Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
A Pandemic Record: More Than 61,000 Kids Diagnosed With COVID Last Week
More than 61,000 children in the U.S. were diagnosed with Covid-19 last week 鈥 more than in any other week during the pandemic, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children's Hospital Association reported Monday. In all, 853,635 children have been diagnosed with the virus this year, representing 11.1 percent of all U.S. cases. The percentage of pediatric cases has risen steadily since mid-April, when children accounted for just 2 percent of Covid-19 cases in the country. (Edwards, 11/2)
Several states weigh their next steps to curb the rise in cases 鈥
Massachusetts Republican Gov. Charlie Baker announced a series of new coronavirus restrictions Monday--including requiring face coverings for all residents over the age of five, in an attempt to curb the rising cases of Covid-19 in the state. Baker announced Massachusetts would revise current public health emergency rules to require everyone to wear face coverings in all public places, indoors or outdoors, even where they are able to maintain six feet of distance from others, according to the executive order released today. This still allows for an exception for residents who can't wear masks due to a medical or disabling condition. (Diaz, 11/2)
Facing an alarming increase in new COVID-19 cases in his state, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine pleaded in an open letter for residents to come together, regardless of political affiliation, to fight a "common enemy" that has claimed nearly 230,000 lives in America. DeWine released a video Sunday reading a letter he penned to Ohioans stressing the urgency of joining forces to keep the virus at bay until there is a vaccine. (Hutchinson, 11/2)
As one of the states leading the fall surge in COVID-19 infections, North Dakota has experienced record-breaking daily new cases, reportedly leading the spread of deaths per capita in the U.S. Data comparison indicates that over the course of one month, the North Dakota Department of Health saw a 167 percent increase in active COVID-19 cases from the prior month. (Kelley, 11/2)
As Pennsylvania continues to see climbing coronavirus case numbers, Health Secretary Rachel Levine said voters should feel safe going to the polls for Tuesday鈥檚 presidential election. 鈥淚f you are voting in person, it is safe to vote,鈥 Levine said Monday. She urged voters to wear masks, bring their own pens, bring hand sanitizer, and download the state鈥檚 contact tracing app, COVID Alert PA, before heading to the polls. (McDaniel and McCarthy and Silverman, 11/3)
Also 鈥
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Monday called the U.S. coronavirus death toll 鈥渁lmost incomprehensible鈥 while speaking at an art installation paying tribute to the dead. 鈥淚t鈥檚 almost incomprehensible that here in America this would happen,鈥 Pelosi said Monday at the ceremony, where celebrity chef Jos茅 Andr茅s and Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) also made remarks at the DC Armory Parade Ground in front of RFK Stadium in the nation's capital. (Budryk, 11/2)
An eighth grade student from Missouri passed away from complications related to Covid-19, officials in his school district said. Peyton Baumgarth, 13, died over the weekend, Dr. Lori VanLeer, the superintendent of his school system in Washington, said in a statement sent to families in the district. Peyton is the youngest person to pass away from Covid-19 in the state of Missouri according to state records. (Johnson, 11/2)
As temperatures in Arizona shot toward their summer peaks, so did the state鈥檚 coronavirus crisis. Lines for drive-up testing snaked for blocks in June. Hospitals were running out of beds, bodies were being stored in coolers, and the state鈥檚 per capita caseload topped global charts. But by mid-August, the Southwest hot spot made a remarkable reversal. Cases plummeted 75 percent. (Brulliard and Duda, 11/2)