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Coronavirus digest: US death toll surpasses 250,000

November 18, 2020

The US has become the first country to pass a quarter of a million deaths related to the novel coronavirus. Deaths continue to rise as regulatory approval for vaccine nears. Follow DW for the latest.

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Medical staff wheel a patient on a gurney into a hospital in Albuquerque, New Mexico
Image: Leila Navidi/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS/picture alliance

Over 250,000 people have died in connection with COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic, according a tally by Johns Hopkins University. The US leads the world in the number of total deaths and on Wednesday became the first country to pass the quarter-million mark. On the same day, the country reported its highest single-day death toll since May.

The US last week surpassed 11 million total infections, just eight days after reaching the 10 million threshold. The case load and deaths make it the hardest-hit country on the planet.

New York City mayor, Bill de Blasio announced the temporary closure of schools from Thursday in an attempt to curtail rising coronavirus cases. The more than 1 million students in the city — the biggest school system in the US — will be taught entirely online.

Americas

United States: In other virus-related news from the US, regulatory approval for vaccines may be weeks away, according to drugmakers and US authorities.

BioNTech Chief Executive Ugur Sahin told Reuters TV that the US Food and Drug Administration could grant emergency-use approval for its vaccine candidate towards the end of the first half of December or early in the second half, while conditional approval in the European Union could be secured in the second half of December.

"If all goes well I could imagine that we gain approval in the second half of December and start deliveries before Christmas, but really only if all goes positively," he said.

The German drugmaker announced in a joint statement with Pfizer today that its vaccine is 95% effective and there are "no safety concerns."

Separately, US Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said Pfizer Inc's and Moderna Inc's COVID-19 vaccine candidates could be ready for US authorization and distribution within weeks, in comments during a press call.

Read moreAustralia’s coronavirus vaccine shows promise in initial testing

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The Food and Drug Administration has approved the country's first rapid test that can be administered entirely at home and yield results in 30 minutes. The FDA granted the emergency authorization to a single-use test kit from California manufacturer Lucira Health that has users swab themselves for a nasal sample. The sample is then swirled in a laboratory solution that plugs into a portable device for results.

In addition to recent promising news about COVID-19 vaccines out of Germany and the US, testing is still seen as a key way to help bring the coronavirus pandemic under control.

In lighter news, country singer Dolly Parton has been celebrated in a rewritten version of her own "Jolene" for her $1 million contribution to the development of the Moderna vaccine candidate.

Asia/Oceania

South Korea: The authorities in South Korea registered the largest daily increase in coronavirus infections in three months. Korean health officials reported 313 new infections Wednesday, bringing its total number of infections to 29,311, with 496 deaths. The daily count has now been above 200 for five straight days and it is the first time single-day figures have surpassed 300 since August.

The country has struggled to contain new infections stemming from offices, medical facilities and small gatherings. Authorities on Tuesday moved to tighten social distancing rules in the greater Seoul area.

Read moreSouth Koreans offer world lessons on how to tame coronavirus

Japan: Tokyo is reportedly set to raise its coronavirus alert level to the highest of four levels after logging a record 493 coronavirus cases in one day. Authorities in the Japanese capital are considering asking businesses to curtail hours as part of the move, according to the Nikkei business daily.

China: Authorities are increasing testing of frozen foods after repeated instances of the coronavirus on imported products and their packaging. The country has suspended imports from 99 suppliers in 20 countries, arguing it needs the measures to prevent more cases of the virus from arriving in the country. 

Earlier this month, Chinese authorities said pork imported from the German port city of Bremen had infected an employee at a cold storage facility. Experts in Germany cast doubt on the claim.

The UN food and agriculture agency (FAO) has said it does not see food production in supplier countries as a source of the coronavirus. The FAO's chief economist, Maximo Torero Cullen, said Wednesday there is no significant evidence of the virus spreading through food trade and reports saying so "need to be minimized." China nevertheless has defended its increased controls as "reasonable and justifiable" measures to protect public health, foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said. 

China Wuhan Market
COVID-19 is believed to have emerged from a wet market in the Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019Image: Stephen Shaver/newscom/picture alliance

Australia: South Australia announced a six-day lockdown after a coronavirus outbreak in the state expanded to 22 cases.

As of midnight, wide-ranging restrictions will be imposed on homes and businesses. Schools, universities, bars and cafes are to shut, and only one person will be allowed to leave home each day and only for a specific reason. Outdoor exercise is also banned and masks are now mandatory.

Premier Steven Marshall said the measures were intended as a "circuit breaker" to bring the virus under control.

"As of midnight tonight we need our community to pause for six days," he told reporters in Adelaide. "A series of wide-ranging restrictions will be implemented to stop the spread, to stamp out this virus."

Marshall said that despite a modest caseload, "we are going hard and we are going early" in a bid to contain the mini-outbreak. Authorities believe the strain identified has a short incubation period and often limited symptoms, increasing the risk of it spreading rapidly and unnoticed

Europe

Switzerland: A top medical association says intensive care units are at their limits as the country battles a second wave of COVID-19 infections. The Swiss Society for Intensive Care Medicine (SSMI) warned the 876 ICU beds it certifies across the country "are practically all full." More beds have since been added and the Swiss military has been called in for support in several cantons.

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The SSMI said it was essential to postpone non-urgent medical procedures to avoid overwhelming hospitals, and urged citizens to draft directives on whether they wish to receive prolonged life-support should they fall critically ill. 

Switzerland reported more than 6,000 new infections on Wednesday, bringing its total number of cases to nearly 280,000. It logged 84 new deaths for a total of 3,377 since the pandemic began.

Germany: 17,561 new coronavirus cases were reported on Wednesday, bringing the total number of infections to 833,307. The Robert Koch Institute said the death toll in the country rose by 305 to 13,119. 

The latest infection figures are a slight drop from the same day last week, when Germany reported 18,487 cases. Daily case numbers have plateaued somewhat in recent days, albeit at a level far higher than the government deems acceptable in most of the country.

Germany passed new legislation, strengthening its ability to enforce coronavirus regulations.

Read more: Police break up large Berlin protests as Germany passes tougher coronavirus laws

France: Total infections have topped 2 million, the fourth-highest total in the world. The country reported a further 437 deaths, bringing its overall tally to 46,723. There were 28,283 new cases reported in the past 24 hours, down from more than 45,000 on Tuesday. 

Director General of Health Jerome Salomon warned that the situation remained serious with 33,500 people currently hospitalized, but said "collective efforts are starting to bear fruit" since France entered a nationwide lockdown that is set to run until December 1.

Authorities warned that they are unlikely to lift a partial coronavirus lockdown any time soon.

Africa

Across Africa, total coronavirus infections surpassed 2 million cases on Wednesday, according to a Reuters tally. 

The continent represents fewer than 4% of the world's reported cases, though many experts believe cases are heavily undercounted.

ab,aw,dr/rs (AP, dpa, Reuters, AFP)