A version of this story appeared in the October 7 edition of CNN’s Coronavirus: Fact vs. Fiction newsletter. Sign up here to receive the need-to-know headlines every weekday.
President Donald Trump keeps downplaying the coronavirus even after it killed more than a million people around the world and left him hospitalized for three days. He has now claimed Covid-19 is “in most populations far less lethal!!!” than the flu. That’s not true. Here are the facts.
In just eight months, Covid-19 has killed more Americans than the flu did during the last five flu seasons combined.
The novel coronavirus is also much more contagious than the flu. While research shows that someone with the flu infects an average of about 1.28 other people, someone with Covid-19 infects an average of about 2 to 3 other people when mitigation efforts such as stay-at-home orders or masks are not in place.
On top of that, the coronavirus can be spread for many days without symptoms. The incubation period for the flu is much shorter, meaning people are likely to start feeling sick earlier and avoid contact with others.
There’s also a vaccine available for the flu and experts say the number of flu deaths could be drastically reduced if more people got flu shots.
Even Facebook has pushed back against the claim by removing a post from Trump about the flu, but it’s unlikely that will have any effect on the President’s approach. His advice to not let the coronavirus “dominate your life” has left loved ones of Covid-19 victims furious.
“They knew what was happening, and they didn’t tell you.”
YOU ASKED. WE ANSWERED
Q. What does asymptomatic mean?
A: For symptomatic carriers: If it’s been at least 10 days since your symptoms started and at least 24 hours since you’ve had a fever (without the help of fever-reducing medication) and your other symptoms have improved, you can go ahead and stop isolating, the CDC says. Patients with severe illness may have to keep isolating for up to 20 days after symptoms started.
This year, it’s “more important than ever to get a flu shot because we will almost certainly face the double whammy of flu season coinciding the same time as surging cases of Covid-19,” emergency room physician Dr. Leana Wen said.
And a flu/coronavirus double whammy could be disastrous if it overwhelms the healthcare system. An estimated 410,000 to 740,000 Americans were hospitalized with the flu this past flu season, from October to April, according to the CDC.
Wen said the flu shot is about 40% to 60% effective. But even if you do get the flu after having been vaccinated, the flu shot “still reduces your chance of having severe effects from the flu.”
And yes, it is possible to have the flu and Covid-19 at the same time.
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WHAT’S IMPORTANT TODAY
The White House coronavirus outbreak is spreading
Stephen Miller, a top policy adviser to Trump, has become the latest White House official to test positive. After working from home for several days, Miller showed up to work yesterday and tested positive, a source familiar with what happened told CNN.
Despite the growing outbreak, the White House has declined offers from the CDC to help investigate the outbreak, according to a federal health official. On top of the White House outbreak, all but one member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are in quarantine after having attended meetings in the Pentagon’s secure spaces.
Trump abruptly scraps coronavirus stimulus talks
President Trump has announced an end to new stimulus talks until after the election yesterday. The decision is a major blow to millions of Americans still out of work as well as small businesses and major airlines that are struggling to stay afloat.
Another round of federal funding was seen as vital to propping up the nation’s economy at a time when the recovery is weakening. Just hours before Trump’s announcement, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell reiterated his calls for more fiscal stimulus, saying that “the risks of overdoing it seem, for now, to be smaller” than not providing more help.
Most patients hospitalized with Covid-19 have neurological symptoms
A new study published in the journal Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology said more than four-fifths of Covid‐19 patients hospitalized across nine hospitals in the Chicago area earlier this year have shown neurological symptoms.
The researchers found that overall, 82% of the 509 Covid-19 patients had neurological symptoms at any time during the course of their Covid-19 illness. The most frequent manifestations were muscle pain, headaches, encephalopathy and dizziness.
FDA wants two months of safety data before considering Covid-19 vaccine
The US Food and Drug Administration made clear Tuesday it will want to see two months of follow-up data after volunteers get their second vaccine doses for clinical trials testing potential coronavirus vaccines.
That would make it difficult, if not impossible, for any vaccine maker to apply for emergency use authorization by Election Day, as President Trump has suggested, or by the end of October, as the CEO of Pfizer has hinted.
Even Europe’s gold standard nations are struggling with Covid surges
ON OUR RADAR
- China has officially joined the WHO-led COVAX initiative, which aims to provide worldwide access to effective Covid-19 vaccines.
- Women do better at mask wearing and other measures to stop the spread of Covid-19, research suggests.
- White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows hosted a wedding in Georgia in May that flouted local coronavirus guidelines.
- Pioneering penalty kick taker Antonin Panenka is on ‘life support’ after contracting Covid-19.
- Canadians have been encouraged to stay home as a second wave of Covid-19 worsens.
- Unemployment benefits claims in the US remain four-times the pre-pandemic level.
- This Japanese theme park lets you co-work from the Ferris wheel.
- Desperate Manhattan landlords are offering an average of two months’ free rent.
TODAY’S TOP TIP
With everything going on this year, mental health has become a major focus for employers, and some companies are increasing their offerings to help their workers stay healthy amid so much uncertainty.
Here are some of the ways companies are trying to help their workers:
- Scheduling meeting-free times
- Increasing access to professional help
- Offering apps and subscriptions
- Being candid and empathetic
TODAY’S PODCAST
“Every rally, every protest – it doesn’t matter – if you’re gathering together in a large group of people, there has almost certainly been transmission.” – Erin Bromage, CNN Medical Analyst
“We are asking schools and teachers and kids to do something that we’ve never done before.” – Hedy Chang, Executive Director and President of Attendance Works