March 21 coronavirus news

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03 coronavirus town hall 0319
Is delivery dangerous? Can I go outside? Your Qs answered
03:42 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • The numbers worldwide: More than 300,000 people have contracted the novel coronavirus and at least 12,944 have died, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.
  • Threat of severe economic downturn: A global recession is on us and experts believe coronavirus could drag the world economy into a depression.
  • US death toll rises: More than 302 people have now died from the virus in the United States.
  • Have a question or a story about?coronavirus??Share it here.
108 Posts

Our live coverage of the coronavirus outbreak has?moved here.

A soldier at the US's Fort Carson base has tested positive for coronavirus

A Fort Carson soldier has tested positive for coronavirus, according to a statement from the base.

The Colorado National Guard soldier was being housed at the Colorado National Guard’s 168th?Regional Training Institute at Fort Carson.

The soldier will remain in isolation, is in good spirits and doesn’t require hospitalization at this time, the release sad.

More than 360 people have tested positive for coronavirus in Colorado, including four who have died.

An airport officer in the US tested positive for coronavirus

A Transportation Security Administration officer working at Dulles International Airport in Virginia has tested positive for the coronavirus.

The individual has been quarantined and is resting at home, the TSA said in a statement.

Here’s what else the statement said:

California Governor urges residents not to be selfish and stay home

People visit the beach in Huntington Beach, California, on March 21.

California Governor Gavin Newsom is telling young people at beaches that the outbreak is not the time to party – it’s time to stay home.

“Don’t be selfish,” Newsom said, adding that for young people “thinking this is a party, (it’s) time to grow up,”

He encouraged everyone to stay at home to combat the coronavirus outbreak, saying that it was best to assume you are contagious and distance yourself from others.?

Testing issues: The Governor said the big issue around testing is about swabs and gathering evidence. There was a need for targeting testing, he said.

He said he was encouraged by the spirit of collaboration and offers of help from Tim Cook and Elon Musk.

Housing issues: Housing the homeless in hotel rooms and trailers is a priority, he said.?His office has identified?1,000 additional nursing facility beds that could be readied for the senior community.

Anyone who arrives in Hawaii will be subject to a 14-day quarantine

Anyone arriving in the state of Hawaii – including returning residents – will be subject to a 14-day quarantine.

The mandate, which is the first of its kind in the United States, will go into effect Thursday at 12:01 a.m. and remain in place until further notice, the state’s governor David Ige said.

Ige said that while the economy will suffer from this move, it was necessary. Violators could be subject to a $5,000 fine and a year imprisonment.

Coronavirus is the most severe crisis since World War II, says Italian Prime Minister

A girl watches Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announce the shut down of all non-essential production activities on March 21, in Rome, Italy.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced that all “non-essential factories”?must close as Italy faces “the most severe crisis since WWII.”

That restriction applies to any factories not involved in producing food or medical equipment.

Speaking via Facebook live Saturday, Conte announced that the more severe measures were necessary due to the increasing number of coronavirus deaths.

Italy has recorded 53,578 cases and 4,825 deaths.

All pharmacies, food stores, financial services and public transportation will continue to remain open in Italy, Conte said.

302 people have died from coronavirus in the United States

A doctor examines Juan Vasquez inside a testing tent at St. Barnabas hospital in New York City on March 20.

There are now at least 23,649 cases of coronavirus in the United States and 302 people have died from the virus, according to a CNN tally.

This includes cases in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as repatriated cases.

Here are the worst affected states:

  • New York – 10,356 cases, 53 deaths
  • Washington – 1,793 cases, 94 deaths
  • New Jersey – 1,327 cases, 16 deaths
  • California – 1,200 cases, 24 deaths

Eritrea has reported its first case of coronavirus

Eritrea’s Ministry of Information has reported the east African country’s first case of coronavirus.

A 39-year-old Eritrean man tested positive for?coronavirus, the ministry said.

The man has permanent residence in Norway and flew back to Eritrea Saturday morning local time via airline FlyDubai.

The man?was exhibiting symptoms during the screening at Asmara International Airport.?He was?immediately?quarantined?and tested.?

US workers may get "unemployment insurance on steroids"

The United State’s emergency stimulus package will help the workers hardest hit by the coronavirus outbreak, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said.

Schumer told CNN’s Wolf Blizter on The Situation Room on Saturday night that a tentpole of the stimulus package was putting “workers first” by giving them “unemployment insurance on steroids.”?

Under this scheme, Schumer noted that workers would be “furloughed by their employer so that you can go back to work.”?

About?75 million residents of?Connecticut, Illinois, New York and California have been ordered to remain at home to slow the spread of?coronavirus.

US Department of Justice proposes denying visas to people who test positive for coronavirus

The United States Department of Justice is petitioning Congress to change the law to deny asylum or visas to people who test positive for the coronavirus, according to a document obtained by CNN.

CNN previously reported that the Trump administration was trying to block asylum seekers, citing the virus. The State Department temporarily stopped processing routine visas at all embassies and consulates on Friday.

The Department of Justice has submitted a multitude of legislative proposals to Congress in order to deal with the coronavirus outbreak and its impact on the judicial system, according to a document obtained by CNN.

Those include:

  • Requesting the suspension of the statute of limitations while the country is in a state of emergency;
  • Using video teleconferencing for preliminary court hearings;
  • Priority virus testing for federal agents.

DOJ has not responded to CNN’s request for comment.

United Airlines slashed international flights. Now it's bringing some of them back

United Airlines is bringing back some of its international flights just one day after making?significant international flight schedule cuts.

On Friday, United said it was slashing its April international schedule by 95%. However,?on Saturday evening,?the airline said it “knows some people around the globe are displaced and still need to get home” and will be adding some capacity back to its schedules.?

The changes mean the airline will operate at about 90% international capacity, it said.?

US Vice President Mike Pence has tested negative for coronavirus

United States Vice President Mike Pence and his wife have tested negative for coronavirus, his spokeswoman announced Saturday evening.

“Pleased to report that the Covid-19 test results came back negative for both Vice President @Mike_Pence and Second Lady @KarenPence,” his spokesperson tweeted.

Pence announced he and his wife would be tested Saturday afternoon after a staff member at his office tested positive for coronavirus.

Bolivians should be at home "24 hours a day," the country's interim president says

Bolivia has announced a nationwide, 14-day “total quarantine” starting Sunday, according to Bolivian state media agency ABI.

The country’s interim president, Jeanine á?ez, said Bolivians should “be at home 24 hours a day” and that only one person per family can leave at a time to go shopping.?Public and private transport will be suspended.

Still operating: Pharmacies, hospitals and health centers will remain open as normal, she said. Permits will be given to employees in sectors that remain open.

Questions over election: On Saturday, the Bolivian electoral tribunal issued a notice on its website saying that the quarantine order impedes the body from carrying out preparatory activities ahead of May 3 elections.

The tribunal said that political groups and authorities should work together to decide on a “new date” that takes into account “scientific evaluations based on serious estimates about the probably evolution of the pandemic.”

An interim government has ruled Bolivia since former President?Evo?Morales?fled the country following allegations of fraud in an October vote that would have given him a fourth term in office.?Morales has said he was the victim of a coup.

Apple is donating millions of industrial masks

Apple is donating 2 million masks to health professionals in the US and Europe. ?

Apple CEO Tim Cook confirmed the news in a tweet.

The company has also temporarily closed all of its stores outside of greater China and committed $15 million to helping with the worldwide recovery from novel coronavirus.

Federal Bureau of Prisons reports first coronavirus case

The exterior of the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York.

An inmate at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn has tested posted for the coronavirus, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons website.

This is the first known case of an inmate detained in the federal prison system to contract the virus.

The inmate initially complained about chest pains and was taken to local hospital, where he was tested for coronavirus, according to a news release from the Bureau of Prisons.

Two Bureau of Prison staff members, one at Leavenworth, Kansas, and another in Grand Prairie, Texas, tested positive for the virus and are the only known staff members to be infected at this point.

US Embassy in Peru says it is arranging charter flights

The US Embassy in Lima said Saturday it “is coordinating closely with the Peruvian Government on all options for US citizens to depart the country and are arranging charter aircraft,” an alert from the embassy said Saturday.

Kuwait to impose 11-hour curfew following 'non-compliance' with health instructions

Kuwaiti Deputy Premier and Interior Minister Anas Al-Saleh announced an 11-hour curfew?from 5 p.m. Sunday to 4 a.m. Monday (local time),?according to the Kuwait News Agency (KUNA).

Al-Saleh said the government was “forced” to impose the partial curfew due to “non-compliance with the Ministry of Health’s instructions to stay indoors.”

There are more than 23,000 coronavirus cases in the US and 295 deaths

Health care workers put on personal protective equipment at a drive-through testing site in Arlington, Virginia, on March 20, 2020.

There are?at least 23,572 cases?of the novel coronavirus in the United States, according to CNN Health’s tally of cases that are detected and tested in the United States through US public health systems.

At least 295 people have died. The total includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, plus all repatriated cases.

Former Italian soccer star Paolo Maldini?and his son test positive for coronavirus, AC Milan says

Italian soccer club AC Milan announced on its website Saturday that former player Paolo Maldini and his son, Daniel, have tested positive for coronavirus.

Maldini, 51, a former Italian national team star, is considered one of the greatest defenders to come out of Italy. He is currently the technical director with AC Milan.

Read AC Milan’s full statement below:

Spanish PM calls for unity as he predicts 'hard days ahead'

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez asked Spaniards on Saturday to remain strong, as new cases and the number of deaths due to novel coronavirus are expected to increase in the coming days and weeks.

Speaking from the Presidential Palace La Moncloa in Madrid,?Sanchez said the worst is to yet come.

To strengthen?Spain’s response to the crisis,?Sanchez announced national production of?masks, ventilators and tests will begin. Meanwhile,?the government has bought 640,000 reliable ratified fast tests, and within the next few hours, Sanchez said 1.3 million masks will be handed to health personnel and patients.

Earlier on Saturday, the?Spanish?government?said approximately 15,000 tests were being administered daily, and that the government is working to acquire four robots to increase testing capacity to almost 80,000 tests a day.

The statement said that it’s important to note that the number of tests do not equal the number of patients; sometimes a single patient may require multiple testing for a proper diagnosis.

Bolivia announces 14-day 'total quarantine'

A view of an empty street in La Paz, Bolivia, on March 18.

Jeanine á?ez, Bolivia’s interim president, announced a nationwide, 14-day “total quarantine” starting Sunday to combat the spread of the novel coronavirus, according to Bolivian state media agency ABI.

á?ez said that Bolivians should “be at home 24 hours a day” and that only one person per family can leave at a time to go shopping.?

Pharmacies, hospitals and health centers will remain open as normal, she said, adding that public and private transport will be suspended and that permits will be given to employees in sectors that remain open.

More than 22,000 coronavirus cases in the US

There are 22,782 cases of the novel coronavirus in the United States, according to CNN Health’s tally of cases that are detected and tested in the United States through US public health systems.

At least 281 people have died. The total includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as all repatriated?cases.

Despite federal guidelines, President Donald Trump suggests 'sanitizing' and reusing medical masks

Despite federal guidelines, President Trump Saturday suggested health care workers sanitize and reuse masks when treating coronavirus patients, rather than “throwing away” masks that are in short supply.

Suggesting that health care workers instead clean and reuse the masks, the President said:

It is unclear which type of mask the President was describing, but FDA guidelines for the common N95 respirator masks state they “should not be shared or reused.”

Neither the FDA nor CDC guidelines suggest the possibility of sanitizing masks for safe reuse.

St. Louis to begin 30-day mandatory 'stay at home' order Monday, mayor says

St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson has issued a mandatory “stay at home order” for city residents beginning?6 p.m. Monday?“to prevent further spread” of coronavirus.

The new restrictions will last for 30 days, Krewson said at a press conference Saturday.?Thirty days was chosen because it spans the approximate length of two Covid-19 incubation cycles.

Residents are allowed to go to the grocery store, doctor’s office, pharmacies and other preapproved types of businesses as long as a six-foot distance is kept between one another.?

Chile reports first coronavirus death

An 82-year-old woman in Chile died from coronavirus, making her the nation’s first death, according to the country’s health ministry Saturday.

The woman had other conditions, including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, the health ministry said.

The woman attended a family gathering of approximately 20 people on March 4 and that four people in the family “cluster” have tested positive for coronavirus, the health ministry said.

Uganda announces first coronavirus case

The Ugandan Ministry of Health announced the country’s first case of coronavirus Saturday on the ministry’s Twitter account.

The ministry said the patient is a 36-year-old Ugandan man who arrived in the country on Saturday after taking an Ethiopian Airlines flight from Dubai. The patient showed symptoms that included high fever and poor appetite.

Ugandan Health Minister Dr. Jane Ruth Aceng said the passenger was identified by a temperature check in the airport.

“The passenger manifest has been retrieved and all contacts are known as we are in position of the passports of all the travelers that came on that plane,” Aceng said.

Berlin limits gatherings to no more than 10

The city of Berlin?limited gatherings to no more than 10 people Saturday.?Restaurants in the city can only offer takeout and delivery.?

The tightened restrictions in Germany’s capital?come a day after the southern state of Bavaria issued restrictions of movement for its residents, allowing only those who have a reason to leave their homes.?

Missouri?governor says social distancing order?will go into effect Monday

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson said the social distancing order he announced Friday will go into effect at 12:01 a.m. Monday and last until April 6 unless it is extended.

At a Saturday press conference, Parson said:

  • Missourians should avoid gatherings of more than 10 people.
  • Avoid eating or drinking at restaurants, bars, or food courts.?The use of drive-through delivery or pickup is allowed.
  • No visiting nursing homes, long-term care facilities, retirement homes or assisted living homes unless it is to provide “critical assistance.”
  • All schools will remain closed.

In addition, the filing and/or payment of state income taxes has been extended to July 15 and an automatic extension of driver’s license renewals and vehicle registrations by two months has been?granted.?

Lebanon to use security patrols and checkpoints to prevent people from leaving homes

Police patrol a street in Beirut, Lebanon, on March 16.

Lebanese Security Forces are?implementing a plan to prevent people from leaving their homes?to contain the spread of coronavirus in the country, Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab said during a press briefing Saturday.

Diab asked the Lebanese people to cooperate with the government.

“I call upon you to implement a self-curfew, because the state alone cannot face this crawling epidemic, the responsibility here is, an individual, social and official responsibility, we are in grave danger, and our victory can only be achieved through the integration of the state, the society and the citizen.”

Earlier Saturday,?the Lebanese Minister of Public Health Hamad Hassan tweeted that the country has “slipped into the (virus) outbreak” phase, as the number of cases increased by 81 cases in the last 48 hours.

On Sunday, Lebanese Minister of Information Manal Abdul Samad said in a press conference that “public and private gatherings are banned” and that?people are “obligated to stay in their homes unless there is an extreme necessity” to leave them.

FAA lifts ground stops at New York area airports after air traffic controller and trainee test positive for coronavirus

The Federal Aviation Administration announced Saturday via Twitter that ground stops in New York have been lifted after an air traffic controller and a trainee tested positive for coronavirus.

Apple to donate masks in US and Europe, CEO says

Apple CEO Tim Cook tweeted Saturday that the tech company will be donating “millions of masks for health professionals in the US and Europe.”

Coronavirus global cases surpass 300,000, Johns Hopkins reports

The number of cases of coronavirus worldwide is now at 303,001, according to the Johns Hopkins University & Medicine Coronavirus Resource Center.?

The total deaths globally is 12,944.

The countries with the highest number of cases are China, Italy and Spain, respectively.

The countries with the highest number of deaths, in order, are Italy, China and Iran.

South Carolina extends tax deadline and allows curbside alcohol sales

More than half of employees in South Carolina are working from home, according to a press release from?state Gov. Henry McMaster.

For 52 of 74 state agencies, a reported 13,902 employees were either working from home or taking leave while 11,411 employees remained at work, the release said.

McMaster extended the state’s income tax deadline to July 15 to match the new federal deadline, the release said. He issued an executive order to direct the state’s Department of Revenue to waive additional regulations allowing restaurants to sell wine and beer “to go” for curbside pickup orders, the release said.

Second NHL player tests positive for coronavirus

The Ottawa Senators announced that a second player on the team has tested positive for coronavirus. This news comes days after another player on the team had tested positive. Neither player has been identified.?

The team had been asked to self-quarantine since March 13. So far, the Senators are the only team in the NHL to announce that a player has tested positive for coronavirus.

Pro soccer star tests positive for coronavirus

Soccer player Paulo Dybala, a forward for Italian Serie A club Juventus, tested positive for coronavirus, according to an announcement on his Twitter account.

Dybala’s girlfriend, singer, actress and model Oriana Sabatini, also tested positive.

Dybala is the third Juventus player known to?have contracted Covid-19 after?Blaise Matuidi and Daniele Rugani.

Dybala is an Argentinian national who also plays for Argentina’s national team.

Illinois 'stay at home' order takes effect at 6 p.m.

A person walks down a sidewalk in Chicago, Illinois, on March 20.

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker reminded Illinois residents that a “stay at home” order will go into effect for the state at 6 p.m. Saturday – an announcement he originally made on Friday.

“Please remember that the grocery stores and gas stations and pharmacies will all be open tomorrow and Monday and Tuesday, and every day after that, and they are constantly being restocked,” Pritzker said at a press conference Saturday.

Pritzker issued a “call to action” for all former physicians, nurses, physicians assistants, nurse practitioners and respiratory care therapists who have recently left their fields to “come back and join the fight against Covid-19.”

Pritzker said the?state will be waiving fees and expediting license renewals so the health care professionals can rejoin the workforce quickly.

Ohio closing most adult day services except for settings of fewer than 10 people

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine issued an order Saturday that closes adult day services across the state with exception of settings of fewer than 10 people.

More than 26,000 citizens, mainly people with developmental disabilities, leave their homes to receive group-based services during the day, according to DeWine. These groups can vary between four to 100 members.

Some locations have already closed or downsized, he said, adding that families and guardians are making or have made tough decisions to keep people home.

Small groups and services in a person’s home can continue while following proper precautions, DeWine said.

The state is working with providers to ensure there is a place for each person to go and individuals will continue to receive the services they need, he said.

There are now at least 22,397 coronavirus cases in the US?

There are?22,397?cases of the novel coronavirus in the United States, according?to CNN Health’s tally of cases that are detected and tested in the United States through US public health systems.

At least 278 people have died.

The total includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other U.S. territories, as well as all repatriated cases.?

France reports 562 coronavirus-related deaths

France has seen a jump in deaths linked to coronavirus infections, according to new figures released by the Health Ministry on Saturday.

The number of people who have died in France since the beginning of the epidemic is now at 562, according to the Health Ministry.

The number of people testing positive is 14,459 as of Saturday.

According to the Health Ministry, 6,172 people have so far been hospitalized, with 1,525 in intensive care, 50% of whom are under 60 years of age.

There are more than 5,000 coronavirus cases in the United Kingdom

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the United Kingdom has climbed to 5,018, according to an official update from the Department of Health and Social Care on Saturday.

The update also says 72,818 people have been tested so far in the UK, the department said.

In total, 233 people with coronavirus have died across the country, the department added.

Turkey imposes partial curfew for people over 65 and those with chronic conditions

A man carries groceries down an empty street in Istanbul, Turkey, on March 21.

Turkey announced a partial curfew for citizens older than 65 years old and for those who have chronic conditions starting at midnight on Saturday.

The partial curfew prohibits senior citizens and those with chronic illnesses from using public transportation, being in parks and leaving their homes, the Turkish interior ministry said in a statement.

For those who live alone and are covered by the curfew, social support will be available through provincial governorships, the statement said.

The conditions covered by the partial curfew include chronic pulmonary obstruction disease, asthma, chronic lung diseases, cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, liver disease and those taking immunosuppressants, the statement said.

Trump on China: "I wish they'd told us earlier" about coronavirus

President Trump said he wished China had told him earlier about coronavirus, according to remarks he made at the White House on Saturday.

Trump added that China “was very secretive and that’s unfortunate.”

The President went on to criticize China saying, “they knew they had a problem earlier, I wish they could have said that.”

Trump said that when he first realized how bad the virus could be he “started doing the closings.”?The first travel restrictions?related to coronavirus went into place on February 2.

Vermont governor?announces business closures due to coronavirus

Vermont Gov. Phil Scott issued an advisory today directing?gymnasiums, fitness centers and similar exercise facilities to close all in-person operations no later than 8 p.m. ET on March 23.?

The advisory also included hair salons and barbers, nail salons, spas and tattoo parlors.

Trump continues to defer to others on whether the Olympics should be canceled

A woman walks beneath a Tokyo 2020 banner on March 19, in Tokyo, Japan.

President Trump said the decision on whether to hold the Tokyo Olympics as planned this summer is “totally up to them,” referring to the Japanese government.?

The President praised the “beautiful” venue that Japan has already built, and said he did not want to influence the decision being made.

Some context: The head of USA Swimming wants the Olympics to be postponed to 2021, calling it “the right and responsible thing to do” in a letter to the US Olympic & Paralympic Committee

Tim Hinchey III, the CEO of USA Swimming, asked the group to advocate for the change because “the right and responsible thing to do is to prioritize everyone’s health and safety and appropriately recognize the toll this global pandemic is taking on athletic preparations.”

Trump defends his response to the coronavirus pandemic

In response to concerns from some doctors complaining about shortage of supplies, President Trump defended the White House’s coronavirus response and placed part of the blame on previous administrations.??

Trump added: “And we are making much of this stuff now and much of it is being delivered now.?We’ve also gotten tremendous reviews from a lot of people that can’t believe how fast it’s coming. When I hear they have an order of 55 million masks and that is just one order, that’s one order, out of many, and there are many millions of masks beyond that, and I keep saying, how is it possible to use so much? But that’s the way it is.”

Coronavirus death toll in?Italy?rises by 793

Coffins are unloaded from a military convoy at Ferrara cemetery in northern Italy on March 21.

The death toll in?Italy?from coronavirus has risen by 793 in the past 24 hours to 4,825, according to the Italian Civil Protection Agency.

Overall, the number of confirmed cases in Italy is 53,578, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Texas governor is waiving regulations for nursing students to help expand medical workforce

Texas will issue temporary permits to “nurses who have yet to take the licensing exam” and suspend other regulations for students to assist with the state’s response to Covid-19, Gov. Greg Abbott said in a press release Saturday.

Abbott is allowing?“nurses with inactive licenses or retired nurses to reactivate their licenses,” the release said.

Nursing students in their final year will be allowed to “meet their clinical objectives by exceeding the 50% limit on simulated experiences,” the release added.

New Jersey governor issues "stay at home" order

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy announced a statewide “stay at home” order which will go in to effect at 9 p.m. ET Saturday.

This order follows New York and Connecticut which made similar orders Friday.

There are 1,327 confirmed Covid-19 cases in New jersey with 16 deaths in total, Murphy said at a press conference.

There were 400 more COVID-19 confirmed cases since yesterday, Murphy added

The order will prohibit all gatherings, such as celebrations, the governor said.

Murphy’s executive order further directs the closure of all non-essential retail businesses to the public, with the exceptions of:

  • Grocery stores, farmer’s markets and farms that sell directly to customers, and other food stores, including retailers that offer a varied assortment of foods comparable to what exists at a grocery store
  • Pharmacies and medical marijuana dispensaries
  • Medical supply stores
  • Gas stations
  • Convenience stores
  • Ancillary stores within healthcare facilities
  • Hardware and home improvement stores
  • Banks and other financial institutions
  • Laundromats and dry-cleaning services
  • Stores that principally sell supplies for children under five years
  • Pet stores
  • Liquor stores
  • Car dealerships, but only for auto maintenance and repair, and auto mechanics
  • Printing and office supply shops
  • Mail and delivery stores

Top infectious disease doctor: "Not every single person in the United States needs to get tested"

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, stressed that not all Americans should be tested for coronavirus during a White House press conference Saturday.

Fauci noted if people get tested unnecessarily, they will utilize important personal protective equipment that could be used for those who do need to be tested or are at a greater risk.

Fauci noted that right now there are disparities in the amount of available personal protective equipment though, “we are working hard to correct that.”

Fauci also reiterated doctors should put off elective surgeries for the time being so they don’t put themselves of others at risk by utilizing medical equipment.?

Pence and his wife will be tested Saturday afternoon for coronavirus

Vice President Mike Pence said Saturday during a news conference that he and his wife Karen would be tested for the coronavirus.

Pence said that more than 195,000 Americans have been tested for the virus. Pence noted that number does not include county hospitals or health care labs around the country.

Currently, only 19,343 tests have come back positive, Pence said.

Earlier Saturday: President Trump told reporters that Congress is close to reaching a deal on a proposal for the next stimulus bill to deal with the pandemic.

On Saturday, congressional and administration negotiators entered a crucial day in the effort to deploy more than $1 trillion in emergency stimulus to a staggering economy, with a growing consensus on a final agreement, but a handful of significant hang-ups still needed to be resolved.

Pence: US Department of Health and Human Services has ordered "hundreds of millions of N95?masks"

Vice President Mike Pence announced Saturday during a coronavirus task force meeting that the Department of Health and Human Services has placed a huge order for N95 masks needed to fight the coronavirus pandemic.

Pence then addressed the need to postpone certain medical procedures across the US out of precaution.

“On behalf of the President, we?do renew the call for Americans?to postpone elective medical?procedures, including dental?services, and this is another?way to make sure that the?medical supplies are available,?by postponing elective medical?procedures, you are freeing up?medical supplies for those?dealing with the coronavirus,” he said.

There are at least 21,240 coronavirus cases in the US

There are?21,240?cases of the novel coronavirus in the United States, according to CNN Health’s tally of US cases that are detected and tested in the country through its public health systems. So far, 267?people have died.?

The total includes cases from all 50 states, Washington, DC, and other US territories, as well as all repatriated cases.?

Trump says "we are getting close" on a stimulus bill

President Trump told reporters that “we are getting close” to reaching a deal on a proposal for the next stimulus bill to deal with the coronavirus.

Some context: Congressional and administration negotiators on Saturday entered a crucial day in the effort to deploy more than $1 trillion in emergency stimulus to a staggering economy, with a growing consensus on a final agreement, but a handful of significant hang-ups still to be resolved.

Bipartisan groups of senators worked late into Friday night with top officials from President Donald Trump’s administration to lock in a final agreement — an agreement that people directly involved in the negotiations tell CNN could top a cost of $1.5 trillion — before falling short of a midnight deadline imposed by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Larry Kudlow, a top economic adviser to Trump, went even further on the overall scope the package Saturday, telling reporters it could top $2 trillion.

“The package is coming in about 10% of GDP, it’s a very large package,” Kudlow, the director of the National Economic Council, said. Ten percent of gross domestic product is roughly $2 trillion.

FDA approves new "point of care" coronavirus test that promises rapid results

The US Food and Drug Administration has announced emergency use authorization of a new on-site coronavirus test that could detect the virus in approximately 45 minutes.

The authorization was made Friday and tests will begin shipping next week, according to a statement from the company manufacturing the tests.

Country of Georgia declares nationwide state of emergency

A bus is disinfected in Tbilisi, Georgia, on March 1.

The country of Georgia has declared a nationwide state of emergency over the coronavirus pandemic, President Salome Zourabichvili said in a statement on Twitter Saturday.

Earlier in the day, Georgian Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia called on the former Soviet republic’s president to declare a state of emergency.

The country’s first case of the novel coronavirus was detected in late February, and the country has 48 confirmed cases today, Gakharia said. More than 2,300 people are in quarantine zones and many are in self-isolation, he added.?

The country has closed schools and suspended military conscription and has shifted public servants to remote work, and has restricted air travel and land traffic, the prime minister said.

Vietnam to ban the entry of foreigners beginning Sunday

All foreigners will be denied entry to Vietnam?as of?March 22?“due to swift and complicated developments of the Covid-19 pandemic,”?according to?state-run?newspaper Chinhphu.?

A temporary suspension of entry will also go into effect on?Sunday for Vietnamese people overseas and their families who were granted visa exemptions, Chinhphu reported on Saturday.?

The government also directed the Ministry of Transport to suspend all inbound international flights but did not give a specific timeline.?

Those?entering for “diplomatic and official purposes”?may be exempt from the ban, subject to the approval from the?ministries of public security,?defense,?health and foreign affairs?as well as a?medical declaration and?self-quarantine, according to?Chinhphu.?

Some context: The?move comes a day after?Vietnam announced a “mandatory centralized quarantine” for 14 days for all passengers entering the country.?Vietnam already suspended visa issuance to foreigners earlier this week.??

Spain's confirmed coronavirus cases jump by 5,000 in a single day

A member of Spanish Emergency Army Unit wearing protective clothing sprays disinfectant in a train station in Madrid on March 20.

Spain’s health authorities reported a drastic spike of 5,000 new cases of novel coronavirus in just one day, according to a ministry of health briefing from the presidential palace in Madrid on Saturday.

Roughly 25,000 cases have been registered in the country, that is “basically 5,000 new cases since yesterday,” said?Maria Jose Sierra, director of the?Coordination Center for Health Alerts and Emergencies.

Spanish health authorities also reported a 5% mortality rate based out those hospitalized or receiving hospital assistance.

“As of today, we have 1,326 deaths, which gives us a mortality rate of about 5%,” Sierra said.

During the briefing, health authorities confirmed that?Spain’s director of Health Emergencies, Fernando Simon,?presented some mild symptoms Friday, but tested negative for coronavirus.

By the numbers: The areas in Spain with the largest number of cases are Madrid with almost 9,000 confirmed cases, Catalonia with a little over 4,000 cases and Basque Country with 1,725 cases, according to Sierra.

“Cases are constantly increasing, therefore we insist people to continue social distancing and all other measures mandated by the government,” said Sierra.

Kroger expands sick leave for diagnosed and quarantined Covid-19 employees

Kroger, one of the United States’ largest supermarket retailers, is expanding its paid sick leave to?associates diagnosed with COVID-19 or under mandatory quarantine, company spokeswoman Kristal Howard says.

The grocer company will also?“provide a one-time bonus to every hourly frontline” employee, amounting to $300 for every full-time and $150 for every part-time associate, according to a Kroger press release.?

Kroger has confirmed two of its employees have tested positive for coronavirus, one in Colorado and another in Washington.?Both associates are receiving medical care and are recovering, Howard said.

Miami-Dade County mayor closes hotels except for essential personnel

Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez issued an emergency order Saturday closing all hotels, motels and other lodging due to coronavirus.

Exceptions are available for those housing essential personnel and those who have been displaced due to the virus, a press release from the mayor said.

All short-term vacation rentals must end by March 23 until further notice, the release said.

Gimenez also included an order for boats to stop “rafting up” for parties at sea or in Biscayne Bay.

Stimulus package could top $2 trillion as negotiators look to clear final major hurdles

Larry Kudlow speaks to the press outside the White House on March 16.

US negotiators entered a crucial day in the effort to deploy more than $1 trillion in emergency stimulus to a staggering economy, with a growing consensus on a final agreement, but a handful of significant hang-ups still need to be resolved.

Bipartisan groups of senators worked late into Friday night with top officials from President Trump’s administration to lock in a final agreement — an agreement that people directly involved in the negotiations tell CNN could top a cost of $1.5 trillion — before falling short of a midnight deadline imposed by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Larry Kudlow, a top economic adviser to Trump, went even further on the overall scope the package Saturday, telling reporters it could top $2 trillion.

“The package is coming in about 10% of GDP, it’s a very large package,” Kudlow, the director of the National Economic Council, said. Ten percent of gross domestic product is roughly $2 trillion.

The expanding price tag of the package was matched only the expanding crisis it is being drafted to try and blunt. The negotiations are expected to continue toward a final agreement through the day, with both sides acknowledging failure at this point isn’t an option.

New York needs medical gowns and is searching for more

Gov. Andrew Cuomo said New York state is in need of medical gowns and is doing everything it can to fill that need.

There are 10,356 confirmed coronavirus cases across New York, governor says

There are at least 10,356 confirmed cases of Covid-19 across New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in a press conference Saturday.

At least 45,000 people have been tested for Covid-19, the governor said.

About 15% of those cases are being hospitalized.

New York state sending masks to NYC to help with coronavirus pandemic

New York state is sending 1 million N95 masks to New York City, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Saturday.

Apparel companies are converting to mask manufacturers in New York and Cuomo said he is exploring the state of New York manufacturing masks.

New York governor: "Everything that can be done is?being done"

Gov. Andrew Cuomo spoke today on what New York state is doing to respond to the growing coronavirus epidemic.

At the top of Cuomo’s list is increasing hospital capacity, building beds and seeking out locations to help treat a growing number of infected.

Cuomo said he will be looking at the Javits Center, SUNY Stony?Brook and the Westchester County Center, among other places, as possible treatment locations.

In strategic shift, doctors in America's two largest cities are told to skip some coronavirus testing

A doctor examines a man for a COVID-19 test inside a testing tent at St. Barnabas Hospital in New York City on March 20.

Health officials in New York City and Los Angeles County are signaling a change in local strategy when it comes to coronavirus testing, recommending that doctors avoid testing patients except in cases where a test result would significantly change the course of treatment.

A news release from the Los Angeles Department of Public Health this week advised doctors not to test those experiencing only mild respiratory symptoms unless “a diagnostic result will change clinical management or inform public health response.”

The recommendation reflects a “shifting from a strategy?of case containment to slowing disease transmission and averting excess morbidity and mortality,” according to the statement.

The guidance said coronavirus testing at L.A. County public health labs will prioritized those with symptoms, health care workers, residents of long-term care facilities, paramedics and other high-risk situations. Others are encouraged to simply stay at home.

At about the same time, the New York City Department of Health directed all healthcare facilities to immediately stop testing non-hospitalized patients for Covid-19.?

Some context: The strategy shift essentially codifies the reality health departments have been living with for weeks; a shortage of tests and protective equipment amid rising demand and case numbers.

It also puts into practice advice from many of America’s top medical experts, including CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta, that a positive test result is not required to treat the symptoms.

Naturally, limiting testing in America’s two largest population centers would also likely lead to widespread under-counting of total cases.

United Kingdom urges shoppers to stop panic buying

People wait in line at a Costco in Glasgow, Scotland, before it opens on March 21.

The United Kingdom government is urging shoppers to act responsibly amid panic buying sparked by the coronavirus outbreak.

At the daily press briefing held at Downing Street, the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, George Eustice, appealed for shoppers to think of others.

“There is more than enough food to go round,” Eustice said, adding that the supply chain is able to step up to meet demand.

Many supermarket shelves have been left empty in recent days.?

National Medical Director of the National Health Service (NHS) Stephen Powis says the panic buying has left some health workers unable to get food at the end of a long work shift.

“Frankly, we should all be ashamed that that has to happen,” he said, referring to a critical care nurse who posted a tearful video on social media when she was unable to buy food.

“These are the very people that we will all need,” Powis added.

Mar-a-Lago is closed because of coronavirus

Mar-a-Lago in 2019.

President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago retreat in Palm Beach, Florida, is closed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Mar-a-Lago members were informed late Friday night, a member said.

More context: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday ordered all beaches in Palm Beach County to close, although it was unclear if that applies to private beaches and whether there will be an update Saturday reflecting that information.

DeSantis issued an executive order on Friday directing all beaches, movie theaters, concert houses, auditoriums, playhouses, bowling alleys, arcades, gymnasiums and fitness studios to close in Palm Beach County and neighboring Broward County.

Egypt announces the closure of all mosques for 2 weeks

A few people walk in the vicinity of the closed al-Hussein mosque in Cairo on March 20.

Egypt announced the closure of all mosques for two weeks to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, according to the Ministry of Endowment on Saturday.

Here's why the US is behind in coronavirus testing

A health worker administers a test to a motorist in Stamford, Connecticut, on March 20.

As the US has lagged behind other advanced nations in testing for the coronavirus, former government officials and public health experts point to a series of policy and procedural decisions that they say hindered the nation’s response to the pandemic.

South Korea had run more than 300,000 tests as of Friday, and while there is no official count of tests done in the United States, Dr. Deborah Birx, part of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, implied about 170,000 people have been tested so far. The US population is more than six times that of South Korea.

For weeks public and private labs have raced to boost their testing capacity, but people across the country, even some with underlying health conditions, have told CNN this week that they have not been able to get tested.

Asked Friday whether the US can currently meet demand for tests, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said, “We are not there yet.”

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s first test didn’t work

Some context: In January, shortly after Chinese authorities identified a novel coronavirus as the cause of cases of pneumonia in Wuhan, the World Health Organization published a protocol with instructions for any country to manufacture tests for the virus

Rather than using that protocol, the CDC developed its own test. A World Health Organization spokesperson said this week that the WHO didn’t offer tests to the CDC because the US agency typically has the capacity to manufacture them itself.

Portugal death toll doubles to 12

The number of coronavirus-related deaths in Portugal doubled to 12 in the past 24 hours, the country’s Directorate-General for Health announced Saturday.

There have also been a further 260 confirmed cases, taking the total to 1,280.?

Portugal?declared a state of emergency over coronavirus Wednesday, scheduled to last 15 days.

The decision gives the government more powers to restrict rights,?access funds and set minimum public services, among others.

However Prime Minister Antonio Costa said “democracy won’t be suspended.”

The country was a dictatorship for decades before democracy was restored in 1974.

Spain death toll jumps to 1,326

A military member disinfects Nuevos Ministerios subway station in Madrid on March 20.

Spain has reported a further 324 coronavirus-related deaths in the past 24 hours, taking the total to 1,326, said the health ministry.

There has been a 25% jump in the number of overall cases in Spain, according to figures released Saturday. The new total is 24,926.

On Friday the government announced an extra 50,000 medical workers would be deployed to tackle?the outbreak.

Minister of Health Salvador Illa said the thousands of new staff include resident doctors, senior year medical and nursing students, and 14,000 recently retired doctors and nurses.?The measures aim to “reinforce the public health system and fight and contain the Covid-19,” the minister said.

A 210 million-euro aid package which aims to help regional governments “prepare for a fast response in urgent cases” was also announced.

?The allocation of funds depends on the number of people affected in each region, the government said.

Illa also announced that a package of quick coronavirus tests should arrive “in the next few days” to allow testing of the “most vulnerable groups” and those at home “with light symptoms.”

Angola confirms first coronavirus cases

Angola’s Health Minister Silvia Lutucuta has confirmed two patients tested positive for coronavirus, the first cases in the country.

In a press conference, Lutucuta said the test results were confirmed in the early hours of Saturday morning.

“We would like to say that these two patients have been through Lisbon in Portugal and arrived on flights on the 17th and 18th,” she said.

“It’s important to mention that they are both men, aged between 36 and 38 years old, residing in Luanda and both are under supervision in our facilities.”

Lutucuta says it’s important that people continue to remain calm and follow the advice of authorities.

Pakistan bans incoming international flights

All international flights to and from Pakistan will be suspended until April 4, according to an official statement Saturday.

The measures are designed to combat the spread of coronavirus and will apply to passenger, charter and private flights, announced Moeed Yousuf, special assistant to the prime minister on national security.

Pakistan has confirmed 533 cases of novel coronavirus, according to data compiled by the country’s national disaster management authority.

French Air Force moves coronavirus patients to ease overcrowded hospitals

A person jogs through the Champs de Mars on March 21.

The French air force is transporting coronavirus patients to the west of the country to ease pressure on overcrowded hospitals in the east.

Airlifts will transport patients in critical condition from the city of Mulhouse in eastern France to the Aquitaine region in the west, according to a statement from the French Ministry of Armed Forces.

The number of coronavirus patients in Mulhouse has spiked since the start of March. As of Friday afternoon,?1,551 people had been hospitalized in the Grand Est region, where the city is situated. Of the total, 352 are in intensive care and nearly 9% are under the age of 60.

The number of coronavirus cases in France has been rising rapidly in the last few days, and the government has imposed strict measures to try to contain its spread, including closing cafes, public spaces and schools.

Dr. Fauci: There is no 'magic drug' for coronavirus

In a press conference, US President Donald Trump said a drug called chloroquine could be a “game-changer” in treating coronavirus. Dr. Anthony Fauci, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director, says?he doesn’t think it was described that way.

At least 30 cruise ships are at sea right now. Here's what it's like on board

Texan newly-weds Jay and Carmen Martinez went straight from celebrating their beachside wedding to embarking on a globe-trotting honeymoon cruise across the South Pacific on board the Norwegian Jewel.

Ahead of the February 28 departure date in Australia, the couple had worried about the spread of coronavirus but didn’t have the option to cancel the 23-day trip they’d booked two years earlier.

Now they are among thousands of passengers still at sea aboard more than 30 oceangoing cruise ships, some still hunting for a port that will accept them amid a global shutdown of the cruise industry and mounting fears of infection.

Read the full report here.

Italian man released from coronavirus isolation in Nigeria

An Italian man who suffered the first case of coronavirus reported in Nigeria has recovered and has been released from an isolation facility, Lagos State government has announced.

The patient donated one unit of blood plasma before he was discharged Friday, officials said.

The plasma is frozen in the Lagos State bio bank and will be useful in treating new cases, according to authorities.

All schools and universities in Lagos will be closed from Monday and religious gatherings have been limited to 50 people as the state works to contain the spread of the coronavirus.

30 days that brought the world to the brink of a depression

Monday, February 17. The novel?coronavirus outbreak?is raging in China, but fewer than 1,000 people have been infected outside the country. With the virus out of sight and mostly out of mind, the Dow Jones Industrial Average stands just shy of 30,000 points, driven by the longest US economic expansion in history.

What investors couldn’t know is that over the next 30 days, the?coronavirus?would burst out of quarantine in China, with major outbreaks in South Korea and Italy, then Spain, France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. It brought business to a sudden stop, sent stock markets into a meltdown and forced central banks to take emergency action on a scale even greater than during the 2008 global financial crisis.

A global recession, once unthinkable in 2020, is now a foregone conclusion and some experts warn that the pandemic could drag the world’s economy into a depression. More bad news: The coronavirus outbreak may just be getting started.

Read the full story here.

Iran death roll reaches 1,556 with more than 20,000?cases recorded

Iran confirmed 966 new coronavirus cases, bringing the country’s total number of cases to 20,610, health ministry spokesperson?Kianush?Jahanpoor?announced on state television Saturday.

Over the last 24 hours 123 people have died from the virus, raising the death toll to 1,556, said Jahanpoor.

A total of 7,635 patients have so far recovered, Jahanpoor added.

Iran has the most coronavirus cases in the Middle East, and is in an ongoing state of economic crisis. US sanctions on the country have seen its currency tank and unemployment grow.

The sanctions also mean Iran is struggling to access coronavirus test kits due to US sanctions, a?board member of Iran’s Association of Medical Equipment Importers told the semi-official news agency ILNA in February.

Ramin Fallah told ILNA that “many international companies are ready to supply Iran with coronavirus test kits, but we can’t send them money” because of the US sanctions.

Data from China shows the majority of people with Covid-19 only suffer mild symptoms, then recover

Most people who contract the?novel coronavirus?experience?mild symptoms, according to data from China, where the worst of the epidemic?now appears to be over.

Last month, scientists from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention published a research paper analyzing the data for the first 72,314 people diagnosed with Covid-19.

Epidemiologists say it will?take a long time?to fully understand the mechanics of the coronavirus outbreak, but the information published by the Chinese scientists may give some insight into those most vulnerable to the virus.

Read the full story here.

Former CDC director: There's a long war ahead and our Covid-19 response must adapt

Dr. Tom Frieden speaks to the media in 2016.

Different times call for different measures. When Covid-19 hit China, I was concerned, as were many public health professionals, about what could happen and urged?rapid action?to?understand more?and prepare. But few of us anticipated the catastrophic impact the new virus has had in?Wuhan, in?Italy?and may soon have in many other places.

For most people, there is simply no frame of reference for this pandemic. Never in our lifetime has there been an infectious disease threat as devastating to society. Never in our lifetime have we seen a rich country like?Italy?face the need to?ration respirators. And never have we seen the fear that millions of health care workers around the world feel about being infected by the virus – justified fear we must address.

Read the full story here.

Germany coronavirus cases increase by nearly 20% in 24 hours

Health workers speak to a motorist in front of the entrance to the University Hospital in Magdeburg, Germany, on Saturday, March 21.

Germany has reported a further 2,705 coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, taking the total to 16,662, according to the Robert Koch Institute, the country’s center for disease and control.

There have also been 16 new coronavirus-related deaths, bringing the total to 47, according to Saturday’s update.

Officials are debating how best to respond to the continued spread of the virus.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman announced Friday that the government would re-evaluate its coronavirus containment measures, but dodged the question of if – and when – curfews should be imposed.?

It comes as the state of Bavaria declared Friday it is imposing – from midnight local time – state-wide exit restrictions to contain the spread of coronavirus. The Bavarian State Premier Markus Soeder announced the measures will be in place for two weeks.

Several German state premiers and local communities have raised concerns about the rate of the virus’s spread across?Germany?– and have called for a?nationwide lockdown.?

However,?Germany?is a federal state and decisions cannot be?implemented nationwide by the Chancellor – only in collaboration with state premiers.

Volkswagen closes Mexico factories amid coronavirus outbreak?

Employees work on a Volkswagen AG Beetle in Puebla, Mexico, in July 2019.

German automaker Volkswagen has temporarily shut down two of its plants in Guanajuato and Puebla in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Production at both plants will be suspended from March 30 through April 12, the company said in a statement Friday.?

The measure is being taken to preserve the health of staff and the community as the virus continues to spread, Volkswagen said. The company also cited a decrease in market demand and the risk of supply shortage for the temporary closure.

Vietnam to impose mandatory quarantine on all incoming travelers

Vietnam has announced a “mandatory centralized quarantine” for 14 days for most people entering the country?to prevent the spread of coronavirus,?state-run newspaper Chinhphu?reported.?

Passengers arrive at?Van Don airport in Vietnam's Quang Ninh province on February 10.

The measure starts Saturday and applies to both Vietnamese nationals and foreigners, except for those traveling for diplomatic and “official” purposes, who are required to self-quarantine at places of residence under the supervision of local authorities.

An army spokesperson said Wednesday there are 140 quarantine areas that can accommodate as many as 44,718 people, according to Chinhphu.

Vietnam?has 91 confirmed cases of coronavirus, with no deaths, according to the latest data from Johns Hopkins?University, which is tracking cases reported by the World Health Organization and additional sources.??

Colombia to hold 19-day "mandatory preventive isolation"

The usually busy avenue running along Nemesio Camacho stadium is empty in Bogota, Colombia, on Friday.

Most Colombian citizens will have to self-isolate from next week, President Ivan Duque announced in a televised address late Friday.

People will be required to isolate from 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday, March 24, for 19 days until midnight Monday on April 13. Duque called the measure “mandatory preventive isolation.”

Many Colombians will only be allowed to go outside to access health services, purchase food and medicine, and to use the bank and post office.

Colombians had previously been asked to self-isolate, but the measure wasn’t mandatory.

As of Friday evening, Colombia had reported 158 coronavirus cases and no deaths, according to the latest numbers by its Ministry of Health.

The President tests negative: Duque also said that he underwent a coronavirus test, which came back negative. Vice President Marta Lucía Ramírez said Saturday on her official Twitter account that Colombia has received 50,000 test kits from South Korea that can deliver results in about four hours.

30 days that brought the world to the brink of a depression

Monday, February 17. The novel?coronavirus outbreak?is raging in China, but fewer than 1,000 people have been infected outside the country. With the virus out of sight and mostly out of mind, the Dow Jones Industrial Average stands just shy of 30,000 points, driven by the longest US economic expansion in history.

What investors couldn’t know is that over the next 30 days, the?coronavirus?would burst out of quarantine in China, with major outbreaks in South Korea and Italy, then Spain, France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. It brought business to a sudden stop, sent stock markets into a meltdown and forced central banks to take emergency action on a scale even greater than during the 2008 global financial crisis.

A global recession, once unthinkable in 2020, is now a foregone conclusion – and some experts warn the pandemic could drag the world’s economy into a depression.

Read more:

Traders work during the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on March 16, 2020 at Wall Street in New York City. - Trading on Wall Street was halted immediately after the opening bell Monday, as stocks posted steep losses following emergency moves by the Federal Reserve to try to avert a recession due to the coronavirus pandemic.Just after the opening bell, the S&P 500 was at 2,490.47, a drop of 8.1 percent and beyond the seven percent loss that automatically triggers a 15-minute trading halt. (Photo by Johannes EISELE / AFP) (Photo by JOHANNES EISELE/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article 30 days that brought the world to the brink of a depression

Vietnam imposes mandatory quarantine on all incoming travelers

Staff members of the Center for Disease Control in Hanoi, Vietnam, spray disinfectant inside a plane at Noi Bai International Airport on March 3.

Travelers arriving in Vietnam will be quarantined for 14 days to help stop the spread of the novel coronavirus, according to state-run newspaper Chinhphu.?

The measure applies to Vietnamese nationals and foreigners – except those traveling for diplomatic and “official” purposes. People are required to self-quarantine at places of residence under the supervision of local authorities.

An army spokesperson on Wednesday said the country had prepared 140 quarantine areas to accommodate up to 44,718 people, according to Chinhphu.

Vietnam?has 91 confirmed coronavirus cases, according to the latest data from Johns Hopkins?University. No fatalities have been reported in the country.

Just tuning in? Here's what you need to know

A sparsely populated Times Square in New York on Friday. Gov. Andrew Cuomo has banned gatherings statewide and ordered all workers in non-essential businesses to stay home.

Positive signs from China: The country’s National Health Commission said that Friday marked the third day in a row in which no new local infections were reported. Forty-one were imported from overseas.

Singapore and the UAE announce first deaths: Both countries reported two coronavirus-related fatalities Saturday.

A grim situation in New York: The number of cases in New York state has skyrocketed in recent days to more than 8,300 – at least 6,000 more than any other state – though the difference is likely due in part to the fact that health authorities there have been testing more people. On Friday, Gov. Andrew Cuomo ordered all non-essential New York workers to stay at home, and said the state may need more medical supplies to deal with the influx of new cases.

A vice presidential staffer tested positive: A staff member in?US Vice President Mike Pence’s office has contracted the novel coronavirus, Pence’s spokesperson said Friday evening. Pence is leading President Donald Trump’s coronavirus task force.

Calling in the military: Italy called in its armed forces to help enforce quarantine measures in the country. Italy is dealing with the deadliest outbreak of the virus in the world – more than 4,000 people have been killed, including 627 in a 24-hour period. More than 47,000 people have been infected, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally.

Thailand announces biggest single-day jump in new cases?

Volunteers wearing protective masks and gloves gather to clean the Chatuchak Weekend Market in Bangkok, Thailand, on Friday.

Thailand reported 89 new coronavirus patients on Friday – the country’s biggest single-day jump in new cases since the pandemic began.?

The Public Health Ministry said many of the new cases are linked to boxing stadiums, which are the biggest sources of infections in Thailand so far.

Thailand now has a total of 411 cases.

First coronavirus-related deaths reported in United Arab Emirates

A sign warns people to maintain a safe distance from each other in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on Friday.

The United Arab Emirates has recorded its first two deaths related to the novel coronavirus, the Ministry of Health and Prevention tweeted on Friday.?

One was a 78-year-old Saudi national who had arrived in the country from Europe. The cause of death was a heart attack that came amid complications related to Covid-19.

The second case was a 58-year-old UAE resident from Asia who suffered from heart disease and kidney failure.

There are 140 Covid-19 cases in the country.?

Google launches educational coronavirus website

Google launched a coronavirus education website on Saturday that contains safety tips and authoritative information about the pandemic.

The move comes a week after US President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence announced that Google was building a nationwide testing website, where Americans could answer a questionnaire and be directed to their nearest testing locations. But Google never affirmed the administration’s claims, and the website that launched Saturday does not include a testing screener.

The site, google.com/covid19, is “focused on education, prevention and local resources. People can find state-based information, safety and prevention tips, search trends related to COVID-19, and further resources for individuals, educators and businesses,” Google said in a blog post.

Read more:

The Google logo is seen on a computer in this photo illustration in Washington, DC, on July 10, 2019. (Photo by Alastair Pike / AFP)        (Photo credit should read ALASTAIR PIKE/AFP/Getty Images)

Related article Google launches educational coronavirus website

Huge crowds flocked to Sydney's iconic Bondi Beach despite the coronavirus scare. So now it's officially closing

Beachgoers swarm Bondi in Sydney, Australia, on Friday.

Authorities in Sydney are closing Bondi Beach after crowds gathered at the iconic waterfront site to take in the sun and swim, effectively ignoring warnings about the importance of social distancing to help prevent the novel coronavirus from spreading.

Images of massive crowds went viral Friday, prompting outrage from concerned citizens and members of government. CNN affiliate 7 News Sydney said that “thousands” of people had gathered there Friday.

It appears more were planning to do so today, according to David Elliott, the Minister for Police and Emergency Services in New South Wales state.

“What we saw this morning here at Bondi Beach was the most irresponsible behavior of individuals that we’ve seen so far. We cannot have an active area of community activity where more than 500 people are gathered,” Elliott said at a news conference in Sydney today.

“It’s with a significant level of disappointment that we have to move today to not only remove people from Bondi Beach but use this as an opportunity to remind people that the Health Act must be complied with.”

Singapore confirms its first coronavirus deaths

Vehicles form a long queue to enter Woodlands checkpoint in Singapore on March 17.

Two people have died in Singapore after contracting the novel coronavirus – the first fatalities in the city-state related to the global pandemic since the virus first emerged there weeks ago.

The victims were a 75-year-old woman and a 64-year-old man, according to the Singapore Ministry of Health. They both died in a local hospital.

The woman, a Singapore citizen, contracted the virus on February 23. She had chronic heart disease and a history of hypertension.

The man, an Indonesian national, also had a history of heart disease. He was infected on March 14.

Gatherings canceled: Gatherings of 250 or more people have been banned in Singapore until the end of June to stop the virus from spreading, the Health Ministry announced Friday.

For events with less than 250 participants, organizers are required to keep people at least 1 meter (3.3 feet) apart, according to the report.??

Restaurants and entertainment venues can remain open, but a distance of at least 1 meter must be maintained between tables and between seats.

The government also urged employers to introduce measures to reduce close physical interactions between employees and facilitate telecommuting when possible.

It also placed a heavy emphasis on personal responsibility, saying:

More than 250 people have died of the coronavirus in the US

A Long Island Rail Road employee disinfects a train car at the Hicksville, New York, LIRR station on March 19.

At least 18,763 people have been infected with the novel coronavirus in the United States, according to CNN Health’s tally of cases detected and tested through US public health systems. At least 258 people have died.

Here’s a breakdown of cases per state and territory:

  • Alabama: 106 cases
  • Alaska: 14 cases
  • Arizona: 63 cases, 1 death
  • Arkansas: 100 cases
  • California: 1,077 cases, 24 deaths
  • Colorado:?363 cases, 4 deaths
  • Connecticut: 194 cases, 4 deaths
  • Delaware: 39 cases
  • District of Columbia:?77 cases, 1 death
  • Florida:?514 cases, 9 deaths
  • Georgia:?420 cases, 13 deaths
  • Guam:?12 cases
  • Hawaii:?37 cases
  • Idaho:?23 cases
  • Illinois:?585 cases, 5 deaths?
  • Indiana:?79 cases, 3 deaths
  • Iowa:?45 cases
  • Kansas:?44?cases, 1 death
  • Kentucky:?63 cases, 2 deaths
  • Louisiana:?537 cases, 14 deaths
  • Maine:?56 cases
  • Maryland:?149 cases, 2 deaths
  • Massachusetts: 413 case, 1 death
  • Michigan:?549 cases, 3 deaths
  • Minnesota:?115 cases
  • Mississippi: 80 cases, 1 death
  • Missouri:?47 cases, 2 deaths
  • Montana:?15 cases
  • Nebraska:?32 cases
  • Nevada:?109 cases, 2 deaths
  • New Hampshire:?55 cases
  • New Jersey:?890 cases, 11 deaths
  • New Mexico:?43 cases
  • New York:?8,377 cases, 53 deaths
  • North Carolina:?137 cases
  • North Dakota:?26 cases
  • Ohio: 169 cases, 1 death
  • Oklahoma:?49 cases, 1 death
  • Oregon:?88 cases, 3 deaths
  • Pennsylvania:?268 cases, 1 death
  • Puerto Rico:?8 cases
  • Rhode Island:?54 cases
  • South Carolina:?125 cases, 1 death
  • South Dakota:?14 cases, 1 death
  • Tennessee:?228 cases
  • Texas:?202 cases, 5 deaths
  • US Virgin Islands:?3 cases
  • Utah:?112 cases
  • Vermont:?29 cases, 2 deaths
  • Virginia:?114 case, 2 deaths
  • Washington:?1,513 cases, 82 deaths
  • West Virginia:?8 cases
  • Wisconsin:?206 cases, 3 deaths
  • Wyoming:?18 cases

Coronavirus testing should be limited to priority groups, lab group says

Due to the widespread shortages of laboratory supplies and reagents, only three specific groups should be prioritized for novel coronavirus testing, according to a joint statement made by the Association of Public Health Laboratories and partner groups on Friday.

The groups are:

  1. Healthcare workers and first responders with Covid-19 symptoms.?
  2. Older Americans with Covid-19 symptoms.
  3. Individuals who have other illnesses that would be treated differently if they were infected with Covid-19.

These three groups differ from those?recommended?to be prioritized by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC recommends testing for:

  • Hospitalized patients with Covid-19 symptoms.
  • Older individuals and those with chronic medical conditions and/or an immunocompromised state.
  • Anyone developing symptoms within 14 days of contact with a presumed or confirmed Covid-19 patient, or travel to an affected geographic area.

The APHL recommended that healthy individuals who are not able to get tested should practice social distancing and follow recommendations provided by their state and local public health authorities. The group also suggested that people with mild illness should stay at home, monitor their symptoms and contact a healthcare provider if symptoms worsen.

Arizona records its first novel coronavirus death

Authorities in Arizona have confirmed the state’s first fatality due to the novel coronavirus.

The Arizona Department of Health Services said in a press release that the patient was a man his 50s with underlying health conditions.

The Maricopa County Department of Public Health is now in the process of notifying close contacts of the individual so they can look out for symptoms.

China donates 100,000 coronavirus testing kits to the Philippines

A police officer reads the temperatures of people at a checkpoint in Manila, Philippines, on March 16.

China has donated a total of 100,000 novel coronavirus testing kits to the Philippines,?the state-run media Philippines News Agency?said Saturday.

The kits – along with 10,000 N95 face masks, 100,000 surgical masks and 10,000 items of personal protective equipment – arrived in Manila on Saturday morning, the agency reported.

Staff member in Vice President's office tests positive for the novel coronavirus

President Donald Trump listens as Vice President Mike Pence speaks during a coronavirus task force briefing at the White House on Friday.

A staff member in?Vice President Mike Pence’s office?has tested positive for the novel coronavirus, Pence’s spokesperson said Friday evening.

“?This evening we were notified that a member of the Office of the Vice President tested positive for the Coronavirus. Neither President Trump nor Vice President Pence had close contact with the individual,” said Katie Miller. “Further contact tracing is being conducted in accordance with CDC guidelines.”

Pence has been the Trump administration’s point person on coordinating the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic.

While the staffer is the closest confirmed case to Pence that is publicly known, it isn’t his first potential brush with the virus.

At least two people tested positive for the coronavirus after?attending the American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s Policy Conference?in Washington, which was attended by Pence as well as several lawmakers and aides.

Both Pence and President Donald Trump attended the Conservative Political Action Conference last month, where a high-profile attendee also?tested positive for the coronavirus. Interactions with that attendee sent multiple Republican lawmakers into self-quarantine in the weeks following the conference.

There is no indication?that either Trump or Pence “met with or were in close proximity to the attendee” at the conference, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said in a statement earlier this month.

Read more:

mike pence coronavirus presser

Related article Staff member in Vice President Mike Pence's office tests positive for coronavirus

Pressure mounts for Trump to actually use the Defense Production Act

US President Donald Trump has repeatedly said he’s invoking?the Defense Production Act to ramp up production,?but he hasn’t wielded his federal powers yet as health officials voice alarm about potential shortages of lifesaving medical supplies like ventilators and protective gear for doctors on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic.

Trump?signed the measure after several people?urged him to act amid mounting concerns over a supplies shortage, a person familiar with the situation told CNN. But as he signed the emergency bill earlier this week, the administration had yet to conduct a full account of inventory across the nation. Nor had it identified which companies it would need to make what products. That still hadn’t been done as of Friday night, this person said, despite Trump insisting the act would be used to acquire “millions of masks.”

Amid the confusion over whether he’ll act or not, several companies have cast doubt on whether the President needs to?carry out orders under the Defense Production Act at all.?And several aides have privately advised against it.

The Defense Production Act, legislation passed in the 1950s on the cusp of the Korean War, provides the President with a broad set of powers to require businesses to “prioritize and accept government contracts” as well as “provide economic incentives” to ensure the US has the stockpiles it needs to handle an impending medical crisis.

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01 trump presser 0320

Related article Pressure mounts for Trump to actually use Defense Production Act

Coronavirus symptoms: What they are, and when to seek help

What are the telling signs that you may have the novel coronavirus, also known as Covid-19?

The main list of acute symptoms at this time is actually quite short and?can appear anywhere from two to 14 days after exposure,?according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Being able to identify those symptoms and act upon them when necessary is critical. Here’s what you need to know.

Here are some of the symptoms:

  • Fever
  • Cough
  • Difficulty breathing
  • Flu and cold symptoms

So what should you do?

“At this moment, the current guidance – and this may change – is that if you have symptoms that are similar to the cold and the flu and these are mild symptoms to moderate symptoms, stay at home and try to manage them with rest, hydration and the use of Tylenol,” American Medical Association president Dr. Patrice Harris said.

That advice does not apply if you are over age 60, since immune systems weaken as we age, or if you are pregnant – anyone with concerns about coronavirus should call their healthcare provider,?according to the CDC.

Read more about what to look for here:

This illustration, created at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), reveals ultrastructural morphology exhibited by coronaviruses. Note the spikes that adorn the outer surface of the virus, which impart the look of a corona surrounding the virion, when viewed electron microscopically. A novel coronavirus virus was identified as the cause of an outbreak of respiratory illness first detected in Wuhan, China in 2019.

Related article Coronavirus symptoms: A list and when to seek help

Data from China shows the majority of people with Covid-19 only suffer mild symptoms, then recover

Most people who contract the?novel coronavirus?experience?mild symptoms, according to data from China, where the worst of the epidemic?now appears to be over.

Last month, scientists from the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention published a research paper analyzing the data for the first 72,314 people diagnosed with Covid-19.

Epidemiologists say it will?take a long time?to fully understand the mechanics of the coronavirus outbreak, but the information published by the Chinese scientists may give some insight into those most vulnerable to infection.

The data shows that men and women have roughly the same chance of contracting the virus. When the scientists looked at 44,672 patients confirmed to have the disease, they found there were 106 diagnosed men per 100 women.

However, the impact on men appears to be worse – at least among those who were part of this initial study. While 2.8% of the men diagnosed with the disease died, only 1.7% of women did.

Read more here:

Nurses in protective gear prepare a ward designated for receiving new patents infected with the Covid-19 virus in a hospital in Budapest, Hungary, 16 March 2020.

Related article Data from China shows the majority of people with Covid-19 only suffer mild symptoms, then recover

UK government will pay 80% of wages as it closes pubs to fight the coronavirus

The UK government said Friday that it will subsidize the wages of any worker facing unemployment because of the?coronavirus pandemic?as it ordered the closure of pubs and restaurants.

Unveiling an unprecedented intervention by the state in the British economy, Finance Minister Rishi Sunak told reporters that the government will cover 80% of worker salaries for at least the next three months up to a maximum of £2,500 ($2,900) a month, which is more than the average income.

Sunak said the measure would apply to all companies, large or small. It was part of a bigger rescue package for British businesses, including tax relief totaling £30 billion ($35 billion) and interest-free loans for up to 12 months.

Read more:

A woman, wearing a face mask as a precautionary measure walks past a pub in London on March 20, 2020, during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. - Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Thursday said he was confident the country can slow the spread of coronavirus in the next three months through tough measures to cut social contact. The government earlier this week called for more people to work from home, and avoid public transport, pubs, clubs and restaurants, to try to slow infection rates.

Related article UK government will pay 80% of wages as it closes pubs to fight coronavirus

China reports no new locally transmitted virus cases for the third day in a row

Medical information is seen on a window in a ward treating coronavirus patients at a hospital in Wuhan, in China's Hubei province, on March 19.

Mainland China reported 41 new cases of the novel coronavirus on Friday – all of which were imported from overseas, according to the country’s National Health Commission.

Seven more people died, bringing the death toll in mainland China to 3,255 by the end of Friday.

The NHC found no new locally transmitted cases for the third day in a row and confirmed no new cases in Hubei province, the epicenter of the pandemic.

Italy called in the military to enforce coronavirus lockdown after 627 people died in 24 hours

Soldiers were drafted in to help enforce the lockdown in Italy on Friday as officials announced 627 new deaths – the largest single-day toll anywhere in the world since the coronavirus outbreak began.

Desperate scenes have unfolded in the north of the country, particularly the hard-hit Lombardy region where infections first exploded last month, as hospitals struggle to treat thousands of cases.

And Chinese medical experts helping Italy deal with the crisis have said the restrictions imposed in Lombardy are “not strict enough.”

The government has agreed that the military can be used to help enforce the lockdown, the president of the Lombardy region, Attilio Fontana, told a news conference on Friday.

“(The request to use the army) has been accepted… and 114 soldiers will be on the ground throughout Lombardy… it is still too little, but it is positive,” Fontana said. “Unfortunately we are not seeing a change of trend in the numbers, which are rising.”

Until now, the soldiers had been deployed in the region to ensure general security in the streets.

More than 4,000 people have died from the disease in?Italy, the country’s civil protection agency said Friday – more than any other nation – and nearly 6,000 new infections were confirmed in the past day, bringing the total to more than 47,000 cases.

Read more:

A view taken on March 20, 2020 in Cremona, southeast of Milan, shows Italian military men supervising the final installation a newly operative field hospital for coronavirus patients, financed by US evangelical Christian disaster relief NGO Samaritans Purse. - Fully operational, the structure will consist of 15 tents, 60 beds, 8 of which will be in intensive care. (Photo by Miguel MEDINA / AFP) (Photo by MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article Italy calls in military to enforce lockdown as coronavirus crisis intensifies in north

US?businesses?will suffer a?$4 trillion?decline due to coronavirus, hedge fund predicts

Famed hedge fund Bridgewater predicts the coronavirus outbreak will lead to $4 trillion in lost corporate revenue for public and private businesses in the US, according to a?report the firm published Friday.

In Bridgewater’s model, companies will have a shortfall of $2 trillion “concentrated in energy and travel and leisure, and about equally divided between large and small companies.”

The firm projects a?6% decline in US GDP for 2020, with the biggest hit during the second quarter.

The firm also estimates a decline of $12 trillion for global businesses in 2020.

“Since this hit to revenues is happening throughout the world, the total hole globally will be roughly three times that — about $12 trillion. Governments are responding, of course, but in most cases these responses will just mitigate some of the ripple. Governments’ capacities to deal with this hit vary greatly and will be a major driver of markets going forward,” the report stated.

“Many companies will try to fill this gap by drawing credit lines, increasing their debt positions.”

If government policies don’t help fill the gap, companies are likely to dramatically cut spending, which would result in meaningful cuts in employment.

Ray Dalio, who founded Bridgewater, is famous for predicting the 2008 financial crisis.

More men than women are dying from coronavirus in Italy, expert says

New numbers from the Covid-19 outbreak in Italy show more men are dying from the virus than women, the White House’s coronavirus response coordinator told CNN.

“This?new data about the male-female ratio is really quite striking,” Dr. Deborah Birx told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Friday evening.

Birx stressed the significance of underlying and pre-existing medical conditions.

“In Italy, again, most of the individuals who succumb to this disease had three other prior existing medical conditions,” she said.

Watch:

There are more than 18,000 cases of coronavirus in the US

There are?18,170?confirmed coronavirus cases in the United States, and 241?deaths, according to CNN Health’s tally.?

The total includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as all repatriated cases.?

General Motors will help produce ventilators for coronavirus

General Motors and Ventec Life Systems are collaborating to produce respiratory care products, including ventilators, to fight Covid-19.

“We are working closely with Ventec to rapidly scale up production of their critically important respiratory products to support our country’s fight again the Covid-19 pandemic,” said Mary Barra, GM chairman and CEO.?“We will continue to explore ways to help in this time of crisis.”