
Street art that reads, "200,000+ Covid-19 deaths" near an "It is what t is" quote by President Donald Trump is displayed on a wall in Park Slope as the city continues Phase 4 of re-opening following restrictions imposed to slow the spread of coronavirus on September 29, 2020 in New York City. (Photo: Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images)
Despite "It's Going Away" Lies From Trump, US Breaks Coronavirus Infection Record Just 11 Days Before Election
77,640 new Covid-19 cases were reported on Thursday.
With Election Day a mere 11 days out--and after repeated claims by President Donald Trump the nation is "rounding the corner" on the virus--the number of coronavirus cases the United States has now set a new record high.
According to NBC News's tally, 77,640 new Covid-19 cases were reported on Thursday, breaking the previous record high 75,723 set in July.
NBC's tracker now puts the nation's death toll from the coronavirus at 224,185 and the number of confirmed cases of the disease at 8,449,855.
The Covid Tracking Project, in its latest assessment, put the death toll from Thursday at 1,038, the highest single day toll since late September.
Trump, however, continues to downplay the severity of the disease and the mounting number of cases and death toll and reject science-backed measures to stop its spread. He has doubled down on his distrastrous repsonse, saying Wednesday there is "not much" he would do differently.
Thursday evening, during the final presidential debate, Trump again defied evidence and falsely claimed again of the coronavirus, "We are rounding the corner. It's going away."
The president's comments during the debate came just a day after Jay Butler, deputy director for infectious diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lamented, "Unfortunately, we're seeing a distressing trend here in the United States, with Covid-19 cases increasing in nearly 75% of the country."
That trend is poised to continue. CNN reported this week:
As cold weather is likely to drive more gatherings indoors, the case level appears too high to avoid dangerous levels of infections and hospitalizations in the coming weeks, experts have said.
"(With) the fact that we're only going to see more transmission occur with indoor air, people inside, this is going to be a rough fall," Michael Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, told CNN on Tuesday.
That's especially worrying given that hospitals are already overwhelmed with Covid-19 patients, a situation forcing some states like Wisconsin to open a field hospital--a step officials in Utah are standing ready to take as well.
"More than 41,000 people are currently hospitalized with the coronavirus in the United States, a 40 percent rise in the past month," the New York Times reported Friday, adding that "the sharply rising numbers now are deeply worrisome, in part, because they are testing the limits of smaller hospital systems." According to the Times,
Patients are now spread more broadly across the country, with troubling hot spots from North Dakota to Kentucky. More people than ever are falling critically ill in rural areas, particularly in the Midwest and the Mountain West, where they must rely on hospitals that may have only a handful of beds. And experts worry that the growing numbers in need of hospital care will only get worse if cases continue to mount.
Dr. Ezekiel J. Emanuel, a professor of health policy and medical ethics at the University of Pennsylvania and co-author of a newly released study comparing Covid-19 death figures in the U.S. to those of 18 other countries, put the American response in blunt terms.
"It's shocking. It's horrible," he told NPR.
"The United States really has done remarkably badly compared to other countries," Emanuel told NPR. "I mean, remarkably badly."
Urgent. It's never been this bad.
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With Election Day a mere 11 days out--and after repeated claims by President Donald Trump the nation is "rounding the corner" on the virus--the number of coronavirus cases the United States has now set a new record high.
According to NBC News's tally, 77,640 new Covid-19 cases were reported on Thursday, breaking the previous record high 75,723 set in July.
NBC's tracker now puts the nation's death toll from the coronavirus at 224,185 and the number of confirmed cases of the disease at 8,449,855.
The Covid Tracking Project, in its latest assessment, put the death toll from Thursday at 1,038, the highest single day toll since late September.
Trump, however, continues to downplay the severity of the disease and the mounting number of cases and death toll and reject science-backed measures to stop its spread. He has doubled down on his distrastrous repsonse, saying Wednesday there is "not much" he would do differently.
Thursday evening, during the final presidential debate, Trump again defied evidence and falsely claimed again of the coronavirus, "We are rounding the corner. It's going away."
The president's comments during the debate came just a day after Jay Butler, deputy director for infectious diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lamented, "Unfortunately, we're seeing a distressing trend here in the United States, with Covid-19 cases increasing in nearly 75% of the country."
That trend is poised to continue. CNN reported this week:
As cold weather is likely to drive more gatherings indoors, the case level appears too high to avoid dangerous levels of infections and hospitalizations in the coming weeks, experts have said.
"(With) the fact that we're only going to see more transmission occur with indoor air, people inside, this is going to be a rough fall," Michael Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, told CNN on Tuesday.
That's especially worrying given that hospitals are already overwhelmed with Covid-19 patients, a situation forcing some states like Wisconsin to open a field hospital--a step officials in Utah are standing ready to take as well.
"More than 41,000 people are currently hospitalized with the coronavirus in the United States, a 40 percent rise in the past month," the New York Times reported Friday, adding that "the sharply rising numbers now are deeply worrisome, in part, because they are testing the limits of smaller hospital systems." According to the Times,
Patients are now spread more broadly across the country, with troubling hot spots from North Dakota to Kentucky. More people than ever are falling critically ill in rural areas, particularly in the Midwest and the Mountain West, where they must rely on hospitals that may have only a handful of beds. And experts worry that the growing numbers in need of hospital care will only get worse if cases continue to mount.
Dr. Ezekiel J. Emanuel, a professor of health policy and medical ethics at the University of Pennsylvania and co-author of a newly released study comparing Covid-19 death figures in the U.S. to those of 18 other countries, put the American response in blunt terms.
"It's shocking. It's horrible," he told NPR.
"The United States really has done remarkably badly compared to other countries," Emanuel told NPR. "I mean, remarkably badly."
With Election Day a mere 11 days out--and after repeated claims by President Donald Trump the nation is "rounding the corner" on the virus--the number of coronavirus cases the United States has now set a new record high.
According to NBC News's tally, 77,640 new Covid-19 cases were reported on Thursday, breaking the previous record high 75,723 set in July.
NBC's tracker now puts the nation's death toll from the coronavirus at 224,185 and the number of confirmed cases of the disease at 8,449,855.
The Covid Tracking Project, in its latest assessment, put the death toll from Thursday at 1,038, the highest single day toll since late September.
Trump, however, continues to downplay the severity of the disease and the mounting number of cases and death toll and reject science-backed measures to stop its spread. He has doubled down on his distrastrous repsonse, saying Wednesday there is "not much" he would do differently.
Thursday evening, during the final presidential debate, Trump again defied evidence and falsely claimed again of the coronavirus, "We are rounding the corner. It's going away."
The president's comments during the debate came just a day after Jay Butler, deputy director for infectious diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lamented, "Unfortunately, we're seeing a distressing trend here in the United States, with Covid-19 cases increasing in nearly 75% of the country."
That trend is poised to continue. CNN reported this week:
As cold weather is likely to drive more gatherings indoors, the case level appears too high to avoid dangerous levels of infections and hospitalizations in the coming weeks, experts have said.
"(With) the fact that we're only going to see more transmission occur with indoor air, people inside, this is going to be a rough fall," Michael Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, told CNN on Tuesday.
That's especially worrying given that hospitals are already overwhelmed with Covid-19 patients, a situation forcing some states like Wisconsin to open a field hospital--a step officials in Utah are standing ready to take as well.
"More than 41,000 people are currently hospitalized with the coronavirus in the United States, a 40 percent rise in the past month," the New York Times reported Friday, adding that "the sharply rising numbers now are deeply worrisome, in part, because they are testing the limits of smaller hospital systems." According to the Times,
Patients are now spread more broadly across the country, with troubling hot spots from North Dakota to Kentucky. More people than ever are falling critically ill in rural areas, particularly in the Midwest and the Mountain West, where they must rely on hospitals that may have only a handful of beds. And experts worry that the growing numbers in need of hospital care will only get worse if cases continue to mount.
Dr. Ezekiel J. Emanuel, a professor of health policy and medical ethics at the University of Pennsylvania and co-author of a newly released study comparing Covid-19 death figures in the U.S. to those of 18 other countries, put the American response in blunt terms.
"It's shocking. It's horrible," he told NPR.
"The United States really has done remarkably badly compared to other countries," Emanuel told NPR. "I mean, remarkably badly."

