Country, |
Total |
New |
Total |
World |
38,348,128 |
+313,286 |
1,090,247 |
8,090,253 |
+51,534 |
220,873 |
|
7,237,082 |
+63,517 |
110,617 |
|
5,114,823 |
+11,415 |
151,063 |
|
1,326,178 |
+13,868 |
22,966 |
|
925,341 |
+7,118 |
33,204 |
|
924,098 |
+5,015 |
28,141 |
|
917,035 |
+13,305 |
24,572 |
|
853,974 |
+2,803 |
33,419 |
|
821,045 |
+3,542 |
83,945 |
|
756,472 |
+12,993 |
32,942 |
|
694,537 |
+1,178 |
18,028 |
|
634,920 |
+17,234 |
43,018 |
|
508,389 |
+4,108 |
29,070 |
|
484,280 |
+1,392 |
13,396 |
|
409,358 |
+3,921 |
9,970 |
|
381,275 |
+1,537 |
5,577 |
|
365,467 |
+5,901 |
36,246 |
|
344,713 |
+1,990 |
6,372 |
|
340,622 |
+3,906 |
12,027 |
|
340,089 |
+474 |
5,087 |
|
338,779 |
+1,632 |
8,957 |
|
335,679 |
+4,585 |
9,740 |
|
319,848 |
+531 |
6,588 |
|
296,652 |
+2,621 |
2,055 |
|
270,587 |
+5,133 |
5,122 |
|
188,876 |
+7,378 |
6,631 |
|
186,881 |
+4,042 |
9,654 |
|
165,880 |
+3,622 |
10,211 |
|
160,461 |
+3,109 |
5,535 |
|
156,946 |
+3,185 |
2,685 |
|
148,171 |
+856 |
12,235 |
|
138,695 |
+121 |
8,326 |
|
135,278 |
+5,068 |
3,101 |
|
129,747 |
+8,326 |
1,106 |
|
128,405 |
+214 |
220 |
|
121,296 |
+494 |
2,511 |
|
Dominican |
119,008 |
+165 |
2,183 |
115,358 |
+3,556 |
663 |
|
112,737 |
+844 |
672 |
|
108,901 |
+70 |
1,768 |
|
108,608 |
+1,315 |
448 |
|
107,213 |
+638 |
1,053 |
|
104,787 |
+139 |
6,071 |
|
100,654 |
+2203 |
5,899 |
|
98,380 |
+554 |
3,410 |
|
90,238 |
+1,015 |
1,124 |
|
89,673 |
+326 |
1,634 |
|
89,121 |
+1,208 |
2,110 |
|
85,718 |
+582 |
1,305 |
|
85,591 |
+13 |
4,634 |
|
84,524 |
+526 |
906 |
|
84,413 |
+332 |
2,521 |
|
84,391 |
+635 |
710 |
|
76,272 |
+324 |
285 |
|
63,275 |
+657 |
1,495 |
|
61,642 |
+323 |
511 |
|
60,655 |
+225 |
1,116 |
|
57,884 |
+4 |
28 |
|
57,566 |
+745 |
1,032 |
|
57,326 |
+1,028 |
861 |
|
55,869 |
+1,245 |
479 |
|
53,399 |
+174 |
1,818 |
|
51,197 |
+853 |
1,108 |
|
49,871 |
+343 |
1,092 |
|
47,126 |
+96 |
310 |
|
45,200 |
+516 |
391 |
|
44,985 |
+1,164 |
656 |
|
44,159 |
+808 |
1,830 |
|
42,381 |
+277 |
612 |
|
41,937 |
+318 |
787 |
|
39,862 |
+1,025 |
996 |
|
35,006 |
+152 |
767 |
|
33,101 |
+290 |
674 |
|
30,480 |
+145 |
899 |
|
30,437 |
+1,123 |
693 |
|
28,127 |
+2,054 |
225 |
|
27,317 |
+31 |
899 |
|
25,774 |
+785 |
923 |
|
24,805 |
+102 |
434 |
|
23,060 |
+408 |
462 |
|
21,193 |
+80 |
800 |
|
20,993 |
+372 |
330 |
|
20,886 |
+531 |
61 |
|
20,183 |
+28 |
120 |
|
16,880 |
+660 |
163 |
|
16,754 |
+28 |
237 |
|
15,793 |
+154 |
277 |
|
15,752 |
+182 |
429 |
|
15,587 |
+38 |
345 |
|
15,307 |
+15 |
315 |
|
14,268 |
+218 |
213 |
|
12,841 |
+569 |
102 |
|
12,499 |
+287 |
346 |
|
12,000 |
+11 |
129 |
|
11,134 |
+72 |
70 |
|
10,993 |
+50 |
35 |
|
10,872 |
+4 |
276 |
|
10,297 |
+37 |
79 |
|
10,258 |
+170 |
73 |
|
10,192 |
+12 |
69 |
|
9,945 |
+81 |
95 |
|
9,840 |
+109 |
133 |
|
9,231 |
+398 |
173 |
|
8,036 |
+15 |
230 |
|
7,910 |
+97 |
146 |
|
6,908 |
+425 |
96 |
|
6,680 |
+192 |
222 |
|
6,366 |
+118 |
106 |
|
6,017 |
+17 |
123 |
|
5,827 |
+3 |
181 |
|
5,696 |
+13 |
114 |
|
5,353 |
+89 |
154 |
|
5,202 |
+8 |
105 |
|
5,163 |
+85 |
108 |
|
5,072 |
+14 |
107 |
|
4,229 |
+32 |
33 |
|
3,937 |
+93 |
44 |
|
3,643 |
+2 |
59 |
|
2,130 |
+83 |
25 |
Retrieved from: https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
From CNN's Paula Newton and Leah Asmelash
A spin studio in Canada that public health officials say followed all Covid-19 protocols is now reporting 61 positive cases of the disease, and as many as 100 staff, clients and family members may have been exposed.
SPINCO, in Hamilton, Ontario, just reopened in July and had all of the right protocols in place, including screening of staff and attendees, tracking all those in attendance at each class, masking before and after classes, laundering towels and cleaning the rooms within 30 minutes of a complete class, said Dr. Elizabeth Richardson, Hamilton's medical officer of health, in a statement.
But it still wasn't enough.
Public health officials are very concerned about the number of cases and the size of the outbreak, especially because the city is not currently a hotspot and the facility was not ignoring health protocols, they said in a statement to CNN.
"They have also supported public health services in our investigation by sharing the messaging with all their members," Richardson said.
There are currently 44 confirmed positive primary cases associated with SPINCO and 17 confirmed secondary cases. Exposure was linked to several classes held from September 28 to October 4.
From CNN's Amy Cassidy
An elderly Dutch woman has become the first known person to die from catching Covid-19 twice, according to experts, raising serious questions about how long immunity and antibodies can last.
The woman, 89, suffered from a rare type of bone marrow cancer called Waldenström's macroglobulinemia. Her immune system was compromised due to the cell-depleting therapy she received, the researchers at Maastricht University Medical Center in the Netherlands wrote in a paper accepted for publication in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases.
However, the researchers said her natural immune response could still have been "sufficient" to fight-off Covid-19, as the type of treatment she received for cancer "does not necessarily result in life threatening disease."
The patient was initially admitted into hospital earlier this year with a severe cough and fever, testing positive for Covid-19.
She was discharged five days later when "besides some persisting fatigue her symptoms subsided completely," according to the report.
But two days into chemotherapy treatment -- 59 days after the start of the first Covid-19 episode -- the woman developed fever, cough and difficulty breathing.
She once again tested positive for coronavirus, and no antibodies were detected in her blood system when tested on days four and six. Her condition deteriorated on day eight.
Two weeks later, the woman died.
Retrieved from: https://edition.cnn.com/world/live-news/coronavirus-pandemic-10-14-20-intl/index.html
By Colby Itkowitz
President Trump throws face masks to the crowd as he arrives to hold a campaign rally at John Murtha Johnstown-Cambria County Airport in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Oct. 13, 2020. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)
Triumphant on his second day back on the campaign trail since contracting the coronavirus, Trump polled his rally crowd on how many had also had the virus and then celebrated a supposed immunity, even though that’s not guaranteed.
“Who has had it here? Who’s had it?” Trump asked, as some in the Pennsylvania rally crowd shouted. “I know a lot of people, a lot of people. We are the people I want to say hello to because you are right now immune. You’re right now immune.”
Reinfection is believed to be rare, but there’s still a lot unknown about immunity and how long it lasts.
Because of his immunity, Trump reasoned he could kiss everyone in the crowd, a recycled line from the previous night’s rally.
“I’d start kissing everybody. I’ll kiss every guy, man and woman, man, woman. Look at that guy. How handsome he is. I’ll kiss him, not with a lot of enjoyment, but that’s okay,” Trump said.
Trump also defended his controversial behavior during the months-long pandemic, during which he has continued to hold large political rallies and White House events with crowds. He and many of his closest aides all contracted the virus two or so weeks ago.
“I got to get out and have to meet people and I have to see people,” Trump said. “And I know it’s risky to do that, but you have to do what you have to do.”
Retrieved from: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-54496354
A police officer wearing a face mask works on a street in Tehran, Iran. Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shutterstock
Iran, the crucible of coronavirus in the Middle East, smashed two grim records this week, reporting its largest number of deaths in a single 24 hours since the outbreak started in March, and the largest number of new infections.
Iranian health officials openly admit Iran is deep into its third, and biggest, wave of the disease, and evidence suggests an exhausted and impoverished country is struggling to cope as trust in government diminishes, sanctions weaken the economy and hospitals report overcrowded intensive care units.
Mohammad Talebpour, the director of Sina hospital, the oldest in Tehran, predicted that if Iranians did not collectively take action and the disease persisted for another 18 months, as many as 300,000 could die. He said a third of the medical staff at his hospital had at one point contracted the disease.
Covid-19 has so far killed 29,070 Iranians, according to widely challenged official statistics, including 254 on Wednesday alone, just down on the daily record set on 12 October of 272.
The number of people newly infected in the previous 24 hours was recorded as 4,108 on Wednesday, just down on the record of 4,392 on 8 October.
In an attempt to force reluctant Iranians to abide by social distancing rules, including the compulsory wearing of face masks in public, Hassan Rouhani’s government has introduced fines of up to $6.60, initially in Tehran.
Businesses face fines that could rise to $30 on the third offence. Since the monthly minimum wage is worth less than $60 after a sharp fall in the value of the currency, these fines are not trivial, but even so the health minister, Saeed Namaki, said he feared they would not be high enough to act as a deterrent.
Masks have been compulsory in indoor public spaces since July.
But Rouhani is an innately cautious centrist, nervous of a public backlash, and concerned by the state of the economy now predicted by the International Monetary Fund to contract by 5% this year. The government spokesman Ali Rabiei stressed on Tuesday that the fines were “a tool to achieve compliance, and not a goal in itself. The fine is a warning to exercise self-discipline”. He insisted all the income from the fines would go to the ministry of health to fight coronavirus.
No one knows if the fines will be rigorously imposed, or the punishment likely to be inflicted on those unable to pay. The police, the Basij paramilitary force and health inspectors will have powers to impose the fines, and offenders will have two weeks to make payment into a health ministry account,
But the much-criticised sight of Iranian police this week parading criminals on the back of trucks is a reminder, if needed, of the methods security services can deploy.
Iran has not hidden the disputes between officials over its handling of the crisis.
Mohammad Reza Zafarghandi, the state-appointed head of the Iranian Medical Association, has alleged that officials ignored warnings from health experts, and said that the medical staff in Iran were exhausted.
He blamed the severity of the crisis on “some of the non-expert decisions”, saying “some decisions were not made by experts, such as reopening schools with a requirement to attend or announcing protocols that people were not required to follow”.
The disease seems to be spreading most in the context of the family, but bakeries, schools and restaurants are also accused of frequently flouting the rules.
The crisis comes at a tumultuous time for Iran, as the US-imposed sanctions on 18 private sector banks, are reducing Iran’s access to humanitarian goods and medicine. The rial remains under pressure, and the Iranian central bank governor, Abdolnaser Hemmati, was in Iraq this week to try to gain access Iranian foreign exchange reserves stored in Iraq.
Rouhani, who is due to stand down next summer, is under growing criticism for his handling of the crisis. Critics, including many of those lining up to replace him in the elections next year, claim he has handed too much responsibility for controlling the outbreak to provincial authorities.
Retrieved from: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/oct/14/iran-at-breaking-point-as-it-fights-third-wave-of-coronavirus
OCTOBER 14 2020 - 9:09AM
COVID-19 infections are again spiking across France.
DEATHS AND INFECTIONS
EUROPE
* Britain's opposition Labour leader Keir Starmer has called for a two-to-three-week "circuit breaker" lockdown, piling pressure on PM Boris Johnson who is struggling to sell his own COVID-19 plan.
* The Netherlands will return to a "partial lockdown", while Ukraine will extend its lockdown until the end of the year and Italy has imposed new restrictions on gatherings, restaurants, sports and school activities.
* New COVID-19 infections, hospitalisations and deaths have all spiked further in France as the nation braces for potential additional restrictions.
* Russia has reported record high daily cases and deaths but authorities say they do not plan to impose lockdowns across the country.
* Portuguese forward Cristiano Ronaldo has tested positive, Portugal's Football Federation says.
AMERICAS
* Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says the Republican-led US Senate will vote on a scaled-down coronavirus economic relief bill of the type Democrats have rejected as they hold out for trillions in aid.
* Mexico plans to vaccinate more than 116 million people or roughly 90 per cent of its population by the end of 2021.
ASIA-PACIFIC
* The Philippines has reported 1990 new infections, the lowest number in three weeks.
* Australia's most populous state will ease restrictions despite reporting the biggest one-day jump in new cases in six weeks.
MIDDLE EAST AND AFRICA
* Iran's death toll has risen by 254 to 29,070, with the number of confirmed cases spiking to 508,389 in the hardest-hit Middle Eastern country.
MEDICAL DEVELOPMENTS
* Johnson & Johnson says it will take at least a few days for an independent safety panel to evaluate an unexplained illness of a study participant that led to a pause in the company's COVID-19 vaccine trial.
* US drugmaker Eli Lilly says the government-sponsored clinical trial of its COVID-19 antibody treatment similar to one taken by President Donald Trump has been paused due to safety concerns.
* The European Union has agreed to pay more than 1 billion euros to Gilead for a six-month supply of its antiviral drug remdesivir.
ECONOMIC IMPACT
* JPMorgan Chase & Co executives are cautiously optimistic the pandemic will not send the economy into the worst possible tailspin.
Retrieved from: https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/6967785/latest-on-worldwide-spread-of-coronavirus/?cs=14264
The Speaker of the House of Commons Sir Lindsay Hoyle has urged vulnerable MPs to stay away from Parliament, amid rising cases of coronavirus.
A spokeswoman for the Speaker confirmed he has told "a number of members" to avoid travelling to Westminster.
It comes as London Mayor Sadiq Khan warns the city could be put into stricter lockdowns within days.
Last week the Speaker said there had been "a small number of cases on the parliamentary estate".
He introduced new safety measures in a bid to protect MPs and staff from the virus including installing Perspex screens in the Commons and advising further use of face coverings.
· Covid MP says she behaved 'out of character'
· London Covid restrictions may increase 'in a week'
Both the Commons and the Lords are still running a "hybrid Parliament" which enables members to join in debates via video link and vote using proxies.
A limited number are allowed in the Commons chamber and many MPs have returned to Westminster.
Leader of the House Jacob Rees-Mogg has previously described the hybrid Parliament as "deeply unsatisfactory".
The Speaker's spokeswoman said: "The Speaker's number one priority is the safety of MPs, their staff and House staff - and to ensure the parliamentary estate is Covid-secure.
"The advice we have given all staff, which is to work from home if they can, is the same for MPs, particularly those who are under medical supervision.
"As Covid cases are rising across the country, the last thing the Speaker wants to do is encourage MPs who are vulnerable to take risks by travelling into Parliament. This is exactly what he told a number of members during a recent phone call."
Earlier this month Sir Lindsay criticised the MP Margaret Ferrier who travelled from Glasgow to London with Covid-19 symptoms, then returned home after testing positive.
Ms Ferrier has been suspended from the SNP and has been urged to quit as an MP.
Retrieved from: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-54536197
· Keir Starmer called on the UK government to impose a national circuit breaker lockdown of at least two weeks in England as the death toll from Covid-19 soared to a four-month high. In a significant escalation, the Labour leader said the prime minister Boris Johnson had “lost control of the virus” and must take urgent action to impose a near-total shutdown across the country over the October half-term. Full story here.
· The Polish prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki tested negative for Covid-19. Morawiecki went into quarantine after he had contact on Friday with a person who has tested positive. A government spokesman said the prime minister had no coronavirus symptoms and continued to fulfil his duties.
· Dutch bars and restaurants ordered to close to stem surge in coronavirus cases. The Dutch government announced the new round of measures on Tuesday as the number of cases in this country surged in recent weeks to a daily record of nearly 7,400.
· Italy announces new restrictions. Italian prime minister Giuseppe Conte on Tuesday imposed new restrictions on gatherings, restaurants, sports and school activities in an attempt to slow a surge in novel coronavirus infections.
· UK reports 143 new deaths from Covid-19, highest daily figure since June. This brings the UK death total to 43,018. There had been a further 17,234 confirmed cases of coronavirus in the UK on Tuesday. It brings the total number of cases in the UK to 634,920.
· Cristiano Ronaldo has tested positive for coronavirus. The 35-year-old is said to be “doing well, without symptoms, and in isolation”, with no further positive tests reported in the squad before Portugal’s Nations League match against Sweden on Wednesday.
· Russia’s regulator has granted approval for a trial of its controversial Sputnik V Covid-19 vaccine on people aged over 60. In August Russia approved the vaccine for use after less than two months of human testing, including a dose administered to one of Vladimir Putin’s daughters.
· Hospitals in Paris could have up to 90% of intensive care beds packed with Covid-19 patients as soon as next week. The warning came from the healthcare system’s chief as France braces for new measures to slow a surge in cases.
· Ireland’s government offered more support on Tuesday to those hit hardest by some of Europe’s toughest Covid-19 restrictions. The budget stimulus package was described as “unprecedented in the history of the state” by Reuters.
· Russia reports record daily coronavirus cases and deaths. On Tuesday, the country’s coronavirus crisis centre said 13,868 new cases had been reported in the past 24 hours, pushing the overall number of infections to 1,326,178.
Retrieved from: https://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2020/oct/13/coronavirus-live-news-trump-tests-negative-for-covid-who-reports-record-new-global-cases