Hello! It is once again Friday, which means I’m going to attempt to do my very best to give you a snapshot of some (read: a fraction) of the best stories from the week amid a flood of them.
But first! Take yourself on this journey about how the most (that gray blob with stone-like texture and red crowns and colored flecks) was made. Sometimes when the government is creating informational illustrations it focuses on the vector or the symptoms, but for this coronavirus the CDC’s Alissa Eckert and Dan Higgins went with what’s called a “beauty shot.” It’s a very cool read!
All right, here we go:
The confirmed number of confirmed cases globally ticked past this week in a grim milestone that experts still say represents only a percentage of the actual cases out there. The U.S. had recorded over as of press time, with more than 6,500 deaths.
President Donald Trump to help manufacturers secure supplies needed to make ventilators and protective face masks, but is it too little, too late? New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, whose state has become the epicenter of the nation’s outbreak, said on Thursday it will in less than a week. Meanwhile, FEMA said that most of the ventilators Trump promised to obtain won’t be .
Governors are distraught over their , likening the process of requesting the equipment to eBay auctions. 鈥淵ou now literally will have a company call you up and say, 鈥榃ell, California just outbid you,鈥” Cuomo said.
Another roadblock is that in the national stockpile are unusable because of a lapse in a contract that left a monthslong gap, during which the machines weren’t being properly maintained.
In the meantime, General Motors has shrugged off Trump’s attacks on the company (he said GM and its chief executive were dragging their feet on the project) and are moving full-throttle ahead at producing the needed equipment. 鈥淓very ventilator is a life,” said one GM exec.
With so much focus on ventilators, doctors are being advised on how to ration care and being told that they’ll be supported in their decisions .
One quick note on that front: New York lawmakers are moving on legislation that would grant sweeping civil- and criminal-liability protections to hospitals and health care workers dealing with coronavirus patients.
And even though there’s a ton of attention on ventilators, the survival rate of any patient who requires one is only 20% 鈥 meaning that even without a shortage, they
In other important news on the preparedness front:
Trump ahead and that people should be braced for a “bad two weeks,” with the White House projecting that the death toll could be somewhere between 100,000 to 240,000. For what it’s worth, disease forecasters over where the task force got those numbers, mostly because we don’t yet know enough about the virus.
(What helped change Trump’s mind, considering he’d previously mused that the country could return to normal in time to fill the pews on Easter? .)
To help states deal with the crisis, for hospitals, giving them unprecedented flexibility. The changes include what counts as a hospital bed, how closely certain medical professionals need to be supervised and what kinds of health care can be delivered at home.
The administration decided not to follow suit after a handful of states reopened their exchanges, though Trump seemed to hint that the possibility was still on the table “.” Also, to note, if people have lost their insurance because of their jobs, that counts as a qualifying event and they have 60 days to enroll in the federal exchanges, regardless of what Trump does with a special session.
And although Drs. Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx, along with Vice President Mike Pence, have emerged as the leading voices of the administration’s pandemic response, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner has taken charge behind the scenes. Critics say its adding confusion to .
And reports continue to emerge that the Trump administration was in China just months before the outbreak.
In other news on the administration:
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi will be creating a special committee to oversee the implementation of the $2.2 trillion stimulus package and any other coronavirus legislation coming down the pike. “Where there’s money there’s also frequently mischief,” Pelosi said, in perhaps one of my favorite quotes of the week. Meanwhile, , but . At the very least, they say, they want to see how the current stimulus package plays out.
The news came the same day as it was reported that filed for unemployment benefits. That eye-popping number blows past all previous records. And experts say it represents only a the virus is wreaking on the country. There are many affected Americans who remain uncounted 鈥 some have lost jobs or income and did not initially qualify for benefits, and others, encountering state unemployment offices that were overwhelmed by the deluge of claimants, were unsuccessful in filing.
In other news about Congress and the economic damage from the outbreak:
The Democratic National Convention, expected to draw as many as 50,000 visitors, in one of the largest disruptions to the 2020 elections so far. On the other hand, Wisconsin is going ahead with its primary on Tuesday, which is causing mixed reactions … including .
More stories on elections:
Much focus this week was on serology tests that serve the dual purpose of finding Americans who can safely return to some normalcy and helping researchers find treatments for COVID-19. Experts are fairly unified on the fact that to get the country back into operation, we need a way to identify those who are now immune to the disease. And using plasma collected from recovered patients is a century-old practice (which, to be clear, has had mixed results in past diseases).
Beyond studies on actually treating the coronavirus illness ( showed a much-touted malaria drug combo had positive results), doctors are also trying to figure out known as “cytokine storm,” in which the body’s own immune system attacks its organs. This is thought to be the cause of some of the severe cases seen in younger patients.
On a side note, the Food and Drug Administration on Sunday issued an emergency-use authorization for hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine, despite scant evidence that they work against COVID-19.
With to issue the stay-at-home order, the vast majority of Americans are now huddled at home. The good news is that the extreme measures seem to be working in California, which was an earlier disciple of flattening the curve.
the government a report on “mobility data” to help states recognize where social-distancing measures are failing, with a specific focus on how foot traffic has increased or declined to six categories of destinations: homes; workplaces; retail and recreation establishments; parks; grocery stores and pharmacies; and transit stations.
Although things might seem a bit grim right now because of these measures, a look at data from the 1918 flu pandemic shows cities that locked down emerged from the crisis stronger economically than those that didn’t. One caveat, though: Because working-age people were harder hit by the 1918 flu (and the coronavirus strikes worse among older generations), any comparisons might not hold.
So, onto some of the stories I find most fascinating … aka the science behind all of this.
I’m going to cut this off here, or else this will no longer be able to be called the Breeze. If you want a more comprehensive roundup, please check out the Morning Briefings from the week, which are chock-full of more stories than you could ever finish reading. Including ones on workers’ protests and the supply chain; the gun store debate; how jails are “ticking time bombs;” ; snapshots from a New York in crisis; health disparities; and a call to arms for medical workers that doesn’t guarantee coverage of potential hospital bills.
Please have a safe and restful weekend, if possible!