Los Angeles Times

Average daily U.S. virus cases dip below 100,000

- By Sudhin Thanawala and Kate Brumback Thanawala and Brumback write for the Associated Press.

ATLANTA — Average daily new coronaviru­s cases in the United States dipped below 100,000 in recent days for the first time in months, but experts cautioned Sunday that infections remain high and precaution­s to slow the COVID-19 pandemic must remain in place.

The seven-day rolling average of new infections was well above 200,000 for much of December and went to roughly 250,000 in January, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, as the pandemic came roaring back after it had been tamed in some places over the summer.

That average dropped below 100,000 on Friday for the first time since Nov. 4. It stayed below 100,000 on Saturday.

“We are still at about 100,000 cases a day. We are still at around 1,500 to 3,500 deaths per day. The cases are more than two-and-ahalf-fold times what we saw over the summer,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

“It’s encouragin­g to see these trends coming down, but they’re coming down from an extraordin­arily high place.”

On Saturday, the sevenday rolling average for deaths was around 2,500. That number peaked at more than 3,300 earlier in the winter, according to Johns Hopkins.

The U.S. saw a spike of more than 5,400 deaths reported Friday — nearly half from Ohio, where authoritie­s said earlier in the week that they planned to add deaths to the state’s tally over the course of a few days after discoverin­g as many as 4,000 unreported COVID-19 fatalities.

Walensky added that new variants, including one first detected in the United Kingdom that appears to be more transmissi­ble and has already been recorded in more than 30 states, will probably lead to more cases and more deaths.

“All of it really wraps up into we can’t let our guard down,” she said. “We have to continue wearing masks. We have to continue with our current mitigation measures. And we have to continue getting vaccinated as soon as that vaccine is available to us.”

The U.S. has recorded more than 27.5 million coronaviru­s cases and more than 485,000 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins data.

With parents and political leaders eager to have children around the country back in school for in-person learning, it is important that people continue to observe precaution­s, Walensky said.

“We need to all take responsibi­lity to decrease that community spread, including mask wearing, so that we can get our kids and our society back,” she said.

The CDC released guidance on Friday outlining mitigation strategies necessary to reopen schools or to keep them open.

Some teachers have expressed concern about returning to the classroom without having been vaccinated, but the guidelines do not say that’s necessary.

Dr. Anthony Fauci said on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday that it would be “optimal” if teachers were vaccinated but that other measures laid out in the 24-page document can lessen their risk.

“Practicall­y speaking, when you balance the benefit of getting the children back to school with the fact that the risks are being mitigated, if you follow the recommenda­tions and these new guidelines from the CDC, hopefully, I think that will alleviate the concerns on both sides,” he said.

The Rev. Frederick K.C. Price, a televangel­ist who founded the Crenshaw Christian Center, a South Los Angeles megachurch with a 10,000-seat sanctuary, died Friday from COVID-19. He was 89. His family said he had been in the hospital suffering from the virus infection for the last five weeks.

Opened in 1989 on the former site of Pepperdine University, Price’s South Vermont Avenue church was topped by a massive aluminum sphere known as the FaithDome, 320 feet in diameter and 63 feet high. At the time, newspapers proclaimed it the largest geodesic church structure in the world, and it remains a landmark visible to travelers arriving at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport.

“He chose to build the FaithDome in the inner city, as opposed to doing it in the suburbs, because he wanted to minister to the disenfranc­hised,” said Angela Evans, his daughter and church president. “He had a heart for his own people, people of color. He wanted to lift them out of their ills

 ?? Patrick Liotta Associated Press ?? A CHARISMATI­C MINISTER The Rev. Frederick K.C. Price, right, with Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger in 2005, founded the Crenshaw Christian Center megachurch.
Patrick Liotta Associated Press A CHARISMATI­C MINISTER The Rev. Frederick K.C. Price, right, with Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger in 2005, founded the Crenshaw Christian Center megachurch.

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