From USA Today:
“The US now has 1 million
confirmed cases of the coronavirus”
The United States topped 1
million confirmed cases of coronavirus Tuesday – nearly a third of the world's
cases – as health authorities here and around the globe try to understand the
full scope of who is at risk and who has been infected. Reaching seven figures
– 1,002,498 to be exact – is the latest milestone for the U.S., which has
topped 57,000 deaths during the pandemic, according to the Johns Hopkins
University dashboard. That's a number approaching the 58,220 Americans killed
in the Vietnam War from 1955 to 1975. And despite warnings from national health
leaders that the country could face a second wave of the virus in late 2020,
states and cities are drafting or implementing plans to get people out of their
homes and back into mainstream life. It's all happened in about three months.
The country's first case was confirmed Jan. 21, and much of what we know about
the virus is still subject to study and debate.
There are now six new symptoms
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention caution could be signs of the
coronavirus: chills, repeated shaking with chills, muscle pain, headache, sore
throat and a loss of taste or smell. Shortness of breath was tweaked to
"shortness of breath or difficulty breathing" by the CDC, which
recommends seeking "medical attention immediately" for trouble
breathing, persistent pain or pressure on chest, bluish lips or face, or a new
confusion or inability to awaken. The daily spike in new cases had slowed in
recent weeks, but April 24 saw a daily
high for the U.S. with 36,200 cases reported.
Testing pitfalls: According to Johns Hopkins University data,
5.6 million of the estimated 328 million people in the country have been tested
for the virus. Still, testing is not as widely available as President Donald
Trump says and many governors say they're running low on testing equipment. The
lack of testing "is probably the Number 1 problem in America, and has been
from the beginning of this crisis," said Maryland's Republican Gov. Larry
Hogan, the chairman of the National Governors Association. The number of cases
would be substantially higher if testing was more readily available and steady
increases are to be expected as testing expands further.
^ Another horrible milestone in
the US. ^
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/04/28/coronavirus-us-cases-million-update/2996724001/
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