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Coronavirus Briefing: What Happened Today | Coronavirus Briefing: What Happened Today |
(about 7 hours later) | |
This is the Coronavirus Briefing, an informed guide to the global outbreak. Sign up here to get the briefing by email. | This is the Coronavirus Briefing, an informed guide to the global outbreak. Sign up here to get the briefing by email. |
Whether it’s illicit raves or pool parties, partying on a large scale has returned to many areas of the world, worrying health officials who say the events are contributing to an uptick in coronavirus cases, particularly among young people. | Whether it’s illicit raves or pool parties, partying on a large scale has returned to many areas of the world, worrying health officials who say the events are contributing to an uptick in coronavirus cases, particularly among young people. |
The scenes of revelry would have been unimaginable a few months ago. In Wuhan, the city in China where the coronavirus outbreak began, hundreds of people recently swam shoulder to shoulder at a cramped pool rave — and no one wore a mask. | The scenes of revelry would have been unimaginable a few months ago. In Wuhan, the city in China where the coronavirus outbreak began, hundreds of people recently swam shoulder to shoulder at a cramped pool rave — and no one wore a mask. |
Italy was recently forced to shutter its night clubs after an increase in cases — the first significant crackdown since the country came out of lockdown four months ago — and images circulated of people ignoring mask requirements at clubs and social-distancing rules on crowded streets. The median age of people contracting the virus has dropped below 40. | Italy was recently forced to shutter its night clubs after an increase in cases — the first significant crackdown since the country came out of lockdown four months ago — and images circulated of people ignoring mask requirements at clubs and social-distancing rules on crowded streets. The median age of people contracting the virus has dropped below 40. |
In the United States, people with means continue to fight for their right to party — with their wallets. | In the United States, people with means continue to fight for their right to party — with their wallets. |
A cottage industry of medical concierge services has cropped up in wealthy enclaves in the Hamptons and Manhattan to offer rapid screenings for clients hosting exclusive parties — even as most of the country waits two weeks to get test results. | A cottage industry of medical concierge services has cropped up in wealthy enclaves in the Hamptons and Manhattan to offer rapid screenings for clients hosting exclusive parties — even as most of the country waits two weeks to get test results. |
Meanwhile, the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill shut down in-person instruction for undergraduates and moved classes entirely online because of four clusters of infections. A university official told faculty members this week that most of the cases had been traced to the “social sphere of campus life,” according to The Chronicle of Higher Education. | Meanwhile, the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill shut down in-person instruction for undergraduates and moved classes entirely online because of four clusters of infections. A university official told faculty members this week that most of the cases had been traced to the “social sphere of campus life,” according to The Chronicle of Higher Education. |
The New York Times has identified at least 251 cases of the virus tied to fraternities and sororities. “The frats are being frats — they are having their parties,” Lamar Richards, a sophomore at U.N.C., told The Times | The New York Times has identified at least 251 cases of the virus tied to fraternities and sororities. “The frats are being frats — they are having their parties,” Lamar Richards, a sophomore at U.N.C., told The Times |
Pooled testing — a decades-old approach that combines samples from multiple people to save time and supplies — was once hailed by the Trump administration and Dr. Anthony Fauci as a solution to America’s persistent testing headaches. | Pooled testing — a decades-old approach that combines samples from multiple people to save time and supplies — was once hailed by the Trump administration and Dr. Anthony Fauci as a solution to America’s persistent testing headaches. |
But no longer: The virus is now too widespread in many areas for pooled testing to be effective. | But no longer: The virus is now too widespread in many areas for pooled testing to be effective. |
As our colleague Katherine Wu reports, pooled testing works only when a vast majority of batches is negative. If the proportion of positives is too high, more pools will need to have each individual sample retested, eliminating efficiency gains. | As our colleague Katherine Wu reports, pooled testing works only when a vast majority of batches is negative. If the proportion of positives is too high, more pools will need to have each individual sample retested, eliminating efficiency gains. |
In many parts of the country, positivity rates — the proportion of tests that turn up positive — are above 10 percent, which makes pooled testing largely impractical. Many areas are also reporting delays of two weeks or more for test results to be processed. | In many parts of the country, positivity rates — the proportion of tests that turn up positive — are above 10 percent, which makes pooled testing largely impractical. Many areas are also reporting delays of two weeks or more for test results to be processed. |
Still, in New York, where test positivity rates have held at or below 1 percent since June, universities, hospitals, private companies and public health labs are using the technique in a variety of settings, often to catch people who aren’t feeling sick. | Still, in New York, where test positivity rates have held at or below 1 percent since June, universities, hospitals, private companies and public health labs are using the technique in a variety of settings, often to catch people who aren’t feeling sick. |
And there are still more audacious plans to close the testing shortfall. In an article in The Atlantic, Robinson Meyer and Alexis Madrigal report on a proposal to mass-produce inexpensive paper-strip saliva tests and use them on a massive scale, possibly in conjunction with pooled testing. | And there are still more audacious plans to close the testing shortfall. In an article in The Atlantic, Robinson Meyer and Alexis Madrigal report on a proposal to mass-produce inexpensive paper-strip saliva tests and use them on a massive scale, possibly in conjunction with pooled testing. |
Here’s a roundup of restrictions in all 50 states. | Here’s a roundup of restrictions in all 50 states. |
Let us know how you’re dealing with the outbreak. Send us a response here, and we may feature it in an upcoming newsletter. | Let us know how you’re dealing with the outbreak. Send us a response here, and we may feature it in an upcoming newsletter. |
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