U.S. coronavirus cases now over 2 million: Reuters tally
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[June 11, 2020]
By Lisa Shumaker
(Reuters) - Total U.S. coronavirus cases
surpassed 2 million on Wednesday, according to a Reuters tally, as
health officials urge anyone who took part in massive protests for
racial justice to get tested.
Nationally, new infections are rising slightly after five weeks of
declines, according to a Reuters analysis. Part of the increase is due
to more testing, which hit a record high on June 5 of 545,690 tests in a
single day but has since fallen, according to the COVID-Tracking Project
https://covidtracking.com.
Recent increases in cases are likely a result of more people moving
about and resuming some business and pleasure activities as all 50
states gradually reopen. Huge nationwide protests with no social
distancing after the May 25 the death of George Floyd at the hands of
Minneapolis police could lead to another spike in cases in coming weeks.
Health officials believe the first U.S. coronavirus cases appeared in
January, and the nation recorded 1 million cases by April 28. So far in
June, there have been an average of 21,000 new cases a day compared with
an average of 30,000 a day in April and 23,000 a day in May, according
to a Reuters tally.
Total U.S. coronavirus-related deaths have surpassed 112,000, also the
most in the world.
On May 12, the World Health Organization (WHO) advised governments that
before reopening, the rate of people testing positive for the
coronavirus should remain at 5% or lower for at least 14 days.
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Gavin Roberts wears his father's police hat as he looks at the
flag-draped casket of his father, Glen Ridge Police Department
officer Charles Roberts, at his funeral service, after the
45-year-old father of three died of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) in Glen Ridge, New Jersey, U.S., May 14, 2020.
REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo
U.S. rates of positive test results have fluctuated between 4% and
7% nationally and have not met those guidelines, although many
individual states have.
Some states were still reporting positive rates above the WHO
threshold last week, with Maryland at 8%, Utah at 9%, Nebraska at
9%, Virginia at 9%, Massachusetts at 11% and Arizona at 12%.
At the peak of the outbreak in April, 25% to 50% of tests came back
positive.
(Writing by Lisa Shumaker; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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