![]() ![]() Yesterday, former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, and his running mate, Kamala Harris, said they would support a 3-month national mask mandate. Thirty-four states now require masks in indoor public spaces, but President Donald Trump has said he is not going to issue a national mandate. The poll also showed that most Americans, 73%, would support a national mask mandate. The percentage was consistent across all regions in the country. Now half of the country's population says they know someone who has contracted the virus, up from 41% last month, according to a survey from the Societal Experts Action Network. "State- and territory-level ensemble forecasts predict that the number of reported new deaths per week may increase over the next four weeks in Colorado and may decrease in Arizona, the Northern Mariana Islands, Vermont, and Wyoming," the CDC said.Īs the death toll grows, so does the number of Americans who say they know someone who has had the virus. In its latest summary of modeling forecasts, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) predicts the United States will see 180,000 to 200,000 total COVID-19 deaths by Sep 5.Ĭurrently, the United States has 167,948 deaths and 5,289,232 cases of COVID-19. "Disparities among Hispanic populations were identified in approximately three quarters of hotspot counties (59 of 79, 74.7%)."Ĭommunity transmission this summer was noted most heavily in Arizona, Texas, and Florida - states with large Hispanic populations. "Disparities in cases were identified among underrepresented racial/ethnic groups in 76 (96.2%) analyzed counties," the authors said. The analysis looked at county-level data for states experiencing a surge of virus activity during Jun 5 through 18. The report’s findings were echoed in new data published today in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, which shows that in many hot spots throughout the country this summer, Hispanics and Latinos were disproportionately infected with the novel coronavirus. Latinos see even more infections: 73 per 10,000.ĭuring the early months of the pandemic, the report asserts that blacks were more likely to have preexisting conditions that predispose them to COVID-19 infection, less likely to have health insurance, and more likely to work in jobs that do not accommodate remote work.īoth black and Latino Americans are also more likely to live in multigenerational housing, which places older, at-risk adults in close contact with younger people who may not know they have the virus. The report, based on data from Johns Hopkins University, also shows black Americans are twice as likely to die from the virus.Īccording to the "State of Black America," the infection rate for blacks is 62 per 10,000, compared with 23 per 10,000 for whites. ![]() Black Americans are infected with COVID-19 at nearly three times the rate of white Americans, according to a new document from the National Urban League. ![]()
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