This post was originally published on this site
President Trump said it’s possible people will die by reopening the economy, but on Wednesday he reversed his position on the White House coronavirus task force, tweeting TWTR, -0.88% Wednesday that it won’t be disbanded by the end of the month, as previously suggested.
Trump said people need to get back to work. Private-sector companies lost 20.2 jobs in April amid the coronavirus crisis, according to data released Wednesday from Automatic Data Processing Inc. Service-producing industries slashed 16 million jobs in April, led by a 8.6 million decline at hotels and restaurants. Retail and transportation also lost 3.4 million positions.
The president, who traveled to Phoenix, Ariz. on Tuesday to tour a Honeywell International’s face-mask production operation, spoke about the likelihood of more deaths. “Will some people be affected badly? Yes,” he said. “But we have to get our country open and we have to get it open soon.” The president told ABC News DIS, +0.84% : “The virus will pass, with or without a vaccine.”
“ ‘The virus will pass, with or without a vaccine.’ ”
Trump said he wanted to be a “cheerleader” for the country, and predicted that the economy will be “raging” next year. “I don’t want to be Mr. Doom and Gloom,” President Trump said. “It’s a very bad subject.”
Projections on how many people will ultimately die of COVID-19 fluctuate, depending on rate of infection and how soon and/or fast states reopen their economies. With more states relaxing stay-at-home measures and allow beaches and non-essential businesses to reopen, however, projections of American deaths have spiked.
Youyang Gu, an independent researcher who graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2015, said current coronavirus models, including those by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, have not been accurate to date. “A model isn’t very useful if it’s not accurate,” he said.
He projects 161,727 deaths from the respiratory disease by Aug. 4, 2020 with a margin-of-error range of 99,000 to 266,000, taking into account transmission rates, the length of time it takes to recover and how long a person remains contagious. Rad more about his model works here.
“We present the most likely dates that the U.S. will surpass certain deaths milestones,” Gu said. “We estimate a 69% chance that the U.S. surpasses 100,000 deaths by June 1, with May 27 being the most likely date,” Gu said. None of these projections take into account a second wave in the fall, a scenario that Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for more than three decades, said will almost certainly happen.
Gu uses artificial intelligence to make his projections, including transmission rates, infection periods, and uses daily fatality data reported by each U.S. region to forecast future reported deaths. “It’s important to consider a model’s historical accuracy in addition to its future forecasts,” he said.
Approximately 134,000 people in the U.S. could die from COVID-19, more than double an estimate five weeks ago of 72,000, according to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington’s School of Medicine. It projects 100,773 job losses by May 21.
That projection, which is one of key measures watched by the White House, could go as high as 243,000, taking into account the institute’s margin of error. Christopher Murray, the director of the institute, cited “premature relaxation of social distancing” as the primary reason for the increased projection.
Coronavirus-related deaths could rise to 3,000 per day by June 1 from 2,000 deaths a day currently, according to preliminary data from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, first reported by The New York Times on Monday. The data is based on a model developed by Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering.
“Our rough guess is that come June, at least 95% of the U.S. will still be susceptible,” IHME’s Murray told NPR. “That means, of course, it can come right back. And so then we really need to have a robust strategy in place to not have a second wave.”
At the beginning of the pandemic, the CDC warned that in a worst-case scenario 2.4 million to 21 million people could require hospitalization, potentially, should they take ill within a condensed time frame, crippling the country’s health-care system. U.S. hospitals have just over 924,000 staffed hospital beds, according to the American Hospital Association.
Still, the numbers keep climbing. As of Wednesday, 5.6 million people had been tested in the U.S. for SARS-CoV-2. There were 1,204,475 confirmed cases in the U.S., and 71,078 deaths, of which nearly 25,124 were in New York State, the epicenter of the pandemic in the U.S. Tuesday was the fifth consecutive day that deaths were below 300. Worldwide, there were 3,680,376 confirmed cases and 257,818 deaths, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University.
In Trump’s one-on-one interview with David Muir on ABC News on Tuesday, Muir pointed out to the president that the country has lost more people from COVID-19 than during the Vietnam War. Trump told Muir that closing the economy was the biggest decision of his presidency and that his forthcoming decision to reopen the economy is also a very big decision.
Trump has repeatedly warned that efforts to stem the rapid spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, or SARS-CoV-2, are spiraling the economy into another Great Recession; the impact has sent the Dow Jones Industrial Index DJIA, -0.14% ricocheting wildly in recent weeks.
Trump acknowledged it will likely lead to more deaths. “It’s possible there will be some because you won’t be locked into an apartment or a house or whatever it is,” Trump added. “But at the same time, we’re going to practice social distancing, we’re going to be washing hands, we’re going to be doing a lot of the things that we’ve learned to do over the last period of time,” Trump said.
The president lamented the current number of fatalities in the U.S. “I always felt 60, 65, 70, as horrible as that is. I mean, you’re talking about filling up Yankee Stadium with death. So I thought that was horrible.”
“ ‘A human life is priceless, period.’ ”
Businesses, including gyms, hair salons, tattoo parlors and movie theaters, are reopening in Georgia, despite the state’s not demonstrating a downward trajectory of cases over 14 days, as had been laid out among the White House’s benchmarks for states reopening. Nor has South Carolina, which has begun reopening beaches and department stores.
Some 38 states have eased restrictions, including Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Wyoming, among others, have also said they would start opening certain nonessential businesses.
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said reopening is both an economic question and a public-health matter. He won’t choose between lives and dollars, he told journalists at his daily briefing Tuesday. “There’s a cost of staying closed. There’s also a cost of reopening quickly. That’s the hard truth we are dealing with. Let’s be honest about it. Let’s be open about,” he said.
“The question comes down to how much is a human life worth?” he added. “What the government does today will literally determine how many people live, and how many people die. That is not hyperbolic.”
Cuomo said he, like many people, is tired of worrying about his mother, his brother, and not being able to touch people, but he also said the economy cannot be opened overnight and he warned on Tuesday that, if the number of infections and deaths start to tick up, he will “close the valve” on the economy again. “A human life is priceless, period. Our reopening plan doesn’t have a trade-off.”