Category: Corona Virus

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The Strange Success of the Coronavirus Conventions – The New York Times

August 29, 2020

The faces flicker across our screens, making a pitch in speech and song to voters who may or may not be listening. To document the national political conventions in this pandemic year, Damon Winter went into ordinary peoples homes in upstate New York and projected images from the live broadcasts across bedrooms, living rooms, kitchens, basements wherever the residents typically watch or listen to the news. The photographs he took of these projections capture the strangeness of this years conventions, and how dramatically they differed from the events in a typical year.

Forced by Covid-19 to hold virtual events, the conventions downsized from arena-scale spectacles to meet the way we watch now: on living-room screens and browsers and smartphones, perpetually distracted and multitasking, quickly moved and easily enraged.

In doing so, both parties, to varying degrees, pulled off something that they had tried and failed to do ever since the conventions were first broadcast on the radio in 1924, and on television in 1948. It took nearly 100 years and a global pandemic, but the conventions messages finally matched the medium.

Change was overdue, for the placard-waving and speechifying format had changed little since the first conventions were held in the 1830s. Then, these gatherings were thrilling and consequential, essentially telescoping the entire modern presidential selection process from straw polls to caucuses to primaries to nomination into three or four days of raucous debate and furious backroom dealings. Conventions began with a crowd of candidates vying for the prize, and it usually took multiple ballots and an occasional all-nighter to reach a decision. In 1924, it took the Democrats 103 rounds of voting to settle on a nominee.

This made for irresistible political theater, so radio networks began exhaustive convention coverage. But broadcasting the conventions meant that the gatherings had two, not always compatible purposes: rally the faithful, and sell the candidate to the wider electorate.

When television took over in the 1950s, the conventions shouting, cavernous atmosphere was a mismatch to televisions intimate scale. And after 1970s-era party reforms assured that the nominee would nearly always be known before the convention, their drama disappeared. Modern conventions minted new political stars and produced some memorable television moments, yet they rarely changed minds or decided elections. Conventions are nothing but infomercials, critics grumbled, high on flash and empty of substance.

The 2020 conventions actually were infomercials, but strangely effective ones. They reflected the odd mashup of our current media moment, and more clearly communicated the essence of each party and its nominee than the traditional convention format.

First up came the Democrats. Television celebrities mixed with social media celebrities. Democratic stalwarts blended with disaffected Republicans. Gorgeously shot film clips contrasted with low-fi, gloriously earnest state roll calls. Traditional speeches were rare enough to make the viewer take notice. It was a Facebook-era convention, its pieces tidily packaged to go viral.

Freed from the convention hall, the Democrats staged moments that recalled some of the modern eras most powerful pieces of televised political theater. Michelle Obamas emotional exhortation to act and vote recalled the similarly intimate Checkers speech Richard Nixon delivered in the earliest days of network television, a personal talk that saved his vice presidential spot on the 1952 Republican ticket.

The sparse, quiet audiences before Kamala Harris and Joe Biden had the feel of the rapt group sitting before Ronald Reagan in 1964 as he delivered a televised address in support of Barry Goldwater that turned the actor into a conservative political star. And like the best scripted television, the event was character-driven, telling the story of a son of Scranton named Joe Biden, a good guy wholl protect you from the bad.

Republicans made Donald Trump the good-guy protagonist in this weeks television drama. It was to be expected that a seasoned reality star would pull out all the best hooks of the genre in his partys nominating convention: surprise appearances, plot twists, and the elevation of ordinary folks to celebrity status. No shock, either, that its nightly episodes brimmed with praise for the president.

More surprising was how much the G.O.P. stuck to the classics. Speaker after speaker appeared behind a podium sometimes prerecorded, often without a crowd. The red-meat messaging recalled past G.O.P. convention moments: Herbert Hoover decrying the collectivism of the New Deal in 1936, Nixon vowing to uphold law and order in 1968, Patrick Buchanans fiery exhortation to take back our culture in 1992.

President Trump also followed his predecessors in leaning into the advantages of incumbency, his convention rarely straying from monumental government settings. In the nineteenth century, incumbent presidents rarely engaged in campaigning and ran so-called Rose Garden campaigns by sticking to their official White House duties.

Trump went further, bringing the campaigning into the White House itself, culminating in his 70-minute acceptance speech on the South Lawn and a fireworks display blazing Trump on the National Mall.

With few masks in sight, Trump and his party as thoroughly dismissed the ongoing Covid-19 crisis as Herbert Hoover and the G.O.P. sidestepped mention of the Great Depression at their convention in 1932.

Yet the pandemic persists. So do many other things that pulled voter attention away from the conventions and back to real life. Brutality in Kenosha. The South awash in a hurricane and California on fire. The missed rent checks, the lost jobs, the closed schools.

With all these worries, will Americans even remember these images that flickered into our homes over the last two weeks? What else might happen to change our minds or alter our sense of political possibility? We wait and see, as we always have, one eye on the screen, the other on the future.

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The Strange Success of the Coronavirus Conventions - The New York Times

New California Coronavirus Guidelines Allow Movie Theaters In San Diego, San Francisco And Some Other Counties To Reopen – Deadline

August 29, 2020

Last week, California Gov. Gavin Newsom said he would release modified reopening guidelines for counties in the state of California.

On Friday, he made good on that promise, revealing a new framework with four tiers with colors attached to them to indicate severity.

The governor described the new framework as simple, stringent and slow.

Case rates and test positivity rates will be the metrics that will determine movement within the tiers which, in terms of severity run from purple to red to orange to yellow. See chart below.

Those color-coded tiers now determine whether movie theaters in the state may open or must stay closed. Eighty-seven percent of the states population currently lives in purple-coded counties.

San Diego and San Francisco both are rated Substantial risk, which means that they can open indoor theaters with these modifications: 25% capacity or 100 people, whichever is fewer.

Related StoryCalifornia Coronavirus Update: Governor Gavin Newsom Reveals Stricter, 'Slower' COVID-19 Reopening Guidelines For Businesses And Schools

As for sports, concerts and amusement parks, Newsom said, Were still maintaining our current states as it relates to those large events, those large sporting events.

From the states new guidelines:

Widespread (purple)Movie theaters: Outdoor only with modificationsFamily entertainment centers: Outdoor only with modifications for activities like kart racing, mini golf, batting cages

Substantial (red)Movie theaters: Indoor with modificationsCapacity must be limited to 25% or 100 people, whichever is lessFamily entertainment centers: Outdoor only with modifications for activities like kart racing, mini golf, batting cages

Moderate (orange)Movie theaters: Indoor with modificationsCapacity must be limited to 50% or 200 people, whichever is lessFamily entertainment centers:Outdoor with modifications for activities like kart racing, mini golf, batting cagesIndoor with modifications for naturally distanced activities, like bowling alleys and climbing wallsCapacity must be limited to 25%

Minimal (yellow)Movie theaters: Indoor with modificationsCapacity must be limited to 50%Family entertainment centers: Outdoor with modifications for activities like kart racing, mini golf, batting cagesIndoor with modifications for naturally distanced activities, like bowling alleys and climbing wallsIndoor with modifications for activities with increased risk of proximity and mixing, like arcade games, ice and roller skating, and indoor playgrounds

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New California Coronavirus Guidelines Allow Movie Theaters In San Diego, San Francisco And Some Other Counties To Reopen - Deadline

August 28 evening update: The latest on the coronavirus and Maine – Bangor Daily News

August 29, 2020

Another 22 coronavirus cases have been reported in Maine, health officials said Friday as a handful of college campuses where students are returning for the fall semester reported their first positive cases.

There have now been 4,436 cumulative coronavirus cases reported in Maine since the outbreak began here in March, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Thats up from 4,414 on Thursday.

Of those, 3,981 have been confirmed positive, while 455 were classified as probable cases, the Maine CDC reports.

On Friday, Bates College in Lewiston reported that a student had tested positive for the coronavirus, while the University of New England said a commuter student and employee at its Portland campus also tested positive.

In addition, an adjunct faculty member at the University of Maine at Farmington tested positive for COVID-19, making the campus the fourth one within the University of Maine System to have a positive test since students began moving back to campuses for the fall semester.

There are nine active cases across the system, with six at the flagship campus in Orono, one in Farmington, one at the University of Southern Maine, and one at the University of Maine School of Law in Portland. One University of Maine at Fort Kent student tested positive earlier this week, but has since been released from isolation.

The adjunct faculty member in Farmington was tested after returning to Maine from out of state through a primary care provider.

No new deaths were reported Friday, leaving the statewide death toll at 132. Nearly all deaths have been in Mainers over age 60.

So far, 417 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus. Of those, 10 people are currently hospitalized, with six in critical care and one on a ventilator.

Meanwhile, 40 more people have recovered from the coronavirus, bringing total recoveries to 3,887. That means there are 417 active and probable cases in the state, which is down from 435 on Thursday.

Heres the latest on the coronavirus and its impact on Maine.

A coronavirus outbreak at the York County Jail that has been linked with an Aug. 7 wedding in the Millinocket area has grown to 54 cases, the county sheriff said Friday. Matthew Stone, BDN

As part of its comprehensive efforts to provide for a return to high school sports competition this season, the Maine Principals Association has recommended numerous new guidelines to help ensure the safety of the athletes, coaches, game personnel, officials and spectators during the COVID-19 pandemic. BDN Sports

Maine is still giving schools in every county the green light to reopen in person, but that green light comes with a caveat in Penobscot and York counties due to recent outbreaks and increasing case numbers. Matthew Stone, BDN

The state has reinstated the eating and lodging license of the Katahdin-region inn that hosted an Aug. 7 wedding reception now connected to at least 123 cases of COVID-19, after briefly suspending it this week following repeat health violations. On Friday, the owner of the Big Moose Inn, Laurie Cormier, acknowledged some of the violations in her first public comments since the outbreak was announced last week. Charles Eichacker, BDN

A man accused of stealing N95 masks intended for emergency responders while working at Bangor City Hall in late March and early April was indicted Thursday by the Penobscot County grand jury on two counts of theft by unauthorized taking. Judy Harrison, BDN

When the wedding guests had their temperatures taken at the door, their readings were normal. Some people who came from out of state brought proof that they had tested negative for the coronavirus. But the guests didnt wear face coverings or stay socially distanced during the Aug. 7 reception inside an inn on Millinocket Lake, and the venues dining areas were packed with 25 to 30 more people than its license allowed. Thats according to a state health inspectors report that contains new details about what happened during the now-infamous gathering that has been linked to 87 cases of COVID-19 and one death in what has quickly become Maines most sprawling outbreak of the disease. Charles Eichacker, BDN

As of Friday evening, the coronavirus has sickened 5,906,615 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 181,579 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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August 28 evening update: The latest on the coronavirus and Maine - Bangor Daily News

More US jobs lost to coronavirus pandemic are disappearing permanently – Fox Business

August 29, 2020

LinkedIn data shows the most in demand jobs right now. Andrew Seaman of LinkedIn weighs in.

A growing number of jobs lost due to the coronavirus pandemic are disappearing forever.

Anew analysis of payroll data published by Gusto found that less than half of furloughed employees have returned to work since March, and often for less money than they were earning pre-crisis.

The findings showthat only 37% of workers furloughed in March, and 47% of those laid off in April, returned to their jobs as of July. A quarter of the workers furloughed in March who were re-hired and went back to their jobs had their wages slashed by 10% or more.

Just 14% of workers whoreturned to work are earningthe same amount of money thatthey were previously making.

TRUMP'S $400 UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFIT LIKELY JUST $300 FOR MOST AMERICANS

Of the millions of workers furloughed between March, when the COVID-19 outbreak triggered an unprecedented shutdown of the nation's economy, and June, 22% have been permanently laid-off.

The Labor Department's July jobs report released at the beginning of August showed thatemployers added 1.8 million jobs last month, sending the unemployment rate down to 10.2%.

While it markedthe third consecutive month of job growth in the millions,the economy has so faradded back less than half --about 42%-- of the 22 million jobs it lost during the pandemic. Permanent losses reached 2.9 million in July, the report showed.

Another 1 million Americans filed for jobless benefits last week, the agency said Thursday, markingthe 22nd time in 23 weeks that the number of workers seeking jobless benefits topped amillion.

TRUMP'S UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFIT MAY ONLY LAST 3 WEEKS

Workers are also growing pessimistic about their odds of returning to work:Nearly half of Americans whose families experienced a layoffduring thepandemic think thejobloss will be permanent which could mean that roughly 10 million workers need to find a newemployer,according toan Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll.

The renewed threat of permanentlayoffs is emerging just a few weeks after the extra $600 a week in employment benefits, part of the $2.2 trillion CARES Act passed in March, expired.

President Trump signed an executive action on Aug.8 partially restoring the federal aid at $300 a week. So far,34 stateshave been approved to offer the benefit. Only five have started to distribute it to laid-off workers.

The boosted aidwill last until the money in the fund runs out, or through Dec. 6, 2020, according to the executive memo. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budgetestimatesthe money will last for about five weeks.

The average state unemployment benefit is about$330 per week. With the federal supplement, Americans can expect to receive about $630in weekly unemployment benefits.

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More US jobs lost to coronavirus pandemic are disappearing permanently - Fox Business

Here’s why new cases of the coronavirus are down across most of the U.S. – CNBC

August 26, 2020

EMS medics with the Houston Fire Department move a patient with Covid-19 symptoms onto a stretcher before transporting him to a hospital on August 14, 2020 in Houston, Texas.

John Moore | Getty Images

White House coronavirus advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci warned members of Congress in late June that the U.S. might report more than 100,000 daily new cases of the virus "if this does not turn around."

But months later, Fauci's worst fears have not come to pass as daily new caseshave steadily fallen across much of the U.S. While testing has declined in recent weeks, the number of new cases is falling faster than testing rates, indicating that at least some of the drop is real.

Epidemiologists credit a more unified health message in the U.S. that has more people following social distancing rules. They also say that keeping some businesses closed has helped slow the outbreak. And President Donald Trump started endorsingmasks in late July, bringing the White House in line with recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention after months of resistance.

The number of daily new cases in the U.S. peaked on July 22 at about 70,000 new infections and have steadily fallen to about 42,600 per day, based on a seven-day average, according to a CNBC analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The percent of all tests coming back positive has also steadily fallen, from a high of 8.5% in late July to 6.2% this week, according to Hopkins data. That, along with the four weeks of sustained decline and the falling number of Covid-19 hospitalizations, has epidemiologists feeling more confident that the U.S. is finally getting a grip on its outbreak.

"The current plan wearing a mask, watching your distance, washing your hands, supplemented by smart testing, according to the state plans, surge testing and extreme technical assistance by CDC as well as our craft teams continues to yield results," Assistant Secretary for Health Adm. Brett Giroir told reporters on a conference call last week.

But the country remains in a delicate spot, according toepidemiologists from some of the hardest-hit states in the country Florida, Texas and Arizona.While new cases are falling by at least 5% in 31 states, they are still rising by at least as much in more than a dozen states, based on a seven-day average, according to Hopkins data.

In Texas, new cases are down from an average of about 10,400 on July 22 to about 5,500. While irregularities in the state data led some local health officials and epidemiologists to question the data,Catherine Troisi, an infectious disease epidemiologist at UTHealth School of Public Health in Houston, said the state data is "with a grain of salt, looking good."

She added that the Texas Gov. Greg Abbott'sJuly2 mask mandate "certainly" helped reduce the spread as well as the closing of bars, "because we know that those were spreading infection." Triosi, however, said that as the number of new cases continues to drop and as society reopens that people may experience "pandemic fatigue" and begin to disregard some guidelines.

"What we're really concerned about are schools opening, Labor Day weekend and pandemic fatigue,"she said. "We were all tired of this five months ago. Now we're really tired, so if people see the number of cases come down, they might think it's OK to do things that are a little bit riskier."

"I would not be surprised if we see an uptick after Labor Day," she added.

In Florida, the daily average number of new cases has fallen from about 11,100 on July 22 to about 3,900 this week. Cindy Prins, an epidemiologist at the University of Florida, attributed much of the drop to changing behavior across the state, prompted by news coverage and effective public health messaging.

"I think it kind of got to people that opening up didn't mean going back to normal," she said. "I think it got very much in the public eye that we weren't where we needed to be and that we had to take better control."

Prins echoed Troisi's concern that as new cases continue to fall, people might get comfortable and ease up on their commitment to the public health guidance.

"My concern is that we'll have people kind of falling away from this perception of threat as our cases decline and that we could wind up with a little bit of a roller coaster," she said.

However, she added that Florida and many other Sun Belt states hit hard by the virus this summer have an advantage over the northern parts of the country: comparatively warmer weather. Various studies have shown that the virus spreads more easily in crowded, indoor, poorly ventilated environments. Officials, including New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, have warned that colder weather could present a new challenge as outdoor dining and gatherings become more difficult.

Arizona has reported an average ofabout 650 new cases per day over the past week, down from about 2,750 on July 22, according to Hopkins data. Will Humble, executive director of the Arizona Public Health Association and former director of theArizonaDepartment of Health Services, attributed the drop to "three core things."

First, he said, Gov. Doug Ducey "finally" allowed towns, cities and counties to implement their own mask mandates in mid-June. Before that, Ducey had prevented local officials from implementing their own face mask requirements.

"We definitely know that was a huge factor," Humble said.

He added that the following week, Ducey ordered the closure of bars and nightclubs, which he said was another major cause in reversing the direction of the outbreak.

The third factor that could be driving the drop is that enough of the population might have been infected earlier in the outbreak, giving the virus "a harder time finding new hosts," he said. Particularly hard-hit parts of Arizona might be benefiting from some level of herd immunity, he said, adding that not nearly enough of the population has been infected to actually halt the spread of the virus.

"Arizona adopted the Swedish model," he said. "We threw our hands up and said, 'alright, let's get it.' That's what happened. And we did it. And a lot of people died. And a lot of people recovered. And those people are now protected."

Humble added that he's nervous about the weeks and months ahead, both for the country and for Arizona. He said that under the governor's plan, bars and nightclubs could reopen as soon as this week in some communities. But he said he's not satisfied with the state's plan to ensure compliance with capacity restrictions and other requirements.

He said that if bars and clubs reopen without a proper enforcement mechanism, it could lead to a major resurgence and "June 2.0."

"When the bars and nightclubs open with no mitigation measures in place because there was no compliance, who's going to suffer from that? The parents and the kids who could have benefited from in-person instruction," he said, "because it's going to move the metrics up, and then kids are going to have to go back online and in-person instruction won't be an option anymore."

Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Dr. Robert Redfield warned last week that while cases are falling nationally, driven by the former hot spots, there are some worrying signs in the middle of the country.

"We're starting to see some of the cases now in the red zone areas are falling, but if you look at those states that are in what we call the yellow zone, between 5% and 10%, they're not falling, so middle America right now is getting stuck," Redfieldsaid in an interview with Dr.Howard Bauchnerof the Journal of the American Medical Association. "This is why it's so important for middle America to recognize the mitigation steps that we talked about, about masks, about social distancing, hand washing, closing bars, being smart about crowds."

He said cases are not rising substantially in the region, but the fact that cases appear to be plateauing could be cause for concern, especially as the country enters the colder months of the year and seasonal influenza spreads. Redfield has repeatedly warned that the confluence of a major flu outbreak along with the Covid-19 pandemic could overwhelm hospitals and cause preventable deaths. He encouraged Americans to get this year's flu vaccine as soon as it's available to mitigate the risk of an overwhelming flu season.

"We don't need to have a third wave in the heartland right now," he said. "We need to prevent that particularly as we're coming to the fall."

CNBC's Nate Rattner contributed to this report.

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Here's why new cases of the coronavirus are down across most of the U.S. - CNBC

China’s Coronavirus Lockdown In Xinjiang Is Severe And Controversial : Goats and Soda – NPR

August 26, 2020

Volunteer Ekebar Emet, a 21-year-old student, publicizes epidemic prevention measures in Urumqi in northwest China's Xinjiang region on Aug. 3. His messaging reaches an estimated 78 households each day. Zhao Ge/Xinhua News Agency via Getty Images hide caption

Volunteer Ekebar Emet, a 21-year-old student, publicizes epidemic prevention measures in Urumqi in northwest China's Xinjiang region on Aug. 3. His messaging reaches an estimated 78 households each day.

Across China, life has largely returned to normal. Domestic travel is picking back up as a coronavirus pandemic brought under control recedes from memory. Businesses and factories have reopened.

Except in Xinjiang. A sweeping, western region nearly four times the size of California, Xinjiang remains largely cut off from the rest of the country and its some 22 million residents under heavy lockdown, an effort officials say is needed to contain a cluster of more than 800 officially diagnosed cases.

In mid-July, officials declared a "wartime mode" for the region. Community officials continue to go door to door, sealing doors with paper strips, tape and in some cases metal bars, to prevent residents from leaving their homes.

The region has effectively been penned off from the rest of the country, meaning scant information about the lockdown has emerged. In July, Xinjiang's train stations were closed, intercity bus routes canceled, and centralized quarantine imposed on residents returning to the region.

"It has been more than a week since we last had a case, but that does not mean we should relax," said Tang Shan, a Communist Party official who oversees Xinjiang's Ganquanbao district, an industrial zone just outside the region's capital of Urumqi. "We still ask our residents and the society at large, including our government organs, to work together in order to maintain the success we have achieved so far."

The monthlong lockdown has angered residents, thousands of whom took to social media this week to complain about what they said are heavy-handed quarantine and testing policies out of sync with the severity of the outbreak. The region's last new COVID-19 case was diagnosed on Aug. 17.

"The government has used an ax where a scalpel was needed," said a 21-year-old resident of Urumqi, where the vast majority of cases have occurred. He asked to remain anonymous because of potential legal retribution for talking to foreign media. "I just want government officials to refrain from lazy policymaking and combat the outbreak with scientific, reasonable measures."

Xinjiang is home to about 11 million Uighurs, a Turkic ethnic minority. Since 2017, local authorities with backing from the country's leader, Xi Jinping, have extralegally detained or imprisoned hundreds of thousands of Uighurs and other historically Muslim ethnic minorities. Those not detained live under heavy government surveillance and a web of restrictions that forbid most religious activities and travel.

Xinjiang's police state has mobilized over the last month to contain the latest coronavirus outbreak. Urumqi residents told NPR that they had been given mandatory tests for the coronavirus as many as three times in the last month and their temperature taken by local officials three times a day.

This past weekend, frustration from Xinjiang residents spilled over to social media, as the hashtag "Xinjiang refugees" briefly began trending on China's Twitter-like platform, Weibo. Most of the posts were soon deleted, and several accounts suspended. Videos shared on the platform by frustrated residents show Xinjiang residents cuffed to window bars and balcony railings outside their homes, a punishment for violating home quarantine rules.

"I want to strongly emphasize to everyone to now open your front door. Those who are discovered [outside their homes] by neighborhood officials will be reported to the nearest police station," read a warning sent to a chat group of residents in Urumqi's Tianshan district, according to screenshots sent to NPR by one of the group's participants.

The policy is similar to strict lockdown policies adopted for weeks at a time in other Chinese cities such as Wuhan and in coastal Zhejiang province during the height of the epidemic. To feed trapped residents, community officials and volunteers rallied to deliver daily essentials to each household several times a week.

With comparatively less-developed community services, residents in Xinjiang said they have been left hungry in their own homes. One woman in Kashgar, a former Silk Road oasis town, said she had been sealed into her house with a random assortment of groceries sent by community officials once a week usually basic vegetables such as potatoes, carrots and cabbage.

Four Uighur residents NPR spoke to said they had also been forced to drink a brown, herbal Chinese traditional medicine packaged by a company called Beijing Donghuayuan Medical. China's state news agency has said asymptomatic cases in Xinjiang were given an "herbal concoction" to prevent symptoms from appearing and that participation in traditional Chinese medicine treatment had "reached one hundred percent" in Xinjiang, though there is no medical evidence proving its efficacy against the virus.

On Monday, the regional government softened its lockdown policy slightly, allowing residents living in compounds with no cases to leave their homes so long as they are wearing a mask.

To further quell public outrage this week, state media also published the mobile phone numbers for about a dozen senior officials and party members at the provincial and city level, encouraging irate residents to reach out directly with recommendations.

"There has been an endless queue of complaints coming in," said Ye Hailong, a county-level Urumqi official.

On Monday, the Xinjiang regional government softened its stance and said it would allow residents without diagnosed cases in their compounds to leave their homes.

But when asked when Xinjiang's "wartime mode" would be entirely lifted, officials declined to offer a specific date. "Our lockdown policies have to follow the timeline of the epidemic and when the epidemic ends," said Chen Xinjian, an Urumqi district official.

Amy Cheng contributed research from Beijing.

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China's Coronavirus Lockdown In Xinjiang Is Severe And Controversial : Goats and Soda - NPR

Coronavirus Superspreader Event in Boston Led to Thousands of Infections – The New York Times

August 26, 2020

On Feb. 26, 175 executives at the biotech company Biogen gathered at a Boston hotel for the first night of a conference. At the time, the coronavirus seemed a faraway problem, limited mostly to China.

But the virus was right there at the conference, spreading from person to person. A new study suggests that the meeting turned into a superspreading event, seeding infections that would affect tens of thousands of people across the United States and in countries as far as Singapore and Australia.

The study, which the authors posted online on Tuesday and has not yet been published in a scientific journal, gives an unprecedented look at how far the coronavirus can spread given the right opportunities.

Its a really valuable study, said Dr. Joshua Schiffer, a physician and mathematical modeling expert who studies infectious diseases at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle and was not involved in the research.

Dr. Schiffer said that the new genetic evidence fit well with what epidemiologists and disease modelers have been learning about the coronavirus. The Biogen conference, he said, was just one of many similar events that amplified and spread the virus in its early months. I dont think its a fluke at all, he said.

The results came out of a project that began in early March at the Broad Institute of Harvard and M.I.T., a research center specializing in large-scale genome sequencing. As a wave of Covid-19 patients crashed into Massachusetts General Hospital, the Broad researchers analyzed the genetic material of the viruses infecting the patients cells. The scientists also looked at samples from the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, which ran tests around Boston at homeless shelters and nursing homes. All told, the scientists analyzed the viral genomes of 772 people with Covid-19 between January and May.

The researchers then compared all of these genomes to trace where each virus came from. When a virus replicates, its descendants inherit its genetic material. If a random mutation pops up in one of its genes, it will also get passed down to later descendants. The vast majority of such mutations dont change how the virus behaves. But researchers can use them to track the spread of an epidemic.

Its kind of like a fingerprint we can use to follow viruses around, said Bronwyn MacInnis, a genomic epidemiologist at the Broad Institute.

The first confirmed case of the coronavirus in Boston turned up on Jan. 29. The patient had traveled from Wuhan, China, and his virus carried distinctive mutations found in Wuhan. But Dr. MacInnis and her colleagues didnt find any other viruses in Boston from later months with the same genetic fingerprint. Its likely that the patients isolation prevented the virus from spreading.

But as February rolled on, the researchers determined, at least 80 other people arrived in Boston with the virus. Undiagnosed, they spread it to others.

Most of the viral lineages in Boston have a genetic fingerprint linking them to earlier cases in Europe, the study found. Some travelers brought the virus directly from Europe in February and March, whereas others may have picked up the European lineage elsewhere in the northeastern United States.

Dr. MacInnis and her colleagues took a detailed look at a few key places to see how the virus swept through the city. At Massachusetts General Hospital, for example, they found that coronaviruses in patients did not share many of the same mutations. That was a relief, because it meant that the hospital was not a breeding ground where a single virus could spread quickly from patient to patient.

But thats exactly what happened in a skilled nursing home where 85 percent of patients and 37 percent of the staff were infected. The researchers identified three different virus lineages in the home, but one of them accounted for 90 percent of the infections.

Such superspreading events are a hallmark of the coronavirus. When an infected person shows up in the right place generally inside, with poor ventilation and close contact with other people the virus can infect a lot of people in very little time. These unfortunate events dont happen often, and so most people who get infected with the coronavirus dont pass it on to anyone else.

The virus that raged through the nursing home didnt spread beyond its walls, as far as Dr. MacInnis and her colleagues could tell. But when the virus showed up at the Biogen conference, the story turned out very differently.

The researchers were able to sequence 28 viral genomes from people at the meeting. All of them shared the same mutation, called C2416T. The only known samples with that mutation from before the Biogen event came from two people in France on Feb. 29.

Updated August 24, 2020

Its possible that a single person came to the meeting from Europe carrying the C2416T mutation. Its also possible that the virus carrying this mutation had already been in Boston for a week or two, and someone brought it into the meeting.

As the attendees spent hours together in close quarters, in poorly ventilated rooms, without wearing masks, the virus thrived. While replicating inside the cells of one meeting attendee, the virus gained a second mutation, called G26233T. Everyone who was subsequently infected by that person carried the double-mutant virus.

From the meeting, the researchers concluded, this lineage spread into the surrounding community. In a Boston homeless shelter, for example, researchers found 51 viral samples with the C2416T mutation, and 54 with both mutations.

We had no idea it would be associated with the conference, Dr. MacInnis said. It came as a complete surprise.

The researchers estimated that roughly 20,000 people in the Boston area could have acquired the conference virus.

New York saw a similar pattern, according to Matthew Maurano, a computational biologist at N.Y.U. Langone Health. After many viral strains arrived from Europe in February, a few came to dominate the city. A lot of lineages die off, and some spread enormously, Dr. Maurano said.

The Boston double-mutant spread particularly far. Researchers identified this lineage in samples collected later in Virginia, North Carolina and Michigan. Overseas, it turned up in Europe, Asia and Australia.

Dr. Jacob Lemieux, a co-author of the new study and an infectious disease physician at Massachusetts General Hospital, said it was impossible at the moment to determine how many people acquired the virus in the months after the Biogen conference. But it would be in the tens of thousands.

Six months after the conference, Dr. MacInnis said that it should serve as a warning to anyone who thinks life can return to an unmasked version of normal before the virus is brought under control.

One bad decision can affect a lot of people, she said. And the ones who suffer the most from that reality are the most vulnerable among us.

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Coronavirus Superspreader Event in Boston Led to Thousands of Infections - The New York Times

A coronavirus chart that will shock you – CNN

August 26, 2020

Which, according to a majority of self-identified Republicans in a new CBS/YouGov poll, is, well, OK.

Almost 6 in 10 registered Republicans said they considered the current number of coronavirus deaths to be "acceptable," while 43% said it was unacceptable.

Among Democrats, 90% say the number of coronavirus deaths is unacceptable. That number is 67% among political independents.

What explains the discrepancy? Partisanship, mostly.

Thanks to President Donald Trump, many Republicans believe that any acknowledgment that the Covid-19 pandemic has not been handled perfectly -- or at least as well as any president could be expected to do -- is somehow an admission that Democrats (and the media) are right in their criticisms of Trump.

And so, when asked whether 177,000+ of their fellow citizens dying is acceptable, which it clearly is not, they say it is -- because to say anything else would be disloyal to Trump.

The logical fallacy built into this way of thinking is that Covid-19 is a public health problem, not a political problem. Simply lining up in your partisan camp won't make it go away. Democrats andRepublicans get the coronavirus. DemocratsandRepublicans die from it.

Until we start to realize that what party you belong to makes zero difference to this virus, we are going to continue to struggle to do the things we need to in order to mitigate its spread -- from social distancing to mask-wearing.

And until we all can acknowledge that the loss of 177,000 people is not just unacceptable but an ongoing tragedy, we are losing the sense of unity and purpose that the country was founded on.

The Point: More Americans have died this year from the coronavirus than died in World War I. And more than double the number of Americans who died in the Vietnam War. There's a word for that massive loss of life: unacceptable.

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A coronavirus chart that will shock you - CNN

Some Ohio Republicans are trying to impeach the state’s GOP governor over coronavirus – CNN

August 26, 2020

The praise those moves won DeWine nationally was reflected in his standing in the state, too. In a late June Quinnipiac University poll, 75% of Ohioans approved of how DeWine was handling his job -- including 81%(!) of Democrats, 76% of independents and 74% of Republicans.

In short: if there was a governor you would think would be immune from an impeachment attempt, it would be DeWine.

Or not.

State Rep. John Becker, the leader of the impeachment effort, insisted to the Plain-Dealer that he was not simply trying to score political points or draw media attention with the impeachment gambit. "If this was (about) a matter of principle and people hearing my voice, I'd send out a letter to the editor, or maybe a House resolution," he said. "No -- impeachment is the intention."

But whether DeWine actually has to worry about being impeached -- he doesn't -- is sort of beside the point here. What matters is that DeWine's handling of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, which has won him plaudits from coast to coast, has so angered a part of the Republican base in his state that a trio of lawmakers from his own party have decided to try to do something about it.

Taken together, what these episodes highlight is how President Donald Trump -- and the ways in which he has politicized public health matters like mask-wearing and social distancing -- are influencing the way that some (many?) Republicans think.

Trump rode to office on voter revulsion with the so-called "establishment" of both parties; his campaign was as much about tearing down the status quo within the Republican Party as in the Democratic Party. And even when he got into the White House, Trump kept up that outsider thinking -- promulgating a series of ill-defined conspiracy theories that all suggested the establishment -- or, in Trump's words, the "deep state" -- were out to get him and all those who think like him.

It's no wonder, then, that as the coronavirus pandemic brought America to its knees -- economically and socially -- over the spring and now well into the summer -- that many Republicans, particularly those who most closely identify with Trump, view attempts by their state governments to slow the spread of the disease with deep suspicion.

Suspicion is an insidious monster; once unleashed, it's hard to contain; it seeps into every nook and cranny of your consciousness. And so you start to see mask-wearing not as a proven (and medically sound) way to slow the spread of Covid-19 but as an unnecessary imposition on your rights. And closures/limitations on restaurants and bars as the government meddling in the private sector.

What all of this fails to acknowledge is that the challenges posed by the coronavirus are unlike any we -- or our politicians -- have faced in more than a century. These are unique times and the same old conspiracy-driven thinking not only doesn't apply but makes government efforts to get the virus under control that much more difficult.

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Some Ohio Republicans are trying to impeach the state's GOP governor over coronavirus - CNN

Another Mainer dies as 24 new coronavirus cases are reported – Bangor Daily News

August 26, 2020

Another Mainer has died as health officials on Wednesday reported 24 new coronavirus cases in the state.

Wednesdays report brings the total coronavirus cases in Maine to 4,389. Of those, 3,942 have been confirmed positive, while 447 were classified as probable cases, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

The agency revised Tuesdays cumulative total to 4,365, down from 4,368, meaning there was an increase of 21 over the previous days report, state data show. As the Maine CDC continues to investigate previously reported cases, some are determined to have not been the coronavirus, or coronavirus cases not involving Mainers. Those are removed from the states cumulative total.

New cases were reported in Androscoggin (2), Aroostook (1), Cumberland (1), Kennebec (1), Penobscot (1), Piscataquis (1), Somerset (1) and York (12) counties, state data show. Information about where the other cases were detected wasnt immediately available Wednesday.

The latest death involved a woman in her 80s from York County, bringing the statewide death toll to 132. Information about that case wasnt immediately available. Nearly all deaths have been in Mainers over age 60.

Maine CDC spokesperson Robert Long said Wednesday that 85 cases have now been linked to the Aug. 7 wedding and reception in Millinocket. That includes six cases from an outbreak at the Maplecrest Rehabilitation and Living Center in Madison and 18 cases from an outbreak at the York County Jail in Alfred.

Of those cases, 32 are considered primary, 33 secondary infections and 20 tertiary infections, Long said.

No new outbreak investigations have been opened since Tuesday, he said.

So far, 412 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus. Of those, eight people are currently hospitalized, with five in critical care and one on a ventilator.

Meanwhile, 34 more people have recovered from the coronavirus, bringing total recoveries to 3,818. That means there are 439 active and probable cases in the state, which is down from 453 on Tuesday.

A majority of the cases 2,475 have been in Mainers under age 50, while more cases have been reported in women than men, according to the Maine CDC.

As of Wednesday, there have been 244,755 negative test results out of 250,331 overall. Just under 2.2 percent of all tests have come back positive, Maine CDC data show.

The coronavirus has hit hardest in Cumberland County, where 2,167 cases have been reported and where the bulk of virus deaths 70 have been concentrated. It is one of four counties the others are Androscoggin, Penobscot and York, with 596, 221 and 768 cases, respectively where community transmission has been confirmed, according to the Maine CDC.

There are two criteria for establishing community transmission: at least 10 confirmed cases and that at least 25 percent of those are not connected to either known cases or travel. That second condition has not yet been satisfied in other counties.

Other cases have been reported in Aroostook (38), Franklin (48), Hancock (46), Kennebec (183), Knox (29), Lincoln (35), Oxford (59), Piscataquis (8), Sagadahoc (59), Somerset (47), Waldo (69) and Washington (15) counties. Information about where another case was detected wasnt immediately available Wednesday.

As of Wednesday morning, the coronavirus has sickened 5,781,834 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 178,578 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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Another Mainer dies as 24 new coronavirus cases are reported - Bangor Daily News

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