What you want to know about coronavirus now

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(Reuters) – Here’s what you want to know about coronavirus right now:

Europe prepares for the wave

Germany is already grappling with a wave of coronavirus and dangers that waste its first successes by ignoring social estrangement regulations, said the head of the German doctors’ union.

The number of daily confirmed coronavirus cases has ticked up steadily in recent weeks, with health experts warning lax adherence to hygiene and distancing rules among some of the public is spreading the virus across communities.

One sample that Britain is facing a wave of COVID-19 this winter twice as widespread as the initial epidemic if it reopens schools without a more effective testing and tracking formula.

France’s most sensitive clinical framework said a “highly likely” coronavirus wave this fall or winter as the country grapps with strong accumulation in new cases in the last two weeks.

Poland reported on the accumulation of other records in cases, with 680 new infections and six deaths, after a spike caused by epidemics among miners and after public meetings.

The army is helping Australia’s rules of isolation

An organization of 500 army workers’ bodies will be deployed to enforce COVID-19 segregation orders in the Australian state of Victoria, in violation of regulations facing hefty fines of up to A$20,000 ($14250). The only exemption will be for urgent medical care.

Nearly a third of coVID-19 were not isolated at home when they were reviewed by officials, requiring difficult new sanctions, Victoria’s Prime Minister Daniel Andrews said Tuesday.

Australia closed the national park that houses its respected Uluru indigenous site after some members of the network blocked a path for fear that visitors could cause coronavirus infections.

“Some progress” in U.S. negotiations

Senior White House officials and Democratic leaders in the U.S. Congress will review Tuesday to narrow the big gaps in a fifth primary coronavirus aid bill to stimulate the economy and eventually send new aid to the unemployed.

“We’re moving forward on some issues,” Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer told reporters after Monday’s talks. “There are many notable problems.”

Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Evans monday suggested to Congress and the White House that they settle for more federal spending on the economy, which has noticed that tens of millions of others are losing their jobs.

Course a teacher

On a cloudy morning in an agricultural village in western India, an organization of schoolchildren sat in socially remote places on the dirt floor of a wooden shed for its first elegance in months. There’s no teacher, just a voice coming from a speaker.

Recorded sessions are components of an initiative through an Indian non-profit organization that aims to succeed in 1,000 village academics without formal categories, as the coronavirus pandemic forced schools to close 4 months ago.

Reach the young people who are the first in their family circle to go to school, with content covering the school curriculum component, as well as social skills and English classes.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned Tuesday that the world is facing a “generational catastrophe” due to the closure of schools amid the coronavirus pandemic and said that the return of students to school deserves to be “a very sensitive priority.”

(Compiled through Linda Noakes and Karishma Singh; Edited through Giles Elgood)

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