Covid-19: Florida cases surge for fifth day as US Pres Trump pledges outbreak will be under control

Covid-19: Florida cases surge for fifth day as US Pres Trump pledges outbreak will be under control
FILE PHOTO A paramedic dressed in personal protective equipment exits an ambulance at St. Petersburg General Hospital where coronavirus disease COVID-19 cases are being treated in St. Petersburg Florida U.S. July 15 2020. REUTERSOctavio Jones

WASHINGTON, July 20 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Florida reported more than 12,000 new cases of COVID-19 on Sunday, the fifth day in a row the state has announced more than 10,000 new infections, even as President Donald Trump pledged that “it’s going to be under control.”

The virus has claimed more than 140,000 US lives total since the pandemic started, and Florida, California, Texas and other southern and western states shatter records every day.

Texas reported 7,300 new cases on Sunday after five straight days of new infections exceeding 10,000.

Despite record levels of new cases nationwide, the Trump administration is pushing for school to reopen in a few weeks and resisting a federal mandate to wear masks in public.

Trump defended his handling of the coronavirus pandemic in an interview broadcast on Sunday, including his statement that there were only embers of the virus popping up around the country. The United States, with 3.7 million total cases, has almost as many infections as the next three hardest-hit countries combined – Brazil, India and Russia.

“We have embers and we do have flames. Florida became more flame-like, but it’s – it’s going to be under control.”

Trump on “Fox News Sunday” repeated his assertion that the virus will eventually disappear.

“I’ll be right eventually,” he said. “It’s going to disappear and I’ll be right.”

Throughout the United States, every metric to measure the outbreak is going in the wrong direction – rising cases, deaths, hospitalisations and positivity rates of test results.

At least 14 states have reported record coronavirus hospitalisations so far in July, including Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, Nevada and Texas.

Trump said he did not agree with CDC Director Robert Redfield that this fall and winter will be one of the most difficult times in American public health, as hospitals deal with the seasonal flu on top of COVID cases. “I don’t know and I don’t think he knows,” Trump said.

Trump also called Dr Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious diseases expert, “a little bit of an alarmist.”

Fauci has warned that cases could soon top 100,000 a day if Americans do not come together to take steps necessary to halt the spread of the virus. The country is averaging 60,000 new cases a day and reported a record one-day increase of 77,299 on Thursday.

Testing shortages and delayed results in some states are hampering efforts to curb the outbreak, similar to situations that frustrated state officials and health experts at the start of the pandemic in March and April.

Dr Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that people were waiting up to a week to learn if they tested positive.

“The average test delay is too long,” said Collins. “That really undercuts the value of the testing.”

The number of COVID tests performed each day has doubled since late May but remains lower than recommended by some health experts. The United States set a record on Friday with more than 850,000 tests performed, according to data from the COVID-Tracking Project. — NNN-AGENCIES

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