U.S. Coronavirus: In states, new cases are at least 50% higher


Health experts warned over the weekend that U.S. Coronavirus cases and deaths are expected to rise in the coming months, with more than 7.7 million cases on record and 21 deaths. Deaths have been reported.

Only Maine, Texas and Washington Washington have been filing average fewer daily cases since last week. The number of new cases is stable in 16 states: Alabama, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, South Carolina and South Carolina.

Elsewhere, in all 31 states, new cases have been reported compared to a week ago.

Montana, one of the states reporting an epidemic increase in one week, has reported 5,000 coronavirus cases in the last 11 days. This is quite a deal to start the epidemic while the state has taken about five months to get into its first 5,000 case chart.

Its first coronavirus case was reported in the state on March 13 and 5,017 cases were reported across the state on August 10. Then from September 30 to October 10, 5,046 coronavirus cases were reported in Montana, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Public health experts warn that autumn and winter could lead to an explosion of new Covid-19 cases as Americans take less precautions and spend more time indoors, thereby increasing the likelihood of transmission.

20,000 deaths this month are ‘inevitable’

U.S. Department of Disease Control and Prevention An additional 20,000 Kovid-19 deaths are “inevitable” by the end of the month, according to the former director of the centers.

D esti. The infection is based on “pre-existing infections,” Tom Frieden said during CNN’s “Coronavirus: Facts and Fears” town hall on Saturday.

There were 57,420 new coronavirus cases reported in the United States on Friday, the highest number of new cases on a daily basis since August. That number dropped to 44,614 on Sunday.

“Whenever we ignore, underestimate or underestimate this virus, we are at our own risk and at the risk of people whose lives depend on us,” Frieden said.

The former CDC director says the U.S. should expect another 20,000 coronavirus deaths by the end of the month

By February, the U.S. The number of coronavirus deaths could double to about 400,000, according to a D.D. from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington School of Medicine. The model predicts a daily death toll of about 2,300 in mid-January.

New Covid-19 cases are on the rise across the country. According to the Florida Department of Health, Florida health officials reported 5,570 new cases Sunday as there were no cases or death updates on Saturday.

There were also 178 Floridian deaths reported on Sunday, bringing the total to 15,364.

U.S. Infections can be close to 40 million

Officials are searching for coronavirus infections and deaths, but Frieden said that number could be much lower.

The actual number of deaths from coronavirus in the United States is more than fifty million, Freden said Saturday.

Infectious disease experts say Florida will be 'like a house of fire' in a week

Part of the problem in determining the true effect is how death is listed on death certificates, especially for elderly patients who are more likely to have other health-related problems such as coronavirus infection. Often other health conditions are listed as the cause of death, he said.

“Even if you die of cancer, and you have diabetes, you die of cancer,” Frieden explained. “If you died from covid, and you also have diabetes, you died from covid.”

He said the probability of infection is close to 4 million people.

“You don’t get sick from all this, but you can spread it to anyone who dies or spread it to another who dies.” “That’s why we should all recognize that we are together in this. There is only one enemy, and that is the virus.”

CNN’s Lauren Mascarenhas, Andre Kane, Liana Folk, Shelby Lynn Erdman, Nicole Chavez and Christina Maxoris contributed to the report.

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