Saturday, 12 Oct 2024

Coronavirus Briefing: What Happened Today

This is the Coronavirus Briefing, an informed guide to the pandemic. Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.

The U.S. virus death toll surpassed 375,000.

Indonesia authorized emergency use of a Covid-19 vaccine made by the Chinese company Sinovac.

President-elect Joe Biden received his second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine.

Get the latest updates here, as well as maps and vaccines in development.

The Biden pandemic plan

President-elect Joe Biden will assume the presidency in nine days, and with it the responsibility of fighting a raging pandemic that is killing more than 3,000 Americans a day.

Democrats have also won control of the Senate and narrowly preserved their majority in the House of Representatives. My colleague Abby Goodnough, who covers health care for The Times, told me that controlling the White House and both chambers of Congress will unlock fresh options as Mr. Biden battles the pandemic.

“He has some really ambitious ideas, and he now has, presumably, a willing Congress to go along and support him in carrying out these ideas,” Abby said. “Now we’re going to see if his vision turns out to be better than Trump’s and the Republicans’ vision and methods for approaching the pandemic.”

Mr. Biden has said he wants 100 million vaccines administered in his first 100 days in office — a plan that includes the creation of federally run mass vaccination sites across the country. He has also pledged to push a new stimulus package through Congress to provide relief for struggling Americans, businesses, local governments and schools that “will be in the trillions of dollars.”

With the Democrats in control, Abby said, Mr. Biden also has a chance to make moves on health care. Big structural changes like “Medicare for all” or a public option face a tough road, but Democrats could make improvements to the Affordable Care Act that could bring immediate benefits in the coronavirus effort.

“Getting more people on health insurance,” Abby said, “could go a lot further to preventing people from getting Covid by keeping their pre-existing conditions in check, and for paying for the ongoing effects of Covid for some of these long-haulers.”

Mr. Biden has said he wants to invoke the Defense Production Act so that American companies will be obliged to increase their production of vaccine-related materials. He wants to reopen schools — though his political allies in the teachers’ unions will have something to say on that matter — and he has asked that every American wear a mask for the first 100 days of his presidency. With fewer health care workers getting the vaccine than expected, public health officers have told Abby that they are also hoping the new president will address vaccine hesitancy.

“There’s a feeling that if Biden gives an address from the Oval Office about the safety data behind the vaccines, and really reinforces that this vaccine is safe and effective, we could see more uptake,” Abby said. “That’s something that he could do that would be vastly different from the current administration.”

A surge in Washington, D.C.

Even before rioters tore through the Capitol building last week, Washington was already experiencing an increase in coronavirus cases, which has since become worse.

Last week, Washington averaged 290 cases a day, the most of any weeklong stretch of the pandemic, part of a broader surge throughout the Mid-Atlantic region. Delaware, Maryland and Virginia also set weekly records for new cases yesterday.

Washington was walloped by the virus in the spring but kept its numbers relatively low into the beginning of October, when it was averaging fewer than 40 cases a day. Cases then surged for two months, and, after a Christmas lull, began to tick up again in January.

As we reported last week, the riot in the Capitol has the potential to become a superspreader event. On Monday, Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman, Democrat of New Jersey, said she had been infected with the coronavirus after being in lockdown at the Capitol.

“Following the events of Wednesday, including sheltering with several colleagues who refused to wear masks, I decided to take a Covid test,” she wrote. “I have tested positive.”

Resurgences

China is experiencing its worst coronavirus flare-up in months. Officials reported 85 new locally transmitted infections today, mostly in the northern province of Hebei.

In Britain, the government’s chief medical officer said that the health care system was facing “the worst weeks of this pandemic,” adding that hospitalizations in England had already far surpassed the peak in the spring.

In the U.S., which is averaging a quarter of a million new cases a day, nearly nine million people have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, far fewer than hoped.

Here’s a roundup of restrictions in all 50 states.

What else we’re following

New York began giving vaccines to residents 75 and older as well as a wider range of essential workers.

The Palestinian Authority has given emergency authorization to Russia’s Sputnik V Covid-19 vaccine.

Chicago began reopening its public schools, over strong objections from teachers about safety.

China authorized a World Health Organization team of experts to enter the country to investigate the origins of the pandemic, The Guardian reports.

Two gorillas at the San Diego Zoo have tested positive for the virus, a striking sign of the virus’s spread in California.

What you’re doing

I am a retired teacher and have continued to help fulfill the great need for substitute teachers in the public schools in my area. I generally sub four to five days a week and have filled a wide variety of positions. I always take my juggling balls with me and use my skills to motivate, entertain, amaze and inspire students. I talk to them about the ups and downs of life and encourage them to reach out to others! I have juggled for thousands of students in 31 different schools since September. Many times the kids ask me if I was a clown in a circus!

— David Hiteshew, Franklin, Ohio

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