Category: Corona Virus

Page 746«..1020..745746747748..760..»

Coronavirus outliers: four nations with very different approaches to the crisis – The Guardian

March 29, 2020

Harrowing images of emergency workers struggling to cope with the onslaught of Covid-19 cases have made front pages around the world, highlighting the terrible impact the disease is having. Death tolls in Italy and Spain have been especially alarming.

But not every nation has suffered to the same grim extent. Some have avoided lockdowns but have still not suffered huge leaps in case numbers. Others have introduced strict monitoring and contact tracing of infected individuals and have managed to contain the disease so far. Here we look at the ways four very different nations have reacted.

Japan remains one of the major international puzzles as it has avoided the death tolls that have affected Italy and Spain but without imposing draconian restrictions on movement or widespread testing. Hokkaido, so far the worst-affected region with 154 cases, is now lifting its state of emergency. Some officials still believe Tokyo could still be affected by a major outbreak, however.

Sweden reacted very differently to its Scandinavian neighbours Norway and Denmark, which imposed tight restrictions when Covid-19 first appeared in Europe. Instead Sweden closed only its high schools and colleges while keeping schools for younger children open along with bars, restaurants and borders.

Germany remains a Covid-19 outlier because of its very low mortality rate: 200 out of a total of 37,000 cases, just under 0.6%. (Spains death rate is 7.8%; Italys is 10.1%.) Health experts point out that in Germany, many more people are being tested including young and healthy individuals, who are not likely to die from coronavirus.

South Korea reacted with remarkable speed in January. The nation had suffered previous coronavirus outbreaks of severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers) and had a very clear idea of how to proceed. Contacts of infected people were traced with considerable effort. More than 338,000 tests have since been carried out, revealing 8,900 infected individuals of whom 111 have died, a mortality rate of 1.25%.

Go here to read the rest:

Coronavirus outliers: four nations with very different approaches to the crisis - The Guardian

They Celebrated Basketball and a Birthday. Then Came Coronavirus. – The New York Times

March 29, 2020

By the time she could get to the Bronx, he had texted to say he was on the way to the hospital. Which one? she asked. Einstein, he wrote. It was their last communication.

Just a week or so earlier, Aiyana Greens phone had died. Lee, eight years older, was concerned that he could not reach her over several hours. He went to New Jersey to bang on her door at 2 a.m. to make sure she was OK.

He was the best big brother, she said.

She rushed to the hospital, but could not get inside.

I just wanted to hold his hand. I wanted to be near him, she said, crying as she retold the story. I kept telling the doctor, if you keep saying my name to him, I promise hes going to live. Keep saying Aiyana, Aiyana, Aiyana. Please. But I know they were so overwhelmed.

She spent much of Thursday figuring out funeral and burial plans. They will be limited to 10 people.

Had Green, Duck or Edwards died any other way, at any other time, the New York basketball community would hold big funerals, big celebrations of life.

Relatives of Duck and Edwards did not respond to messages. But the Green family wanted to get a message out.

I want people to stay inside so we can get through this a lot faster and I can personally get out of this nightmare, Greens daughter, Bria Natalie, said. She cried. I want people to know my dad was loved by all, and he wanted people to love each other. And I would do anything to have him back.

Read the original post:

They Celebrated Basketball and a Birthday. Then Came Coronavirus. - The New York Times

In the Coronavirus Fight in Scandinavia, Sweden Stands Apart – The New York Times

March 29, 2020

STOCKHOLM When the coronavirus swept into the Scandinavian countries, Norway and Denmark scrambled to place extensive restrictions on their borders to stem the outbreak. Sweden, their neighbor, took a decidedly different path.

While Denmark and Norway closed their borders, restaurants and ski slopes and told all students to stay home this month, Sweden shut only its high schools and colleges, kept its preschools, grade schools, pubs, restaurants and borders open and put no limits on the slopes.

In fact, Sweden has stayed open for business while other nations beyond Scandinavia have attacked the outbreak with various measures ambitious in their scope and reach. Swedens approach has raised questions about whether its gambling with a disease, Covid-19, that has no cure or vaccine, or if its tactic will be seen as a savvy strategy to fight a scourge that has laid waste to millions of jobs and prompted global lockdowns unprecedented in peacetime.

By Saturday, Norway, population 5.3 million, had more than 3,770 coronavirus cases and 19 deaths; Denmark, population 5.6 million, reported 2,200 cases and 52 deaths; Sweden, with 10.12 million people, recorded more than 3,060 cases and 105 deaths.

A recent headline in the Danish newspaper Politiken, encapsulates the question ricocheting around Europe, Doesnt Sweden take the corona crisis seriously?

There is no evidence that Swedes are underplaying the enormity of the disease rampaging across the globe. The countrys leader and health officials have stressed hand washing, social distancing and protecting people over the age of 70 by limiting contact with them.

But peer into any cafe in the capital, Stockholm, and groups of two or more people can be seen casually dining and enjoying cappuccinos. Playgrounds are full of running, screaming children. Restaurants, gyms, malls and ski slopes have thinned out but are still in use.

The state epidemiologist, Anders Tegnell, said in an interview that Swedens strategy is based on science and boiled down to this: We are trying to slow the spread enough so that we can deal with the patients coming in.

Swedens approach appeals to the publics self-restraint and sense of responsibility, Mr. Tegnell said. Thats the way we work in Sweden. Our whole system for communicable disease control is based on voluntary action. The immunization system is completely voluntary and there is 98 percent coverage, he explained.

You give them the option to do what is best in their lives, he added. That works very well, according to our experience.

Swedens method flies in the face of most other nations stricter strategies. India is attempting a lockdown that affects 1.3 billion people. Germany has banned crowds of two or more people, except for families. In France, residents are asked to fill in a form stating the purpose of each errand when they leave their homes; each trip requires a new form. Britain has deployed police officers to remind residents to stay home.

Still, while Sweden may appear to be an outlier in Scandinavia and in much of the wider world, it is too soon to say whether its approach will yield the same results as other countries. And the Swedish authorities could still take stronger action as coronavirus hospitalizations rise.

In explaining Swedens current strategy, experts point to other underlying factors: The country has high levels of trust, according to the historian Lars Tragardh, and a strict law in the Constitution prohibits the government from meddling in the affairs of the administrative authorities, such as the public health agency.

Therefore, you dont need to micromanage or control behavior at a detailed level through prohibitions or threat of sanctions or fines or imprisonment, Mr. Tragardh said in a phone interview. That is how Sweden stands apart, even from Denmark and Norway.

The government has deferred to the agencys recommendations to fight the virus, which has infected more than 600,000 people and killed more than 27,000 worldwide by Saturday. If the health agency were to say that closing borders and shutting down all of society was the best way to go, the government would most likely listen.

Mr. Tragardh said Swedes level of trust was manifested in other ways: Not only do citizens have confidence in public institutions and governmental agencies and vice versa, but high social trust exists among citizens, as well.

That is evident in the countrys approach to the virus. Norway did not completely shut its 1,000-mile land border with Sweden, but most people returning from abroad must enter a two-week quarantine (Reindeer herders and daily commuters are exempt.) Finland closed the borders of its most populous region which has 1.7 million people and includes the capital, Helsinki for three weeks to fight the outbreak there.

Norway limited groups outdoors to no more than five people, and those indoors must keep a distance of more than six feet (except relatives). Denmark closed its borders, sent public workers home with pay and encouraged all other employees to work from home. It shut nightclubs, bars, restaurants, cafes and shopping centers, and banned gatherings of more than 10 people outdoors.

Sweden initially banned gatherings of 500.

Early in the outbreak, some event organizers suggested they would try to get around the crowd limit by allowing precisely 499 ticket holders into their venues. (That stopped when cases of Covid-19 were confirmed among staff members.)

Mr. Tegnell, the state epidemiologist, said that is why bans dont work: People find ways around the rules.

He also said he did not believe Sweden was a maverick and did not understand its neighbors strategy. Closing borders at this stage of the pandemic, when almost all countries have cases, to me does not really make sense, he said. This is not a disease that is going to go away in the short term or long term. We are not in the containment phase. We are in the mitigation phase.

He also said that closing schools had not been ruled out.

The Netherlands, which reported more than 9,700 cases of the virus and 639 deaths by Saturday, is taking a similar approach to Swedens. On March 16, Prime Minister Mark Rutte said his country of 17.1 million was opting for a controlled spread among groups at the least risk of getting seriously ill. He argued that it was too late to shut down the country completely.

A majority of Swedes, 52 percent, support the measures to contain the virus, according to a survey conducted by the newspaper Svenska Dagbladet and published on Tuesday. But 14 percent said that too little consideration was being given to public health in order to benefit the economy.

There is growing concern as Swedes prepare to travel to their country houses and to the ski slopes for Easter, even though the public health agency has asked citizens to reconsider such trips. (Norway announced a cabin ban to prevent residents from going to their country homes.)

Even Prime Minister Mette Fredriksen of Denmark issued a warning about its neighbor on Monday: Dont go on a ski vacation in Sweden!

Last week, a cluster of Covid-19 cases was traced to an aprs-ski party at a Swedish alpine center, Are, prompting officials to close an aerial tram and gondola and shut bars and nightclubs. Hundreds of Covid-19 cases in Scandinavia have stemmed from vacationers returning from ski trips in Italy which has the most cases in Europe and in Austria.

The public health agency denies this.

In the meantime, the infection curve in Sweden has started to rise sharply, and on Friday the government tightened the limit on crowds to no more than 50 people.

Some residents like Elisabeth Hatlem, a hotelier, are of two minds about the Swedish approach. She is grateful that she can keep her business open. But she and her partner do not like sending their six children to school amid the pandemic.

For us, a total lockdown is a disaster, she said. But I am worried Sweden will explode at some point. I feel like Im living in a huge experiment, and I was never asked if I wanted to sign up.

Christina Anderson reported from Stockholm, and Henrik Pryser Libell from Oslo. Follow Ms. Anderson on Twitter @candersonSTO and Mr. Libell @hlibell.

Read more here:

In the Coronavirus Fight in Scandinavia, Sweden Stands Apart - The New York Times

Some Recovered Coronavirus Patients In Wuhan Are Testing Positive Again : Goats and Soda – NPR

March 29, 2020

People in Wuhan, China, line up at a facility that tests discharged COVID-19 patients as well as individuals who had been held in isolation. Feature China/Barcroft Media via Getty Images hide caption

People in Wuhan, China, line up at a facility that tests discharged COVID-19 patients as well as individuals who had been held in isolation.

A spate of mysterious second-time infections is calling into question the accuracy of COVID-19 diagnostic tools even as China prepares to lift quarantine measures to allow residents to leave the epicenter of its outbreak next month. It's also raising concerns of a possible second wave of cases.

From March 18-22, the Chinese city of Wuhan reported no new cases of the virus through domestic transmission that is, infection passed on from one person to another. The achievement was seen as a turning point in efforts to contain the virus, which has infected more than 80,000 people in China. Wuhan was particularly hard-hit, with more than half of all confirmed cases in the country.

But some Wuhan residents who had tested positive earlier and then recovered from the disease are testing positive for the virus a second time. Based on data from several quarantine facilities in the city, which house patients for further observation after their discharge from hospitals, about 5%-10% of patients pronounced "recovered" have tested positive again.

Some of those who retested positive appear to be asymptomatic carriers those who carry the virus and are possibly infectious but do not exhibit any of the illness's associated symptoms suggesting that the outbreak in Wuhan is not close to being over.

NPR has spoken by phone or exchanged text messages with four individuals in Wuhan who are part of this group of individuals testing positive a second time in March. All four said they had been sickened with the virus and tested positive, then were released from medical care in recent weeks after their condition improved and they tested negative.

Two of them are front-line doctors who were sickened after treating patients in their Wuhan hospitals. The other two are Wuhan residents. They all requested anonymity when speaking with NPR because those who have challenged the government's handling of the outbreak have been detained.

One of the Wuhan residents who spoke to NPR exhibited severe symptoms during their first round of illness and was eventually hospitalized. The second resident displayed only mild symptoms at first and was quarantined in one of more than a dozen makeshift treatment centers erected in Wuhan during the peak of the outbreak.

But when both were tested a second time for the coronavirus on Sunday, March 22, as a precondition for seeking medical care for unrelated health issues, they tested positive for the coronavirus even though they exhibited none of the typical symptoms, such as a fever or dry cough. The time from their recovery and release to the retest ranged from a few days to a few weeks.

Could that second positive test mean a second round of infection? Virologists think it is unlikely that a COVID-19 patient could be re-infected so quickly after recovery but caution that it is too soon to know.

Under its newest COVID-19 prevention guidelines, China does not include in its overall daily count for total and for new cases those who retest positive after being released from medical care. China also does not include asymptomatic cases in case counts.

"I have no idea why the authorities choose not to count [asymptomatic] cases in the official case count. I am baffled," said one of the Wuhan doctors who had a second positive test after recovering.

These four people are now being isolated under medical observation. It is unclear whether they are infectious and why they tested positive after their earlier negative test.

It is possible they were first given a false negative test result, which can happen if the swab used to collect samples of the virus misses bits of the virus. Dr. Li Wenliang, a whistleblowing doctor who later died of the virus himself in February, tested negative for the coronavirus several times before being accurately diagnosed.

In February, Wang Chen, a director at the state-run Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, estimated that the nucleic acid tests used in China were accurate at identifying positive cases of the coronavirus only 30%-50% of the time.

Another theory is that, because the test amplifies tiny bits of DNA, residual virus from the initial infection could have falsely resulted in that second positive reading.

"There are false positives with these types of tests," Dr. Jeffrey Shaman, a professor of environmental health sciences at Columbia University, told NPR by email. Shaman recently co-authored a modeling study showing that transmission by individuals who did not exhibit any symptoms was a driver of the Wuhan outbreak.

How real is China's recovery?

On Tuesday, Hubei province, where Wuhan is the capital, said it would relax lockdown measures that have now been in place for more than two months and begin letting residents leave cities the following day. Wuhan said it would begin lifting its quarantine measures and letting residents leave two weeks later, on April 8.

To leave Wuhan, residents must first test negative for the coronavirus, according to municipal authorities. Such screenings will identify some remaining asymptomatic virus carriers. But the high rate of false negatives that Chinese doctors have cited means many with the virus could pass undetected.

Last Thursday, Wuhan reported for the first time since the outbreak began that it had no new cases of the virus from the day before a milestone in China's virus containment efforts. The city reported a zero rise in new cases for the following four days.

Assessing asymptomatic carriers

But Caixin, an independent Chinese news outlet, reported earlier this week that Wuhan hospitals were continuing to see new cases of asymptomatic virus carriers, citing a health official who said he had seen up to a dozen such cases a day.

Responding to inquiries about how the city was counting asymptomatic cases, Wuhan's health commission said Monday that it is quarantining new asymptomatic patients in specialized wards for 14 days. Such patients would be included in new daily case counts if they develop symptoms during that time, authorities said.

"Based on available World Health Organization data, new infections are mainly transmitted by patients who have developed symptoms. Hence [asymptomatic cases] may not be the main source of transmission," the commission said.

A researcher at China's health commission told reporters Tuesday that asymptomatic carriers "would not cause the spread" of the virus. Zunyou Wu, the researcher, explained this was because the authorities were isolating people who had close contact with confirmed patients. Wu did not explain how they would identify asymptomatic carriers who had no close contact with confirmed patients.

Addressing growing public concern of asymptomatic patients, China's Premier Li Keqiang urged during Thursday's senior-level government meeting that "relevant departments must ... truthfully, timely, and openly" answer questions, such as whether these patients are infectious and how the course of the outbreak may change.

Research suggests that the spread can be caused by asymptomatic carriers. Studies of patients from Wuhan and other Chinese cities who were diagnosed early in the outbreak suggest that asymptomatic carriers of the virus can infect those they have close contact with, such as family members.

"In terms of those who retested positive, the official party line is that they have not been proven to be infectious. That is not the same as saying they are not infectious," one of the Wuhan doctors who tested positive twice told NPR. He is now isolated and under medical observation. "If they really are not infectious," the doctor said, "then there would be no need to take them back to the hospitals again."

Geoff Brumfiel contributed reporting from Washington, D.C.

Read this article:

Some Recovered Coronavirus Patients In Wuhan Are Testing Positive Again : Goats and Soda - NPR

Coronavirus preys on what terrifies us: dying alone – CNN

March 29, 2020

He never saw his family again.

Kaminski died days later of covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. Because of fears of contagion, no visitors, including his family, were allowed to see him at Mt. Sinai Hospital before he died.

"It seemed so surreal," said Diane Siegel, Kaminski's daughter in law. "How could someone pass so quickly and with no family present?"

Mitzi Moulds, Kaminski's companion of 30 years, was quarantined herself, having also contracted the coronavirus. She worried Kaminski would wake up and think she'd abandoned him.

"Truthfully, I think he died alone," said Bert Kaminski's, one of Steve's sons. "Even if a doctor was there."

As the coronavirus stalks victims around the world, one of its scariest aspects is how it seems to feed on our deepest fears and prey on our primal instincts, like the impulse to be close to people we love when they are suffering and near death.

In a painful irony, the very thing we need in moments of fear and anxiety could also kill us.

Many hospitals and nursing homes have closed their doors and placed covid-19 patients in isolation wards to prevent the disease from spreading. One doctor called it "the medical version of solitary confinement."

Priests are administering last rites over the telephone while families sit helplessly at home.

The isolation extends beyond coronavirus patients. Amy Tucci, president of the Hospice Foundation of America, estimates that 40% of hospice patients are in hospitals or nursing homes, many of which have placed strict restrictions on visitors. Their families, too, are worried about loved ones dying without them.

"We crave closure," said Maryland psychologist Dr. Kristin Bianchi, "so it's only natural we would want to be there in our loved one's final moments. We want to bear witness to that process and say our last goodbyes."

Something about dying alone seems to haunt us. To some it may suggest the deceased's life lacked love and worth, and that in the end they were forgotten.

But some medical experts challenge the idea that scores of people are dying unaccompanied in hospitals right now. In many instances, they said, hospital staff are standing vigil by patients' bedsides during their last moments.

It's not ideal, they say, but they're not quite the lonely deaths we may imagine.

As a lung specialist and member of the Optimum Care Committee at Massachusetts General Hospital, Dr. Emily Rubin is on the frontlines of the pandemic.

But Rubin said the situation is evolving rapidly as the virus spreads. In some cases, the hospital may connect families and covid-19 victims electronically instead of in person. Other times, nurses and other hospital staff will step in to stand vigil.

"Even if the disease is too mighty, the ethic of not abandoning people is so strong," Rubin said. "We feel like being present with people at the end of life is a huge part of what we do.

"People in a hospital are not dying alone."

Still, shepherding patients through the last stages of life can take an emotional and physical toll on doctors, nurses and other hospital staff, Rubin acknowledged.

"The devastating image of the lonely deaths of coronavirus patients in Italy hangs over us all," Lamas wrote. "Talking with one of the nurse practitioners in our hospital's new Covid-19 I.C.U. one recent night, I asked what worried her most. 'Patients dying alone,' she replied quickly."

But some hospice chaplains question notions of "lonely deaths," saying that in their experience, some people want to approach the end by themselves.

"I don't think dying alone has to always be a bad thing," said the Rev. C. Brandon Brewer, a hospice chaplain in Maryland. "What we've done is make it into something that it doesn't have to be."

When we think about dying alone, we're really talking about two separate things, psychologists say: The fear that people we love will die alone, and the fear that we ourselves will stare down death solo.

"It creates in almost everyone a sense of terror," said Bianchi, of the Center for Anxiety & Behavioral Change in Rockville, Maryland. "We want to be be able to cushion the experience from what we believe will be a painful and difficult experience. We also want to be there because we imagine ourselves in that scenario."

"People feel a sense of guilt. What could I have done better? How could I have stopped this?" she said. "Part of that is just part of the normal grief process."

This relentless pandemic, which brings deaths shockingly quickly, heightens the anxiety. Many people can't get to their loved one's bedsides to whisper last goodbyes or reconcile old grudges.

Secular and religious end-of-life rituals, too, have been stripped away. Hospice care, for example.

"Hospice is all about being able to provide an environment where people can review their life and say their goodbyes and their sorries and hold hands and kiss one another and then -- poof! -- all of that is just gone overnight," said Tucci, of the Hospice Foundation. "It's a nightmare."

At the same time, many funeral homes have cut way back on memorials, burials and other rituals used to commemorate departed friends and family.

"Even when there are people around to support us during times of mourning, it can be an extremely isolating experience," said Bianchi. "Take that, and then put someone into forced isolation, like we are now, and it can be absolutely agonizing."

It happens too often to be a coincidence, hospice chaplains say.

Family members will maintain a constant vigil, spending hours, even days, by their loved one's deathbed. And then, when they leave for a few moments to make a sandwich or take a shower, their beloved dies.

"There's no coincidence in my mind," said Brewer, the hospice chaplain in Maryland. "This is an intentional process."

Egan agreed. "Ask anyone who has worked in hospice and they will have dozens of stories like this. "I think a lot of people want to die alone."

In other words, there's a difference between dying alone and dying lonely.

"Dying alone is not necessarily dying without love. It is simply in some cases the absence of another person in the room," said Brewer. "And if that's what someone wants, that's OK. It doesn't mean they were forsaken."

In a certain sense, Egan added, we all die alone, even if we are surrounded by people we love. Often, as we die, our bodies are breaking down and our minds are elsewhere. The conscious experience of death is, by nature, solitary.

And the movie image of someone imparting profound last words upon his deathbed, encircled by his faithful family? That's a comforting fiction, hospice chaplains said.

"That is not how it happens," Egan said. "Many people are not responsive at the end. Their bodies are busy doing something else."

Before Steve Kaminski died, a nurse practioner at Mt. Sinai set up a group call so he could hear his family's voices one last time.

His face brightened, the nurse told family members, as each offered their tearful goodbyes or said, hoping against hope, that they'd see him when he left the hospital.

On a ventilator, Kaminski himself could say nothing.

When he died days later, it was a sudden and stunning ending to 86 years of vibrant life, said Bert Kaminski, Steve's son.

But Bert Kaminski said he took some solace from a dinner he shared recently with his father and his father's longtime partner. They went to a Vietnamese restaurant, drained a bottle of Merlot and then feasted on ice cream. His father was his usual bon vivant self, Bert remembers.

"People shouldn't take it for granted that there is time to connect with them later, particularly older family members," Kaminski said.

"This thing can come very suddenly. No visitors. No final words."

Read more from the original source:

Coronavirus preys on what terrifies us: dying alone - CNN

Coronavirus stimulus check scams are out to swindle you out of $1,200: What you need to know – USA TODAY

March 29, 2020

Congress has passed, President Trump has signed, a $2 trillion stimulus bill that includes checks to taxpayers. Here's how to see what you might get. USA TODAY

Do not give out your PayPal account information, Social Security number, bank account number or anything else if someone claims such information is essential tosign you up for a stimulus check relating to the coronavirus pandemic.

It's not. It's a scam.

It's time to warn consumers once againthat we need to practice some social distancing from the scammers.

The FBI, state attorneys general and other agencies are alerting Americans that phone calls, texts or emails asking for personal or financial information to get the $1,200 federal payment are not legit.

Your money is important: Money tips and advice delivered right to your inbox. Sign up here

Michigan Attorney General DanaNessel on Thursday issued what she called "an urgent consumer alert" relating to scammers who play upfederal stimulus checks. In other states, the Better Business Bureau has reported that the level of "stimulus scams" has gone through the roof.The real stimulus cash is likely to hit bank accounts within the next three weeks or later, but taxpayers don't have to sign up to get the money. Checks are expected to take longer. And yes, some people could experience delays.

Stockpiling food on a budget: Here are inexpensive staples to put in your pantry

How to use your stimulus check:Savings, debt payment, support local shops? How to bestuse your $1,200 payment

It's estimated that as many as 150 million U.S. households would be eligible to receive full or partial payments, according to the Tax Policy Center.

According to Nessel's alert, consumers are already reporting that they've received phishing emailsthat include phony websites that look official.

The FBI and top cops in states are warning consumers: Beware of stimulus check scammers(Photo: Matt Rourke, AP)

The scammers are demanding that potential victims provide PayPal, bank account or other financial information to get a much-talked-about stimulus check that is part of thefederal economic-relief package.

Anyone who receives such texts or emails should ignore them or delete them. Never click on links because you might download malware onto your computer.

In some cases,fakephishingscams might ask for a persons bank account information and insist$1,000 or morewill be depositeddirectly into his or her bank account. Again, it's a scam.

Families across the U.S. will get a portion of money from the federal government's sweeping $2 trillion stimulus package. But how much? USA TODAY

Consumers are not going to need to sign up for the stimulus checks.

Under the program, all U.S. residents with an adjusted gross income up to $75,000 ($150,000 married), who are not a dependent of another taxpayer and have a work-eligible Social Security number, are eligible for the full rebate check.

They would receive $1,200 per adult or $2,400 married as part of a stimulus rebate. In addition, they are eligible for an additional $500 per child.

"This is true even for those who have no income, as well as those whose income comes entirely from non-taxable means-tested benefit programs, such as SSI benefits," according to the Senate compromise.

No action will be required for the vast majority of Americans.

Stimulus check: Calculate how much money you could get

What we know: How the $2T coronavirus stimulus will affect you and the economy

The Internal Revenue Service will use a taxpayer's 2019 tax return or a 2018 tax return for information in order to send out the money via direct deposit or check.

The rebate amount is reduced by $5 for each $100 that a taxpayers income exceeds the phase-out threshold. The amount is completely phased-out for single filers with incomes exceeding $99,000, $146,500 for head of household filers with one child, and $198,000 for joint filers with no children.

See the IRS website, irs.gov/coronavirus, for updates. Right now, the IRS is discouraging callsabout the checks. Check the website for updates.

Autoplay

Show Thumbnails

Show Captions

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/03/28/coronavirus-covid-19-stimulus-checks-scams/2934056001/

The rest is here:

Coronavirus stimulus check scams are out to swindle you out of $1,200: What you need to know - USA TODAY

Coronavirus Fact Check: Analyzing the Patterns in Trump’s Falsehoods – The New York Times

March 29, 2020

This week, as cities and states began locking down, stock markets tumbled and jobless claims hit record levels, Mr. Trump again played down the impact of the pandemic and said, with no evidence and contrary to available research, that a recession would be deadlier than the coronavirus.

The president has also dispensed a steady stream of optimism when discussing countermeasures against the virus.

From later February to early March, Mr. Trump repeatedly promised that a vaccine would be available relatively soon despite being told by public health officials and pharmaceutical executives that the process would take 12 to 18 months. Later, he promoted treatments that were still unproven against the virus, and suggested that they were approved and available though they were not.

Outside of medical interventions, Mr. Trump has exaggerated his own policies and the contributions of the private sector in fighting the outbreak. For example, he imprecisely described a website developed by a company affiliated with Google, wrongly said that insurers were covering the cost of treatment for Covid-19 when they only agreed to waive co-payments for testing, and prematurely declared that automakers were making ventilators right now.

Often, he has touted his complete shut down or closing of the United States to visitors from affected countries (in some cases leading to confusion and chaos). But the restrictions he has imposed on travel from China, Iran and 26 countries in Europe do not amount to a ban or closure of the borders. Those restrictions do not apply to American citizens, permanent residents, their immediate families, or flight crews.

Not only were these restrictions total and absolute in Mr. Trumps telling, they were also imposed on China against the advice of a lot of professionals, and we turned out to be right. His health and human services secretary, however, has previously said that the restrictions were imposed on the recommendations of career health officials. The Times has also reported that Mr. Trump was skeptical before deciding to back the restrictions at the urging of some aides.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sent test kits to states in February, some of which were flawed and produced inconclusive readings. Problems continued to grow as scientists and state officials warned about restrictions on who could be tested and the availability of tests overall. Facing criticism over testing and medical supplies, Mr. Trump instead shifted responsibility to a variety of others.

Go here to read the rest:

Coronavirus Fact Check: Analyzing the Patterns in Trump's Falsehoods - The New York Times

Thousands of grounded planes. Nearly empty flights. How the coronavirus is affecting US airlines – CNN

March 29, 2020

A CNN review of the latest airline-related data gives a clearer picture of how air travel has ground to a halt, a result of isolation measures around the country.

The latest announcement on Friday from American Airlines reflect the trends around the industry: Over the next two months, it expects to fly as little as 20% of its domestic schedule and between 10% and 20% of its international schedule.

Many of those planes have just a handful of passengers. American CEO Doug Parker said his planes are about 15% full. US airlines started the year filling about four of five available seats, but are now, on average, filling just one of every five seats, according to data from Airlines for America, an industry group.

The sliver of usual traffic that is now trickling through airport security checkpoints show how few people are packing their bags. The Transportation Security Administration on Thursday screened just 8% of the travelers that it did on the equivalent day in 2019 -- the first day since the coronavirus pandemic reached the US when that number has dropped below 10%.

As the number of travelers nationwide has dropped, TSA has cut back on the number of checkpoints it operates, particularly at medium- and large-sized airports, according to an aviation official familiar with the matter.

In some cases, the official said, the reductions have been linked to a reduced availability of officers to work. More than 60 TSA officers have tested positive for the coronavirus, according to agency data compiled by CNN. The union representing them said dozens more have needed to stay home due to the possibility of exposure.

The official noted that the drop in traffic means multiple security lanes are not needed and can be consolidated. The closures have also allowed the agency to space out the number of lanes that are operational.

The stark figures underscore why the nation's passenger and cargo airlines requested a $58 billion federal relief package, divided between grants to pay employees and loans for other expenses. Parker said his airline expects to receive "about $12 billion" of the package.

An additional $10 billion is for airports, and $3 billion is reserved for the companies whose employees stock and clean aircraft between flights.

Across the industry, airlines have slashed from their schedules. Two operators of regional jet service that work for American, Delta and United Airlines, are closing their doors because the cuts and passenger declines were too deep.

When Delta Air Lines unveiled one round of cuts, CEO Ed Bastian told employees in a memo obtained by CNN that "the speed of the demand falloff is unlike anything we've seen." Days later, the airline made even steeper cuts -- and is now flying only 30% of its usual schedule.

United says it is currently operating at only 68% of its schedule. Earlier this month, it cut its international schedule by 95%, then added a few flights back to its roster, adapting to the plight of Americans overseas who were "displaced and still need to get home."

Southwest is eliminating 1,500 of its 4,000 daily flights.

The schedule cuts have snowballed as the US and other governments rolled out travel restrictions. Some of the latest flight cancellations are linked to quarantine restrictions in Hawaii. The infrastructure around tourism and travel -- including conferences, hotels, sightseeing, cruises and restaurants -- have cut operations and staff.

Airlines are similarly closing lounges for premium travelers and cutting back on amenities for travelers, such as poured drinks on aircraft. Southwest, for example, is shifting to serve passengers only water in individual cans.

The schedule cuts mean the airlines need to operate far fewer planes. Delta has grounded 600 planes -- more than half its fleet. American says its grounded jets are congregating at airfields in Pittsburgh, Tulsa, Roswell, New Mexico, and Mobile, Alabama.

Airlines for America says about 1,200 planes in the US fleet of 6,215 have been grounded due to the coronavirus outbreak -- not including planes like the Boeing 737 MAX that were grounded a year ago, or are awaiting delivery.

Airlines rarely ground planes because it not only means no revenue, but losses. Planes in short-term storage require regular maintenance to remain ready to return into service.

Worldwide, nearly a third of the 17,750 passenger jets in operation are parked, according to the aviation data firm Cirium. That number is growing rapidly: It said 1,000 more planes were parked since its update a day earlier.

The airlines also need fewer pilots, flight attendants, and other employees. Hundreds of pilots at American Airlines have accepted early retirements. Delta announced Friday that more than 21,000 employees are taking unpaid leave. The memo to employees, obtained by CNN, described unpaid leave as "the most important way you can help the company over the next few months. We could use more volunteers."

One bright spot for airlines: The need for cargo shipping has grown. American Airlines recently flew its first cargo-only flight since 1984, laden with medical supplies, mail and packages people ordered from online retailers.

CNN's Chris Isidore and Joshua Replogle contributed to this report.

Read more:

Thousands of grounded planes. Nearly empty flights. How the coronavirus is affecting US airlines - CNN

How Coronavirus Has Transformed Elections Across the U.S. – The New York Times

March 29, 2020

From the White House to the county courthouse, the coronavirus pandemic has drastically upended the 2020 elections.

Many Democratic leaders now doubt their national party convention will take place as planned in July, while President Trumps determination to hold the Republican convention could collide with life-and-death realities.

Both Mr. Trump and former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. are wary of holding public events too soon and may not engage in full-fledged campaigning until the summer.

And hundreds of congressional, statewide and local candidates, who are always overshadowed in presidential years, are turning to the role of good Samaritan aiding with groceries and hiring people newly out of work in an effort to stay visible without being insensitive to the crisis.

The virus has fundamentally transformed political life in America, affecting how candidates communicate with voters, raise money from donors and confront their opponents. This is for now the countrys first virtual campaign, as the risk of disease physically separates candidates from the people they seek to represent, and pushes officeseekers from Mr. Biden on down to appeal to homebound voters and contributors through balky web videos.

Even when more traditional electioneering resumes, the nature of this race will be profoundly different.

The outbreak, which has already claimed more than 2,000 lives in the United States and well over three million jobs, has thrust the public health threat and economic downturn to the forefront in races up and down the ballot this year.

Incumbents at every level, starting with Mr. Trump, will be judged on how they prepared for and steered the country through a crisis that has turned the life of nearly every voter upside down.

This is the question that is going to dominate the election: How did you perform in the great crisis? said Representative Tom Cole, Republican of Oklahoma, who has canceled fund-raisers and instead scheduled tele-town hall events with guests like the provost at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center.

The duration of the election season itself is likely to shrink significantly. The presidential campaign, which typically dominates news coverage for much of the year, could look more like one of Britains six-week general election sprints. Should the two major American candidates return to the stump before the fall, they will most likely be crowded out by the grim accounting of the countrys worst pandemic in over a century.

Regional disparities in how the virus is spreading could mean that officeseekers may be able to campaign in parts of the country that are less hard-hit. And if the social distancing measures in place mitigate the outbreak, the contenders could return to the parade and banquet circuit sooner than some anticipate.

But until the spread of the virus slows, there is likely to be little interest in the presidential race and even less in state and local races.

Representative Sean Casten, Democrat of Illinois, has culled his campaigns phone bank list to voters 60 or older. Rather than ask them policy questions or trumpet his accomplishments, Mr. Castens volunteers ask if they need any health and safety information and provide a list of senior-only hours at local supermarkets.

Nobody wants to talk about my thoughts on carbon pricing, said Mr. Casten, who was a renewable energy executive before he was elected to Congress in 2018.

At the moment, there effectively is no campaign of any consequence to voters who are consumed with their familys safety and well-being.

Every issue in my district is impacted by this, said Representative Elise Stefanik, a Republican who represents much of New Yorks vast North Country. This is going to be an economic issue, its going to be a higher ed issue, its going to be a border issue.

The long sweep of American history is filled with presidential elections that took place during times of war and upheaval, but there is little modern precedent for a campaign unfolding against a backdrop of such widespread national fear.

The closest comparison may be the New York mayoral race in 2001, when the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks loomed over the citys general election. In presidential politics, the Vietnam War, assassinations and civil rights struggles shaped the 1968 campaign and seemed to reveal a country coming apart.

But some historians believe the closest comparison to this year, the last time the entire nation was consumed by a single issue, may be 1944, when the threat of Nazi Germany and imperial Japan fully mobilized American citizens behind the war effort.

That was the last time there was this sort of disruption in our daily lives and change in rituals, said Doris Kearns Goodwin, the presidential scholar, noting that millions were deployed in arms and those who remained home lived with rationed goods. But at least people then could go to work, be part of the effort to win the war.

Sensing opportunity, Mr. Trump has sought to portray himself as a wartime leader in daily televised news briefings. It has given him a bump in the polls, with his approval ratings creeping up toward 50 percent as independents and some Democrats rally behind him, while Mr. Biden, the likely Democratic nominee, is largely drowned out by the president and even Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York.

Its a defining moment, said Henry Barbour, a Republican National Committee member from Mississippi, adding of Mr. Trump: The more he reassures Americans, gives them the facts and delivers results, the harder it will be for Joe Biden.

A race that turns entirely on the response to the current health and economic crises could also render other traditional campaign markers less important if they happen at all.

While Mr. Trump is loudly insisting his convention will go on in Charlotte, N.C., in late August, it remains to be seen whether the Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, would allow such a large gathering in his states most populous city.

Democratic officials are even more skeptical about their convention.

Hundreds of local and state conventions have already been canceled or become mail-in, telephone or online events. Theres talk among some Democrats of conducting the national convention online or through the mail, with some operatives and fund-raisers discussing a one-night television event that could replicate a star-studded awards show.

The D.N.C. is going to have to start considering that this convention will have to be held in other ways, said Ken Martin, the Democratic chairman in Minnesota who is also the president of an organization of state Democratic leaders.

For now, Democrats are using a barrage of ads to try to remind voters of Mr. Trumps initial dismissal of the viruss severity, but its been difficult to broadly divert attention from the threat of the moment.

Some in the party, however, believe the president will ultimately be held to account for his slow response, the unfolding damage to the economy and will suffer from the new light the crisis will cast on domestic issues in the fall.

The administrations court case to repeal the A.C.A. takes on a very different meaning, said Guy Cecil, who runs a Democratic super PAC, referring to the legal effort to strike down Obamacare in its entirety.

But the larger question for Mr. Trump may be whether he can sustain the appearance of a wartime leader able to summon Americans to sacrifice.

The president has already displayed impatience and pique that could damage his re-election chances, lashing out at governors, refusing to take any responsibility for the coronavirus crisis and suggesting Americans can return to life as usual in a way that experts say could exacerbate the spread of the virus.

His campaign is already discussing the possibility of a rally-style event in one of the less-affected states in late April, although one adviser said those discussions are preliminary.

While they would have preferred to use the months before Mr. Biden formally claims the nomination to define the former vice president to their advantage, Republicans generally believe this crisis has done little to diminish Mr. Trumps prospects.

His campaign continues to raise money online at a brisk pace, but Republican officials privately conceded it has been harder to raise money without events featuring the president.

Fund-raising has been even more difficult for other candidates on the ballot, who often rely more on big-dollar, in-person events rather than internet solicitations.

Corry Bliss, a Republican strategist, said he expects fund-raising totals for federal candidates from the first three months of the year to be down about 20 percent from what they would have been without the pandemic.

In Missouri, Nicole Galloway, the state auditor and a Democrat, is running for governor. On Thursday night she held a virtual cocktail hour by teleconference with a few dozen invited supporters.

With framed photos of her three children over her shoulders, Ms. Galloway told about 60 supporters that Missouris Republican governor has been following her lead in responding to the pandemic, answered questions about education funding and professed sadness that she couldnt travel the state in person.

In the small frames atop the screen, supporters could be seen pouring and mixing drinks. One Missouri donor had distributed a recipe for a drink called The Democrat, inspired by the native son Harry Trumans fondness for bourbon.

Ms. Galloway is hardly the only candidate being creative.

In Georgia, Lynne Homrich, a Republican running for the House, announced her campaign would hire 20 people who had been laid off from local businesses, augmenting a paid campaign staff of five ahead of her May 19 primary.

Ms. Homrich, a former Home Depot executive, began sorting through dozens of emails from people seeking campaign staff work which in the age of virus means calling or writing people from ones own home.

Hiral Tipirneni, a former emergency room doctor running for Congress in Arizona, said she spends just as much time explaining the details of the pandemic in phone calls, video chats and during Facebook Live sessions as she does asking people to vote for her in November.

They have medical questions, Ms. Tipirneni said. Its a scary time and whatever I can do to alleviate some of those fears, its a moral responsibility.

The rest is here:

How Coronavirus Has Transformed Elections Across the U.S. - The New York Times

Delay of tax deadline due to the coronavirus will cause significant disruption to Pa.s budget process – The Philadelphia Inquirer

March 29, 2020

Pennsylvania has scant reserves and likely cant rely on them to bridge the gap: The states rainy day account could fund government operations for only about 3 days, even after a large deposit last year. The decision to extend the deadline prioritizes public health at a time when Wolf is urging Pennsylvanians to stay at home to help prevent the spread of the virus, said Jeffrey Johnson, a state Department of Revenue spokesperson.

Read this article:

Delay of tax deadline due to the coronavirus will cause significant disruption to Pa.s budget process - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Page 746«..1020..745746747748..760..»