Geneviève J. McCall is 96 years old and tells us that she had not noticed her daughter since the coronavirus settled here. “I have not been able to see or touch it for 3 months. ” She did not come to the ER thinking she had Covid. She was showing symptoms of worsening center failure. But as Dr. Bakshy spoke to her, it has become transparent that she, too, could possibly have been exposed. “Do you have Covid contacts?” “Okay. When was that?” “It’s okay. ” What they are finding now in hospitals is that other people who come for all kinds of ailments that seem like their same old ailments, in fact, they can too. have Covid. Or at least have been exposed to it. Tell me about your joy with the coronavirus. You look smart right now, but you are breathing with extra help. “We released a small component for my 8 year old son. He lives with me. Girl. Just a birthday cake. This is Rosa V. Hernandez. Like many other people, she had literally tried to be careful, but she let her guard down and gave it to her. They were in poor health and he almost had a breathing tube yesterday. “People don’t take this seriously. They’re like, oh my pass, I have to big components. I have to go to bars, I have to go to the beach, I have to go to a place to eat. Really? Like you’ve never done it before? Please take this seriously. “The concern is that nobody knows literally what the trajectory is. You may have role models, but there isn’t much that role models can do. Literally, literally it is based on human behavior. If they stay home longer. “They’re dressed in masks. And then there could be some mysteries that we don’t even perceive about how this virus is progressing. And the numbers right now? They just keep passing by.
Many conservative Texas disagree, adding some of the top leaders in the state. On Tuesday, Deputy Governor Dan Patrick said he was tired of Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the country’s leading doctor of infectious diseases. “I don’t want your advice anymore, ” said Mr. . Patricio.
This sentiment echoed outdoors at a popular hamburger restaurant that opened recently in Wolfforth, just outside Lubbock, where even Mr. Abbott, a Republican, has been harshly criticized. “It seems to have influenced through Fauci and the left, ” said Mark. Stewart said.
But in The Largest Cities in Texas, Governor Abbott’s directives don’t pass enough.
“I’m sure a mask order will make a difference, and I’m grateful it happened now,” said Judge Lina Hidalgo, a Democrat who is truly the executive director of Harris County, in ABC’s “This Week. “said, as long as we do the least imaginable and hope for the best, at all times we will be in pursuit of this, at all times we will be late. “
Some Texas are concerned about a political occasion on the horizon: the state REPUBLICAN Party committee voted Thursday to move forward with a face-to-face conference in Houston next week. In response, the Texas Medical Association said it would withdraw from the occasion as an advertiser.
“With or without masks, an indoor collection of thousands of people across the state in a city with tens of thousands of active COVID-19 cases poses a significant risk to fitness,” said the organization’s president, Dr. Diana L. Fite, on a Friday.
Even Patrick said holding a face-to-face conference in Houston was not a smart idea, as it posed the dangers of exposing others to the Covid-19, but added that he had a good reputation in the committee vote. “, he said on a Friday.
Early figures had shown that blacks and Latinos were affected by coronavirus at higher rates, however, new federal knowledge, created after the New York Times sued the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, reveals a clearer and more complete picture: blacks and Latinos were disproportionately affected by coronavirus widely in theArray country in piles of counties in urban areas , suburban and rural, and in all age groups.
Latin American and African-American citizens of the United States were 3 times more likely to be inflamed than their white neighbors, according to new data, providing detailed characteristics of 640,000 infections detected in nearly 1,000 US counties. But it’s not the first time And blacks and Latinos, are almost twice as likely to die from the virus as whites, according to data.
Disparities persist across state borders and regions. They exist in rural Great Plains, suburban counties such as Fairfax County, Virginia, and many major cities across the country.
“Systemic racism not only manifests itself in the corrupt judicial system,” quinton Lucas, the third black mayor of Kansas City, Missouri, said in a state where 40% of those who are inflamed are black or Latino, even though those teams not only 16% of the state’s population. “It’s anything we see claim lives not only in urban areas of the United States, but also in rural America, and in all sorts of regions where, frankly, other people deserve an equivalent chance to live: get attention, get tested, get tested. “
Global summary
As the Iranian government fights a new wave of viruses, the government, for the first time since the start of the pandemic, ordered citizens to cover their faces in public.
The new regulation came into force on Sunday.
A day earlier, President Hassan Rohani had suggested to corporations that they refuse service to consumers dressed in masks and said that any government painter who showed up to paint without one would be sent home and marked as absent for the day.
In Tehran, the capital, city officials said police, security forces and the government of public transport would take strong action against others who violated the mask rule.
On Sunday, Iran recorded its death number, 163 people, from the virus in a day without getting married since the start of the pandemic, according to the Ministry of Health. Eighteen of the country’s 31 provinces are on high alert by Covid-19, with nine red zones declared, a spokeswoman for the ministry said.
A pandemic patient supervisor at tehran’s disease hospital said all beds were full.
But it remains to be noted that the Iranians will adhere to the new rules.
Iran, in short, imposed a blockade on its annual New Year’s holiday era in early April and opened the country to business in early May. Since then, most Iranians have returned to everyday life, and more.
While giant gatherings such as weddings and funerals were still prohibited, a luxurious Cinderella-themed wedding in the Lavasan hills near Tehran provoked the wrath of local authorities. There would be 120 actors and 65 wedding runner workers who reconstructed the fairy tale.
The fitness ministry had arrested the groom.
In news from around the world:
Authorities in India canceled the planned reopening of the Taj Mahal this week, thwarting hopes that visitors’ return to monuments will fuel local tourism until foreign flights resume. Coronavirus infections in India began to increase several weeks ago when the government began lifting a national shutdown imposed in March, and some cities have already restored strict regulations to reduce their number of cases. India reported that about 700,000 showed infections and nearly 20,000 deaths on Monday.
Over the weekend, other people crossing Mexico from Lukeville, Arizona, encountered a short roadblock erected on the main road south of the border through citizens who feared the virus, The Associated Press reported. function to “protect the fitness of our community,” said a local mayor, José Ramos Arzate, in a statement. He noted that Arizona had an “Accelerated Covid-19 contagion rate” and said U. S. citizens can only “essential issues. “
In rewarding Tokyo’s first female governor, Yuriko Koike, with a momentary mandate on Sunday, the electorate seemed to approve of his highly visual leadership during the pandemic. The expanding city has moved away from the kind of fatalities noticed in other primary cities. A recent increase in cases in Tokyo has made it clear that its challenge is far from over. Even when Ms. Koike, 67, won sunday, with Japanese media polls appearing to have won 60% of the vote, Tokyo reported 111 new infections, her fourth consecutive day of 100.
Croatia’s ruling party came out wisely in Sunday’s general elections, despite complaints about the country’s recent handling of the pandemic. Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic’s center-right party, the Croatian Democratic Union, enjoyed its most productive functionality in more than a decade.
An army plane carrying Canadian troops to Latvia as a component of a NATO project capsized in the air after the army learned that a user who may have been in contact with passengers tested positive for the virus. About 70 passengers and equipment were on board the flight Thursday, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported.
More than six months after the pandemic began, coronavirus has inflamed more than 11 million people worldwide, killing more than 525,000 people, but despite the growing number of casualties, scientists still do not have a transparent response to one of the highest. basic questions about the virus: how fatal is it?
An estimate by the company may be waiting for the number of deaths if the virus spreads uncontrollably. India and Nigeria.
In poorer countries, this figure can help the government spend more on oxygen and fan centers, or on measles and mosquito net vaccines.
Today, countries have very different lethality rates, which measure deaths among patients known to have had Covid-19. In maximum cases, this number is found in countries where the virus is the oldest.
According to knowledge compiled through the New York Times, China reported 90,294 cases on Friday and 4,634 deaths, representing a 5% fatality rate. The United States, which has recorded a record number of new cases six times in more than two weeks, recorded 2,811,447 instances and 129,403 deaths, or about 4. 6%.
Ten primary countries, the highest of them in Western Europe, consistently tested consistently with consistent percentages of their population than the United States. Its mortality rates vary greatly: Iceland is less than 1%, New Zealand and Israel are less than 2%. By comparison, it is at 16 consistent with penny, and Italy and Britain are at 14 consistent with penny.
Prior to last week, the World Health Organization did not have an official estimate of the infection mortality rate, but was based on a set of knowledge from member countries and educational groups, and on a may-based meta-analysis of Wollongong University scientists. James Cook University in Australia.
These researchers analyzed 267 studies in more than a dozen countries, then chose the 25 they considered to be the most accurate, putting them by accuracy and averaging the data. They concluded that the overall infection death rate is 0. 64%.
This percentage of the world’s population is 47 million people, adding two million Americans.
Other clinical developments:
In an open letter to the W. H. O. to be published next week, 239 scientists from 32 countries urge the company to recognize that the virus can infect others through tiny aerosol particles, not just giant drops that breathe expelled by other people’s coughs and sneezing sneezes.
A segment of six genes in the human genome that increases the threat of severe coronavirus disease has been inherited from Neanderthals, according to a new study. The variant is not unusual in Bangladesh and could possibly be the reason why patients of Bangladeshi origin from Covid-19 die at a higher rate in Britain. Only 8% of Europeans use them and are almost absolutely absent in Africa.
Researchers have reported new evidence that a variant of the virus that has become the main one in much of the world has made it a component because it is more communicable than other variants. The variant carries a mutation that stabilizes the complex proteins of the virus, which it uses for While the report notes that the effects are not definitive, leader Bette Korber, a theoretical biologist, said: “It’s the dominant virus in the world, it only took about a month, and now it’s the one we deserve to be hunting.
The virus has inflamed more than 47,301,100 people and has been detected in almost all countries.
The Australian state of Victoria has closed nine social housing towers in Melbourne, its capital, and has told some 3,000 citizens that they do not leave their homes to explain the reason for at least five days.
Strict quarantine, the first of its kind in Australia, the pandemic and is being monitored through a lot of police officers, began without delay on Saturday afternoon after the discovery of 23 coronavirus infections in 12 of the tower’s homes. would be tested in the coming days.
“There are a lot of other people getting ready between those towers for work, family, network events,” said Dr. Paul Kelly, Australia’s Acting Medical Director.
He described the towers as “vertical cruisers” that can cause a strong build-up in cases at a time when infections in Australia are already spreading due to an epidemic in several suburbs of Melbourne.
Some citizens of the towers opposed being quarantined without warning. Abdi Ibrahim, who lives there with his five children, adding 7-month-old twins, told The Australian that the lockdown prevailed so temporarily that he did not give him time to buy groceries. for his family he also had to cancel his Sunday shift at a logistics company.
“If I don’t work, I don’t get paid,” he said, adding, “We’re so remote, you know what I mean, it’s like a prison. “
Officials said they would provide tower citizens with food, money backs and hire help.
While the towers were closed, officials also added two more Melbourne zip codes to the other 10 who were already in order to stay home, affecting a total of more than 300,000 people. Unlike the citizens of the towers, citizens of these spaces can leave their homes for paintings or education, exercise, medical care, care or purchase of supplies.
The total number of cases in Australia remains low, however, public fitness officials are increasingly alarmed by the outbreak in Melbourne. Approximately two hundred new cases have given the impression in and around the city in the last two days, an expansion rate that has not been noticed since. March.
Rewarding Tokyo’s first female governor, Yuriko Koike, with a momentary mandate on Sunday, the electorate backed their highly visual leadership, as the expanding city has moved away from the kind of coronavirus spiral deaths noticed in other capitals around the world.
But a recent resurgence of cases in Tokyo has shown that its challenge is too much.
Even when Ms. Koike, 67, won sunday, with Japanese media polls appearing to have won 60% of the vote, Tokyo reported 111 new infections, her fourth consecutive day of 100.
The increasing accumulation in some cases has begun to raise considerations that the capital may have to repair elements of the nearly two-month state of emergency that emerged at the end of May. 35%.
During the emergency period, when the government issued voluntary requests for companies to restrict their activities and for citizens to remain at home, Ms. Koike showed Tokyo’s reaction to the virus. He approached evening press meetings to provide daily control figures and recommendation on how to prevent infections.
Unlike Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who gave the impression of being rigid in front of the media, Koike felt much more comfortable when he gave the impression in a verbal exchange with Japan’s top YouTube star, Hikakin.
“Seeing her face on TELEVISION every day made me feel comfortable,” said Yuki Matsuura, 70, voting in Tokyo’s Setagaya district. “I think you’re doing your best in a very complicated situation.
Some Covid-19 survivors have a long way to recover even after discharge from the hospital, and the disease can leave lasting effects that are only just beginning to be identified and understood. It is still too early to know the trajectory of those patients, but scientists are beginning studies that may be expecting those effects and have an effect on how doctors treat the disease.
In Britain, the National Institute for Health Research, the University of Leicester and the University Hospitals of the City of Leicester have introduced some 10,000 patients, making it, according to the university, the largest of its kind in the world.
“As we continue to fight this global pandemic, we are learning more and more about the effect the disease can have not only on immediate health, but also on long-term physical and intellectual health,” Matt Hancock, Health Secretary, said Sunday.
Chris Brightling, professor of respiratory medicine at the University of Leicester and lead researcher in the study, said: “It is vitally important that we temporarily collect evidence about the long-term consequences of the severe Covid-19 contraction so that we can expand and control new remedies for themselves and others affected by prolonged waves of the disease.
Hancock told the BBC on Sunday that long-term effects are a “really serious challenge for a minority of other people who have had Covid, fortunately not me,” describing them as a “post-viral fatigue syndrome. “
Since the dawn of cinema, Italy’s hot summers have made film screenings under the stars one of the season’s favorite entertainment options.
But this year, various cultural and social non-profit organizations struggled to organize their summer film festivals after movie sellers refused to receive many requested titles, from the Harry Potter series to “BlacKkKlansman” and “Bohemian. Rhapsody “.
The reason? These non-profit organizations screen films for free, even when the mythical Italian film industry is surprised by many cinemas closed because of the virus.
“The vendors told us that if we showed them loose, they couldn’t give us movies,” said Luca Sansone of the Laboratorio di Quartiere Giambellino Lorenteggio. The show shows loose movies in a low-income Milanese neighborhood “where other people don’t go to videos because it’s too expensive,” he said.
Industry officials say the pandemic has struck so hard that it has jeopardized the survival of the Italian film industry, and that not restricting yourself to films would only make things worse.
“We’ve lost over 30 million tickets and over two hundred million euros in revenue, cash receipts only,” said Mario Lorini, president of a movie owners agreement.
Cinemas were given the green light to reopen on June 15, but only 540 did. The new rules of protection and social distance restrict those interior spaces to two hundred people, and many movie owners say they can’t even exceed the rules.
At what point is Wales more cautious than England when it comes to closing?Try buying a drink at Llanymynech, which stretches on both sides of the Anglo-Galician border.
For a small town, there is an impressive variety of pubs, 3 in total, but wisely if you need a pint: only two of them, those on the English side of the border, can serve guests.
“It’s ridiculous,” said John Turner, owner of the still-closed Dolhin Inn, while having a beer at a rival pub across the border, “but there will have to be a border at some point. It just so happens that we’re there. “
England has allowed restaurants, cafes and bars to open on Saturday after more than a hundred days of closure. That’s good news for two-thirds of Llanymynech’s commercials.
But the Welsh government has delayed pub opening until July thirteen, and even then it only allows drinking in gardens or other areas.
The regulations are different because the Welsh government in Cardiff has strength over problems such as health, education and public administration. And like Scotland, Wales has sometimes adopted a more cautious virus control technique than England, maintaining restrictions, for example, and waiting longer to open non-essential stores.
Wales plans to reopen the hotel industry more slowly, as part of some scientists’ complaints that England is taking on an unnecessary threat by opening pubs, restaurants and many other businesses at the same time, and on Saturdays, when other people have a trend. drink more. .
An estimated 22,000 seasonal employees have a trend and harvest crops in New Jersey, nicknamed the Garden State for its strong agricultural industry. Many of these staff track crop maturation on the East Coast, starting with Florida, where migrants’ homes have been devastated. coronavirus and heading north to Maine.
Making life even more dangerous, they were a must-have staff, exempt from house maintenance orders and a 14-day quarantine rule in New Jersey for others in states where the virus is spreading rapidly. new epidemic.
With the exception of rain, they paint seven days a week.
In New Jersey, 3,900 farms were tested on Thursday and 193 tested positive for the virus, according to the state department of fitness. Of these, 14 who had nowhere to stay remote were quarantined at a state-run cash hospital at the Atlantic City Convention Center.
“It’s a little dangerous,” said Felix Nieves, 56, manager of atlantic Blueberry Company in Hammonton. The 1,300-acre estate is the largest producer of blueberries in the northeast.
The first test run at Atlantic Blueberry took place at the start of the season, before most of the staff arrived. Three of the first 56 people examined were carriers of the virus.
Atlantic Blueberry got 3,000 handkerchiefs and gave each employee two, one to use and one to wash, and hung fireproof fabrics between the bedroom beds where a lot of staff live during the season. coming and going from the fields.
“Agriculture never stops, ” said Denieves. ” The fruit may not wait for it to pass. “
Alarmed by China’s dominance over the source of masks, robes, verification kits and other equipment to combat coronavirus, countries around the world have established their own factories to deal with this pandemic and the future.
When the epidemic subsides, these plants may have difficulty surviving, but China has laid the foundation for dominating the medical and protective materials market over the next few years.
Before the pandemic, China already exported more respirators, surgical masks, medical glasses and protective clothing than the rest of the world combined, the Peterson Institute for International Economics said.
Beijing’s reaction to coronavirus has added to this domain. She increased the production of mask by almost 12 times in February alone. He can now produce 150 tons per day of the specialty fabric used for the mask, said Bob McIlvaine, who runs a studio and consulting firm in Northfield, Illinois. That’s 15 times the production of American corporations even after expanding production this spring.
“The Chinese have managed to forge a global domain of non-public protective devices with command and control of the source chain,” said Omar Allam, a former Canadian sales executive who will identify the production of N95 medical respirators requested in their country.
U. S. corporations have been reluctant to make giant investments in fabric production because they are concerned that the mask order is temporary, but officials across the country are calling for masks to be used in public.
“It’s a big mistake,” McIlvaine said, “for the market it’s to pass to disappear. “
Two hours by boat from the beach in the town of Lowestoft, on the east coast of England, more than a hundred giant windmills at more than 500 feet above sea level. On the most sensitive of the new towers, technicians worked in red and black protective suits. to connect them to the British electrical system.
Britain has been the subject of blocking stages since March, but paints at this wind farm, called East Anglia One, were ahead of schedule. Contractors rented holiday homes and entered into agreements with hotels near Lowestoft, the base of operations. so that they could only space some staff members on the high seas and keep them isolated. Staff were taken by boat to the wind farm for 12-hour shifts day and night.
Clean energy manufacturers are working hard to get their projects up and running; they need to make cash on their investments as soon as possible. And while the virus has reduced demand for electricity as a total, the oil and fuel industry in particular has been shaken by falling costs, renewable energy has a tendency to overcome pollution of energy resources due to low costs and favorable regulatory rules.
The green energy industry suffered primary setbacks during the 2008 and 2009 monetary crisis, but analysts say corporations have consolidated since then and the industry has continued to reduce costs. East Anglia One turbines are 15 times stronger than those installed in the first offshore wind power. farms about 30 years ago and therefore generate many more profits in line with the unit.
“The outlook for renewable energy seems resilient, despite all the restrictions on Covid,” said Sam Arie, an application analyst at UBS, an investment bank. “We’ve noticed some corporations reveling in minor disruptions,” he added. “But compared to other sectors, the effects here have been very limited. “
When it’s time to invite others or schedule an appointment for a game, hosts face complicated conversations with friends, neighbors, and a circle of family about their criteria for coronavirus infection. Here are some methods to help you.
The reports went through Pam Belluck, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Nellie Bowles, Keith Bradsher, Chris Cameron, Stephen Castle, Damien Cave, Emily Cochrane, Farnaz Fassihi, Jacey Fortin, Robert Gebeloff, J. David Goodman, Maggie Haberman, Rebecca Halleck, Hikari Hida, Makiko Inoue, Annie Karni, KK Rebecca Lai, Iliana Magra, Sapna Maheshwari, Apoorva MandaviMcNeil, Richard A. Oppel Jr. , Bryan Pietsch, Roni Caryn Rabin, Stanley Reed, Motoko Rich, Rick Rojas, Kai Schultz, Mitch Smith, Lucy Tompkins, Tracey Tully, Hisako Ueno, Daniel Victor, Elizabeth Williamson, Wright
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