Monday, November 30, 2020

The Morning: The path of Covid deaths

Cases are still rising during this wave of the pandemic.

Good morning. Cases are still rising during this wave of the pandemic. Deaths are probably not far behind.

A mobile morgue in Texas.Ivan Pierre Aguirre/Reuters

The virus chart that forecasts the future

The number of Covid-19 deaths in the U.S. has dropped in the last few days, but there is reason to think the decline is a statistical mirage — and that deaths are on the verge of surging again.

Why? The relationship between confirmed new coronavirus cases and deaths has held fairly steady this fall. If you track the number of new cases, you can fairly accurately predict the number of deaths three weeks later. Every 100 new cases in the U.S. has led to an average of about 1.7 deaths, with that three-week lag.

It’s not a precise equation, of course. The time between diagnosis and death in fatal cases is sometimes shorter than three weeks and sometimes longer. And the death rate is not exactly 1.7 percent. But that simple formula has done a striking job of describing the path of Covid deaths in recent weeks.

The chart here shows the relationship — daily deaths compared with an index equal to 1.7 percent of newly diagnosed cases from three weeks earlier. The two lines have risen almost in tandem for the past three months:

By The New York Times | Sources: State and local health agencies and hospitals

The most likely explanation for the tick down at the end of both lines is the statistical mirage I mentioned: There was a slowdown in testing over Thanksgiving weekend, which may have artificially reduced the number of both reported coronavirus cases and deaths. “Thanksgiving has really blurred the picture,” Mitch Smith, a Times reporter who tracks the virus statistics, told me.

In coming weeks, deaths seem almost certain to rise, perhaps sharply. The run-up in cases during November suggests that daily deaths may approach 3,000 in December. The previous one-day high was 2,752, in April, and the previous high in the seven-day average was 2,232, also in April.

Already, the U.S. death toll in recent weeks has exceeded one victim every minute of every day — 1,462 deaths per day in the two weeks before Thanksgiving. Barring a major surprise, that toll is about to get even worse. And January is looking worrisome, as well.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the infectious disease expert, said yesterday that Thanksgiving gatherings may have created clusters of new infections. “We might see a surge superimposed upon that surge that we’re already in,” Fauci said.

An explainer: Andrew Joseph of Stat walks through the timeline of how an infection turns into a serious illness.

THE LATEST NEWS

THE VIRUS
Students at a Brooklyn public school.Sarah Blesener for The New York Times
  • New York City will reopen elementary schools, a sign that city officials believe schools are not a major source of new cases. Rhode Island has also kept many schools open, while closing gyms, bars and movie theaters.
  • The governor of Colorado, Jared Polis, tested positive. At least seven governors have contracted the virus.
  • Patients tend to be at their most infectious for about seven days — two days before they first show symptoms and five days after — according to a new analysis. The C.D.C. has recommended that infected people isolate themselves for at least 10 days, but is considering shortening that period.
  • The Denver Broncos ordered all four quarterbacks on their roster to quarantine after one of them tested positive. A wide receiver and running backs had to take snaps instead, and the Broncos completed only one pass in the game, which they lost, 31-3.
  • New York’s Sheriff’s office shut down a party in Manhattan over the weekend that had more than 400 people inside. Only a few were wearing masks.
THE PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITION
  • President-elect Joe Biden plans to announce his nominees for top economic spots this week. Among the picks: Cecilia Rouse, a Princeton labor economist, to run the Council of Economic Advisers; and Neera Tanden, who has led the liberal think tank Center for American Progress, to run the Office of Management and Budget.
  • Biden named an all-female White House communications staff, including Jennifer Psaki — a veteran of the Obama administration — as press secretary.
  • Biden slipped and suffered hairline fractures in his foot while playing with one of his dogs over the weekend, his doctor said. He is likely to require a walking boot for several weeks.
  • On a related note, the Bidens may get a cat. The last cat to live in the White House was India, who belonged to George W. Bush.
  • Wisconsin finished its partial recount of the presidential election results, reaffirming Biden’s more than 20,000-vote lead over President Trump in the state.
  • Pressure is mounting on Gov. Gavin Newsom of California to appoint someone to fill Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’s Senate seat. Alex Padilla, California’s secretary of state, has emerged as the front-runner.
OTHER BIG STORIES
Border wall construction between Arizona and Mexico.Adriana Zehbrauskas for The New York Times
  • Customs and Border Protection officials are rushing to meet Trump’s goal of constructing 450 miles of his proposed wall on the U.S.-Mexico border before he leaves office. Biden has said he hopes to halt construction of the wall.
  • Argentine authorities searched the home and offices of Diego Maradona’s doctor as part of an investigation into the soccer star’s death last week.
  • A cyberattack forced Baltimore public schools to cancel remote classes for its 115,000 students last week. Classes will remain closed today and tomorrow.
  • The Supreme Court will hear arguments today on Trump’s efforts to exclude unauthorized immigrants from calculations used to allocate House seats. A ruling for the administration could shift political power from Democratic states to Republican ones.
  • Nike, Coca-Cola and other companies are lobbying Congress to weaken a bill that would ban imported goods made with forced labor in China’s Xinjiang region. The companies fear the bill would disrupt supply chains for raw materials like cotton and sugar.
  • California’s governor has blocked the release of Leslie van Houten, a Charles Manson follower who is serving a life sentence for her role in a double murder in 1969.
MORNING READS
Wild mushrooms.Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times

So many toadstools: It’s been a bumper year for Ukraine’s mushroom crop. The fungi are a staple in the country, and some families have begun selling them to stay afloat during the pandemic. “Mushrooms saved so many people this year,” one mushroom hunter said.

The Media Equation: Ben Smith writes about Christopher Ruddy, the “revenue-minded cynic” whose cable outlet, Newsmax, saw its audience soar after it began peddling Trump’s conspiracies.

From Opinion: The columnists Gail Collins and Bret Stephens hold their final Conversation of 2020.

Lives Lived: Dave Prowse provided Darth Vader’s imposing physical presence in the original “Star Wars” trilogy. But the filmmakers replaced his voice with that of James Earl Jones — perhaps because of Prowse’s thick Bristol accent, which earned him the nickname “Darth Farmer.” Prowse has died at 85.

Subscribers make our reporting possible, so we can help you make sense of the moment. If you’re not a subscriber, please consider becoming one today.

PAID POST: A MESSAGE FROM PhRMA

Science is how we get back to normal.

In 2020, the year of COVID-19, nothing is the same. But that also means the way we make vaccines must evolve. Biopharmaceutical companies apply more advanced technologies to research and develop new vaccines. What used to take years can now be done in months, even weeks. The same scientific rigor, no cut corners or skipped steps, performed in parallel.

Learn More

ARTS AND IDEAS

Glenn Close as Mamaw in “Hillbilly Elegy.”Lacey Terrell/Netflix

Critics react to “Hillbilly Elegy”

“Hillbilly Elegy,” J.D. Vance’s best-selling memoir of growing up in Ohio with family roots in Appalachia, has been a signature book of the Trump era. The movie version — released last week on Netflix, starring Glenn Close and Amy Adams — has been less successful.

Many critics have panned it as simplistic, painting rural American life with overly broad strokes. It “understands rural poverty mostly via iconography — rundown houses and kids in swimming holes and the like,” Emily VanDerWerff writes in Vox. In The Times, A.O. Scott says the film pretends to link the characters to “something bigger without providing a coherent sense of what that something might be.”

In the conservative publication The Bulwark, Sonny Bunch writes that many liberal critics are too harsh on the movie but agrees that it suffers from “lack of focus and muddled messaging.”

After Netflix announced its involvement with the project last year, Meredith McCarroll, a professor at Bowdoin College who has written about Appalachia, wrote that the movie’s release might have one silver lining: to spark discourse about the richness of life within the region, rather than accepting any one portrait of it.

“I hold out some hope,” McCarroll wrote in the Columbia Journalism Review, “that more attention to Appalachia might make space for debate, and debate might shed some light on the wild range of life that is happening right now in those mountains: angry protests and mournful music and joyful poetry and determined activism, all derived from and leading to a love of place.”

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

WHAT TO COOK
David Malosh for The New York Times

Make this autumnal galette, filled with caramelized onions, Gruyère cheese and lots of cracked black pepper.

WHAT TO WATCH

“In the Mood for Love,” a romantic drama that is a great entry point into the work of the director Wong Kar-wai.

BEHIND THE MUSIC

Look at how guitars are made by touring a factory.

SWEET TOOTH

These are Christmas cookies for the modern era. Make, mix and match these reimagined classics (or let the videos mesmerize you).

NOW TIME TO PLAY

The pangram from Friday’s Spelling Bee was enveloped. Today’s puzzle is above — or you can play online if you have a Games subscription.

Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Ball game first played in ancient Rome (five letters).

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. The word “cheerlebrities” — cheerleaders with large social media followings — appeared for the first time in The Times yesterday, as noted by the Twitter bot @NYT_first_said.

Today’s episode of “The Daily” is about what we know about the distribution of a virus vaccine. On the latest Book Review podcast, Book Review editors discuss the 10 Best Books of 2020.

Lalena Fisher, Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Sunday, November 29, 2020

Your Weekend Briefing

Coronavirus Deaths, Joe Biden, Holiday Windows

November 29, 2020

Author Headshot

By Remy Tumin and Shelby Knowles

Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We’re covering record-breaking coronavirus numbers, a look at President-elect Joe Biden’s cabinet and how to replicate the Hope Diamond.

Christopher Lee for The New York Times

1. The numbers of coronavirus-related deaths are at their highest levels since the spring.

On April 15, 2,752 people in the U.S. died from Covid-19, more than on any other day of the pandemic. On Wednesday, 2,300 deaths were reported nationwide — the highest toll since May. The pandemic has now claimed more than 264,800 lives in the country.

While the deaths during the spring peak were concentrated in a handful of states, they are now scattered widely across the entire nation, and there is hardly a community that has not been affected. Above, a Covid patient in Houston last week.

“We are at risk of repeating what happened in April,” one expert said of the death toll. “I shudder to imagine what things might be like in two weeks.”

The record-breaking swell of virus infections — four million in November alone — is pushing U.S. hospitals to a breaking point. Severe staffing and bed shortages are crippling efforts to provide adequate care for patients.

Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times

2. Lists of top contenders for President-elect Joe Biden’s cabinet are flooding Washington — and drawing fire from all sides.

As Mr. Biden fills out the rest of his team in the days and weeks ahead, the task will force him to navigate tricky currents of ideology, gender, racial identity, party affiliation, friendship, competence, personal background and past employment. Here are his choices so far.

Some of the president-elect’s choices for top posts, including Antony Blinken, Mr. Biden’s pick to be his secretary of state, have done work for undisclosed corporate clients and aided a fund that invests in government contractors. The Biden team’s links to these entities are presenting the incoming administration with its first test of transparency and ethics.

Emily Elconin for The New York Times

3. A few Republicans in key states blocked President Trump’s push to overturn the vote. They told us about resisting their party, and what it cost them.

Republicans in Washington may have indulged Mr. Trump’s baseless assertions of voter fraud, but at the state and local levels, party officials played a critical role in fending off the mounting pressure from their own to back his agenda.

“I’ve got a pretty thick skin, but it’s hard not to feel shook by it all,” said Tina Barton, the Republican clerk in Rochester Hills, Mich. Above, supporters of Mr. Trump in Lansing, Mich., last week.

The election painted a different picture in statehouse races, where Democrats suffered crushing blows across the country. Party officials are awakening to the reality that voters may have delivered a one-time verdict on Mr. Trump that does not equal ongoing support for center-left policies.

Abedin Taherkenareh/EPA, via Shutterstock

4. The killing of Iran’s top nuclear scientist raised fears of an escalation in violent retribution.

Iran’s leaders threatened on Saturday to retaliate over the assassination of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, pledging to continue the work of the man who American and Israeli officials believe was the architect of a secretive nuclear weapons program. Intelligence officials say there is little doubt that Israel was behind the killing, and the Israelis have done nothing to dispel that view. Above, protests in Tehran.

While the killing of Mr. Fakhrizadeh is likely to impede Iran’s military ambitions, its real purpose may have been to prevent President-elect Joe Biden from reviving the 2015 nuclear deal, our national security correspondent writes in an analysis.

Mr. Fakhrizadeh’s killing was the latest in a decade-long pattern of mysterious sabotage that has afflicted the Islamic Republic. Never, however, has Iran endured a spate of covert attacks quite like in 2020.

Sumy Sadurni/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

5. Entrenched leaders in several East African countries are using the coronavirus as a pretext to strengthen their grip on power and clamp down on dissent.

Many countries that traditionally serve as watchdogs are preoccupied with the pandemic and domestic concerns, leading to less international attention and outcry than usual. But the repercussions have been felt in elections in Tanzania, Ethiopia and especially in Uganda, where Bobi Wine, above, has faced violent intimidation and jail time for challenging President Yoweri Museveni, who has ruled the country with an iron grip since 1986.

Separately, Ethiopia claimed victory in its conflict with the restive region of Tigray after a daylong series of artillery strikes against the regional capital. With communications shut off, there was no way to independently confirm its claim.

Andrea Mantovani for The New York Times

6. For the global economy, the road back to normalcy will be a long one.

With the U.S. suffering its most rampant virus surges yet, and with major nations in Europe again under lockdown (pictured above in Paris), prospects remain grim for a meaningful worldwide recovery before the middle of next year, and far longer in some economies. Substantial job growth could take longer still.

In the U.S., jobless claims jumped by 78,000 last week to nearly 828,000 — a big change from the increase of 18,000 the week before. Among the worst-performing major economies is India: Its economy contracted 7.5 percent in the three months before September.

Stephanie Keith for The New York Times

7. Despite the economic downturn, one show must go on: New York City’s holiday window displays.

Tourism may be down, and changes have been made to accommodate social distancing so onlookers don’t get too close, but the sparkle remains. The Bergdorf Goodman windows are both bolder and simpler, designed to be “read” even from across the street. Macy’s windows, above, are devoted to thanking essential workers. The Saks windows depict holiday rituals in New York City.

The displays are a “light,” said Tony Spring, the chief executive of Bloomingdale’s, at “the end of a very difficult year.”

If you’re staying at home, here are the best seasonal mainstays, like “The Nutcracker” and Handel’s “Messiah,” reimagined for online viewing.

“The Death of General Wolfe” (1770), Benjamin West

8. What does history look like — and whose narrative prevails?

Our art critic Jason Farago examines the creative, historical liberties that the painter Benjamin West took in “The Death of General Wolfe” (1770), above. The work depicts a British general at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham, outside Quebec City, in the Seven Years’ War, also known as the French and Indian War.

The battle was a turning point in a war that would end with the British takeover of French colonies from Quebec to Florida. West mixed real history, mythmaking, British boosterism and New World melodrama in the painting — the first by an American artist to gain international attention. The vision stands at the origin of a rewriting of New World history that endured in both the U.S. and Canada for centuries, Jason writes.

John Bigelow Taylor and Dianne Dubler

9. The world’s most glamorous quarantine project.

While some of us have been binge-watching Netflix and peering anxiously at our sourdough, John Hatleberg has been working on replicas of the Hope Diamond, a luminous blue 45.52-carat stone, and its earlier incarnations that date to the 17th century, for the Smithsonian.

Mr. Hatleberg strives to ensure that his replicas have the exact same angles and color as their inspiration. That required seven trips to a laboratory for gems in Rochester, Minn., where experts coated and recoated the replica (made of synthetic material) using a thick level of precious metals to match the lush blue of the Hope.

For something a little more manageable at home, try pressing flowers.

Pool photo by Ian Volger

10. And finally, cozy up with some great reads.

Russia’s “road of bones.” A personal essay about miscarriage by Meghan, Duchess of Sussex. How to digital detox. Take a look at our wide-ranging journalism in The Weekender.

Here’s the front page of our Sunday paper, the Sunday Review from Opinion and our crossword puzzles. The news quiz is off this weekend.

Have a light week.

Your Weekend Briefing is published Sundays at 6 a.m. Eastern.

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