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Australia’s COVID-19 hot spot marks new daily case record | CBC News

Byindianadmin

Jul 16, 2020
Australia’s COVID-19 hot spot marks new daily case record | CBC News

Australia’s coronavirus hot spot — the state of Victoria — is reporting a record 317 newly confirmed cases in a day. The tally for Thursday surpassed the state’s previous high of 288 on July 10. Here’s the latest on the pandemic from around the world.

A man wears a face covering as he jogs through Melbourne’s Carlton Gardens. The state of Victoria set a new record of daily COVID-19 cases on Thursday. (Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

The latest:

Australia’s coronavirus hot spot — the state of Victoria — is reporting a record 317 newly confirmed cases in a day. The tally for Thursday surpassed the state’s previous high of 288 on July 10.

The previous one-day Australian record was 212 cases set March 28 by New South Wales state during the first peak of the pandemic. New South Wales reported only 10 new cases Thursday. Two men in their 80s died in Victoria in the last 24 hours, bringing the country’s death toll for the pandemic to 113.

Victoria’s government is reducing the number of non-urgent surgeries allowed in hospitals to increase beds available for COVID-19 patients. State officials had planned to restore hospitals to normal medical services by the end of July before infections began to rise in recent weeks.

Victoria Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton said of the latest caseload: “It’s a big number. It needs to turn around.”

As of 8:30 a.m. ET on Thursday, the global coronavirus case count stood at 13,579,581, with 584,794 deaths and 7,597,786 cases considered recovered, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

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Four months into the COVID-19 pandemic and answers to questions about masks, vaccines and catching the virus are still evolving. We check in with Dr. Lynora Saxinger and Dr. Raywat Deonandan for the latest insights. 7:20

Meanwhile, Australian authorities said a COVID-19 patient apparently became infectious within a day of contracting the coronavirus. Deputy Chief Medical Officer Michael Kidd gave no details of how the patient was infected in New South Wales state or whether that patient infected anyone else before the coronavirus was diagnosed.

The Australian Health Protection Principal Committee, the country’s peak decision-making body for public health emergencies, reported such a short incubation was “unusual,” but “not implausible,” Kidd said.

People usually develop symptoms within five to seven days but may become infectious a day or two before their symptoms develop, Kidd said. A person becoming infectious within 24 hours was unlikely to be evidence of the virus changing, Kidd said.

It more likely reflected differences in individual reactions to the virus, he said.


What’s happening with coronavirus in Canada

As of 8:30 a.m. ET on Thursday, Canada had 108,829 confirmed and presumptive coronavirus cases. Provinces and territories listed 72,485 of those as recovered or resolved. A CBC News tally of deaths based on provincial reports, regional health information and CBC’s reporting stood at 8,848.

WATCH | Ontario man killed by police after altercation at store over refusing to wear a mask:

A 73-year-old Ontario man was shot and killed by police shortly after an altercation at a Minden, Ont., grocery store because he refused to wear a mask. 1:46

Some business owners and experts in employment law say Toronto’s mandatory mask bylaw is creating issues because it’s unclear for some and puts the onus on businesses to enforce it.

The city is leaving it to business owners and operators to create a policy, post signage and ensure people are wearing masks to slow the spread of the coronavirus. If they aren’t doing that, they can be issued a $1,000 fine. Right now, the city says it’s concentrating on education rather than enforcement and hasn’t issued any fines.

But some people are taking advantage of what seems to some like a murky and somewhat confusing bylaw — for example, groups creating fake medical exemption cards and staging anti-mask protests.

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