COVID Cases Are
Still Peaking In America
November 11. 2021
Photo courtesy of CNBC
COVID cases are peaking in America
again. Reports indicate emergency rooms in America
are packed once again. CNBC reported, "The downward
trajectory has leveled off in recent weeks, bouncing
between 70,000 and 75,000 new cases a day for nearly
three weeks, according to data compiled by Johns
Hopkins University. Covid hotspots across the U.S.,
in the meantime, have shifted away from much of the
South.
The daily death toll still remains elevated, with
more than 1,200 fatalities per day reported over the
past week, up 1% from a week ago, according to Johns
Hopkins. "
Every time a little progress is
made, via cases declining, states rush to cast off
or ease restrictions (no mask wearing or social
distancing). Why do some keep doing that. This is
why the virus keeps circulating. It is the
equivalent of celebrating victory while the battle
is still going on and you're losing (America Is Experiencing A Dire
10,100,000 Job Openings Due To Economic Mismanagement And 100,000 New
Coronavirus Cases Per Day After President Joe Biden Told The Public To
Take Off Their Masks).
STORY SOURCE
After weeks of declines, U.S. Covid cases have
stalled at a high level: ‘The ERs are packed’
Published Wed, Nov 10 202110:34 AM
EST Updated 3 Hours Ago - After weeks of plunging
U.S. Covid-19 cases, the decline in infections has
stalled out. New infections have dropped to an
average of more than 74,000 per day over the past
week, a 57% fall from the delta wave’s peak level of
172,500 new cases per day on Sept. 13.
While that surely is good news, the
downward trajectory has leveled off in recent weeks,
bouncing between 70,000 and 75,000 new cases a day
for nearly three weeks, according to data compiled
by Johns Hopkins University. Covid hotspots across
the U.S., in the meantime, have shifted away from
much of the South. The daily death toll still
remains elevated, with more than 1,200 fatalities
per day reported over the past week, up 1% from a
week ago, according to Johns Hopkins...
https://www.cnbc.com