The latest predictions from the university's widely cited Institute
for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) comes as top White House
infectious disease advisers warned that major U.S. cities could
erupt as new coronavirus hot spots if officials there were not
vigilant with counter-measures.
"We're seeing a rollercoaster in the United States. It appears that
people are wearing masks and socially distancing more frequently as
infections increase, then after a while as infections drop, people
let their guard down," Dr Christopher Murray, director of the IHME,
said in announcing the university's revised forecast.
The U.S. death toll from COVID-19 stands at more than 159,000, the
most of any country in the world, with nearly 4.9 million known
cases. (Open https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR in an external browser for a
Reuters interactive graphic)
The IHME said infections were falling in the former epicenters of
Arizona, California, Florida, and Texas, but rising in Colorado,
Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Oklahoma,
Oregon, and Virginia. Those findings are consistent with Reuters
tallies.
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine, a Republican, on Thursday said he had
tested positive for the virus ahead of a planned meeting with
President Donald Trump, but had experienced no symptoms of the
illness. He later said a second test came back negative and his wife
and staff members had likewise tested negative.
Tennessee and North Carolina reported record single-day increases in
deaths on Thursday with 42 and 73, respectively.
'TROUBLE AHEAD'
The U.S. outbreak, once centered around densely populated New York
City, has since infected communities from coast to coast. Experts
believe that spread has been driven in part by summer vacation
travel.
"This is a predictor of trouble ahead," Dr Anthony Fauci, the
nation's top infectious diseases official, told CNN.
Fauci was speaking after the White House coronavirus task force
coordinator, Dr Deborah Birx, identified new areas of concern during
a telephone call with state and local officials on Wednesday.
Baltimore and Atlanta remain at a "very high level," as well as
Kansas City, Portland, Omaha and California's Central Valley, Birx
said on the call, a recording of which was obtained by the
journalism nonprofit Center for Public Integrity.
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White House data shows small increases in the percentage of positive tests in
Chicago, Boston, Detroit and Washington.
On the positive side, medical professionals have a better understanding of what
they are dealing with, said Dr Khalilah Gates, a pulmonary and critical care
specialist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago.
"We don't know all of it, but it's not the fear of the unknown anymore," she
told Reuters.
Trump has urged state and local authorities to re-open public schools for
in-person learning and Fauci has said children should be sent back to class as
soon as possible.
But many school districts nationwide, including two of the largest, Los Angeles
and Chicago, have opted for online instruction.
In rural Mississippi's Corinth school district, where schools opened two weeks
ago, five coronavirus infections forced some students and teachers into
quarantine, Superintendent Edward Lee Childress said on Facebook.
The decision to reopen schools took into account the "inevitable moment" that
the virus would be detected and contact tracing plans triggered, Childress said.
"We're going to have some more positive cases. We know it will happen," he said.
Although the number of Americans seeking jobless benefits fell last week, a
staggering 31.3 million people were receiving unemployment checks in mid-July.
Other data on Thursday showed a 54% surge in job cuts announced by employers in
July.
The State Department on Thursday lifted an advisory from March that U.S.
citizens should avoid all international travel due to the pandemic. But American
travelers are still restricted or banned in many parts of the world, including
the European Union and Canada.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu and Susan Heavey in Washington, D.C., Barbara
Goldberg and Maria Caspani in New York and Rich McKay in Atlanta; Writing by
Sonya Hepinstall and Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Bill Berkrot, Bill Tarrant and
Daniel Wallis)
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