u) SEPTEMBER / OCTOBER 2020 DURING COVID

It is hard to keep track of what has been happening. More of the same I guess. The federation is still fractured with states not letting in other states. Will WA ever open its borders? And QLD is also anti the rest of Oz. Sports things have moved to QLD due to the number of cases in Melbourne. It feels like Melbourne has been in lockdown forever. How are all those shops and restaurants possibly going to survive? NSW is doing ok, a few cases popping up now and then. People still wearing masks – but less and less people I feel. I don’t even know what our current restrictions are right now. Talk of a vaccine seems to have dropped out of the news. Overseas travel seems to be off the cards for next year, and who knows about the year after. Europe and USA  (and other parts of the world) don’t seem to be getting things under control.

We are now at 44 million cases across the world, over a million deaths, 10 million active cases.

26/1020

France has registered a record 52,010 new confirmed coronavirus infections over the past 24 hours, following a record 45,422 on Saturday, the health ministry said, as a second wave of cases surges through Europe.

The new cases took the total to 1,138,507, with France now ahead of Argentina and Spain to register the world’s fifth highest number of cases after the United States, India, Brazil and Russia.

In the past three days, France has registered over 139,000 new cases, which is more than the 132,000 cases registered during the two-month lockdown from mid-March to mid-May.

The health ministry said that 116 people had died from coronavirus infection over the past 24 hours, compared to from 137 on Saturday, taking the total to 34,761.

The number of people who tested positive during massive testing under way in the whole country increased to 17%, from 16% on Saturday and around 7% a month ago.

Like many other European countries, including neighbours Britain, Spain and Italy, France has seen a second wave hit in recent weeks.

The head of the Paris region health authority, Aurelien Rousseau, said on BFM television that the circulation of the virus in the region was accelerating and that the situation in French hospitals was becoming more and more tense.

The health ministry reported no hospital data on Sunday, but on Saturday the number of people in hospital with coronavirus rose by 652 to 15,660 and the number of people in intensive care by 59 to 2,500, compared to a peak of 7,148 during the lockdown in the spring.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez announced a new state of emergency on Sunday in an effort to curb soaring coronavirus infections, imposing local night-time curfews and banning travel between regions in some cases.

The measures go into force from Sunday night and will require all regions except the Canary Islands to impose a night-time curfew and limit the number of people allowed to meet to six.

“We are living in an extreme situation … it is the most serious health crisis in the last century,” he told a news conference following a cabinet meeting.

Catalonia was one of the first regions on Sunday to use the new legislation to impose a curfew, which will take effect at 10pm. Establishments open to the public will have to close at 9pm.

Police were patrolling the city before the curfew took effect and locals welcomed the new rule.

Other regions that announced curfews from Sunday night included Cantabria and La Rioja.

Spain imposed one of the toughest lockdowns early on in the pandemic and then relaxed curbs over the summer.

The state of emergency will need parliamentary approval to last beyond 15 days. Sanchez asked for parliament to approve its extension up to May 9.

 

Oh yeah, and Trump got COVID. 

12/10/20

Ten days after he was diagnosed with having contracted the coronavirus, President Donald Trump was back out on the campaign trail, holding a rally Monday evening in Sanford, Florida.

“I went through it, now they say I’m immune. I just feel so powerful. I’ll walk into that audience… I’ll kiss everyone in that audience,” he told the crowd on Monday.

He didn’t. But experts say they are worried less about whether he is contagious and more about the risk for the crowd gathered at the rally.

Thousands packed the tarmac at the Orlando Sanford International Airport. They had waited for hours with no physical distancing and few wearing masks.

Experts fear the rally could become another superspreader event.

In fact, because of the extent to which the state has taken its reopening, some experts are concerned that Florida is on its way to becoming a COVID-19 hot spot again.

Reuters reports that the Sunshine State recorded more than 18,000 new COVID-19 cases this past week, a 13 percent rise from the week before. The state has more than 730,000 cases since the pandemic began.

“Florida is ripe for another large outbreak,” Michael Osterholm, PhD, MPH, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, told CNN.

21/09/20

Despite making progress after a difficult summer, most of the US is heading in the wrong direction again as the nation closes in on 200,000 COVID-19 deaths.
In 31 states, the number of new COVID-19 cases has increased by at least 10 per cent this past week compared to the previous week, according to data Sunday from Johns Hopkins University.
Only four states — Delaware, Hawaii, Louisiana and Michigan — have had decreases of more than 10 per cent. Fifteen states are holding steady, including Alaska, Arkansas, California, Georgia, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Virginia and Washington state.
And the test positivity rate — the percentage of new test results that are positive — is rising in 25 states, according to the COVID Tracking Project.
This is exactly what doctors feared would happen in the weeks following Labor Day, said Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health.
“A couple of weeks ago, as we went in to Labor Day, we were talking about exactly this — and our worry that coming out of Labor Day, as we’ve seen after Memorial Day and July Fourth, we’d see an increase,” he said.
“And unfortunately, we’re walking into the fall, where weather gets colder. We’re going to spend more time indoors. So this is not where we want to be as a country right now.”
Utah set a new record high of 1,117 cases on Friday, Gov. Gary Herbert said Saturday. Mr Herbert extended Utah’s state of emergency until October 20.
Wisconsin also reported a record number of new cases — 2,533 on Friday. Health officials urged people to stay home, keep at least 1.5 metres distance from those outside their household, and wear masks in public.
Nationwide, more than 6.7 million people have been infected with coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University data. As of 3:45 p.m. ET Sunday, more than 199,400 have died.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *