Covid-19 Pandemic

Covid-19 Pandemic

Bloomberg Bloomberg   Here’s the latest news: Singapore study shows patients not infectious after 11 daysBrazil curve steepens after overtaking RussiaGlobal economy relies more than ever on finding a vaccine   Our take on the latest developments   States are stirring back to life, tentatively opening businesses and public spaces that slammed closed in March to slow the virus’s spread. Now their health agencies are in a race against the pathogen. To avoid having to shut down again, they’re hiring hundreds of virus sleuths to track down individual cases, alert the people they may have exposed, and try to keep them from spreading it more widely. It’s a high-stakes logistical challenge that gets harder to sustain as the number of cases rise. “It feels like we’ve gotten better than we were but not as good as where we need to be,” said Umair Shah, who runs public health for Harris County, Texas. Home to 4.7 million people, it encompasses Houston and dozens of other municipalities. Shah’s office recruited and trained 300 contact tracers this month. Part detective, part social worker, contact tracers spend their days on the phone, following the trails of Covid patients and assisting those who may need help to safely quarantine. Hired from the communities where they work, they need to persuade strangers on the other end of the line to cooperate for the greater good. Nationwide, health experts say America needs at least 100,000 people to do this work. Some warn that the country is behind, with public-health departments diminished by inadequate funding playing catch up. Failure could mean more illness and death. New waves of cases that threaten hospital capacity could trigger more shutdowns. But people like Shah’s new contact-tracing force, working quietly out of view, day after day, call by call, could allow the country to reopen safely. — John Tozzi   Tourism collapse   Holiday Destinations Scramble as Tourism Drops Chances are you don’t have many summer vacation plans for 2020, and even if you do, they probably won’t look anything like past excursions to far-off lands.     What you should read   A Race Is On to Recruit Virus Sleuths Officials are struggling to recruit enough people to track down infections.   U.S. Hits Back at China’s Airline Curbs Trade tensions are heating up between the world’s two biggest economies.   Working At Home Fine for South Africa Bankers Many office workers plan to stay put after lockdown rules loosen.    Johnson’s Aide Under Fire for Lockdown Breach Dominic Cummings accused of breaking virus rules he helped set in U.K.   Beach Towns Struggle Despite Reopening Jersey Shore is reopening but foot traffic is lower than normal.   Know someone else who would like this newsletter?  Have them sign up here. Have any questions, concerns, or news tips on Covid-19 news? Get in touch or help us cover the story. Like this newsletter? Subscribe for unlimited access to trusted, data-based journalism in 120 countries around the world and gain expert analysis from exclusive daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close.   Follow Us Get the newsletter   You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg’s Coronavirus Daily newsletter. Unsubscribe | Bloomberg.com | Contact Us Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022