Friday, August 14, 2020

KAMALA HARRIS SAYS COVID WORST IN U.S. - ACTUALLY, IT'S WORST IN HER STATE OF CALIFORNIA THAN THE RNTIRE WORLD!

 Fact Check: Kamala Harris’s Misleading Claim Pandemic ‘Worse in U.S. than Other Advanced Nations’

Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., speaks during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing examining issues facing prisons and jails during the coronavirus pandemic on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, June 2, 2020. (Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Pool via AP)
Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Pool via AP
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CLAIM: “This virus has impacted almost every country. But there’s a reason it has hit America worse than any other advanced nation. It’s because of [President Donald] Trump’s failure to take it seriously from the start.”

VERDICT: MISLEADING

Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA), presumptive Democrat nominee Joe Biden’s vice-presidential pick, alleged Wednesday that the coronavirus had plagued the United States more than any other developed country.

In sheer numbers, the United States has more confirmed infections and deaths than any other country. The U.S. also has the third-largest population in the world, more than any other developed country.

Per capita, America has reported more cases than nearly all developed nations (except Chile), a tally by the Worldometer showed on Wednesday evening.

However, there are several other advanced nations — including the United Kingdom, Belgium, Spain, Italy, and Sweden — with a higher death rate per 100,000 residents, data maintained by Johns Hopkins University revealed, echoing the Worldometer figures.

The data showed that COVID-19 (coronavirus disease) is more widespread but less deadly in the U.S. than in the developed countries with a higher per capita death rate. Compared to those other countries, more people are contracting the virus without dying in the United States.

Some analysts suggest the faster the disease spreads and hits its peak, the fewer people die. The second spike in the average number of daily new U.S. cases that began in early June hit its crest in late July and steadily dropped until yesterday. It is unclear if the figures will remain at the level now (about 55,000) or continue to drop.

New deaths reported daily had also plateaued in the United States as of Wednesday after a second spike that began in July and remained below peak level. The average tally of new daily fatalities is currently at around 1,000, well below peak levels.

Worldometer data showed that the United States had done more testing than any other developed country globally, which has increased the case tally through the detection of more infections. America also leads the world in total recoveries.

According to Johns Hopkins, the confirmed case fatality rate in the U.K. (14.9 percent) is much higher than in the U.S. (3.2 percent). The case death rate only takes into account confirmed infections, excluding people with mild or no symptoms that do not require medical attention.

The U.S. has experienced massive nationwide unrest encouraged by the media and their Democrat allies, making coronavirus case comparisons with other developed countries difficult. Some public health officials in the U.S. have described the protests as potential breeding grounds for COVID-19.

The U.S. economy, particularly the gravity-defying U.S. stock market, appears to be weathering the virus’s impact better than at least some of the other developed countries.

At the very least, it seems that the economy’s contraction is less severe in the United States.

Before the rise of the virus, the United States enjoyed one of the best economies in history, which provided a cushion for the disease’s financial toll.

For months, the Democrat-allied mainstream media has warned of a looming economic downturn similar to the Great Depression that the U.S. has avoided.


IMAGES AND GRAPHS

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8627749/California-ranks-fifth-world-COVID-19-cases.html


California now ranks fifth in the world for COVID-19 cases and has the third worst death toll in the US - as other Sunbelt hotspots of Arizona, Florida and Texas start to see an uptick in deaths

  • The number of infections in California, the most populous US state, reached 597,984 on Friday morning, according to a John Hopkins tally 
  • The state sits only behind the US (5.2 million), Brazil (3.2 million), India (2.4 million) and Russia (910,000) 
  • Cases have been declining nationally in recent weeks, which has been driven in part by a drop off in cases in the hotspot Sunbelt states where coronavirus surged throughout June and July
  • Deaths in these states, however, appear to be increasing slightly despite showing signs of a decline or at least a plateau earlier this month
  • Florida reported a record 277 deaths on Tuesday, while Arizona had a near-record spike of 148 deaths on Wednesday 
  • Deaths across the US currently appear to be plateauing but are still averaging about 1,000 fatalities per day
  • Currently, the total number of infections in the US has now surpassed 5.2 million and more than 167,000 Americans have died from COVID-19 

California now has more COVID-19 cases than most countries across the world as the US state and other hotspots including Arizona, Florida and Texas start to see a slight uptick in deaths. 

The number of infections in California, the most populous US state, reached 597,984 on Friday morning, according to a John Hopkins tally.  

The state sits only behind the United States (5.2 million), Brazil (3.2 million), India (2.4 million) and Russia (910,000).  

The death toll in California has now reached 10,870, which is only third behind New York's 32,805 and New Jersey's 15,893.

California's cases, on average, have been trending upwards in the past week despite national infections being on the downward trajectory. The spike is due, in part, to a backlog of cases from a technical glitch in the state's reporting of data that left COVID-19 infections undercounted during the recent summer surge. 

The number of infections in California, the most populous US state, reached 597,984 on Friday morning, according to a John Hopkins tally. The state sits only behind the United States (5.2 million), Brazil (3.2 million), India (2.4 million) and Russia (910,000)

Cases have been declining nationally in recent weeks, which has been driven in part by a drop off in cases in the hotspot Sunbelt states where coronavirus surged throughout June and July. 

Deaths in these states, however, appear to be increasing slightly despite showing signs of a decline or at least a plateau earlier this month.  

Florida reported a record 277 deaths on Tuesday, while Arizona had a near-record spike of 148 deaths on Wednesday. The spikes could be a result of a weekend-delay in reporting given there is the same steep drop off each week.

Deaths across the country currently appear to be plateauing but are still averaging about 1,000 fatalities per day.  

Currently, the total number of infections in the US has now surpassed 5.2 million and more than 167,000 Americans have died from COVID-19. 

While the average daily death toll of 1,000 is still high, it remains below levels seen in April when an average of 2,000 people a day were dying from the virus. 

The average daily infection toll remains steady at about 53,000, which is down from the 66,000 daily cases being reported just last month. 

Infections increased in only 11 states last week compared to the previous seven days, including Hawaii where the rate of spread is now the highest in the country. 

More than 167,000 Americans have died from COVID-19. Deaths across the country, on average, appear to be plateauing but are still averaging about 1,000 fatalities per day

Currently, the total number of infections in the US has now surpassed 5.2 million. Cases have been declining nationally in recent weeks, which has been driven in part by a drop off in cases in the hotspot Sunbelt states where coronavirus surged throughout June and July

The death toll in California has now reached 10,870, which is only third behind New York's 32,805 and New Jersey's 15,893. California's cases, on average, have been trending upwards in the past week despite national infections being on the downward trajectory. The spike is due, in part, to a backlog of cases from a technical glitch in the state's reporting of data

Arizona had a near-record spike of 148 deaths on Wednesday after starting to decline earlier this month. Cases have been dropping off rapidly after peaking in July

There has been an uptick in deaths in Florida this week after the state reported a record 277 deaths on Tuesday

Deaths have been increasing in Texas this month after an initial steep drop off in early August. The state recorded a spike of 324 deaths on Wednesday

Hawaii had kept the virus at bay for most of the summer, but new cases have more than doubled and are repeatedly seeing daily triple-digit increases. 

The state's Governor David Ige said last week that he would be reinstating inter-island travel restrictions that require people to quarantine for 14 days in a bid to curb the spread.    

The increases seen in Hawaii and the 10 other states including South Dakota, Illinois and North Dakota, are minimal compared to the outbreaks that plagued hotspot states in June and July and are not enough to reflect an uptick in the national infection toll. 

Health experts have attributed the current decline in cases and deaths to policy and behavior changes in the hotspot states behind the summer surge where governors and local officials rolled back reopenings to curb the infection rate. 

They say the widespread adoption of masks, social distancing and closing down bars all helped. 

The decline in deaths and cases comes about three weeks after President Donald Trump, who for months refused to publicly wear a mask, urged Americans to cover their faces in public to stop the spread. 

Deaths are a lagging indicator and can continue to rise weeks after new infections drop. A coronavirus death, when it occurs, typically comes several weeks after a person is first infected. 

Hawaii had kept the virus at bay for most of the summer, but new cases have more than doubled and are repeatedly seeing daily triple-digit increases

In South Dakota, new cases have increased for the third straight week. More than 100,000 motorcycle enthusiasts are expected to attend a 10-day annual rally in Sturgis that began on August 7

It comes as California Governor Gavin Newsom continues to face mounting criticism over his handling of the coronavirus pandemic. 

Newsom has had a summer of muddled messaging and bad news in the coronavirus fight, a trend crystallized this week by his delayed response to a data error that caused a backlog of nearly 300,000 virus test results.  

California Governor Gavin Newsom continues to face mounting criticism over his handling of the coronavirus pandemic. Newsom has had a summer of muddled messaging and bad news in the coronavirus fight, a trend crystallized this week by his delayed response to a data error that caused a backlog of nearly 300,000 virus test results

'The buck stops with me, I'm accountable,' he said in a tense news conference on Monday, his first appearance since state officials revealed the error a week earlier. 

'No one's trying to hide that, no one's trying to mask that, we're owning that, we're moving forward to address those issues.'

His tone couldn't have been more different than it was in March when California's public battle with the virus began and the state initially avoided the worst outcomes. In commanding news conferences held almost daily, he announced the country's first statewide stay-at-home order and won mostly adherence from the state's 40 million residents.

But things began to change in May, when Newsom, under pressure from business leaders, allowed parts of the economy to begin reopening under a complicated, county-by-county process. Within weeks he reversed course as confirmed cases and the positive test rate rose.

The data backlog, which began at the end of July and continued because of a series of errors, led to the state under-counting the rate of virus spread and halted decision-making about what parts of the economy could open. Newsom has repeatedly stressed that those decisions will be made based on data.

Newsom's announcement last week that things were trending in a positive direction was immediately overshadowed by news of the data errors. 

The state's top public health official, Dr Sonia Angell, abruptly resigned, and Newsom declined to get into the details. He later said 'decisions were made' to change the team. 

In the last week, 11 states saw increases in COVID-19 cases including Hawaii (124%), Vermont (27%), North Dakota (19%), Indiana (18%), South Dakota (16%), Illinois (15%), Virginia (15%), Arkansas (7%), Idaho (5%), Kansas (5%) and Minnesota (3%)

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