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Dr. Anthony Fauci said Friday he would “want to see a clear indication” that the U.S. is “strongly going in the right direction” before reopening the country.
“The virus kind of decides whether or not it’s going to be appropriate to open,” the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said on CNN. He warned the country could “prematurely” end social distancing measures and then “you’re right back in the same situation.”
Elsewhere, travelers were being cautioned to stay home around the world to mark the traditions of Good Friday and the Easter weekend. Eagerly awaited stimulus checks should soon be hitting Americans’ bank accounts. And UK leader Boris Johnson, out of intensive care, has his father worried but filled with “relief.”
Early Friday, the U.S. death toll was at more than 16,600 and there are more than 466,000 confirmed cases, according to the Johns Hopkins University data dashboard. About 26,000 Americans have recovered.
Our live blog is being updated throughout the day. Refresh for the latest news, and get updates in your inbox with The Daily Briefing. More headlines:
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• Rare look at stockpile handouts shows which states got ventilators and masks. Read about it here.
• Leaders, be honest about what you know — and don’t know. Transparency builds trust. Read The Backstory from USA TODAY editor Nicole Carroll.
As the curve of new cases appears to flatten, President Donald Trump said he was hopeful the U.S. could “reopen” soon: ”We’re at the top of the hill, pretty sure we’re at the top of the hill,” Trump said at a press briefing Thursday.
Top White House officials also suggested this week that parts of the country and the economy could reopen by May.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, though, suggested that the House of Representatives would not return to Washington, D.C., at the end of April and cautioned Trump against moving too quickly. ”I would hope that the scientific community would weigh in and say, ‘You can’t do this, it is only going to make matters worse if you go out too soon,’” Pelosi told Politico.
Anthony Fauci, the country’s leading expert on infectious diseases,said Thursday that there wasn’t any one medical factor for reopening and indicated it could occur at different times for different parts of the country.
Americans have received conflicting information on when they will receive stimulus checks due to the economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic. But there’s good news: Checks will be hitting their bank accounts soon.
The first wave of $1,200 stimulus payments is on track to be paid the week of April 13, according to Lisa Greene-Lewis, a certified public accountant at TurboTax. The government is prioritizing the first few waves of payments in the coming weeks toward low-income Americans and Social Security beneficiaries, Greene-Lewis says.
Some Americans were confused following conflicting reports from different corners of the government in recent weeks. The IRS said at the end of March stimulus payments would start being distributed within three weeks.
Then Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on April 2 the first stimulus payments would arrive for some via direct deposit within two weeks. Larry Kudlow, senior economic adviser to President Donald Trump, then said this week that checks could go out this week or next. Others have said they could have come as early as April 9.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said “a rather large number” of antibody tests could be available within “a week or so.”
Antibody tests for the new coronavirus could show who has already had the virus and recovered, which Fauci said is especially important for people who may have been asymptomatic and not known they had the virus.
“This would be important for health care workers, for first line fighters,” Fauci said on CNN Friday morning.
After the test is more widely available, it’s possible that Americans could be carrying “certificates of immunity,” Fauci said.
“It’s one of those things that we talk about when we want to make sure that we know who the vulnerable people are and not. This something that’s being discussed. I think it might actually have some merit under certain circumstances.”
Fauci warned, though, that other countries have been “burned’ by antibody tests and said they need to be validated, consistent and accurate. However, once the antibody testing is widely available, testing for who currently has the coronavirus will run in parallel, Fauci said.
Many people around the world began observing Good Friday from the safety of their homes as politicians and public health officials have warned that the hard-won gains against the pandemic must not be jeopardized by relaxing social distancing over the Easter holiday weekend.
Across Europe, where Easter is one of the busiest travel times, authorities set up roadblocks and otherwise discouraged family gatherings. In France’s Notre Dame Cathedral, though, a small group of worshipers gathered for a service nearly a year after a fire ravaged the iconic Gothic structure.
Only seven people were present for the 40 minute service that included prayer, music and readings inside the cathedral, which is closed to the public.
“This message of hope is especially important in these days where we are particularly affected by the coronavirus, which is sowing anguish, death and paralysis in our country and the world,” Paris Archbishop Michel Aupetit said in a video press conference this week, according to NPR.
Pope Francis will celebrate Easter Mass in a nearly empty St. Peter’s Basilica instead of the huge square outside. In England, the Archbishop of Canterbury will deliver his Easter sermon by video.
New York state alone has more confirmed coronavirus cases than any other country in the world, data from its health department and Johns Hopkins University suggest.
There were 159,937 known coronavirus cases in New York as of Friday. Spain had 157,022 confirmed cases and Italy had 143,626.
New York also reported a record-breaking number of deaths for a third straight day, at 799. More than 7,000 people have died in the state, accounting for almost half the U.S. death toll.
“That is so shocking and painful and breathtaking, I don’t even have the words for it,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Thursday.
But he added that there are hopeful signs, including slowdowns in the number of people being hospitalized, admitted to intensive care and placed on ventilators.
New York City has shortened the amount of time families have to claim the remains of loved ones before they’re buried in a public cemetery.
Bodies will be stored for just 14 days before they’re buried on Hart Island, which houses the city’s public graveyard for unclaimed bodies and those who don’t have a private burial.
Normally, 25 bodies a week are buried on the island, but with the coronavirus pandemic devastating New York, burial operations have increased to five days a week, with around 24 burials each day, Department of Correction spokesman Jason Kersten told the Associated Press.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson must be allowed to “rest up” before getting back to work after he was moved out of intensive care to a regular hospital ward, the British leader’s father said in an interview on Friday.
Johnson’s 79-year-old father, Stanley, said he felt “tremendously grateful” for his son’s improving condition.
“Relief is the right word,” he said in a BBC radio interview. But he warned that his son needed a period of recuperation before returning to work.
“He has to take time. I cannot believe you can walk away from this and get straight back to Downing Street and pick up the reins without a period of readjustment,” he said.
Johnson is the first major world leader known to have contracted the coronavirus. In a series of video messages he published on social media before he was admitted to the hospital with the illness, Johnson appeared increasingly unwell as he carried on the work of government in isolation at his official residence and office at Downing Street.
“The reason I’m still living is early detection,” retired NBA player Magic Johnson said Thursday on CNN. “I had a test and I had a physical. It came up that I had HIV, and that saved my life.”
Johnson still drew parallels between HIV and COVID-19 because of the similarities regarding the misconceptions about the respective viruses, inadequate testing, lack of available drugs and how the pandemic has hurt the black community.
“African Americans are leading in terms of dying from the coronavirus and most of them in the hospital are African American,” Johnson said. “We have to do a better job as African Americans to follow social distancing, stay at home and make sure we educate our loved ones and our family members and do what we’re supposed to do to keep safe and healthy.
“Then when you add that up, we don’t have access to health care, quality health care. So many of us are uninsured. That also creates a problem, too. Just like it did with HIV and AIDS.” Read more here.
The last of Utah’s “Big Five” national parks closed Thursday, effectively shutting down a tourism industry that pumped a record $9.75 billion into the state’s economy in 2018.
Gov. Gary Herbert announced Capitol Reef National Park’s closure, two days after Bryce Canyon National park closed and less than a week after the closure of Zion National Park. Arches and Canyonlands national parks closed March 27.
A report from the Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute at the University of Utah last November showed a 6.5% increase in tourism spending over 2017, pushing revenues close to $10 billion, and record visitation of more than 10 million people at the national parks.
The decision to close national parks have been left up to individual parks, according to the National Park Service.
• Iceland has tested more of its population for coronavirus than anywhere else. Here’s what it learned.
• The US has a shortage of face masks amid coronavirus pandemic. A USA TODAY investigation shows why.
• Your coronavirus money questions, answered: Can I get aid if my salary was cut? Should I withdraw money from my 401(k)?
An effort by Senate Republicans to replenish an emergency fund for small businesses hurt by the coronavirus crisis was blocked by Democrats, who called it a “political stunt” that failed to consider hospitals and other pressing needs.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., had proposed legislation boosting the popular Paycheck Protection Program by another $250 billion on top of the $349 billion Congress approved last month as part of the $2.2 trillion pandemic response known as the CARES act.
But when it came up Thursday on a voice vote, Maryland Democratic Sens. Ben Cardin and Chris Van Hollen objected, effectively blocking it. The bill “was not negotiated so it won’t get done,” Cardin said.
The head of the International Monetary Fund said Thursday the coronavirus pandemic will push the global economy into the deepest recession since the Great Depression, and the poorest countries will fare the worst. That marks a dramatic turnaround to what was on track to be a year of economic growth.
Three months ago, the IMF projected income growth per capita for 160 countries. Now the organization expects more than 170 nations will see per capita income diminish. Emerging markets and low-income nations across Africa, Latin America and much of Asia are at high risk, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said.
“With weak health systems to begin with, many face the dreadful challenge of fighting the virus in densely populated cities and poverty-stricken slums, where social distancing is hardly an option,” Georgieva said.
African countries have sounded the alarm about a lack of access to medical equipment that may leave them vulnerable to the virus.
The unions that represent commercial pilots and flight attendants say dozens of them who work for American Airlines have tested positive for the coronavirus, and they need better protection.
One hundred of the airline’s flight attendants had COVID-19 as of Saturday, the Association of Professional Flight Attendants said. In a statement, Julie Hendrick, AFPA’s new president, said the union has been pushing American since January for protective measures for front-line workers.
On Thursday, Capt. Dennis Tajer, spokesman for the union that represents American Airlines pilots, told USA TODAY that 41 of them have tested positive for the virus.
Because flight crews could be vectors for the virus, Tajer said they should “receive ‘first responder’ status and priority for protective equipment.”
• The CDC wants you to wear a mask in public. Why? Because the coronavirus might spread much farther than 6 feet through the air.
• Eight states — all with Republican governors — haven’t issued stay-at-home orders. Here’s why.
• A side of toilet paper to go? Some restaurants are serving up more than meals amid coronavirus outbreak.
• A bridge between life and death: Most COVID-19 patients who are put on ventilators will not survive.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Coronavirus live updates: Fauci says ‘virus decides’ when to reopen US; NYC Island sees more burials
Post time: Jul-23-2020