April 6 coronavirus news

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LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 20: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a daily press conference at 10 Downing Street on March 20, 2020 in London, England. During the press conference, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson told pubs, cafes, bars, restaurants and gyms to close, whilst Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced that the government will pay up to 80% of the wages of those unable to work due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis. (Photo by Julian Simmonds - WPA Pool/Getty Images)
Boris Johnson in intensive care with Covid-19
02:17 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • The?novel coronavirus?has infected more than 1.27 million people and?killed over 69,000?worldwide, according to Johns Hopkins University.
  • The US surgeon general said this week is going to be the “hardest and the saddest” for Americans, describing it as a “Pearl Harbor moment” and a “9/11 moment.”
  • British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is in intensive care after being admitted to hospital last night.
146 Posts

Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.

Colombia extends isolation order until April?26

Colombian President Iván Duque announced that he will extend the nationwide isolation order until April 26.?

In a tweet, Duque said the measures taken to slow the spread of coronavirus “have been positive.”

The order for “mandatory preventive?isolation” took effect on March 25 and was initially scheduled until April 13.

All Los Angeles residents can now apply for coronavirus testing

All 10 million residents in Los Angeles County are now eligible to apply for a coronavirus test.

Mayor Eric Garcetti said at a news conference today that there are “no longer any limits” on who can apply for the?testing.?Patients don’t have to be over age 65, have underlying medical conditions, or have a weakened immune system, as was previously required.?

Garcetti said that doesn’t mean officials immediately have a test for everyone in the county – the most populous in the US – but it means that the capacity of tests is now greater than the number of cases they’ve been receiving under the previous guidelines.

LA County residents can register for testing at?https://corona-virus.la

750,000 people in North Carolina could be infected by June, warns state health official

If North Carolina stops social distancing at the end of April – as President Donald Trump and administration officials have pushed for – there could be 750,000 state residents infected by June, said state health officials.

The North Carolina-specific modeling forecast showed that if the state stopped social distancing by the end of this month, there is more than a 50% probability that the state will outstrip ICU bed capability and acute care capacity – even as early as May.

On the other hand, if social distancing stayed in effect, it could cut the number of infections by half a million cases – down to 250,000.

North Carolina now has 2,870 cases and 33 deaths, said Cohen.

Chile mandates face masks on public and private transportation

Chile?has announced the mandatory use of face masks for all travelers riding public and private transportation to combat the spread of coronavirus.

During a televised press conference Monday, Chile’s Undersecretary of Public Health Paula Daza said the measure will go in effect Wednesday, April 8 at 5 am local time.?

Some of the transportation methods that are included in the measure include trains, buses, metros and taxis.?

The announcement comes after Health Minister Jaime Ma?alich called on the population to start making their own masks with homemade materials, such as T-shirts and scarves.

California suspends evictions and sets $0 bail for misdemeanors and lower-level offenses

California’s Judicial Council approved a series of temporary emergency rules Monday, including staying eviction and foreclosure proceedings during the Covid-19 pandemic, a vote that reinforces?Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom’s executive order to delay such actions against renters and homeowners in the state.?

During a teleconference Monday afternoon, the council also moved to set?bail statewide at $0 for misdemeanors and lower-level felonies to “safely reduce jail populations.”

Chief Justice Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye opened the session saying,?”(We are) trying our best to preserve rights and ultimately preserve lives.”

“We are at this point truly with no guidance in either history, law or precedent. And to say that there is no playbook is a gross understatement of?the?situation.”

District attorney Jackie Lacey, who presides over Los Angeles County where a zero-bail measure was implemented last week to reduce the number of inmates, applauded the decision.

“I appreciate the collaboration among criminal justice leaders in Los Angeles County that has resulted in the rapid deployment of new and innovative approaches as we work to try to stop the spread of COVID-19 in our community,” Lacey said in a statement.?

In total the council approved 11 temporary emergency rules.?Among the actions the council approved, to go into effect immediately are:

  • Suspend the entry of defaults in eviction cases;
  • Suspend judicial foreclosures;
  • Allow courts to require judicial proceedings and court operations be conducted remotely, with the defendant’s consent in criminal proceedings;
  • Adopt a statewide emergency bail schedule that sets bail at $0 for most misdemeanor and lower-level felony offenses;
  • Allow defendants to appear via counsel or remote technologies for pretrial criminal hearings;
  • Prioritize hearings and orders in juvenile justice proceedings and set a structure for remote hearings and continuances;
  • Extend the timeframes for specified temporary restraining orders;
  • Extend the statutes of limitations governing civil actions; and
  • Allow electronic depositions in civil cases.

Fact-checking Trump on performance of the small business lending program

During Monday’s White House coronavirus task force briefing, Trump claimed that the Paycheck Protection Program – a small businesses lending program – has “really been?performing?well.”

Trump said there were a few “minor glitches that have already been taken care of.”

?Facts First:?CNN has reported significant issues to the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), with system wide failures as lenders process these loans.

Days after the launch of the Small Business Administration’s rollout of the PPP,?there are still delays?in the system lenders use to upload loan application information and the money is still largely not going out to the businesses that need it yet.

According to?an?industry source?who spoke to CNN, major system-wide failures continue to crop up in the PPP system, including shutdowns?preventing the submission of applications from?lenders on their system known as E-Tran. These issues have slowed down the ability for banks to participate in the loan program,?this source tells CNN.?

Additionally,?several bank executives?tell CNN they want?the Treasury Department or the Small Business Administration to offer more guidance on how they are supposed to disburse funds.?CNN reporting indicates there are?also concerns among lenders who say they won’t cut checks until there is clear guidance on how they should distribute the money.

To read more about the early glitches in the small business lending program, read?here?and?here.

Pregnant women with coronavirus don’t experience more severe illness than the general population, unlike in SARS and flu cases, study finds

Pregnant women don’t seem to be any more susceptible to severe symptoms of Covid-19, compared to the general population and they don’t seem to pass the infection onto their babies, according to a new study,

The small study was published Monday in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and looked at data from 43 pregnant women in New York who tested positive for Covid-19 over two weeks between March 13 and 27.

Thirty-seven of the women in the study experienced a mild form of Covid-19, four developed a severe form of the disease and two experienced what researchers called “critical disease.” The percentages are similar to the breakdown of severity in disease in the general population. About 80% experience?mild disease, 15% develop severe cases and 5% result in critical cases.

Scientists were interested in the impact of the disease on pregnant women because in prior SARS and H1N1 pandemics, pregnant women were more susceptible to serious forms of the illness and had a greater chance of dying from the infection than the general population.

None of the babies in this study seemed to be infected, based on tests performed on them on the first day of their lives.

Birx says she did not visit sick grandchild because of the risk and urged people to stay home

Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, speaks about the coronavirus at the White House on April 6.

Dr. Deborah Birx, coordinator of the White House coronavirus task force, says she did not visit her grandchild despite the 10-month-old having “a fever of 105 this weekend.”

Birx shared her experience during a Monday task force briefing with reporters, while urging people in particularly high-risk areas to stay home as much as possible.

“I’m the doctor. And I couldn’t get there,” she said during the press briefing. “I mean, so I’m trying to explain to my daughter how to listen to her lungs. How to listen to her lungs, how to listen to the baby’s lungs…”

President Donald Trump, standing feet away from Birx, asked, “But you did not get there, you did not get there?”

“I did not go there. Because of you two,” she said, gesturing toward the President and Vice President Mike Pence, who stood nearby. “I mean, you can’t take that kind of risk with the leaders of the country.”

Birx said that her granddaughter is “coming out of it.”

She stopped short of telling people not to go to the grocery store for the next week in high-risk areas, but did recommend consolidating shopping trips and sending one member per family.

Watch the moment:

Trump questions whether politics tinged findings of HHS IG report on coronavirus response

President Donald Trump speaks about the coronavirus at the White House on April 6.

President Donald Trump on Monday questioned whether politics tinged the findings of a newly released Health and Human Services inspector general report that found hospitals have been most concerned about a shortage of coronavirus testing supplies and long wait times for test results.

After listening to a reporter citing the report during Monday’s White House press briefing, Trump responded, “It’s just wrong. It’s just wrong. Did I hear the word ‘inspector general’? Really?”

The President also questioned the integrity of the leadership in HHS’ Office of the Inspector General saying, “Well where did he come from, the inspector general? What’s his name?”

“We’ve had more testing and had more results than any country anywhere in the world. They’re doing an incredible job,” the President continued.

“So give me the name of the inspector general. Could politics be entered into that?” he concluded.

The report was based on interviews with more than 300 hospitals around the country.

Admiral Brett Giroir, who serves as the assistant secretary for health, expressed frustration with the recent OIG report’s findings, saying during Monday’s briefing that the OIG’s office did not adequately communicate with him.

Giroir pointed out that the report was done around March 23 and March 24, which he said was “during a ramp-up period.”?

“It’s hard to interpret the report because it mixes up all kinds of things, but clearly there were complaints by some hospitals of a backlog, had probably sent out tests, and that is true. There were several days of backlog as some of the major labs that have been taken care,” Giroir said.

Watch CNN reporters fact check Trump’s claims:

Fact check: Trump falsely claims plane and train passengers are being tested for the coronavirus

Asked about the possibility of restrictions on travel between coronavirus hotspots, President Donald Trump said: “There’s also testing done when people get onto those planes and also when people get off the planes.”

Facts First:?There is no evidence that plane passengers in the US are being tested for the coronavirus at all, let alone both when they get on and get off the plane.?While it is theoretically possible this is happening under the radar at a particular airport, it is certainly not happening widely.

Trump might have meant to refer to screening – which involves questioning and sometimes temperature checks – rather than actual testing, but major US airlines are not doing screening, either. Some plane passengers are being subjected to government screening upon landing, but most passengers are not – and this screening, unlike testing, cannot conclusively determine whether someone has the virus.

To read a full fact check, read?here.

Watch analysis here:?

Nissan to furlough about 10,000 workers in Mississippi and?Tennessee

Nissan plans to furlough most of its hourly manufacturing employees as its US plants remain closed to help slow the spread of Covid-19.

Nissan spokeswoman Lloryn Love-Carter confirmed the company will layoff about 10,000 employees Tuesday at plants in Canton, Mississippi; Smyrna, Tennessee and Decherd, Tennessee.

Nissan asked furloughed employees to apply for enhanced unemployment through at least April 27, when the company will restart production.

Nissan closed its US plants on March 20.

Trump confirms "wonderful, warm conversation" with Biden about coronavirus

Former Vice President and Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden speaks about Covid-19 during a press event in Wilmington, Delaware, on March 12.

President Donald Trump confirmed his phone call with former Vice President Joe Biden Monday, calling it a “wonderful, warm conversation” about the coronavirus pandemic.

Trump said the phone called lasted “probably 15 minutes” and reiterated that it was a “really good” call.

“He gave me his point of view and I fully understood that,” Trump said at the White House coronavirus task force briefing.

“I appreciate his calling,” the President said.

CNN reported earlier Monday that the Democratic presidential candidate and Trump had spoken by phone.

Watch here:

Trump says he's "going to get involved" in case of ex-Navy commander who sounded alarm

President Donald Trump said that he’s “going to get involved” in the case of a Navy captain removed from command of the USS Theodore Roosevelt.

At a Monday briefing, Trump was asked about comments made by Acting Secretary of the Navy Thomas Modly, who attacked Capt. Brett Crozier as either “too naive or too stupid” to be in command.

“I haven’t heard it exactly, I heard they heard,” Trump said, referring to the crew of the USS Theodore Roosevelt. “I heard they had a statement that was made, if that were the statement, it’s a strong statement.”

Crozier was relieved of command after a letter he sent to Navy leadership was leaked to the media. The letter flagged his concerns about the Roosevelt’s crew of more than 4,000 – saying in part that “sailors do not need to die”– and discussed the challenges of trying to contain an outbreak of coronavirus aboard the ship. He urgently requested that sailors be allowed to quarantine on land.

The Navy cited loss of confidence in his command.

“The letters shouldn’t have been sent, and certainly they shouldn’t have been leaked,” Trump said. “This is a military operation. I must tell you I’ve heard very good things about the gentlemen. Both gentlemen, by the way, I will say this. About both gentlemen. And I may look into it from the standpoint of something should be resolved because I’m hearing good things about both of people.”

LA Surge Hospital for coronavirus patients to open next week

The state of California and the County of Los Angeles has partnered with Dignity Health and Kaiser Permanente to open up a “Los Angeles Surge Hospital” for coronavirus patients in the city.

The temporary facility, which will be located on the campus of the former St. Vincent Medical Center in Los Angeles, will expand access to additional beds and expand ICU capacity for coronavirus patients in the coming weeks, according to a press release from Los Angeles County.

The hospital is expected to open on April 13 in phases, “ramping up to accept more patients as physicians and staff are hired and supplies and equipment are secured.” When fully operational, up to 266 beds will be available.

Masks were ineffective in preventing the spread of the coronavirus, small study finds

A small experiment involving patients with coronavirus who wore cotton and surgical masks showed that both seemed ineffective in preventing the spread of the coronavirus when the patients coughed. Scientists found coronavirus particles in the environment and on the exterior of the mask itself.?

The experiment was published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. Scientists tested face masks on four patients infected with the coronavirus at two hospitals in Seoul, South Korea.

They compared the use of surgical masks with reusable 100% cotton masks against patients who were not wearing masks. The researchers placed a petri dish about 7 inches from the patients’ mouths and told the patient to cough five times each onto a petri dish.

Researchers saw greater contamination on the outer surface of the mask, compared to the inner surface. It was unclear if the force of the person’s cough leaked out of the edge of the mask to contaminate the outer surface, or if the particles of the coronavirus were so small that a high-velocity cough penetrated the mask.?

The experiment did not look at the effectiveness of N95 masks, nor did it show if the masks protected against the actual transmission of infection from patients with Covid-19 while wearing different masks. Nor does it show if masks shorten the distance these droplets travel while someone is coughing.

More research will be needed to determine if the masks help prevent the spread of the disease with people who are asymptomatic or people who have Covid-19 and aren’t coughing.

Inside a prison Covid-19 lockdown

Former Wisconsin inmate Jeremy Egger gave CNN a glimpse inside what a Covid-19 prison lockdown looked like in his medium security facility over the past three weeks.

With limited contact to the outside, he heard snippets about the coronavirus pandemic on a prison radio. “The?radio station we had, it was from Milwaukee. We only had bits and pieces about a virus out there.”?

Egger said that – without being told anything directly by the guards – he could tell something was changing within the prison. Egger said guards’ posturing was different.

“Whether inmates were coming down with it or guards, I didn’t know, but something wasn’t right and it was in the institution,” he said.

Former Wisconsin state prison employee Jeff Wydeven said a change in demeanor with the guards doesn’t surprise him at all. “Of course they’re going to be scared,” he told CNN. “It’s their health too.”

Egger, 33, was taking morning courses in Wisconsin’s Thinking For Change program and studying in the afternoons.?He arrived?at the Metropolitan Secure Detention Facility (MSDF)?on March 12?expecting to serve three months for a parole violation.

Three days later everything changed.

While Egger was taking one of his courses, “they suddenly locked the entire place down,” he said.

“Everybody had to go back in their cells and that’s when we’re like, OK, there’s got to be a case here somewhere,” Egger said.

‘From the normal to being locked’

Prison life went “from the normal to being locked,” he said.?Egger said the initial lockdown was 23 1/2 hours a day with only 30 minutes out of a cell he shared with three other inmates.?They shared a dry cell that Egger described as a cell without a toilet, running water or television. Those 30 minutes a day gave them time to use the phone, microwave food and use shower facilities.?

During a call with his mother on March 25, Egger?grew concerned because she was exhibiting symptoms of the virus, but couldn’t get a test.?His mother, Cheryl Fountaine-Kempf, said?she “could easily detect the pain and fear in his voice.”??

The next day, an even more stringent lock down was instituted, according to Egger.?

“It just all changed again from one day to the next,” Egger said, adding that?inmates were only allowed out?for 45 minutes about every?three?days.?

?“I’m sitting there wanting to call my mom, thinking she’s deathly sick and I can’t call her for another two days.”

Guards told Egger they were trying to do their part in helping to slow the?spread, he said.

MSDF Milwaukee has the largest population of parole revocations re-entering the system for short periods of time “so people are going in and out constantly which creates much more of a risk than?other facilities,” according to Wydeven.

Four staff members at MSDF have tested positive, according to the Wisconsin Department of Corrections, which noted on its website this is the highest number of staff cases at any Wisconsin prison.

“Each site has pandemic plans to address COVID-19,” according to the website which states the plan includes “protocols and isolation procedures if someone is exposed and/or becomes infected. In the event of a confirmed positive case in one of our secure facilities, contact investigations are being conducted to determine which individuals may have been exposed to the virus, and subsequent isolation or quarantine may occur to manage these situations.”

CNN has reached out to the Department of Corrections for additional details.

More changes

On March 30, almost three months before his expected release, Egger was told to contact his family and probation officers because there was a possibility he was going to get out.?He said after that even more changes began happening.?

“The last two weeks there was no laundry was?being done internally and it was instead, outsourced,” he said.

Wydeven said while inmates normally do the laundry, with a lockdown they wouldn’t be able to do it.?

“We had to wear the same ‘yellows,’ a jumpsuit, for like two weeks,” Egger said.

“We’re supposed to wash our hands, but we could only shower about once every other day If we were lucky … and wearing dirty clothes With no running water in their cell hand washing was at a minimum,” he said.

Egger, a registered sex offender, was released on April 3.?He was originally released from prison in 2016 and obtained his welder’s certificate and a commercial drivers’ license.

He is living with his mother for the next two weeks to make sure he hasn’t contracted the virus, and then?will move to rural Wisconsin with his father, he told CNN.

Watch video from inside the prison:

Wisconsin Supreme Court blocks governor's order to postpone primary election because of coronavirus

Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers speaks to the media in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on February 26.

Wisconsin’s Supreme Court blocked Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ order to postpone Tuesday’s election, despite his arguments that in-person voting could endanger poll workers and voters because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The court sided with Republicans who control the state legislature and opposed Evers’ executive order Monday that sought to delay the election until June 9. The decision was 4-2, with the court’s conservative majority backing the GOP’s position.?

It was the latest twist in a legal battle that has thrown the primary into chaos as state and local elections officials have consolidated polling places and scrambled to find workers and supplies for those that will open.?

Los Angeles County urges residents to skip grocery shopping this week

Los Angeles County health officials urged residents to skip grocery shopping this week as the number of coronaviruses cases continue to rise.?

“If you have enough supplies in your home, this would be the week to skip shopping altogether,” said Dr. Barbara Ferrer, the LA County Department of Public Health Director, on Monday.

This would be the week to use delivery services for medications and groceries, she advised.

“We will see many more cases over the next few weeks. It remains important that we continue to do what we know will work,” she added.

Trump says he won't take steps to distance from Pence in light of Boris Johnson situation

President Donald Trump on Monday said he won’t take steps to physically separate from Vice President Mike Pence to protect the continuity of government in light of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s worsening condition.

“No I don’t think so,” Trump said when asked about potential new steps he might take after the top US ally fell seriously ill from coronavirus.

Trump said he would likely ramp up testing of people around him given the relative ease and speed of new testing kits.

“I think we’ll probably, just because of questions like that, I think we’ll probably have maybe quite a few tests,” he said.?

Standing alongside Trump, Pence said he was tested earlier Monday and that it came back negative.

Neither Trump nor Pence nor other members of the White House coronavirus task force wore masks to Monday’s briefing, despite updated guidance from the federal government suggesting face coverings in settings where social distancing is difficult.

Watch here:

Trump approves Cuomo's request to be able to treat Covid-19 patients inside hospital ship

President Donald Trump speaks about the coronavirus pandemic at the White House on April 6.

President Donald Trump said Monday he would be granting New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s request to convert a hospital ship docked off of Manhattan to treat coronavirus patients.

Cuomo, a Democrat, told members of the press earlier Monday that he was “going to call the President this afternoon and ask him to shift the (USNS) Comfort from non-Covid to Covid.”?

Trump, speaking at a White House press briefing Monday afternoon, said he “was informed that Gov. Cuomo has already told you and announced he called me up a little while ago and asked whether or not it would be possible to use the ship with respect to fighting the virus.”

“We hadn’t had that in mind at all, but we’re going to let him do it,” Trump remarked.

The President also confirmed that the ship has been approved to treat New Jersey patients.

Who is Dominic Raab? The Brexiteer ex-lawyer deputizing for Boris Johnson

Britain's Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab arrives for a meeting of the cabinet at 10 Downing Street on March 11.

Before British Prime Minister Boris Johnson went into intensive care on Monday evening with worsening coronavirus-related symptoms, he asked his Foreign Secretary and First Secretary of State Dominic Raab to deputize for him “where necessary.”

While now is a time of great uncertainty for the British public, Johnson’s handing over of some duties to Raab should be relatively seamless and is unlikely to affect any immediate government business.

Less clear is what will happen if Johnson is incapacitated for more than a few days. There’s no clear “Plan B” in Britain’s constitution or in the Cabinet Manual – which lays out the rules for running the government – for who should take over if Johnson isn’t able to lead the country, experts told Reuters.?

One thing that should help in terms of continuity: Unlike in the United States, where a President might hail from a different party than leaders in Congress, the UK government is entirely comprised of members of Parliament from Johnson’s party, which won the most seats in December’s election – meaning it operates as one entity.

An ardent Brexiteer?

Raab, a 46-year-old former lawyer, was elected to Parliament in 2010,?and spent his entire political career on the same wing of the party that secretly yearned for Johnson to have a serious go at taking the reins.??

Like Johnson, Raab is a longstanding advocate of Brexit who was willing to be a thorn in his own party’s side when it had more pro-European leadership.

Despite his euroskeptic leanings, his qualities were noticed by that pro-European leadership, and when then-Prime Minister David Cameron won reelection in 2015, Raab was offered a job in government. At the time, Raab was seen as a rising star within the party, and his promotion was seen as a way for Cameron to bolster his own euroskeptic credentials.

Raab previously served in Theresa May’s cabinet as the Brexit secretary, only to resign in protest at the deal she eventually struck with the EU. And despite running against Johnson in last summer’s Conservative leadership contest, he has been extraordinarily loyal to the Prime Minister ever since.?

While Raab is perhaps less socially liberal than Johnson, it is highly unlikely he would depart radically from the Prime Minister’s agenda in the short-term – not just because there simply isn’t enough time to change government policy during a time of national crisis, but also because the UK cabinet works on the principle of collective responsibility.?

Trump announces deal with 3M to ship additional 55-million N95 masks to US for next several months

President Donald Trump announced the United States has reached an agreement with 3M that will see the company supply 55 million additional N95 respirator masks to the US?each month.

“Because of my actions under the (Defense Production Act) I can also announce today that we have reached an agreement — very amicable agreement with 3M — with the delivery of an additional 55.5 million high quality face masks each month,” Trump said during a Monday press conference.?

The agreement comes just days after?Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to force the company’s hand.

Under the deal,?3M will ship an additional 55 million masks per month to the US from its overseas factories for the next three months, a senior administration official said, which will help alleviate shortages in personal protective equipment for medical workers. The overwhelming majority of the masks will come from 3M’s Chinese factories, the official said.

A senior administration official said the government’s decision to use the Defense Production Act was key to shifting the trajectory of negotiations between the two sides and forcing 3M’s hand.

Washington State extends school closure for remainder of academic year

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee prepares to speak about additional plans to slow the spread of coronavirus before a televised address from his office in Olympia, Washington, on March 23.

Washington Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee announced Monday that the state’s ban on in-person school classes will continue for the remainder of the school year.?

Despite signs that the increase in coronavirus cases may be leveling off in many places, “we cannot risk losing the gains we have made after the peak of this pandemic presumably will have passed,” Inslee said.

Superintendent of Public Instruction Chris Reykdal said reopening schools too soon would be even more disruptive than at-home instruction, since a single Covid-19 case in a school would force that building to be closed again for days, at least, until contacts could be traced and the building deep cleaned.?

Reykdal acknowledged they are not certain at this point that school buildings in Washington will be able to open as normal in time for the beginning of the new academic year this fall.

Trump on Boris Johnson: "I also want to send best wishes to a very good friend of mine"

US President Donald Trump said he and several pharmaceutical companies have contacted British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s doctors in London to see if they can help after he was admitted to an intensive care unit Monday for coronavirus.

“I also want to send best wishes to a very good friend of mine and a friend of our nation Prime Minster Boris Johnson. We’re very saddened to hear that he was taken into intensive care … a little while ago,” Trump said. “He’s been a really good friend. He’s been really something very special. Strong. Resolute.”

Trump said he held a teleconference with pharmaceutical companies about therapies for coronavirus patients earlier Monday.

“We have made tremendous progress on therapeutics,” he said. “I’ve asked two of the leading companies… I’ve asked them to contact London immediately.”

He said his administration has contacted Johnson’s doctors.

“We’ve contacted all of Boris’ doctors, and we’ll see what is going to take place, but they are ready to go,” the President said. “When you are brought into intensive care that gets very, very serious.”

He added: “We are working with London with respect to Boris Johnson.”

Minnesota governor announces help for veterans

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announced help for veterans, as well as for Asian Americans who are facing discrimination amid the coronavirus outbreak, in a press conference Monday.

Starting Monday, Minnesota veterans who are impacted by the novel coronavirus can apply for financial assistance grants from the Minnesota Department of Veteran Affairs.

Walz also announced the lieutenant governor was leading the Minnesota Department of Human Rights and launching a discrimination helpline for calls of xenophobia and racism, specifically aimed at Asian American community.

Minnesota has 986 confirmed cases of coronavirus and 31 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.

Doctor shares what it's like inside New York hospitals

A New York doctor said Monday that hospitals in the state are overwhelmed as more patients arrive with coronavirus.

Dr. Craig Spencer, the director of Global?Health in Emergency Medicine at New?York-Presbyterian/Columbia?University Medical Center, said emergency rooms are being converted into intensive care units and morgues are filling up.

“We have trucks outside to hold?bodies, those are getting?filled,” Spencer told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on “The Situation Room.”

He said while data shows the number of new infections is decreasing, there is a lag time between when people get sick and when they come to emergency rooms.

“In the best case scenario, it?may be another week or two?before we have a decrease in the?really, really sick patients,” he said.

Spencer said social distancing is still very important and is the best way to continue to battle the virus and continue to decrease numbers.

“Instead of peddling a bunch of?treatments that we don’t know?whether they work or some magic?bullet, we know what does work – if you stay home, you will not?get infected with this virus.?If you do not get infected with?this virus, you will not show up?sick in the emergency room,” he said.

Hear his message:

South Carolina governor issues stay-at-home order

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster speaks at a Covid-19 briefing in West Columbia, South Carolina, on April 3.

One of the last states in the nation to not have a stay-at-home order will now have one starting tomorrow.

South Carolina Republican Gov. Henry McMaster announced a mandatory stay-at-home order in a press conference Monday. The order goes into effect Tuesday April 7 at 5 pm ET.

South Carolina residents should stay home unless they are working, visiting family, recreating outdoors, or obtaining necessary goods or services, he said.

When a newborn can only see her mother's eyes

The first time Dominique Shuminova saw her newborn daughter, Clara, after giving birth, it was only her eyes that could smile. The rest of her face was covered by a black mask, thanks to Covid-19.

Baby Clara will always have that picture to show her own children and grandchildren a world turned upside down when she came into it.

Shuminova will always have the combined joy and pain — both emotional and physical — of delivering her daughter in the time of the novel coronavirus.

She delivered in New York, a Covid-19 hot spot where partners of women delivering babies are not allowed to come to the hospital, per state order. So, her husband, Eldar, had to stay home with their son Henry.

Those of us who have given birth know it is hard in any circumstance. It turned out that she did it with more pain than she had planned for. She says she could not get an epidural because, when it was time, she was told that all of the hospital’s anesthesiologists were busy intubating patients with Covid-19.????

And why the mask? Shuminova says that when she was admitted to the hospital at 5 a.m. ET Sunday morning, the hospital had to test her for coronavirus. Because the test took about 18 hours to come back, they treated her as if she were positive — so she was told to wear one.

That meant that she went through the whole delivery alone, with no epidural, trying to breathe properly, as all women in labor do, all while wearing a mask.

Still, Shuminova has it all in perspective.

“Given the circumstances I am just grateful to have a bed and medical care,” she said in a text message.

She is healthy. Her newborn daughter is healthy. Especially in these times, that is nothing to be taken for granted.??

Boston Mayor: "We have to be consistent with?our messaging"

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh said he wants Washington to stop sending mixed messages when it comes to the coronavirus pandemic.

“When you have people talking,?the President talking about he?might relax services, and let?services be happening for?Easter – that’s a mixed message,” Walsh said.?“We have to be consistent with?our messaging now and let people?know the impacts of the?coronavirus and how serious this?is in every city and state in?the country.”

He also said federal officials should stop criticizing governors for the way they are operating.

“We’re in this together, and I think it’s about us supporting?each other and moving and?getting the American people out?of the situation we’re in,” Walsh said.

Walsh called for the federal government to deliver equipment to states that need it, including ventilators and personal protection equipment. Boston, he said, is expecting a surge of cases in the next two weeks.

“I would suggest to the?federal government that they get?on the ball here and get the?equipment down here,” he said. “No state or city should be?begging for equipment.”

Watch here:

CDC is preparing to test more people for past infection with the novel coronavirus

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is preparing to test more people in the United States for antibodies from the novel coronavirus to see whether they have already had the virus, according to a statement from CDC spokeswoman Kristen Nordlund on Monday.

A set of serological assays, or blood-based tests, will be able to detect antibodies that are specific to the virus. The tests, which were designed and produced by the vaccine research center at the National Institutes of Health, have already been used to monitor immune response in several coronavirus contact investigations.?

“We are also preparing to deploy them to larger surveys within the coming weeks to further identify individuals who, due to mild infection, may have not known they were infected with SARS-CoV-2 and to monitor immunity in recovered individuals,” Nordlund said.?

The US Food and Drug Administration last week issued its first emergency use authorization for a coronavirus test that looks for antibodies in the blood.

Louisiana governor says hospital admissions in state for coronavirus are trending downward

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards speaks about the impact of the novel coronavirus pandemic on the state during an interview with the Associated Press in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on April 3.

Hospital admissions in Louisiana for the novel coronavirus are trending downward, Gov. John Bel Edwards said Monday.

Edwards, a Democrat, said more than 70% of the deaths are African American patients, describing it as a “big disparity” because African Americans make up about 32% of the state’s population.

“We’re going to try to figure out what that is attributable to and what we can do about that is as quickly as possible,” Edwards said.

Italian Prime Minister announces "biggest ever" $400 billion economic aid package

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte speaks during a press conference in Rome, Italy, on March 4.

Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced the government is allocating a record $400 billion euros to help families and businesses tackle the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic.?

“This is the most powerful intervention of the story of our country,” Conte said during a televised statement. “200 billion to finance the internal market and another 200 billion to strengthen the export market.”

Speaking after a cabinet meeting, Conte said the government approved?the suspension of various tax payments and contributions for the months of April and May.

“We are giving to the country a very efficient instrument to protect all businesses that have even the slightest strategic role in our country,” he said. “This is not only a health emergency but also economic and social at the same time. The April law decree will contain social protection tools, to support families and workers.”

Italy has 132,547 cases of coronavirus and has had 16,523 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.

There are now 356,942 coronavirus cases in the US

There are at least?356,942?cases of coronavirus in the United States and at least?10,524?people have died, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases.

The totals includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as all repatriated cases.?Wyoming is the only state or territory that is not reporting a death from coronavirus.

NFL will hold a virtual draft this month, commissioner says

The National Football League commissioner Roger Goodell has announced that all league and club facilities will remain closed indefinitely and that the upcoming three-day NFL Draft, set to start on April 23, will be conducted in a “fully virtual format” with coaches and team personnel making picks from their individual homes.

In a league-wide memo, first reported by ESPN’s Adam Schefter and?NFL Network’s?Tom Pelissero, Goodell said that all teams will be required to?“conduct their Draft operations remotely, with club personnel separately located in their homes.”

Goodell acknowledged the challenges the league is currently facing by saying in part,?“we are operating in an environment unlike anything we have experienced before.”

Missouri governor waives in-person notary requirements?

Missouri Governor Mike Parson signs executive order waiving state law requirements that notaries be physically present to authenticate documents.?

“To help protect the health & safety of Missourians who wish to execute changes in their important documents.??Today, I signed an Executive Order waiving that requirement,” tweeted Parson.??

Illinois governor says White House sent a "mere fraction" of the medical equipment the state asked for

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker wasted no time at today’s press confernence in going after the federal government’s response to Covid-19, specifically as it pertains to personal protective equipment from the Strategic National Stockpile (SNS).?

The governor, who entered the briefing room wearing a face mask per US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines, immediately called out the White House for changing the stated purpose on the SNS website from an entity that “support states” to one that will “supplement states” in the short-term during a public healthcare emergency.??

Pritzker said what his state was sent from the SNS is a “mere fraction of what we asked for.”?He went on to explain the tedious, sometimes difficult process of trying to obtain PPE from all over the world and “by whatever means necessary” saying he’s often competing against other states and the federal government for the same supplies.???

To anyone who wants a response to some of the blame shifting coming out of the White House, Pritzker said, “look at the numbers.”?His state’s own procurement efforts are what is keeping their first responders outfitted with what they need, he said.??

With the state expecting its warmest day of the year so far on Tuesday, the governor and other health officials are urging residents to “stay at home” and not “congregate in the parks.”?

Illinois reported 1,006 new cases of Covid-19 and 33 deaths from the virus in the last 24 hours, according to an announcement by the Department of Health at the governor’s press briefing Monday.?The state has a total of 12,262 cases and 307 deaths.?

Alaska Airlines cuts flights by 80% for next 2 months

An Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-9 Max flies above Paine Field near Boeing's manufacturing facility in Everett, Washington, on March 23.

Alaska Airlines is cutting flights for the third time since the coronavirus pandemic began.?

In a new filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Seattle-based carrier said the latest cutbacks will mean an 80% drop compared to its typical number of flights for April and May.

The new filing says “sizable cuts will be necessary for the coming months” beyond May, although Alaska Airlines says it will wait before making specific decisions that far into 2020.?

The company also confirmed it has asked for payroll support grants under the CARES Act, one of the stimulus measures passed by Congress and signed by President Trump last month.?

Chicago mayor says 72% of city's Covid-19 deaths are black patients

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot speaks after being sworn in as Mayor of Chicago during a ceremony in Chicago, Illinois, on May 20, 2019.

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot says that 72% of all Chicago deaths related to Covid-19 have been black Chicagoans.???

While presenting statistics on how Covid-19 is affecting black residents more severely than white residents, Lightfoot announced a new Covid-19 patient data order to help combat the virus’ effects on Chicago, including in the hardest hit African-American neighborhoods.?

Chicago?Department of Public Health Commissioner Allison Arwady joined Lightfoot at?Monday’s press conference and said that?52% of the city’s Covid-19 diagnoses have been in black Chicagoans.

“72% of our Covid deaths here in Chicago have been in black Chicagoans” even though they make up 30%, Arwady said.

“Those numbers take your breath away,” Mayor Lightfoot said.??

Lightfoot criticized health care providers for not providing needed information on Covid-19 effects demographically.?

She’s announcing the launch of a Covid-19 patient data order?that requires healthcare providers to report the race and ethnicity of those they treat. This is “not negotiable,” Lightfoot said, while announcing the new strategy in an effort to understand the full Coronavirus impact on the city.

UK Foreign Secretary?will deputize for Prime Minister Boris Johnson

UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab during a joint news conference in Tokyo, Japan, on February 8.

Before he was moved to the ICU, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson asked Foreign Secretary Dominic?Raab — who is the most senior Cabinet minister after Johnson — to deputize for him where necessary, according to a statement from 10 Downing Street.

CNN correspondent Bianca Nobilo said Raab stood in for Johnson at the daily briefing on coronavirus and chaired the coronavirus “war cabinet” meeting today.

At a press conference about four hours ago, Raab said the prime minister was comfortable, in good spirits and was continuing to lead the country. Now, Johnson’s symptoms are being called “persistent.”

Watch more:

US stocks finish higher

US stocks closed near session highs Monday on optimism about a slowdown in new coronavirus infections.

It was the stock market’s best day since March 24.

Here’s how today went:

  • The Dow finished up 7.7%,?or 1,627 points.
  • The S&P 500 closed 7% higher.
  • The Nasdaq Composite ended up 7.3%.

It’s a shortened trading week for US markets, which will be closed for Good Friday.

Remember: As stocks settle after the trading day, levels might still change slightly.

Watch more:

Illinois reports more than 1,000 new cases in the last 24 hours

The state of Illinois saw a rise of 1,006 cases of Covid-19 and 33 deaths from the virus in the last 24 hours, according to an announcement by the Department of Health at the governor’s press briefing Monday.?

The state has a total of 12,262 cases and 307 deaths.??

Arkansas plans to send ventilators to Louisiana this week, governor said

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson speaks in Hope, Arkansas, on May 5, 2015.

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson announced Monday that his state will send five ventilators to Louisiana this week to help with treating hospitalized Covid-19 patients.

Hutchinson said during a press conference that he asked Dr. Nathaniel Smith, Secretary of the Arkansas Department of Health, “about the possibility of extending ventilators to the urgent needs in Louisiana and I asked about five and talked to UAMS (University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences) who said they could make five available without jeopardizing our population here.”

The governor added he asked Smith to coordinate the transfer of ventilators to Louisiana because “this week I know Governor (John Bel) Edwards is going to be a confronted with a real challenge.”

California locks down more than 4,600 beds to prepare for coronavirus surge

California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks to the press in Los Angeles, California, on December 19, 2019.

The state of California has secured 4,613 beds to prepare for the surge of coronavirus cases, California Gov. Gavin Newsom just announced.

Today’s press conference was held at the Sleep Train Arena in Sacramento, an alternative care site where 400 beds will be provided for patients being discharged from the hospital with mild to moderate systems. Acute care will continue to be provided at hospitals, Governor Newsom said.

The Sleep Train Arena, where the Sacramento Kings used to play, will start accepting patients as early as April 20.

Alternative care sites have been set up in every major region in the state of California, Newsom said. 4,613 beds have been locked in and are “ready to go.” An additional 5,005 beds have also been identified.

This is a part of Newsom’s first phase to secure 50,000 beds beyond the current capacity.

More than 80,000 people have filled out an application for the California Health Corps. These workers will help staff the sites.

While the state has the physical sites and the human personnel, more PPE is needed. We need more ventilators and N95 masks, Newsom said.

Newsom also reminded residents to continue to practice social distancing. “Physical distancing is working,” he said.

Newsom said he anticipates a peak in mid-May.

Arkansas schools will be closed for the rest of the school year

Arkansas public schools will remain closed for the rest fo the current school year due to the coronavirus pandemic, Gov. Asa Hutchinson said Monday.

During a news conference in Little Rock, Hutchinson told reporters?alternative methods of instruction will continue while schools remain closed.?

The governor also sounded a positive tone on the measures to prevent the spread of the virus.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is in intensive care

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a press conference at 10 Downing Street in London on March 20.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is in intensive care at St Thomas’ Hospital, in London, 10 Downing Street said.

“Over the course of this afternoon, the condition of the Prime Minister has worsened and, on the advice of his medical team, he has been moved to the Intensive Care Unit at the hospital,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

Johnson was admitted to the London hospital last night with persistent symptoms of coronavirus, 10 days after first being diagnosed.

Watch more:

Milwaukee mayor says he supports delaying Wisconsin primary

Wisconsin Gov.?Tony Evers?just ordered a suspension of his state’s primary election just one day before it was scheduled to take place.

Evers issued an?executive order?delaying tomorrow’s primary until June 9, unless he and the legislature approve of a different date. He said in the order that “no Wisconsinite should ever have to choose between exercising their constitutional right to vote and being safe, secure, and healthy.”

Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett said he was proud of the governor and agrees that going forward with the election would put many people at risk.

The delay will be challenged: Some Republican state legislative leaders say they will ask the state Supreme Court to block the order. In a joint statement, state Assembly Speaker Robin Vos and Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, both Republicans, said they were challenging Evers’ executive order in the Wisconsin Supreme Court and that local clerks should “stand ready to proceed with the election.”

If courts allow Evers to delay the primary, his move could avert the need for the Wisconsin National Guard to man polling places Tuesday as poll workers quit due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Wisconsin had been the only one of 11 states with April primaries that was moving forward with in-person voting, after the other 10 either delayed their primaries or shifted to by-mail only voting.

Kroger will limit the number of shoppers allowed in a store at one time

 A ine forms in a Kroger store tin Bloomington, Indiana on March 16.

National?grocery?store chain?Kroger?says it will only allow 50% of each store’s capacity in to shop at one time, according to a statement released by the company today.

Starting tomorrow, stores will “limit the number of customers to 50% of the international building code’s calculated capacity.”

The statement said the chain has also?started to test one-way aisles in some stores to see if it is an effective way to further help with physical distancing.

The company operates 2,758 grocery retail stores across the country under a variety of brand names, according to its website.

New Jersey is now reporting more than 1,000 deaths from Covid-19

New Jersey has had 3,663 positive test results and 86 deaths in the last 24 hours, Gov. Phil Murphy said at a press conference today.

Monday’s numbers bring the statewide total to?41,090 cases and 1,003 deaths.?

Peloton cancels all live classes after employee tests positive for coronavirus

Peloton is canceling all live classes days after confirming an employee tested positive for Covid-19.?

Peloton informed members in an email Monday that it would pause production at both its London and New York studio locations through April 30.?The fitness company previously had continued to offer virtual live classes despite New York closing all essential businesses.

This decision was made following news last week that the company confirmed a studio employee in New York had tested positive for Covid-19.

In lieu of live classes, Peloton will offer new, pre-recorded sessions as well as on-demand content.

Peloton sells $2,000-plus indoor fitness bikes.?Customers pay $39 a month in subscription fees to participate in live classes.

US Army has paused arrival of new recruits to basic training?

The US Army has paused the arrival of new trainees to basic training, the Army’s top general who oversees training announced Monday.

The Army has paused “shipment of trainees to basic combat training,” Gen. Paul Funk, the Commander of the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command said at a Pentagon news conference Monday.

Funk said the pause would be conditions-based but that it will be re-evaluated after two weeks.

He said this is not a pause for the soldiers currently in basic training.

New York official whose mother died from coronavirus: "Trump has?blood on his hands"

Scott Stringer

Scott Stringer, the New York City comptroller whose mother died from coronavirus, said he is angry at the federal government’s response to the pandemic.

About the ship: The USNS Comfort hospital ship docked in New York City last week. The original plan was for the the ship to treat non-coronavirus patients to ease the strain on area hospitals seeing an influx of infected patients. But today, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he believes the right move is for the ship to utilize its 1000-bed capacity to battle the coronavirus. Trump has said the ship could be used for coronavirus patients if needed.

Stringer said his mother was a strong woman and the only way he was able to get closure was through an outpouring of texts and support from strangers.

“The government is supposed to?protect our people and we’re?supposed to be able to protect?our parents and grandparents the?way they protected us and we’re?not able to do that,” Stringer said.

Watch his interview with Anderson Cooper here:

At least 81?people on an Australian cruise ship near Uruguay have coronavirus

At least?81?passengers and crew aboard an?Australian?cruise ship off?the coast of Uruguay, in South America, have tested positive for coronavirus, the cruise company announced on Monday.

Australian company Aurora Expeditions, said two crew members and one passenger had been taken off the ship to a hospital in the city of Montevideo as “they are considered as a higher risk,” the cruise ship owners said in a statement. Those patients were considered to be a higher risk.?

More than 120 other passengers and staff were tested for Covid-19, with?81 passengers testing positive and 45 have been tested negative.

Another 90 test results are expected to be processed over the next 12 to 24 hours.?

Georgia governor says beaches are important for residents "physical and mental health"

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp speaks during a news conference in downtown Atlanta on April 1.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp said the state’s beaches are an important option for residents to “maintain their physical and mental health.” He issued the statement today to reiterate his stance on opening the state’s?beaches.?

Kemp said state troopers and local law enforcement are working to make sure those visiting the beaches are abiding by the shelter-in-place order. Visitors are not allowed to bring chairs, umbrellas, coolers or other items that encourage group activity.

Kemp said most people followed the rules this weekend and patrols reminded people “to follow social distancing or disperse.”?

He?issued a shelter-in-place order on April 2, which supersedes all local orders placed previously.?

Following the order, Georgia Department of Natural Resources signed an?administrative?order Friday on the use of beaches in Georgia.

Georgia’s Tybee Island Mayor, Shirley Sessions, announced in a written statement Saturday that she and the Tybee City Council will pursue legal avenues to overturn Kemp’s “reckless mandate” to reopen beaches in the state.

Most coronavirus cases in US children are mild, but some severe cases have been reported

Children make up less than 2% of reported cases of Covid-19 in the United States for which age was known, according to a new report released today by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The research, published in the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, found 149,082 reported cases between Feb. 12 and April 2 where the patient’s age was known, and 2,572 (or 1.7%) were among children younger than 18 years.

Infants younger than 1 year made up 15% of pediatric Covid-19 cases — or 0.27% of all reported Covid-19 cases with known age. Three deaths were reported among the pediatric cases included in the analysis.

Children seemed to have fewer hospitalizations than adults, according to the report: 20% of children for whom hospitalization status was known were hospitalized compared to 33% of 18 to 64-year-old adults with known status.?

“Whereas most Covid-19 cases in children are not severe, serious Covid-19 illness resulting in hospitalization still occurs in this age group,” the report said. ?

However, data were available for a small proportion of patients, said the researchers. For example, hospitalization status was available for 29% of cases in children younger than 18 years and 31% of cases in adults ages 18 to 64 years.??

Some more key findings:

  • Among 345 pediatric cases with information on underlying conditions, 80 (23%) had at least one underlying condition, such as chronic lung disease – which was most commonly reported – and cardiovascular disease.
  • For the 295 pediatric cases that had information on both hospitalization status and underlying medical conditions, 28 of 37 (77%) hospitalized children had one or more underlying medical condition – including all six admitted to an intensive care unit. Children who are less than 1 year made up 59 of the 147 (40%) pediatric hospitalizations and 5 of the 15 (33%) pediatric ICU admissions.
  • Children with Covid-19 might not have reported fever or cough as often as adults, the report also said. Among those with available information, 73% of pediatric patients had symptoms of fever, cough or shortness of breath, compared to 93% of adults ages 18 to 64 years during the same period.

Navy says its prepared to treat coronavirus patients on the hospital ship if directed

The Navy says its prepared to shift course and treat Covid-19 patients aboard the USNS Comfort hospital ship that is docked in New York City.

A Navy spokesperson told CNN today:

What’s this about: Earlier today, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said at press conference that he plans to call President Trump today and ask him to authorize the Navy to treat Covid-19 patients aboard the Comfort.

The original plan was for the the ship to treat non-coronavirus patients to ease the strain on area hospitals seeing an influx of infected patients. Now, Cuomo said he believes the right move is for the ship to utilize its 1000-bed capacity to battle the coronavirus

More than 10,000 people have died from coronavirus in the US

A body is moved to a refrigerator truck serving as a temporary morgue outside of Wyckoff Hospital in Brooklyn on April 4, in New York.

The United States has at least 10,335 reported deaths from coronavirus, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

Johns Hopkins is reporting at least 347,003 coronavirus cases in the United States.?

US House speaker announces new rules to limit people on House floor

In an interesting step, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has told members in a letter that the House?will take additional measures to limit the number of people on the House floor.

Specifically, Pelosi says that all House floor documents, like bills or resolutions, will now be submitted electronically.?

“Beginning Tuesday, staff must electronically submit all Floor documents – including bills, resolutions, co-sponsors and extensions of remarks – to a dedicated and secure email system, rather than deliver these materials by hand to staff in the Speaker’s Lobby or Cloakrooms,” she said in a letter to her colleagues.

She added:

New York governor increases fines to $1,000 for violating state's social distancing directive

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says he wants local law enforcement to demonstrate “more aggressive” enforcement of social distancing. He said he is increasing the fine of violating state directives from $500 to $1,000.

He added that individuals “don’t have the right” to take the lives of health care staff and people who are “literally putting their lives on the line” and be “cavalier or reckless with them.”

Watch the moment:

New York governor: "We have to continue the social?distancing"

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said that the rate of infection in the state is?going down, which means that social distancing is working.

He said there is a “danger” in being “over-confident,” adding other places have made that mistake — “and we’re not going to make that mistake.”

The number of deaths due to coronavirus in New York state has remained “effectively flat for two days,” he said.

New projection suggests New York could be at the apex of coronavirus cases

Jim Malatras, the president of SUNY Empire State College

New York could be at the apex of coronavirus cases according to new projections shown at a press briefing.

Jim Malatras, the president of SUNY Empire State College, said new models show a much lower projection.

Some of the initial models predicted that up to 110,000 beds would be needed for coronavirus patients alone, and another that suggested 55,000 beds were needed. Both of the early models showed the peak — or apex — occurring at the end of April.

Malatras said a new, more optimistic projection can be attributed to social distancing.

“We saw the folks looking at?those types of model says it was?going so what activities and?actions could you take to aggressively lower?that overall number,” Malatras said. “The answer really was, and what the governor’s been doing, was aggressively?enforce and enact social distancing to?lower the overall number and this number, and the current?data suggests that is exactly?what’s happening.”

Remember: Malatras said that while the new model is hopeful, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo will continue to take it one day at a time.

Watch more:

New York's schools and non-essential businesses will stay closed until April 29

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo extended the state’s “pause act” – which closes schools and non-essential businesses — until April 29th.

He said the situation is “turning” and the “rate of infection is going down” and that is because “social distancing is working.”

“I know that’s a negative for many many reasons, I know what it does for the economy” but he said since day one he would not choose “between public health and economic activity.”

New York governor says he will ask that Navy ship treat coronavirus patients

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he is going to ask the President to shift the USNS Comfort “from non-Covid to Covid.”

The Navy ship was initially dispatched to New York to treat non-coronavirus patients. “We don’t need the comfort for non-Covid cases,” the governor said.

The Comfort is outfitted with 1,000 hospital beds and is currently docked in New York City. Cuomo said utilizing those beds for coronavirus patients would “make a significant difference” for the state.

Cuomo said he is going to call Trump today to put in the request.

New York governor says it's a "good sign" that new hospitalizations are down in the state

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said that new hospitalizations, ICU admissions and daily intubations are all down for the state.

He added that those numbers, “would suggest a possible?flattening of the curve.”

Here were the number of new hospitalizations in New York over the past three days that the governor reported today:

  • Friday, April 3: 1,095
  • Saturday, April 4: 574
  • Sunday, April 5: 358

See more:

There are at least 130,689 coronavirus cases in New York

At least 130,689 people across New York have tested positive for coronavirus, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.

At least 16,837 people are currently hospitalized.

Cuomo said there have been 4,758 deaths — that’s up from 4,159 yesterday.

Former US Federal Reserve chair warns unemployment rate may go to depression levels "for a time"

Former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen

Former Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen believes that unemployment may go to depression levels “for a time.”

In an interview with CNBC on Monday, Yellen called the initial jobless claims “absolutely shocking” and said the unemployment rate is likely at 12% or?13% and moving higher.

“I think the toll is continuing to rise and how bad it gets, I think it really depends on how quickly people can get back to business,”?Yellen said.?

Yellen also said that the focus should be on testing and getting the pandemic under control.

Here’s what Yellen said when she was asked about US employment:

Italian football league recommends pay cuts for players and coaches

Italy’s top flight football league, Serie A, recommended that the annual pay of players and coaching staff be cut by as much as a third due to the Coronavirus emergency in the country.?

Following an emergency General Assembly meeting via video conference on Monday, the League along with 19 clubs unanimously voted to propose “a reduction of 1/3 in total gross annual earnings” if the season can’t be resumed, the league said in a statement.

They also recommenced “a reduction of 1/6 in total gross annual earnings” if “the remaining matches of the 2019-20 season can be played in the coming months.”?

The statement went on to explain that each club would have to negotiate the cuts with its players and that such a proposal was “necessary to safeguard the future of the entire Italian football system.”?

The 2019-20 Serie A season has been suspended indefinitely since March 9.

“The assembly confirmed the desire to play again and finish the season, but without running risks and only when health conditions and government decisions allow,” added Serie A.

California is sending 500 ventilators to the national stockpile

Gov. Gavin Newsom

Gov. Gavin Newsom today announced today that California would loan 500 state-owned ventilators to the Strategic National Stockpile inventory.?

“We can’t turn our backs on Americans whose lives depend on having a ventilator now,” Newsom said in a press release.

Some context: By all accounts, the coronavirus peak has not hit California yet, but the state is lending ventilators while continuing to prepare for the onslaught of patients.

Masters golf tournament postponed until November

A view of the locked gates at the entrance of Magnolia Lane off Washington Road that leads to the clubhouse of Augusta National on March 30,  in Augusta, Georgia.

The?famed Masters golf tournament has earmarked a November weekend to hold its 2020 championship.

The Masters was originally slated to tee off this week but was postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Fred Ridley, the chair of Augusta National Golf Club, the home of the Masters, said in a statement, that the organizers had?“identified?November 9-15 as the intended dates to host the 2020 Masters.”

US Open Championship golf tournament pushed to September

The United States Golf Association has announced that the 120th?US Open will now tee off in September rather than its original date in June.

One of the four annual men’s golf majors, the US Open will still be played at?Winged Foot Golf Club in Mamaroneck, New York. The new dates are September 17 through 20.

The USGA also announced that the 2020 US Senior Women’s Open has been canceled. The organization said the men’s 2020 US Senior Open has been postponed to a later date this year.

Trump economic adviser says "the glitches will get worked" with coronavirus loans

Economic adviser Larry Kudlow

President Trump’s top economic adviser Larry Kudlow said Monday that loans under the program aimed at assisting small businesses impacted by coronavirus reached $38 billion, and he dismissed glitches that hindered the program’s rollout.

In an interview with CNBC, Kudlow said, “the glitches will get worked. It’s a monumental undertaking.”

A number of banks said they would not take part in the program during its launch on Friday because the government had failed to provide enough information in advance.?Trump over the weekend described the rollout as “flawless.”

Kudlow says that the President “doesn’t want the cure to be worse than the problem” and asserted that the coronavirus itself must be mitigated before any talk of reopening the economy can be considered.?

“The health side has to come first,” Kudlow said. “The health side must continue to come first and the mitigation efforts, we believe, are working.”

He said that the government’s priority remains “phase three” of an assistance program. He also said that the Federal Reserve is likely going to continue rolling out various initiatives aimed at easing the economic crisis, including “a main street lending facility.”

Kudlow added that he is interested in selling bonds “in order to raise money for the war effort, in this case the pandemic effort.”

?“Why not sell large bonds, why not go for it in a patriotic way, and an American safety way, and to bring the economy back whenever that can be possible,” he said.

Michigan governor: "We are running dangerously low on PPE"

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer told reporters that the state is running dangerously low on personal protective equipment, also called PPE.

Gov. Whitmer said that there are less than three days left until face shields run out and less than 6 days until surgical gowns run out at all three of those health systems. She added that these data points do not include private donations that are going straight to hospitals.

“We are doing everything that we can at the state level to secure more personal protection equipment. Today we will begin distributing 1.2 million surgical masks that the state has procured on the open market,” Whitmer said.?

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has sent 400 ventilators, 1.1 million surgical masks, 232,000 face shields and 2 million gloves. “FEMA will be shipping 1 million more N95 masks to Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties this week,” the governor said.?

The state is working with the Army Corps of Engineers and the Michigan National Guard to get the TCF Convention Center in Detroit up and running to see patients by Friday.

The governor added that Ford and the United Autoworkers have donated thousands of face shields to Michigan hospitals and the state issued the purchase of 1 million face shields from Ford to be delivered over the next 3 weeks.?

“We’re making some progress, and that is a good thing, but we need more PPE to continue fighting this virus,” Whitmer said.

Golf’s oldest major tournament canceled due to coronavirus pandemic

A sign near the first tee at the host venue for the 2020 Open Championship, seen on April 05, shows that the course is currently closed for all play under government instructions

The 149th?edition of The Open Championship, one of the four men’s annual golf majors, has been canceled due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Royal & Ancient, which plans and organizes the event, announced today.?

It is the first time that golf’s original and oldest championship, first played in 1860, has been canceled since World War II.

The event was scheduled for July 16 through 19 at Royal St George’s Golf Club in Sandwich, England.

“I can assure everyone that we have explored every option for playing The Open this year but it is not going to be possible,” he added.

Slumbers confirmed that The 149th?Open will now be played at the historic Sandwich links in July 2021, with the Old Course at St Andrews now hosting The 150th?Open in July 2022.

The championship is the first men’s golf major of 2020 to be cancelled outright. In March, both The Masters and the PGA Championship were postponed with a new date for both events yet to be announced.

The US Open, though, is still set to be played from June 18 through June 21 at Winged Foot in New York.

There are at least 337,971 coronavirus cases in the US

Medical professionals from the NYC Joint Task Force consisting of Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps personnel administer COVID-19 tests at the drive-through testing center and field ER at Stony Brook, New York on on April 4.

There are at least?337,971?cases of coronavirus in the US and at least?9,654?people have died, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases in the United States.

The totals includes cases from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and other US territories, as well as all repatriated cases.?Wyoming is the only state or territory that is not reporting a death from coronavirus.

?Find the latest Johns Hopkins University U.S. numbers here.

JPMorgan Chase CEO predicts a major recession is coming

Jamie Dimon

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon used his annual shareholder letter to detail just how bad he thinks the US economy can get from the coronavirus pandemic.?

Dimon expects a “bad recession,” he wrote in the letter released Monday.

In the most adverse scenario — which he said he hopes is unlikely — gross domestic product could plunge at a 35% annual rate in the second quarter and that a downturn would last through the rest of the year. The unemployment rate would spike as high as 14% in this environment.?

But Dimon added that “this scenario is quite severe and, we hope, unlikely.” And even if the worst case situation bears out, JPMorgan Chase still plans to lend an additional $150 billion to its customers.?

Still, he said there will be a “major recession.”

Dimon stressed that the bank is in solid shape and has a “fortress” balance sheet. That is allowing JPMorgan Chase to step up lending to small businesses and consumers in this time of crisis.

The bank is now accepting applications for the Small Business Administration’s Paycheck Protection Program loans after a rocky start to the process Friday morning.?

Dimon praised the Federal Reserve and other global central bankers — as well as lawmakers — for taking quick action to try to stimulate the economy with lower rates and fiscal support for those in need.?

“We applaud the speed with which the federal government and the Federal Reserve … put together a stimulus package and other funding benefits to help individuals, businesses, and state and local entities across the United States and beyond,” Dimon said.

US health official: Expect "rolling peaks across the country" as coronavirus unfolds over next few weeks

Admiral Dr. Brett Giroir, assistant secretary for health at the US Department of Health and Human Services, said Monday that New York, New Jersey and Detroit will see peaks in hospitalizations and deaths due to coronavirus this week — and it will happen in other US cities in the weeks to come.

In an interview on “Today,” Giroir said “all our predictions, all our models, and we know from the data we see and health care workers we talk to is — for New York and New Jersey and Detroit, this week is going to be the peak week.”??

Giroir explained peak “reflects infections that occurred two or three weeks ago, adding, “we may be seeing the worst upon us right now in terms of outcomes.”?

Giroir said other parts of the US, such as New Orleans, will see a peak in hospitalizations and deaths in the coming weeks. “We’ll see some rolling peaks across the country as the next few weeks unfold,”?Giroir told NBC’s Savannah Guthrie.?

CVS opens two more drive-though coronavirus testing locations

CVS, in partnership with government agencies, is adding two drive-through coronavirus testing sites less than a week after CNN reported on the anemic progress of a program President Trump touted as part of his solution to expand testing.?

The retailer announced it’s using a new rapid coronavirus test, which can provide results in less than 15 minutes and was approved by US Food and Drug Administration under an emergency authorization last week, according to a company press release.

Its two new locations — in Georgia and Rhode Island — will utilize licensed health care providers from its MinuteClinic, the company’s retail medical clinic, to oversee the testing, said the press release.?The retailer made clear that the sites will not be located at CVS Pharmacy or MinuteClinic locations.

Some background: Under fire for the lack of testing, the Trump administration on March 13 announced a public-private partnership between the government and major retailers including CVS, Target, Walmart and Walgreens. Vice President Mike Pence said the program “laid the foundation” to help meet the nation’s testing needs by giving a “little bit of their parking lot so that people can come by and do a drive-by test.”

But the administration’s celebrated announcement hasn’t come close to being fulfilled.

While these retailers have approximately 30,000 locations combined, the Department of Health and Human Services confirmed last week that only five locations from these major retailers were offering drive-thru testing — and none are open to the general public at the time. Instead, the sites were only testing healthcare workers and first responders. The one site CVS previously opened in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts was also testing senior citizens with symptoms.?

After?CNN’s story?on March 31, Walmart announced a plan to open a drive-thru coronavirus testing site for first responders and healthcare workers in Arkansas — it’s third location in the U.S.?

For its two new locations, CVS will not be using its parking lot. Instead it worked with local government officials to identify parking lots that are easily accessible and able to accommodate multiple lanes of cars at one time: one at a multi-level parking garage at the Georgia Institute of Technology. The other — in Rhode Island — will be located at Twin Rivers Casino.??

Unlike previously opened testing drive throughs, the new CVS locations will be testing a broader population. People who meet US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention criteria, in addition to state residency and age guidelines, are eligible for testing.?Patients will need to pre-register in advance online at?CVS.com?in order to schedule a same-day time slot for testing, said the release.?

CNN’s Kaitlan Collins contributed to this report

France is heading for worst economic downturn since WWII, finance minister says

A view of the shut down Louvre Museum on April 05, 2020 in Paris, France.

France is heading for the worst economic downturn since World War II, the country’s Minister of the Economy and Finance Bruno Le Maire says.

In a Senate hearing today, he said the economy’s worst year since the war was during the 2009 financial crisis when it contracted by 2.9 percent.

“We are likely to be well beyond -2.9% this year,” Le Maire said.

He had previously warned that the economic shock from the coronavirus pandemic would be brutal.

Stocks open higher on encouraging coronavirus data

US stocks rallied at Monday’s open following some encouraging data that showed a slowdown in coronavirus infections in multiple countries.

Here’s what happened at the opening:

  • The Dow opened up 4.4%, or 900 points.
  • The S&P 500 kicked off nearly 4% higher.
  • The Nasdaq Composite opened up 3.8%.

?This is a shortened week, as exchanges are closed for Good Friday.

At least 173 crew members of USS Theodore Roosevelt have tested positive for Covid-19

A US Navy official tells CNN that 173 crew members of the USS Theodore Roosevelt?have now tested positive for coronavirus.?

About 61% of the crew has been tested. Approximately 2,000 people have been evacuated from the ship and moved ashore.?

Remember: The Navy said it wanted to move 2,700 ashore by Friday so they are still behind schedule.

Top White House trade adviser explains he can disagree with Dr. Anthony Fauci on coronavirus treatments

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said he was qualified to engage and disagree with Dr. Anthony Fauci on the use of an anti-malarial drug as a coronavirus treatment — which is not yet proven as effective.?

“My qualifications in terms of looking at the science is that I’m a social scientist,” he told CNN’s John Berman on “New Day.”

“I have a Ph.D. And I understand how to read statistical studies, whether it’s in medicine, the law, economics or whatever,” he added.

CNN previously reported that a heated argument broke out in the Situation Room over the weekend, where Navarro feuded with other officials on the unproven efficacy of hydroxychloroquine in treating coronavirus, according to sources.

While discussing the latest on the anti-malaria drug, an exasperated Navarro lashed out at Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, who has urged?caution around the drug.

Watch the moment:

"There's no question that testing is tight," US health official says

Admiral Dr. Brett Giroir, the assistant secretary for US Department of Health and Human Services

Admiral Dr. Brett Giroir, the assistant secretary for US Department of Health and Human Services, acknowledged that “testing is tight” for Covid-19.

“We are really going hospital to hospital to try to assure that the tests are available and I’m meeting with hospital associations from all the metroplex areas,” Giroir added.

He said there would be “a million-plus” tests this week.

“We are not going to have tens of millions of tests this week — but we will have a million-plus tests, plus all the thousands of hospitals who do their own tests. That should be efficient to take care of the load we’re going to see this week.”

US could have "another peak in a few weeks" if social distancing efforts stop, official says

Admiral Dr. Brett Giroir, the assistant secretary for health at the US Department of Health and Human Services, urged the country to continue social distancing efforts.??

Over the weekend by Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, urged Americans to stay home, saying “This is the moment to not be going to the grocery store, not going to the pharmacy.”

Giroir said he agreed with Birx, and explained, “That does not mean go without medication. If you need to go to the pharmacy to get your medications, if you need to get groceries, do it. But don’t go every day … Do it as infrequently as possible.”

“Anything you can do to protect yourself, to avoid yourself from getting this virus and being in the hospital for a month or potentially facing death, I think it’s advised to do that,” Giroir told NBC’s Savannah Guthrie.?

South Florida could be the most impacted by new restrictions on cruise travelers

An ambulance transports a patient from the Coral Princess cruise ship docked at the Port of Miami, Florida, on April 4.

Miami is the cruising capital of the world, with millions of passengers traveling through the Port of Miami every year.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced new rules for cruise line passengers overnight, requiring people to travel by charter flight and private transportation. Upon arrival home, the traveler must isolate for 14 days.

And South Florida could be the area of the country that is most impacted by the new CDC guidelines.?

The USCG announced this weekend that 114 cruise ships with 93,000 crew members on board were off the coast of the United States. The overwhelming majority of them – up to 90 – are in the Miami USCG area of responsibility, per USCG.??

Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez, expressed concern in a press conference this weekend, saying that he is trying to talk to the cruise lines to get crew members home.

Ireland's prime minister once worked as doctor. He reregistered to help in the coronavirus fight.

Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar speaks at a press briefing about coronavirus in Dublin, Ireland, on March 27.

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, the Irish prime minister, reregistered as a medical practitioner last month to assist during the coronavirus crisis, a spokesperson for his office said on Monday.

Varadkar worked as a doctor before leaving medicine to work in politics. He was removed from the medical register in 2013 and became prime minister in 2017.?

“Many of his family and friends are working in the health service. He wanted to help out even in a small way,” the spokesman said.

US health official says everyone who "needs" a coronavirus test can get one this week

Health care workers check in people at a testing site setup by the the Florida National Guard, in Miami Gardens, Florida, on March 30.

Admiral Dr. Brett Giroir, assistant secretary for US Department of Health and Human Services, touted efforts to ramp up testing during an interview on the “Today” show on Monday.

Still, there continue to be reports in the United States of a shortage of Covid-19 testing kits at hospitals.

“We’ve done over 1.67 million tests to?date and this week we’re going to have at least a million tests done and that’s not even counting the thousands of hospital laboratories that do their own tests. So tests have ramped up dramatically in the past couple of weeks,” Giroir?told NBC’s Savannah Guthrie.

“This?week we’ll have at least 250,000 of the Abbott point-of-care tests out,” Giroir said. “So this is being remedied very quickly.”

Some context: In late March, the US Food and Drug Administration authorized that Abbott Laboratories coronavirus test for emergency use, which can provide results in less than 15 minutes, using the same technology that powers some rapid flu tests.?

Giroir continued:

British prime minister remains at London hospital

The front door of 10 Downing Street is pictured in London on April 6, after British Prime Minister Boris Johnson spent the night in hospital.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson had “a comfortable night” and remains under observation at a London hospital, a 10 Downing Street spokesperson said on Monday.?

Johnson is suffering from “persistent” Covid-10 symptoms and was admitted to St Thomas’ hospital for tests on Sunday night as a “precaution.”

Johnson is in “good spirits,” according to the spokesperson, who declined questions about whether the prime minister receiving oxygen treatment.

Romania will extend its state of the emergency for another month

Police reinforce a lockdown curfew in Tandarei, Romania, on April 4.

Romania will extend its state of emergency by 30 days more day, until mid-May, Romanian President Klaus Iohannis announced in a video statement Monday.

The current state of emergency runs out on April 15.

Polish PM expects coronavirus infections to peak in May or June?

An ambulance is seen in Warsaw, Poland, on April 4.

Poland is expecting coronavirus infections to peak in May or June and is?preparing for a long fight, Polish Prime Minister?Mateusz Morawiecki said in parliament on Monday.?

Morawiecki said, “We expect the peak number of cases is still ahead of us – in May or June. We want to limit the number of cases before this happens, especially by flattening the curve,” according to the prime minister’s office on Twitter.

Poland has 4,201 confirmed cases of coronavirus, including 98 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.?

Coronavirus infection rate decreasing in nearly all Spanish regions, but almost 15% of infected are health workers

A health worker tests a patient at a drive-through testing center in Menorca, Spain, on April 6.

The number of new coronavirus infections is decreasing in “practically all” regions across Spain, Maria Jose Sierra, an official from the country’s center for health emergencies said at a briefing on Monday.

“It is important that a few days pass to confirm this tendency, but the data allows us to observe that the growth rate of the coronavirus pandemic is decreasing in practically all [Spanish] communities,” Sierra said.

Spain coronavirus outbreak slows down further: The coronavirus outbreak in Spain continues to slow down, with Health Ministry figures showing 637 have died from Covid-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 13,055 deaths. That represents a rise of 5.1% on Sunday’s numbers, the lowest daily rise, percentage-wise, since early March.

Heath workers infected: Around 19,400 Spanish health workers, including doctors and nurses, have been infected with the novel coronavirus, Sierra added.

That means health workers account for almost 15% of the total number of infections in Spain.

Watchdog report finds severe shortages and significant challenges to US hospitals’ coronavirus response

Medical personnel hold signs during a demonstration for increased personal protection equipment outside Montefiore Hospital in the Bronx, New York, on April 2.

America’s hospitals are dealing with “severe” and “widespread” shortages of needed medical supplies, hampering the ability to test and respond to coronavirus adequately and protect medical staff,?according to a new report?from a government inspector general.

The findings by the inspector general for the Department of Health and Human Services describe a dire situation for front line doctors and medical stuff as cases mount in hospitals.

The assessment, the first internal government look at the response, were based on interviews from March 23-27?with administrators from more than 300 hospitals across 46 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

US edging towards 10,000 deaths: The US surgeon general?said this week?is going to be the “hardest and the saddest” for “most Americans’ lives.” The US has recorded?more than 337,000 cases?and over 9,600 deaths.

Doctors arrested in Pakistan after protests over lack of PPE

Police detain medical personnel demanding better facilities and personal protective equipment while caring for coronavirus patients in Quetta, Pakistan, on April 6.

Police in Pakistan have arrested dozens of doctors and medical staff protesting a lack of personal protective equipment (PPE) in their fight against the Covid-19 pandemic.?

The demonstrations took place in the city of Quetta in Pakistan’s southwestern province of Balochistan. Senior police official Razzaq Cheema confirmed the arrests to CNN.

Doctors are arrested in Quetta on Monday.

In response, The Young Doctors Association (YDA) has announced an immediate boycott of all medical services in Balochistan.?

The protest comes a day after 13 doctors in Quetta contracted the novel coronavirus.

Covid-19 in Pakistan: According to the Ministry of Health, 3,277 cases of Covid-19 have been diagnosed in the country and 50 people have died.

Former Libyan Prime Minister dies of coronavirus

Former Libyan Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril pictured in Washington, DC in 2011.

Former Libyan Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril died on Sunday in Cairo, Egypt after contracting coronavirus, his National Forces Alliance (NFA) announced in a statement Sunday.

He is the first major Arab politician to die of Covid-19.

The UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) said Jibril died after a “battle with the coronavirus infection.”

Here’s some background: On March 27, the NFA announced that Jibril tested positive for Covid-19, adding that he was in “stable health on the course to recovery.”

Jibril, 67, served as interim Prime Minister of the opposition government that led the country?through?the civil war until the first post-Gadhafi elections were held in 2012.

Iran coronavirus cases pass 60,000, the highest in the Middle East

A person in protective clothing walks through a temporary hospital for coronavirus patients in Tehran, Iran, on March 26.

There have been 2,274 new cases of coronavirus in the past 24 hours In Iran, bringing the total number of cases to 60,500, Health Ministry spokesman Kianush Jahanpoor announced on state TV Monday.

He also confirmed 136 more coronavirus-related deaths, bringing the total death toll to 3,739.

Iran has the highest reported number of Covid-19 cases and deaths in the Middle East.

Jahanpoor added 24,237 patients so far have recovered and have been released from hospitals across the country.

It's 7 a.m. in New York. Here's the latest

If you’re just joining us now, here’s what has happened since our last catch-up.

US edges towards grim milestone: At least 9,648 people have died in the U.S. from coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases. The country has at least 337,646?cases of coronavirus.?

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

President Trump backs unproven treatments: President Donald Trump on Sunday again doubled down on an?unproven therapy for the novel coronavirus: hydroxychloroquine.

Without citing evidence, he said it’s a “great” and “powerful” anti-malaria drug “and there are signs that it works on this, some very strong signs.”

Japan will declare state of emergency: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will declare a state of emergency on Tuesday, lasting for approximately one month. The news comes after 378 new cases and three more deaths in Japan were announced Sunday.?

Spain coronavirus outbreak slows down further: The coronavirus outbreak in Spain continues to slow down, with Health Ministry figures showing 637 have died from Covid-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 13,055 deaths. That represents a rise of 5.1% on Sunday’s numbers, the lowest daily rise, percentage-wise, since early March.

Spain coronavirus outbreak slows down further

A police officer waves as people applaud to thank healthcare workers dealing with the coronavirus outbreak in Ronda, Spain, on April 3.

The novel coronavirus outbreak in Spain continues to slow down, with figures released by the Spanish Health Ministry showing 637 have died from Covid-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the total to 13,055 deaths. That represents a rise of 5.1% on Sunday’s numbers, the lowest daily rise, percentage-wise, since early March.

The Ministry’s data shows there are now 81,540 active cases, an increase of 1,279 from Saturday – the smallest daily rise since March 14. The rise in the number of new cases has been declining in percentage terms since March 24.

Slowing rate of infection: While the number of active cases continues to rise, the rate of increase continues to slow.

There was also a slowdown in the number of people admitted to intensive care units in the past 24 hours, with Spanish authorities counting only 70 new cases – the lowest increase since March 16.

Some 40,437 people have now recovered from the virus, the health ministry also reported.

MADRID, SPAIN - MARCH 26: A priest and two relatives attend a burial at La Almudena cemetery on March 26, 2020 in Madrid, Spain. Spain plans to continue its quarantine measures at least through April 11. The Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has spread to many countries across the world, claiming over 20,000 lives and infecting hundreds of thousands more. (Photo by Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images)

Related article Drive-thru funerals in the epicenter of Spain's coronavirus pandemic

US edges closer towards 10,000 deaths

A deceased coronavirus patient is loaded into a waiting funeral home van outside Wyckoff Heights hospital in Brooklyn, New York, on April 2.

There are at least?337,646?cases of coronavirus in the U.S, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tally of cases in the United States. At least?9,648?people have died in the U.S. from coronavirus.?

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

Wyoming is the only state not reporting a death from coronavirus.

Chinese tourist sites packed as country comes out of lockdown, but experts say risk still high

Large numbers of people flocked to popular tourists sites and major cities across China over the country’s holiday weekend, despite warnings from health authorities that the risk posed by?the coronavirus pandemic?remains far from over.

Images from the Huangshan mountain park in Anhui province on Saturday April 4 showed thousands of people crammed together, many wearing face masks, eager to experience the great outdoors after months of travel restrictions and strict lockdown measures.

Such was the rush to get into the popular tourist spot, that at 7.48 a.m., authorities took the unusual step of issuing a notice declaring that the park had reached its 20,000 person daily capacity, and would not be accepting any more visitors, according to?state media Global Times.

Restaurants and parks packed: Meanwhile in Shanghai, the famous Bund waterfront was packed with shoppers and tourists, after weeks of being near deserted. Many of the city’s restaurants that were shuttered only days ago also appeared to be doing a brisk trade, with several requiring reservations.

A similar story played out in the capital Beijing, with locals flocking to the city’s parks and open spaces.

Caution urged: The abrupt return to apparent normality comes more than three months after the virus was first detected in the Chinese city of Wuhan. The outbreak, which has since spread around the world infecting more than a million people, saw much of China brought to a near standstill in an effort to contain transmissions.

At its peak, thousands of new cases were recorded in China every day. However, in recent weeks the rate of infection has slowed significantly. On Monday, China reported just 39 new cases, all but one of which were imported. To date, China has recorded 82,641 cases and 3,335 deaths.

But while the government is slowly relaxing restrictions, Chinese health experts have urged the public to continue to practice caution.

Read the full story:

01 Huangshan tourists coronavirus

Related article Chinese tourist sites packed as country comes out of lockdown, but experts say risk still high

South Korea’s football captain to carry out mandatory military service during coronavirus pandemic

Son Heung-Min is pictured during a Premier League match between Aston Villa and Tottenham Hotspur in Birmingham, England, on February 16.

South Korea’s football captain, Son Heung-Min, will carry out mandatory military service with the Marine Corps in his homeland as football’s coronavirus shutdown continues, his agent has confirmed to CNN.

The 27-year-old returned to South Korea on Saturday 28 March and is in the process of completing his 14 days in self-quarantine.

Military service: Under South Korean law, all able-bodied men between the ages of 18 and 35 are required to perform at least 21 months of military service.

However, any South Korean athletes who win Olympic medals or Asian Games titles are exempt from military conscription.

Son, who represents English Premier League side Tottenham Hotspur at club-level, earned his exemption in 2018 when he led South Korea to win the football gold medal at the Asian Games in Indonesia.

Despite the exemption, athletes are still required by law to serve a mandatory four-week national service in the South Korean military – albeit with the Marine Corps being an exception of three-weeks.

Premier League suspended: On Friday it was confirmed the England’s Premier League season had been indefinitely suspended amid the ongoing pandemic with the League announcing it would resume play “only when it is safe and appropriate to do so.”

Ventilators held in Turkey to fly to Spain today

Spanish-bought ventilators and other medical equipment held in Ankara by Turkish authorities will take off for Spain on Monday, Spanish foreign minister Arancha González Laya said in an interview with Spanish network Antena 3.?

The equipment is expected to be available for distribution among regional governments in Spain on Tuesday. The ventilators, produced by a company in Turkey, have been held by local authorities in Ankara since Friday.?

On Friday, the foreign minister said the ventilators would not arrive on time because “the Turkish government understands that they are a priority for the treatment of its patients.”

However, Ankara said that the exporting company lacked the proper authorization because Turkey introduced strict controls on the export of medical equipment a month ago, as the novel coronavirus in the country started to worsen.

The situation was resolved late on Saturday, with the Spanish foreign minister tweeting thanks to her Turkish counterpart for authorizing the export.

“We will always stand by our friend Spain,” Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu tweeted back. “We will overcome these difficult times together.”

Austria will gradually reopen shops after Easter

A closed street food stall is pictured in Vienna, Austria on April 2.

Austria will gradually reopen shops after Easter, Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said on Monday.

Smaller shops, DIY shops and garden shops will reopen as of April 14, Kurz said at a press conference.?

All shops, shopping centers and hairdressers will open as of May 1, while restaurants and hotels will open in mid-May at the earliest, in a step-by-step system.

No major events will be held until the end of June, Kurz said.

There will be home-schooling until the middle of May, and decisions on schooling will be made towards the end of April.

Kurz added that social distancing and the wearing of masks must be adhered to where necessary.

The situation in Austria: There have been more than 12,000 confirmed cases in Austria, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University. At least 200 people have died.

"People are fighting over products to fight coronavirus," Spain's foreign minister says

Spanish foreign minister Arancha Gonzalez Laya said governments are “fighting” over medical supplies to tackle the coronavirus pandemic.

The foreign minister said that Spain was prioritizing contracts with “exclusive” supplies but also incentivizing local companies to produce some of the equipment instead of buying it from abroad.

“National production is a very important aspect and will allow us not only to tackle the coronavirus on national territory but also to help other countries that do not have that many resources,” she said.

Japan will declare state of emergency

Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe attends a parliamentary session on April 2 in Tokyo.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will declare a state of emergency on Tuesday, lasting for approximately one month, he announced Monday.

Abe will hold a press conference on Tuesday to further explain the declaration.?

A different tactic: Abe says Japan’s state of emergency will differ from Western countries, adding that “basic economic activity” will continue, giving examples including public transportation and supermarkets.

The Prime Minister’s advisory committee recommended that a state of emergency be declared for seven Japanese prefectures, including the Japanese capital of Tokyo and its second largest city Osaka. The full list of prefectures affected is: Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama, Chiba, Osaka, Hyogo and Fukuoka.

Economic relief: Abe also announced details of a massive JPY ¥108 trillion (USD $989 billion) economic stimulus package. The size of the economic relief package — 20-percent of Japan’s GDP — is unprecedented.

The stimulus includes JPY ¥6 trillion (USD $54 billion) in cash handouts for families who have lost significant income and small business owners. Also included, JPY ¥26 trillion (USD $238 billion) in extension of deadlines for tax and social welfare payments. Zero-interest loans will also be provided to private financial institutions, but Abe did not specify the amount.

This post has been corrected to better reflect the details of Japan’s stimulus package.

Former British PM Tony Blair fears for economic damage from UK "lockdown"

Former British Prime Minster Tony Blair speaks at an event in London in December 2019.

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair says the economic damage caused by the UK’s social distancing rules and government-mandated shutdown of some businesses is “enormous” and could eventually affect the county’s ability to run its health-care system.

Blair said the only real way to ease the restrictions is to dramatically increase the number of coronavirus tests being carried out.

“If I was handling this situation now I think I would put a senior minister in charge of testing and nothing else,” he said, adding that the minister would need to be supported with business and technology experts to advise on how to increase testing rates to an industrial scale.

“Unless you’re able to get mass testing – at scale, with speed – I don’t see how you get a way out of this lockdown.”

It's just past 2:30 p.m. in New Delhi and 10 a.m. in Dublin. Here's the latest

A man wearing a face mask sits in front of a closed shop during a government-imposed nationwide lockdown in New Delhi, India, on April 6.

If you’re just joining us now, here’s what has happened since our last catch-up.

Boris Johnson in hospital: The British prime minister was admitted to hospital yesterday for tests, but continues to lead the government, authorities said today. Johnson tested positive for coronavirus on March 27, and is still experiencing symptoms 10 days later, so went to the hospital as a “precautionary step.”

Scottish scandal: Scotland’s chief medical officer resigned after being caught leaving her home without a proper excuse. Police issued her with a formal warning on Sunday for breaking Scotland’s strict measures aimed at limiting the spread of coronavirus.

Irish leader steps in: Ireland’s Taoiseach (prime minister) Leo Varadkar, a former doctor, has rejoined the medical register and will work one shift a week to help out,?according?to national?broadcaster RTE.

Spike in Japan: Japan’s health ministry announced 378 new cases and three more deaths nationwide by the end of Sunday. A US military commander in Japan declared a public health emergency for military bases today, citing the rise in cases in nearby Tokyo.

Commuters wearing face masks pass through Shinagawa station in Tokyo, Japan, on April 6.

Controversial drug: India has imposed a blanket export ban on a malaria drug touted by President Donald Trump as possible therapy for coronavirus. This ban comes just as Trump called on Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to release more of the drug to the US.

And finally, some good news: The Easter Bunny and Tooth Fairy are both essential workers, so they are exempt from movement restrictions, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told children today. But they may be busy with their own families during this pandemic – so if children aren’t visited by the Bunny this year, they could organize their own social distancing version of an Easter egg hunt, she suggested.

Trump calls Queen Elizabeth a "wonderful woman" as the US struggles to control its outbreak

President Donald Trump speaks during a coronavirus task force briefing at the White House on April 5, in Washington.

President Donald Trump called Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II “a great and wonderful woman” on Twitter, after the Queen recorded a rare televised address to the nation broadcast on Sunday.

The Queen typically only speaks to the public during her annual Christmas message, or when there is a new parliament installed.

The Queen’s message: She urged unity and offered reassurance for the nation during her speech.

She thanked those who were staying at home and following social distancing rules, as well as frontline workers and medical staff.

Contrast in the US: Trump’s praise of the Queen comes as the US struggles with its own outbreak, and as the President faces sharp criticism for his handling of the crisis.

He has sent mixed messages to the public over the past month, offering misleading information on testing, ventilator supply, and the pandemic’s timeline.

Trump has also contradicted medical and scientific experts on his own White House task force, and urged the economy to resume operations by Easter – which is this coming weekend.

“We have to open this country up,” he said last week – even as doctors warn the nation will see a?massive spike in cases if Americans return to crowded workplaces or events.

Colombian president calls for solidarity with Venezuelan migrants during coronavirus outbreak

Colombian President Ivan Duque Marquez speaks during the American Israel Public Affairs Committee policy conference, in Washington on March 2.

Colombian President Ivan Duque called for solidarity and support for more than a million Venezuelan migrants who have been hit hard by the impacts of coronavirus,?during a Facebook Live session on Sunday.

About 600 Venezuelan citizens crossed the Colombian border into Venezuela on Saturday, according to?Migracion Colombia, Colombia’s Immigration Authority. They?were received by officials from the Administrative Service of Identification, Migration and Immigration of Venezuela.?

Colombia’s quarantine measures during the outbreak have left many Venezuelan citizens in the country without a source of income.

Duque said Colombia will help the migrants despite the difficulties caused by the outbreak, “especially those with the most vulnerable conditions, being able to receive food and some protection at this time.”

He said the government would continue making progress in food aid and protection programs to help the nearly 1.7 million displaced Venezuelans.

Coronavirus cases in Switzerland continue to rise

Swiss personnel help move a coronavirus patient at the Pourtales Hospital?in Neuchatel, Switzerland,?on March 25.

Switzerland reported 822 more cases of coronavirus on Sunday, bringing the national total to 21,100, according to the Swiss Federal Office for Health.

At least 559 people have died from the virus.

The Swiss authority said that there are 246 cases per 100,000 inhabitants.

“Switzerland now has one of the highest incidences (246/100,000) in Europe,” said a statement on the health authority’s website.

Top Indian doctor says community participation is vital in stopping slum coronavirus outbreaks

People rest by their homes in Dharavi, one of Asia's largest slums, in Mumbai, India, on April 3.

Dr.?Randeep Guleria, director of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi says that the most important way to stop a coronavirus outbreak in India’s slums will be to get community participation.

“In my mind the control of the disease is going to be through the community rather than through the hospitals,” Guleria said, speaking to CNN on Monday.

Efforts to stop the coronavirus from spreading in Mumbai’s densely populated Dharavi slum are being ramped up after several cases and one death were confirmed there last week.

Quarantining not possible in a slum: Guleria said it is impossible for people there to isolate themselves at home.

Lockdown showing signs of helping: India is entering its second week of a 21-day nationwide lockdown, and Guleria recommended that more aggressive restrictions may be needed in hotspot areas.

Can India cope? On whether the country has enough hospital resources to cope with a large outbreak, Guleria said that while resources “are going to be strained,” India has had a few weeks to prepare.

Boris Johnson continues to lead British government from hospital

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson remains in charge of the British government from hospital, housing minister?Robert Jenrick said on Monday.?

Johnson was admitted to the hospital on Sunday night in what Downing Street said was a “precautionary step” after continuing to experience coronavirus symptoms 10 days after testing positive on March 27.

UK foreign minister Dominic Raab will chair the regular morning meetings for the government, Jenrick said.?

He added that it “wasn’t an emergency admission.”

Scotland's chief medical officer resigns after she was caught leaving home without a proper excuse

Scotland's Chief Medical Officer, Catherine Calderwood speaks at a coronavirus briefing in Edinburgh on March 29.

Scotland’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Catherine Calderwood has resigned after being caught leaving her home without a proper excuse during the coronavirus pandemic.

Calderwood initially said in a news conference apologizing for her actions that she intended to stay in the role. But by late Sunday night, she had resigned “with a heavy heart.”

Calderwood was photographed by a Scottish newspaper near her second home, in a different part of the country from her Edinburgh address.

Police issued her with a formal warning on Sunday for breaking Scotland’s strict measures aimed at limiting the spread of coronavirus.

Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said Monday that she had hoped that Calderwood would be able to stay in the position, “because at this point in dealing with the pandemic, continuity of advice from somebody who’s been immersed in this from the very outset was very important.”

Ireland's leader has reregistered as a doctor to help during the coronavirus

Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar speaks during the annual Friends of Ireland luncheon at the US Capitol on March 12 in Washington.

Ireland’s Taoiseach (prime minister) Leo Varadkar has rejoined the medical register and will work one shift a week to help out during the coronavirus pandemic, according to national?broadcaster RTE.

Varadkar worked as a doctor for seven years before becoming a politician. He left the medical profession in 2013.

RTE reported that he reregistered as a doctor in March and offered his services to the country’s Health Service Executive (HSE) for one session a week.

Varadkar will carry out phone assessments to free up staff for frontline work, according to RTE.

Efforts to stop coronavirus spreading through one of Asia's largest slums are being ramped up

Testing in Dharavi.

Home to around 1 million people, Dharavi in Mumbai is one of Asia’s largest slums – and a coronavirus outbreak there could become unmanageable.

But the slum may be the site of the first self-sufficient model in India for the identification, quarantine, and treatment of coronavirus, according to a senior municipality official.

Since a 56-year-old man tested positive for Covid-19 on Wednesday and succumbed to the disease later that evening, four more coronavirus cases have been identified in Dharavi.?

The Rajiv Gandhi Sports Complex in the area has been converted into a 300-bed quarantine facility for high-risk patients, while efforts to fight the virus are being ramped up.

Boosting the response in Dharavi:

  • On Sunday, the BMC acquired?a 51-bed hospital, along with its entire medical?staff, to exclusively quarantine asymptomatic coronavirus patients from Dharavi, Dighavkar said.?
  • A team of 274 health-care workers, who had worked on a polio vaccine drive, have been deployed in Dharavi to identify and test potential contacts.
  • A pathology lab near Dharavi has offered to test samples from the slum and lab officials will receive training by BMC doctors on Monday.
  • Fifteen doctors from the Doctors Association of India have also come forward to set up a health camp to screen residents of Dharavi for the virus, Dighavkar said.?

Tooth Fairy and Easter Bunny are essential workers, New Zealand PM reassures children

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks during her post-Cabinet media update at Parliament on April 6, in Wellington, New Zealand.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern was asked a slightly more unusual question about the nationwide lockdown at a news conference today.

The “bubble” refers to the idea that New Zealanders should stay within their own bubbles, composed of people in their household – and not go out or enter neighbors’ and friends’ bubbles during the lockdown.

“But as you can imagine, at this time, of course they’re going to be potentially quite busy at home with their family as well and their own bunnies. So I say to the children of New Zealand, if the Easter Bunny doesn’t make it to your household, we have to understand that it’s a bit difficult at the moment perhaps for the Bunny to get everywhere.”

Ardern suggested that if the Easter Bunny can’t make it to children’s homes this year, they could instead draw Easter eggs and tape them to the front windows of their homes, so neighborhood children can have their own social-distancing Easter egg hunt.

New Zealand has been under lockdown since March 25. The country has reported 1,106 coronavirus cases, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Japan reports almost 400 new cases in one day

Japan’s health ministry announced 378 new cases of coronavirus and three more deaths nationwide by the end of Sunday.??????

The total number of cases in the country has risen to 4,366, 712 of which were from the Diamond Princess cruise ship.

Some 84 people have died from the disease in the country, 11 of whom were linked to the ship.

India has imposed a blanket export ban on a malaria drug touted by Trump as possible therapy for coronavirus

A packet of hydroxychloroquine pills.

India has placed a blanket ban on all exports of hydroxychloroquine, just as President Donald Trump called on Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to release more of the drug to the United States.

In an official notification issued Saturday, India’s Ministry of Commerce and Industry amended a previous order issued last month and effectively banned all export of the drug.?It is unclear whether the export ban was made before or after Trump and Modi spoke in a telephone call on Saturday.

Hydroxychloroquine is an anti-malaria drug that some institutions are researching for a possible Covid-19 treatment. Yet there is little reliable evidence that the drug is effective at treating the novel coronavirus.

President Trump, however, has doubled down on the?unproven therapy, and at a briefing at the White House on Sunday said:

In India, the eligible individuals for use of the drug are “Asymptomatic healthcare workers involved in the care of suspected or confirmed cases of Covid-19 and asymptomatic household contacts of people testing positive for Covid-19.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said there is no “definitive information to be able to make any comment” on whether the drug can be used to treat coronavirus.

For more on hydroxychloroquine, read here:

US President Donald Trump speaks during the daily briefing on the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, at the White House on April 4, 2020, in Washington, DC. (Photo by JIM WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article Trump suggests hydroxychloroquine may protect against Covid-19. Researchers say there's no evidence of that

Shanghai goes from ghost town to thriving metropolis on Qingming Festival

In mid-March, when we strolled Shanghai’s usually bustling West Bund park by the river, it was nearly deserted.

The only people we saw were either the occasional local or expats walking their pets. You could sit on the grass and still keep a safe distance from your fellow visitors.

But on Saturday, during the three-day Qingming public holiday, every inch of the park was packed.

There was so little space on the grass that some groups were hovering, picnic blankets ready, to claim their space. With the lure of spring weather and a day off, crowds walked shoulder to shoulder, far closer than the recommended six feet (1.8 meters) of social distancing. Most people wore masks, but there were some who were daring enough to go barefaced.

Walking through the area, we saw local families sharing a meal, groups of kids playing basketball and dogs weaving in and out of the crowds of people, chasing each other.

On Nanjing Road, a popular shopping district which was deserted a month ago, customers flooded in and out of stores – a happy sight for the Chinese government, which is desperate to get the country’s economy humming again.

But for me, the crowds?brought mixed emotions. While it is nice to see people happy and celebrating that the worst of the outbreak may be behind them, part of me does worry just how safe it is.

Can the epidemic really be over already? Or are we witnessing the start of the next outbreak within the now-walled off country? How long can this freedom last?

David Culver is CNN’s international correspondent, based in Beijing. He discusses concerns over Beijing’s transparency about the virus here:

The CDC has released instructions for making cloth face masks

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has released?instructions and visual tutorials on how to make cloth face coverings?from common household materials.

The CDC recently released guidance recommending the use of cloth face coverings “in public settings where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain, especially in areas of significant community based transmission.”

Cloth face coverings, according to the CDC, can be homemade out of pieces of fabric, T-shirts, bandannas and coffee filters to slow down the spread of the virus, especially those that may be asymptomatic and capable of transmitting it to others despite experiencing no symptoms.?

The CDC recommended any homemade cloth face coverings include multiple layers of fabric, be secured to the ears, and allow for breathing without restriction. The guidance recommends routinely cleaning coverings in a washing machine and that no child under the age of 2 should wear them.

US commander in Japan declares public health emergency for military bases as Tokyo cases rise

The commander of the United States Forces Japan (USFJ) has announced a public health emergency for the Kanto Plains region due to rising coronavirus cases in nearby Tokyo, the army unit said in a statement Monday.

The order, which will remain in effect through May 5, allows commanders the authority to enforce compliance of health protection measures on those who live and work on US installations.

An active duty member of the USFJ tested positive for the coronavirus a few weeks ago.

The move comes as the daily count of new coronavirus cases in Tokyo doubled in the past week, and there are concerns that the country isn’t doing enough to halt the spread of the virus.

Read more on that here:

tokyo japan coronavirus covid 19 pandemic hotbed shinzo abe ripley pkg intl ldn vpx_00005624.jpg

Related article There are fears a coronavirus crisis looms in Tokyo. Is it too late to change course?

It's just past 4 p.m in Sydney and 7 a.m. in London. These are the latest developments

Workers prepare train coaches to be used as temporary isolation wards for coronavirus patients in Chennai, India on March 30.

If you’re just joining us now, here’s the latest on the coronavirus pandemic.

Worry in India: India now has more than 4,000 cases, with health experts bracing for a potential “onslaught” of infections. Indian Railways, the oldest rail network in Asia, is converting as many as 20,000 old train carriages into isolation wards for patients.

Spike in Singapore: Singapore saw 120 new cases of coronavirus in 24 hours this weekend – its biggest daily jump so far.

Slowdowns in Thailand and Korea: Thailand reported 51 new cases today – a sharp drop from the 102 reported yesterday. And South Korea reported 47 new cases today – the lowest number of new daily cases since mid-February.

Australia takes action: Sydney is closing more beaches due to crowds defying social distancing rules. And police in New South Wales state have launched an investigation into the docking and disembarking of the Ruby Princess cruise ship, which created a major cluster of cases.

In the UK: On Sunday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson was admitted to hospital for tests. He tested positive for the coronavirus on March 27. Meanwhile, the Queen gave a rare televised address to the nation, offering reassurance and urging unity.

Musician Christopher Cross calls coronavirus "possibly the worst illness I've ever had"

Christopher Cross performs on the German TV game show "Wetten Dass...?" in Offenburg, Germany on April 30, 2011.?

Singer-songwriter?Christopher Cross revealed on social media?that he tested positive for?coronavirus.

Cross, known for his Grammy Award-winning hits “Sailing” and “Arthur’s Theme,”?said that he felt it was important to make people aware of how dangerous the virus is.

Cross implored his followers to self-quarantine, wash their hands frequently and avoid touching their faces to help stop the virus’ spread.

Read more here.

Thailand has recorded more than 2,200 cases

Thailand reported 51 new coronavirus cases on Monday, bringing the national total to 2,220, according to the country’s Ministry of Public Health.

Three more deaths were reported, taking the national toll to 26.

The number of new cases reported on Monday is a sharp drop from the 102 infections reported on Sunday.

Bangkok and its neighboring areas are reporting the highest number of infections, while the popular tourist destination Phuket has the second highest.

Manchester City will not furlough non-playing staff

A general view of Manchester City's Etihad Stadium on March 14, in Manchester.

Manchester City Football Club is not planning to make use of the UK’s Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme to furlough non-playing employees, the club confirmed to CNN Sports.?

Manchester City is the first English Premier League club to express a commitment to avoiding furloughs – enforced breaks from work without pay.

Read more about what it means to be furloughed here:

NEW ORLEANS, LA - MARCH 27: A view of empty Bourbon street in the French Quarter amid the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic on March 27, 2020 in New Orleans, Louisiana.  Orleans Parish has reported at least 1,170 cases, and recorded 57 deaths from the coronavirus.  (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

Related article What does it mean to be furloughed?

Australia launches criminal investigation into docking of Ruby Princess cruise ship

Cruise liner Ruby Princess sits in the harbour in Port Kembla, 80km south of Sydney after coming in to refuel and restock on April 6.

Australia’s New South Wales police have launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the docking and disembarking of the Ruby Princess cruise ship, which created a major cluster of coronavirus cases, police said in a statement Sunday.

The investigation will “fully examine” the communications and actions that allowed passengers to disembark from the cruise ship in Sydney on March 19, NSW Police Commissioner Mick Fuller said in a statement.?

It is expected that the investigation will involve interviewing thousands of witnesses, including the ship’s captain, doctors, crew members, and passengers, and officials from the federal and state government.

Here’s what the NSW Department of Health said last Friday:

  • “No cases of Covid-19 were identified” at the time when the ship docked.
  • The vast majority of passengers did not report symptoms until after leaving the ship.
  • As of last Friday, at least 342 people are confirmed to have contracted Covid-19 from the ship, it added.

Up to 200 of the 1,040 crew members onboard the ship have displayed coronavirus-like symptoms, while 16 have returned positive results for Covid-19, NSW Police said.

Meanwhile, the Ruby Princess will continue to berth at Port Kembla for up to 10 days to allow for safer access for medical assessments, NSW police said Monday.

Health authorities will carry out “medical assessments,?treatment, or emergency extractions of her crew,” according to a police statement.

Crew members will not be allowed to disembark unless in an emergency and approved by the police commissioner.

The Zaandam cruise ship enters the Panama City Bay to be assisted by the Rotterdam cruise ship with supplies, personnel and COVID-19 testing devices, at 8 milles from Panama City, on March 27, 2020. - Panama allowed medical assistance at sea for the Zaandam cruise ship with dozens of people with flu symptoms on board amid the coronavirus pandemic outbreak, but denied the Dutch-flagged cruiser Zaandam transit through the Panama Canal, announced the administrator of the maritime route, Ricaurte Vásquez, who also said that the ship will be quarantined if any case of the new coronavirus is confirmed on board. (Photo by Luis Acosta / AFP) (Photo by LUIS ACOSTA/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article Cruise ships are still scrambling for safe harbor

Coronavirus cases in India pass 4,000

A municipal worker fumigates a residential area in Prayagraj, India, on April 4.

India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare announced on Monday that 4,067 people in total have tested positive for novel coronavirus.

A total of 109 people have died as a result of contracting the virus, according to the ministry.?

Last week, one of Asia’s biggest slums, located in Mumbai, confirmed its first?coronavirus?death and top Indian doctors warned that the country must prepare to face an “onslaught” of cases.

Read more on that here:

NEW DELHI, INDIA - APRIL 02: An Indian policeman stands alert as Indians stand apart in a queue to maintain social distance, as they wait to receive ration,  as nationwide lockdown continues over the highly contagious coronavirus (COVID-19) on April 02, 2020 in New Delhi, India. India is under a 21-day lockdown to fight the spread of the virus, the workers of country's unorganized sector are bearing the brunt of the curfew-like situation. The lockdown has already disproportionately hurt marginalized communities due to loss of livelihood and lack of food, shelter, health, and other basic needs. The lockdown has left tens of thousands of out-of-work migrant workers stranded, with rail and bus services shut down. The closing of state borders have caused disruption in the supply of essential goods, leading to inflation and fear of shortages. The number of positive coronavirus cases in India crossed the 1965 mark with 50  deaths as the country reeled under a government-imposed lockdown for the seventh day amid increasing hardships for the country's poor. (Photo by Yawar Nazir/Getty Images)

Related article Indian doctors say the country must prepare for an 'onslaught' of coronavirus cases

South Korea's new cases drop to lowest in more than six weeks

City officials wearing protective clothing arrive at a coronavirus testing station set up at Jamsil Sports Complex in Seoul on April 3.

South Korea is extending its social?distancing campaign for two more weeks until April 19, as the number of new coronavirus cases in the country fell to the lowest in over six weeks.

On Monday, the country reported 47 new cases, the first time since February 18 that the number has dropped below 50,?according to the South Korean Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC).?

All religious facilities, indoor gyms, and recreational facilities like bars and karaoke rooms will be closed for two more weeks,?South Korean Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun announced Saturday.

The number of daily new infection cases would need to remain below 50 for the government to consider an end to the social distancing campaign, he said.

As of Monday, South Korea has reported 10,284 confirmed cases and 186 deaths from the coronavirus.

US reports 25,544?new cases and at least?1,147?new deaths on Sunday

At least?337,620?cases?of coronavirus have been reported in the United States, according to?Johns Hopkins University’s tally.

Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, has killed at least 9,643?people in the US.

On Sunday, at least?25,544?new cases and at least?1,147?new deaths were reported in the US.

Sunday’s total number of cases and deaths were lower than the numbers reported on Saturday, which were the country’s highest to date at?34,123?new cases reported and?1,344?deaths.

Over the weekend:

  • Friday:?1,169 new deaths were reported in the US.
  • Saturday:?1,344
  • Sunday:?1,147

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

Wyoming is the only state not reporting a death from coronavirus.

CNN is keeping track of coronavirus cases across the US and an interactive map can be found?here:

Sydney closes more beaches after crowds gathered over the weekend

Surfers walk along Manly Beach in Sydney, Australia on April 5.

Sydney is closing more of its beaches until after Easter as crowds defied social distancing rules and gathered to take in the sun and sea over the weekend.

From Tuesday, five beaches will be closed until after the Easter long weekend, according to the Northern Beaches Council.

They include:

  • Dee Why Beach
  • Manly
  • Shelly Beach
  • North Steyne
  • Queenscliff

The closures will be reviewed on April 14 ahead of any decision to reopen.

New South Wales health authorities said Manly and Dee Why beaches have become hotspots for community transmissions of Covid-19.

It comes about two weeks after authorities closed the city’s iconic Bondi Beach?after massive crowds gathered there.

On March 27, the Sydney district of Waverley Council reported more coronavirus cases than any district in Australia, Mayor Paula Masselos said in a statement.

Waverley includes some of Sydney’s famous beaches, including Bondi, Tamarama and Bronte.

Surfers ride waves at Freshwater Beach in Sydney on on April 5.

It's midnight in New York and midday in Beijing. Here's a global breakdown of the coronavirus pandemic

Bodies are moved to a refrigerator truck serving as a temporary morgue outside of Wyckoff Hospital in Brooklyn, New York on April 4.

The novel coronavirus pandemic continues to batter much of the world, with total global cases past 1.27 million.

The US now has more than four times China’s total cases, and is the worst-hit country.

This is how the pandemic looks around the world:

  • Chaos in the US: The US has more than 337,000 cases, with New York at the epicenter. Most of the country is under movement restrictions, with people ordered to stay at home except for essential reasons. Emergency personnel and medical staff have spoken of insufficient resources, war-like conditions, exhaustion and fear. In one New York hospital, six patients went into cardiac arrest and four died within 40 minutes.
  • China returns to normal life: The past few weeks have seen the rate of new daily cases drop dramatically in mainland China, according to government figures. Yesterday, China reported 39 new cases nationwide and just one death – a striking contrast to the thousands of new cases reported each day during the peak in February. Restrictions are now lifting and people are returning to normal life; photos this weekend show hikers crammed onto a famous mountain.
  • Controversy in Japan: The daily count of new coronavirus cases in Japan has doubled in the past week. Many have criticized the government’s handling of the crisis: the Prime Minister has repeatedly refused to declare a state of emergency or lock down Tokyo, and patients have had difficulty getting tested. To make things worse, people are reluctant to work from home, continue to gather outside, and are commuting during rush hours.
  • Slowdown in parts of Europe: Spain, Italy, Germany, and France are the four countries with the highest number of cases after the US. But evidence suggests the worst may have passed for some of these places; yesterday Spain saw the lowest rise in deaths since early March. Meanwhile, the mood in the UK is grim, with Prime Minister Boris Johnson admitted to hospital and the Queen giving a rare national address.
  • Cases spike in Iran: Iran, which became the epicenter of the Middle East outbreak in March, is still seeing high numbers – 2,483 new cases in 24 hours were reported yesterday. Despite this, the President said yesterday that foreign media “exaggerate the issue,” and that some restrictions will be lifted this week, allowing “low-risk businesses” to return to work.

Britain's Queen called for unity in a rare address to the nation

A woman watches Queen Elizabeth II's televised address to the nation on April 5, in Glasgow, Scotland.

Queen?Elizabeth?II offered reassurance to the British public and called for unity on Sunday in a rare televised speech.

The address comes as UK authorities warn people to stay at home, and as Prime Minister Boris Johnson was admitted to the hospital for tests, after days of coronavirus symptoms. Johnson tested positive for the virus on March 27.

It’s extremely rare for the Queen to address the nation like this: She typically only speaks to the country during an annual televised Christmas message and when a new parliament is installed.

She’s only held these types of emergency national addresses a handful of times in history – one time during World War Two, which she alluded to during her speech on Sunday.

The?Queen, 93,?concluded by again calling for unity saying, “we will succeed.”

Singapore reports its biggest daily jump in cases, locks down two worker dormitories

Ambulances are seen at the National Center for Infectious Diseases, where coronavirus patients are being treated, in Singapore on April 3.

Singapore has reported 120 new cases of coronavirus in 24 hours – its biggest daily jump of reported infections since the coronavirus outbreak began – the country’s Ministry of Health said in a statement.

The cases were reported from 12 p.m. Saturday to 12 p.m. Sunday, Singapore time.

Of the new infections, 116 were identified as local cases with no recent travel history.

Fifty cases were linked to existing clusters, while contact tracing is ongoing for the remaining 66, the statement said.

Dormitories locked down: On Sunday, Singapore said that?it has locked down two foreign worker dormitories as the number of reported cases continued to rise, according to another notice posted by the Ministry of Health.?

The dormitories, the?S11 Dormitory @ Punggol and Westlite Toh Guan dormitory, have been declared isolation areas. Foreign workers are?banned from moving between blocks or reporting to work for 14 days, but will continue to receive their salary during this period.

The S11 Dormitory @ Punggol, has 13,000 resident workers, while Westlite Toh Guan has?6,800.

India has closed its railways for the first time in 167 years. Now trains are being turned into hospitals

Laborers work on train coaches that will be used as temporary isolation wards in preparation for coronavirus-infected patients at a workshop in Allahabad on April 4, 2020.

When Prime Minister Narendra Modi imposed a nationwide?lockdown?on March 25, Indian Railways took the unprecedented move of suspending passenger trains across the country until April 14.

It was the first time in 167 years that Asia’s oldest rail network had been suspended.

Now the railway network has decided to convert as many as 20,000 old train carriages into isolation wards for patients as the virus spreads.

The network, which is the world’s fourth-largest rail operator and India’s biggest employer, already operates 125 hospitals across the nation, so has the expertise to expand into mobile beds.

While India’s hospital system isn’t overwhelmed yet, the repurposed trains could ease some of the pressure if the number of coronavirus patients begin to rise.

For more on how India is turning train carriages into turn into hospitals, read here:

This handout photograph from Indian Railways show how old trains will be used as Covid-19 isolation ward

Related article India has closed its railways for the first time in 167 years. Now trains are being turned into hospitals

A heated disagreement broke out in the US Situation Room over a malaria drug

There was a heated disagreement in the Situation Room this weekend over the efficacy of the?malaria drug hydroxychloroquine – but multiple sources say it was mostly one-sided.

President Donald Trump’s top trade adviser Peter Navarro feuded with other officials inside the coronavirus task force over the unproven drug’s treatment for the virus.?

Medical experts have repeatedly explained to the President that there is a risk in touting the drug in case ultimately it doesn’t work. But other aides and outside advisers have sided with Trump, including Navarro, who is still not a formal part of the task force but has wedged himself into the meetings.

What happened: While discussing the latest on?hydroxychloroquine this weekend, Navarro lashed out at Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious diseases expert and one of those advisers who has urged caution about the drug, a person familiar with the meeting told CNN.?

Not data: Navarro had brought a stack of paperwork with him into the Situation Room on the drug, arguing it was proof that it could work to treat coronavirus, which Fauci disagreed with because it was not data.?

Not a proven treatment: A source close to the task force said Fauci is not backing off of his belief that hydroxychloroquine is not a proven treatment for coronavirus. When CNN’s Jeremy Diamond asked Fauci to comment on the matter Sunday night, Trump stepped in and didn’t allow Fauci to answer. But a source said the doctor has already offered his opinion on the drug in other venues and would continue to do so.

The argument highlights how deep the divide runs over the task force’s response to the coronavirus outbreak: Another source told CNN that despite the disagreement in the Situation Room with Fauci and Navarro, Fauci continues to have a good relationship with Trump and Vice Presdient Mike Pence, though some staffers have shown irritation when his opinions differ.?

Read more here:

U.S. President Donald Trump exits after speaking and not taking any questions during a press briefing with the White House Coronavirus Task Force team in the press briefing room of the White House March 9, 2020 in Washington, DC. Also pictured, from L-R, Economic Advisor Peter Navarro, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,Secretary of Health and Human Services, Alex Azar, Secretary of Health and Human Services, and Robert Redfield, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. President Trump said he will hold a press conference on Tuesday concerning COVID-19 and other topics.

Related article Heated disagreement breaks out in Situation Room over hydroxychloroquine

UN secretary-general says violence against women during coronavirus quarantine must stop

United Nations secretary-general Antonio Guterres said there has been a “horrifying global surge in domestic violence” and urged governments to make women’s safety a key part of their national coronavirus response plans.

Watch his address here:

Akila Radhakrishnan, president of the Global Justice Center, said the call “recognizes how violence and crisis situations exacerbate existing inequalities in society and emphasize the need to center those most impacted in responses.”

“However, to date, we have consistently seen that Covid-19 responses have inadequately taken women’s rights and human rights into account. And there’s been a lack of inclusivity in the groups responsible for crisis response and decision-making,” she said.

China sends 1,000 ventilators to New York, as the city grapples with coronavirus horror

Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks at a news conference on March 30 at the Javits Center in New York, which is being used as a temporary hospital.

New York City is the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak in the United States, with emergency frontline workers saying they are facing “battlefield conditions.”

The city now has a total of 64,955 cases and 2,472 deaths, according to the government site.

Hopeful signs: After a few weeks of social distancing and business shutdowns, the number of deaths has begun dropping “for the first time,” said Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Sunday – but he cautioned that it’s too early to tell whether this means New York has passed the peak.

In the meantime, China is stepping in to help. The Chinese government has facilitated a donation?of 1,000 ventilators that were scheduled to arrive at JFK Airport on Sunday, Cuomo said.

At least 337,274 coronavirus cases in the US

Health workers transport a patient to Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City on April 4.

There are at least?337,274?cases of coronavirus in the United States, according to?Johns Hopkins University’s tally.

At least 9,633?people have died in the US from coronavirus.?

As of Sunday, there have been at least?25,029?new cases and at least?1,137?new deaths reported in the US.

Over the weekend:

  • Friday: 1,169 new deaths reported in the US.
  • Saturday: 1,344
  • Sunday: 1,137

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

Wyoming is the only state not reporting a death from coronavirus.

CNN is keeping track of coronavirus cases across the US and an interactive map can be found?here:

More deaths linked to New Jersey nursing homes

Four more people have died at nursing homes in Wanaque, New Jersey, while two others died in the community, according to?a Sunday letter?from the borough’s mayor.

In a letter posted online last week, Mayor Dan Mahler said there was a “major Covid-19 outbreak” at Lakeland Nursing Home in Haskell and eight people had died.

Many others, including staff members, were infected.

In an updated letter on Sunday, Mahler said six more people in Wanaque have died from the disease:

  • Four at local nursing homes.
  • Two from the community.
  • 82 residents of the borough have tested positive for Covid-19.
  • “Many of those infected are patients or employees at the nursing homes,” Mahler wrote.

Mahler stressed the importance of maintaining social distance at all times, especially with Easter and Passover coming soon.

One of the residents who died was a “healthy person” who had hugged and cried with a friend, after they visited and said her husband was in the final stages of terminal cancer. The friend was “a very healthy person who was home avoiding contact with the public,” Mahler wrote.

“Less than a week later the friend became ill. The resident became ill a few days after that. Both tragically passed away this week from the Covid-19 virus.”

There are now more than 1.2 million cases globally

Medical staff load a coronavirus patient into a plane for transport to a hospital outside of the Paris, on April 4.

The total number of coronavirus cases worldwide has reached 1.27 million, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

The global death toll is 69,419, according to JHU.

Here are the five countries with most cases, as of Sunday night ET:

  1. United States: 337,274 cases
  2. Spain: 131,646?cases
  3. Italy: 128,948 cases
  4. Germany: 100,123 cases
  5. France: 93,780 cases

These figures do not represent active cases, but rather the total number of people infected since the beginning of the pandemic. A number of these patients have since recovered and been discharged from hospital.

China, once the country with most cases, is now sixth on the list, with 82,602 cases. The past two weeks have seen a striking reversal of roles, with the US and Europe seeing explosive growth in cases while the number of new daily infections dropped dramatically in China, according to government-reported figures.

Daily death tolls are now beginning to slow in Italy, Spain, and France, as the US continues to grapple with an exponential rise in cases.

China reported just one death yesterday

China’s National Health Commission reported 39 new cases of coronavirus across the country on Sunday.

Of those, 38 were imported cases. That raises the national case total to 81,708.

Hubei province – where the virus was first identified – reported no cases for the second day in a row.

China reported one new death, bringing the national total to 3,331, according to the NHC.

Additionally, 78 new asymptomatic infections were reported. There are currently 1,047 asymptomatic cases under medical observation, of which 275 are imported.

Trump administration restricts new air travel for cruise ship passengers

Passengers look out from the deck of the Coral Princess cruise ship as it docks in Miami, Florida, on April 4.

The US Department of Homeland Security and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are now?restricting?cruise ship passengers and crew arriving in the US from boarding domestic commercial flights.

The restrictions will apply even to people not showing symptoms and also would require 14-day quarantines for cruise passengers and crew.

CNN reported on the restrictions being finalized earlier Sunday.

An administration official said these new protocols would likely be agreements between cruise ship companies and the government, requiring that they be followed in order for these ships to dock at specific ports.

Exceptions: The official said that there could be a range of exceptions and specific circumstances that would divert from the new protocols, specifically as it relates to foreigners on the ships.

Limit onward travel: These new restrictions will limit cruise passengers and crew to flying on charter aircraft or using private transportation.

How many ships could be affected? The US Coast Guard said Saturday?there are 114 cruise ships, carrying 93,000 crew members, either in or near US ports and waters.

This includes 73 cruise ships, with 52,000 crew members, moored or anchored in US ports and anchorages. Another 41 cruise ships, with 41,000 crew members, are underway and still in vicinity of the United States. The cruise industry has an ongoing obligation for the care, safety and welfare of their seafarers.

Third Coral Princess passenger dies after being taken to the hospital

The Coral Princess cruise ship arrives in Miami on April 4.

A third passenger from?the Coral Princess cruise ship?has died after being transported by a private ambulance to a hospital in Hialeah, Florida, according to a news release from the office of Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez.

Chain of events:

  • The Coral Princess departed Santiago, Chile, on March 5.
  • Princess Cruises announced operations were halting one week later.
  • On Saturday, Princess Cruises confirmed the ship arrived in Miami, Florida.
  • The cruise line said Saturday that disembarkation of guests is expected to take several days due to limited flight availability and passengers “requiring shoreside medical care will be prioritized to disembark first.”
  • Two passengers died on board the ship before it docked and six others were transported from the ship for treatment at local hospitals on Saturday, the release from Gimenez’s office said.
  • Eight additional passengers were transported from the Coral Princess to local hospitals on Sunday, according to the release. Information on the condition of those patients is not known.

The county is not able to clear passengers to leave the ship, the release said. Vessels are required to report to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Customs and Border Protection and the US Coast Guard, to have their passengers offloaded, the release said.

Passengers and crew who have received medical screenings and clearance for travel are driven on charter buses to an isolated area of Miami International Airport and go directly to board charter flights coordinated by the cruise line, the release said.

Gimenez sent additional medical staff to assist the Coral Princess Sunday, the release said. The county also replaced the ship’s oxygen cylinders with full ones after learning the supply on board was critically low, the release said.

US Vice President announces hydroxychloroquine trial in Detroit hospital

A packet of hydroxychloroquine pills.

Hydroxychloroquine will be used in a trial?of 3,000 patients at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, Michigan, and the results will be tracked in a formal study, Vice President Mike Pence announced Sunday.

Pence added that they are “more than prepared” to make hydroxychloroquine available to doctor’s offices and pharmacies in the Detroit area “as they deem appropriate.”

Rear Adm. John Polowczyk of the Supply Chain Logistics Task Force said that the government is working to put out millions of doses of hydroxychloroquine into areas with increasing number of coronavirus cases.

President Donald Trump has frequently claimed the drug has high efficacy against Covid-19?despite no evidence the drug is effective?and safe for preventing or treating the coronavirus.

However, there is no “definitive information to be able to make any comment” on whether the drug can be used to treat coronavirus, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, at the White House briefing on Saturday.?There are currently no products approved by the US Food and Drug Administration to prevent Covid-19.

Italy records lowest coronavirus death rate in two weeks

Italy has recorded its lowest death rate in a 24-hour period with 525 deaths, the Italian Civil Protection Ministry said Sunday.

A total of 15,877 people have died of Covid-19 in Italy.?

There was a small decrease in patients in critical condition with hospital intensive care units reporting 17 fewer patients. A total of 2,972 new cases have been diagnosed, another decline, bringing the total active cases to?91,246.?

A total of 21,815 people have recovered from the coronavirus, an increase of 819.?There are now almost 130,000 coronavirus cases in Italy.

Italy has been in a lockdown?for almost four weeks now.

Trump claims 1.6 million people in the US have been tested and received results

President Donald Trump speaks during a briefing after a coronavirus task force meeting at the White House on April 5.

President Donald Trump claimed Sunday that 1.6 million people in the United States have been tested for coronavirus and been given results.

“That’s far?more than any country’s been?able to do,” Trump said.

He also said that Abbott Laboratories will produce 1,200 of its new 15-minute coronavirus test weekly. Abbott’s?test was approved?by the Food and Drug Administration on March 27.

British Prime Minister expected to stay in the hospital overnight

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to stay in the hospital overnight, a Downing Street source told CNN on Sunday.

Johnson was admitted to the hospital on Sunday night in what Downing Street said in a statement was a “precautionary step” given that the “Prime Minister continues to have persistent symptoms of coronavirus ten days after testing positive for the virus.”

Johnson was diagnosed with coronavirus on March 27.

President Donald Trump wished Johnson well during a Sunday night press briefing.

US coronavirus fight enters crucial weeks as cases top 330,000

Samaritans' Purse members gather at a field hospital for coronavirus patients in Central Park on April 4 in New York City.

There are at least?337,072?cases of coronavirus in the United States, according to?Johns Hopkins University’s tally?of cases.

At least 9,619?people have died in the US from coronavirus.?

CNN is keeping track of coronavirus cases across the US and an interactive map can be found?here.