Category: Corona Virus

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Another Mainer dies as 17 new coronavirus cases are reported – Bangor Daily News

June 15, 2020

By Christopher Burns, BDN Staff June 15, 2020 11:53 am Updated: June 15, 2020 2:48 pm

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Another Mainer has died as health officials on Monday reported 17 more coronavirus cases have been detected in the state.

There have now been 2,810 cases across all of Maines counties since the outbreak began here in March, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Thats up from 2,793 on Sunday.

Of those, 2,495 have been confirmed positive, while 315 are likely positive, according to the Maine CDC.

[Our COVID-19 tracker contains the most recent information on Maine cases by county]

The latest death was a woman in her 40s from Androscoggin County, bringing the statewide death toll to 101. It marked the first new death Maine has seen since last Tuesday.

While the Maine CDC continues to address a number of coronavirus outbreaks places that have recorded three or more cases the agency on Monday said two of them no longer had active cases.

Those outbreaks happened at the Durgin Pines nursing home in Kittery, which had recorded six cases, and a construction site in Augusta where crews are building a new Maine Veterans Homes facility. Some 29 cases were recorded as part of that outbreak among construction workers from states as far away as Wisconsin and North Carolina.

The virus likely spread because many of the workers lived together and socialized during off hours.

So far, 317 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus. Of those, 31 people are currently hospitalized, with 11 in critical care and four on ventilators.

Meanwhile, 2,189 people have fully recovered from the virus, meaning there are 520 active and likely cases in the state, according to the Maine CDC. Thats unchanged since Sunday.

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

As of Monday, there have been 73,783 negative test results out of 77,614 overall. About 5 percent of all tests have come back positive, Maine CDC data show.

The coronavirus has hit hardest in Cumberland County, where 1,445 cases have been confirmed and where the bulk of virus deaths 57 have been concentrated. It is one of four counties the others are Androscoggin, Penobscot and York, with 429, 102 and 446 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 detected in Aroostook (10), Franklin (37), Hancock (13), Kennebec (136), Knox (23), Lincoln (21), Oxford (34), Piscataquis (1), Sagadahoc (30), Somerset (25) Waldo (55) and Washington (1) counties. Information about where another two cases were detected wasnt immediately available Monday.

As of Monday morning, the coronavirus has sickened 2,096,902 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 115,755 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

Watch: What Maine is doing to expand contact tracing

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Another Mainer dies as 17 new coronavirus cases are reported - Bangor Daily News

Major Texas City Considers Issuing Another Stay-In-Place Order As Coronavirus Cases Surge – CBS Dallas / Fort Worth

June 15, 2020

HARRIS COUNTY (CBSNEWS.COM) Houston opened to 75% capacity on Friday, but it may not last long. Officials are cautioning that they may need to order people back home and open a COVID-19 hospital at NRG Stadium as coronavirus cases surge in the nations fourth-largest city.

Im growing increasingly concerned that we may be approaching the precipice the precipice of a disaster, said Lina Hidalgo, the Harris County judge who is the top official for the countys five million residents.

A server wearing a facemask and gloves rings up an order at Eight Row Flint in Houston, Texas, on May 22, 2020. (credit: Mark Felix/ AFP via Getty Images)

Hidalgos warning comes amid a record week for virus cases and hospitalizations in the Houston area and across Texas, which marked the outbreaks by reopening restaurants to three-quarters of their capacity.

Click Here To Read The Complete Story On cbsnews.com

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Major Texas City Considers Issuing Another Stay-In-Place Order As Coronavirus Cases Surge - CBS Dallas / Fort Worth

Health Experts Link Rise In Arizona Coronavirus Cases To End Of Stay-At-Home Order – NPR

June 15, 2020

A vehicle arrives at a testing site for the coronavirus last month at Steele Indian School Park in Phoenix. Arizona has seen a surge of new coronavirus cases recently. Matt York/AP hide caption

A vehicle arrives at a testing site for the coronavirus last month at Steele Indian School Park in Phoenix. Arizona has seen a surge of new coronavirus cases recently.

With new daily coronavirus cases rising in at least two dozen states, an explosion of new infections in Arizona is stretching some hospitals and alarming public health experts who link the surge in cases to the state's lifting of a stay-at-home order close to a month ago.

Arizona has emerged as one of the country's newest coronavirus hot spots, with the weekly average of daily cases nearly tripling from two weeks ago. The number of people hospitalized is climbing, too.

Over the past week, Arizona has seen an average of more than 1,300 new COVID-19 cases each day.

After the state's largest hospital system warned about a shortage of intensive care unit beds, Gov. Doug Ducey, a Republican, pushed back on assertions that the health care system could soon be overwhelmed.

"The entire time we've been focused on a possible worst-case scenario with surge capacity for hospital beds, ICU beds and ventilators," Ducey told reporters Thursday. "Those are not needed or necessary right now."

While he acknowledged a spike in positive cases, Ducey said a second stay-at-home order was "not under discussion."

"We put the stay-at-home order there so we could prepare for what we are going through," he said.

Some states have reopened more slowly with a set of specific benchmarks for different regions, but Arizona took a more aggressive approach.

The state began easing restrictions on businesses in early May and lifted its statewide lockdown order after May 15. Under Arizona's reopening plan, businesses are advised to follow federal guidance on social distancing.

There is also no requirement for everyone to wear masks in public.

Public health experts agree: The timing of this spike reflects the state's reopening.

"Perhaps Arizona will be a warning sign to other areas," said Katherine Ellingson, an epidemiologist at the University of Arizona. "We never had that consistent downward trend that would signal it's time to reopen and we have everything in place to do it safely."

Before Arizona lifted its stay-at-home order, about 5% of tests for the coronavirus registered as positive. Two weeks later, that number was around 12%.

A slower reopening gives public health agencies time to identify whether or not cases are rising and then respond with contact tracing and isolating those who are infected.

"With a fast, rapid reopening, we don't have the time to mobilize those resources," Ellingson said.

Maricopa County, home to about 60% of the state's population, has ramped up contact tracing in recent weeks, but it may not have enough capacity if the surge in cases continues.

Dr. Peter Hotez said the spike in Arizona, as well as parts of Texas such as Houston, Dallas and Austin, is the consequence of removing restrictions too quickly and without a public health system that can keep pace.

"It was just open it up and then more or less business as usual, with a little bit of window dressing," said Hotez, dean for the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. "This is not an abstract number of cases. We're seeing people pile into intensive care units."

Arizona's governor has also faced criticism from the mayors of the state's two biggest cities for not putting in place more stringent requirements.

"There is a pandemic, and it's spreading uncontrollably," said Tucson Mayor Regina Romero, a Democrat. Ducey, she said, "is just putting up his hands and saying, 'The spread is happening, and we just have to go about our business.' "

Adding to Romero's frustration, the governor's executive order forbids local governments from implementing their own extra measures.

"What he did was pretty much tie the hands of mayors and public health officials," Romero said.

Arizona's hospital industry has tried to tamp down fears that it's on the verge of a crisis. Hospitals are still performing elective surgeries.

"It's very unfortunate because hospitals right now in Arizona are quite busy with elective procedures," said Saskia Popescu, a Phoenix-based epidemiologist with George Mason University. "You throw in increasing cases of COVID, and that's going to very much stress your hospital systems."

Phoenix's triple-digit summer temperatures may help fuel the spread of the virus as well. People forgo outdoor activities and retreat to air-conditioned indoor spaces, where the risk of transmitting the virus goes up significantly.

"My concern is we're going to see a lot more people in close quarters for prolonged periods of time," she said.

Since the stay-at-home order was lifted, Popescu and others said they've seen people returning to a pre-pandemic mindset, neglecting to wear masks or maintain social distance. Videos of crowded bars have only propelled these fears.

On Thursday, however, Arizona's top doctor stressed there were also dangers to keeping the state on lockdown, including the mental health effects of loneliness and isolation.

"We know that it's in the community. We are not going to be able to stop the spread. And so we can't stop living as well," said Dr. Cara Christ, health director for the Arizona Department of Health Services.

But Quinn Snyder, an emergency medicine physician in Mesa, Ariz., said there needs to be more consistent messaging on public health measures such as wearing masks.

"Frankly, I just think a wholesale reevaluation of where we're at is critical right now, but I can tell you that we're not doing nearly enough," said Snyder, who has seen the uptick in seriously ill COVID-19 patients firsthand.

"If we continue to head down this path, the virus will press our health care facilities beyond capacity, where we're going to have to be making tough decisions like who gets a ventilator and who doesn't."

More here:

Health Experts Link Rise In Arizona Coronavirus Cases To End Of Stay-At-Home Order - NPR

Coronavirus Almost Took The Life Of The Healthiest Man In Lone Tree – Colorado Public Radio

June 15, 2020

For days, there were no major signs of progress. Doctors wanted to try several experimental treatments. First, they suggested a drug called tocilizumab, which depresses the immune system, putting Jason at risk for a secondary infection but also potentially quieting the immune storm inside his body. They also suggested convalescent blood plasma, where blood from people who recovered from COVID-19 is pumped into the patient, to help provide antibodies that might fight the infection.

Each time, Michelle had to decide "yes" or "no," with Jasons life hanging in the balance.

On the day before Easter, a week and a half after Jason entered the emergency room, she broke down.

I felt like I had to give everything to God because I had so much anxiety, she says. I just had to ask him to help me and guide me on this path and to make any available treatments that Jason needed available to me.

The next day, Easter Sunday, the doctors called and said he was approved for the trial study to do the convalescent plasma.

At The Medical Center of Aurora, doctors and nurses were seeing a lot of really sick patients, and they were seeing a lot of patients die, a heavy mental weight to carry around. Melton, one of Jasons registered nurses, estimated a COVID-19 patient like Jason could have more than a hundred people contributing to his care: nurses, doctors, physical and occupational speech therapists, dieticians, housekeeping.

It takes an actual village and I was just privileged to be a part of that, she says.

For Hanna, Jasons illness came at a critical moment in her own life. She was just returning from maternity leave and Jason was her very first patient.

Her son Brooks was about 8 weeks old and she says she worried about bringing the virus home. As soon as shed walk in the door, shed want to hug her child. But the first thing shed do is disinfect everything, take off her scrubs and take a shower.

So it's kind of an interesting time to actually be away from home, she says.

There is no comprehensive accounting of the healthcare workers whove died of COVID, but an investigation from Kaiser Health News and the Guardian found more than 600 frontline providers likely died from the disease, many of them people of color. A doctor in New York died by suicide after treating COVID-19 patients; a Colorado paramedic who answered the call to help in New York in midst of an outbreak there died from the disease.

On top of that, Jason shared so much in common with Hanna's husband: Theyre the same age, both really fit, with young children.

It was really scary. I actually kind of held a lot of that back from discussing with my husband, she says.

Amy Cooper, one of the nurses who treated Jason, has worked in intensive care units for ten years but even so, managing patients who are fighting to survive COVID-19 has been tough.

Several die, several don't make progress, but very few have been success stories, Cooper says. It sort of boggles my mind how this virus picks and chooses people, and who gets really sick and who is barely ill from it.

By Easter, Jason had been under sedation and on a ventilator for nine days, and on ECMO for nearly that long. That weekend doctors decided to try the convalescent plasma, as well as the experimental drug theyd considered earlier.

While Michelle worried, doctors began to see signs of hope he might survive. Then, the day after Easter, his condition suddenly began to improve. His chest x-ray and his lab results got better every day.

He just rocketed forwards, she says. A few days later, providers were able to turn off the ECMO, and then the next day the ventilator.

Little by little, Jason started to wake up. He had no idea how he got there, drifting in and out of awareness. A collage of family pictures, put together by a friend, hung from the wall of his hospital room. It said You Are Loved.

Sometime during my recovery phase in the ICU, I must've seen this collage. So in my dreams, I went through multiple different scenarios of me on my deathbed, Jason says. It was very much just time to reflect on what's special in life.

He remembers the moment when he started to realize what hed been through. He didnt recognize the person at his bedside, a doctor hed never met before at least when he was awake.

Jason says it was a confusing celebration.

It was basically high fives, like, Oh my gosh, you made it. It's so great to see you. Fantastic. You beat this thing, he said.

That doctor at his bedside was Joe Forrester, a pulmonologist. He says its common for patients whove been under so long and had their sleep cycle disrupted to be disoriented when they wake up. Jason had been unconscious for nearly two weeks, with no understanding of what hed been through.

Jason remembers telling Forrester Oh, okay, yeah, I'll get through this. This is a journey. We'll power through it. He says Forrester said something like, No, no, you don't understand. You made it through the tough part. You made it. It's so great to see you.

Forrester says he told Jason hed already done all the hard work and he will make it home. And I think before that he really didn't see an end in sight.

Man, I was, I was more on that side than this side. I beat the odds, Jason said. I was completely overwhelmed.

Jason had lost between 25 and 30 pounds in two and a half weeks. He couldnt unlock his smartphone at first because the facial recognition software didnt recognize him.

Back when Jason got sick, Michelle had circled one key date: her birthday on April 18. Shed prayed Jason would be awake by then and told friends the only thing she wanted was for him to be healthy enough to celebrate the day.

It started getting closer and closer and I was like, Oh my goodness. You know, I honestly didn't feel like we would be reaching this point, she said.

On April 18th, two days after he woke up, Jason wished her happy birthday over Facetime. It was the best thing I have ever heard, Michelle said.

Their daughter Kestin says everyone, including family, friends and neighbors, pitched in to help the family while her dad was sick.

It's amazing. There were so many people supporting him, she said. That gave me a lot of confidence that he was gonna make it.

The ECMO certainly kept him alive and he was part of an FDA clinical trial using convalescent plasma. In Colorado, nearly 1,000 people have been treated with that therapy. No publication time frame for the drug trial results has yet been announced.

Researchers are also studying tocilizumab, which Jason received, though not as part of an FDA clinical trial. The drug has been used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, and is among a number of other treatments to deal with the cytokine storm Jason experienced.

Still, none of his doctors are sure of what saved him.

I don't think any of us know, or we'd be treating all COVID patients with a certain therapy regimen, Hanna says.

But it seems likely his fitness was a decisive factor. Forrester says that didnt stop Jason from catching COVID-19, but it helped him muster the strength to fight it off. He had to overcome the stress of being on a mechanical ventilator, ECMO, and lying in bed for weeks, which can lead to muscle atrophy.

Having someone who's fit that makes a tremendous difference as to whether they'll survive that kind of insult, Forrester says.

Needless to say, I did not think this (COVID-19) would impact me, if at all, minimally, Jason says.

Cooper believes the fact that he was hospitalized and then on ECMO relatively early in his illness probably had the most impact, a testament to Michelles early push to get Jason to the hospital.

Forrester said Jason recovered so thoroughly he didnt have any visible residual lung disease and wasnt on oxygen anymore a rarity for COVID-19 patients.

It's just a matter of rehabilitating his arms and legs and he should be back to normal as if in a year this never happened, he said. He showed a remarkable ability to heal and to reverse such extensive lung injury to the point where it's almost negligible.

Many COVID-19 patients who get released from the hospital will face ongoing health problems. Those lucky enough to survive may suffer permanent disability, including things like kidney failure, neurologic damage and post-traumatic stress disorder.

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Coronavirus Almost Took The Life Of The Healthiest Man In Lone Tree - Colorado Public Radio

Coronavirus daily news updates, June 15: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world – Seattle Times

June 15, 2020

As Washington counties slowly begin to reopen, coronavirus infections are on the rise throughout the state, according to a new report fromthe Department of Health. State epidemiologistshave seen large increases in Benton, Yakima, Spokane and Franklin counties.

COVID-19 cases are risingin nearly half of U.S. states. More than 2 million cases have been reported in the U.S., including more than 115,000 deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Experts at top medical centers are questioning the accuracy of coronavirus tests being used in the United States and are calling for new studies to look into how well the virus is being detected here.

Throughout Monday, on this page, well post updates from Seattle Times journalists and others on the pandemic and its effects on the Seattle area, the Pacific Northwest and the world. Updates from Sunday can be foundhere, and all our coronavirus coveragecan be found here.

The following graphic includes the most recent numbers from the Washington State Department of Health, released Sunday.

For the fourth time in its history, the Oscars are being postponed. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the ABC Television Network said Monday that the 93rd Academy Awards will now be held April 25, 2021, eight weeks later than originally planned because of the pandemics effects on the movie industry.

The Academys Board of Governors also decided to extend the eligibility window beyond the calendar year to Feb. 28, 2021, for feature films, and delay the opening of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures from December until April 30, 2021.

Our hope, in extending the eligibility period and our Awards date, is to provide the flexibility filmmakers need to finish and release their films without being penalized for something beyond anyones control, said Academy President David Rubin and Academy CEO Dawn Hudson in a joint statement.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

U.S. regulators on Monday revoked emergency authorization for malaria drugs promoted by President Donald Trump for treating COVID-19, amid growing evidence they dont work and could cause deadly side effects.

The Food and Drug Administration said the drugs hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine are unlikely to be effective in treating the coronavirus. Citing reports of heart complications, the FDA said the drugs unproven benefits do not outweigh the known and potential risks.

The decades-old drugs, also prescribed for lupus and rheumatoid arthritis, can cause heart rhythm problems, severely low blood pressure and muscle or nerve damage.

The move means that shipments of the drugs obtained by the federal government will no longer be distributed to state and local health authorities for use against the coronavirus. The drugs are still available for alternate uses, so U.S. doctors could still prescribe them for COVID-19 a practice known as off-label prescribing.

Dr. Steven Nissen, a Cleveland Clinic researcher who has been a frequent FDA adviser, agreed with the decision and said he would not have granted emergency access in the first place.

There has never been any high-quality evidence suggesting that hyrdoxychloroquine is effective for treating or preventing coronavirus infection, he said, but there is evidence of serious side effects.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

UW Medicine will close Seven North, a psychiatric facility at UW Medicine Montlake, laying off staffers and reducing the number of inpatient beds available to those in need of mental-health care amid the states coronavirus crisis.

They are going to officially close the unit, said Tina Mankowski, a UW Medicine spokesperson. Twenty-three jobs are being cut, though employees could fill open roles elsewhere in the UW Medicine system.

The Washington State Nurses Association (WSNA), which represents Seven North nurses, issued a statement calling for UW Medicine to reverse course and reopen this facility. Negotiations over layoffs will begin Monday, said Heather Vargas-Lyon, a nurse who will participate in bargaining.

The financial upheaval that has accompanied COVID-19 prompted the closure of the facility, which serves people who admit themselves voluntarily. UW Medicine announced last month it faced a $500 million shortfall.

Read more here.

Evan Bush

Kathy Katzen, office manager at Loyal Heights Elementary School in northwest Seattle, saw a need during the coronavirus, and she helped deliver.

Literally, as she takes bags of groceries and gift cards every week to families of students in need.

When school was in session, the kids (of families in need) would get a bag of food to take home over the weekend, Katzen said. When we stopped going to school because of COVID-19, we decided that that program could still be carried out. I knew a lot of families depended on that. It would just take a team of people to go to the food bank and deliver the food.

Editors note: This is one in a periodic series calledStepping Up, highlighting moments of compassion, duty and community in uncertain times. Have a story we should tell? Send it via email tonewstips@seattletimes.comwith the subject Stepping Up.

Read the full story here.

Scott Hanson

Black Americans are disproportionately likely to say a family member or close friend has died of COVID-19 or respiratory illness since March, according to a series of surveys conducted since April that lays bare how Black Americans have borne the brunt of the pandemic.

Eleven percent of Black Americans say they were close with someone who has died from the coronavirus, compared with 5% of Americans overall and 4% of white Americans.

The findings are based on data from three COVID Impact surveys conducted between April and June by NORC at the University of Chicago for the Data Foundation about the pandemics effect on the physical, mental and social health of Americans.

While recent surveys conducted by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research have found that Black Americans are especially likely to know someone who had the virus, the new data from the COVID Impact research further details the toll the pandemic has taken on Black Americans.

Pre-existing conditions and limited access to health care have been identified as reasons Black Americans have been particularly susceptible to the virus.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

Paris is rediscovering its joie de vivre, as cafes and restaurants reopen for the first time since the fast-spreading coronavirus forced them to close their doors on March 14.

Many customers seemed to shrug off masks and social distancing as they streamed back to their neighborhood bistros for a morning espresso or a three-course lunch Monday, free to resume their lifestyles by a surprise announcement from the French president himself.

We will rediscover the art of living, our taste for freedom, President Emmanuel Macron said in a televised address to the nation Sunday night, citing progress in fighting the virus. We will rediscover France.

At the Caf Des Anges in the heart of the Bastille neighborhood of Paris, customers seemed happy to reconnect and talked about the need to remain careful yet almost no one wore a mask. France has the worlds fifth-highest recorded toll from the virus, at 29,410 dead.

Its like a renaissance, but with caution, said customer Marie-Elisabeth Vilaine.

Read the story here.

The Associated Press

People have been amping up the use of cleansers and disinfectants in their homes to guard against the novel coronavirus. But 39% of U.S. adults are doing so in risky ways, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly 20% say they have washed fruits and vegetables with bleach or used household cleansers or disinfectants on their hands.

Other reported risky practices included misting the body with a household cleaning or disinfectant spray and drinking or gargling with bleach solutions, soapy water or other cleaning and disinfectant solutions.

Based on survey data from a panel of 502 adults, determined to be a representative sampling of the U.S. population, the CDC says that people who used at least one of these unsafe practices were more than twice as likely to have a subsequent health issue irritation of the nose, sinuses, skin or eyes, nausea or an upset stomach, dizziness, headaches or breathing problems than were those who did none of these things (39% vs. 16%).

Read more here.

The Washington Post

Beijing has set about testing hundreds of thousands of people for coronavirus in an exhaustive effort to stamp out a new eruption of the disease in the Chinese capital.

After dozens of new cases were reported over the weekend, continuing into Monday, Chinese authorities mobilized almost 100,000 community workers to carry out tests on everyone who has worked in or visited the Xinfadi market in the southwest of Beijing.

Xinfadi is the largest fruit, vegetable and meat market in the capital, which is home to some 21 million people, and supplies 70% of the citys fresh vegetables and 80% of its fruit.

After discovering more than 90 new infections linked to the market over the weekend, and a further 36 being reported Monday, Beijings health authorities are taking military-style action to try to ensure the virus doesnt spread further.

The sudden appearance of scores of new infections, both symptomatic and asymptomatic, highlights the resilience of the virus and its rapid spread despite tight social controls. It also underscores the dangers of markets as the virus is believed to have originated in the Huanan food market in the city of Wuhan before it spread across the globe.

Read more here.

The Associated Press

Kris Higginson

Businesses across the U.S. have begun intensive COVID-19 disinfection regimens, exposing returning workers and consumers to some chemicals that are largely untested for human health, a development thats alarming health and environmental safety experts.

The rush to disinfect is well-intended. Executives want to protect employees while abiding by guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (and to avoid liability).

But as offices are cleaned and sanitized more frequently, the use of toxic chemicals is creating another problem for a whole group of people,said Dr. Claudia Miller, an immunologist, allergist and co-author of Chemical Exposures: Low Levels and High Stakes.

Read the full story here.

Bloomberg

Washington health officials reported 296 new cases of coronavirus yesterday, after Gov. Jay Inslee warned that a new report shows cases and deaths will soon increase substantially if COVID-19 continues to spread at the current levels. Tracking patients' contacts is vital to Inslee's reopening strategy, but his administration cant tell you if its meeting its own goals for this.Read the Times Watchdog story.

Scientists are finding that how long a person feels COVID-19 symptoms varies, with some peopleremaining sick for months.

What does it cost to survive COVID-19? More than $1.1 million, the longest-hospitalized patient found when he opened his 181-page bill. Columnist Danny Westneat catches up with West Seattle's Michael Flor and the bizarre economics of American health care.

The first COVID-19 vaccines may not prevent you from getting the coronavirus. A knock-out blow against the virus is the ultimate goal, but a weaker punch may come first.

European countries reopened their borders today but not to Americans just yet. And in Beijing, a new outbreak is underscoring the virus' continued threat. Track its spread around the world.

As poor countries fight the new coronavirus, they are unintentionally contributing to the spread ofother diseases that are readily prevented by vaccines. A mutated strain of poliovirus has been reported in more than 30 countries, and measles is flaring around the globe. We're looking at an epidemic in a few months time that will kill more children than COVID, said Chibuzo Okonta, president of Doctors Without Borders in West and Central Africa.

A bicycle boom:Fitness junkies, commuters fearful of public transit and families eager to get out are driving thebiggest spike in bike sales in the U.S.since the oil crisis of the 1970s.

Kris Higginson and Nicole Brodeur

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Coronavirus daily news updates, June 15: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world - Seattle Times

When coronavirus closed schools, some Detroit students went missing from class. These educators had to find them. – NBC News

June 15, 2020

DETROIT Principal Jacqueline Dungey was searching for one of her kindergartners.

Shed called every number she had for his family. Shed sent urgent notes to his parents. Shed reached out to a social worker whod worked with his family in the past.

But more than a month after the coronavirus threat forced the New Paradigm Loving Academy in Detroit to move its classes online, the little boy, Legend, hadnt been in touch with his teachers. His family had not shown up for the meals the school distributes on Tuesdays and Thursdays. No one seemed to know where he was.

Dungey was determined to find him.

I just wanted to make sure he was safe, she said.

Legend was among about a dozen Loving students who went missing in the weeks after COVID-19 began battering this community. Panic, sickness and death sent many Detroiters into financial and emotional turmoil, scattering some families from their homes, just as one of the safest places in a childs life school was abruptly forced to close.

Thats meant educators like Dungey, who work in the hardest-hit parts of the country, have not only had to adapt to a radically new way of teaching. Theyve also had to become detectives.

Full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak

Dungey and her staff have spent the last three months knocking on doors and scouring social media in search of students needing help. Theyve pestered students friends. Theyve searched for their relatives all to make sure that some of the nations most vulnerable children don't get lost in the middle of a global pandemic.

I need to make sure my kids are getting the education they deserve, she said.

All of the 127 students enrolled this year in grades K-5 at the Loving Academy, a tiny elementary school in Detroits North End, were considered economically disadvantaged by the state. Many of them, according to last years state test scores, already lagged behind their peers academically. And many faced significant challenges long before a deadly virus stole the lives of their loved ones or put their parents out of work.

So if Dungey couldnt find them and couldnt make sure they got the food they needed, or the grief counseling, or the internet connection required to attend their online classes they wouldnt be able to learn.

Theyre going to fall further behind, Dungey said as she prepared to knock on a students door last month. The achievement gap is going to continue to grow, and its already wide enough.

Its not clear how many schools have the resources to track down students during a crisis. Many states have not required schools to log attendance these last few months, and educators have been overwhelmed with the demands of shifting to remote instruction, changing the way they distribute meals to needy families and figuring out how to support students with disabilities while also suddenly having to instruct their own children, who have been underfoot.

And the intensity of the crisis has made tracking families difficult.

At the University Yes Academy, which, like Loving, is in Detroits six-school New Paradigm for Education charter network, Principal Robert Hines said his staff found one student by convincing his friends to reach out to him through a multiplayer online video game. They found another through the students comments on TikTok, the video-sharing app.

One missing student a first grader turned up when her mother called to report that the girl was in the hospital with the virus and nearly died. She flatlined, Hines said.

Other parents said they were coping with loss or overwhelmed with financial stress. Some had phones that stopped working. Some were too sick or exhausted to figure out the technology for online learning.

But, whatever their reason, Dungey said, theres too much at stake to let students fall through the cracks.

The grief and anger that have ignited protests across the country in the wake of George Floyds death in Minneapolis last month have only made the need to reach children more crucial, Dungey said, since school can be a source of hope.

Its a very powerful piece for them, to be able to not just understand the academic piece but where theyve come from, what they need to do to be successful and how they can change the world, she said.

Even as the school year comes to a close next week, she plans to keep following up with students, connecting them with summer school and making sure theyre ready for the fall, regardless of whether schools are able to open.

Were relentless, Dungey said. If we dont go to some of these homes, those kids would never be online, and those kids deserve what everybody else has.

A second grader at the New Paradigm Glazer Academy, a K-8 school a few miles from Loving, had been absent from his online classes. His teacher called the boys father repeatedly and left messages. When she hadnt heard anything by mid-April, she drove to the familys house and left a note on the door, asking for someone to call.

The next day, someone did. It was the boys 22-year-old brother, who reported that their father had died. The young man now planned to raise his little brother.

He said, You know, my brother keeps asking for my dad and I dont know what to tell him, said Yolanda Eddins, the director of community and parent affairs for the 2,400-student New Paradigm network, who reached out to the young man when she heard his familys news.

COVID-19 has pummeled Detroit, killing more than 1,400 residents, one of the highest death rates in the nation.

The pain and grief that have shrouded Detroit have also rippled through the schools in the New Paradigm network.

Eddins estimated that as many as a third of students and staff at the six schools lost someone close to them to the virus a number that would climb if she included extended families.

One Glazer parent lost her mother and father within a few days of each other, Eddins said. Another lost her father and two cousins in quick succession.

Her kids were really clinging and crying, Eddins said of that mom. They saw so much loss.

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Eddins used some of the money from a COVID-19 relief fund that New Paradigm put together with donations to buy groceries and toys for that distraught family. While shopping for them, she said, she stopped by the clothing section to pick up a cozy sweater for the mom, who was feeling isolated in her grief at home.

I remember her saying how alone she felt, Eddins said.

When she handed that package over later wearing a mask and gloves on the sidewalk in front of the familys home Eddins told the mother to take some comfort from the sweater.

I told her when you put that on, its going to soothe you, Eddins said. She started crying and I said, Just know youre not by yourself.

Detective work is only one of the new duties that educators in cities like Detroit have had to shoulder during this crisis, Eddins said. We also have to be good listeners.

Teachers and staff at New Paradigm schools have used shared spreadsheets to log daily calls to families, making note of those whove lost someone or need support. They flag family members who are sick and those who are struggling financially.

Eddins and New Paradigm President Ralph Bland review the tracker to decide who might need a gift card or a contribution from the community fund. They decide who might need grief counseling or a bouquet of flowers.

When the Glazer second grader who lost his father celebrated a recent birthday, they used some of the money to buy him a Spider-Man watch as a gift.

Hines, the University Yes principal, said the network sent him a condolence card when he recorded his own loss in the tracker: a 62-year-old cousin who died due to the virus.

The network also offered to help the mother whose young daughter was in the hospital on life support, but she didnt need much, Hines said. She just asked for our prayers.

Support from the school makes a difference, said Loretta Sailes, whose son, Jeremiah, 6, is about to finish kindergarten at Loving.

Jeremiahs father died on April 5, just days after Jeremiah and his mom grieved the death of a cousin who lived in their building and had watched Jeremiah when his mother needed a babysitter.

The deaths have been hard on her son, Sailes said. But the online grief counseling the school set up for him has been helpful.

They do some activities, like coloring and stuff, and they talk about his dad and about how he feels, Sailes said.

It was a rainy Tuesday morning in mid-May when Dungey, the Loving Academy principal, pulled up in front of a small two-story house a few blocks from the school to meet with a third grader and her mother.

She adjusted her mask, put on her gloves and walked up the wooden porch steps to knock on the familys door. But a woman called down from an upstairs window and said the family was gone.

She didnt tell you they were moving? the woman asked.

Dungey had confirmed the appointment that morning with a phone call and a text but somehow hadnt heard about a move. She pulled out her phone to call the childs mother, but her call went straight to voicemail.

Im definitely confused, she said, shaking her head.

Many of Dungeys home visits end this way, with crossed wires and missed appointments. Things change in a day or two and anything can happen, she said.

Its frustrating, but she gets it, she said. As a veteran educator with six children herself including three still at home who need support with their online coursework she knows families are busy and overwhelmed. Shell keep calling until she can connect with this family, she said.

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This has become her life in the months since March 16, when Michigans schools closed. When shes not consulting with teachers about instruction, posting video greetings for students or stopping by online classrooms, shes been on the hunt for students.

By May, shed managed to track down all of Lovings students. But finding them once has proved insufficient. Sometimes they disappear again. Sometimes she has to return, week after week, to help families that need support.

She came to my home at least four to five times, said Doshinique Green, who has seven children, including three at Loving.

Green didn't realize the school had been trying to get in touch with her until Dungey showed up on her doorstep one morning in early April.

Green, whose children range from a preschooler to a high schooler, works nights as a home health care aide and sleeps much of the day. In the early days of the pandemic, when a colleague was sick, she was working 12-hour shifts, six to seven days a week. She wasnt able to help her children log into their classes.

I couldn't get them online because I was working and sleeping, she said. I couldnt get up and be like, OK, let me get them to do it. I was so exhausted.

Green rarely answers her phone, which her children are often using, she said.

She was stunned when Dungey showed up at her door.

At that first visit, Dungey handed over a large bag with meals for the family. She came back the next week with a laptop, then again to show Green and her children how to log into the schools online platform. But still, Dungey said, Greens children werent doing their coursework so she kept calling and kept visiting.

Eventually, in early May, Dungey masked up, came into the house, sat Green and her children around their dining room table, and showed them what they needed to do to access the schools online platform.

That time, it finally clicked, Green said, and now her children know how to log in themselves.

They can go online and talk to their teacher with no problem, she said. And they dont need help from their exhausted mother.

Dungey was thrilled when she saw all three of Greens Loving students in second, fourth and fifth grades turn up for their classes the next day.

They actually came to gym class, Dungey said. Im, like, success!

Finding students is not all about knocking on doors. Staff at University Yes found a missing fifth grader by getting the childs friends to convey a message from the school through his video gaming headset.

Jumar Motley, a school social worker, said the boy called the next day, claiming hed been under the impression that the states emergency order closing schools exempted him from having to do school work. Motley corrected him and warned him that hed be the biggest fifth grader next fall if he couldnt advance to the sixth grade.

Now hes plugging in with his class and doing his work, he said.

Another University Yes student surfaced when principal Hines posted a video of himself singing and dancing on TikTok. Several students responded including a boy the school had been trying to reach.

There was one kid that commented, Yeah, Mr. Hines, you still got it. This was a kid we could not get in contact with at all, Hines said. I replied back on my TikTok: Hey whats your phone number? Were trying to get in contact with you.

The child sent his number and soon began logging into his classes, Hines said.

In late March and early April when Dungey was looking for Legend, her missing kindergartner, she didn't realize that his grandmother, Mekialena Durham, was also trying to get in touch with the school.

Durham had become a foster parent to the 6-year-old and his younger siblings in early March but hadn't told the school before it shut down. Later, with staff largely working from home, she hadnt been able to reach anyone.

She had tried to coach her grandson on his letters and numbers, but worried he would fall behind without support from his teachers. He needs a little bit of extra help, she said.

Finally, on April 17, Dungey happened to be in the schools office when the phone rang. It was a social worker now working with Legend and his family. The social worker gave Dungey a number for Legends grandmother and she immediately reached out.

That very same day, she dropped homework off right onto my porch a big old box of homework, Durham said.

A week later, Dungey returned with a tablet so Legend could connect with his teacher online. She stood on the grandmothers porch from a distance, in a mask to walk her through the steps to access the online platform.

It was awesome! Durham said. Shes been really supportive. She said whenever you need me, just let me know.

As the end of the school year approaches, educators in the New Paradigm network say they still have students struggling to regularly log into their classes. They plan to stay on them and keep at it through the summer so students can make up what they missed in summer school.

When its over, families will know that we didnt leave anybody behind, said Motley, the social worker at University Yes.

Theyll see that we didnt quit on them.

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When coronavirus closed schools, some Detroit students went missing from class. These educators had to find them. - NBC News

Coronavirus Created an Obstacle Course for Safe Abortions – The New York Times

June 15, 2020

Anti-abortion governors in Oklahoma, Texas, Ohio, Iowa and Alabama listed abortions as nonessential procedures, arguing that performing them would threaten supplies of medical resources and protective equipment in the midst of the pandemic.

The medical community pushed back, setting off a flurry of lawsuits to keep services running.

But some women ended up racing across state lines to avoid the new limitations. One traveled from Arkansas to Oklahoma to Kansas before she could terminate her pregnancy.

I firmly believe that this is a coordinated movement among the anti-abortion folks, said Julie Burkhart, founder and chief executive of Trust Women, which operates a clinic in Oklahoma City and another in Wichita, Kan. She noted that even before the pandemic, states that deemed abortion nonessential were debating legislation to curb access.

Her clinics, she said, saw a surge in the number of women seeking abortions, many of them coming in from other states. We saw, in one week, over 250 patients, she said, compared with the usual number of 40 patients per week per clinic.

Dr. Kanem, of the United Nations agency, said the approaches in the United States, where the debate over abortion was highly polarized, and in Europe, where governments failed to make womens health needs a priority, can both lead to terrible outcomes.

She added, Women and girls should not be shoved to the end of the line.

Matina Stevis-Gridneff and Monika Pronczuk reported from Brussels, and Alisha Haridasani Gupta from New York. Christopher Schuetze contributed reporting from Berlin.

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Coronavirus Created an Obstacle Course for Safe Abortions - The New York Times

Vermont among handful of states expected to see more deaths related to the coronavirus in next month – Burlington Free Press

June 15, 2020

Vermont could see an uptick in deaths related to the coronavirus over the next month compared to the last four weeks.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported the United States would likely reach between 124,000 and 140,000 deaths by July 4. The nation reachedmore than 115,000 deaths as of Sunday. The CDC named Vermont in a Friday update aslikely to see more new deaths over the next four weeks (relative to the last four weeks) that are related toCOVID-19,the official name of thediseaserelated to the coronavirus that first started toaffect peopleat the end of 2019.

A trend line of protected hospitalizations for COVID-19 after May 15 shows skyrocketing cases (orange) through August if Vermont returns to normal activity except for school closures.The pink, green and blue lines project respectively more cautious re-opening scenarios (blue signifies the continuation of the state's "stay at home" order).The graph, released by Governor Phil Scott on May 8, 2020, was prepared by Dr. Alessandro Vespignani and the Laboratotry for the Modeling of Biological & Socio-technical Systems.(Photo: Courtesy Vermont Health Department)

The Vermont Department of Healthcounted55 deaths in the state as of Sunday. Other states projected by the CDC to see increases include Arizona, Arkansas, Hawaii, North Carolina and Utah.

The Green Mountain State took steps to re-open over the past month.

Gov. Phil Scott declared a state of emergency March 13. He issued orders over the following weeks to mitigate the impact of COVID-19, which included: dismissing schools;closing bars and restaurants; restricting non-essential gatherings; issuing a stay-home order; and providing guidance for people entering Vermont.

Changes over the past few weeks included:

More: Coronavirus: Gov. Scott allows indoor restaurant dining, lifts some travel restrictions

Cumulative deaths reported in Vermont over the last three months include:

Chittenden County had the highest level of deaths in the state as of Sunday, at 39 according to the Health Department's dashboard tracking COVID-19. The county reportedly had 81 cases as of Thursday evening related to an outbreak, according to the department, with a majority concentrated in Winooski.

The update noted there were noassociated deaths and stated one person was hospitalized; However, the department revised that information Monday, indicating no one in the Winooski outbreak required hospitalization.

More: Coronavirus in Vermont: News and impact on your community

More: Coronavirus: Expanded COVID-19 testing in Burlington as outbreak unfolds in Chittenden County

The state hit more than 1,000 confirmed cases earlier in June afterjumping by 36 in one day; Most of these came from Chittenden County. The spike came after a testing site opened in Winooski.

34 of the new cases are thought to be associated with an outbreak of COVID-19 in Winooski, Health Department spokesman Ben Truman wrote in an email, according to previous Free Press reporting.

More: Vermont hits COVID-19 milestone with more than 1,000 reported cases since pandemic began

Contact Maleeha Syed at mzsyed@freepressmedia.com or 802-495-6595. Follow her on Twitter@MaleehaSyed89.

This coverage is only possible with support from our readers.Sign up today for a subscriptionto the Burlington Free Press.

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Vermont among handful of states expected to see more deaths related to the coronavirus in next month - Burlington Free Press

Coronavirus updates: Kitsap County eligible to apply for Phase 3 this week – KING5.com

June 15, 2020

Find developments on Washington's coronavirus outbreak and the state's plan for recovery.

Monday, June 15:

Kitsap Public Health likely to consider Phase 3 application

Kitsap County health officials will consider whether or not to apply for Phase 3 of Gov. Jay Inslee's recovery plan this week.

Kitsap County becomes eligible to apply for Phase 3 beginning June 18.

The Kitsap Public Health Board will consider a Phase 3 application during a special meeting June 19, followed by a Kitsap County Board of Commissioners' meeting.

Under Phase 3 of the recovery plan, non-essential travel can fully resume, gatherings of up to 50 people will be allowed, and businesses can increase capacity or reopen if they haven't already.

The following counties are currently in Phase 3:

There are no counties in Phase 4.

Food banks preparing for significant gap in volunteers

Food banks in King County may see a significant gap in its volunteer force when more than 100 National Guard members end their assignments on June 24.

Around 330 National Guard members were deployed to help at food banks in the county during the pandemic. Of those, the assignments for 116 of those members are coming to an end.

Because other volunteers - especially those most vulnerable to COVID-19 - have followed Gov. Jay Inslee's stay-home order and are expected to continue to do so, food banks are now scrambling to find new volunteers.

Were working with the state to put volunteers into food banks so the Guard can be released, said Jennifer Rosenberger, senior manager with King County Emergency Management. We really need to try to get help. Were hoping for high school students who need community service hours, or teachers, or others who arent working right now.

As unemployment hovers around 15% in the county, approximately 10,000 more households received food assistance benefits in April than January.

More information can be found here.

Lyme disease symptoms can be mistaken for COVID-19

With more people outside enjoying nature and possibly exposing themselves to ticks, health experts are warning of possible overlap between the symptoms of COVID-19 and Lyme Disease.

But can you get diagnosed with COVID-19 instead of Lyme disease and vice versa?

Experts say, yes, you could, as both have similar symptoms. Evidence and experts suggest patients should get tested for other conditions when presenting any of the symptoms. The experts that the VERIFY team contacted said getting the correct diagnosis in a timely manner is important as Lyme Disease can have serious effects if it's not caught early on.

A spokesperson with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention explained to the VERIFY team that Lyme disease shares some general flu-like symptoms with COVID-19 including "fever, chills, fatigue, body aches and headaches"

But," they added, "there are key symptoms of Lyme disease that help distinguish it from other illnesses, most commonly the erythema migrans rash (commonly known as a bulls-eye rash) which occurs in approximately 70 to 80 percent of people with Lyme disease.

The CDC representative explained that other Lyme Disease symptoms include facial palsy, arthritis in large joints and irregular heartbeat. Tick-born diseases are not likely to cause the type of respiratory symptoms associated with COVID-19, such as cough, congestion, shortness of breath, or loss of taste or smell, they wrote.

According to Dr. John Aucott, Director of the John Hopkins Lyme Disease Clinical Research Center, the overlap of Lyme Disease season with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic could lead people to self-diagnose incorrectly. Were currently on tick season," he said, "which means that Lyme being also a seasonal disease is currently overlapping COVID-19. Testing is fundamental, especially when Lyme usually tests positive later than the incubation period for COVID-19.

While some COVID-19 cases can be mild, it's important to get checked out if you think there's a chance it could be Lyme Disease instead.

Southcenter Mall in Tukwila opens Monday

Westfield Southcenter Mall in Tukwila will reopen with modified hours on Monday, June 15.

The mall will be open from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and from noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday.

Shoppers must wear masks and the mall will follow social distancing protocols.

Report: COVID-19 cases on the rise in Washington state

The Washington Department of Health said coronavirus infections are on the increase on both sides of the Cascades.

The situation report says state epidemiologists have seen a particularly large increases in Benton, Yakima, Spokane and Franklin counties, but said the latest data through the end of May indicates likely increases in infections across the state.

The results, the report says, includes increases in coronavirus transmission over Memorial Day weekend, but not infections that may have occurred during recent protests that have drawn tens of thousands of people together in cities and towns across the state.

Over 100 COVID-19 cases reported at Washington state prison

The Washington State Department of Corrections said a prison is restricting movement at its medium-security unit after more than 100 officers and inmates tested positive for COVID-19.

Coyote Ridge Corrections Center has confirmed more than half of its inmates at the facility are in quarantine because of potential exposure. Department officials say the announcement came after 30 corrections officers and 71 inmates tested positive. Another 33 people exhibited potential symptoms.

The Connell-based prison has minimum and medium-security units but only the medium-security unit is on restricted movement.

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Coronavirus updates: Kitsap County eligible to apply for Phase 3 this week - KING5.com

Only three out of 53 countries say US has handled coronavirus better than China – The Guardian

June 15, 2020

China has beaten the US in the battle for world opinion over the handling of coronavirus, according to new polling, with only three countries out of 53 believing the US has dealt with the pandemic better than its superpower rival.

The survey comes ahead of a major conference on the future of democracy this week, due to be addressed by the US secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, the former secretary of state John Kerry and the Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong. The conference is likely to be a rallying point for pro-democracy activists as China and the US enter an ever more explicit ideological contest.

The 53-country survey of 120,000 people by the German polling firm Dalia Research and the Alliance of Democracies Foundation, an organisation headed by the former Nato secretary general Anders Fogh Rasmussen, reveals deep dissatisfaction with US leadership.

The survey found electorates in Greece (89%), Taiwan (87%), Ireland (87%), South Korea, Australia and Denmark (all 86%) are happiest worldwide with the performance of their government in controlling the coronavirus. At the bottom end of the scale are Brazil, France, Italy, the US and the UK.

Only a third of people around the world said the US responded well to Covid-19, compared with more than 60% who said Chinas response was good. In only three countries Taiwan, the US and South Korea do more people think the US has responded well to the pandemic than think China has responded well.

Reflecting Donald Trumps unpopularity globally, only a third of Europeans believe the US is a positive force for global democracy, compared with half who say it has had a negative impact. The positive figure has fallen 4% since the same survey last year. Majorities in all 15 of the European countries surveyed say the US has a negative impact on global democracy, with the net negative score at -40% in Germany.

EU foreign ministers will meet on Monday to discuss how far to take a more sceptical approach to China. There is a reluctance to enlist in an all-out trade war, and concern that the US is due to implement a law that will require companies to certify that their entire global supply chain not just the part of the business that sells to the US government is devoid of equipment from Huawei, the telecoms company ZTE corps, and other Chinese companies.

This kind of measure has led to to a striking rise of anti-American feeling within China, the survey shows. The share of Chinese people who think the US has a negative influence on democracy around the world almost doubled since 2019 from 38% to 64% in 2020, moving China up to the top rank as the country most critical of the US.

Rasmussen, a former Danish prime minister, said: Covid-19 is also a litmus test for democracy. Democracy is still alive in the hearts and minds of people across the world, but this study highlights a disconnect between citizens and their governments. It should act as a wake-up call to democratic leaders that people want more democracy and freedom after Covid-19.

Half of Americans and just over half of French, Italians and Belgians say their country is democratic. Every country surveyed shows a democratic deficit a gap between the percentage who feel democracy is important and those who feel they live in a democratic country

The largest democratic deficits were recorded in Venezuela (50%), Poland (48%), Hungary (42%), Ukraine (39%) and Thailand (35%).

The Alliance of Democracies Foundation has previously conducted research on the extent of election meddling by authoritarian countries making recommendations on how social media companies could do more to shut down bots run by foreign governments.

The European Unions foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, on Sunday ruled out a transatlantic alliance against China a day before talks with Pompeo, and called for a big, positive agenda for EU-China cooperation.

The meeting between Pompeo and EU foreign ministers is expected to focus on China and disinformation, and will be followed in a weeks time by the first EU-China summit under the European commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and European council president, Charles Michel. The two EU chiefs will meet the Chinese premier, Li Keqiang, with the discussions expected to focus on market access.

Borrell said the EU would not pick a side in the US-China conflict. Amid US-China tensions as the main axis of global politics, the pressure to choose sides is increasing, he said. We as Europeans have to do it my way, with all the challenges this brings.

He also admitted there were internal divisions within the EU with some wishing to follow a policy of equidistance between China and Europe, and others urging Europe to align with the US.

He said the transatlantic relationship remained vital for Europe the values we share form its bedrock but that it was strained by the Trump administration taking unilateral decisions with which we do not always agree.

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Only three out of 53 countries say US has handled coronavirus better than China - The Guardian

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