The world recorded its case number 20 million coronavirus on Monday and the United States of Life continues to face changes, restrictions and cancellations.
College football meetings have to make decisions for the fall season and the Big Ten may be about not playing football this fall.
A team of Duke researchers studied the effectiveness of other types of masks in removing respiratory droplets and neck fleeces behave worse.
California leads the country in coronavirus cases, more than 550,000 on Sunday, according to Johns Hopkins data, and state officials are not in a position to allow theme parks to reopen. This means Disneyland, in Anaheim, won’t reopen soon.
On the other hand, when the United States took a dark step on Sunday, a ray of hope from New York: the Empire State Empire reported its lowest positivity rate since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.
Here are some developments:
? Figures today: The United States has recorded more than 163,000 deaths and five million COVID-19 cases, according to Johns Hopkins University. Worldwide, there have been more than 732,000 deaths and 19.9 million cases.
? What we read: While millions of others may lose the top or all of the $600 premium of their weekly unemployment benefits, one thing can cushion the blow: Americans have stocked money insane.
The number of international cases of coronavirus has reached 20 million. That’s what’s done through Johns Hopkins University.
Health officials estimate that the actual number is much higher, given the limitations of the evidence and the fact that up to 40% of all inflamed people have no symptoms.
The United States, India and Brazil together account for nearly two-thirds of all cases since the world reached 15 million on July 22.
Big Ten’s athletic directors are about to leave football in the fall, another 3 people aware of the resolution shown to the Detroit Free Press.
People asked for anonymity because they were not allowed to speak publicly about the decision. An official announcement is expected on Tuesday, other people said. An official announcement is expected on Tuesday.
In a tense week of emergency convention meetings, the next vote may simply signal the inability of school football to combat the fitness and protection measures needed to combat widespread coronavirus transmission.
Michigan and the state of Michigan, anyone with doctors as presidents, were among the supporters of the end of the fall season, according to sources.
Several others familiar with the procedure said Monday morning that presidents had voted 12-2 to end the season, the Big Ten said Monday afternoon that no official vote had been held.
– Paul Myerberg and Detroit Free Press
In order to quell the Republican complaint of his new orders on the economy, President Donald Trump attacked Republican Senator Ben Sasse on Monday as “a Republican by name,” the same senator who attacked his movements as “an unconstitutional bump.”
Sasse used a living metaphor to denounce Trump’s new executive orders, comparing them to those used by President Barack Obama to block the deportation of young people from parents who entered the country illegally.
Trump and his aides said they were still hoping to reach an agreement with Congress on a new stimulus bill to deal with the economic unrest caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
– David Jackson
Disney World reopened about a month ago, and most Disney theme parks around the world also reopened after the final due to the coronavirus pandemic. The one who didn’t: Disneyland.
And Anaheim Park, California, is unlikely to reopen soon. California leads the country in coronavirus cases, more than 550,000 on Sunday, according to Johns Hopkins data, and state officials are not in a position to allow theme parks to reopen.
Disneyland is awaiting the recommendation of state officials and the company has provided additional details.
Also in California, the state’s most sensible public fitness officer, Dr. Sonia Angell, resigned on Sunday. Angell’s departure comes when California announced a solution to a challenge that has resulted in a delay in reporting the effects of coronavirus tests used to make decisions about reopening businesses and schools.
– Curtis Tate
Gov. Lou Leon Guerrero tested positive for COVID-19, Guam’s government said on a Monday.
Leon Guerrero said he had been in contact with a close relative who tested positive and then tested positive after experiencing symptoms. “I stay healthy despite moderate symptoms of the virus,” Guerrero added.
– Pacific Daily News staff
Officials at the Wuhan Institute of Virology rejected the claim that the new coronavirus arrived from their lab before spreading around the world, while NBC News gave a review of the facility.
In a foreign news organization’s first report, the lab, NBC News met with scientists who said they were unfairly scapegoats as they continued to search for the virus’s origin.
“Anyone would inevitably feel very or misunderstood as the subject of unwarranted or malicious accusations while conducting similar studies and paintings in the opposite fight against the virus,” Wang Yanyi, director of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, told NBC News.
President Donald Trump and other management officials have said without evidence that the virus originated at the Wuhan facility. The lab is supplied to examine coronavirus and other harmful diseases. Yuan Zhiming, the high school’s deputy director, told NBC News that he first acquired samples of the virus on December 30, but the media can confirm that claim.
N95 tight masks are the most effective at filtering the wearer’s respiratory droplets, while neck fleeces offer little coverage to others, a team of Researchers from Duke University has discovered.
Using 14 common masks, as well as a professional-proven N95 and a patch of mask material, researchers set up a soft laser experiment and a camera to show how many breathing drops are emitted when a user dresses of all types. mask speaks. for 10 seconds.
Each mask has been tested 10 times and the effects show that, in addition to the tight N95 mask, the surgical and cotton mask are also the maximum efficiency for filtering drops. Knitted mask and scarves, for the neck with fleece, had little protection.
With 3 states setting records for new instances in a week and 3 more recording deaths, Americans are still for domestic vacation destinations that come with places where the number of COVID-19 instances is increasing, according to USA TODAY analysis.
According to a USA TODAY investigation into Johns Hopkins’s knowledge through Sunday night, new case records have been established in Hawaii, Indiana and North Dakota, while record deaths have been reported in Arkansas, Nevada and West Virginia, as well as in Puerto Rico. .
However, research into the knowledge of Trivago, a hotel search and booking platform, shows that the goal of Americans is beginning to grow again.
Trivago measures the search volume of hotels, which reflects booking requests and queries based on clicks on user links. Last month’s volume was 73% compared to last month in 2019. And while it has been emerging and falling for months, Florida has remained the country’s most sought-after national destination, followed by California and Nevada.
– Dian Zhang, David Oliver and Mike Stucka
At least 97,000 young people in the United States tested positive for coronavirus in the last two weeks of July alone, according to a new report from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.
In total, more than 338,000 young people have become inflamed since the onset of the pandemic, according to the report’s knowledge, which was based on the knowledge of 49 states, as well as Washington, D.C., Puerto Rico and Guam.
Brittany Goddard’s last semester at Howard University is the end of the dream she imagined in Washington, D.C.
When the coronavirus pandemic ended the U.S. economy in March, it rushed to let go of its business, lost part-time jobs, and disrupted its plans to examine abroad. And when a few weeks to go until the end of the fall semester, she’s involved in how she’ll pay her tuition balance and fees, about $9,000, as her monetary aid won’t cover personal school prices.
“It’s heartbreaking. I’m a low-income student. I can’t pay tuition fees,” says Goddard, who created a GoFundMe page to increase the budget because his mother can’t get another Parent PLUS loan, a federal student loan presented to parents of dependent college students.
Millions of academics across the country, such as Goddard, face monetary and fitness considerations when they return to schools and universities this fall.
– Jessica Menton
New York took a major step in its recovery on Sunday when the state reported its lowest positivity rate since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the rate, the average number of positive effects consistent with a hundred tests, had reached a record 0.78% on Saturday. The state and New York have been in the final stages of reopening for at least 20 days, and Cuomo said the current number of critical care patients (131) is the lowest in the state since March 16.
The St. Louis Cardinals, who played five primary league games due to a coronavirus outbreak in their ranks, may not return to the box until at least Thursday.
MLB postponed its three-game series opposed to the Pittsburgh Pirates, which was scheduled to begin on Monday, meaning the Cardinals will spend at least 15 days between games and will only have 46 days to play the remaining 55 games on the calendar.
The Cardinals have had at least nine players and seven staff members test positive for COVID-19, and manager Mike Shildt said that has led to a “few visits to the ER.” St. Louis has had 15 games suspended.
– Jesse Yomtov
New Zealand marked 100 days on Sunday with a local COVID-19 broadcast on Sunday, the country’s ministry of fitness said.
“Achieving a hundred days without network transmission is a vital step, yet, as we all know, we can’t be complacent,” said Director General of Health Dr. Ashley Bloomfield.
“We have noticed how temporarily the virus can resurface and spread to places where it was in the past under control, and we will need to be able to temporarily remove any long-term instances in New Zealand,” he said.
There are still 23 active coVID-19 instances in controlled isolation centres, according to the ministry’s press release.
The U.S. hit five million CASES of COVID-19 on Sunday, 17 days after achieving four million cases. The country now accounts for about 2 to 5% of reported cases worldwide.
Last week, President Donald Trump said the U.S. had the virus “under control” and called his administration’s reaction to the pandemic “unbelievable” in an interview with Axios broadcast August 3 on HBO. This is despite an average number of deaths of around 1,000, with nearly 60,000 new cases reported. Alabama Array has just reached 100,000 cases. South Carolina is shy 540 and Virgina 811 races. Texas is about to approach 500, 000.
Trump’s recurring theme has been to blame the largest number of cases in the United States at the maximum rate of evidence. However, alarming hospitalization and mortality rates are not tested.
– Khrysgiana Pineda and Mike Stucka
Several atlanta-area academics and schools who caught attention to overcrowding and low wearing masks tested positive for coronavirus after the first week of school, and now one of those schools is online.
North Paudling High School west of Atlanta will move on to virtual learning at least Monday and Tuesday, as its amenities will be disinfected after nine students and tested positive for the virus in the first week of in-person categories. North Paulding made headlines shortly after students returned to school on August 3, when images posted on social media showed corridors full of students, many of whom were not dressed in masks.
And after just one week of school, more than 250 students and a Georgia school district will be asked to quarantine for two weeks after several students tested positive for COVID-19, according to the Cherokee County School District website.
– Doug Stanglin and Joel Shannon
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Contributing: The Associated Press