The grim milestone came on the same day as global coronavirus cases
exceeded 50 million.
The United states has reported about a million cases in the past 10
days, the highest rate of infections since the nation reported its
first novel coronavirus case in Washington state 293 days ago.
The country reported a record 131,420 COVID-19 cases on Saturday and
has reported over 100,000 infections five times in the past seven
days, according to a Reuters tally.
The U.S. latest reported seven-day average of 105,600 daily cases,
ramped up by at least 29%, is more than the combined average for
India and France, two of the worst affected countries in Asia and
Europe.
More than 237,000 Americans have died of COVID-19 since the illness
caused by the coronavirus first emerged in China late last year.
The daily average of reported new deaths in the United States
account for one in every 11 deaths reported worldwide each day,
according to a Reuters analysis.
The number of reported deaths nationwide climbed by more than 1,000
for a fifth consecutive day on Saturday, a trend last seen in
mid-August, according to a Reuters tally.
Health experts say deaths tend to increase four to six weeks after a
surge in infections.
U.S. President-elect Joe Biden, who spent much of his election
campaign criticizing President Donald Trump’s handling of the
pandemic, pledged on Saturday to make tackling the pandemic a top
priority.
Biden will announce a 12-member task force on Monday to deal with
the pandemic that will be led by former surgeon general Vivek Murthy
and former Food and Drug Administration commissioner David Kessler.
The coronavirus task force will be charged with developing a
blueprint for containing the disease once Biden takes office in
January.
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The Midwest remains the hardest-hit region based on the most cases
per capita with North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, Iowa and
Nebraska the top five worst-affected U.S. states.
Illinois emerged as the new epicentre in the Midwest, with the state
reporting over 60,000 COVID-19 infections in the last seven days,
the highest in the country, according to Reuters data. The state
reported more than 12,454 new cases on Saturday, the highest
single-day number so far.
Texas, which accounts for 10% of total U.S. cases, is the
hardest-hit state and became the first to surpass a million
coronavirus cases in the United States on Saturday.
According to a Reuters analysis, the South region comprises nearly
43% of all the cases in the United States since the pandemic began,
with nearly 4.3 million cases in the region alone, followed by the
Midwest, West and Northeast.
New York, with over 33,000 fatalities, remains the state with
highest number of deaths and accounts for about 14% of total U.S.
deaths.
The United States performed about 10.5 million coronavirus tests in
the first seven days of November, of which 6.22% came back positive,
compared with 6.17% the prior seven-days, according to data from The
COVID Tracking Project, a volunteer-run effort to track the
outbreak.
(Reporting by Anurag Maan and Shaina Ahluwalia in Bengaluru; Editing
by Diane Craft and Michael Perry)
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