From schools to sports, a new wave of COVID-19 disrupts U.S. life
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[December 16, 2021]
By Tyler Clifford and Lisa Shumaker
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Universities canceled
events, the National Football League reported a record number of cases,
and long lines formed at New York City testing clinics as a sharp rise
in COVID-19 cases and concern over the Omicron variant disrupted
American life anew.
The NFL and two other major North American sports leagues scrambled to
control outbreaks as the threat of widespread schedule disruptions
loomed larger.
U.S. diplomatic efforts fell victim to the new spate of infections with
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken cutting short a brief trip to
Southeast Asia after learning of a COVID-19 case in the press corps
accompanying him.
Over the past month, new cases have risen nearly 50% to a seven-day
average of 122,000 new infections per day, according to a Reuters tally.
At this point in 2020, the United States was reporting an average of
219,000 new infections per day.
Across the country, COVID hospitalizations have risen about 40% over the
last month, according to a Reuters tally
At least 36 states have reported confirmed cases of the Omicron variant,
representing about 3% of COVID-19 cases in the country, U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said in a
briefing on Wednesday.
At a COVID testing site in the Chicago suburb of Geneva, Illinois, the
number of people seeking tests has nearly doubled in the past two weeks.
"Ever since Thanksgiving more people have been coming in," said Mona
Kawaiah, who collects the test kits. The site has gone from 30 tests per
day before Thanksgiving to now 52 tests per day. "Some of them have the
flu symptoms and want to make sure it's not COVID," she said.
The Metropolitan Opera in New York said on Wednesday it would require
audiences and staff to show proof of a booster shot starting in January.
In what is thought to be the first such move to stricter rules in New
York City theaters, the requirement will take effect on Jan. 17, 2022,
the Met Opera said in a statement on its website.
The United States leads the world in the daily average number of new
infections reported, accounting for one in every 5 infections reported
worldwide. There have been 50 million infections and more than 800,000
coronavirus-related deaths reported in the country since the pandemic
began.
Urging Americans to get booster shots, top U.S. infectious disease
expert Dr. Anthony Fauci said an additional dose of currently available
COVID-19 vaccines work against the Omicron variant of the coronavirus
and there appears to be no need for variant-specific boosters.
LONG LINES
In Harlem on Wednesday, about two dozen people stood in a queue to enter
the City MD clinic on busy 125th Street. A staff member came out just
before 4 p.m. to announce there was a two-hour wait, owing in part to
efforts to disinfect rooms between patients.
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People wait in line to take coronavirus disease (COVID-19) tests at
pop-up testing site in New York City, U.S., December 14, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Chris Johnson, a sophomore at Fordham University, said he would wait
as long as it takes. “I gotta get a test to take my final tomorrow,”
he said.
Students at New Jersey's Princeton University will take all finals
remotely starting on Thursday. The school ordered the cancellation
of all indoor gatherings with food, and those where face coverings
cannot be worn, effective from Thursday to Jan. 7, the university's
dean Jill Dolan said in a statement.
New York University in New York City canceled all "non-essential"
gatherings and events. Provost Katherine Fleming said in a statement
on Wednesday that data from a testing program had shown a
considerable acceleration in the rate of new cases.
"It’s not a cause for alarm, but it is a cause for concern, caution,
and appropriate actions," she said, adding that the school is
strongly encouraging final exams be taken online.
In retailing, Apple Inc temporarily closed three retail stores in
Miami, Annapolis and Ottawa after a rise in COVID-19 cases and
exposures among employees, the iPhone maker said on Wednesday.
The National Hockey League, already dealing with a backlog of
postponed games, was bracing for more headaches as the Nashville
Predators, Boston Bruins, Carolina Hurricanes and Calgary Flames
confirmed players and staff had been forced into COVID-19 protocols.
After the NFL reported a record 37 positive tests on Monday, another
22 players were added to the COVID reserve list on Tuesday.
The surge continued into Wednesday with ESPN reporting the
Washington Football Team added eight players to COVID protocols and
the Cleveland Browns placed quarterback Baker Mayfield and head
coach Kevin Stefanski on the reserve list.
In the National Basketball Association, Sacramento Kings interim
head coach Alvin Gentry tested positive for COVID-19 and will miss
Wednesday night's game against the Washington Wizards.
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford in New York and Lisa Shumaker in
Chicago; additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien, Steve Keating,
Barbara Goldberg, Akash Srir; Writing by Frank McGurty; Editing by
Howard Goller)
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