Friday, July 3, 2020

Florida shatters records with over 10,000 new COVID-19 cases in single day

July 2 (Reuters) - Florida shattered records on Thursday when it reported over 10,000 new coronavirus cases, the biggest one-day increase in the state since the pandemic started, according to a Reuters tally.
Outbreaks in Texas, California, Florida and Arizona have helped the United States break records and send cases rising at rates not seen since April.
In June, Florida infections rose by 168% or over 95,000 new cases. The percent of tests coming back positive has skyrocketed to 15% from 4% at the end of May.
Florida, with 21 million residents, has reported more new daily coronavirus cases than any European country had at the height of their outbreaks.
To contain the outbreak, Florida has closed bars and some beaches but the governor has resisted requiring masks statewide in public or reimposing a lockdown.
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Only one other state has reported more than 10,000 new cases in a single day. New York recorded 12,847 new infections on April 10, three weeks after the state implemented a strict lockdown that closed most businesses. While the state has relaxed many measures, it requires masks in public and mandates anyone arriving from 16 other U.S. states with high infections self-quarantine for two weeks.
Once the epicenter of the U.S. epidemic, New York saw cases rise by about 6% in June - the lowest rate in the entire country.
(Open https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR and https://tmsnrt.rs/3dM9TLE in an external browser for Reuters interactives) (Writing by Lisa Shumaker)

Alabama students hold 'COVID-19 parties' with prize for first person to get sick

As coronavirus cases continue to surge across the country, students in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, have started throwing COVID-19 parties. The first attendee to become infected wins money, according to Tuscaloosa City Councilor Sonya McKinstry.
Within the past week, Alabama became one of 14 states to report a record-high number of cases in a single day. On Wednesday, the country as a whole set a record for daily cases, the fifth time this has happened in the past eight days.
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Speaking about the parties to local NBC affiliate WVTM, McKinstry said: "At first, I couldn't believe it ... These kids are having parties, and then they're putting money in a pot, and they're purposely trying to get COVID from the person who has COVID. And apparently whoever gets COVID first gets the pot."
CNN reported that the winnings come from ticket sales to attend the party.
"I just think it's senseless," McKinstry continued to WVTM. "I think it's careless, and it made me mad as hell that we're constantly trying to do everything we can to slow the spread while they're just having a damn party trying to spread it."
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Initially, many people in the community were skeptical the parties were actually happening, McKinstry told CNN.
"We thought that was kind of a rumors at first," she said. "We did some research. Not only do the doctors' offices confirm it, but the state confirmed they also had the same information."
Tuscaloosa, with a population of roughly 100,000 people, is home to the the state's flagship college, the University of Alabama.
Earlier this week, the city council unanimously voted to require face masks in public places, the Tuscaloosa News reported. The law is scheduled to go into effect Monday and will be enforced for kids and adults, though parents can decide for themselves what to do for children between the ages of 2 and 8.
As of Wednesday, Alabama had 38,442 confirmed cases of the coronavirus and 947 deaths, per the Alabama Department of Public Health.

If Trump's looking for a 'hoax,' the mirror is a good place to start, Pelosi suggests

WASHINGTON — Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., on Thursday expressed outrage at Trump for what she said was his calling reports about Russian bounties on American troops, Moscow's interference in U.S. elections and coronavirus a hoax — and she pointed to Trump himself as the hoax.
In an interview with MSNBC's Stephanie Ruhle, Pelosi was asked how confident she is in the level of participation by Republicans in an upcoming intelligence briefing about the alleged Russian bounties when Trump has called the reports a hoax.
"He'll say this is a hoax, and it's a hoax that they are 24/7 trying to disrupt our election as they did in 2016. He says the coronavirus is a hoax. The fact is the president himself is a hoax," Pelosi said ahead of the briefing that she and other top congressional leaders, known as the Gang of Eight, were slated to receive Thursday morning.
Pelosi added, "Let's hope that the Gang of Eight shows up, open to hear the truth, the facts, the intelligence, and that 'Moscow Mitch' doesn't show up, but the leader of the Republicans in the Senate comes with an open mind."
Earlier this year, Trump referred to Democrats' criticism of his administration's response to coronavirus as "their new hoax," tying it to impeachment, but he did not specifically refer to the virus as a hoax.
The president tweeted Wednesday that the reports of Russia paying bounties to Taliban-linked fighters to kill U.S. troops are a hoax.
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"The Russia Bounty story is just another made up by Fake News tale that is told only to damage me and the Republican Party. The secret source probably does not even exist, just like the story itself. If the discredited @nytimes has a source, reveal it. Just another HOAX!" Trump tweeted.
NBC News has reported the U.S. has gathered intelligence that Russian intelligence officers have offered to pay bounties to Taliban fighters who kill Americans, according to three people briefed on the matter. However, a senior defense official downplayed the intelligence, saying there was no evidence that any bounty was actually paid.
Pelosi also questioned Thursday what Russia may have on the president politically, personally or financially.
"You just wonder what the president would be thinking if this kind of intelligence had come forth about any other country, but every time it's Russia, as I've said over and over. With this president all roads lead to Putin," she said.
Later in the interview, she said, "I think the president should step down because of dereliction of duty."

California man who posted regret for attending party died a day later of coronavirus

A California man posted his regret on Facebook about contracting the coronavirus after attending a party in June. A day later, he died from COVID-19.
On June 20, Thomas Macias, wrote an impassioned message on Facebook in which he lamented ignoring social distancing guidance.
Thomas Macias died of complications from the coronavirus.
"Some of you may know, but most don't," Macias, 51, wrote. "I ... went out a couple of weeks ago" and contracted the coronavirus.
Macias, who was a truck driver, expressed guilt for possibly exposing his family to the virus.
"Because of my stupidity I put my mom and sisters and my family's health in jeopardy," he wrote. "This has been a very painful experience."
"Hopefully with God’s help," he added, "I’ll be able to survive this."
He died the next day.
An official from the Riverside County Office of Vital Records told NBC News on Wednesday that Macias died from COVID-19.
From late March through early June, Macias was only going out when necessary, his brother-in-law, Gustavo Lopez, said on Wednesday.
"He was quarantining because he was overweight and had diabetes," Lopez said.
The expletives have been blurred by NBC News. (Courtesy Gustavo Lopez)
Sometime in early June, however — after Gov. Gavin Newsom indicated that he would loosen the social distancing restrictions — Lopez said Macias attended a party in Lake Elsinore, about 70 miles southeast of Los Angeles.
Afterward, a friend of Macias who was also at the party contacted him to say he had tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, Lopez said.
The friend told Macias he was aware of the diagnosis when he attended the gathering, but because he was not showing symptoms, he did not believe he could infect anyone else.
The friend advised everyone who attended the party to get tested.
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Naturally, Lopez said, Macias was upset. Still, he said, Macias took accountability for his actions as evidenced in his Facebook post.
Lopez said he was unsure how many people went to the party, but that Macias was among more than a dozen people who contracted COVID-19.
Macias visited his sister Veronica, who is married to Lopez, on June 11 at the couple's home, before he was tested. Lopez remembers being concerned for Macias after that visit.
"He did not look right," Lopez said. "He was really sweaty."
Macias, who never married and did not have any children, soon started to feel sick and believed it was related to his diabetes.
He was tested for COVID-19 on June 16 and received a positive diagnosis on June 18. In his Facebook post two days later, Macias implored people to take the coronavirus seriously.
"This is no joke," he wrote. "If you have to go out wear a mask and practice social distancing."
He was rushed to the hospital at about 11 a.m. on June 21. He was put on a ventilator sometime between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. and died by 9 p.m., Lopez said.
"I think what he wanted people to know, this is a real thing," Lopez said. "It’s serious and it kills people."
Macias is remembered by his family as a really good guy with a lot of friends.
"He would do anything for everybody," Lopez said. "No questions asked."
He is survived by his mother, two sisters, four nieces and two great-nieces.
Veronica Lopez said her brother always greeted people with a smile and was not one to hold a grudge.
"He used to say opinions don’t matter," Lopez said. "Relationships do."

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