Coronavirus updates: American deaths on the east coast, cruise ship still in limbo, quarantine hotel in China collapses

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Coronavirus updates: American deaths on the east coast, cruise ship still in limbo, quarantine hotel in China collapses

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The deaths of two Florida residents of the new coronavirus marks the first deaths outside the west coast, according to Florida health officials.

Health officials said two people in the 1970s who had traveled overseas died in Santa Rosa County in Panhandle, Florida and in the Fort Myers area. At least one of these deaths, considered a suspected positive, has not been confirmed by the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

When confirmed by the CDC, both cases would bring the total number of deaths in the United States to 16.

The Florida Department of Health also said that six Florida residents had been diagnosed with a coronavirus as well as one non-Florida resident.

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Nationally, the number of infections has risen to at least 340, according to a compilation by the Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering. Cases are scattered in about half of the states, with Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Indiana, Maryland, Minnesota and Nebraska reporting their first cases recently.

Here is the latest news on the COVID-19 epidemic:

Grand Princess will dock but still do not know where; 21 on board positive test

More than 3,500 people aboard the Grand Princess of Princess Cruises stayed in limbo Saturday morning while awaiting information on when and where the cruise ship will dock after 21 people on board have tested positive for coronavirus.

Vice President Mike Pence said Friday that the ship will dock this weekend in a “non-commercial port” and that all passengers and crew will be tested. Of the 21 positive tests, 19 were crew members who had likely been exposed to the virus on a previous trip. The vice president said they would likely be quarantined on the ship.

While health officials said around 1,100 crew members would remain on board, passengers could be disembarked for quarantine, perhaps at U.S. military bases or other sites. This is what happened to hundreds of passengers who were exposed to the virus on another cruise ship in January.

President Donald Trump, speaking Friday at the Atlanta CDC, said he would prefer not to allow passengers on US soil but would stick to the recommendations of medical experts.

– Morgan Hines, John Fritze, Maureen Groppe and Associated Press

Amtrak Cancels DC Nonstop Service to NYC Acela for 3 Months

Amtrak is canceling Acela non-stop high-speed service between Washington, D.C. and New York until the end of May due to reduced demand due to coronavirus outbreaks.

Moving, in effect from March 10 to May 26, does not affect other Acela services along the route which has limited stops between Washington and Boston.

Amtrak said in a statement that it also plans to take additional measures, including reducing cars, changing schedules or canceling more rail services.

To address health concerns related to the virus, Amtrak has already announced that it will undertake more frequent cleaning of trains and stations, make disinfectants and disinfectants more readily available, and discuss good hygiene practices with workers.

Stanford is the latest university to move all classes online

Stanford University, which has 17,000 students, is the last school to cancel all courses in person and move them online due to concerns over the coronavirus.

Persis Drell, the schools provost, said that the courses for the last two weeks of his winter term would move online and the large group events would be canceled or adjusted. The university, which is located in northern California’s Silicon Valley, has also canceled its in-person Admit Weekend event slated for April 23 for potential undergraduates.

The University of Washington, located in Seattle, announced Friday that it will move all classes online for the next three weeks for its 57,000 students.

China quarantine hotel collapses

Rescuers help a man from the rubble of a collapsed hotel building in the city of Quanzhou, in southeast China's Fujian province Saturday, March 7, 2020. The hotel used for medical observation of people who have Contact with coronavirus patients collapsed in southeast China on Saturday, trapping dozens, state media reported.

A hotel in southeast China that was used for medical observation of people in contact with coronavirus patients collapsed on Saturday, trapping some 70 people, official media reported. No deaths were reported immediately.

At least 34 people were rescued from the wreckage of the Xinjia Express hotel in Quanzhou, a city in Fujian province, the ministry of emergency management told the South China Morning Post.

The 80-room hotel was converted by the city government to observe people who had come into contact with patients infected with the virus, according to the People’s Daily.

Pope Francis will deliver public blessings by video

Pope Francis will deliver his next two public blessings by video to prevent the crowd from gathering in St. Peter’s Square as a precaution against the spread of the coronavirus.

The Vatican said in a statement on Saturday that the Pope will deliver his traditional Sunday noon blessing from the library of the Apostolic Palace instead of appearing at a window in St. Peter’s Square. Wednesday’s hearing will be handled the same way.

Francis also stopped celebrating morning mass before inviting guests to the chapel of the Vatican hotel where he lives.

By staying inside, the pope not only limits the spread of the virus in the crowd, he also protects himself. The 83-year-old pontiff, who had a portion of a lung removed from a respiratory infection when he was younger, is recovering from a cold. He would be exposed to serious complications if he caught the coronavirus.

WHO warns of “false hopes” that the virus will disappear with the summer

One day after four other states announced their first cases of the new coronavirus, more than 338 people in the United States were infected on Saturday.

More than 102,000 people worldwide have been infected with the virus and more than 3,400 have died. Over 57,000 people have recovered.

The World Health Organization has warned of “false hopes” that the disease will subside when the hot summer weather arrives in northern countries.

The number of infections overshadows other major epidemics such as SARS, MERS and Ebola. The virus is still far less widespread than the annual flu epidemics, which cause up to 5 million serious cases worldwide and 290,000 to 650,000 deaths a year, according to the World Health Organization.

Which states have cases of coronavirus?

Here is an overview of the states that have reported COVID-19:



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