US coronavirus: Cases are on the rise in more than 40 states


In 42 states where at least 10% more new Covid-19 cases have been reported in the past week, an emergency therapist at Brown University has warned that the United States is “getting into the worst state of the epidemic,” according to JHU.

D We. “We’re going to see all of these small epidemics across the country, we’re going to be overwhelmed and mixed, and it’s going to be as horrible as pouring gasoline on the fire,” Megan Renny told CNN’s Frederica Whitfield on Sunday.

The case is running at a level never seen before in epidemics. Sunday’s unprecedented number will follow the days of the other four highest new coronavirus cases, with a record set at 128,412 on Saturday. According to the JHU, the rising number of cases has led to a national total of more than 9.9 million cases and 237,574 deaths.

Rennie said he is concerned about what happens after people gather in late November and early December as people expect.

U.S. Currently in the virus. 56,768 people are hospitalized. By October 30, 10,000 – and with the number of people hospitalized by the virus, the Covid Tracking Project said U.S. A record number could be hospitalized in just a few days.

States where .bha

States in every corner of the U.S. are buzzing with rising cases.

Utah Govt. Gary Herbert issued an administrative order on Sunday declaring a state of emergency and placing the entire state under a mask order, citing the rapid spread of the virus to limit social gatherings to domestic gatherings only until November 23.

U.S.  Again daily new cases are surpassed as B Biden prepares his coronavirus task force

“The hospital is close to hospitalization and ICU capacity and health care providers will be unable to take care of Utahns in the coming days, if this increase continues,” the emergency release said. “We must now take steps to protect our hospitals and healthcare personnel and prevent further destruction of our families, communities and businesses.”

On Sunday, Illinois reported more than 10,000 new daily cases for the third day in a row, with a total of 487,987 cases and 10,538 deaths. And on Saturday, Idaho broke the record for most single-day cases set a day earlier with 1,403 new cases.

Govt. Of New Jersey. Phil Murphy warned residents to stay awake on Sunday afternoon.

“We’re still in the middle of an epidemic and everyone needs to take this seriously,” Murphy tweeted. “Unfortunately, we are reporting the deaths of four newly confirmed COVID-10s.”

And with the nation approaching one million coronavirus cases, Texas alone is coming close to reporting 10 million with 9 million 930 cases.

The former FDA commissioner has said the USA needs to be more aggressive

With skyrocketing cases and warnings that the effects will increase, U.S. Former Commissioner of Food and Drug Administration Dr. Scott Gottlieb said Sunday that the U.S. needs to be more aggressive in its fight against the virus.

“They don’t believe in bipartisanship between election intervals,” Gottlieb told CBS’s “Face the Nation”. “We’re holding back the election – I think they’re doing what we can at the national level,” Gottlieb told Brennan. Need to focus on. ” Down or not.

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“We don’t need to tell people we need to shut down the country, shut down businesses, keep people at home to control the virus,” he said. “We’re not going to get full control of this virus – it’s an infectious virus. It will spread, but it doesn’t have to spread at the level and speed that will suppress the healthcare system that we’re seeing

Gottlieb also advised President-elect Biden to implement the strategy by working with the National Governors Association over the next few months.

His words include those of Dr. George, where “Gigi” Al-Baumi, a professor of medicine at George and Washington University in Washington, said on Sunday that the Biden administration would need an “all-hands-on” approach to coronavirus.

“We’re in a four-alarm fire, and we don’t all need to stop the fire – stop it from spreading – but we also need to find out what caused the fire in the first place,” Al-Bayoumi told CNN’s Fredericka in Whitfield.

‘Age, experience and better medications’ affect mortality

Although the death toll has risen, the rate of cases resulting in mortality is likely. Decreased, and Fawcett said it was “due to age, experience and better medications.”

Like all diseases, health professionals learn more about the virus, including putting people on a ventilator, Fawcett said Saturday.

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“We’re just getting better at treating people,” he said. “You (know) what works. You know what doesn’t work, which only involves basic, non-theological approaches.”

The use of therapies that can help people like dexamethasone and rimadesivir has also evolved further, he said.

He said college students are more likely to go back to school and become more infected as it affects mortality. People who get infected now compared to spring “are now almost a decade apart from being younger.”

“Ultimately, they will infect people in the community, but it is the people who run the infection,” Fawcett said.

CNN’s Holly Silverman, Artemis Mostagian, Lennon Mascarenhas, Laina Faq and Jennifer Selva contributed to the report.

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