Tag: Coronavirus

  • Greek health workers demonstrate over coronavirus conditions

    Hundreds of Greek healthcare workers demonstrated on Tuesday to protest at working conditions and lack of manpower and equipment in public hospitals during the Coronavirus pandemic.

    The demonstrations were staged to coincide with World Health Day, according to the federation of hospital personnel.

    “You only saw us when we covered our faces,” proclaimed a poster printed by hospital trade unions, bearing a picture of doctors wearing anti-coronavirus masks.

    Demonstrators at the large Evangelismos hospital in central Athens held up signs demanding job hiring, virus testing and hospital equipment.

    Police tried to enter the hospital courtyard where the rally was taking place before being forced back by demonstrators, an AFP photographer said.

    A similar protest was held at the main hospital in Larissa in central Greece, according to images from public television ERT.

    Despina Tossonidou, president of the doctors’ union at Voula hospital in southern Athens, said that in addition to the hiring of medical staff, intensive care units in private clinics should be requisitioned “to overcome the shortcomings of the public sector” during the virus crisis.

    Health care in Greece was drastically affected by the country’s 2010-2018 financial crisis and tough austerity required by creditors in exchange for bailouts.

    As part of its measures to deal with the pandemic, the government has offered clinics 30 million euros ($32.6 million) and announced the hiring on short-term contracts of 2,000 doctors and 2,000 nursing staff.

    “These measures are just a drop in the ocean,” said Tossonidou, a radiologist.

    “The hospital system needs 30,000 additional permanent doctors,” she said, also citing the lack of protective equipment and COVID-19 testing in hospitals.

    “The majority of tests are currently carried out in private hospitals at costs ranging from 150 to 300 euros ($163-326),” said Tossonidou.

    Greece, a country of around 10.7 million people, has suffered relatively less than other European nations in the pandemic, recording 81 deaths out of 1,755 cases.

    Source: AFP

  • Boris Johnson receives oxygen treatment in ICU amid questions about who’s running the UK

    British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been receiving oxygen treatment for coronavirus in intensive care, a senior member of the Cabinet confirmed.

    Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove said in an interview with the BBC that the Prime Minister was “not on a ventilator” but had “received oxygen support.”
    He told BBC Radio 4’s Today program that Johnson was “receiving the very best care” at St. Thomas’ Hospital in London, after being taken into intensive care at 7 p.m. local time (2 p.m. ET) on Monday.
    “And of course, one of the reasons for being in intensive care is to make sure that whatever support the medical team consider to be appropriate can be provided,” he said.
    Johnson’s hospitalization has highlighted the lack of a formal line of succession in the UK government. Johnson nominated the Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, who also holds the title of First Secretary of State, to deputize for him “where necessary.”
    Few formal powers are invested specifically in the UK prime minister and key decisions are taken collectively by the Cabinet or its sub-committees. Many statutory powers are held by individual secretaries of state. But in recent decades, holders of the UK’s top political office have adopted a more presidential style, and the sweeping nature of the ruling Conservative Party’s most recent election victory was attributed to Johnson’s personal appeal with voters.
    “The Prime Minister has a team around him who ensure the work of government goes on,” Gove told the BBC. He said Johnson had a “stripped-back diary” last week to make sure he could follow the medical advice of his doctors.
    Gove confirmed that Raab was now in charge of seeing through Johnson’s plan to tackle the novel coronavirus. “Dominic [Raab] takes on the responsibilities of chairing the various meetings the PM would’ve chaired but we’re all working together to implement the plan that the PM has set out,” he said.
    But Gove sidestepped a question about who held the “nuclear codes,” saying he would not discuss national security issues.
    Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood, who chairs the House of Commons defense select committee, tweeted good wishes to Johnson but added: “It is important to have 100% clarity as to where responsibility for UK national security decisions now lies. We must anticipate adversaries attempting to exploit any perceived weakness.”

    Johnson was taken to hospital on Sunday evening. At the time, Downing Street said the decision was a precaution because the Prime Minister continued to suffer from a cough and a fever ten days after testing positive for the coronavirus. But his condition deteriorated on Monday, Downing Street said, and he was moved to the intensive care unit at St. Thomas’ Hospital.

    Gove told Sky News on Tuesday morning that Cabinet ministers were not told about the Prime Minister’s deteriorating condition until nearly an hour after Johnson was taken into intensive care.
    Asked whether the government had been up front with the public about Johnson’s condition, and whether the Cabinet had been taken by surprise, he replied: “Yes we were. The [daily coronavirus] briefing that was given at 5 o’clock was given at a time when we didn’t know about the deterioration in the Prime Minister’s condition.”
    “We were informed subsequently. The Prime Minister was admitted to intensive care at 7 o’clock, and that information wasn’t given to us in government — to those in the cabinet — until just before 8 o’clock.”
    Source: cnn.com
  • Coronavirus and sex: What you need to know

    If I have sex can I catch coronavirus? You might have thought about it but been too embarrassed to ask. To separate the facts from myths, we’ve put your questions to health experts.

    Dr Alex George is an A&E doctor and former Love Island contestant. Alix Fox is a sex journalist, presenter of BBC Radio 1’s Unexpected Fluids show, and co-host of The Modern Mann podcast.

    Alix Fox and Dr Alex George answered some of the questions around sex and coronavirus that are being searched for online

    Is it safe to have sex during the coronavirus outbreak?

    Dr Alex George: If you’re in a relationship… living with that person, and sharing the same environment, it shouldn’t change your situation. However if one of you is displaying symptoms of coronavirus then you should maintain your social-distancing and isolate, even within your home. In an ideal world everyone would stay two metres apart – even in their own house, but we realise this may not be realistic.

    Alix Fox: It’s also really important not to assume that if you are experiencing mild symptoms of coronavirus it will be the same for your partner. So, if you’re showing any symptoms whatsoever do try and stay away from your lover.

    What about sex with new people?

    Dr Alex: I certainly wouldn’t advise having new sexual partners at the moment, because the risk is you could pass on the virus.

    Alix Fox: Don’t forget as well, some people who are carriers of the virus won’t have any symptoms. So even if you feel absolutely fine… you could still pass on the infection to someone and they could pass it on to other people via close contact and kissing.

    I kissed someone I recently met, and they’ve gone on to develop symptoms. What should I do?

    Dr Alex: If you’ve kissed or been in contact with someone who you think has gone on to develop coronavirus, make sure you self-isolate. Keep an eye on your symptoms. If you are developing symptoms, then be extra careful. Go online to the nhs.uk website. Only call the 111 service if your symptoms are so bad that you need medical support from us.

    Alix Fox: We should be responsible with each other, and for ourselves in our relationships. If you’re somebody who has developed symptoms, and you know that you’ve kissed people recently, you should let them know. And even if you’ve kissed someone and they’ve got symptoms and you haven’t, you should also self-isolate.

    I wasn’t using condoms with my partner before coronavirus, should I start now?

    Alix Fox: The answer depends on why you weren’t using condoms.

    If you weren’t using condoms because you have both been tested for STIs, or you’re in a heterosexual relationship prior to menopause and are using another kind of contraception to prevent an unplanned pregnancy, then that’s fine. But if you weren’t using condoms because you were relying on something like the pull-out method – or you were taking chances with STIs – then it’s even more important that you use condoms now.

    Can I get coronavirus by touching someone else’s vagina or penis?

    Dr Alex: If you are going to touch each other’s genitals it’s likely that you will potentially be kissing at the same time – and we know the virus is passed through saliva. Essentially, any possibility of transfer of coronavirus – from your mouth to your hands, to genitals, to someone else’s nose or mouth – increases the risk of passing on coronavirus. We want to cut this back to the absolute minimum. So, no contact between a partner that you’re not living with is really important.

    How can I maintain a relationship at a time like this? I don’t want to be single now.

    Alix Fox: This whole pandemic is prompting a lot of people to rethink what a good sex life is and what constitutes as an enjoyable, pleasurable exchange. I’ve heard of people writing erotic stories to each other, and people who are dating but quarantined in different places taking advantage of the time and the distance. A lot of people have been getting really creative. If you use your imagination a little bit there are lots of ways you can have a sexy time without being face-to-face with somebody.

    It’s also important to remember that right now… some people might be discovering that they or their partners have different libidos. You might find yourself in a situation where you were only going on a date once a week, and suddenly you’re living under the same roof. You might find that you want sex when your partner doesn’t, or vice versa. It’s important to communicate this in a respectful, compassionate manner. Living together does not mean that you’re entitled to sex whenever you want. And for anybody who is in a situation where they’re with a partner and they’re not having a good time, because they feel like they’re being forced into sex, there are helplines available for that.

    Am I more at risk of catching coronavirus if I have HIV?

    Alix Fox: Dr Michael Brady at the Terrence Higgins Trust has provided some really great advice on this. If you are already on regular medication to manage HIV, and you have a good CD4 count (number of white blood cells to fight infection) and an undetectable viral load (the amount of HIV in the blood) then you’re not considered to have a weakened immune system. This means you run no additional risk of contracting coronavirus. So, if you’re HIV positive, continue taking your meds as you would do. Make sure that you follow the same rules as everybody else when it comes to things like isolation.

    SOURCE:www.graphic.com.gh

  • China kick-starts development of 6G technology less than a week after rolling out its superfast 5G network

    China has officially begun the research and development of 6G technology.

    The news came less than a week after the country rolled out its superfast 5G network.

    The country’s Technology Bureau has formally set up a team of experts to work on the next-generation mobile internet connection, state media said today.

    A total of 37 telecommunication specialists drawn from universities, institutions and corporations are on the panel, which is tasked with laying out the development of 6G and proving the scientific feasibility of it

    The news was announced during a 6G launch ceremony in Beijing on Sunday, according to a report by Chinanews.com.

    Wang Xi, deputy minister of the Technology Bureau, said at the conference that the bureau was set to work with the experts to design a specific research plan for 6G and carry out preliminary research.

    China’s three state-owned telecommunication carriers – China Mobile, China Unicom and China Telecom – launched their 5G data plans just last Thursday.

    The country is due to activate more than 130,000 5G base stations by the end of this year to support the network, which is one of the world’s largest 5G deployments.

    Chinese engineers have already built a ‘5G smart town’ near Shanghai, where residents will be able to download TV series, movies or games at an impressive speed of 1.7GB per second.

    China has named Wuzhen the country's first '5G town' which has which boasts super-fast internet connection in every corner of the place. Wuzhen (pictured) is an ancient water town

    China has named Wuzhen the country’s first ‘5G town’ which has which boasts super-fast internet connection in every corner of the place. Wuzhen (pictured) is an ancient water town

    5G signal is sent out to the nooks and crannies of the 27-square-mile town of Wuzhen by more than 140 transmitters, which went into service recently.

    The country is also on its way to completing a 5G-equipped high-speed train station, in collaboration with Chinese tech giant Huawei.

    The ‘super-fast’ 5G network will be fitted to the existing Shanghai Hongqiao Railway Station, which is one of Asia’s busiest traffic hubs and handles some 60 million passengers a year .

    Visitors to the station will be able to download a 2GB high-definition film in less than 20 seconds, according to Huawei.

    In comparison, it would take three minutes and 20 seconds to download the same film on a standard 4G network.

    The evolution of the G system started in 1980 with the invention of the mobile phone which allowed for analogue data to be transmitted via phone calls.

    Digital came into play in 1991 with 2G and SMS and MMS capabilities were launched.

    Since then, the capabilities and carrying capacity for the mobile network has increased massively.

    More data can be transferred from one point to another via the mobile network quicker than ever.

    5G is expected to be 100 times faster than the currently used 4G.

    Whilst the jump from 3G to 4G was most beneficial for mobile browsing and working, the step to 5G will be so fast they become almost real-time.

    That means mobile operations will be just as fast as office-based internet connections.

    Potential uses for 5g include:

    • Simultaneous translation of several languages in a party conference call
    • Self-driving cars can stream movies, music and navigation information from the cloud
    • A full length 8GB film can be downloaded in six seconds.

    5G is expected to be so quick and efficient it is possible it could start the end of wired connections.

    By the end of 2020, industry estimates claim 50 billion devices will be connected to 5G.

    The evolution of from 1G to 5G. The predicted speed of 5G is more than 1Gbps – 1,000 times greater than the existing speed of 4G and could be implemented in laptops of the future

    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

  • Men wash their hands much less often than women and that matters more than ever

    Handwashing with soap and warm water for 20 seconds — along with staying home and standing six feet apart from others — is the best weapon we have against the novel coronavirus that has infected almost 800,000 people around the world.

    However, there’s one big yet little discussed difference when it comes to this essential personal hygiene habit: Women are hands down better handwashers than men.

    Years of surveys, observations and research have found that women are more likely to wash their hands, use soap and scrub for a longer period of time than men after using the restroom. However, there’s still a surprisingly large portion of both sexes who don’t wash their hands at all.

    People lie about washing their hands

    Researchers have had to come up with clever ways to collect this data, since most people will tell you that they think handwashing after using the bathroom is important. That’s even if they don’t actually do it.

    Carl Borchgrevink, director of the School of Hospitality at Michigan State University in East Lansing, takes this kind of survey data with a pinch of salt.

    “If you’re at a restroom at an airport, for example, and when you come out someone [asks] you ‘Did you wash your hands?’ And what are you going to say? Yes, of course,” said Borchgrevink.

    When researchers only ask about people’s handwashing habits, “we found that the data that people were reporting seemed to be too high,” he said.

    To dig deeper into what people really do after using the bathroom, Borchgrevink tasked 12 research assistants at Michigan State University with the job of surreptitiously hanging out in four different restrooms on and off campus to record what 3,749 men and women actually did. The results of the 2013 study were shocking to the researchers.

    Few people wash their hands correctly

    Some 15% of men didn’t wash their hands at all, compared with 7% of women. When they did wash their hands, only 50% of men used soap, compared with 78% of women.

    Overall, only 5% of people who used the bathroom washed their hands long enough to kill the germs that can cause infections.

    A bigger study published in 2009 that used more high tech methods at a busy highway rest stop in the UK was equally, if not more, damning.

    With the use of wireless devices to record how many people entered the restroom and used the pumps of the soap dispensers, researchers were able to collect data on almost 200,000 restroom trips over a three-month period.

    The found that only 31% of men and 65% of women washed their hands with soap.

    It’s a big gap — clearly twice as many women as men were washing their hands,” said Susan Michie, health psychology professor and director of the Centre for Behaviour Change at the Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology at University College London.

    “Another interesting result was that the more people were in the toilet area the more they were likely to wash their hands,” said Michie, who was an author of the study. “If there were no people around, people tended to zap out with no one noticing.”

    There’s little to suggest that men in the UK and US are unsual in their handwashing (or lack thereof).

    A review published on the subject in 2016 looked at research from dozens of different countries, and found that women were 50% more likely than men to practice, or increase, protective behavior like proper hand-washing, mask-wearing and surface cleaning in the context of an epidemic, like flu.

    Why is there a gender gap?

    There’s been far less research done on why there is such a gap between the sexes when it comes to hand-washing. Michie said it was likely socially programmed behavior, not genetic.

    “Women are more focused on care than men — childcare, household care, personal care,” she said.

    Similarly, Borchgrevink said that while his study didn’t look at why men didn’t wash their hands as much as women, he suggested that it could be down to a sense that men were too macho to fear germs.

    “We did talk to some of (the men) and ask, ‘why didn’t wash your hands?’” Borchgrevink said. “And they would look at us indignantly and say, ‘I’m clean, I don’t need to wash my hands.’ They had a sense of invincibility.”

    Nancy Tomes, a history professor at Stony Brook University and the author of “The Gospel of Germs: Men, Women and the Microbe in American Life,” says the hand-washing gender gap has a long history dating back to when the germ theory of disease took hold in the public consciousness in the Victorian era — that certain diseases were caused by microorganisms that invaded the body rather than bad air or miasma.

    “This changed the definition of cleanliness,” she said, and women especially were told their family’s health depended on the highest level of hygiene.

    “Of course, there had been definitions of what was clean and unclean before the germ theory came along, but it injected a level of specificity and also upped the ante. If you made a mistake in your cleanliness, you could die, your family could die.

    “And that message of, ‘make a mistake and your kid will die’ resonates like a megaphone in the lives of mothers (even today),” Tomes said.

    Motivating men to wash their hands

    Michie’s research at the highway rest stop in the UK looked at what kind of public health messaging would improve handwashing rates by using a sign that illuminated with different messages as people entered the restroom.

    While the findings weren’t conclusive, the study suggested that men and women responded to different types of messaging around handwashing. Messages that triggered disgust (“Soap it off or eat it later”) resonated with men, while women were more motivated to wash by messages that activated knowledge, such as “Water doesn’t kill germs, soap does.”

    Michie said she wasn’t aware of any public health campaigns that had focused their efforts on men in light of their handwashing lapses, but said this was the perfect moment to try.

    “It’s an excellent idea to target men. It could be really helpful. If women knew men weren’t doing it, they’d get on to them.”

    Source: ww.graphic.com.gh

  • Italian nurse strangles doctor girlfriend, claims she gave him coronavirus

    A nurse who strangled his doctor girlfriend told police he did it because she gave him coronavirus.

    Newly qualified medic Lorena Quaranta, 27, was found dead by cops after her partner Antonio De Pace called them to say he had murdered her.

    Both had been working in a local hospital in Messina, on the Italian island of Sicily, and were drafted in to help out with the coronavirus pandemic.

    Cops burst into their apartment after De Pace, 28, called to confess that he had murdered Lorena.

    Paramedics were called when the police found him on the floor of his apartment having cut his wrists.

    Lorena’s colleagues at the hospital were able to save her boyfriend’s life.

    De Pace was later taken to local prosecutor Maurizio de Lucia where he told stunned investigators: “I killed her because she gave me coronavirus.”

    A police source said: “She was a doctor who was working hard to save others. It’s such a tragedy.”

    Tests were last night being carried out on both but early indications were neither Lorena or De Pace had the virus.

    Just days before she died, Lorena had told of her anguish at how 41 doctors had died during Italy’s coronavirus epidemic that has left more than 12,000 dead.

    Posting a news report on the figures which highlighted how doctors had died from lack of personal protection equipment, she wrote online: “Unacceptable”.

    She added: “Now more than ever we need to demonstrate responsibility and love for life. You must show respect for yourselves, your families and the country.

    ”You must think and remember those that dedicate their lives daily to looking after our sick.

    “Let’s stick together everyone staying at home. Let’s avoid the next one falling sick is a loved one or ourselves.”

    Last month De Pace had posted a tribute to her after she qualified and said: “To reach our dreams you have to work hard with determination and you are proof.

    “I wish you to keep chasing your dreams, always live the life you always imagined. Well done!

    “Congratulations on your brilliant graduation doctor.”

    Source: www.graphic.com.gh

  • Ahmed Adams kicks against salary cuts

    Berekum Chelsea defender Ahmed Adams says implementing salary cuts for Ghanaian premier league players is unadvisable as it will affect them and their respective families.

    The impact of coronavirus on the global sports economy means clubs will have to take measures to cut down on expenses. Top European clubs like Juventus and Barcelona have all implemented salary cut measures to survive.

    In Ghana the debate continues as to whether local clubs can also do same. Ahmed Adams is the latest to add his voice to the discourse.

    According to him, slashing the scrimpy salary of the Ghanaian premier league player will lead to drastic effects on him and his family and should not be encouraged.

    He told local station Nhyira FM “the pay cut is a good idea in some way but the players will be affected a lot since we also have families to take care of. At this moment the price of gari has even increased”

    “How much are our salaries even? None of the clubs in Ghana even pay more than €1000” he noted.

    Ghana has so far recorded 214 cases of CoronaVirus with 5 deaths confirmed.

    Football activities have been halted as a result of the outbreak of the disease.

    Source: footballmadeinghana.com

  • Coronavirus: New UK car registrations plunge by more than 40%

    New car registrations for March saw a steeper fall than during the financial crisis, according to the motor industry.

    Data from the Society for Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) show a drop of 44.4% compared with last year.

    March is usually one of the strongest months of the year for the car industry.

    But the Covid-19 outbreak has taken a heavy toll, forcing potential customers to stay at home for the past fortnight.

    New number plate registrations are released in March and September every year.

    But last month new registrations dropped by about 200,000 compared with the same period last year.

    They fell to the lowest level in March for more than two decades.

    The crisis has come at a difficult time for the motor industry, which was already suffering with falling sales and a collapse in demand for diesel vehicles, while struggling to meet tough new emissions targets.

    The coronavirus outbreak has also halted car production.

    All of the UK’s major car factories suspended work last month, and it is not yet clear when they will reopen.

    In total, 254,684 new cars were registered in March according to the SMMT, a fall of 203,370 compared with March 2019.

    Demand from private buyers and larger fleets fell by 40.4% and 47.4% respectively.

    At the same time, the numbers of petrol and diesel cars reaching the country’s roads were down 49.9% and 61.9% respectively.

    However, registrations of battery electric vehicles rose almost threefold to 11,694 units, accounting for 4.6% of the market, while plug-in hybrids grew by 38%. Hybrid electric vehicles fell 7.1%.

    The SMMT said it now expected car sales of 1.73 million in 2020, 25% lower than last year.

    ‘Stark realisation’

    Larger falls in new car registrations have been reported in other European countries, with Italy down -85%, France -72% and Spain down -69% in March, the SMMT said.

    SMMT chief executive Mike Hawes said, “With the country locked down in crisis mode for a large part of March, this decline will come as no surprise.

    “Despite this being the lowest March since we moved to the bi-annual plate change system, it could have been worse, had the significant advanced orders placed for the new 20 plate not been delivered in the early part of the month.

    “We should not, however, draw long-term conclusions from these figures, other than this being a stark realisation of what happens when economies grind to a halt.”

    Mr Hawes added that it was uncertain how long the market would remain stalled, but it would reopen and the products would be there.

    Source: bbc.com

  • UN Security Council expected to hold first coronavirus talks Thursday

    The UN Security Council will on Thursday hold its first meeting on the coronavirus pandemic by video conference after weeks of divisions among its five permanent members, diplomats said Monday.

    Last week, exasperated by the back-and-forth that has paralyzed the council, including between China and the United States, nine of the 10 non-permanent members formally requested a meeting featuring a presentation by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

    “Meeting confirmed for Thursday,” one diplomat told AFP on condition of anonymity. It was to be held behind closed doors at 3:00 pm (1900 GMT).

    It’s not yet clear what form the meeting will take, or what could be accomplished: will the member nations show unity in the fact of a global crisis and a willingness to cooperate, or proceed with a settling of scores?

    The New York-based Security Council has been teleworking since March 12 as the new coronavirus spreads rapidly in the city.

    Last week, the UN General Assembly adopted by consensus a resolution calling for “international cooperation” and “multilateralism” in the fight against COVID-19, the first text to come out of the world body since the outbreak began.

    Russia has tried to oppose the text, but only four other countries backed its parallel draft.

    The United States has long demanded that any meeting or text specify that the virus first emerged in China, to Beijing’s consternation.

    Diplomats said Monday that opposition to holding a council meeting was coming from the Chinese and the Russians.

    Moscow and Beijing say they only believe the council should consider the pandemic when they are talking about a country experiencing conflict, the diplomats said.

    According to several diplomats, France been trying since last week to organize a video conference with leaders of the five permanent member countries to try to iron out differences, and would prefer that is done before a meeting of the 15-member council.

    Along with France, the permanent members are Britain, China, Russia and the US.

    The nine countries that requested the meeting are Germany, which spearheaded the effort, Belgium, the Dominican Republic, Estonia, Indonesia, Niger, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Tunisia and Vietnam.

    The final non-permanent member, South Africa, did not support the move, saying the council’s remit was peace and security, not health and economic issues.

    For those nine countries, it’s “really irresponsible to block” a council meeting and to “paralyze” the institution since the start of the crisis, a diplomat from one of them said.

    Source: France24

  • China reports no new coronavirus deaths for first time since January

    China on Tuesday reported no new coronavirus deaths for the first time since it started publishing figures in January, the National Health Commission said.

    Cases in mainland China have been dwindling since March, but the country faces a second wave of infections brought in from overseas, with health officials reporting nearly 1,000 imported cases in total.

    Mainland China had 32 new confirmed cases of the coronavirus on Monday, down from 39 cases a day earlier, the National Health Commission said.

    All of the 32 confirmed cases involved travellers arriving from overseas, compared with 38 imported cases a day earlier. The overall number of imported infections so far stands at 983, the health authority said.

    Imported cases and asymptomatic patients have become China’s chief concern after draconian containment measures succeeded in slashing the overall infection rate.

    China has shut its borders to foreigners as the virus spread globally, though most imported cases have involved Chinese nationals returning from overseas. International flights have been slashed to around 3,000 a day in April from the tens of thousands previously.

    It has also started testing all international arrivals for the virus this month.

    The total number of confirmed cases in mainland China stood at 81,740 as of Monday, according to the authority.

    China reported 30 new asymptomatic cases on Monday, nine of which involved incoming travellers. Of the new asymptomatic cases, 18 were in central Hubei province.

    As of Monday, 1,033 asymptomatic patients were under medical observation.

    The National Health Commission reported no new deaths in Wuhan, capital of Hubei and epicentre of the outbreak in China, for the first time since the outbreak started.

    Wuhan is due to allow people to leave the city on Wednesday for the first time since it was locked down on Jan. 23 to curb the spread of the epidemic.

    To date, 81,740 people have been infected and 3,331 have been killed by the deadly virus in China, with the vast majority in Wuhan and the surrounding Hubei province.

    Meanwhile, the global death toll from the pandemic has surpassed 70,000 as the virus ravages numerous countries in Europe and the US.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus severs Brazilian Amazon from world

    Deep in the Amazon rainforest in northern Brazil, where rivers are the only highways, the coronavirus pandemic is sharply limiting boat traffic, leaving villages even more cut off from the world than before.

    Canoes, motor boats and ferries are the cars, trucks and buses of the Amazon, bringing people and goods to remote communities that can only be reached by river, sometimes with a journey of more than a week.

    But because of the pandemic, authorities in Amazon state have restricted river traffic to essential travel, seeking to stop the spread of the virus in a region that could be particularly vulnerable to it.

    Cargo transport is operating normally, but passenger transport is restricted to exceptional circumstances such as medical emergencies and essential services like paramedics and police, said Jerfeson Caldas, regional coordinator for national health agency Anvisa.

    Even those trips are bound by special rules: boats can only operate at 40 percent of their passenger capacity, and must supply water, soap and hand sanitizer.

    The restrictions amount to the jungle equivalent of the isolation measures now in place for around half the world’s population.

    “Amazonas depends on rivers for more than 85 percent of the transport we survive on. Unfortunately, people here are now living a sad reality because of this crisis,” said Alessandra Martins Pontes, a transportation planning expert at Amazonas Federal University.

    Hammock distancing

    Passengers usually make the trip on “regionals,” big diesel-engine ferries that replaced the steam-powered paddle boats of the 19th century.

    Travelers typically sleep on hammocks they bring themselves, slung one above the other like bunk beds.

    But not in the time of COVID-19. The authorities have ordered all hammocks be placed a minimum of two meters (yards) apart.

    Amazonas is the biggest state in Brazil, a densely forested expanse of more than 1.5 million square kilometers (600,000 square miles), equal to about the size of Peru and Ecuador combined.

    It has registered 532 cases of the new coronavirus so far — mostly in the state capital, Manaus — with 19 deaths.

    The fear is what will happen if the virus progresses into the rainforest, particularly the indigenous communities that live there.

    Indigenous peoples are particularly vulnerable to imported diseases, as they have been historically isolated from germs against which much of the world has developed immunity.

    Remote indigenous communities have been decimated in the past by diseases including smallpox and flu.

    Authorities reported last week that a first indigenous woman had tested positive for the new coronavirus in Amazonas, a health worker from the Kokama ethnic group who came into contact with an infected doctor.

    Natural isolation

    The transport restrictions affect hundreds of families, indigenous or not, that live from fishing and gathering in stilt-house villages along the Amazon and its tributaries.

    “Movement is very limited now. Outsiders can’t even go to the protected nature reserves” where most of those families live, said Edervan Vieira, a technical adviser to an association of farmers and fishermen in Carauari, a week’s trip upriver by boat from Manaus.

    No COVID-19 cases have been reported here yet. But he says he worries about the economic effects of the transport restrictions on families that depend on sales of their surplus produce to buy whatever they cannot make locally.

    “We have what we need to survive here: fruit, fish, cassava flour,” said Maria Cunha, 26, who lives in the protected nature reserve of Medio Jurua.

    “But living in the forest also brings its challenges…. What worries us is if we have to go to the city for an emergency, because that’s when we would risk bringing the virus back home.”

    Source: France24

  • Spanish deaths fall for fourth consecutive day

    The daily number of coronavirus deaths has fallen in Spain for a fourth consecutive day, boosting hopes the country has passed the outbreak’s peak.

    Monday’s increase of 637 deaths means 13,055 have died in total.

    Spain’s population has been living under severe restrictions for more than three weeks, with lockdown measures now extended toward the end of April.

    The nation has more than 135,000 confirmed cases, the most in Europe, but new infections have been slowing.

    Spanish officials plan to widen coronavirus testing to include those without symptoms.

    “It is important to know who is contaminated to be able to gradually lift Spanish citizens’ lockdown,” Foreign Minister Arancha González said in a TV interview.

    Slowing death rates in a number of the worst-hit European countries, including Italy, France and Germany, are raising hope that strict social distancing measures are curbing the spread of Covid-19 – the disease caused by the virus.

    Austria’s chancellor announced on Monday plans to start easing some of the restrictions in place because of the pandemic.

    There have been more than 1.2 million cases and 70,000 deaths confirmed around the world since the virus emerged in China in December, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Hydroxychloroquine: Can India help Trump with unproven ‘corona drug’?

    India is reportedly “considering” a request by Donald Trump to release stocks of a drug the US president has called a “game-changer” in the fight against Covid-19.

    Mr Trump called India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday, a day after the country banned the export of hydroxychloroquine, which it manufactures in large quantities.

    The two leaders are on friendly terms, and Mr Trump recently made a high-profile trip to India.

    But is India really in a position to help the US? And does hydroxychloroquine even work against the coronavirus?

    What is hydroxychloroquine? Hydroxychloroquine is very similar to Chloroquine, one of the oldest and best-known anti-malarial drugs.

    But the drug – which can also treat auto-immune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis and lupus – has also attracted attention over the past few decades as a potential antiviral agent.

    President Trump said that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had approved it for treating coronavirus, something the organization has denied. Mr Trump later said that it had been approved for “compassionate use” – which means a doctor can give a drug that is yet to be cleared by the government to a patient in a life-threatening condition.

    Doctors are able to prescribe chloroquine in these circumstances as it’s a registered drug.

    So, can India really help President Trump? Hydroxychloroquine could be bought over the counter and is fairly inexpensive. However, its purchase and use has been severely restricted ever since it was named as a possible treatment for Covid-19.

    On Saturday, India banned the export of the drug “without any exception”. The order came even as the number of positive cases of Covid-19 spiked in the country. India has now recorded 3,666 active cases of the virus with more than 100 deaths, according to the latest data released by the ministry of health.

    But now it seems the government could be reconsidering this stance, possibly following Mr Trump’s call to Mr Modi. Local media quoted government sources as saying that a decision on this could be taken as early as Tuesday after considering what domestic requirements could look like in the near future.

    But does India – one of the world’s largest manufacturers of the drug – have the capacity to actually supply other countries as well?

    Yes, according to Ashok Kumar Madan, of the Indian Drug Manufacturer’s association.

    “India definitely has capacity to cater to both global and local markets. Of course, domestic considerations must come first, but we have the capacity,” he told the BBC.

    Mr Madan also denied reports that China had severely limited the export of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) that is used to manufacture hydroxychloroquine. He acknowledged that 70% of all the APIs needed by India to manufacture drugs come from China, but said that supplies from China had steadily continued “by both sea and air”.

    But does it work? Many virologists and infectious disease experts have cautioned that the excitement over hydroxychloroquine is premature.

    “Chloroquine seems to block the coronavirus in lab studies. There’s some anecdotal evidence from doctors saying it has appeared to help,” James Gallagher, BBC health correspondent, explained.

    But crucially there have been no complete clinical trials which are important to show how the drug behaves in actual patients, although they are under way in China, the US, UK and Spain.

    Even so, some are sceptical about how successful they will prove to be.

    “If it truly has a dramatic effect on the clinical course of Covid-19 we would already have evidence for that. We don’t, which tells us that hydroxychloroquine, if it even works at all, will likely be shown to have modest effects at best,” Dr Joyeeta Basu, a senior consultant physician, told the BBC.

    Raman R Gangakhedkar, a senior scientist with the Indian Council of Medical Research, said the policy at the moment is that the drug is not to be used by everyone.

    “It is being given to doctors and contacts of lab confirmed cases. When their data will be complied only then a call can be taken whether it should be recommended to everyone,” he told reporters last week.

    Despite the fact trials are yet to conclude, people have begun to self-medicate – with sometimes disastrous consequences.

    There have been multiple reports in Nigeria of people being poisoned from overdoses after people were reportedly inspired by Mr Trump’s enthusiastic endorsement of the drug.

    An article in the Lancet medical journal also warns hydroxychloroquine can have dangerous side-effects if the dose is not carefully controlled.

    This lack of certainty has prompted social media sites like Facebook and Twitter to delete posts that tout it as a cure – even when they are made by world leaders.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Boris Johnson moved to intensive care

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been moved to intensive care in hospital after his coronavirus symptoms “worsened”, Downing Street has said.

    Mr Johnson has asked Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab to deputise “where necessary”, a spokesman added.

    The prime minister, 55, was admitted to St Thomas’ Hospital in London with “persistent symptoms” on Sunday.

    The spokesman said he was moved on the advice of his medical team and is receiving “excellent care”.

    A statement read: “Since Sunday evening, the prime minister has been under the care of doctors at St Thomas’ Hospital, in London, after being admitted with persistent symptoms of coronavirus.

    “Over the course of this afternoon, the condition of the prime minister has worsened and, on the advice of his medical team, he has been moved to the intensive care unit at the hospital.”

    It continued: “The PM is receiving excellent care, and thanks all NHS staff for their hard work and dedication.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus hunters zero in on a possible culprit

    A vacuum of knowledge about the origins of the new coronavirus ravaging the world has provided fertile ground for all manner of theories — from the fantastic, to the dubious to the believable.

    It was a bioweapon manufactured by the Chinese. The US Army brought the virus to Wuhan. It leaked — like a genie out of a bottle — from a lab in an accident. It took root at a wildlife market in Wuhan.

    Scientists have banded together across international borders to condemn the nationalist-tinged conspiracy theories. And yet, they are divided on what was once widely thought the most likely culprit: a so-called wet market in Wuhan, where wild animals are kept in cages and sold as pets or food. It is believed that a bat-infected animal — perhaps a pangolin — infected the first human.

    The truth of how this began remains elusive. But CNN spoke to more than half a dozen virus experts about the origins of the outbreak, and all of them say anyone who claims to know the source of Covid-19 is guessing. The scientists say there is zero evidence the Chinese or American government purposefully introduced the new coronavirus — SARS-CoV-2 — to the public.

    To date, one thing seems likely: It came from bats.

    Experts at odds over wet-market theory

    It’s “the most simple, obvious and likely explanation,” said Dr. Simon Anthony, a professor at the public health grad school of Columbia University and a key member of PREDICT, a federally funded global program investigating viruses in animal hosts with pandemic potential. PREDICT has discovered 180 coronaviruses over a decade.

    Though the scientists discount conspiracy theories about bioweapons, on other questions they are divided.

    The experts are at odds over the once widely accepted theory that the virus originated at a wet market.

    Proponents believe the gory nature of these crowded markets packed with people and wild animals slated for slaughter make them the most likely culprit; the doubters cite a peer-reviewed study indicating that many of the first known patients had no direct exposure to the so-called wet market.
    Another potentially explosive theory — first posed by two Chinese researchers in early February and amplified by Fox News host Tucker Carlson on March 31 — holds that the origin traces back to an accident in one of two labs near the Wuhan market that work with bats.
    Most of the experts interviewed for this story discounted the theory — whose progenitors reportedly withdrew their paper — saying it wasn’t supported by evidence.

    The theory has also been strenuously denied by the Chinese government and one of the labs.

    But one expert, a chemical biology professor and bioweapons expert at Rutgers University, has suggested to several media outlets that the lab-accident theory has credence.

    “The possibility that the virus entered humans through a laboratory accident cannot and should not be dismissed,” Dr. Richard Ebright told CNN in an email Sunday.

    Virus hunters zeroing in on bats

    In any case, researchers agree that the coronavirus jumped from an animal to a human, a phenomenon known as “zoonotic spillover.”

    In early February, Chinese researchers published an article in Nature — a top science journal — that concluded the “2019-nCoV is 96% identical at the whole-genome level to a bat coronavirus.”
    Questions raised over China’s coronavirus transparency 04:43
    Later that month, 27 public health scientists from across the United States and the world wrote a letter in The Lancet condemning the conspiracy theories.

    “Conspiracy theories do nothing but create fear, rumours, and prejudice that jeopardise our global collaboration in the fight against this virus,” they wrote.

    In the Lancet piece, the experts cited scientific evidence that support the theory that “overwhelmingly conclude that this coronavirus originated in wildlife, as have so many other emerging pathogens.”

    One of those scientists is Peter Daszak, a preeminent virus hunter who has been working in China for 10 years.

    “We’re very confident that the origin of Covid-19 is in bats,” said Daszak, president of EcoHealth Alliance, a health nonprofit that tracks zoonotic spillover. “We just don’t know where exactly it originated — which bat species exactly. And we don’t know how many others there are out there that could emerge in the future.”

    It is a genetic detective story.

    Did it jump from bat to human, or to another animal first?

    Researchers hope to trace the virus that is killing tens of thousands to a yet-to-be captured bat in the wild.

    Another source of debate is whether the virus that causes Covid-19 transferred directly from bat to human, or whether there was an “intermediate” animal between.

    Daszak believes a bat infected a farm animal that was brought to market alive, and kept with people in one of the most perfect incubators for viral infection: the Chinese wet market.

    “The first time you go into China as a Westerner, it is a bit of shock to go to a wildlife market and see this huge diversity of animals live in cages on top of each other with a pile of guts that have been pulled out of an animal and thrown on the floor,” he said. “As you walk towards the stalls, you slip on the feces and blood. These are perfect places for viruses to spread. Not only that, people are working there … kids are playing there. Families almost live there.”

    Professor Andrew Cunningham of the Zoological Society of London says wet markets are a prime candidate for causing zoonotic spillover events from wildlife, which he said have become more common over the past 30 years.

    “If you bring wild animals — you catch them in the wild, you bring them together in large numbers,” he said. “They’re stressed and then they can become virus factories, and they’re in close contact with human beings in the markets and they’re butchered in the markets, and by people in relatively unhygienic conditions.”

    But an article in Lancet has cast some doubt on the theory. The study shows that about a third of the first 41 confirmed infected patients had no direct exposure to the wet market. Among them was the first known patient, whose symptoms reportedly began appearing December 1.

    “No epidemiological link was found between the first patient and later cases,” the report states.

    The market was shuttered January 1, two days after the Wuhan authorities issued a public health alert about it.

    (An article in the South China Morning Post puts the date of the first case as early as November 17.)

    “I think people went into the fish market who were already infected,” Vincent Racaniello, a microbiology professor at Columbia University, told CNN.

    Most experts push back on lab leak theory

    Racaniello offers yet another theory: The source of the outbreak is a farmer.

    “In bats, these viruses are intestinal viruses, and they are shedding the bat feces, which we call guano,” he said. “And if you go into a bat cave, it is littered with guano. And farmers in many countries harvest the guano to fertilize their fields.”

    Racaniello speculates that, after getting infected, a farmer or an associate came into Wuhan and started infecting other people.

    “We do know that in China you can eat bats — that’s another scenario,” he said. “But I don’t think it’s any more likely than a farmer harvesting guano or a farmer encountering a bat in his barn.”

    Anthony, also of Columbia, echoed Racaniello’s skepticism of the wet-market theory.

    “Early in the outbreak … everyone was talking about the thing having emerged from the wet market,” he said. “And now I think the data calls into question whether or not that’s really true.”

    Anthony noted that not even the mystery of the 2003 SARS outbreak is settled.

    For many years, it was widely believed that the SARS virus jumped from a bat to an intermediate host — a cat-like civet — that infected a person at a food market in China. But a study in 2013 — backed by a followup in 2017– suggested that the 2003 coronavirus could also have jumped straight from a bat into a human.

    “We don’t know which of those is actually true,” Anthony said.

    Perhaps, the most forceful rejection of the wet-market theory came from Ebright of Rutgers.

    “It is absolutely clear the market had no connection with the origin of the outbreak virus, and, instead, only was involved in amplification of an outbreak that had started elsewhere in Wuhan almost a full month earlier,” he told CNN.

    Ebright also isn’t ready to rule out the theory of the two Chinese researchers that the virus may have “leaked” from one of two labs near the Wuhan market, although one of the authors told The Wall Street Journal they withdrew the paper because it “was not supported by direct proofs.”

    While Ebright said he did not believe the genome sequence of the virus shows any “signatures of human manipulation,” he said there is a risk that a lab worker could have accidentally been infected.

    CNN was not able to independently verify the points made by Ebright, and the main author of the study — Botao Xiao — did not respond to CNN’s emails and phone calls requesting comment.

    US-China tensions slowing down the virus hunters

    But one of the labs cited in the paper, the Wuhan Institute of Virology, issued a statement on February 19 that strongly rejected any suggestion that the virus originated from its lab.

    The statement said the theory that the virus leaked from the lab was one of the false rumors that had “great damaged our frontline researchers and seriously disrupted our urgent scientific research.” Other rumors it rejected include “virus was man-made,” “Patient Zero came from the institute” and “Chinese military took control of the institute.”

    Officials in the Chinese government say the source of the virus remains unknown, and that others should stop “smearing” the country.

    “As a matter of fact, the source of Covid-19 is a scientific issue,” Luo Zhaohui, a vice minister of foreign affairs, said in late March. “We need to listen to professional and scientific opinions. The WHO has stressed many times that linking viruses to specific races, skin colors or geographical areas should be avoided. This is also the international consensus.”

    Other researchers contacted by CNN were skeptical of the lab accident theory.

    “I think it has no credibility,” said Racaniello, who hosts a podcast called “This Week in Virology.”

    “I think it’s part of human nature to think that we’re doing the worst things, as opposed to nature.”

    Anthony, who had not heard about the paper when reached Friday, said “it all feels far-fetched.”

    “Lab accidents do happen, we know that, but … there’s certainly no evidence to support that theory,” he said.

    Meanwhile, tensions between the US and China over the origins of the virus — compounded by accusations of misinformation from both sides — are slowing the work of the virus hunters, who are grounded by the same travel restrictions that have crippled the world.

    “If there was a so-called intermediate host, an animal that the bat virus got into and then allowed it to get into people, the virus might still be in that host,” said Daszak, the virus hunter working in China. “And there are hundreds, thousands of these animals and farms and maybe the virus is still there. So even if we get rid of the outbreak, there’s still a chance that that virus could then re-emerge and we need to find that out quickly.”

    CNN’s Jenny Friedland, Dan Logan and Zac Leja contributed to this report.

  • Pep Guardiola’s mother dies after contracting coronavirus

    Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola’s mother, Dolors Sala Carrio, has died aged 82 in Barcelona after contracting coronavirus.

    “Everyone associated with the club sends their most heartfelt sympathy at this most distressing time to Pep, his family and all their friends,” said Manchester City on social media.

    Monday’s increase of 637 coronavirus deaths means 13,055 have died in Spain.

    Last month, Guardiola donated 1m euros (£920,000) to help fight the outbreak.

    The money will be used to purchase medical equipment and protective material for staff involved in treating those admitted to hospital.

    Barcelona is in Catalonia, which is one of the areas in Spain with the most concentrated number of cases.

    Manchester United posted on social media to say the club was “saddened to hear this terrible news”, adding: “We send our heartfelt condolences to Pep and his family.”

    Spaniard Guardiola, 49, has been in charge of Manchester City since July 2016 after spells as manager of Barcelona and Bayern Munich.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Wall Street opens higher on coronavirus slowdown hopes

    U.S. stocks opened higher on Monday, after President Donald Trump expressed hope that the coronavirus health crisis was “leveling-off” in some of the hardest-hit U.S. states.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI rose 641.10 points, or 3.05%, at the open to 21,693.63.

    The S&P 500 .SPX opened higher by 89.63 points, or 3.60%, at 2,578.28. The Nasdaq Composite .IXIC gained 287.09 points, or 3.89%, to 7,660.17 at the opening bell.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Coronavirus: Boris Johnson in ‘good spirits’ in hospital

    Boris Johnson says he is in “good spirits” after spending the night in hospital with coronavirus.

    The PM was taken to St Thomas’ Hospital in London on Sunday evening with “persistent symptoms” – including a temperature and a cough – for routine tests.

    He remains in charge of government, although Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab chaired Monday’s coronavirus meeting.

    Mr Johnson, 55, tested positive for coronavirus 10 days ago.

    In a tweet, he said he was “keeping in touch with my team as we work together to fight this virus and keep everyone safe”.

    He also thanked the “brilliant NHS staff” taking care of him and other patients, adding: “You are the best of Britain”.

    The prime minister’s official spokesman said he remained in hospital “under observation”, and described Russian reports that Mr Johnson had been placed on a ventilator as “disinformation”.

    He is continuing to receive updates and briefings in hospital, the spokesman added.

    Last month, the prime minister’s spokesman said if Mr Johnson was unwell and unable to work, Mr Raab, as the first secretary of state, would stand in.

    Earlier, Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick said he hoped the prime minister would be back in Downing Street “as soon as possible”.

    “He’s been working extremely hard leading the government and being constantly updated. That’s going to continue,” he told BBC Breakfast.

    “I’m sure this is very frustrating for him, for somebody like Boris who wants to be hands [on] running the government from the front, but nonetheless he’s still very much in charge of the government,” he added.

    US President Donald Trump is among those who has sent his wishes to Mr Johnson.

    “All Americans are praying for him. He’s a great friend of mine, a great gentleman and a great leader,” Mr Trump said, adding that he was sure the prime minister would be fine because he is “a strong person”.

    And Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said he hoped the prime minister had a “speedy recovery”.

    Health minister Nadine Dorries, who herself tested positive for coronavirus last month, said many of those with the virus would be “felled” by fatigue and a high temperature and use isolation to sleep and recover.

    “Boris has risked his health and worked every day on our behalf to lead the battle against this vile virus,” she said in a tweet.

    Meanwhile, the former head of the civil service Lord Kerslake said it may be “sensible” for Mr Johnson to “step back” if he is not well enough to carry out his role for now.

    “I think in the end if he’s not well, he will have to reflect on this because the job’s tough at the best of times and it’s doubly tough now,” he told the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Pep Guardiola’s mother dies after contracting coronavirus

    Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola’s mother, Dolors Sala Carrio, has died aged 82 in Barcelona after contracting coronavirus.

    “Everyone associated with the club sends their most heartfelt sympathy at this most distressing time to Pep, his family and all their friends,” said Manchester City on social media.

    Monday’s increase of 637 coronavirus deaths means 13,055 have died in Spain.

    Last month, Guardiola donated 1m euros (£920,000) to help fight the outbreak.

    The money will be used to purchase medical equipment and protective material for staff involved in treating those admitted to hospital.

    Barcelona is in Catalonia, which is one of the areas in Spain with the most concentrated number of cases.

    Source: BBC

  • Coronavirus: The Queen’s message seen by 24 million

    About 24 million TV viewers watched the Queen’s broadcast to the nation on Sunday, according to overnight figures.

    In a rare speech, the monarch thanked people for following government rules to stay at home and praised those “coming together to help others”.

    The message was seen by 23.97 million viewers, making it the second most-watched broadcast this year.

    Boris Johnson’s statement announcing strict new coronavirus restrictions was watched by 27 million last month.

    More than 14 million viewers watched the Queen’s message on BBC One, with about five million viewing it on ITV.

    Another 2.5 million watched the monarch deliver her rare speech on Channel 4, with more watching on Channel 5, Sky News and the BBC News channel.

    Catch-up services are not included in overnight figures.

    It was only the fifth time the Queen has given such a speech in her 68-year reign.

    Her most recent Christmas Day message drew a combined overnight audience of 7.85 million.

    In her speech on Sunday, the Queen said the UK “will succeed” in its fight against the coronavirus pandemic.

    She thanked people for following government rules to stay inside and paid tribute to key workers for their efforts.

    Speaking from Windsor Castle, the Queen said the pandemic was a “different” challenge compared to what the nation had faced before.

    The message ended with the words “we will meet again” – an apparent reference to Dame Vera Lynn’s bolstering war anthem We’ll Meet Again.

    The Queen’s four other special addresses were given in 1991, 1997, 2002 and 2012.

    The first was made at the beginning of the land war in Iraq, while the second was given on the eve of the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales.

    The 2002 address came on the eve of her mother’s funeral, while the 2012 speech marked her Diamond Jubilee.

    Sunday’s pre-recorded message was filmed by a single cameraman wearing protective equipment.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump voices hope for levelling-off in US hotspots

    President Donald Trump has expressed hope coronavirus cases were “levelling off” in US hotspots, saying he saw “light at the end of the tunnel”.

    On Sunday, New York, the epicentre of the US outbreak, reported a drop in the number of new infections and deaths.

    Mr Trump described the dip as a “good sign”, but warned of more deaths as the pandemic neared its “peak” in the US.

    “In the days ahead, America will endure the peak of this pandemic,” Mr Trump said at his daily coronavirus briefing.

    He said more medical personnel and supplies, including masks and ventilators, would be sent to the states that are most in need of assistance.

    Deborah Birx, a member of the president’s coronavirus task force, said the situation in Italy and Spain, where infections and deaths have fallen in recent days, was “giving us hope on what our future could be”.

    “We’re hopeful over the next week that we’ll see a stabilization of cases in these metropolitan areas where the outbreak began several weeks ago,” Dr Birx said at the same news conference.

    Optimism from Dr Birx and Mr Trump contrasted with other leading US experts, including top advisor Dr Anthony Fauci, who earlier said the short-term outlook was “really bad”.

    The US surgeon general, meanwhile, warned that this will be “the hardest and the saddest week of most Americans’ lives”.

    “This is going to be our Pearl Harbor moment, our 9/11 moment,” Surgeon General Jerome Adams told Fox News on Sunday.

    The US has reported 337,274 confirmed infections and 9,619 deaths from Covid-19, by far the highest tally in the world.

    What’s the latest in New York? On Sunday, Governor Andrew Cuomo reported 594 new deaths giving an overall total of 4,159 deaths in New York, the state hit hardest by the coronavirus so far.

    He said there were now 122,000 New York residents who had been infected. But he added that nearly 75% of patients who have required hospitalisation had now been discharged.

    Patients requiring hospital are down for the first time in a week, and deaths are down from the previous day, he said.

    There were 630 deaths reported in the previous 24 hours.

    “The coronavirus is truly vicious and effective at what the virus does,” he told reporters in Albany, the state capital.

    “It’s an effective killer.”

    It’s too early to know if New York is currently experiencing its apex – the highest rate of infection that graphics behind Mr Cuomo referred to as “the Battle on the Mountain Top”.

    He also said it was too early to know if cases would drop off quickly after the apex, or if they would decline slowly – and at a rate that would still overwhelm hospitals.

    “The statisticians will not give you a straight answer on anything,” he said about the so-called “curve” – the chart that tracks the rate of infections.

    “At first it was straight up and straight down, or a total ‘V’. Or maybe its up with a plateau and we’re somewhere on the plateau. They don’t know.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • A tiger at the Bronx Zoo tests positive for coronavirus

    Nadia, a tiger at the Bronx Zoo in New York, has become the first of her kind to test positive for the coronavirus.

    The 4-year-old female Malayan tiger tested positive after developing a dry cough and is expected to recover, the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Bronx Zoo said in a news release.
    Samples from Nadia were taken and tested after the tiger — and five other tigers and lions at the zoo — began showing symptoms of respiratory illness, according to the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). No other animals at the zoo are showing symptoms.

    “Though they have experienced some decrease in appetite, the cats at the Bronx Zoo are otherwise doing well under veterinary care and are bright, alert, and interactive with their keepers,” the zoo said.

    “It is not known how this disease will develop in big cats since different species can react differently to novel infections, but we will continue to monitor them closely and anticipate full recoveries.”

    The Covid-19 testing that was performed on Nadia was performed in a veterinary school laboratory and is not the same test used for people, Dr. Paul Calle, the zoo’s chief veterinarian, posted on Facebook.

    The animals were infected by a zoo employee who was “asymptomatically infected with the virus” while caring for them, according to the zoo. The Bronx Zoo has been closed to the public since March 16.

    Anyone sick with the coronavirus is being advised to minimize contact with animals, including pets, until more information is known about the virus, the USDA said.

    CNN’s Aaron Cooper and Sarah Jorgensen contributed to this report.

  • Coronavirus: China reports 30 new cases, 3 deaths

    China on Sunday claimed 25 of the 30 news coronavirus cases it confirmed were imported.

    China’s National Health Commission said the five locally transmitted cases were reported from the southeastern province of Guangdong.

    In a statement, the commission said three deaths were reported on Saturday from Hubei province, the capital of which is Wuhan, initially at the center of the global coronavirus outbreak.

    “Hubei reported no new cases of confirmed infections, no new cases of suspected infections, and 3 deaths.”

    China’s total number of confirmed coronavirus cases stands at 81,669, with the death toll at 3,329.

    Some 76,964 people have recovered, while 295 are in critical condition.

    Hong Kong has reported 862 cases and four deaths so far, Taiwan has 355 cases, and Macau has 44 cases, according to the commission.

    As of Saturday, a total of 186 COVID-19 patients had recovered in Hong Kong, 50 in Taiwan, and 10 in Macau, it added.

    Since appearing in Wuhan, China, last December, the novel coronavirus has spread to at least 181 countries and regions.

    Data compiled by the U.S.-based Johns Hopkins University shows worldwide infections surpassing 1.2 million with over 64,700 deaths. An excess of 247,000 people have recovered.

    Source: aa.com.tr

  • Japan expected to declare state of emergency over coronavirus

    Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will declare a state of emergency as early as Tuesday in a bid to stop the coronavirus spreading across the country, the Yomiuri newspaper reported, as the cumulative number of infections topped 1,000 in Tokyo alone.

    Abe will likely announce his plans to declare the emergency on Monday, the paper said, while Kyodo news agency said new measures would likely come into force on Wednesday.

    Pressure had been mounting on the government to make the move as the pace of infections continues to accelerate – particularly in the capital – even though it remains slow for now compared with the United States, countries in Europe and China, where thousands have died.

    Sounding alarm over the high rate of cases that couldn’t be traced, Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike indicated last week that she would favour a state-of-emergency declaration as a means to help her urge residents to adhere to stronger social-distancing measures.

    Under a law revised in March to cover the coronavirus, the prime minister can declare a state of emergency if the disease poses a “grave danger” to lives and if its rapid spread could have a huge impact on the economy.

    Japan’s top government spokesman, Yoshihide Suga, said on Monday that a decision had yet to be made.

    Declaring an emergency would give governors in severely affected regions legal authority to call on people to stay home and businesses to close, but not to impose the kind of lockdowns seen in other countries. In most cases, there are no penalties for ignoring requests, and enforcement will rely more on peer pressure and respect for authority.

    The government is likely to designate the greater Tokyo metropolitan area for the state of emergency, and possibly also Osaka and Hyogo prefectures in western Japan, the Yomiuri reported.

    More than 3,500 people have tested positive and 85 have died in Japan from the COVID-19 disease associated with new coronavirus, according to public broadcaster NHK.

    While that toll is dwarfed by 335,000 infections and more than 9,500 deaths in the United States alone, experts worry a sudden surge could strain Japan’s medical system and leave patients with nowhere to go.

    Kenji Shibuya, director of the Institute for Public Health at King’s College, London, said Abe’s decision on a state of emergency was too late given the explosive rise in Tokyo.

    “It should have been declared by April 1 at the latest,” he said.

    Abe must seek formal advice from a panel of experts before deciding to go ahead and declare a state of emergency. One medical professional on the panel has said a decision to do so was “complex”, involving political, economic and other factors.

    The government’s coronavirus task force – a separate entity from the panel of experts – is scheduled to hold a meeting on Monday evening. Government spokesman Suga said he was not aware of any meeting with the advisory panel of experts itself on Monday.

    Governors in Tokyo and elsewhere have previously asked citizens to stay home on weekends, avoid crowds and evening outings, and work from home. That had some effect, but less than many experts said was needed.

    Restricting movement and businesses under a state of emergency would deal a heavy blow to an economy already struggling to avoid a recession. The government is readying a stimulus package of hundreds of billions of dollars to be rolled out this week.

    Source: France24

  • Apple to ship 1 million face shields a week for medical workers

    Apple has said it will soon be producing one million face shields a week for medical workers battling the coronavirus pandemic.

    The tech giant had already sourced 20 million surgical masks from around the world to help address a global shortage, chief executive Tim Cook said in a video posted to Twitter on Sunday.

    But the company had also designed its own transparent protective face shield and begun mass production at its factories in the US and China, he added.

    “We plan to ship over one million by the end of this week,” said Cook.

    Initial distribution would be focused on the US but the company hoped to “quickly expand distribution” to other countries, he said.

    Apple joins several global firms that have modified their production lines to meet demand for protective gear, including Italian luxury brand Prada.

    US President Donald Trump last month issued a federal order forcing auto giant General Motors to manufacture ventilators after a shortage of the hospital equipment, which is crucial for treating critical COVID-19 cases.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus: Singapore quarantines 20,000 migrant workers

    Singapore has told 20,000 foreign workers to stay in their dormitories for 14 days as coronavirus cases increase in the city state.

    Two dormitories have been isolated: one with 13,000 workers and 63 cases, and one with 6,800 workers and 28 cases.

    They are typically home to men who work in construction from South Asia.

    The workers will be paid and given three meals a day – but some have complained of overcrowded and dirty conditions.

    What has the government announced?
    Two places are being sealed off – the S11 Dormitory at Punggol and the smaller Westlite Toh Guan dormitory.

    The government said cases in the dormitories were rising, and that isolation would “keep the workers safe [and] protect the wider community from widespread transmission”.

    Workers are banned from leaving their blocks, and have been told not to mix with people who don’t live in their room or floor.

    The number of people in a room varies between dormitories, but in 2015 the BBC visited a new complex which had 12 people per room.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Man rescued from Pyrenees fined for lockdown breach

    A man has been rescued by helicopter from the Pyrenees after trying to walk from France to Spain to buy cheap cigarettes, reports say.

    The local mountain rescue service said the man was found “exhausted, shivering, cold and lost” when he was eventually picked up.

    Despite his ordeal, he was fined 135 euros ($146; £119) for breaking coronavirus lockdown rules.

    “We remind you once more. STAY AT HOME,” the regional police tweeted.

    The mountain rescue service said the man, from Perpignan – about 25km (15 miles) from the Spanish border – had initially set off by car but was turned back at a checkpoint.

    It said he then decided to attempt the journey on foot along a hiking path over the mountains.

    However, the man fell into a stream and brambles and got lost before contacting rescuers, the service said. It said he was found quickly and airlifted to a security facility back in Perpignan.

    Under lockdown rules in France, people can only leave home for exceptional reasons and with a letter explaining why.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump voices hope for levelling-off in US hotspots

    President Donald Trump has expressed hope coronavirus cases were “levelling off” in US hotspots, saying he saw “light at the end of the tunnel”.

    On Sunday, New York, the epicentre of the US outbreak, reported a drop in the number of new infections and deaths.

    Mr Trump described the dip as a “good sign”, but warned of more deaths as the pandemic neared its “peak” in the US.

    “In the days ahead, America will endure the peak of this pandemic,” Mr Trump said at his daily coronavirus briefing.

    He said more medical personnel and supplies, including masks and ventilators, would be sent to the states that are most in need of assistance.

    Deborah Birx, a member of the president’s coronavirus task force, said the situation in Italy and Spain, where infections and deaths have fallen in recent days, was “giving us hope on what our future could be”.

    “We’re hopeful over the next week that we’ll see a stabilisation of cases in these metropolitan areas where the outbreak began several weeks ago,” Dr Birx said at the same news conference.

    Optimism from Dr Birx and Mr Trump contrasted with other leading US experts, including top advisor Dr Anthony Fauci, who earlier said the short-term outlook was “really bad”.

    The US surgeon general, meanwhile, warned that this will be “the hardest and the saddest week of most Americans’ lives”.

    “This is going to be our Pearl Harbor moment, our 9/11 moment,” Surgeon General Jerome Adams told Fox News on Sunday.

    The US has reported 337,274 confirmed infections and 9,619 deaths from COVID-19, by far the highest tally in the world.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Boris Johnson admitted to hospital due to persistent symptoms of coronavirus

    British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was admitted to hospital for tests on Sunday in what Downing Street said was a “precautionary step” because he was showing persistent symptoms of coronavirus ten days after testing positive for the virus.

    “On the advice of his doctor, the Prime Minister has tonight been admitted to hospital for tests,” Downing Street said.

    “This is a precautionary step, as the Prime Minister continues to have persistent symptoms of coronavirus ten days after testing positive for the virus,” Downing Street said.

    News of his hospitalisation came only after an hour after Queen Elizabeth delivered a rallying call to the British public saying they would overcome the coronavirus outbreak if they stayed resolute.

    Johnson, 55, on March 27 became the first leader of a major power to announce that he had tested positive. He went into isolation at an apartment in Downing Street and said on Friday he was staying there as he still had a high temperature.

    Downing Street underscored that this was not an emergency admission and that Johnson remained in charge of the government. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab will chair the government’s emergency COVID-19 meeting on Monday, a source said.

    With only an unwieldy collection of sometimes ancient and contradictory precedents to go by, there is no simple, formally-enshrined “Plan B” or succession scenario should the prime minister become incapacitated.

    The pound briefly fell 0.4% vs the U.S. dollar to $1.2215 before trimming some losses to trade at $1.2230, down 0.3%.

    Queen Elizabeth had been informed of Johnson’s admission to hospital, Buckingham Palace said. It made no further comment.

    U.S. President Donald Trump said Johnson was a “strong man” as he passed on his nation’s best wishes.

    “All Americans are praying for him,” Trump told a news conference. “He’s a friend of mine, he’s a great gentleman and a great leader, and as you know he went to the hospital today but I’m hopeful and sure that he’s going to be fine.”

    Coronavirus in the UK

    Johnson, the face of the 2016 Brexit campaign, won a resounding election victory in December before leading the United Kingdom out of the European Union on Jan. 31.

    But he has faced criticism in the United Kingdom for initially approving a much more modest response to the novel coronavirus outbreak than other major European leaders, telling a news conference on March 3 that he had been shaking hands with coronavirus patients.

    He then changed tack when scientific projections showed a quarter of a million people could die in the United Kingdom.

    Johnson effectively shuttered the world’s fifth-largest economy, advising people to stay at home and the elderly or infirm to isolate themselves for weeks.

    But the virus has penetrated the British government.

    Johnson and his health minister tested positive last month and his chief medical adviser also self isolated. Johnson’s pregnant 32-year-old fiancee, Carrie Symonds, also had symptoms but said on Saturday she was feeling better.

    From an apartment above Number 11 Downing Street, and with food brought to his door, Johnson continued to lead the government’s response and chaired meetings via video conference.

    <video=96289>

    He has posted a series of video messages on Twitter since then, initially appearing in a suit and tie but in the latest post on Friday, he appeared weary, sitting in a chair with his shirt open at the neck.

    “Although I’m feeling better and I’ve done my seven days of isolation, alas I still have one of the symptoms, a minor symptom, I still have a temperature,” he said.

    Britain’s National Health Service guidelines stipulate that those who suspect they have coronavirus should not leave home.

    Under a section headlined “What to do if you need medical help while self-isolating”, it says: “If you need medical help for any reason, do not go to places like a GP (family doctor) surgery, pharmacy or hospital.”

    Health officials said on Sunday the UK death toll from the coronavirus had risen by 621 to 4,934.

    Downing Street refused to say what tests Johnson was to have in hospital, but experts said a person of the prime minister’s age with COVID-19 symptoms after 10 days would be likely be assessed for their oxygen levels, lung, liver and heart functions, and undergo an electrocardiogram heart check.

    Doctors managing COVID-19 patients had reported that more men than women had serious problems and patients who were overweight or had previous health issues were at a higher risk.

    Earlier this year, Johnson said he needed to lose weight.

    “We don’t know exactly why the PM has gone to hospital except we have been told he is having tests,” said Derek Hill, professor of medical imaging science at University College London.

    “Many people attending hospital with COVID-19 have difficulty breathing. Some people are rapidly discharged. Some others can quickly deteriorate and need help breathing. We have no reason to believe the PM needs such help.”</video=96289>

    Source: France24

  • USA: Bronx zoo tiger tests positive for coronavirus

    A tiger at New York’s Bronx Zoo has tested positive for COVID-19, the institution said Sunday, and is believed to have contracted the virus from a caretaker who was asymptomatic at the time.

    The four-year-old Malayan tiger named Nadia along with her sister Azul, two Amur tigers and three African lions all developed dry coughs and are expected to fully recover, the Wildlife Conservation Society that runs the city’s zoos said in a statement.

    “We tested the cat out of an abundance of caution and will ensure any knowledge we gain about COVID-19 will contribute to the world’s continuing understanding of this novel coronavirus,” the statement sent to AFP said.

    “Though they have experienced some decrease in appetite, the cats at the Bronx Zoo are otherwise doing well under veterinary care and are bright, alert, and interactive with their keepers,” the statement continued.

    “It is not known how this disease will develop in big cats since different species can react differently to novel infections, but we will continue to monitor them closely and anticipate full recoveries.”

    All four of the zoos and the aquarium in New York — whose virus death toll has topped 4,000 — have been closed since March 16.

    The zoo emphasized that there is “no evidence that animals play a role in the transmission of COVID-19 to people other than the initial event in the Wuhan market, and no evidence that any person has been infected with COVID-19 in the US by animals, including by pet dogs or cats.”

    Chinese disease control officials had identified wild animals sold in a Wuhan market as the source of the coronavirus pandemic that has infected well over one million people worldwide.

    According to the US Department of Agriculture website there had “not been reports of pets or other animals” in the United States falling ill with coronavirus prior to news of the tiger Nadia.

    “It is still recommended that people sick with COVID-19 limit contact with animals until more information is known about the virus,” the department’s website says.

    In late March a pet cat was discovered infected with the novel coronavirus in Belgium, following similar cases in Hong Kong where two dogs tested positive for COVID-19.

    All of those animals are believed to have contracted the virus from the people they live with.

    The Bronx zoo said preventative measures were in place for caretakers as well as all cats in the city’s zoos.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus: Ecuadorian city runs out of coffins amid coronavirus crisis

    Ecuador’s government has begun storing the bodies of victims of the coronavirus in giant refrigerated containers as hundreds of deaths in the city of Guayaquil, the center of the country’s outbreak, have already filled morgues and hospitals.

    Ecuador has confirmed 318 deaths from the virus, one of the highest tallies in Latin America. But President Lenin Moreno said this week that the real figure was higher as authorities were collecting more than 100 bodies a day, many from relatives’ homes as a strict quarantine prevented them from being buried.

    The government has installed three containers, the largest about 12 meters (40 ft) long, at public hospitals to preserve bodies until graves were prepared, according to Guayaquil’s mayor, Cynthia Viteri. So far 150 victims have been buried in a private cemetery in the port city.

    At Guayaquil’s Teodoro Maldonado Carbo hospital on Saturday, medical workers wearing protective gear removed bodies wrapped in plastic from a storage room and used a pallet to wheel them to one container, according to a Reuters photographer.

    “This pandemic is overcoming the capacity of our hospital services,” the hospital said in a statement on Friday.

    The hospital on Sunday confirmed that it had set up a refrigerated container to hold the bodies of those who died amid the pandemic, adding that the arrangement was being operated in accordance with World Health Organization protocols.

    The Ecuadorean Institute of Social Security, which runs Teodoro Maldonado Carbo, said on Saturday on Twitter that it had disinfected all areas of the hospital to guarantee the safety of patients and medical professionals.

    On Saturday, Ecuador’s government said it would activate a new digital system that would allow families to find out where their dead relatives were buried.

    Moreno said the government expected the total number of deaths in Guayaquil’s surrounding province to reach up to 3,500, and said a “special camp” was being built to bury the dead.

    Source: France24

  • Apple to ship one million face shields a week for medical workers

    Apple has said it will soon be producing one million face shields a week for medical workers battling the coronavirus pandemic.

    The tech giant had already sourced 20 million surgical masks from around the world to help address a global shortage, chief executive Tim Cook said in a video posted to Twitter on Sunday.

    But the company had also designed its own transparent protective face shield and begun mass production at its factories in the US and China, he added.

    “We plan to ship over one million by the end of this week,” said Cook.

    Initial distribution would be focused on the US but the company hoped to “quickly expand distribution” to other countries, he said.

    Apple joins several global firms that have modified their production lines to meet demand for protective gear, including Italian luxury brand Prada.

    US President Donald Trump last month issued a federal order forcing auto giant General Motors to manufacture ventilators after a shortage of the hospital equipment, which is crucial for treating critical COVID-19 cases.

    Source: France24

  • Boeing extends factory shutdown in Washington state

    Boeing has said it will indefinitely extend a shutdown at its factories in Washington state because of the coronavirus pandemic.

    The aerospace giant had already halted production at its Puget Sound facility near Seattle, where the company builds the long-range 777 jet and other models, after announcing a two-week stoppage last month.

    It had also shut its other major state factory at Moses Lake because of the 737 MAX grounding.

    Boeing announced Sunday that the shutdown would continue indefinitely in an effort to protect staff from COVID-19, which has already claimed the life of one employee at the company’s Everett facility.

    “The health and safety of our employees, their families and our communities is our shared priority,” Boeing’s commercial airplanes division president Stan Deal said in a statement.

    Boeing was already facing significant headwinds prior to the coronavirus pandemic because of the crisis surrounding the 737 MAX, which has been grounded for more than a year following two fatal crashes.

    But the pandemic has further hit the company’s outlook with most commercial airline travel suspended and major carriers thrust into a life-or-death fight.

    The company is seeking more than $60 billion in federal support for the US aerospace industry in the wake of the two crises.

    It announced a voluntary worker layoff plan on Thursday and said it expected “several thousand employees” to take a severance package or retire.

    Boeing currently employs around 70,000 people in Washington state.

    Source: France24

  • China reports increase in new coronavirus cases, asymptomatic patients

    Mainland China reported 39 new coronavirus cases as of Sunday, up from 30 a day earlier, and the number of asymptomatic cases also surged, as Beijing continued to struggle to extinguish the outbreak despite drastic containment efforts.

    The National Health Commission said in a statement on Monday that 78 new asymptomatic cases had been identified at of the end of the day on Sunday, compared with 47 the day before.

    Imported cases and asymptomatic patients, who have the virus and can give it to others but show no symptoms, have become China’s chief concern in recent weeks after draconian containment measures succeeded in slashing the infection rate.

    Of the new cases showing symptoms, 38 were people who had entered China from abroad, compared with 25 a day earlier. One new locally transmitted infection was reported, in the southern province of Guangdong, down from five a day earlier in the same province.

    The new locally transmitted case, in the city of Shenzhen, was a person who had travelled from Hubei province, the original epicentre of the outbreak, Guangdong provincial authorities said.

    The Guangdong health commission raised the risk level for a total of four districts in the cities of Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Jieyang from low to medium late on Sunday.

    Mainland China has now reported a total of 81,708 cases, with 3,331 deaths.

    Daily infections have fallen dramatically from the peak of the epidemic in February, when hundreds were reported daily, but new infections continue to appear daily.

    The country has closed off its borders to foreigners as the virus spreads globally, though most imported cases involve Chinese nationals returning from overseas.

    The central government also has pushed local authorities to identify and isolate the asymptomatic patients.

    Source: France24

  • US braces for ‘Pearl Harbor moment’ as coronavirus death toll rises

    US governors on Sunday appealed to the White House for a national strategy against the fast-spreading coronavirus, as deaths surged and health authorities warned the coming week could resemble a “Pearl Harbor moment.”

    The US death toll was creeping toward the grim milestone of 10,000 as the pandemic’s epicentre in New York racked up hundreds of lives lost a day and hospitals girded for an influx of new infected patients.

    Anthony Fauci, the senior American scientist battling the pandemic stateside, warned of a looming “escalation,” saying Americans should prepare for “a bad week.”

    “I will not say we have it under control,” Fauci told CBS Sunday. “That would be a false statement.”

    US Surgeon General Jerome Adams sounded an even more dire alarm.

    “This is going to be the hardest and the saddest week of most Americans’ lives, quite frankly,” he told Fox News.

    “This is going to be our Pearl Harbor moment, our 9-11 moment, only it’s not going to be localised.”

    Most of the nation is under shelter-in-place orders, but nine states have yet to issue such regulations, while the federal government has declined to mandate anything on a national level.

    Adams noted that the nine states without orders were producing much of the US food supply.

    Still, he pleaded with state leaders to urge residents to stay home for at least the next seven to 10 days: “There is a light at the end of the tunnel if everyone does their part.”

    Sunday night the White House aimed to emphasize progress in the fight including plans to send hundreds of thousands of masks to counties in New York, but could not sugarcoat the difficult weeks ahead.

    “We all know that we have to reach a certain point, and that point is going to be a horrific point in terms of death,” President Donald Trump said at his briefing.

    Hitting a plateau?

    The coronavirus death toll in hardest-hit New York state rose to 4,159, Governor Andrew Cuomo said, up from 3,565 a day prior.

    It was the first time the day-over-day toll had dropped on Saturday it hit a record 630 deaths in 24 hours but Cuomo told journalists it was too early to tell whether that was a “blip.”

    New York’s peak could arrive over the next week, he said, though he cautioned it was unclear if the apex would be a point, followed quickly by a decline, or a lingering plateau.

    The state has now reported 122,031 confirmed infections roughly one-tenth the worldwide total.

    Cuomo said he aimed to shift patients away from already overburdened hospitals to others with more capacity and equipment.

    “I can’t say to a hospital, I will send you all the supplies you need, all the vents you need. We don’t have them,” he said, referring to life-saving ventilator equipment. “You are going to have to shift and deploy to different locations.”

    The governor said rapid testing, still out-of-reach, was key to a “return to normalcy,” while reiterating appeals for equipment including ventilators from other states as well as from the federal stockpile.

    Cuomo vowed to return the favor as the virus spreads elsewhere New Jersey, Michigan and Louisiana are all emerging hotspots saying that New York could offer a strategic blueprint.

    ‘All hands on deck’

    On the Sunday morning talk show circuit, other state governors voiced alarm that the Donald Trump administration has not offered a unified policy plan.

    “Not having a national strategy where there is one policy for the country as opposed to a patchwork based on whomever the governor is, is something that I think is creating a more porous situation where COVID-19 will go longer and more people will get sick,” Michigan’s Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer said on Fox News.

    “We are not one another’s enemy,” she added. “The enemy is COVID-19. And it has to be all hands on deck, from the federal level, to the state level, to the local level.”

    Throughout the weekend Trump stressed that the US where infections have surpassed 330,000 cannot remain economically shut down forever, and continued to leave it to the states to declare their own mitigation strategies and lockdown orders.

    Illinois’s Democratic governor J.B. Pritzker skewered the Trump administration for not better preparing the nation, leaving the virus to slam the US as it has Europe and China.

    “If they had started in February building ventilators, getting ready for this pandemic, we would not have the problems that we have today, and frankly, very many fewer people would die,” Pritzker told CNN.

    At his briefing the president later accused Pritzker of “always complaining.”

     

    Source: AFP

  • Coronavirus: Scientists brand 5G claims ‘complete rubbish’

    Conspiracy theories claiming 5G technology helps transmit coronavirus have been condemned by the scientific community.

    Videos have been shared on social media showing mobile phone masts on fire in Birmingham and Merseyside – along with the claims.

    The posts have been shared on Facebook, YouTube and Instagram – including by verified accounts with hundreds of thousands of followers.

    But scientists say the idea of a connection between Covid-19 and 5G is “complete rubbish” and biologically impossible.

    The conspiracy theories have been branded “the worst kind of fake news” by NHS England Medical Director Stephen Powis.

    Conspiracy theory

    Many of those sharing the post are pushing a conspiracy theory falsely claiming that 5G – which is used in mobile phone networks and relies on signals carried by radio waves – is somehow responsible for coronavirus.

    These theories appear to have first emerged via Facebook posts in late January, around the same time the first cases were recorded in the US.

    They appear to fall broadly in to two camps:

    • One claims 5G can suppress the immune system, thus making people more susceptible to catching the virus.
    • The other suggests the virus can somehow be transmitted through the use of 5G technology.

    Both these notions are “complete rubbish,” says Dr Simon Clarke, associate professor in cellular microbiology at the University of Reading.

    mobile network
    Masts caught fire in Birmingham and Merseyside, prompting investigations

    “The idea that 5G lowers your immune system doesn’t stand up to scrutiny,” Dr Clarke says.

    “Your immune system can be dipped by all sorts of thing – by being tired one day, or not having a good diet. Those fluctuations aren’t huge but can make you more susceptible to catching viruses.

    “Radio waves can disrupt your physiology as they heat you up, meaning your immune system can’t function. But 5G radio waves are tiny and they are nowhere near strong enough to affect the immune system. There have been lots of studies on this.”

    It would also be impossible for 5G to transmit the virus, Adam Finn, professor of paediatrics at the University of Bristol, adds.

    “The present epidemic is caused by a virus that is passed from one infected person to another. We know this is true. We even have the virus growing in our lab, obtained from a person with the illness. Viruses and electromagnetic waves that make mobile phones and internet connections work are different things. As different as chalk and cheese,” he says.

    Graphic shows 5G's frequencies on the electromagnetic spectrum - within the non-ionising band at the lower end of the scale.

    It’s also important to note another major flaw with the conspiracy theories – coronavirus is spreading in UK cities where 5G has yet to be deployed, and in countries like Iran that have yet to roll out the technology.

    There were plenty of scare stories about 5G circulating before the coronavirus outbreak which Reality Check has already looked into, such as this piece: Does 5G pose health risks?

    Earlier this year, a long-running study from the watchdog the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) rebutted these claims, saying there was no evidence that mobile networks cause cancer or other illnesses.

    Coronavirus: What you need to know graphic featuring three key points: wash your hands for 20 seconds; use a tissue for coughs; avoid touching your face

    But if anything, the misinformation seems to have escalated.

    Trade body Mobile UK has said false rumours and theories linking 5G and coronavirus were “concerning,” while the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport has reiterated there is “absolutely no credible evidence for the link”.

    Viruses invade human or animal cells and use them to reproduce, which is what causes infection. Viruses cannot live very long outside a living thing, so they have to find a way in – usually via droplets of liquid from coughs or sneezes.

    Genome sequencing of this coronavirus suggests it jumped from animals to humans – and then began to pass from human to human.

    Source: bbc.com

  • COVID-19: All persons in mandatory quarantine who tested negative discharged Oppong-Nkrumah

    All persons who have been in mandatory quarantine over the past 2 weeks and have tested negative for the COVID-19 after two tests within the period have been sent home.

    This was disclosed by Information Minister, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, on Saturday, April 4, in a Twitter update.

    He stated that beginning Saturday, persons who have successfully undergone the 14-day mandatory quarantine will be sent home with assistance from the National Security.

    Those who live outside Accra, or wish to be sent to destinations outside the Region will also be catered for.

    The exercise, he tweeted, will take place over two days, Saturday and Sunday.

    Kojo Oppong Nkrumah mentioned, “Today and tomorrow we are commencing an exercise to take home, our Colleagues who have been in mandatory quarantine for the last 14days and who tested negative after both tests.”

    “The national security secretariate and the military are coordinating the exit and transport to their homes. For those who desire to go outside Accra, arrangements are being made to assist them to the exits of Accra,” he added.

    Updates from the Ghana Health Service website dedicated to the provision of verified information indicate that

    “As at 4 th April 2020, Ghana has recorded a total of 214 cases of COVID-19 with five (5) deaths. Currently, the number of regions reporting cases are as follows: Greater Accra, Ashanti, Northern, Upper West Eastern and Upper East Region. The Greater Accra Region has most cases (189) followed by the Ashanti Region (12), Northern Region (10), Upper West Region (1), Eastern Region (1) and Upper East Region (1).

    “Most of the cases are reported from routine / enhanced surveillance activities. Cases from travellers under mandatory quarantine are 90,” it added.

    Source: ABCNewsGh.com 

  • Police arrest 6 engaging in sex party during lockdown

    Six persons who were engaging in an orgy without recourse to the coronavirus lockdown have been arrested and are set to be arraigned before court.

    According to the dailymail.co.uk, Spanish police found six people allegedly having an orgy at a brothel in Madrid during the coronavirus lockdown.

    Police in the Spanish capital confirmed they found six people in a flat suspected of being a brothel taking part in a sex party.

    According to local media, several neighbours in the building called the police to complain about people going in and out of a flat and playing loud music.

    Reports said the police went into the flat on Saturday and found four women and two men naked in a corridor with three bedrooms.

    The local authorities also found alcoholic drinks and cigarette butts all over the flat, local media reported.

    The police reportedly suspect the house was functioning as a brothel as only one of the women was registered as a tenant in the house.

    Officers broke up the orgy in the Tetuan area of the city and have filed reports against them.

    Reports claim that local authorities filed a complaint against the tenant for breaking the regulations against noise pollution.

    The other five guests were also reported for breaking the quarantine declared by the national government to stop the spread of COVID-19.

    No arrests have been reported.

    Source: dailymail.co.uk

  • Corona beer stops production in Mexico

    Production of Corona beer has been temporarily suspended in Mexico because of the coronavirus pandemic, said Grupo Modelo, the company that makes the popular beverage.

    In a statement on Twitter, the company said it was halting the production and marketing of its beer because the Mexican government has shuttered non-essential businesses.

    The Anheuser-Busch Inbev-owned company also makes Modelo and Pacifico beers.

    This week, the Mexican government announced the suspension of non-essential activities in the public and private sectors until April 30 in an effort to curb the spread of the virus.

    The country has more than 1,500 cases and 50 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.

    Grupo Modelo is ready to enact a plan to “guarantee the supply of beer” if the Mexican government decides to include breweries as essential, according to a statement.

    Source: cnn.com

  • Coronavirus: Trump to defy ‘voluntary’ advice for Americans to wear masks

    US President Donald Trump has said he will not wear a face mask despite new medical guidance advising Americans to do so.

    He could not see himself greeting “presidents, prime ministers, dictators, kings, queens” in the Oval Office while wearing one, he said.

    He stressed that the guidance released on Friday was “voluntary”.

    “You do not have to do it,” he said. “I don’t think I’m going to be doing it.”

    The guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the government’s public health advisory agency, came as the US reported at least 270,473 confirmed cases of Covid-19, with nearly 7,000 deaths.

    Until now, US health authorities had said that only the sick, or those caring for patients of coronavirus, should wear masks, but newer studies suggest that covering up one’s face is important to prevent inadvertent transmission.

    “From recent studies we know that the transmission from individuals without symptoms is playing a more significant role in the spread of the virus than previously understood,” Mr Trump said on Friday.

    However, he told reporters after announcing the CDC’s new guidance: “I just don’t want to do it myself.”

    “Sitting in the Oval Office… I somehow don’t see it for myself.”

    Americans are now advised to use clean cloth or fabric to cover their faces whilst in public. Officials have stressed that medical masks remain in short supply, and should be left for healthcare workers.

    The guidance comes as the number of cases globally climbs past one million.

    Source: bbc.com

  • India reports more than 600 new coronavirus cases in a day, many linked to a religious gathering

    India has reported its biggest single-day jump in new coronavirus cases, with 601 in the past day representing a 26% rise, according to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

    The country now has 3,082 cases and 86 deaths, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.

    The surge in cases has been linked to a religious gathering held at a New Delhi mosque in March, a senior health ministry official said. People from across India and overseas had gathered for the event.

    So far, 647 cases have been directly linked to the gathering, said Lav Agarwal, a senior official of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. He added that the cases have been identified and isolated across 14 states and union territories

    The Delhi government said earlier this week that it will be taking strict action against those responsible for organizing the gathering.

    “We are being told that a lot of people left this mosque and went to different parts of the country,” Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said. “It is scary to think how many people might have been impacted by this incident.”

    Source: cnn.com

  • Coronavirus: A fifth of smaller UK firms ‘will run out of cash’

    Nearly a fifth of all small and medium-sized businesses in the UK are unlikely to get the cash they need to survive the next four weeks, in spite of unprecedented government support.

    That’s according to research from a network of accountants which suggests between 800,000 and a million firms nationwide may soon have to close.

    Many firms have told the BBC that banks have refused them emergency loans.

    The banks say they are following the rules set out by the government.

    Chancellor Rishi Sunak said two weeks ago that businesses would be able to walk into bank branches and discuss Coronavirus Business Interruption Loans (CBILs) of up to £5m to help them survive the shutdown.

    The promise from the chancellor was that “any good business in financial difficulty who needs access to cash to pay their rent, the salaries of their employees, pay suppliers, or purchase stock, will be able to access a government-backed loan, on attractive terms”.

    However, thousands of struggling firms can’t get through to their banks by phone or, when they do, are being told by the banks they’re not eligible.

    Mayor of London Sadiq Khan told BBC Radio 5 live that “banks have got to step up” to help small and medium-sized businesses survive during the coronavirus pandemic.

    ‘Disappointment after disappointment’

    Steve Lord runs Belgrave & Powell, a Nottingham-based engineering group employing 120 people and supplying services to customers such as BAE’s Samlesbury site, where the F-35 and Typhoon fighter jets are made.

    Since Salmesbury halted production, his business – like millions of others – is facing the prospect of cash drying up, threatening its ability to pay wages and stay afloat.

    “I was heartened and astonished to see the unprecedented help that was announced by the government two weeks ago,” he said. “But we put one of our most senior people on it and as each day passed it was disappointment after disappointment.”

    He said some of the approved lenders were demanding interest rates of up to 30%, which Mr Lord believes is “taking advantage of the situation”. Meanwhile, he said, High Street banks were charging around 7%, however he was told it could be as long as a month before his firm got the money.

    Mr Lord thinks too much control has been handed to the banks and approved lenders: “The government needs to make it so everyone’s offering the same terms.”

    “It seems to be that if you are lucky you are banking with the right party, if you’re not lucky you’ll end up having to close your business.”

    ‘The loans won’t help’

    Another business owner, Peter Jackson – who runs jewellery shops employing 40 people across the north-west of England – said his bank decided he was ineligible because the firm made a small loss in 2019. But Mr Jackson said his business was viable before the shutdown and expected to make a profit this year. It also owns valuable stock.

    “I thought the whole point of the loans was to help business like mine stay afloat,” he said. “But they’re not going to help.”

    The figures identifying how many businesses would not be able to access cash come from a network of accountants serving more than 12,000 small and medium-sized businesses across the country called the Corporate Finance Network.

    After analysing the government help on offer, those accountants say that 18% of their clients were unlikely to get access to the cash they will need to survive a four-week lockdown.

    The findings echo similar reports from other business groups, estimating that up to a fifth of businesses could close if the lockdown lasts a month or more.

    Bank say they’re following rules set by the government, which mean firms can only get the emergency loans if they can’t borrow in a normal commercial way, like borrowing against the value of a property.

    Businesses wanting to borrow more than £250,000 are being told by banks that directors must sign personal guarantees. That means if the loan goes bad owing to a prolonged shutdown, their personal property is on the line.

    Under CBILs, a business owner’s primary residence is protected but other personal assets could be recovered if the company cannot keep up repayments. Under normal commercial lending, personal guarantees may also put the owner’s home at risk if the loan goes bad.

    Joshua Wade runs a fast-growing ethical cosmetics business, Skin and Tonic. He said lenders were insisting on early repayment penalties as well as personal guarantees.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Spain’s death toll rises by 932 in a day

    More than 900 people died in Spain over the past 24 hours for the second day running, government figures showed on Friday, although the rate of new infections and deaths continued to slow.

    Spain has the world’s second-highest death toll after Italy with the virus so far claiming 10,935 lives 932 in the past day from 117,710 confirmed coronavirus cases.

    But health ministry figures confirm a consistent downward trend in the rate of new cases and fatalities.

    The latest number show the rate of infections up by 6.8 percent, compared with 7.9 percent on Thursday and 20 percent in the middle of last week.

    And the daily rise in deaths also slowed to 9.3 percent on Friday, down from 10.5 percent on Thursday, and a big drop from the 27-percent increase on March 25.

    Spain and France appear to be recording a flattening of their infection curves over the past few days and are nearing or even past their peaks in daily deaths.

    The crisis has hit Spain’s elderly population especially hard with authorities admitting that they are not getting access to limited breathing machines, which are being used first on healthier, younger patients. More than half of Spain’s 10,935 deaths have come in the last seven days alone.

    Source: France24

     

  • Hydroxychloroquine rated most effective coronavirus treatment, poll of doctors finds

    An international poll of thousands of doctors rated the Trump-touted anti-malaria drug hydroxychloroquine the best treatment for the novel coronavirus.

    Of the 6,227 physicians surveyed in 30 countries, 37 percent rated hydroxychloroquine the “most effective therapy” for combating the potentially deadly illness, according to the results released Thursday.

    The survey, conducted by the global health care polling company Sermo, also found that 23 percent of medical professionals had prescribed the drug in the US — far less than other countries.

    “Outside the US, hydroxychloroquine was equally used for diagnosed patients with mild to severe symptoms whereas in the US it was most commonly used for high risk diagnosed patients,” the survey found.

    The medicine was most widely used in Spain, where 72 percent of physicians said they had prescribed it.

    A debate about hydroxychloroquine was sparked two weeks ago after President Trump touted the drug as a possible “game-changer” in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, prompting critics to accuse him of peddling unproven, untested remedies.

    To date, “there is no evidence” that any medicine “can prevent or cure the disease,” according to the World Health Organization.

    But Sermo CEO Peter Kirk called the polling results a “treasure trove of global insights for policymakers.”

    “Physicians should have more of a voice in how we deal with this pandemic and be able to quickly share information with one another and the world,” he said in a press release.

    The 30 countries where doctors were surveyed included Europe, South America and Australia — and no incentives were provided to participate, the company said.

    Source: Natalie O’Neill | nypost.com

  • Italian PM tells EU to ‘show more ambition, unity, courage’

    Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte on Friday extended his feud about coronavirus money with EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen in the pages of a Roman newspaper.

    Conte wrote a letter to Italy’s La Repubblica in response to an apology that von der Leyen had published in the same paper on Thursday.

    “I am sorry,” von der Leyen had told Italians. “The EU is with you now.”

    Conte sounded unimpressed in his letter.

    “Dear Ursula,” he wrote. “I hear ideas (from you) not worthy of Europe.”

    He told her it was time for the EU “to show more ambition, more unity and more courage”.

    At issue is billions of euros that Italy wants from the European Union to help fight the novel coronavirus pandemic that has killed nearly 14,000 people in Italy and shattered the country’s economy.

    Conte wants the EU to start issuing lots of joint debt dubbed “coronabonds” — that could let countries such as Italy address the crisis more cheaply.

    Von der Leyen has sided with Germany and some other northern European countries’ suspicion of pooled risk because it could raise their own borrowing costs at the expense of more indebted countries.

    Von der Leyen is backing an EU-wide guarantee that could raise 100 billion euros ($108 billion) to aid strained national unemployment schemes.

    She told Italians said these EU-backed loans were “demonstrating European solidarity”.

    Conte said he “welcomed” the EU’s unemployment initiative.

    But the Italian leader also made it clear that he still wanted the coronabonds.

    “When fighting a war, you must do everything possible to win and equip yourself with all the tools needed for the (subsequent) reconstruction,” he wrote.

    Conte said this required “innovative tools such as the European Recovery Bonds.”

    He said these bonds are “useful to finance the extraordinary efforts that Europe will have to put in place” and “are in no way aimed at sharing the debt that each of our countries has inherited from the past”.

    EU leaders failed to find a common response last week and gave finance ministers until next Thursday to draft a new strategy.

    Italy’s world-leading toll from the new disease reached 13,915 on Thursday.

    Its three-week lockdown to stop the spread has been extended through at least mid-April and its economy is expected to suffer its biggest peacetime shock since World War II.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus: How Ghanaians abroad are enjoying free rent, free utilities & managing cases

    A Ghanaian based in Austria has told Rainbow Radio 87.5Fm that, the cases in the country has shot up to 10, 900 with 150 deaths recorded.

    The Ghanaian who only gave his name as Mr. Samuel told host Kwabena Agyapong that they have been on lockdown for the past two weeks with only essential workers allowed to move in and out of their homes.

    He said when one is caught violating the order of lockdown, you are cautioned for the first time but fined 3,600 euros.

    He stated that the government has said the situation can only improve when people stay home.

    The government he indicated has put in a support system for businesses in the country.

    He said the government has introduced several benefits for them including rent-free this period and also workers would be paid their monthly stipends although they have been asked to go home.

    From China, Kingsley Mensah said, the Chinese government has hinted businesses would fully start operation on April 8, 2020.

    The infection rate in China he said has decreased drastically.

    Manufacturing companies he revealed have started producing hand sanitizers and Personal Protective Equipment (PPEs) to meet the demand of the outbreak.

    Giving an update form the U.S. Mr. Samuel Apenteng disclosed the situation keeps rising.

    The majority of states in the U.S. he said have been put under lockdown.
    Church activities, social gatherings, and other activities have been all banned.

    Social-distancing he indicated is taken seriously in the U.S.

    He said people who have filed their taxes as residents are entitled to $1,200 each, with mobile services paid for.

    U.S. states were reporting more than 241,000 cases, almost a quarter of confirmed cases in the world.

    For the first time since the outbreak began, more than 1,000 U.S. deaths were reported in a day, bringing the total to over 5,800.

    Some 6.6 million Americans filed for unemployment last week.

    Globally, 1,016,534 cases have been confirmed with 53, 069 deaths and 211,615 recoveries.

     

    As at 2nd April 2020, Ghana has recorded 204 cases COVID-19 with five (5) deaths. The number of regions reporting cases remains five (5) (Greater Accra, Ashanti, Northern, Upper West and Eastern).

    The Greater Accra Region has most of the cases (183) followed by the Northern Region (10), Ashanti Region (9), Upper West Region (1) and Eastern Region (1).

    Most of the cases are reported from routine / enhanced surveillance activities. Cases from travellers under mandatory quarantine remain 89.

     

    Source: rainbowradioonline.com

  • Coronavirus: US jobless claims hit 6.6 million as virus spreads

    The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits has hit a record high for the second week in a row as the economic toll tied to the coronavirus intensifies.

    More than 6.6 million people filed jobless claims in the week ended 28 March, the Department of Labor said.

    That is nearly double the week earlier, which was also a new record.

    The deepening economic crisis comes as the number of cases in the US soars to more than 216,000.

    With the death toll rising to more than 5,000, the White House recently said it would retain restrictions on activity to try to curb the outbreak.

    Analysts at Bank of America warned that the US could see “the deepest recession on record” amid forecasts that the unemployment rate could hit more than 15%.

    The outlook is a stark reversal for the world’s biggest economy where the unemployment rate had been hovering around 3.5%.

    However, more than 80% of Americans are now under some form of lockdown, which has forced the closure of most businesses.

    By Michelle Fleury, New York business correspondent

    This is the highest number of new unemployment claims in US history.

    But what is so terrifying is not just the magnitude but also the speed with which American firms have shed workers.

    Roughly 10 million Americans lost their jobs in just the last two weeks. To put that in context, 9 million jobs were lost in the 2008 financial crisis.

    There were several reasons for this week’s historic increase.

    More states ordered non-essential businesses to close to contain the virus. According to economists, a fifth of the US workforce is now in some form of lockdown.

    And a government relief package signed last week expanded unemployment benefits to help more people, such as the self-employed and independent contractors.

    Some fear the true number could be even higher since many people couldn’t even get through to file a claim.

    Given these are weekly figures, this data is the closest we have to real-time information showing just how catastrophic the pandemic is for the American economy. And it points to a bruising couple of months ahead.

    More than 3.3 million people filed claims two weeks ago, eclipsing the previous record of 695,000, set in 1982 and bringing the two-week total to about 10 million.

    The most recent figure was worse than many economists had feared.

    “I don’t usually look at data releases and just start shaking,” said Heidi Shierholz, former chief economist at the US Department of Labor and now policy director at the Economic Policy Institute. “This is a portrait of disaster … It’s like nothing we’ve ever seen before. It represents just incredible amounts of grief and suffering.”

    Workers in accommodation and food services were hit hard again this week, the Department of Labor said.

    But it added that states are reporting “a wider impact across industries”.

    “With this report, there should be little doubt that … US is already in deep recession and the global economy will be too”, tweeted Mohamed A El-Erian, chief economic adviser to financial services firm Allianz.

    The US recently passed a more than $2tn rescue bill, which funds direct payment for households, assistance for businesses and increased unemployment benefits.

    It also made more people eligible to receive benefits, including workers whose jobs are suspended rather than cut. There is speculation the government may provide further relief.

    Unlike other countries such as the UK, the US has not implemented a program that pays firms to keep workers on the payroll – one reason the numbers are so stark, Ms Shierholz says.

    “There’s an attempt at it,” Ms Shierholz said, pointing to the expanded eligibility. “But this concept of keeping workers on the payroll through a downturn is not well socialized in the US. It’s just not how we’ve done things in the past.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Expert panel to assess face mask use by public

    This question is to be assessed by a panel of advisers to the World Health Organization (WHO).

    The group will weigh up research on whether the virus can be projected further than previously thought; a study in the US suggests coughs can reach 6m and sneezes up to 8m.

    The panel’s chair, Prof David Heymann, told BBC News that the new research may lead to a shift in advice about masks.

    The former director at the WHO explained: “The WHO is opening up its discussion again looking at the new evidence to see whether or not there should be a change in the way it’s recommending masks should be used.”

    What is the current advice?

    The WHO recommends keeping a distance of at least 1m from anyone coughing or sneezing to avoid the risk of infection.

    It says people who are sick and show symptoms should wear masks.

    But it advises that healthy people only need to wear them if they are caring for others suspected of being infected or if they themselves are coughing or sneezing.

    It emphasises that masks are only effective if combined with frequent hand-washing and used and disposed of properly.

    The UK, along with other countries including the US, advises that social distancing should mean staying at least 2m apart.

    This advice is based on evidence showing that viruses can only be transmitted while carried within drops of liquid.

    The understanding is that most of those drops will either evaporate or fall to the ground near to the person who released them.

    So what does the new research say?

    Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, US, used high-speed cameras and other sensors to assess precisely what happens after a cough or sneeze.

    They found that an exhalation generates a small fast-moving cloud of gas that can contain droplets of liquid of varying sizes – and that the smallest of these can be carried in the cloud over long distances.

    The study – conducted in laboratory conditions – found that coughs can project liquid up to 6m away and that sneezes, which involve much higher speeds, can reach up to 8m away.

    What are the implications?

    The scientist who led the study, Prof Lydia Bourouiba of MIT, told me that she is concerned about the current concept of “safe distances”.

    “What we exhale, cough or sneeze is a gas cloud that has high momentum that can go far, traps the drops of all sizes in it and carries them through the room,” she said.

    “So having this false idea of safety at one to two meters, that somehow drops will just fall to the ground at that distance is not based on what we have quantified, measured and visualized directly.”

    Does this change the advice about masks?

    Prof Bourouiba’s view is that in certain situations, especially indoors in poorly ventilated rooms, wearing masks would reduce the risks.

    For example, when facing someone who’s infected, masks could help divert the flow of their breath and its load of virus away from your mouth.

    “Flimsy masks are not going to protect from inhaling the smallest particulates in the air because they do not provide filtration,” Prof Bourouiba said.

    “But they would potentially divert the cloud that is being emitted with high momentum to the side instead of forward.”

    What do the WHO advisers think?

    According to Prof Heymann, the new research from MIT and other institutions will be evaluated because it suggests that droplets from coughs and sneezes could be projected further than originally thought.

    He said that if the evidence is supported, then “it might be that wearing a mask is equally as effective or more effective than distancing.”

    But he adds a warning that masks need to be worn properly, with a seal over the nose. If they become moist, Prof Heymann explained, then particles can pass through. People must remove them carefully to avoid their hands becoming contaminated.

    He adds that masks need to be worn consistently.

    “It’s not on to wear a mask and then decide to take it off to smoke a cigarette or eat a meal – it must be worn full time,” he said.

    The panel, known as the Strategic and Technical Advisory Group for Infectious Hazards, is due to hold its next virtual meeting in the next few days.

    A spokesperson for Public Health England said there was little evidence of widespread benefit from wearing masks outside clinical settings.

    “Facemasks must be worn correctly, changed frequently, removed properly, disposed of safely and used in combination with good universal hygiene behaviour in order for them to be effective.

    “Research also shows that compliance with these recommended behaviours reduces over time when wearing facemasks for prolonged periods.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • France records 471 more virus deaths in hospitals as total toll tops 5,000

    France recorded 471 new coronavirus hospital deaths and 884 deaths in retirement homes, the country’s chief medical adviser told a press conference on Thursday.

    France’s Director General of Health, Jérôme Salomon, announced the figures during a daily press conference making for the first time a distinction between deaths recorded in hospitals and those in retirement homes.

    He said that a provisional tally showed that around 884 people in total had died in nursing homes.

    He added that the number of coronavirus-related deaths in hospitals rose 12 percent on Thursday to 4,503 from Wednesday.

    This makes for a total of 5,387 lives lost to coronavirus in France, so far.

    Salomon cautioned that coronavirus deaths in retirement homes could turn out to be higher than the reported number, as authorities were still gathering data from across the country.

    Salomon said that the number of known infections rose nationwide to 59,105 from 56,989. The number of patients requiring life support rose to 6,399 from 6,017 on Wednesday.

    In a televised interview on TF1 Thursday night, Prime Minister Édouard Philippe urged the French to continue to comply with mandatory lockdown measures imposed since March 17, to ensure a levelling off of new cases of the virus. He conceded these measures “would probably be extended” beyond the current deadline of April 15.

    According to the Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Resource Center, the global death toll from the virus on Thursday topped 50,000 with total infections surpassing one million.

    Source: France24

  • Coronavirus: Confirmed global cases pass one million

    More than a million cases of coronavirus have been registered globally, according to the latest figures from Johns Hopkins University – another grim milestone as the world grapples with the spreading pandemic.

    Nearly 53,000 people have died and more than 210,000 have recovered, according to the US university’s figures.

    The US has the most cases, and about 1,000 died there in the past day.

    The disease, Covid-19, first emerged in central China three months ago.

    Though the tally kept by Johns Hopkins records one million confirmed cases, the actual number is thought to be much higher.

    It took a month and a half for the first 100,000 cases to be registered. A million was reached after a doubling in cases over the past week.

    Nearly a quarter of cases have been registered in the United States, while Europe accounts for around half.

    What’s the latest?

    On Thursday, Spain said 950 people had died in the previous 24 hours – thought to be the highest number of deaths of any country in one day.

    The number of confirmed Spanish cases rose from 102,136 on Wednesday to 110,238 – an 8% rise that is similar to the rate recorded in previous days. Authorities believe the virus is now peaking and say they expect to see a drop in figures in the days ahead.

    “We continue with an increase of around 8%. This points, as we have already seen, to a stabilisation in the data that we’re registering,” María José Sierra, from the Spanish health ministry’s emergency co-ordination unit, said at a news conference.

    Spain, the second-worst hit nation in terms of deaths, has also lost nearly 900,000 jobs.

    The US on Thursday said it saw a record 6.6 million new unemployment benefit claims.

    How did we get here?
    In China at the end of December, a 34-year-old ophthalmologist named Dr Li Wenliang tried to send a message to other medics warning them about a new virus in the city of Wuhan in Hubei Province.

    He was later visited by the police and accused of scaremongering. Dr Li died on 6 February after contracting the virus while treating patients in Wuhan.

    China first informed the World Health Organization (WHO) about cases of pneumonia with unknown causes on 31 December.

    On 3 January, the BBC wrote its first news report about a “mystery virus” in Wuhan. At the time, 44 cases had been confirmed, 11 of which were considered severe.

    Many feared there would be a repeat of the 2003 Sars outbreak that killed 774 people. By 18 January the confirmed number of cases had risen to around 60 – but experts estimated the real figure was closer to 1,700.

    Just two days later, as millions of people prepared to travel for the lunar new year, the number of cases more than tripled to more than 200 and the virus was detected in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.

    Source: bbc.com