Face masks may be 'new normal' in post-virus life as U.S. prepares
gradual reopening
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[April 16, 2020]
By Maria Caspani and Jessica Resnick-Ault
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The death toll from
the coronavirus pandemic in the United States approached 31,000 on
Wednesday as governors began cautiously preparing Americans for a
post-virus life that would likely include public face coverings as the
"new normal."
The governors of Connecticut, Maryland, New York and Pennsylvania each
issued orders or recommendations that residents wear face masks as they
emerge from isolation in the coming weeks.
"If you are going to be in public and you cannot maintain social
distancing, then have a mask, and put that mask on," said New York
Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat.
Similar orders were imposed in New Jersey and Los Angeles last week and
face coverings were recommended by Kansas Governor Laura Kelly on
Tuesday.
California Governor Gavin Newsom has said residents across the nation's
most-populous state would likely be wearing masks in public for some
time to come.
"We are going to be getting back to normal; it will be a new normal,"
Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont said, echoing a phrase used by at least
two of his fellow governors in recent days.
U.S. Midwest governors were also making plans together to restart their
economies, said Jordan Abudayyeh, a spokeswoman for Illinois Governor
J.B. Pritzker.
In Michigan, hundreds of cars flooded the streets around the state
Capitol in Lansing on Wednesday to protest Democratic Governor Gretchen
Whitmer's stay-at-home orders, some of the strictest in the country.
Some protesters, in the demonstration organized by conservative and
pro-President Donald Trump groups, left their cars to gather on the lawn
in front of the Capitol building, many of them not wearing masks or
practicing social distancing.
TOLL ON HEALTHCARE STAFF
As of Wednesday night, 30,885 people in the United States had died of
COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by the novel coronavirus,
according to a Reuters tally.
That includes more than 4,000 deaths newly attributed to the disease in
New York City after health officials revised their counting methods to
include "probable," but unconfirmed, cases.
Healthcare workers have faced unique health threats while working on the
front lines trying to tackle the pandemic.
Reuters has identified more than 50 nurses, doctors and medical
technicians who have died after being diagnosed with COVID-19 or showing
symptoms of it. At least 16 were in New York state.
"The emergency room is like a war zone," said Raj Aya, whose wife,
Madhvi Aya - a physician's assistant in Brooklyn - was one of the
healthcare workers who died in New York.
As the outbreak begins to slow, political leaders have bickered over how
and when to begin the process of unwinding unprecedented lockdowns that
have damaged the economy and largely confined Americans to their homes.
Washington state Governor Jay Inslee told an afternoon news conference
the largest obstacle to a return to normalcy was a shortage of
coronavirus tests.
"We simply haven't had enough test kits – they simply do not exist
anywhere in the United States right now," Inslee said, adding the state
had purchased about a million swabs, along with vials and test medium
but they were just starting to arrive.
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A food delivery driver cycles on an empty road as the global
outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Beverly
Hills, California, U.S., April 15, 2020. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
At his daily White House briefing hours later, Trump boasted that
the United States had "the most expansive testing system anywhere in
the world". But, he said, testing was a problem for the states and
not the federal government.
"We can't be thinking about a Walmart parking lot," where some
testing is being done, but the states and cities should do that, he
said.
Senate Democrats on Wednesday unveiled a $30 billion plan to vastly
increase nationwide testing for the coronavirus.
'ALMOST IN FREE FALL'
Trump, citing data suggesting the peak of new infections had passed,
said he would announce guidelines on Thursday for reopening the
economy.
The sweeping closures of businesses have left millions of Americans
unemployed and store owners struggling to pay rent.
Government data released on Wednesday showed that retail sales
dropped by 8.7% in March, the biggest decline since tracking began
in 1992. Consumer spending accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S.
economic activity.
In addition, output at U.S. factories declined by the most since
1946 as the pandemic fractured supply chains.
"The economy is almost in free fall," said Sung Won Sohn, a business
economics professor at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles.
The United States, with the world's third-largest population, has
now suffered the greatest number of reported fatalities from the
coronavirus, ahead of Italy and Spain.
Globally, the number of infections has crossed the 2 million mark
and over 136,000 people have died, a Reuters tally shows.
The pathogen emerged last year in China.
Trump said on Wednesday his government was trying to determine
whether the coronavirus emanated from a lab in Wuhan, China, and
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Beijing "needs to come clean" on
what they know. The official death toll released by the Chinese
government stands at about 3,600.
The source of the virus remains a mystery. General Mark Milley,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said on Tuesday that U.S.
intelligence indicated the coronavirus likely occurred naturally, as
opposed to being created in a laboratory in China, but there was no
certainty either way.
(Reporting by Nathan Layne, Lucia Mutikani, Doina Chiacu, Susan
Heavey, Maria Caspani, Lisa Shumaker, Gabriella Borter, Peter
Szekely, Kristina Cooke, Jessica Resnick-Ault, Sharon Bernstein,
Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb; Writing by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by
Bill Tarrant, Cynthia Osterman, Peter Cooney and Himani Sarkar)
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