The United States is now averaging fewer than 50,000 new coronavirus cases per day, a level not seen since early October and a sign that the nation's mass vaccination program is having an impact on the pandemic.
In the week ending Sunday, the United States reported 344,463 cases. The daily average is down about 22,000 cases each day from a small peak seen three weeks ago. It's down much further from the records set in January; the United States is now reporting as many cases in a week as it was getting every two days then.
Helping the cause: Almost 150 million Americans have received at least one dose of a vaccine, and over 40% of U.S. adults are fully vaccinated.
Globally, however, daily deaths and new cases remain at or near all-time highs, driven to a great extent by India's well-documented struggles. And India's reported data is generally viewed to be just a fraction of the true numbers across the nation of 1.4 billion people.
– Mike Stucka
Also in the news:
►Los Angeles County public health authorities reported no new COVID-19 deaths Sunday. Infections remain at their lowest levels since the start of the pandemic.
►New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy will make an announcement Monday easing COVID restrictions as case numbers continue to fall in the state.
►Colorado’s governor has extended a statewide mask mandate for another 30 days but loosened face-covering requirements for groups who are vaccinated against COVID-19.
►Illinois is approaching 10 million vaccinations, public health officials said Sunday. The state, with more than 12 million residents, has reported more than 1.3 million coronavirus cases and 22,019 deaths.
? Today's numbers: The U.S. has more than 32.4 million confirmed coronavirus cases and 577,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. The global totals: Over 152.9 million cases and nearly 3.2 million deaths. More than 312.5 million vaccine doses have been distributed in the U.S. and 245.5 million have been administered, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than 104.7 million Americans have been fully vaccinated.
? What we're reading: California is reopening again as the state's coronavirus cases plummet. But critics say the "extreme measures" to fight the virus were too much.
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Novavax vaccine clinical trials target kids ages 12-17
Novavax today announced a pediatric expansion of its Phase 3 clinical trial for NVX-CoV2373, the company's vaccine candidate. The additional arm of the ongoing trial will evaluate the effiectiveness, safety and immunogenicity of NVX-CoV2373 in up to 3,000 adolescents aged 12-17 across up to 75 sites in the United States. Participants will randomly receive either the vaccine candidate or placebo in two doses, administered 21 days apart. Two-thirds of volunteers will receive intramuscular injections of the vaccine and one-third will receive placebo. Participants will be monitored for safety for up to two years following the final dose.
"We hope to ... play a significant global role in offering vaccination to as many people as possible across age groups to end the suffering caused by the pandemic," said Gregory M. Glenn, M.D., Vovavax's president of research and development.
Teacher appreciation week holds special meaning in pandemic
It's been a tough year in education, with bizarre schedules, little in-class time for millions, and so many Zoom rooms. Education reporters in the USA TODAY Network had a front seat to the highs and lows of an extraordinary year of schooling. Those challenges took a toll on many, with 43% of teachers who recently quit citing stress — both before and during COVID-19 — as the chief reason for their departure.
For Teacher Appreciation Week, we're highlighting the educators who stuck with us over the past year because of their tenacity or charm or dogged determination to help students or communities. Read about some of the stars here.
Most employees still working from home
A growing number of states are lifting business constraints, leading people to shop, dine out and travel. But the revival of one activity has been agonizingly slow: Working from the office. The number of employee office visits in 10 large cities reached 26.1% of the pre-pandemic level the week ending April 21, according to Kastle Systems, the largest provider of technology that tracks such data through swipes of keycards and other devices. While Dallas and other Texas metro areas have solidly topped that average, cities such as San Francisco and New York have lagged.
“While the return to office is picking up slowly, we have not seen meaningful movement yet,” says Kastle Chairman Mark Ein. “It’s a very low number.” Read more here.
– Paul Davidson
US vaccine aid to other nations may be overdue
The Biden administration is besieged with requests from foreign leaders for help accessing COVID-19 vaccines. But while President Joe Biden has vowed the U.S. would be "an arsenal of vaccines" for the world, his advisers have yet to detail how or when the United States would begin sharing the U.S. supply. Instead, Biden has repeatedly said his administration would help the rest of the world only after all Americans have access to the vaccines. That position is increasingly untenable, particularly in the face of India's deepening COVID-19 crisis and a growing global chasm in vaccination rates, global health experts and advocates say.
"Our assistance, we hope, will have a catalytic effect on society more broadly here and around the world to come to the aid of the Indian people," said State Department spokesman Ned Price. Read more here.
– Deirdre Shesgreen
Walgreens taking its vaccination program to the streets of Chicago
Walgreens is bringing mobile vaccination clinics to Chicago. The traveling clinics will focus on bringing vaccines directly to underserved communities and those with barriers to accessing the vaccine. Over the next two months, additional mobile clinics will begin rolling across the nation, company president John Standley said.
“Mobile clinics and the other models we use will allow us to bring vaccines to the heart of the most impacted communities, as well as addressing common barriers like transportation and convenience," Standley said.
Walgreens began its vaccination program in December through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The chain has administered 15 million vaccine shots.
Puerto Rico struggles with surge in cases, hospitalizations
Even though 55% of Puerto Rico's residents have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, the U.S. territory is grappling with a spike in cases and hospitalizations while trying to prop up an economy battered in recent years by the coronavirus pandemic, hurricanes, earthquakes and a prolonged financial crisis. While health authorities say many are eager to get vaccinated – more than 2 million doses have been administered on the island of 3.3 million American citizens – they note that some people who are not yet fully protected are disregarding restrictions that include a curfew lasting more than a year. That and the spread of new variants may be partly to blame for the current surge in infections.
“The solution is vaccination,” said Gov. Pedro Pierluisi. The island has reported about 2,000 COVID deaths.
US to talk to WTO on wider vaccine distribution
The White House says the U.S. trade representative will begin talks with the World Trade Organization on ways to overcome intellectual property issues that are keeping critically needed COVID-19 vaccines from being more widely distributed.
The White House has been under intense pressure to join an effort to help waive patent rules for the vaccines so that poorer countries can begin to make their own generic versions.
White House chief of staff Ron Klain said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation” that U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai will be starting talks “on how we can get this vaccine more widely distributed, more widely licensed, more widely shared.”
Klain and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the administration would have more to say on the matter in the coming days.
Contributing: The Associated Press
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