Every country needs the same lifesaving tools, but nationalist-minded leaders are jeopardizing access for all. Michigan will ban travel between homes. California saw a drop in patients in intensive care, but its governor said “one data point is not a trend.”
Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the leading U.S. expert on infectious diseases, said an antibody test for the virus should be ready in about a week.
https://www.magcloud.com/user/theresahemmings
The global toll approaches 100,000, as the N.Y. region again tallies its highest daily death count.
Never have so many millions so suddenly lost their jobs. Never has the United States government vowed to spend so much money all at once to stave off economic ruin. Still, never has the financial security of so many been in such jeopardy.
But what’s most immediate, never have Americans had to watch so many die day after day, separated from friends and family, the air drained from their lungs by a virus that was first detected in the country less than two months ago.
“That is so shocking and painful and breathtaking, I don’t even have the words for it,” said Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York.
Around the world, the official death count surged toward 100,000 and public health officials from Paris to Los Angeles said the only way to keep that figure from growing even faster would be to extend the lockdowns.
https://bbpress.org/forums/profile/samoh
The virus has yet to reveal many of its insidious mysteries, but new data and a growing body of research have shown that it preys on the human propensity to connect.
In one densely crowded, seven-square-mile area in the center of the New York borough of Queens, it took just weeks for the virus to infect thousands. In theory, the pathogen infects princes and paupers alike, but working-class and immigrant communities like the one in Queens have been especially hard hit, exposing the deep inequities in American society and its health care system.
The swift spread of the virus in locations where people live in cramped quarters has raised concern for vulnerable populations around the world. But it is also behavior — once common, daily behavior — that can give the virus life.
A new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed how one unsuspecting man who attended a dinner, a funeral and a birthday party in Chicago was the likely source of a chain of transmission that would lead to the infection of at least 15 people, three of whom later died.
Yet Republican lawmakers in Kansas blocked efforts by the governor to restrict large gatherings, saying that worshipers should be able to attend Easter services.