China Daily

US leads world in virus infections, deaths

- By BELINDA ROBINSON in New York and CHEN WEIHUA in Brussels

The United States surpassed Italy in the total number of deaths from COVID-19 on Saturday, becoming the country with the most confirmed cases and fatalities.

According to a running tally kept by the Center for Systems Science and Engineerin­g at Johns Hopkins University, the United States reported 530,006 cases and 20,608 deaths as of Sunday.

US President Donald Trump approved a Major Disaster Declaratio­n for the state of Wyoming on Saturday. So far, all 50 states, Washington, DC, the US Virgin Islands, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and Puerto Rico have received the declaratio­n for the same reason, the first time in US history.

The designatio­n allows state and local government­s to gain federal funds and resources such as the Army Corps of Engineers to help combat the pandemic.

California and New York, the two hardest-hit states, have seen their curve of COVID-19 infections flattening during the past few days due to stay-at-home orders and social distancing protocols, and both governors urged residents to keep doing so.

“Staying at home is literally saving lives. This isn’t over yet. We have to keep it up,” California Governor Gavin Newsom said on social media on Saturday.

Meanwhile, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said at his daily briefing that he wants to “make sure any decision we make to open the economy is based on what we’ve learned from our own experience and from other places around the globe”.

“I understand the need to bring back the economy as quickly as possible and that people need to work, but, more importantl­y, we need to save lives,” he added.

Hundreds of US employers have temporaril­y laid off workers amid the outbreak because many realize they are eligible for weekly state and federal benefits that equal their wages.

Businesses in the US, including Macy’s Inc, JC Penney Co, Kohl’s Corp, Gap Inc, Equinox gyms and furniture maker Steelcase Inc, are facing the economic fallout. Statemanda­ted shutdowns have forced millions of US workers to stay home since mid-March, decimating parts of the economy.

Macy’s, which said furloughs would affect the majority of its 125,000 workers, lost most of its sales after the pandemic forced it to close all 750 stores. Gap, which also owns Old Navy and Banana Republic, said it would furlough nearly 80,000 of its approximat­ely 129,000 store employees in the US and Canada. The announceme­nts followed similar actions by other chains with products considered nonessenti­al.

Last week, 6.6 million US workers filed new unemployme­nt benefit claims, bringing the total number who have lost their jobs to 16.8 million. Many more workers have yet to file a claim due to the system being overwhelme­d, which could mean the US jobless numbers are even higher than reported.

To rescue the economy, Trump has repeatedly said he wants to reopen it as soon as possible. But the World Health Organizati­on warned on Friday against a rush to lift measures.

“I know that some countries are already planning the transition out of stay-at-home restrictio­ns. The WHO wants to see restrictio­ns lifted as much as anyone,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said in Geneva.

Tedros said that lifting restrictio­ns too quickly could lead to a deadly resurgence.

The WHO has highlighte­d several important factors to be considered when government­s are making the move, including that transmissi­on is controlled, sufficient public health and medical services are available, outbreak risks in special settings such as long-term care facilities are minimized, preventati­ve measures are in place in workplaces, schools and other places where it is essential for people to go, and that the risk of importatio­n can be managed.

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