Consumer & Business Response

Disasters are unpredictable and can be devastating to a community. But there is a lot your bank can do to help prepare your customers for these events.

Help Consumers Prepare for a Natural Disaster

Disasters are unpredictable and can be devastating to a community. But there is a lot your bank can do to help prepare your customers for these events.

Share these tips:

  • Store important documents such as proof of identity, property ownership, insurance policies, bank and investment account information, and three years of tax returns in a bank safe-deposit box. Encase these items in plastic bags to prevent moisture.
  • Prepare additional copies of critical documents such as birth certificates, adoption papers, marriage licenses and the deed to your home for safekeeping and inform a trustee, relative or attorney of their location.
  • Print out key contact information for executors, trustees and guardians and store it in a secure location, either in your safe-deposit box or with a close relative.
  • Inventory personal and household valuables (take photos and keep receipts) to help evaluate replacement costs.
  • Include surplus cash, preferably small bills, in your home emergency kit. The kit should also include a three-day supply of food and water, a first aid kit, can opener, radio, flashlights and batteries.
  • Create digital copies, which can serve as a supplement or backup to paper documents.  Scanned or electronic documents can be uploaded with secure online backup services.
  • Contact your insurance agent or visit the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s website to determine if a flood insurance policy is right for you.

FS-ISAC Coronavirus Update, Feb. 26, 2021

Feb. 26, 2021

Headlines

  • US Food and Drug Administration vaccine advisers are scheduled to meet Friday to discuss the potential emergency authorization of a third coronavirus vaccine for the US, this one made by Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine arm Janssen Biotech, the next step in a process that could end up with the new vaccine’s rollout early next week, with advisers and federal agencies meeting over the weekend to try to get the vaccines to the US public as soon as possible.
  • Coronavirus cases and deaths are making a “dramatic” decline that is faster than expected - a drop of 70% over the past five weeks, the team at the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington reported Thursday, who said a big factor in the slowed spread has been that mask use remains high in the US, with more than three-quarters of adults reporting they wear one when leaving home.
  • Five residents of a skilled nursing facility in Kentucky may have been reinfected with coronavirus in the fall after testing positive for the virus in the summer, a new report from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests, with each person infected, aged 67 to 99, receiving multiple negative tests between the first and second outbreak in July and October.
  • At least 2,157 cases of coronavirus variants first spotted in the United Kingdom, South Africa and Brazil have now been reported in the US, according to data updated Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
  • New, more contagious variants of the coronavirus could fuel a renewed surge of infections, Dr. Francis Collins, the director of the National Institutes of Health, said Thursday, warning that although the US is on a downward trend of cases and hospitalizations from Covid-19, it may not last.
  • Epidemiologist Michael Osterholm says that while the US is in a downward trend with cases, he expects an increase in cases to occur in the next few weeks due to the highly contagious variant first detected in the United Kingdom, explaining that “It often takes four, six, even eight weeks of this virus circulating before it really takes off, going from kind of the small little brush pile fire to a large forest fire.”
  • The US Food and Drug Administration handed Pfizer a victory on Thursday, agreeing to allow its Covid-19 vaccine to be transported and stored for up to two weeks at "conventional temperatures" typically found in pharmaceutical freezers, a decision expected to relieve some of the constraints that have made the vaccine especially difficult to store and distribute.
  • Reports of new vaccinations have started to increase again across the US, after a week of declines brought on by severe weather, as the country administered an average of about 1.5 million newly reported doses a day in the seven-day period ending Thursday, according to federal data, a slight increase from a low point of 1.4 million doses a day through Tuesday.
  • It’s possible a single dose of coronavirus vaccine might be enough to protect people who have recovered from a bout of Covid-19, National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins said on Thursday, adding that the agency is “trying to collect as much data as possible about that right now,” but for now that strategy is “very high risk” and could result in unforeseen consequences, including encouraging more variants to happen.
  • Pfizer and its partner BioNTech announced Thursday that they are testing a third dose of their Covid-19 vaccine against new coronavirus variants, and Chairman and CEO Albert Bourla said that a third shot taken six months after the first could induce 10 to 20 times the antibody response of the first two doses.
  • The post-vaccination observation period required after the administration of Pfizer and Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccines may not be necessary for Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, Dr. Nirav Shah, deputy director of the Maine Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a briefing by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Wednesday.
  • Regeneron Pharmaceuticals said on Thursday that an independent panel found the company's COVID-19 antibody cocktail to have "clear clinical efficacy" in reducing the rates of hospitalization and deaths in patients.
  • With much of Europe living under heightened restrictions on movement and social interaction, the rates of Covid-19 infection across the continent have been cut in half from the winter peak, the World Health Organization said on Thursday, but as pressure on national governments mounts to ease lockdowns, Hans Kluge, the agency’s director in Europe, cautioned new cases were still 10 times as high as they were last May and that the region was still experiencing high rates of community transmission.
  • Covid-19 cases in England have fallen 78% since the government imposed a national lockdown on January 4, according to weekly statistics released today from the National Health Service Test and Trace, with some 84,310 people testing positive for the virus between February 11 and February 17, the lowest weekly figure recorded since September.
  • The European Union's goal is to vaccinate 70% of adults in each member state "by the summer," Europe's Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides said during a virtual summit on Thursday, adding that “We are seeing more and more people being vaccinated every day and we are taking decisive action to increase the production, delivery and the rollout of vaccines across the EU.”
  • Initial weekly jobless claims improved last week, totaling 730,000 first-time filings - one of the lowest of the Covid era, with economists polled by Dow Jones having expected claims to total 845,000 for the week, and a readout that was still substantially higher than pre-pandemic levels, when fewer than 200,000 Americans filed for unemployment benefits each week on average.
  • A CNBC + Acorns Invest in You survey, conducted by SurveyMonkey between February 1st to the 8th among a national sample of 6,182 adults, found that 40% of Americans have taken an emergency financial action during the pandemic, including tapping into emergency savings, borrowing money from family or friends, and visiting a food bank.
  • The Biden Administration expanded unemployment insurance eligibility Thursday to include workers who refused job offers at unsafe worksites, making good on a pledge to reduce the pressure on people who say they have been forced to choose between staying healthy or getting a paycheck.

 

The Good Stuff:  A New Jersey woman not only has beaten COVID-19, she has also survived two cardiologists and three husbands.  What is Lucia DeClerck’s secret?  The 105-year-old’s tips for living a long and healthy life?  Prayer, avoiding junk food and eating nine gin-soaked raisins each morning.  “Fill a jar,” DeClerck told the Times. “Nine raisins a day after it sits for nine days.”  “She’s just been open with everything in life and I think that has really helped her because she hasn’t hesitated to do whatever she’s wanted to do,” DeClerck’s son, Henty Laws III said.  The raisin recipe may seem quirky, but it difficult to argue with DeClerck’s longevity.  Some of her other habits include drinking aloe juice - straight up from the container - and brushing her teeth with baking soda.  The baking soda worked wonders.  DeClerck’s relatives said she did not have a cavity until she was 99.  “We would just think, ‘Grandma, what are you doing? You’re crazy,’” DeClerck’s 53-year-old granddaughter, Shawn Laws O’Neil, of Los Angeles, said.  “Now the laugh is on us. She has beaten everything that’s come her way.”

 

US Snapshots

Seven-Day Trending

Data compiled daily from John Hopkins CSSE Tracking and The COVID Tracking Project at the Atlantic, which uses a Creative Common CC-BY-NC-4.0 license type

Trends as ofThu Feb 25

Daily Average
Case Increase

Daily Average
Death Increase

Positivity Rate

Total Tests

Currently
Hospitalized

Currently in ICU

Currently on Ventilators

This Week

73,595

2,165

8.05%

349,785,144

52,669

10,846

3,567

Last Week

73,556

2,585

8.14%

339,981,823

62,300

13,045

4,180

Change

39

-420

-0.09%

9,803,321

-9,631

-2,199

-613

%

0.05%

-16.25%

-1.11%

2.88%

-15.46%

-16.86%

-14.67%

As of Feb 24

-8.46%

-25.71%

-0.98%

2.75%

-14.64%

-15.85%

-13.72%

As of Feb 23

-13.78%

-29.81%

-1.10%

2.72%

-14.68%

-17.22%

-14.78%

As of Feb 22

-20.43%

-35.51%

-1.10%

2.80%

-15.36%

-16.40%

-14.59%

As of Feb 21

-23.34%

-37.85%

-1.10%

2.78%

-16.21%

-15.55%

-13.73%

As of Feb 20

-25.29%

-37.52%

-1.10%

2.85%

-15.96%

-15.81%

-15.40%

As of Feb 19

-29.89%

-30.50%

-1.22%

3.01%

-16.25%

-15.46%

-15.08%

As of Feb 18

-28.89%

-9.33%

-1.09%

3.00%

-16.07%

-14.12%

-15.90%

 

Estimated National Hospital Utilization

Data compiled from US Department of Health and Human Services

As of

Inpatient Beds Occupied (All Patients)

Capacity Filled %

Inpatient Beds Occupied (Covid Patients)

Capacity Filled %

ICU Beds Occupied (All Patients)

Capacity Filled %

25-Feb-21

508,634

72.18%

58,558

8.31%

62,614

72.15%

19-Feb-21

509,498

72.41%

66,217

9.41%

63,268

72.61%

Change

-864

-0.23%

-7,659

-1.10%

-654

-0.46%

17-Feb-21

482,288

68.86%

67,757

9.67%

61,319

71.19%

16-Feb-21

501,487

71.31%

70,812

10.07%

63,678

72.89%

10-Feb-21

494,258

70.52%

82,599

11.78%

63,083

72.18%

01-Feb-21

511,756

72.27%

97,978

13.84%

66,981

75.57%

25-Jan-21

523,968

73.79%

114,816

16.17%

68,813

77.24%

15-Jan-21

529,318

74.53%

132,172

18.61%

70,352

78.88%

04-Jan-21

508,370

71.34%

126,417

17.74%

67,246

63.18%

 

Trending Charts

Charts compiled from Sunknighty CVOB web site via Johns Hopkins University data, updated daily at 5AM from the previous day’s numbers

 

 

US Vaccinations

Note: Washington Post data in Friday’s communication included numbers incorrectly posted on their web site which have since been updated

Total Doses

Data compiled by The Washington Post, updated February 25

Over 46 million people have received one or more doses of the vaccine, more than 21.5 million people have been fully vaccinated and almost 92 million doses have been distributed.

 

Current Doses

Data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, updated daily

Date

Total Doses Distributed

Change

% of Total Population

Total Doses Administered

Change

% of Total Population

2/25/2021

91,673,010

3,003,975

27.95%

68,274,117

-190,830

20.82%

2/24/2021

88,669,035

6,554,665

27.03%

68,464,947

3,432,864

20.87%

2/23/2021

82,114,370

6,908,430

25.03%

65,032,083

854,609

19.83%

2/22/2021

75,205,940

975

22.93%

64,177,474

1,086,840

19.57%

2/21/2021

75,204,965

-3,923,530

22.93%

63,090,634

1,801,134

19.23%

2/20/2021

79,128,495

976,000

24.12%

61,289,500

1,704,457

18.69%

2/19/2021

78,152,495

4,775,045

23.83%

59,585,043

1,847,276

18.17%

 

Date

Number of People Receiving 1 or more Doses

Change

% of Total Population

Number of People Receiving 2 Doses

Change

% of Total Population

Pfizer-BioNTech

Moderna

Not Identified

2/25/2021

46,074,392

837,249

14.05%

21,555,117

947,856

6.57%

35,095,003

33,066,503

112,611

2/24/2021

45,237,143

692,174

13.79%

20,607,261

724,717

6.28%

34,159,027

32,194,245

111,675

2/23/2021

44,544,969

406,851

13.58%

19,882,544

444,049

6.06%

33,352,170

31,569,021

110,892

2/22/2021

44,138,118

510,026

13.46%

19,438,495

573,176

5.93%

32,853,883

31,212,925

110,666

2/21/2021

43,628,092

818,497

13.30%

18,865,319

969,652

5.75%

32,232,422

30,747,615

110,597

2/20/2021

42,809,595

832,194

13.05%

17,895,667

856,549

5.46%

31,270,062

29,909,492

109,946

2/19/2021

41,977,401

956,352

12.80%

17,039,118

876,760

5.19%

30,431,247

29,044,336

109,460

  • Total doses distributed are cumulative counts of vaccine doses recorded as shipped in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vaccine Tracking System.
  • Doses distributed are for both Moderna and Pfizer BioNTech vaccine; administered doses are for Pfizer BioNTech vaccine only at this time

 

Reported doses administered by day

Data compiled by The Washington Post from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,, updated February 25

In the last week, an average of 1.37 million doses per day were administered, a 12% decrease over the week before.

 

State Doses

Data compiled by The Washington Post, updated February 25

 

US Variants

Cases Caused by Variants

Data compiled by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, normally updated Sunday, Tuesday, and Thursday

Date

UK - B.1.1.7

South Africa - B.1.351

Brazil - P.1

Spread: More transmissible

Spread: More transmissible

Spread: Likely more transmissible

Illness: No more or less severe *

Illness: No more or less severe

Illness: No more or less severe

Vaccine: As effective

Vaccine: Less effective

Vaccine: May be less effective

Cases

States

Cases

States

Cases

States

2/25/2021

2,102

45

49

15

6

5

2/23/2021

1,881

45

46

14

5

4

2/21/2021

1,661

44

22

10

5

4

2/18/2021

1,523

42

21

10

5

4

2/16/2021

1,277

42

19

10

3

2

2/14/2021

1,173

40

17

8

3

2

2/11/2021

981

37

13

5

3

2

2/9/2021

932

34

9

3

3

2

2/7/2021

690

33

6

3

3

2

2/4/2021

611

33

5

2

2

1

2/2/2021

541

33

3

2

2

1

 

Map compiled by NBC News from CDC data, last updated February 24

 

Key news and updates

Published from The New York Times Variant Tracker

  • Added the B.1.526 variant, which is spreading in New York City – Feb 23
  • Studies suggest that a variant discovered in California is more contagious – Feb 23
  • Maryland confirms its first case of the P.1 variant – Feb 17
  • Massachusetts confirms its first case of the B.1.351 variant – Feb 16
  • Added the Q677 spike mutation, which was found in several lineages in the US – Feb 15
  • B.1.351 is confirmed in a Connecticut resident hospitalized in New York City – Feb 15
  • Studies suggest B.1.1.7 is likely more deadly than other circulating variants – Feb 13
  • Illinois and North Carolina confirm their first cases of the B.1.351 variant – Feb 11
  • South Africa stops using AstraZeneca’s vaccine against the B.1.351 variant – Feb 7
  • The B.1.1.7 variant is doubling every 10 days in the US – Feb 7

 

Highlights

Vaccines – US

  1. About 68 million doses of vaccine have been administered in the US, according to data published Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 74% of the 91,673,010 doses delivered and about two million more reported since Wednesday, for a seven-day average of about 1.5 million doses per day.
  2. The number of vaccine doses administered in the US as second doses outpaced first doses for the first time over the past week, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and over the past seven days, the total number given has jumped by nearly 10.2 million doses, with just over half - 5.1 million – given as second doses.
  3. The Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington estimates that 165.82 million Americans will have been vaccinated by June 1 - close to half the population.
  4. Missouri will soon enter its Phase 1B of the state’s Covid-19 Vaccine Plan, which means K-12 educators and school employees, child care providers, grocery store employees and critical infrastructure workers in energy, food, agriculture, and other sectors, will become eligible, making approximately 550,000 more Missourians eligible to receive doses.
  5. Massachusetts saw nearly 50,000 vaccine appointments snatched up in 90 minutes Thursday morning, as residents were told they could be waiting hours, or even days, to schedule one of the limited slots.
  6. Supermarket chain Giant Eagle today announced a partnership with the Pittsburgh Steelers to host a multi-day vaccination clinic at Heinz Field which will run from at least March 2 through March 5, with a “significant number” of appointments available each day, but if additional supply is made available the dates will be extended.
  7. President Biden gave remarks commemorating 50 million Covid-19 vaccine doses administered Thursday, taking the time to mark the occasion while still warning of the road ahead, adding that “The more people get vaccinated, the faster we're gonna beat this pandemic.”
  8. The US needs more equitable vaccine distribution systems to respond to the pandemic and any in the future, the Biden administration’s nominee for surgeon general, Dr. Vivek Murthy, said Thursday, explaining "Disparities we often see with vaccine distribution are often related to pre-existing structural challenges that we have - one of them being a lack of access to health care that many people unfortunately face.”
  9. Vice President Harris watched from a distance Thursday as vaccinations took place at a Giant pharmacy in Southeast Washington at an event staged to highlight the Biden administration’s expanding efforts to make shots directly available at local pharmacies across the country.

Vaccines - Global

  1. The European Union's vaccine rollout "will continue to be difficult" in the next few weeks, European Council President Charles Michel said during a summit Thursday, explaining that “Our top priority now is speeding up the production and delivery of vaccines and vaccinations across the European Union," adding “It's why we support the Commission's efforts to work with [the] industry to identify bottlenecks, guarantee supply chains and scale up production,” and “we want more predictability and transparency to ensure that pharmaceutical companies comply with the commitments."
  2. AstraZeneca is "very confident" its vaccine yield will improve in the second quarter, noting that the company could even "catch up" to the supply volumes originally projected, company CEO Pascal Soriot said during an European Union virtual summit Thursday.
  3. Moderna's current vaccine production numbers "are far from indicative" of future production, CEO Stéphane Bancel said today, explaining "The numbers we are producing today are far from indicative of what we can produce in the future," and adding "We expect that the additional capacity investment, which we announced yesterday to drive to up to 1.4 billion doses in 2022 will be helpful."
  4. UNICEF said today it has shipped 504,000 vaccine doses from Mumbai airport, bound for Ivory Coast on Friday, making it the second country to receive the doses through the World Health Organization's COVAX program, following a vaccine shipment to Ghana on Wednesday.
  5. Ireland is beginning to see strong early evidence that its vaccine rollout is protecting healthcare workers and care home residents from catching the disease, health officials said on Thursday.
  6. South Korea launched its inoculation campaign on Friday, with shots to be administered in some 200 nursing homes, in an effort that officials call the first step in returning the country to more normal life.
  7. Mexico’s Finance Minister Arturo Herrera said more than 80 million people should be vaccinated by July, a figure that represents all of the targeted adult population, with 34 million expected to received their shot by April.
  8. Argentina has received 904,000 doses of the Sinopharm vaccine in its first delivery from the Chinese drug maker, the government said on Thursday, which should help the country accelerate its fledgling inoculation program.
  9. Syria will start administering vaccines the country has received “from a friendly country” to frontlines workers treating coronavirus patients next week, the health minister Hassan al-Ghobash said Thursday.
  10. Guatemala's Health Ministry approved the emergency use of Russia's Sputnik V vaccine, according to a statement from the Russian Direct Investment Fund released Thursday, the third country of Central America to approve its use and the 37th country worldwide.
  11. Bahrain approved the use of Johnson & Johnson’s single-shot vaccine, making it the fifth authorized for emergency use in the tiny Gulf nation.
  12. German president Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Thursday urged people not to be picky about which vaccine they receive, as doses of AstraZeneca’s offering go unused in Europe, and speaking to health workers in Bavaria called choosing a vaccine a “luxury problem” given that citizens from some countries may not receive a shot this year.

New Variants

  1. The vast majority of new variants - 2,102 – reported in the US are the more contagious variant known as B.1.1.7 originally detected in the United Kingdom, which has now been found in 43 states, Puerto Rico and Washington, DC, with nearly a quarter of the infections in Florida.
  2. There are now a total of 49 cases of the variant first seen in South Africa, called B.1.351, in 14 states and Washington, DC, with the strain linked to Brazil now reported to have infected six people in the US.
  3. The B.1.1.7 variant, first seen in the United Kingdom, has been found across the US and experts fear it might fuel a new surge as it appears to be more contagious, but there’s little sign it’s doing so yet, the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington reported today.
  4. Columbia University researchers say they have identified at least 80 cases of the new variant across the tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, indicating the new homegrown mutation isn't confined to a single outbreak.
  5. New York City officials said on Thursday that the full possible risks posed by a new variant were unknown, but that it did not appear yet to require that the city modify its public health response.
  6. France’s prime minister said Thursday that several regions could face new pandemic restrictions starting March 6, as the country recorded a sharp increase in infections that was attributable to new variants of the virus, such as one originally detected in Britain that now accounts for half of infections in France.
  7. Hungary is facing its "most difficult two weeks" of the pandemic so far, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán said Thursday, adding that hospitals are facing unprecedented pressure due to the spread of variants.
  8. CureVac chief Franz-Werner Haas said on Thursday that preliminary trials on animals of the company's vaccine candidate show it is effective against the United Kingdom and South African variants.
  9. Europe's medicines regulator said on Thursday it has issued new guidance for drug makers that modify their vaccines to protect against variants of the virus to speed up the approval process.

US Outbreak

  1. “Daily deaths are also declining, but the decline is half the size of daily cases,” the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington reported Thursday, saying the trend may partly be because of a rising ratio of deaths in Alabama, Arizona, California, Delaware, and Georgia, but that the number has dropped nearly 35% in the last five weeks.
  2. The influential model from the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington projects that 574,000 people will have died of Covid-19 in the US by June 1, trending down from its last forecast of 562,000 by April 1.
  3. Since the arrival of vaccines, which were prioritized to long-term care facilities starting in late December, new cases and deaths in nursing homes have fallen steeply, outpacing national declines, according to a New York Times analysis of federal data, a turnaround that is an encouraging sign for vaccine effectiveness and offering an early glimpse at what may be in store for the rest of the country, as more and more people get vaccinated.
  4. California became the first state to report 50,000 deaths from COVID-19 this week, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, a grim milestone that occurred after 806 additional deaths were reported in Los Angeles County on Wednesday, due to a backlog from the holidays/
  5. Oregon Governor Kate Brown extended the state of emergency due to Covid-19 for an additional 60 days on Thursday, a measure that will last through May 2 and allowing continued federal Covid-19 relief and assistance, including help with vaccine distribution.
  6. Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker, who has been criticized for a rocky vaccine rollout, announced Thursday that the state would move into the next phase of reopening in March as long as infection rates continue to trend downward, and that capacity limits for indoor dining will be lifted starting next week, but bars and nightclubs will remain closed.
  7. Texas Governor Greg Abbott of Texas said Thursday he was considering lifting a statewide mask mandate, which has been in place since July, explaining “We’re working right now on evaluating when we’re going to be able to remove all statewide orders, and we will be making announcements about that pretty soon.”
  8. New York City schools have a positive Covid-19 test rate of less than 1% as middle schools reopened to students for in-person instruction.
  9. Infections have continued to emerge by the tens of thousands this year at colleges, a New York Times survey found, after students returned to campuses during a period when numbers were soaring across much of the country, with over 120,000 cases linked to American colleges and universities since January 1, and more than 530,000 reported since the beginning of the pandemic.
  10. Maryland’s State Board of Education adopted a plan this week for standardized testing to go on this spring, but this year the exams will be shorter and limited to math and English for students in third grade to eighth grade and high school, whether they are learning in person or virtually.

Global Outbreak

  1. More than 2.5 million people across the world have now died due to coronavirus, according to Johns Hopkins University data on Thursday, less than a month and a half after the milestone of 2 million was recorded on January 15.
  2. The World Health Organization on Thursday warned that as many as 20 poor countries were in urgent need of oxygen, as more than 500,000 Covid-19 patients in low and middle income countries around the world need an oxygen treatment each day.
  3. Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom have seen infections decline in recent weeks, but this contrasts sharply with countries including France, Germany and Greece, which are all seeing rises in weekly cases compared to the previous seven days.
  4. Brazil reported another 65,998 cases in the last 24 hours, and the country’s total death toll crossed 250,000- the most number of fatalities after only the US.
  5. France on Wednesday registered more than 30,000 new cases, up from a daily average of 20,000 new infections in recent weeks and the biggest daily tally since mid-November.
  6. Italy reported 19,886 new cases on Thursday, compared with 16,424 the day before, marking the highest number of infections since January 9, and patients in intensive care units rose for an eighth day to 2,168, still below the November peak of about 3,800 and the April 2020 peak of more than 4,000.
  7. Poland reported its number of new cases rose for a second straight day - with some 12,000 new infections detected on Wednesday, and announce that face coverings like scarves and bandannas can no longer be worn instead of protective masks.
  8. Germany recorded 10,774 new cases in the 24 hours through Thursday morning, the highest one-day addition since February 6, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, and the country’s seven-day incidence rate inched up to 61.7.
  9. Ukraine has registered an almost 40% jump in new cases over the past 24 hours, Health Minister Maksym Stepanov said Thursday.
  10. The United Kingdom lowered its Covid alert level from five to four, the Department of Health and Social Care announced Thursday, and in a statement said that “The health services across the four nations remain under significant pressure with a high number of patients in hospital, however thanks to the efforts of public we are now seeing numbers consistently declining, and the threat of the NHS and other health services being overwhelmed within 21 days has receded."
  11. Japan’s government will end a state of emergency in all but Tokyo and three neighboring prefectures at the end of this month, a week earlier than scheduled.
  12. Finland will go into a three-week lockdown starting March 8 and is prepared to declare a state of emergency, Prime Minister Sanna Marin said Thursday, who said the country faces a "significant" increase in the number of cases and a rise in hospitalizations, and while the lockdown will not include a curfew, it will involve the closing of restaurants and ordering school students that are 13 or older to shift to remote learning.
  13. Portugal on Thursday extended until at least mid-March a nationwide lockdown, but its president told the government to put together a plan to gradually lift the strict rules.
  14. Dubai plans to link the IT systems of its health authority with Emirates’ reservation and check-in systems, in order to facilitate the digital verification of air passengers' Covid-19 testing and vaccination data, and in a news release Thursday the airline said the project will allow for “the efficient sharing, storing and verification of passenger health information related to COVID-19 infection, testing and vaccination, all in a secure and legally compliant manner.

Diagnosis, Prevention and Treatment

  1. GlaxoSmithKline will extend a trial testing an experimental rheumatoid arthritis drug on patients suffering from pneumonia related to COVID-19 to focus on the elderly as it seeks to firm up encouraging findings so far.
  2. Pfizer plans to begin testing its vaccine in children as young as 5, Pfizer Chairman and CEO Albert Bourla said Thursday, with data on the population expected to be available by the end of the year.
  3. Moderna has completed enrollment of 3,000 US participants for a Phase 2/3 trial called “TeenCOVE” that will study their vaccine in adolescents ages 12 to 17 and will start the Phase 2 study in younger children soon, the company said Thursday.
  4. About one in 10 people who have contracted covid-19 continue to show symptoms three months after infection, the World Health Organization said Thursday, who urged policymakers to do more to acknowledge and treat the phenomenon often referred to as “long covid,” with the agency reporting symptoms from fatigue to chest pain to depression to a loss of smell which results in “severe social, economic, health and occupational consequences.”

Business Related

  1. A ruling in the Senate on Thursday dealt a severe blow to Democrats' hopes of raising the minimum wage in the Covid-19 relief package, likely dooming the proposal in the legislation that is headed for a vote in Congress, with the parliamentarian, the in-house referee, saying that the provision was not compliant with rules governing the budget process being used to pass the bill with simple majorities.
  2. Best Buy said it expects fewer consumers to buy home theaters and new laptops as they spend money on travel and dining out again in the second half of the year, as the retailer exceeded Wall Street’s earnings expectations for the fourth quarter but missed on revenue expectations and reported slowing sales, forecasting an even slower rate for the coming year, with same-store sales expected to decline by as much as 2%.
  3. Costco plans to raise its minimum wage from $15 to $16 next week, the company’s chief executive told Congress on Thursday, becoming the latest major retailer to boost hourly pay as the pandemic wears on and big-box stores post booming profits.

Other Stories

  1. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken plans to take virtual “trips” to Mexico and Canada on Friday, an effort to continue diplomacy in as normal a fashion as possible at a time when the coronavirus has shut down most foreign travel.
  2. The Tokyo 2020 Olympic Torch Relay will start in Fukushima prefecture on March 25, 2021 with several Covid-19 countermeasures in place, officials announced on Thursday, but there will be no cheering allowed and people who view from the roadside must wear masks.
  3. Virginia state Republican Party leaders voted this week to choose their nominee for governor at a drive-in convention at Liberty University, a decision that seemed to take officials at the Lynchburg campus by surprise, with Central Committee members who pitched the idea acknowledging before the vote that they had no formal agreement with the college, saying the party could pursue that only after the committee signed off on the principle.

 

Outbreak Statistics

Numbers from John Hopkins CSSE Tracking are pulled daily at 5:00PM and changes reflect the past 24 hours

Global Numbers

Date

Cases

Deaths

Recovered

25 Feb Thu

112,856,868 (+447,284)

2,503,735 (+11,315) - 2.22%

63,669,784 (+229,474)

24 Feb Wed

112,409,584 (+434,679)

2,492,420 (+11,280) - 2.22%

63,440,310 (+239,022)

23 Feb Tue

111,974,905 (+332,881)

2,481,140 (+9,339) - 2.22%

63,201,288 (+245,100)

22 Feb Mon

111,642,024 (+364,357)

2,471,801 (+7,411) - 2.21%

62,956,188 (+172,470)

21 Feb Sun

111,277,667 (+328,556)

2,464,390 (+7,017) - 2.21%

62,783,718 (+229,384)

20 Feb Sat

110,949,111 (+381,380)

2,457,373 (+9,026) - 2.21%

62,554,334 (+261,090)

19 Feb Thu

110,567,731 (+387,042)

2,448,347 (+11,209) - 2.21%

62,293,244 (+246,631)

Top 15 Global Country Counts

  • Daily case change (total):  US: +83,893 (28,396,896), Brazil: +66,588 (10,324,463), France: +25,413 (3,746,466), Italy: +19,871 (2,868,435), India: +16,738 (11,046,914), Czechia: +13,816 (1,198,168), Poland: +12,143 (1,673,252), Russia: +11,067 (4,164,802), Germany: +10,751 (2,426,780), United Kingdom: +10,015 (4,166,718), Turkey: +9,572 (2,674,766), Spain: +9,568 (3,180,212), Mexico: +8,642 (2,060,908), Indonesia: +8,493 (1,314,634), Ukraine: +8,278 (1,373,139)
  • Daily death change (total):  US: +3,508 (507,803), Brazil: +1,428 (249,957), Mexico: +1,006 (182,815), Russia: +437 (83,481), Germany: +391 (69,327), Spain: +345 (68,813), United Kingdom: +324 (122,303), Italy: +308 (96,974), Poland: +286 (43,094), Indonesia: +264 (35,518), France: +262 (85,734), Peru: +196 (45,683), Czechia: +153 (19,835), Ukraine: +144 (26,991), Colombia: +142 (59,260)

US Numbers

Date

Cases

Deaths

Recovered

25 Feb Thu

28,396,744 (+83,893)

507,800 (+3,508) - 1.79%

10,554,761 (+64,939)

24 Feb Wed

28,312,851 (+73,432)

504,292 (+2,290) - 1.78%

10,489,822 (+50,579)

23 Feb Tue

28,239,419 (+65,438)

502,002 (+1,934) - 1.78%

10,439,243 (-1,586,720)

22 Feb Mon

28,173,981 (+52,955)

500,068 (+1,356) - 1.77%

12,025,963 (+21,900)

21 Feb Sun

28,121,026 (+61,131)

498,712 (+1,370) - 1.77%

12,004,063 (+67,658)

20 Feb Sat

28,059,895 (+106,224)

497,342 (+2,216) - 1.77%

11,936,405 (+34,976)

19 Feb Thu

27,953,671 (+72,095)

495,126 (+2,483) - 1.77%

11,901,429 (+73,399)

US State and Territory Counts

  • Cases by daily change (totals):  New York: +11,719 (1,619,924), Texas: +11,107 (2,629,850), Florida: +6,640 (1,892,301), California: +5,970 (3,550,368), New Jersey: +3,577 (778,963), North Carolina: +3,351 (852,981), Georgia: +3,149 (997,442), South Carolina: +2,502 (511,546), Ohio: +2,409 (962,404), Pennsylvania: +2,389 (925,563), Massachusetts: +2,102 (573,885), Tennessee: +1,994 (770,940), Virginia: +1,979 (570,982), Illinois: +1,903 (1,181,151), Michigan: +1,598 (642,868), Arizona: +1,310 (811,968), Kentucky: +1,294 (400,307), Colorado: +1,168 (423,558), Oklahoma: +1,144 (422,156), Indiana: +1,084 (659,127), Minnesota: +986 (481,831), Maryland: +976 (379,466), Connecticut: +975 (279,159), Wisconsin: +965 (615,225), Mississippi: +920 (292,811), Alabama: +890 (491,110), Washington: +872 (336,565), Utah: +832 (369,433), Arkansas: +803 (317,396), Louisiana: +764 (427,689), Iowa: +731 (361,940), Missouri: +708 (493,803), Nevada: +571 (292,630), Rhode Island: +467 (125,185), New Mexico: +446 (183,781), West Virginia: +431 (130,813), Idaho: +423 (170,289), Oregon: +417 (154,062), Nebraska: +381 (200,163), New Hampshire: +335 (74,258), Delaware: +295 (85,801), Maine: +218 (44,118), Montana: +203 (99,445), Alaska: +181 (58,151), District of Columbia: +179 (40,122), South Dakota: +156 (111,964), Puerto Rico: +100 (99,619), North Dakota: +90 (99,621), Vermont: +72 (14,840), Wyoming: +44 (53,988), Hawaii: +43 (27,497), Kansas: +20 (295,190), Virgin Islands: +10 (2,623), Guam: +0 (7,729), Northern Mariana Islands: +0 (143), American Samoa: +0 (0)
  • Deaths by daily change (totals):  California: +1,157 (51,088), Texas: +629 (43,176), Virginia: +155 (7,963), Florida: +138 (30,478), Georgia: +137 (17,195), New York: +108 (47,264), Alabama: +87 (9,831), Pennsylvania: +81 (23,840), Ohio: +80 (17,125), New Jersey: +70 (23,147), North Carolina: +63 (11,137), Massachusetts: +62 (15,945), Wisconsin: +58 (6,994), Tennessee: +55 (11,321), Kentucky: +51 (4,527), Michigan: +47 (16,436), South Carolina: +45 (8,443), Arizona: +43 (15,693), Illinois: +38 (22,607), Oklahoma: +38 (4,302), Louisiana: +33 (9,561), Oregon: +32 (2,194), Washington: +31 (4,912), Missouri: +28 (8,251), Indiana: +27 (12,494), Maine: +24 (701), Iowa: +23 (5,438), Connecticut: +19 (7,614), Maryland: +16 (7,805), Nevada: +14 (4,933), New Mexico: +14 (3,658), Utah: +11 (1,890), Colorado: +10 (5,917), Arkansas: +10 (5,387), Nebraska: +9 (2,063), Rhode Island: +9 (2,496), Puerto Rico: +9 (2,016), Mississippi: +8 (6,613), South Dakota: +8 (1,872), Minnesota: +7 (6,518), West Virginia: +5 (2,290), Delaware: +4 (1,406), District of Columbia: +4 (1,005), Hawaii: +4 (434), Montana: +2 (1,350), New Hampshire: +2 (1,157), Vermont: +2 (203), North Dakota: +1 (1,471), Kansas: +0 (4,681), Idaho: +0 (1,840), Alaska: +0 (290), Wyoming: +0 (671), Guam: +0 (130), Virgin Islands: +0 (25), Northern Mariana Islands: +0 (2), American Samoa: +0 (0)

 

US Testing and Treatment Statistics

Data from The COVID Tracking Project at the Atlantic, which uses a Creative Common CC-BY-NC-4.0 license type, typically posted by 7PM

Date

New Tests

Positive Results

Negative Results

Total Results

% of Positive Tests

Pending Tests

Currently Hospitalized

Currently in ICU

Currently on Ventilators

25 Feb Thu

1,837,743

28,150,738

121,290,663

349,785,144

8.05%

11,813

52,669

10,846

3,567

24 Feb Wed

1,464,714

28,075,173

120,757,956

347,947,401

8.07%

12,548

54,118

11,026

3,685

23 Feb Tue

1,188,609

28,000,689

120,288,105

346,469,862

8.08%

11,200

55,058

11,272

3,755

22 Feb Mon

1,238,604

27,932,810

126,181,328

345,630,563

8.08%

9,499

55,403

11,536

3,804

21 Feb Sun

1,225,773

27,879,604

125,799,737

344,360,398

8.10%

9,442

56,159

11,862

3,915

20 Feb Sat

1,274,526

27,821,175

125,499,697

343,134,625

8.11%

9,408

58,222

12,120

3,932

19 Feb Fri

1,878,276

27,749,224

125,189,379

341,860,099

8.12%

8,711

59,882

12,491

4,118

  • Testing by daily change (currently):  New York: +278,942 (37,256,699), California: +161,988 (47,814,160), Florida: +118,508 (21,488,105), Massachusetts: +118,144 (15,894,675), Illinois: +91,292 (17,895,829), Wisconsin: +88,386 (6,825,405), North Carolina: +62,314 (10,199,355), Pennsylvania: +54,200 (10,244,968), Texas: +53,992 (19,357,913), Louisiana: +53,200 (5,521,097), Michigan: +50,278 (10,211,286), New Jersey: +47,527 (10,535,018), Minnesota: +45,708 (6,831,489), Indiana: +45,517 (7,902,509), Ohio: +44,938 (9,894,516), Connecticut: +39,700 (6,267,131), Colorado: +39,073 (6,119,346), Arizona: +37,382 (7,549,777), Maryland: +37,184 (7,755,974), Virginia: +30,668 (5,830,467), Georgia: +28,972 (7,125,751), South Carolina: +27,689 (4,932,992), Tennessee: +26,206 (6,859,550), Rhode Island: +24,685 (2,946,696), Missouri: +22,411 (4,445,341), Washington: +21,996 (5,167,513), New Hampshire: +17,172 (1,436,668), Kentucky: +16,035 (3,878,912), Oregon: +15,528 (3,526,219), Nebraska: +12,000 (2,347,453), Maine: +11,597 (1,607,004), West Virginia: +11,465 (2,173,485), Oklahoma: +11,004 (3,456,445), Utah: +10,605 (2,829,905), Nevada: +10,057 (2,696,649), New Mexico: +9,788 (2,652,210), Arkansas: +9,057 (2,627,733), Alaska: +8,887 (1,671,043), Montana: +7,535 (1,067,508), Alabama: +7,155 (2,276,188), Hawaii: +5,490 (1,080,715), District of Columbia: +5,048 (1,209,653), Wyoming: +3,788 (633,626), North Dakota: +3,738 (1,403,080), Delaware: +2,817 (1,371,551), Iowa: +2,594 (1,308,496), Vermont: +1,603 (1,033,554), Idaho: +1,456 (635,314), Mississippi: +920 (1,728,997), South Dakota: +738 (420,565), Guam: +372 (117,265), Virgin Islands: +294 (47,273), Puerto Rico: +100 (405,591), American Samoa: +0 (2,140), Kansas: +0 (1,248,768), Northern Mariana Islands: +0 (17,572)
  • Hospitalization by daily change (currently; that report this data):  Idaho: +33 (143), Missouri: +20 (1,202), Wisconsin: +8 (355), Indiana: +3 (889), Kansas: +0 (214), Oregon: +0 (191), Alaska: -1 (45), Guam: -2 (4), Nevada: -2 (532), South Dakota: -2 (100), Vermont: -2 (30), Hawaii: -3 (34), North Dakota: -3 (25), Tennessee: -3 (1,139), Utah: -4 (248), Rhode Island: -5 (163), Wyoming: -5 (20), District of Columbia: -6 (205), Iowa: -6 (227), New Hampshire: -6 (97), New Mexico: -6 (245), Maine: -7 (67), Louisiana: -8 (679), Maryland: -8 (952), Connecticut: -10 (485), Pennsylvania: -10 (1,962), Washington: -10 (534), West Virginia: -10 (282), Texas: -14 (6,724), Colorado: -15 (412), Delaware: -18 (164), Nebraska: -18 (160), Mississippi: -20 (534), Massachusetts: -22 (853), Montana: -22 (75), Arkansas: -23 (522), Minnesota: -27 (265), South Carolina: -29 (939), Georgia: -32 (2,583), North Carolina: -32 (1,498), Michigan: -34 (821), New Jersey: -38 (2,032), Kentucky: -40 (843), Illinois: -48 (1,463), Alabama: -51 (722), Puerto Rico: -58 (184), Arizona: -64 (1,385), Ohio: -76 (1,262), Virginia: -76 (1,488), Oklahoma: -100 (491), Florida: -120 (3,957), New York: -173 (5,703), California: -244 (6,520)

 

Diagnosis, Prevention and Treatment

Tracker data is consolidated from The New York Times and US CDC, (#) is change from last update, see Reference detail in Compiled Information following

 

Vaccine Tracker(last updatedFebruary 25)

 

 

PRECLINICAL

PHASE I

PHASE II

PHASE III

EARLY/LIMITED

APPROVED

 

 

~150+

40

27

20

8 (+1)

4

 

 

Vaccine candidates being evaluated

Vaccines testing safety and dosage

Vaccines in expanded safety trials

Vaccines in large-scale efficacy tests

Vaccines approved for early or limited use

Vaccines approved for full use

 

 

Early/Limited Use (in country):CanSinoBIO Biologics (China), Gamaleya Research Institute (Russia), Sinovac Biotech (China), Sinopharm - Wuhan (China), Vector Institute (Russia), Chumakov (Russia)

 

 

Emergency Use (in country): Pfizer-BioNTech (US and elsewhere), Moderna (US), AstraZeneca/University of Oxford (Britain and elsewhere), Bharat Biotech (India), Sinopharm (China, UAE, Bahrain)

 

 

Approved (in country):Pfizer-BioNTech (multiple countries), Moderna (Canada and multiple countries), Sputnik V (Mexico), Sinovac (China)

 

New additions and recent updates:

  • Bahrain authorizes Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine for emergency use – Feb 25
  • A vaccine developed by the Icahn School of Medicine enters Phase 1 – Feb 22
  • Sanofi moves to Phase 2 – Feb 22
  • Russia approves the Chumakov Center vaccine for early use – Feb 20
  • China’s Shenzhen Kangtai moves to Phase 2 – Feb 18
  • A nasal spray from India’s Bharat Biotech enters Phase 1 – Feb 16
  • A vaccine from Italy’s Takis and Rottapharm enters Phase 1 – Feb 10
  • South Korea’s SK Bioscience moves to Phase 1/2 - Feb 8
  • South Africa halts plans for a rollout of AstraZeneca’s vaccine – Feb 7
  • A second vaccine from Iran enters Phase 1 – Feb 7
  • China gives conditional approval to the Sinovac vaccine – Feb 6
  • New York-based COVAXX moves to Phase 2 – Feb 6
  • Vaxart stock plunges after a reported low antibody response – Feb 3
  • Mexico authorizes Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine – Feb 3
  • Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine has an efficacy of 91.6% - Feb 2
  • Cuba’s Abdala vaccine moves to Phase 2 – Feb 2

 

Drug and Treatment Tracker(last updated February 11)

 

 

 

 

 

 

3 (2)

2

3

13

3

3

FDA Approved (Emergency)

Widely used

Promising evidence

Tentative or mixed evidence

Not promising

Pseudoscience or fraud

FDA Approved:Remdesivir, Bamlanivimab Antibody (emergency use), Regeneron (emergency use)

Widely Used:Prone positioning, ventilators and other respiratory support devices

Promising:Dexamethasone and Other Corticosteroids, Cytokine Inhibitors, Azithromycin

Pseudoscience or fraud: Drinking or injecting bleach and disinfectants, UV light, Silver

New additions and recent updates:

  • Added azithromycin, an antibody used to fight bacterial infections – Feb 10
  • Added colchicine, an anti-inflammatory used to treat gout – Jan 31
  • A large trial finds no mortality benefit among hospitalized patients receiving convalescent plasma – Jan 15
  • The National Institutes of Health finds insufficient data to recommend for or against the use of ivermectin – Jan 14
  • Regeneron’s antibody cocktail receives emergency use authorization from the F.D.A. - Nov. 21
  • An antibody treatment called bamlanivimab receives emergency use authorization from the FDA - Nov. 10
  • Remdesivir is approved as the first drug to treat Covid-19 - Oct. 23
  • A trial of Eli Lilly’s antibody therapy was paused to investigate a potential safety concern - Oct. 13
  • President Trump is taking the steroid dexamethasone. Oct. 4
  • President Trump is receiving a five-day course of remdesivir. Oct. 3
  • President Trump receives an experimental antibody cocktail - Oct. 2
  • Added vitamin and mineral supplements to other treatments - Sept. 29
  • Convalescent plasma was approved for emergency use - Aug. 24

 

US Restrictions

Data compiled by the Kaiser Family Foundation, updated on change, Table available at CVOB website for sorting

US Restrictions and Policy Actions - February 22(previous update February 16)

Status of Reopening

Reopened (19); Easing Restrictions (20); Paused (7); New Restrictions Imposed (5)

Stay at Home Order

Stay at Home Order Eased or Lifted (40); New Stay at Home Order in Place (5); No Action (6)

Mandatory Quarantine for Travelers

Traveler Quarantine Mandate in Place (13); Traveler Quarantine Mandate Lifted (19); No Action (19)

Non-Essential Business Closures

All Non-Essential Businesses Open (21); Some or All Non-Essential Businesses Open with Limits (30)

Large Gatherings Ban

All Gatherings Prohibited(2: +1 ); >10 Prohibited(20: -1); >25 Prohibited(1: -1); >50 Prohibited(7: +1); No Limit(21)

Restaurant Limits

Open (19); Open with Service Limits(30: -1); Closed to Indoor Service(2: +1)

Bar Closures

Open (19); Open with Service Limits (21); Open for Outdoor Service Only (3); Closed (8)

Face Covering Requirement

Yes (36); No (15)

Emergency Declaration

Yes(50: -1); No(1: +1)

 

 

Back-to-Normal Index

The Moody’s Analytics and CNN Business US Back-to-Normal Index is comprised of 37 national and seven state-level indicators, ranges from 0% - representing no economic activity, to 100% - representing the economy returning to its pre-pandemic level in March, and is updated weekly on Fridays for Wednesday numbers (see FAQ following for methodology)

As ofWednesday, February 17,the Index was82.0% (+2.0%),with37 (+30)states showing improvement since the previous week

 

Recent Historical Trending

17-Feb

10-Feb

3-Feb

27-Jan

20-Jan

13-Jan

6-Jan

30-Dec

23-Dec

16-Dec

9-Dec

2-Dec

25-Nov

18-Nov

11-Nov

4-Nov

28-Oct

21-Oct

14-Oct

7-Oct

82.0%

80.0%

82.0%

81.0%

82.0%

81.0%

74.0%

75.3%

81.7%

82.0%

80.0%

78.5%

82.4%

81.6%

81.6%

80.0%

82.7%

81.5%

81.3%

81.2%

 

 

 

Statistics Sources

John Hopkins CSSE Live Tracking Map, CDC US Case Reporting, Worldometer Coronavirus Pandemic, News Break Coronavirus Realtime Update Stats, Bing Covid19 Tracker, Covid Tracking Project, Uncast Social Distancing Scoreboard, University of Washington Outbreak Model, Moody’s Analytics and CNN Business Back-to-Normal Index

 

References

CNN, Washington Post, CNBC, ABC News, CBS News, NBC News, New York Times, Bloomberg, Reuters, USA Today, Yahoo News, BBC, Reddit