Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Americans brace for virus surge

There almost certainly is going to be an uptick because of what has happened with the travel

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America should prepare for a “surge upon a surge” in coronaviru­s cases as millions of travelers return home after the Thanksgivi­ng holiday, top US scientist Anthony Fauci warned Sunday.

The United States is the world’s worst- affected country, with 266,831 COVID-19 deaths, and President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has issued conflictin­g messages on mask-wearing, travel and the danger posed by the virus.

“There almost certainly is going to be an uptick because of what has happened with the travel,” Fauci told CNN’s “State of the Union.”

It’s going to get worse over the next several weeks.

Travel surroundin­g Thursday’s Thanksgivi­ng holiday made this the busiest week in US airports since the pandemic began.

“We may see a surge upon a surge” in two or three weeks, Fauci added. “We don’t want to frighten people, but that’s the reality.”

The trend is ominous, Fauci and other government scientists said, with the Christmas holidays sure to bring more travel and family gatherings.

Deborah Birx, White House coronaviru­s response coordinato­r, noted a surge in COVID-19 after a holiday weekend in May.

“Now we’re entering this postThanks­giving surge with three, four and 10 times as much disease across the country,’ she told CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

“We are deeply worried.”

The US surgeon general, Jerome Adams, was equally blunt.

“I want to be straight with the American people,” he told “Fox News Sunday.”

Now we’re entering this postThanks­giving surge with three, four and 10 times as much disease across the country.

“It’s going to get worse over the next several weeks.”

In the 24 hours to 0130 GMT Monday, the country added 140,651 coronaviru­s cases, taking its total to 13,373,673, according to Johns Hopkins University. There had been 822 additional deaths.

Desperate wait for vaccine

Elsewhere, thousands of health workers marched in Madrid in support of Spain’s public health system, in one of the European countries hardest hit by the pandemic.

And guards opened fire to quell a prison riot in Sri Lanka, where four inmates were killed while protesting a surge in coronaviru­s infections.

In France, the highest administra­tive court ordered the government to loosen rules allowing no more than 30 people at religious services, in the face of angry objections from church leaders.

Around 9,000 runners — some wearing masks — took part in the Shanghai Internatio­nal Marathon, according to Chinese media, a mass-participat­ion sports event rare during the pandemic.

New York City again took a small step back toward normality, as Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that elementary schools would reopen for in-person instructio­n on 7 December.

Things were also returning to normal in Bolivia, where Health Minister Edgar Pozo said the country would soon allow the resumption of “cultural, sporting, religious and political activities,” with appropriat­e safety measures — a further easing of strict containmen­t rules introduced in March.

The US news media meanwhile reported that first shipments of the Pfizer vaccine against COVID-19 — one of the first to claim high effectiven­ess, along with a Moderna product — had arrived in the United States from a Pfizer lab in Belgium.

Pfizer was using charter flights to pre- position the vaccine for quick distributi­on once it receives US emergency authorizat­ion — expected as early as 10 December — the Wall Street Journal and other media reported.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, both said to be safe and 95 percent effective, have introduced a glimmer of hope after months of gloomy news.

“This is the way we get out of the pandemic. The light is at the end of the tunnel ,” Admiral Brett Giroir, the US of ficial overseeing coronaviru­s testing, told CNN.

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