COVID-19 live updates: New cases in US up by more than 42%

COVID-19 live updates: New cases in US up by more than 42%
COVID-19 live updates: New cases in US up by more than 42%
Tomwang112/iStock

(NEW YORK) — As the COVID-19 pandemic has swept the globe, more than 5.1 million people have died from the disease worldwide, including over 773,000 Americans, according to real-time data compiled by Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

Just 59.2% of the population in the United States is fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Here’s how the new is developing. All times Eastern:

Nov 24, 9:37 am
700K more could die in Europe between now and March: WHO

An additional 700,000 people in Europe could die from COVID-19 between now and March, the World Health Organization said Tuesday.

COVID-19 is now Europe’s leading cause of death, the WHO said.

Deadly deaths in Europe neared 4,200 last week, which is twice as many as the daily deaths at the end of September, according to the WHO.

-ABC News’ Dragana Jovanovic

Nov 24, 3:25 am
Massachusetts asks hospitals with limited capacity to reduce elective surgeries

Hospitals with limited capacity in Massachusetts are being asked to, once again, begin reducing elective surgeries.

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health released the updated guidance to hospitals on Tuesday. The guidance explains that, “on a statewide basis, hospitals are currently operating at over 90% inpatient capacity,” which it says “is compounded by 500 fewer acute care inpatient beds available as a result of unprecedented staffing shortages.”

“The current strain on hospital capacity is due to longer than average hospital stays and significant workforce shortages, separate and apart from the challenges brought on by COVID,” Massachusetts Secretary of Health and Human Services Marylou Sudders said in a statement Tuesday. “COVID hospitalizations in Massachusetts remain lower than almost every other state in the nation, but the challenges the healthcare system face remain, and this order will ensure hospitals can serve all residents, including those who require treatment for COVID-19.”

Although COVID-19 hospitalizations in Massachusetts are still significantly lower than last January, when more than 2,000 patients were receiving care, approximately 740 patients are currently hospitalized across the state.

Given the current “high census level” and expected increase in hospitalization rates, as seen last year during the period following Thanksgiving and through January, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health said a “concerted effort to preserve inpatient capacity” was necessary.

The current strain on the Bay State’s health care system has been further exacerbated by staffing shortages.

“We are now seeing significant strain on hospital capacity due largely to workforce shortages and an influx of non-COVID-19 patients who deferred care and now need complex medical care,” Steve Walsh, president and CEO of the Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association, said in a statement Tuesday.

The reduction of non-essential, non-urgent scheduled procedures will not apply to ambulatory services, pediatric care or immunizations, pregnancy terminations and essential, urgent inpatient procedures that have a high risk or would lead to a significant worsening of the patient’s condition, if deferred.

-ABC News’ Arielle Mitropoulos

Nov 23, 3:58 pm
New cases in US up by more than 42%

New cases in the U.S. have jumped by more than 42% over the last four weeks, according to federal data.

These states as well as Washington, D.C., have seen at least a 10% uptick in daily cases over the last two weeks: Arkansas, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin.

Michigan is currently experiencing its highest case average of the entire pandemic, according to federal data.

New York is now averaging its highest number of new cases since February.

More than 101 million Americans remain completely unvaccinated; 81 million of those people are over the age of 5 and thus eligible to be vaccinated, according to federal data.

-ABC News’ Arielle Mitropoulos

Nov 23, 3:02 pm
Denver hospitals running out of space

Denver area hospitals are 95% full, Denver Health CEO Robin Wittenstein warned at a Tuesday news conference.

“Emergency rooms are routinely diverting patients because they simply don’t have the capacity to take care of people who need help,” Wittenstein said.

Eighty-three percent of hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Colorado are unvaccinated, said Bob McDonald, executive director of Denver’s Department of Public Health and Environment.

“To suggest that the vaccines don’t work… that’s like suggesting seatbelts don’t work,” McDonald said.

Denver is implementing an indoor mask mandate unless businesses choose to require proof of vaccination.

-ABC News’ Zachary Ferber

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

COVID-19 live updates: Fauci says definition of fully vaccinated could ‘without a doubt’ change

COVID-19 live updates: New cases in US up by more than 42%
COVID-19 live updates: New cases in US up by more than 42%
Tomwang112/iStock

(NEW YORK) — As the COVID-19 pandemic has swept the globe, more than 5.1 million people have died from the disease worldwide, including over 773,000 Americans, according to real-time data compiled by Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

Just 59.2% of the population in the United States is fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Here’s how the new is developing. All times Eastern:

Nov 24, 8:59 am
Fauci says definition of fully vaccinated could ‘without a doubt’ change

Dr. Anthony Fauci told Reuters Tuesday that the definition of fully vaccinated could change as more evidence emerges on how vaccine protection can wane over time.

“Right now, officially, fully vaccinated equals two shots of the mRNA and one shot of the J&J, but without a doubt that could change,” Fauci said. “That’s on the table for discussion.”

Fauci told Reuters that the “overwhelming majority” of Americans who have been fully vaccinated should now receive a booster shot given the evidence that the additional dose provides “substantial” protection.

-ABC News’ Arielle Mitropoulos

Nov 24, 3:25 am
Massachusetts asks hospitals with limited capacity to reduce elective surgeries

Hospitals with limited capacity in Massachusetts are being asked to, once again, begin reducing elective surgeries.

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health released the updated guidance to hospitals on Tuesday. The guidance explains that, “on a statewide basis, hospitals are currently operating at over 90% inpatient capacity,” which it says “is compounded by 500 fewer acute care inpatient beds available as a result of unprecedented staffing shortages.”

“The current strain on hospital capacity is due to longer than average hospital stays and significant workforce shortages, separate and apart from the challenges brought on by COVID,” Massachusetts Secretary of Health and Human Services Marylou Sudders said in a statement Tuesday. “COVID hospitalizations in Massachusetts remain lower than almost every other state in the nation, but the challenges the healthcare system face remain, and this order will ensure hospitals can serve all residents, including those who require treatment for COVID-19.”

Although COVID-19 hospitalizations in Massachusetts are still significantly lower than last January, when more than 2,000 patients were receiving care, approximately 740 patients are currently hospitalized across the state.

Given the current “high census level” and expected increase in hospitalization rates, as seen last year during the period following Thanksgiving and through January, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health said a “concerted effort to preserve inpatient capacity” was necessary.

The current strain on the Bay State’s health care system has been further exacerbated by staffing shortages.

“We are now seeing significant strain on hospital capacity due largely to workforce shortages and an influx of non-COVID-19 patients who deferred care and now need complex medical care,” Steve Walsh, president and CEO of the Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association, said in a statement Tuesday.

The reduction of non-essential, non-urgent scheduled procedures will not apply to ambulatory services, pediatric care or immunizations, pregnancy terminations and essential, urgent inpatient procedures that have a high risk or would lead to a significant worsening of the patient’s condition, if deferred.

-ABC News’ Arielle Mitropoulos

Nov 23, 3:58 pm
New cases in US up by more than 42%

New cases in the U.S. have jumped by more than 42% over the last four weeks, according to federal data.

These states as well as Washington, D.C., have seen at least a 10% uptick in daily cases over the last two weeks: Arkansas, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin.

Michigan is currently experiencing its highest case average of the entire pandemic, according to federal data.

New York is now averaging its highest number of new cases since February.

More than 101 million Americans remain completely unvaccinated; 81 million of those people are over the age of 5 and thus eligible to be vaccinated, according to federal data.

-ABC News’ Arielle Mitropoulos

Nov 23, 3:02 pm
Denver hospitals running out of space

Denver area hospitals are 95% full, Denver Health CEO Robin Wittenstein warned at a Tuesday news conference.

“Emergency rooms are routinely diverting patients because they simply don’t have the capacity to take care of people who need help,” Wittenstein said.

Eighty-three percent of hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Colorado are unvaccinated, said Bob McDonald, executive director of Denver’s Department of Public Health and Environment.

“To suggest that the vaccines don’t work… that’s like suggesting seatbelts don’t work,” McDonald said.

Denver is implementing an indoor mask mandate unless businesses choose to require proof of vaccination.

-ABC News’ Zachary Ferber

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Detecting cancer with a simple blood draw could soon be a reality

Detecting cancer with a simple blood draw could soon be a reality
Detecting cancer with a simple blood draw could soon be a reality
Kubra Cavus/iStock

(NEW YORK) — Every year, thousands of Americans undergo routine screening to catch cancer in its early stages, while it’s still treatable. But these routine tests can be painful and invasive, and doctors only regularly screen for five of some of the most common types of cancer.

So for decades, scientists have been working on ways to screen for cancers using a simple blood draw rather than a painful biopsy or invasive test. These so-called “blood biopsy” tests are closer than ever to dramatically improving the way doctors screen for cancer.

Galleri, a new blood test by health care company GRAIL, is one of the most advanced blood biopsy tests. It works by looking for fragments of DNA in a person’s blood that indicate the presence of more than 50 types of cancer.

According to Dr. Pashtoon Kasi, director of colon cancer research and precision medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine, the underlying technology was actually first used to serve a different purpose.

“The same technology has been around for more than 20 years,” he said. “It started with prenatal diagnostics.”

But now, similar technology has been harnessed to detect early signatures of cancer.

Dr. Michael Seiden, the former president of the US Oncology Network, sees blood biopsy tests as part of the future wave of so-called “precision medicine” — the idea that each person’s medical care can be tailored to fit their specific genetics, medical needs and unique characteristics.

Precision medicine tries “to learn as much [as possible] about a person’s health through sort of sophisticated diagnostic tests,” Seiden said.

According to Kasi, less than two thirds of Americans get screened for colon cancer, which often involves an invasive procedure called a colonoscopy. A simple blood biopsy such as Galleri may improve current cancer screening due to ease of use, he said.

But despite the recent advancements, many doctors say there’s a long way to go — and some say there are reasons to wait for more research to be done.

The Galleri test, though promising, is not yet FDA approved. It still needs to undergo more testing to show it can produce reliable results every time.

“What you want to see is evidence it detects cancers early and in a reasonably good-sized population and that there aren’t harms done,” Dr. Ann Partridge, a breast oncologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, said.

But there’s another, more complex challenge, some experts say. In routine medical care, more testing isn’t always better.

“To do a screening test for any kind of disease or disorder, you have to consider what’s the benefit of doing it,” Partridge said. “If you live for 15 minutes longer, it might not be worth it. But if you live for 10 months longer, it might be worth it.”

A common refrain in cancer treatment is “earlier is better”: that the earlier a cancer can be found, the treatment is often more successful. However, sometimes it can be difficult to tell the difference between an early cancer and a non-cancerous growth.

A final diagnosis often involves an invasive procedure, such as a needle biopsy or surgery in order to remove tissue. These procedures are not without risk, and any screening tool, such as the Galleri test, should reduce the number of unnecessary procedures by not flagging non-cancers as cancers.

That’s why some in the medical community have hesitation about the utility of a blood biopsy capable of detecting only a few cancer cells, as it may accidentally detect a non-cancer as a cancer.

But at the very least, Galleri could provide an early warning system, so doctors could monitor patients and treat them if it becomes necessary.

“This provides an additional screening test that might detect an early-stage cancer that’s not detectable by other available tests,” Seiden said. But, “It does not prove you don’t have cancer, and it does not replace currently recommended screening. It’s a supplement.”

Partridge added that she’s hopeful that someday she’ll be able to order tests like these, but right now, “I think the big picture is very optimistic, but really not ready for our patients routinely, outside a clinical trial. I look forward to seeing this important research evolve.”

Although Galleri is still not FDA approved, the test can be prescribed by any physician in the United States. Because it’s not covered by insurance, it costs $949 out of pocket.

Jacob S. Warner, an internal medicine resident at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, is a contributor to the ABC News Medical Unit.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ahmaud Arbery death trial live updates: Jury continues deliberations

Ahmaud Arbery death trial live updates: Jury continues deliberations
Ahmaud Arbery death trial live updates: Jury continues deliberations
Stephen B. Morton – Pool/Getty Images

(BRUNSWICK, Ga.) — A Georgia jury resumed deliberating on Wednesday the fates of three white men charged with trapping Ahmaud Arbery with their pickup trucks and fatally shooting him.

“Your oath requires that you will decide this case based on the evidence,” Judge Timothy Walmsley told the jury before sending the panel off to begin their deliberations on Tuesday.

The jury got the case after Linda Dunikoski, the Cobb County, Georgia, assistant district attorney appointed as a special prosecutor in the Glynn County case, took two hours to rebut the closing arguments made on Monday by attorneys for the three defendants.

The jury, comprised of 11 white people and one Black person, heard wildly different summations on Monday of the same evidence in the racially-charged case. Dunikoski alleged the defendants pursued and murdered Arbery because of wrong assumptions they made that the Black man running through their neighborhood had committed a burglary, while defense attorneys countered that Arbery was shot in self-defense when he resisted a citizen’s arrest.

Travis McMichael, the 35-year-old U.S. Coast Guard veteran; his father, Gregory McMichael, 65, a retired Glynn County police officer, and their neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, 53, each face maximum sentences of life in prison if convicted on all the charges.

The defendants have pleaded not guilty to a nine-count state indictment that includes malice murder, multiple charges of felony murder, false imprisonment, aggravated assault with a 12-gauge shotgun and aggravated assault with their pickup trucks.

The McMichaels and Bryan were also indicted on federal hate crime charges in April and have all pleaded not guilty.

Here’s how the news developed. All times Eastern:

Nov 24, 9:01 am
Jury resumes deliberations

The jury resumed its deliberations on Wednesday morning, after working a little over six hours on Tuesday.

The panel was called into the Glynn County courtroom around 8:30 a.m. and Judge Walmsley thanked them for their service and sent them off to continue their discussions.

Nov 23, 6:34 pm
Jury sent home for the night

After more than six hours of deliberations on Tuesday, the jury was sent home for the night.

Judge Timothy Walmsley sent the panel home after questioning the jury foreperson about the jury’s progress.

“We are in the process of working to reach a verdict,” the jury foreperson told Walmsley.

When Walmsley asked if a verdict was imminent, the foreperson said, “At this moment, I think breaking for the day would be the best option.”

The foreperson went back and conferred with the other jurors, who initially said they wanted to keep working. But minutes later, Walmsley called the jury into the courtroom and told the panel it was a good time to break for the day and sent them home.

Deliberations will resume at 8:30 a.m. on Wednesday.

Nov 23, 11:34 am
Judge gives jury final instructions

Judge Timothy Walmsley read the jury final instructions and explained the law and each charge to the jury before sending the panel off to deliberate their verdicts.

Walmsley told the jury that they must reach a unanimous verdict beyond a reasonable doubt, explaining that does not mean “beyond all doubt” or to a “mathematical certainty.”

He reminded the jury that the defendants have all pleaded not guilty to the charges and that the burden of proof is solely on the prosecution.

Walmsley said that lesser charges could only be considered against William “Roddie” Bryan. He said the lesser charges against Bryan are simple assault, reckless conduct and reckless driving.

“Each of you must decide this case for yourself,” Walmsley said.

Nov 23, 10:56 am
Prosecutor pokes holes in Travis McMichael’s testimony

Prosecutor Linda Dunikoski suggested to the jury that Travis and Greg McMichael became angry at Ahmaud Arbery after he ignored their calls to stop when they pulled up alongside him during the pursuit.

Dunikoski attacked the testimony of Travis McMichael, pointing out inconsistencies and claims she alleged were concocted for the trial.

Dunikoski said neither Travis McMichael nor his father told police on the day of the shooting that they were trying to place Arbery under criminal arrest because they believed he had committed a burglary at a home under construction in their neighborhood.

The prosecutor cited Travis McMichael’s testimony that he thought his father had called 911 before they set out to chase Arbery.

“Does anybody believe that?” asked Dunikoski, suggesting that a dispatcher would have kept Greg McMichael on the line to get more information.

She scoffed at Travis McMichael’s claim on the witness stand that he didn’t know what his father yelled at Arbery as they chased him, including the alleged statement threatening to shoot Arbery.

She said Travis McMichael’s testimony was full of “maybes” and assumptions, including that Arbery may have committed a crime, that maybe he was caught.

“These are all maybes. He doesn’t know anything,” Dunikoski said.

Dunikoski also poked holes in Travis McMichael’s claim that he spoke to Arbery calmly during the pursuit, trying to get him to stop and answer questions about what he was doing in their neighborhood.

“Do you believe for a minute he was talking softly to Ahmaud Arbery?” Dunikoski asked the jury.

She played a 911 call Travis McMichael made after Arbery was cornered, and breathlessly reported his emergency that “A Black male was running down the street.” In the background of the call, Greg McMichael was heard yelling at Arbery, “Stop. Goddammit. Stop.”

The prosecutor wrapped up her rebuttal argument by telling the jury the defendants are all “parties to the crime” and asked the panel to convict them on all charges.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Macy’s iconic Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons are now NFTs

Macy’s iconic Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons are now NFTs
Macy’s iconic Thanksgiving Day Parade balloons are now NFTs
webpay/iStock

(NEW YORK) — Macy’s is turning some of the iconic balloon designs from its annual Thanksgiving Day parades into non-fungible tokens (NFTs), some of which will be auctioned to benefit the Make-A-Wish foundation.

NFTs have become adopted by the mainstream and are especially popular among budding digital art collectors.

Macy’s first-ever NFT series is launching in celebration of its 95th annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, which is returning in full-swing this year after pandemic restrictions curbed some of its excitement last year.

“As we celebrate our rich legacy, 95 years in the making, we were struck by the unique place the Parade holds in pop culture, always evolving and reflecting the greatest characters and artists of each generation,” Will Coss, the executive producer of Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, said in a statement.

“To celebrate that history, we created art in a new form through NFTs that would bring the magic of the Parade to a new generation while raising funds for our partner Make-A-Wish,” Coss added.

The NFTs are based on Macy’s archival content and balloons that have appeared over the parade’s nine-decade history. They are being designed by a digital art agency REOMETRY.

Starting last Friday and going through Nov. 30, Macy’s is auctioning 10 of its unique NFT designs, and 100% of the proceeds generated from these 10 digital collectibles will go toward benefitting Make-A-Wish, a group that grants life-changing wishes for children with critical illnesses.

Macy’s is also dropping an additional 9,500 free generative NFTs, featuring past parade balloon designs, that will be available on a first-come, first-serve basis starting at 10 a.m. ET on Thanksgiving Day. The auction and NFT drop can be accessed at macys.com/NFT.

Bids on some of the 10 NFTs up for auction have already topped $5,000 as of Tuesday.

The NFTs are powered by the platform Sweet and built on the Polygon blockchain. Even if the free NFTs are sold by fans in the future, 10% of any sales generated will be donated to Make-A-Wish, in perpetuity, using the blockchain technology.

NFTs have exploded in popularity amid the pandemic, creating an entirely new marketplace in recent years for digital collectors. Many recent NFT sales have garnered eye-brow raising sums. An NFT of Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey’s first-ever tweet fetched some $2.9 million in March. A collage by digital artist Mike Winkelmann, known as Beeple, fetched a whopping $69 million when it was auctioned as an NFT by Christie’s.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Adele’s ’30’ surpasses Drake’s ‘Certified Lover Boy’ for biggest album of the year

Adele’s ’30’ surpasses Drake’s ‘Certified Lover Boy’ for biggest album of the year
Adele’s ’30’ surpasses Drake’s ‘Certified Lover Boy’ for biggest album of the year
Simon Emmett

Move over, Drake, Adele‘s taking over! The British singer’s fourth studio effort, 30, now holds the title for biggest U.S. album debut of 2021.

Adele released the highly anticipated album on November 19, and according to Billboard, initial MRC Data reveals she racked up more than 660,000 equivalent album units in the U.S. in just three days. The massive feat surpasses the September 3 release of Drake’s Certified Lover Boy, which launched with 613,000 earned units for the week ending September 9.  

Not only did the “Easy On Me” singer beat out Drake, she also beat out the previous year’s best-seller: Taylor Swift‘s evermore, which sold 462,000 copies in 2020. 

The official MRC Data won’t be reported until Sunday, November 28, but with sales like that, it’d be no surprise if Adele landed atop the Billboard 200 album chart as well. If so, that would earn Adele her third number-one album, after 2015’s 25 and 2010’s 21.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

US, others warn citizens in Ethiopia to leave as prime minister heads to front lines

US, others warn citizens in Ethiopia to leave as prime minister heads to front lines
US, others warn citizens in Ethiopia to leave as prime minister heads to front lines
beyhanyazar/iStock

(WASHINGTON) — The U.S. government is warning American citizens in Ethiopia even more starkly to leave the country now, as the conflict there continues to deteriorate.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is heading to the front lines to lead the federal government’s forces, he announced, urging his fellow citizens to join him and “lead the country with a sacrifice.”

On the other side, forces from Ethiopia’s Tigray region, now aligned with other ethnic-based groups, are marching toward the capital Addis Ababa, pledging to end Abiy’s blockade of their region one year after fighting there burst open decades-old wounds.

Now the conflict in Africa’s second-most populous nation is increasingly existential for both sides, potentially “ripping the country apart and spilling over into other countries in the region,” as Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned in recent days.

The U.S. special envoy for the region said he still had hope for a ceasefire and a negotiated resolution after some “nascent progress,” but he warned the fast-moving conflict threatened to swiftly sweep away international diplomatic efforts and cause “a bloodbath situation or chaos.”

That fear has driven fresh warnings from foreign countries, including France and Turkey, urging their citizens to depart the country immediately while commercial flights remain. The United Nations announced it was evacuating its staff’s dependents on Tuesday, too.

Since Nov. 5, the U.S. embassy in Addis has been on ordered departure, evacuating non-emergency staff and diplomats’ families and leaving a smaller team behind. While the mission remains open and continues to provide services like passports and repatriation loans, the U.S. military is maintaining a “state of readiness,” according to U.S. Africa Command, in case there are issues “related to the safety of our diplomats where the security environment has deteriorated.”

But after the unprecedented, chaotic evacuation effort from Afghanistan, the State Department has gone to extraordinary lengths to make sure U.S. citizens in Ethiopia know military flights like those out of Kabul will not be coming to rescue them.

“There should be absolutely no expectation of the military becoming involved,” a senior State Department official said Monday. For months now, the agency has issued travel warnings, urging Americans to leave now while Addis’s international airport continues commercial flights.

This week, their warnings have employed even stronger language: “We just want to make sure that we don’t get into a situation where U.S. citizens are waiting for something that’s never going to happen,” the senior State Department official added. “We need them to remember what the norm is, and the norm is leaving via commercial while that’s available.”

The official and others have declined to speak to any plans to close the embassy or evacuate American diplomats, except to say that they’re “engaged in contingency planning for hypotheticals” with the Pentagon.

The Pentagon declined to comment on any troop movements to ABC News after a report that the U.S. had put Navy ships in the region on “standby” and deployed a small number of Army Rangers to the neighboring country Djibouti. The Pentagon’s East African Response Force — a team trained to move within 24 hours to assist U.S. embassies in the region with additional security or an evacuation — is based in the small African country.

Despite the increasingly grim developments on the battlefield, the State Department made clear it has not yet given up on a diplomatic resolution.

“There is some nascent progress in trying to get the parties to move from a military confrontation to a negotiating process, but what concerns us is this fragile progress risks being outpaced by the alarming developments on the ground… by the military escalation on the two sides,” Ambassador Jeffrey Feltman, special envoy for the Horn of Africa, told reporters Tuesday.

In particular, Tigrayan forces said this week they are now some 130 miles northeast of Addis, while Abiy declared Monday that he would go to the front lines to lead troops directly.

“Unfortunately, each side is trying to achieve its goals by military force and believe they are on the cusp of winning,” Feltman said Tuesday, back in Washington after days of meetings in Addis. He met not just Abiy and Tigrayan leaders, but also the African Union’s special envoy for the conflict, former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo.

From those meetings, Feltman said he sensed a “greater willingness to brainstorm with us about how you could put together the pieces of a deescalation and negotiated ceasefire process” — instead of an outright refusal to even consider any other means but force.

What the two sides say they want can be achieved at the same time, too, Feltman added: Abiy wants to return Tigrayan forces to Tigray region, and Tigrayan forces want Abiy’s de facto blockade of the region to end.

“The tragedy is, the sadness is that both sides have in mind the same type of elements. … They just need to muster the political will in order to pivot from the military to the negotiations, and we’re not the only ones encouraging them to do so, but we can’t force them to the table,” Feltman said.

As of now, U.S. and international pressure, Obasanjo’s mediation and the humanitarian suffering of the Ethiopian people have not yet been enough for leaders to come to the table. Feltman said Abiy also told him in their meeting Sunday that he had “confidence” he could achieve his goals militarily — and the seasoned U.S. diplomat warned the incitement of ethnic-based violence is spiraling out of control.

That means there’s “no sign” that direct negotiations are “on the horizon,” but perhaps some back-channel diplomacy is possible — and Feltman and Obasanjo will continue to pursue that, according to the U.S. diplomat.

“Right now, both sides are still pursuing military options, but they are also engaged on other ways to pursue their objectives… And that’s what I find marginally encouraging, but again, I don’t want to overstate the case,” Feltman said.

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

US COVID-19 infections rise as Americans prepare for Thanksgiving

US COVID-19 infections rise as Americans prepare for Thanksgiving
US COVID-19 infections rise as Americans prepare for Thanksgiving
Lubo Ivanko/iStock

(NEW YORK) — Armed with booster shots, and pediatric vaccines, millions of Americans are expected to gather once again over the Thanksgiving holiday, which for many, will be the first major familial gathering since before the pandemic.

“If you’re vaccinated, and hopefully you’ll be boosted too, your family can enjoy a typical Thanksgiving holiday with your family. There’s no reason not to do that,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the White House’s chief medical adviser, said during an appearance on ABC’s This Week on Sunday.

However, although there is hope for a return to pre-pandemic normalcy this holiday season, there are renewed concerns brewing among health experts that yet another coronavirus surge could be on the horizon, as coronavirus cases and hospitalizations increase again across the country.

Holidays have proven to be a catalyst of COVID-19 spread across the country. In the weeks following Thanksgiving of 2020, the U.S. experienced its most significant viral spread of the pandemic, with nearly 17 million infections, and more than 220,000 virus-related deaths reported between the months of November and January alone.

“While there is room for more optimism this Thanksgiving, this virus has consistently proved us wrong. It is clearly less than ideal to head into a major holiday at the starting point of a national surge in COVID cases,” said John Brownstein, an epidemiologist at Boston Children’s Hospital and an ABC News contributor.

Infection rates growing rapidly across the country

Infectious disease experts warn that there are implications of yet another difficult winter ahead, with their concerns stemming from the apparent beginnings of a surge across colder regions of the country.

Nationally, the U.S. is reporting more than 93,000 new COVID-19 cases each day, up by 46% since late October. 32 states — nearly all of them in the north or mountain region — have seen an uptick in daily cases of 10% or more in the last two weeks.

Michigan is currently reporting the nation’s highest new infection, with the state now averaging more cases than at any other point in the pandemic, with health officials now warning that patients are being turned away or placed in hallways due to lack of beds and staffing.

“The reality is most hospitals throughout the state have more patients in their emergency departments than they do available rooms and staff to care for them. This results in long wait times, patients being placed in hallways or conference rooms, and diverting patients away from a hospital because there is no physical room or medical staff available to accept more patients,” officials from the Michigan Hospital Association wrote in a statement on Monday. “We are extremely concerned because our best predictions are that COVID-19 patients will continue to increase during the weeks ahead as we enter the yearly flu season.”

Given the surge, the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services issued a face mask advisory, ahead of the holidays, recommending that all individuals over the age of 2 wear a face mask at indoor gatherings, regardless of their vaccination status.

New York, which is set to welcome thousands of visitors to the streets of Manhattan for its annual Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, had maintained relatively low COVID-19 infection figures in recent months. However, now, the state is averaging its highest number of new cases since February.

In Illinois, daily cases are higher than at any point over the summer, and in Minnesota, federal medical staff have been sent in to help overwhelmed hospitals.

“Every day, our doctors and nurses are treating Minnesotans sick with COVID-19 or suffering other emergencies. But they are underwater, and they need all the help we can give them,” Gov. Tim Walz wrote in a statement last week.

Even the states with the highest vaccination rates — including Massachusetts, Connecticut and Vermont — have all seen notable upsurgence since the early fall. In Maine, hospitalization totals have reached record levels.

The magnitude of the geographic area seeing a COVID-19 resurgence is growing, according to a recent forecast released by the PolicyLab at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.

Although hospitalizations had remained flat throughout the fall, in areas of high vaccination coverage, large urban areas should “anticipate increases in case incidence, alongside an increase in hospital admissions,” forecasters wrote.

This uptick could be further exacerbated, experts say, by the high number of Americans traveling, and with unvaccinated and vaccinated family members mingling indoors, particularly in states with colder climates.

A total of 53.4 million people are expected to travel for Thanksgiving, up 13% from 2020, according to estimates from AAA. In the last five days alone, the Transportation Security Administration reported it has already screened 10.5 million people through checkpoints.

Unvaccinated Americans driving national COVID-19 uptick

Although positive COVID-19 cases among the unvaccinated do appear to be on the rise, due to waning immunity, health officials say the vast majority of infections and severe hospitalizations are among the unvaccinated.

“The thing we are concerned about is the people who are not vaccinated, because what they’re doing is they’re the major source of the dynamics of the infection in the community,” Fauci said. “The higher the level of dynamics of infection, the more everyone is at risk.”

On Monday, new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed that despite the emergence of the Delta variant, vaccines continue to dramatically reduce one’s risk of getting infected by COVID-19, being hospitalized or dying from the disease.

In September, unvaccinated individuals had a 5.8 times greater risk of testing positive for COVID-19, and a 14 times greater risk of dying from it, as compared to vaccinated individuals.

At this time, more than 101 million Americans remain completely unvaccinated, 81 million of whom are currently over the age of 5, and thus are eligible to be vaccinated.

Public health experts continue to advise caution to minimize COVID-19 risk, beginning with getting primary vaccinations, if eligible, and receiving a booster shot before traveling for the holiday in order to increase protection against the virus.

“By working together, we can enjoy safer holidays, travel, and protect our own health as well as the health of our family and friends,” the CDC wrote.

If certain family members are unvaccinated, immunocompromised or elderly, and thus at increased risk for severe illness, CDC guidance recommends people take precautions by getting tested before the holiday, wearing masks and if possible, gathering outdoors, which is safer than indoors.

“Risk of transmission of gatherings is highly nuanced and dependent on a range of factors including group size, age and underlying health conditions of attendees, vaccination coverage as well as quality of ventilation. While there is no event that is 0 risk, at this point in the pandemic, everyone should be armed with enough information to help significantly reduce risk while still enjoying the holidays,” Brownstein said.

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Murder trial paints two different portrayals of Ahmaud Arbery

Murder trial paints two different portrayals of Ahmaud Arbery
Murder trial paints two different portrayals of Ahmaud Arbery
Sean Rayford/Getty Images

(BRUNSWICK, Ga.) — A Georgia jury is now deliberating the fates of three white men charged in the fatal shooting of Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-year-old Black jogger.

The prosecution and defense gave the nearly all-white jury two vastly different tales of Arbery. The prosecution painted him as a brother, an uncle and a victim, while the defense portrayed him as a prospective criminal.

Travis McMichael — who shot Arbery on Feb. 23, 2020 — his father Gregory and their neighbor William Bryan have pleaded not guilty to a nine-count state indictment that includes malice murder, multiple charges of felony murder, false imprisonment, aggravated assault with a 12-gauge shotgun and aggravated assault with their pickup trucks.

Travis McMichael claims he shot Arbery in self-defense. The three say they believed he may have committed a crime in the neighborhood and pursued him after he jogged past Gregory McMichael’s house.

In closing statements, Laura Hogue, the attorney for Travis McMichael, slammed Arbery’s character, claiming that “a beautiful teenager with a broad smile and a crooked baseball cap can go astray.”

“He can deteriorate and lose his way, and years later he can end up creeping into a home that is not his own and running away instead of facing the consequences, acting erratically when approached and making terrible, unexpected, illogical choices,” she said, describing Arbery and the case.

Travis McMichael had testified that he and his father believed Arbery had committed a burglary at a home under construction in their neighborhood, though prosecutor Linda Dunikoski said neither Travis nor Gregory called the police or had seen Arbery commit a crime.

The attacks against Arbery’s character continued from the defense.

“Turning Ahmaud Arbery into a victim after the choices that he made does not reflect the reality of what brought Ahmaud Arbery to Satilla Shores in his khaki shorts with no socks to cover his long, dirty toenails,” Hogue said.

Defense attorney Jason Sheffield also recalled Travis McMichael’s testimony, which claimed that Arbery was angry and clenching his teeth when he was approached.

The prosecution argued that there is no proof Arbery had committed or planned to commit a crime.

Dunikoski denounced the portrayal of him as a criminal, saying, “All three of these defendants made assumptions — made assumptions about what was going on that day, and they made their decision to attack Ahmaud Arbery in their driveways because he was a Black man running down the street.”

Dunikoski urged jurors to remember that Arbery was unarmed with nothing in his pockets when he was being tailed by the three men on trial.

“They’re going to try and convince you that Ahmaud Arbery was the attacker, that he was somehow threatening to them — three on one, two pickup trucks, two guns,” said Dunikoski. “They want you to believe that he is the danger to them.”

Dunikoski opened the trial by humanizing Arbery, highlighting his personal relationships as a brother and uncle, and “an avid runner.”

“The evidence that he was an avid runner is you’re going to be able to see his shoes, his Nike shoes, where he basically almost had absolutely no tread left on them whatsoever,” she said, highlighting the commonplace nature of Arbery’s run through the neighborhood.

Outside of the courtroom, Arbery’s mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones, urged people to remember him for more than his tragic death.

“He was my baby boy,” she said in an interview with ABC News Live Prime on Nov. 18. “Ahmaud was loved by many and also I saw Ahmaud love many. He just wasn’t a young man who decided to go jogging on a sunny Sunday afternoon. Ahmaud was his son. He was a brother. He was an uncle. He was a grandson. Ahmaud was loved by so many people, and we lost him so tragically.”

Travis McMichael, Gregory McMichael and Bryan each face maximum sentences of life in prison if convicted on all the charges.

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Scoreboard roundup — 11/23/21

Scoreboard roundup — 11/23/21
Scoreboard roundup — 11/23/21
iStock

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Tuesday’s sports events:

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Miami 100, Detroit 92
New York 106, LA Lakers 100
Portland 119, Denver 100
Dallas112, LA Clippers 104 (OT)

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Tampa Bay 4, Philadelphia 0
Dallas 4, Edmonton 1
Calgary 5, Chicago 2

TOP 25 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Gonzaga 83, UCLA 63
Wisconsin 65, Houston 63
Arkansas 73, Cincinnati 67
Illinois 72, Kansas St. 64

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER
Nashville 3, Orlando City 1

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