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		 U.S. 
		new COVID cases fall for third straight week, hospitalizations down
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		[February 02, 2021]  
		(Reuters) - New cases of COVID-19 in the 
		United States fell for a third week in a row, the first time the country 
		has seen such an extended decline since last September, though more than 
		a million people are still being infected every week. | 
        
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			 New cases in the seven days ended Jan. 31 fell 9% from the previous 
			week to 1.1 million, with only four out of 50 states reporting 
			rises, namely Louisiana, Washington, Pennsylvania and Montana, 
			according to a Reuters analysis of state and county reports. 
 (Open https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR in an external browser to see a 
			related graphic)
 
 Deaths from the virus rose 5% last week to 22,751, or an average of 
			3,250 people each day. January was the deadliest month of the 
			pandemic so far in the United States, with nearly 96,000 lives lost.
 
 Deaths are a lagging indicator, meaning they can increase weeks 
			after cases and hospitalizations fall.
 
			
			 
			Cumulatively, nearly 442,000 people have died from the novel 
			coronavirus, or one in every 740 U.S. residents.
 Lisa Shumaker, editing by Tiffany Wu)
 
			
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			   The average number of COVID-19 
								patients in hospitals fell 13% from the previous 
								week to about 103,000, according to a Reuters 
								analysis of data from the volunteer-run COVID 
								Tracking Project.
 Nationally, 8.7% of tests of tests came back 
								positive for the virus, down from 9.2% the prior 
								week and the lowest since the week ended Nov. 8, 
								according to data from the COVID Tracking 
								Project. The lowest positive test rates were in 
								Hawaii at 1.5% and Wyoming at 1.7%, and the 
								highest were Alabama at 34.1% and Iowa at 33.7%.
 
 Graphic: GRAPHIC-COVID-19 global tracker: 
								https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-maps/
 
 (Graphic by Chris Canipe, writing by
 
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