The deadly coronavirus pandemic claimed lives of more than 16,000 Americans and infected over 4.6 lakhs of them, devastating the US economy and rendering a record 16 million workers jobless in just three weeks.
Of this, the New York metropolitan area, comprising the adjoining New Jersey and Connecticut, alone account for more than 9,000 cases and 220,000 cases. Globally, over 15 lakh people have been infected so far by coronavirus and the fatalities stands at nearly 95,000.
The United States accounts for nearly 30 percent of the all COVID-19 positive cases and over 17 percent of all fatalities.
By Thursday, nearly all of America - 97 percent of the 220 million population are under stay-at-home order. President Donald Trump has notified major disaster declaration for almost all 50 States.
In New York City, which is considered financial capital of the world and has one of the best health facilities, more than 800 deaths were reported in one day alone, taking the fatalities to a record 7,067.
New York Governor Andrew Cumo, however, asserted that COVID-19 now appears to have reached its peak in the city, where the number of new patients to hospitals have started coming down.
Strict enforcement of mitigation measures including maintaining social distancing, he said, is having an impact nationwide.
"As such they now are projecting far less death - around 60,000 due to coronavirus than earlier projections of between one and two lakhs," he said.
“It looks like we're at the lower end of the curb in terms of death, which is a terrible word... a terrible, dark word that we've experienced like nobody's ever seen before in this country. We have numbers that are terrible,” Trump told reporters during his daily White House press conference on coronavirus.
“It is, in the sense of deaths, a bad week. In fact, every day there seems to be a record number of deaths compared to the day before. In fact, New York today had again another record of -- I think the city itself had about 820-plus deaths,” said Dr Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a lead member of the White House Task Force on Coronavirus.
“At the same time as we are seeing the increase in deaths, we are seeing rather dramatic decrease in the need for hospitalizations like I think yesterday was something like 200 new hospitalizations and it's been as high as 1,400 at any given time. So that is going in the right direction,” Dr Fauci said.
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