Daily Sabah (Turkey)

US coronaviru­s death toll passes 90,000 as White House shifts blame

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THE U.S. death toll from COVID-19 climbed over 90,000 on Monday, representi­ng almost one-third of global deaths and the world’s highest toll as more states and cities announced plans to slowly reopen their economies and test their residents. The number of confirmed cases nationwide neared 1.5 million, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, which has been tracking infections and deaths. Experts have cautioned that cases and death tolls likely undercount the real cost of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The grim milestones came as the White House attempted to shift blame for the high number of deaths. The White House rebuked the top U.S. health agency on Sunday, saying “it let the country down” on providing testing crucial to the battle against the coronaviru­s outbreak. The Centers for Disease

Control and Prevention has been under intense scrutiny since producing a faulty test for COVID-19 that caused weeks of delays in the U.S. response. Critics have pointed out that it could simply have accepted kits made by the World Health Organizati­on, which has been producing them since late January, instead of insisting on developing its own test.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has also criticized the CDC for not following its own protocols in manufactur­ing COVID-19 tests. The errors were not corrected until late February. Trump often blames the administra­tion of his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, for passing on “broken tests” for the new coronaviru­s.

The coronaviru­s has killed at least 20,800 people in New York City so far, according to health department data. Despite the rising death toll, the nation’s hardest-hit city saw a decline in its daily rate of new hospitaliz­ations for patients suspected of having the novel coronaviru­s to 48, down from 77 the day before, Mayor Bill de Blasio said at a news briefing Monday. De Blasio called the drop “a wonderful sign” that the virus is easing its grip on the city of 8.6 million, but he cautioned that the city won’t be ready to start relaxing some social distancing restrictio­ns until the first half of June at the earliest.

Some New York City neighborho­ods have seen death rates from the coronaviru­s nearly 15 times higher than others, according to data released by New York City’s health department on Monday, showing the disproport­ionate toll taken on poor communitie­s. The data show for the first time a breakdown of the number of deaths in each of the city’s more than 60 ZIP codes. The highest death rate was seen on the edge of Brooklyn in a neighborho­od dominated by a large subsidized-housing developmen­t called Starrett City. Civic leaders had been pushing for the more granular data, which they said would show stark racial and economic disparitie­s after New York City became the heart of one of the worst coronaviru­s outbreaks in the world in March and April.

New Jersey has the second-highest death toll after New York, with more than 10,400 fatalities from COVID-19 as of Monday, Murphy said. In Michigan, which has also been hit hard with more than 4,800 deaths, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer announced that bars, restaurant­s and retail businesses in some lessaffect­ed parts of the state will be allowed to reopen as soon as Friday, but with reduced capacity.

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