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Coronavirus Briefing: What Happened Today | Coronavirus Briefing: What Happened Today |
(1 day 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. |
A judge struck down an order by Florida’s governor that all schools must open for in-person teaching. The state is expected to appeal. | |
The number of new reported cases in the United States has begun to drop, though the infection rate remains one of the world’s highest. | |
After tests and temperature checks, 336 Republican delegates gathered today to officially renominate President Trump, the only in-person event of either political party’s national convention. | |
Get the latest updates here, as well as maps and trackers for U.S. metro areas and vaccines in development. | |
It’s official: Humans can get reinfected with the coronavirus. The first documented case is a 33-year-old man in Hong Kong who caught the virus at the end of March and, more than four months later, picked it up again during a trip to Europe. | It’s official: Humans can get reinfected with the coronavirus. The first documented case is a 33-year-old man in Hong Kong who caught the virus at the end of March and, more than four months later, picked it up again during a trip to Europe. |
The proof lay in the genome sequencing of the virus from both of the man’s infections, which researchers found to be significantly different. The second strain was one that had been circulating in Europe when he was there. | The proof lay in the genome sequencing of the virus from both of the man’s infections, which researchers found to be significantly different. The second strain was one that had been circulating in Europe when he was there. |
The theoretical possibility of reinfection does not come as a surprise. “We expected that the immunity to the coronavirus might last less than a year because that’s how it is with common cold coronaviruses,” Apoorva Mandavilli, a Times science reporter, told us. | The theoretical possibility of reinfection does not come as a surprise. “We expected that the immunity to the coronavirus might last less than a year because that’s how it is with common cold coronaviruses,” Apoorva Mandavilli, a Times science reporter, told us. |
The man experienced mild symptoms the first time he had Covid-19 but had none the second time — an encouraging sign, and very likely an indication that his immune system had been trained by the initial infection. | The man experienced mild symptoms the first time he had Covid-19 but had none the second time — an encouraging sign, and very likely an indication that his immune system had been trained by the initial infection. |
If the research is buttressed by subsequent cases, it will underline the need for a comprehensive vaccine. “We can’t just get to herd immunity the natural way because only vaccines may be able to produce the kind of immune response that can prevent reinfection,” Apoorva said. | If the research is buttressed by subsequent cases, it will underline the need for a comprehensive vaccine. “We can’t just get to herd immunity the natural way because only vaccines may be able to produce the kind of immune response that can prevent reinfection,” Apoorva said. |
Forget antibody tests. Many of the current ones are inaccurate, some look for the wrong antibodies and even the right antibodies can disappear, experts at the Infectious Diseases Society of America have advised. And because antibody tests can’t tell you if you’re immune to subsequent infections, they’re useless in deciding whether to ease up on mask-wearing and other social-distancing precautions. | Forget antibody tests. Many of the current ones are inaccurate, some look for the wrong antibodies and even the right antibodies can disappear, experts at the Infectious Diseases Society of America have advised. And because antibody tests can’t tell you if you’re immune to subsequent infections, they’re useless in deciding whether to ease up on mask-wearing and other social-distancing precautions. |
As the United States struggles to contain the pandemic and the European Union faces a fresh wave of cases, life in many parts of China is more or less back to normal. | As the United States struggles to contain the pandemic and the European Union faces a fresh wave of cases, life in many parts of China is more or less back to normal. |
Schools and movie theaters have reopened, cities are hosting large events, social distancing and masks rules have been relaxed, and people are resuming their old habits and routines — with some modifications. | Schools and movie theaters have reopened, cities are hosting large events, social distancing and masks rules have been relaxed, and people are resuming their old habits and routines — with some modifications. |
It’s a sharp departure from the early days of the outbreak when China was the epicenter of the virus and anxiety gripped the country. The authoritarian government instituted a strict lockdown that successfully curbed cases, and now local transmission rates are near zero. The total number of confirmed cases in the country is 84,951, with at least 4,634 deaths from the virus. In the United States, nearly 5.7 million people have been infected and at least 176,200 have died. | It’s a sharp departure from the early days of the outbreak when China was the epicenter of the virus and anxiety gripped the country. The authoritarian government instituted a strict lockdown that successfully curbed cases, and now local transmission rates are near zero. The total number of confirmed cases in the country is 84,951, with at least 4,634 deaths from the virus. In the United States, nearly 5.7 million people have been infected and at least 176,200 have died. |
Experts warn that China could still face a resurgence, and many are worried that the public isn’t taking the virus seriously enough. Still, many are just glad to be returning to something resembling normal life. | Experts warn that China could still face a resurgence, and many are worried that the public isn’t taking the virus seriously enough. Still, many are just glad to be returning to something resembling normal life. |
Yuki Liu, a 28-year-old who works at a foreign trading company, attended a crowded pool party rave in Wuhan this month where she said she felt “relaxed and free.” | Yuki Liu, a 28-year-old who works at a foreign trading company, attended a crowded pool party rave in Wuhan this month where she said she felt “relaxed and free.” |
“To be honest, I almost forgot about the epidemic,” she said. | “To be honest, I almost forgot about the epidemic,” she said. |
In France, dozens of virus cases have been linked to a nudist camp in the southern resort town of Le Cap d’Agde. | |
The lockdown in Auckland, New Zealand’s largest city, has been extended until Sunday night as the number of cases rose to 101. | |
Officials in Connecticut have issued a public health warning in the city of Danbury, urging residents to stay home when possible and to limit gathering after new cases jumped severely in the first 20 days of August. | |
In Italy, a pandemic rule intended to stop crowding in nightclubs and the spread of the virus among young people is forcing outdoor dance halls to close, a central part of life for the older generation. | |
Here’s a roundup of restrictions in all 50 states. | Here’s a roundup of restrictions in all 50 states. |
The Food and Drug Administration has given emergency approval for expanded use of blood plasma to treat Covid-19 patients, allowing President Trump to claim progress on the virus just before the Republican convention begins. | |
The video call service Zoom reported partial outages, causing problems for many schools in the United States. | |
Europe limited mass job losses for a few months, but now a wave of layoffs is coming anyway. | |
The Trump administration tied billions of dollars in coronavirus medical funding to hospitals’ cooperation with a private vendor collecting data for a Covid-19 database that bypassed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. | |
Usain Bolt, the Olympic runner, will quarantine while awaiting results from a coronavirus test after photos surfaced of him at a surprise birthday party. | |
The pandemic could be threatening the accuracy of the U.S. census, experts warn, with more than a third of the people hired to tally the population having quit or failed to show up. | |
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. |
Sign up here to get the briefing by email. | Sign up here to get the briefing by email. |