U.S. records 1,000 coronavirus deaths for fourth day, some progress seen
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[July 25, 2020]
By Lisa Shumaker and Dan Whitcomb
(Reuters) - The United States recorded more
than 1,000 deaths from COVID-19 for the fourth straight day on Friday
but a top White House advisor on the pandemic said she saw signs that
the worst could be past in hard-hit southern and western states.
At least 1,019 fatalities due to COVID-19 were confirmed nationwide on
Friday, following 1,140 on Thursday, 1,135 on Wednesday and 1,141 on
Tuesday. Total cases across the United States rose by at least 68,800 on
Friday to over 4 million.
The numbers have been driven in large part by a surge in infections in
Arizona, California, Florida, Texas and California.
"We're already starting to see some plateauing in these critically four
states that have really suffered under the last four weeks, so Texas,
California, Arizona and Florida, those major metros and throughout their
counties," Dr Deborah Birx told NBC news in an interview.
Birx's comments came as federal health and education officials stressed
the need for children to return to in-class instruction. The American
public and its leaders have been sharply divided over whether students
should return to school for the fall term during the pandemic.
Birx said children under the age of 18 are typically less sick than
older adults from the sometimes deadly illness but called it an "open
question" how readily those under 10 can spread the virus.
U.S. President Donald Trump has pushed for schools to reopen, saying
that it was critical to the mental and emotional well-being of children
and the ability of their parents to work.
Business closures and "stay-at-home" orders imposed by governors and
local officials have badly damaged the nation's economy and thrown
millions of Americans out of work.
'BAD OPTIONS'
The CDC issued a call to reopen schools in a statement posted on its
website that listed the benefits of being in school and downplayed
health risks, although it said exceptions should be made for so-called
virus "hot spots."
The guidance does not carry the force of law, and it is unclear how much
weight it will carry with school districts. Most teachers unions, which
in some states and cities have an outsized political influence
especially among Democrats, have fought hard against reopenings.
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A family use a hand sanitizer station as the National Zoo reopens
for socially-distanced patrons for the first time since the start of
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Washington, U.S. July
24, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The guidelines were "all put out with the intent to help facilitate,
as was mentioned earlier, the full reopening of schools for
face-to-face learning," said Dr Robert Redfield, the CDC's director.
The CDC, the nation's health protection agency posted the documents
after Trump called earlier recommendations too tough, impractical
and expensive. The Republican president has been increasingly
critical of health experts as the surge in cases interferes with his
efforts to reopen the economy.
While the risk of severe COVID-19 is seen as relatively low for
children, there is fear they could infect teachers and other
employees.
Schools across the country are opening on different dates, with
different modes of teaching - virtual instruction, in-person in
classrooms, or a hybrid of both - and different or unclear
expectations of how long each stage will last.
In-person classes in metropolitan Houston, which has been hard-hit
by the virus in recent weeks, have been delayed until at least Sept.
8, Harris County Judge Lina Hidalgo said.
New Jersey on Friday issued guidelines allowing parents to choose
all-remote learning after receiving feedback from many who "wanted a
greater voice in the decision-making process."
Heather Mellet, 42, has two children in Florida's Orange County
Public Schools system, which is starting classes on Aug. 24. Parents
can choose online, in-person, or a hybrid, she said.
Mellet is keeping both her children home and opting for online
learning only.
"We're choosing the best of the bad options," she said.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu and Jason Lange in Washington, Rich McKay
in Atlanta, Brad Brooks in Austin, Maria Caspani and Barbara
Goldberg in New York; Writing by Sonya Hepinstall; Editing by
Matthew Lewis and Daniel Wallis)
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