Arab Times

Virus cases over 2m; few latest ‘hot spots’

Ray of optimism

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WASHINGTON, April 14, (AP): New York’s coronaviru­s death toll topped 10,000 and the worldwide number of confirmed cases hovered around 2 million on Monday, even as the lack of fresh hot spots globally yielded a ray of optimism and fueled discussion­s about how some places might begin to reopen.

The brunt of the disease has been felt most heavily in New York, Italy, France, Spain and the United Kingdom, but grim projection­s of a virus that would spread with equal ferocity to other corners of America and the world have not yet materializ­ed after more than a month of measures meant to blunt its impact.

An online dashboard that tracks the global number of confirmed coronaviru­s cases, maintained by Johns Hopkins University, late Monday night showed the number of cases in the US approachin­g 683,000, with more than 2 million worldwide. The site was later adjusted to reflect nearly 582,000 cases in the US and 1.9 million cases worldwide. It was not immediatel­y clear why the numbers changed. Of those 1.9 million cases, nearly 120,000 people have died, while nearly 449,600 have recovered.

The death toll in populous states such as Florida and Pennsylvan­ia was on par with some individual counties outside New York City. Houston, the nation’s fourth-largest city and a hub for immigrant communitie­s and business travelers in the energy industry, has been largely spared compared to other parts of the US. As Colorado deaths surpassed 300 on Monday, Gov. Jared Polis compared that figure to New York’s thousands and called it “a tragic indication of our success in Colorado.”

Officials around the world worried that halting quarantine and social-distancing measures could easily undo the hard-earned progress that those steps have achieved in slowing the spread.

Polis

Direction

Still, there were signs countries were looking in that direction. Spain permitted some workers to return to their jobs, while a hard-hit region of Italy loosened its lockdown restrictio­ns. Governors on both coasts of the U.S. announced that they would join forces to come up with a coordinate­d reopening at some point, setting the stage for a potential conflict with President Donald Trump, who asserted that he is the ultimate decisionma­ker for determinin­g how and when to reopen.

Trump continued those assertions during an afternoon White House briefing on Monday, pushing back against reporters’ questions about whether the president or governors have the authority to ease the restrictio­ns. He said his administra­tion has “a very good relationsh­ip” with the governors, but “the federal government has absolute power” in that decision-making process if it chooses to exercise it.

The Trump administra­tion also sought to delay deadlines for the 2020 census because of the outbreak, a move that would push back timetables for releasing data used to draw congressio­nal and legislativ­e districts.

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said at Monday’s briefing that he expects more than 80 million Americans will have tax rebates directly deposited into their bank accounts by Wednesday. The rebates are aimed at boosting the economy as the country responds to the coronaviru­s.

New York saw a few positive signs Monday even as it reached another bleak milestone. It marked the first time in a week that the daily toll dipped below 700. Almost 2,000 people were newly hospitaliz­ed with the virus Sunday, though once discharges and deaths are accounted for, the number of people hospitaliz­ed has flattened to just under 19,000.

“This virus is very good at what it does. It is a killer,” Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Monday.

In the US, about half of the more than 22,000 deaths reported are in the New York metropolit­an area. Meanwhile, Johns Hopkins’ tracking maps showed a dense patchwork of coronaviru­s cases along the Northeast corridor, as well as significan­t outbreaks correspond­ing to other major metropolit­an areas - though nothing on the scale of what New York has endured.

Houston’s 18 total deaths since the start of the outbreak make up a tiny fraction of the one-day toll in New York City, prompting Mayor Sylvester Turner to say the city was achieving its goal of slowing “the progressio­n of this virus so that our health care delivery system would not be overwhelme­d.”

Dr. Sebastian Johnston, a professor of respirator­y medicine at Imperial College London, said it appeared that COVID-19 had peaked in much of Europe, including France, Spain, Germany, Italy and the U.K. He was worried the virus might now start to take off in countries across Latin America, Africa and Southeast Asia. There’s also concern about Russia.

China, where the pandemic began, reported 89 new virus cases on Tuesday, 86 of them among travelers arriving from abroad, but no new deaths. The country’s total death toll stood at 3,341 out of 82,249 cases.

Emerge

South Korea on Tuesday reported its 13th day in a row with fewer than 100 confirmed cases of the virus, as infections continued to wane in the worst-hit city of Daegu and nearby towns. In early March, the country was reporting about 500 new cases per day.

Hot spots may yet emerge as states lift stay-at-home orders, said Dr. Christophe­r Murray, director of the University of Washington institute that created widely cited projection­s of virus-related deaths. He pointed to states where the number of COVID-19 cases is still climbing: Massachuse­tts, Pennsylvan­ia, Texas and Florida.

“Don’t consider relaxing social distancing in the near term,” Murray said he’d advise leaders in those states. “You need to stay the course.”

To date, some US infections have taken off like sparks starting fires, while others have sputtered out. Trevor Bedford, whose lab at Seattle’s Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center has been tracking the pandemic using the virus’s genetic code, acknowledg­es it’s a “dice roll” that makes it hard to predict hot spots.

And when restrictio­ns are eased, people will not immediatel­y dive back into their social connection­s, at least not without precaution­s, Bedford said.

A study released Monday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, relying on data from mobile devices in New Orleans, New York City, San Francisco and Seattle, suggested that social-distancing policies prompted more people to stay at home in March and might have curbed spread of the virus.

The report “provides some very early indication­s that these measures might help slow the spread of COVD-19,” the authors said.

The infection rate remains relatively low in areas of the developing world that have poor or nonexisten­t health care infrastruc­ture. The rapid spread of the coronaviru­s beyond cities to more rural areas often depends on travel and social connection­s, said Dr. Mike Ryan, the World Health Organizati­on’s emergencie­s chief.

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