Tag: trump

  • Coronavirus: US urges doctors, nurses around world to apply for visas

    Coronavirus: US urges doctors, nurses around world to apply for visas

    The United States has asked medical professionals seeking to work in America to apply for a work visa at the nearest US Embassy as part of measures to strengthen the health system to contain the coronavirus pandemic in the country.

    The government in a statement published on www.travel.state.gov on Friday, advised foreign medical professionals already in the US to consult with their sponsors to extend their programmes.

    According to World Health Organisation statistics as of 12:00 pm on Friday, 63,570 people have been infected with the virus and nearly 884 have died in the US which is quickly becoming the new epicenter of the outbreak.

    The statement read, “We encourage medical professionals seeking to work in the United States on a work or exchange visitor, particularly those working to treat or mitigate the effects of COVID-19, to reach out to the nearest embassy or consulate to request a visa appointment.

    “For those foreign medical professionals already in the United States:

    “J-1 Alien Physicians (medical residents) may consult with their programme sponsor, ECFMG, to extend their programmes in the United States. Generally, a J-1 program for a foreign medical resident can be extended one year at a time for up to seven years.”

    It noted that the expiration date on a US visa did not determine how long one can be in the United States.

  • Covid-19: Trump’s stand irresponsible, America needs 6-10 weeks of extreme shutdown – Bill Gates

    Billionaire Bill Gates recommended the U.S.needs six to 10 weeks of “extreme shutdown” of regular life to tame the COVID-19 pandemic.

    His view expressed in an interview with TED contradicted President Donald Trump’s.

    Trump wanted the U.S.loosen restrictions by Easter Sunday, April 12. Healthy people would return to work, while people who are sick would remain isolated.

    Gates slammed Trump’s view as irresponsible.

    He said: “It’s very irresponsible for somebody to suggest we can have the best of both world.

    “What we need is an extreme shutdown so that in six to 10 weeks, if things go well, then you can start opening back up.”

    Gates noted that while isolation in populated areas — along with widespread testing — is difficult and “disastrous” for the economy, “the sooner you do it in a tough way, the sooner you can undo it.”

    The United States surpassed China on Thursday as the world’s worst hit country by the virus.

    It now has 82,457 confirmed cases.

    In contrast, China has 81,285 and Italy 80,598.

  • COVID-19: We cannot let cure be worse than problem itself- Trump

    COVID-19: We cannot let cure be worse than problem itself- Trump

    By Dayo Benson Editor Politics,Law/Human Rights New York

    As United States grapples with Coronavirus Pandemic, President Donald Trump, Monday evening, assured Americans that his administration would not allow cure for the ravaging disease to be worse than the problem itself, even as he reminded all that current situation called for sacrifice.

    The President stated this at the daily briefing at the White House. He however hinted that America would soon be opened for business again, after the situation was reviewed in 15 days, saying that the country was not created to be shut down.

    Trump’s assurance came as major States across the country were on pause, following lockdown imposed to stem further spread of the virus.

    “America will again and soon be open for business. Very soon, a lot sooner than three or four months that somebody was suggesting. A lot sooner. We cannot let the cure be worse than the problem itself”, Trump said.

    Monday’s briefing also coincided with deployment of National Guard to assist in the distribution of medical supplies to needy states.

    Speaking in a measured tone laced with confidence, the President told journalists that the country had taken delivery of millions of medical supplies which were already being distributed across the states in urgent need.

    Trump charged the Republicans and Democrats to put politics aside and come together to defeat the common enemy, even as he praised Governor Andrew Cuomo’s efforts in New York, the pandemic epicenter.

    He appealed to Americans to come together and fight the invisible enemy, even as he warned against hoarding personal protective equipments needed by medical personnel.

    The President revealed that he had signed an Executive Order which criminalizes hoarding of such equipments, saying that the Department of Justice (DOJ) has been mandated to enforce the Order.

    Attorney General Bill Barr, spoke after President Trump. He stated that Section 102 of the Defence Production Act, prohibits profiting from such medical items.

    Barr explained that an individual could have more than enough toilet paper at home, he added that law enforcement agents would knock on the door of anyone who stockpiled masks in a warehouse.

    Earlier, former Vice President Joe Biden, had criticized Trump’s handling of COVID-19 crisis, in streamed address from his house in Delaware.

    The Democratic Presidential Nominee front runner, had been invisible since Coronavirus compelled the party to reschedule its primaries. He challenged Trump to act as “war time President” he called himself.

  • Just in: US begins first human trial of coronavirus vaccine

    Just in: US begins first human trial of coronavirus vaccine

    The first human trial to evaluate a candidate vaccine against coronavirus disease 2019 has begun in Seattle, US health officials said on Monday.

    “The open-label trial will enrol 45 healthy adult volunteers ages 18 to 55 years over approximately 6 weeks,” the US National Institutes of Health said in a statement.

    “The first participant received the investigational vaccine today.”

    But the candidate would still need to progress through various more stages, known as phases, to prove it works and is safe.

    US officials have estimated it may take a year to 18 months before it becomes available — if everything goes to plan.

    The vaccine is called mRNA-1273 and was developed by NIH scientists and collaborators at biotechnology company Moderna, which is based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

    Funding was also provided by the Oslo-based Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI).

    “Finding a safe and effective vaccine to prevent infection with SARS-CoV-2 is an urgent public health priority,” said Anthony Fauci, head of infectious diseases at the NIH.

    “This Phase 1 study, launched in record speed, is an important first step toward achieving that goal.”

    Coronaviruses are spherical and have spikes protruding from their surface, giving them a crown-like appearance. The spike binds to human cells, allowing the virus to gain entry.

    The Moderna candidate vaccine carries the genetic information of this spike in a substance called “messenger RNA.”

    Injecting human tissue with the spike’s messenger RNA makes it grow inside the body, thereby eliciting an immune response without having actually infected a person with the full-blown virus.

  • BREAKING: Trump’s physician announces result of Coronavirus test

    US President Donald Trump has tested negative to coronavirus, according to a memo from his doctor late on Saturday.

    The doctor, Sean P. Conley said he received confirmation that the president’s COVID-19 test was negative, adding that Trump was “symptom free.”

    The much expected news must have brought much relief to all people around the US President.

    Anxiety about the US President’s coronavirus status had mounted since Thursday after the press aide of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro had tested positive.

    The aide Fabio Wajngarten, and Bolsonaro had dinner on Saturday, with Trump in Florida and even had a photo, standing beside Trump.

    Sean P. Coley’s memo to White House Press Secretary

    “One week after having dinner with the Brazilian delegation in Mar-a-Lago, the president remains symptom-free,” Conley said in his memo of 13 March.

    “I have been in daily contact with the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and White House Coronavirus Task Force, and we are encouraging the implementation of all their best practices for exposure reduction and transmission mitigation.”

    Because of a U.S. effort to slow the spread of the virus, which disproportionately kills older people, schools have been closed, museums shuttered and many employees have been urged to work from home to practice “social distancing.”

    The virus has killed more than 50 Americans. It has infected more than 154,000 people worldwide and killed some 5,800 since it emerged in China in December.

  • BREAKING: Trump tested for Coronavirus, says no results yet

    BREAKING: Trump tested for Coronavirus, says no results yet

    President Trump said Saturday that he has taken the test to determine whether he contracted the new strain of the coronavirus and was awaiting the results.

    He made the announcement at a White House news conference as his administration announced it was expanding European travel restrictions to the United Kingdom and Ireland. The ban is scheduled to go into effect on Monday at midnight, although U.S. citizens will be allowed to return to the country. Britain had been exempted from a previously announced travel ban.

    Trump also said he was considering whether to implement limitations on domestic travel, “specifically from certain areas,” although he did not name any.

    “If you don’t have to travel, I wouldn’t do it,” he said. “We want this thing to end. We don’t want a lot of people getting infected.”

    The president’s decision to get tested came after a back-and-forth over whether he should take such a step. Last weekend, Trump came into contact with two Brazilian officials at his Florida estate, Mar-a-Lago, who later reportedly tested positive for the virus.

    On Friday afternoon, Trump said he would “most likely” get tested. But hours later the White House released a letter from his physician saying it was not necessary because Trump is “low risk.”

    The president said Saturday at a news conference with top administration officials that he decided to move forward anyway.

    “I also took the test last night,” Trump said. “I decided I should based on the press conference last night.”

    Although the results were not yet available, Trump said he had his temperature checked shortly before stepping in front of the podium and it was “totally normal.”

    The issue has become increasingly controversial as Trump has tried to downplay the threat of the virus even as many people around him have reported exposure. Any doubt about a president’s health can rattle the public and the financial markets, which are already badly shaken by the pandemic.

    Sean P. Conley, a Navy commander and osteopathic doctor assigned to the president, wrote in his letter that Trump, while dining with Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro at Mar-a-Lago last weekend “briefly came into contact with an individual who 3 days later began showing symptoms and was subsequently confirmed to have COVID-19.” The letter says Trump shook hands and took a picture with the person, separately reported as Brazilian press secretary Fabio Wajngarten.

    The letter says that on Friday evening the administration learned of a second dinner guest who shared a table with Trump, “who was symptom-free until this morning,” and has now tested positive. The Brazilian Embassy reported that the person is Nestor Forster, Brazil’s acting ambassador to the United States.

    Trump has sent mixed messages about the new virus, alternately telling people to remain calm, that the country soon would be free of the threat, and then on Friday declaring a national state of emergency. During a news conference announcing the declaration, he shook hands with several of the officials who shared the platform with him, despite official guidance to avoid such germ-spreading behavior.

    Several Republican members of Congress as well as Trump’s incoming chief of staff, Mark Meadows, decided to self-quarantine after attending the Conservative Political Action Conference, where they interacted with a person known to be infected. Trump also spoke at the conference, held two weeks ago.

    Trump was asked about his own exposure to the virus during the news conference Friday. At first, he dismissed the risk.

    “I take pictures and it lasts for, literally, seconds,” he said. “I don’t know the gentleman that we’re talking about” who tested positive.

    “I think they have to listen to their doctors, and I think they shouldn’t be jumping to get the test unless it’s necessary,” he said.

    Later, when asked if he was “being selfish by not getting tested and potentially exposing” others, Trump shifted course, saying he would “most likely” get tested “fairly soon.”

  • Coronavirus: Trump declares Sunday ‘National Day of Prayer Day’

    Coronavirus: Trump declares Sunday ‘National Day of Prayer Day’

    President Donald Trump has declared Sunday a national day of prayer in the United States.

    This is coming less that 24 hours after the president declared national emergency in the country over the coronavirus outbreak which has led to over 5000 deaths across the world.

    The country confirmed its first case of person-to-person transmission of the virus on January 30.

    At least 48 people have died in the US as a result of the virus, while more than 2,100 have been infected across 49 states.

    In a Twitter post on Saturday, Trump urged the people to turn towards prayer in an act of faith for the country to prevail.

    “It is my great honor to declare Sunday, March 15th as a National Day of Prayer,” Trump said.

    “We are a country that, throughout our history, has looked to God for protection and strength in times like these.

    “No matter where you may be, I encourage you to turn towards prayer in an act of faith. Together, we will easily PREVAIL!”

    Timothy Cole, rector of Christ Church, Washington DC, US, had tested positive for coronavirus after shaking hands with over 500 worshippers during holy communion.

    According to latest data from the World Health Organisation (WHO), there are now more than 142,000 coronavirus cases globally and more than 5,300 related deaths across 129 countries.

  • Trump bows to pressure, speaks on undergoing Coronavirus test

    Trump bows to pressure, speaks on undergoing Coronavirus test

    US President Donald Trump said Friday he would “likely” be tested soon for the novel coronavirus, although he stressed he is “displaying no symptoms.”

    Trump was pressed repeatedly during a White House news conference on whether he should be tested after coming into contact with a Brazilian official now known to have COVID-19.

    The president initially shut down the question, saying that per the advice of White House doctors, “I don’t have any of the symptoms.”

    “And we don’t want people without symptoms to go and do the test,” he told reporters.

    But when grilled by reporters about his encounter with the official at his Florida resort, he bowed to pressure and changed tack, saying: “I didn’t say I wasn’t going to be tested” and that he “most likely” would be, “fairly soon.”

    “Not for that reason but because I think I will do it anyway,” Trump said.

  • Brazilian President clears air on Coronavirus status

    Brazilian President clears air on Coronavirus status

    Brazil’s President, Jair Bolsonaro, who recently had dinner with US President Donald Trump has tested negative for coronavirus.

    A post on his Facebook page on Friday debunked earlier media reports that a first test had been positive.

    Bolsonaro and a large Brazilian entourage, including cabinet ministers, met with Trump and other senior U.S. officials last weekend at Mar-a-Lago. One of the party, Bolsonaro’s communications secretary Fabio Wajngarten, tested positive for COVID-19 on Thursday and is in quarantine.

    The entire delegation, including Bolsonaro, was subsequently tested. It is not yet known if the results of any of the others have come back positive.

    “He tested negative full stop,” Bolsonaro’s son Eduardo told Fox News.

    Fox News had previously reported that an initial test had come back positive. Eduardo did not directly answer a question from Fox News as to whether that was the case.

    Trump said on Thursday he was “not concerned” about having come into contact with Wajngarten.

    CNN later reported he was worried, citing a source close to the U.S. president.

  • Trump set to declare national emergency as US coronavirus worsens

    Trump set to declare national emergency as US coronavirus worsens

    A national emergency will be declared by President Donald Trump today as the coronavirus rages relentlessly in the country.

    On Friday, the US coronavirus death toll hit 41 and confirmed cases surpassed 1840.

    Trump reportedly plans to invoke the Stanford Act, which will open the door to more federal aid for states and municipalities.

    Senate Democrats have been urging Trump to invoke the Stanford Act and other disaster declarations, which they say will free $42 billion in funding.

    The emergency, which Trump is expected to declare at 3pm Washington Time, would allow the government to marshal additional resources to combat the rapidly-spreading virus.

    In a much criticised move, Trump on Wednesday, without prior warning to allies, slammed a 30-day ban on flights from Europe effective from Friday midnight. Britain and Ireland are exempted.