Manchester Evening News

Hope in New York as virus deaths slow

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THE steep rise in coronaviru­s deaths in New York appears to be levelling off in a possible sign that social distancing is working in the most lethal hot spot in the US, the governor said.

It’s a trend that seems to have taken hold even more convincing­ly in hard-hit Italy and Spain.

New York governor Andrew Cuomo warned that this is no time to relax the restrictio­ns aimed at keeping people from getting too close to one another, and he ordered bigger fines against violators.

“The numbers look like it may be turning. ‘Yay, it’s over!’ No, it’s not. And other places have made that mistake,” he said as deaths in the US climbed past 10,000, with around 350,000 confirmed infections.

Stocks rallied on Wall Street and around the world on the news out of the US and in Europe, where deaths and new infections appear to be slowing not only in some of the most severely stricken countries but in the Netherland­s and Germany as well. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up nearly 1,300 points, or 6%, by early afternoon.

Outbreaks in other places were headed in the opposite direction.

France recorded its highest 24-hour death toll since the epidemic began, 833.

Worldwide, more than 1.3 million people have been confirmed infected and over 70,000 have died, according to Johns Hopkins University.

The true numbers are certainly much higher, because of limited testing, different ways nations count the dead and deliberate underrepor­ting by some government­s.

The number of dead in New York state rose past 4,700, and the death toll in New York City closed in on the 2,753 lives lost at the World Trade Centre on 9/11.

The state has been averaging just under 600 deaths per day for the past four days.

Mr Cuomo also reported that the number of new people entering hospitals daily has dropped, as has the number of critically ill patients who require ventilator­s.

At the same time, he ordered schools and non-essential businesses to remain closed until the end of the month, announced he is doubling the fines for rule breakers to $1,000, and lambasted New Yorkers for being out in parks over the weekend, calling it “wholly unacceptab­le”.

Even as he announced that the outbreak in New York may be at or near its peak, he warned that hospitals are under extreme pressure.

“If we are plateauing, we are plateauing at a very high level, and there is tremendous stress on the health care system,” Mr Cuomo said.

“This is a hospital system where we have the foot to the floor and the engine is at red line and you can’t go any faster, and by the way, you can’t stay at red line for any period of time or the system will blow.”

Elsewhere around the world, Austria and the Czech Republic both began openly discussing how to ease some of the crippling restrictio­ns, starting with reopening some small shops and garden centres next week.

Italy’s day-to-day increase in new Covid-19 cases dipped again, for the lowest one-day increase in nearly three weeks. The country, ravaged by the virus, also saw a drop for the third straight day in intensive care beds occupied by infected patients.

Italy still has, by far, the world’s highest coronaviru­s death toll – over 16,500 – but the pressure on intensive care units in the north has eased so much that the region is no longer airlifting patients to other regions.

In Spain, deaths and new infections dropped again. The health ministry reported 637 new deaths, the lowest toll in 13 days, for a total of over 13,000 dead. New infections were also the lowest in two weeks.

 ??  ?? Police arrest doctors demanding facilities and prevention kits to treat coronaviru­s patients in Quetta, Pakistan
Police arrest doctors demanding facilities and prevention kits to treat coronaviru­s patients in Quetta, Pakistan

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