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Over 16,000 confirmed cases were reported in a single day in the US on Thursday, 26 March, as the total number of COVID-19 patients soared to 85,088, the highest for any country, according to data compiled by Worldometer.
According to Worldometers, the website that records confirmed cases of infection and deaths globally, the US by Thursday night had 85,088 individuals infected with coronavirus, of which 16,877 were added just in a single day.
A week ago, the number of confirmed cases were 8,000. It has dangerously surged 10 times in the span of a week.
With at least 263 deaths, the US also reported most number of fatalities due to the contagion on a single day on Thursday.
In China, from where it all originated, 3,287 people have died due to coronavirus pandemic while Italy has recorded 8,215 such deaths.
US President Donald Trump attributed the spike in the confirmed cases of coronavirus to the large-scale testing of the deadly disease.
Vice President Mike Pence said it is important for hospitals and labs testing the samples to report back to the Centre for Disease Control and Federal Emergency Management Agency so that the government has full visibility to provide the President with the best counsel.
The Abbott Laboratory, he said, submitted to Food and Drug Administration a national request for approval of a point-of-care test. This would be the kind of test where one could go to a doctor and get the test done and have the results in no more than 15 minutes.
According to Dr Deborah Brix, coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force, 55 percent of all new cases continue out of the New York — New York Metro area. This includes New Jersey as well, she said and expressed concern over the coronavirus spread.
"At the same time, 19 of the 50 states that had early cases, but have persistently low level of cases and at this point have less than 200 cases," she said.
In an in interview with CNN, Dr Anthony Fauci, America's top infectious disease expert said it is difficult to tell where the pandemic will go and how long it will last in the US.
This is the relative percentage of asymptomatic infection — and it "influences everything," he said. It influences transmission, contact tracing, and the measures that the authorities need to take. That's why the most important thing to do now is to conduct widespread testing and collect more data, he asserted.
He called for ratcheting up the current level of contact tracing and testing. "We've got to do it better than we are now".
Dr Brix said so far the US has done 5,50,000 tests.
"We are still running somewhere about 14 per cent overall. That means 86 per cent of the people with significant symptoms because remember you had to have a fever and symptoms to get tested at this point. So still 86 per cent are negative," she said.
These are really important facts for the American people, Dr Brix said.
She was critical of some of the modelling studies which had said that there would be 500,000 deaths in the UK and 2.2 million deaths in the US. "They have adjusted that number in the UK to 20,000. Half a million to 20,000. We are looking into this in great detail to understand that adjustment," she said.
"When people start talking about 20 per cent of a population getting infected, it's very scary but we don't have data that matches that based on the experience," Dr Brix said.
She assured Americans that there is no shortage of essential medical supplies including ventilators and ICU beds.
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