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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  March 27, 2020 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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you are the best of us. when ever we call on you, you are there, and what you did in this facility in one week creating a hospital is just incredible. i don't know how you did it, now you did such a good job that i am asking for four more from the president. that's the downside as being as good as you are of what you did. what you did was really incredible. i want to make two-points to you, i want to make two promises to you. this is a different beast that we are dealing with. this is an invisible beast. it is an insidious beast. this is not going to be a short deployment. this is not going to be you go out there a few days and you work hard and we go home.
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this is going to be weeks and weeks and weeks. this is going to be a long day. and it is going to be a hard day, an ugly day and a sad day. this is a rescue mission you are on. the mission is to save lives. that's what you are doing. the rescue mission is to save lives. as hard as we work, we are not going to save everyone. what's even more cruel is this enemy does not attack the strongest of us. it attacks the weakest of us. it attacks our most vulnerable which makes it even worse in my ways. because these are the people that every instinct tells us we are supposed to protect.
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these are our parents and our grandparents. these are our aunts and uncles and relatives who is sick. every instinct says protect them and help them because they need us. those are the exact people that this enemy attacks. every time i call out the national guard, i said the same thing to you. i promise you i will not ask you to do anything that i would not do myself and i will never ask you to go anywhere that i won't go myself. we are going to do this and we are going to do it together. my second point is you are living a moment in history.
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this is going to be one of most moments where they'll write about and talk about for generations. this is a moment that's going to change this nation. this is a moment that forges character, forges people and changes people. make them stronger, make them weaker but this is a moment that'll change character and ten years from now you will be talking about today, your children or your grandchildren and you will shed a tear because you will remember the lives loss and you will remember the faces and you will remember the names and you will remember how hard
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we worked and that we still lost loved ones. you will shed a tear and you should because it will be sad. you will also be proud. you will be proud of what you did. you will be proud that you showed up, you showed up when other people played it safe, you had the courage to show up. you had the skills and the professionalism to make a difference and safe lives. that's what you have done. at the end of the day nobody can ask anything more from you. that's your duty to do what you
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can when you can. you ha you will show skills and talent, you will be there with your mind and heart. ulcer you will serve with honor. that'll give you pride and you should be proud. i know that i am proud of you. every time the national guard has been called out, they have made every new yorker proud. i am proud to be with you yet again. i am proud to fight this fight with you. i bring you thanks from all over new yorkers who are just so appreciative of the sacrifice that you are making, the skills that you are bringing, the talent that you are bringing and you give many new yorkers confidence. i say, my friends, that we go
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out there today and we kick coronavirus' ass, that's what i say. we'll save lives and new york is going to thank you. god bless each and everyone of you. [ applause ] >> andrew cuomo at the javits center and members of the national guard, the governor thanking them for their work. the national guard helping in the coronavirus fight. the governor speaking at the javits center, let's listen.
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>> the fact that somebody said on cable tv show, the ventilators new york needed are not being deployed. they're in the stockpile. that's where they are supposed to be because we don't need them yet. we need them from the apex and apex is not here. we are gathering them in the stockpile so when we need them, they'll be there. we don't need them today because we are not in capacity today. that's why they are not deployed because they are not needed. second point well maybe you don't need 30,000. well, look, i don't have a crystal ball. everybody is entitled to their own opinion. i don't operate here on opinion. i operate on facts and on data and on numbers and on
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projections. we ha the cdc is making projections, mckenzie's and company is making projections for us. all the projection say you could have an apex needing 140,000 beds and about 40,000 ventilators. those are numbers. not i see or i think or i believe, i want to believ believe -- make the decisions based on the data and the science and we are following the data and the science and that's what the data and the science says. i hope we don't need 30,000 ventilators, i hope some natural weather change happens over night and kills the virus globally. that's what i hope. but, that's my hope. that's my emotions and my thought. the numbers say you may need
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30,000. >> you will see as these numbers increase, you will see hospitals reaching capacity. you will see if the numbers continue to increase, hospitals over capacity. that's the whole planning exercise. that's why we are building a thousand facility here. that's why we are building the other facilities. those hospitals will reach capacity. to be alarmed, hospitals reaching for capacity. yeah, that's what we have been saying and that's what we have been planning for, that's why we
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are here. [ inaudible question ] >> what i said initially, let's look at two weeks to see where we are at the end of two weeks. two weeks is up and let's extend another two weeks and see where we are. at the end of two weeks, if the same trajectory is going up and t there has not been a change then you are right. we'll extend it. why not say today we'll extend it for four week ors ss or six because i don't know what's going to happen next week. nobody knows what's going to happen next week. so two weeks and we'll reassess.
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you are right, if the numbers continue this way then yes, all likelihood we'll extend another two weeks. [ inaudible question ] flatten the curve is only two things you can do. life is options. social distancing which we have taken as dramatic in action as anyone and anywhere. two, testing to find a positive and isolate the positives and stop the spread. we are doing more testing than any place in the country per capita and we are going everything we can. is that why the curve is slowing or the doubling is slowing?
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i would think it is a correlation, i don't think it is a coincidence. the rate of doubling is slowing and that's the good news. the curve is going up. >> i concur what the governor is saying. there are a lot of different factors that can be involved in this. obviously the social distancing is working and the virus is not spreading more individuals - it is spreading but not where the number of hospitalization keeps rising. i think we'll have a better answer in a couple more days when we see the trend.
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>> the criteria you need a large open in-door space with power and ac and a company space where you can set up with medical staff and supply and staging area. you need a place that's now empty so you don't have to clear it. my strategic decision was that one per county so every county and every bureau has one facility in their bureau. and we looked at about ten sites and we are eliminating them. we got them down to a short list. we run with the army corp of engineers because they would do the construction of it and we came up with a final list of
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these four. i am going to send that list to the president asking him to approve those four, that would be 4,000 units. we have 4,000 units on the table. this is 1,000 of those 4,000, it will be a total of 8,000 units from the federal government for temporary hospital beds. >> first is the approval. we need the approval first and then the timeline is constructed some where in the neighborhood of ten days. first question is the approval. that's up to the president. [ inaudible question ] >> we are looking at that policy and recognizing this is
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difficult for many families. via hospitals, we are trying to figure out what would be the approach we have of this. the hospitals have the right to do something further then we would recommend. >> healthcare workers are on the front line the governor mentions before. we are addressing for what's the next precautions. they have been responsive and
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they're concerned of their patien patients. >> federal government said, promised and replied and stated that they would provide aid to state government. they passed the bill, they did not do that. you know this is math at one point. we have no state revenues to speak of. we are going to have to dramatically cut our state's expenses. we can't spend what you don't have. you can't do that in a family or in a business or in government. the federal government only
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gaigave us $5 billion that's only for coronavirus expenses. that's all it could be used for. we have lost about 10 to $15 billion in reservenue. people don't work and they don't pay income tax and business is closed, they don't pay tax. the federal government gave us zero, nada, zilch, we have to cut. that's all new york terms, right? we'll have to cut education aid because that's the number one expense and healthcare we can use the $5 billion from the feds from the coronavirus care. the main expense for the state's budget is education. they know that. when they did not give the state funding, all they did was cut the education budget to the state of new york which is a
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tragedy. there is not a lot of negotiating. when the number is zero it makes it an easy budget to negotiate. zero is actual lyanly an easy n. >> we have said there is no evictions based on rent for 90 days. so if you don't pay rent for 90 days, you can't be evicted. >> have you consider closing down construction sites because they don't have protective
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gears -- >> that's what we did yesterday. closing down construction sites and we are closing down non-essential construction sites. some construction is essential to keep the place running but no non-essential construction is going to be stopped. >> we have a list. i can get it to you later if you would like. [ inaudible question ] >> people are out of work, you
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are out of work, you can qualify for unemployment insurance. that's not what you are making. you still have to buy food and expenses. rent which tends to be 40% or 50% of a person's income. it becomes a big expense to carry. i sign an executive order saying for the next three months, a landlord abiding law can't evict a tenant for non-payment of rent. if you can't pay the rent, that's an understandable circumstances. we said 90 days because we don't know how long it will go on. we can revisit it. for 90 days by law, the landlord can't be evicted. all right, let's go to work, guys. thank you all very much, give them a big rauound of applause r
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what they have done and they are doing. [ applause ] >> the governor of new york andrew cuomo applaud at the end there for the national guard, you see them at the javits center there. as always a big headline and some sad headlines at the epicenter. the governor announcing new york case totals is now up. new york is almost half of the national total here in the united states as the national total goes in excess. the death toll in new york is now 519. that's the day-to-day increase of 134 from yesterday. yesterday was in the 300s and now again, put new york's deaths at 1,353 and rising. with our guests and governor
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returning politely returning the fe fire of the president of how many beds is needed. nathan allen, i want to start with this. new york is having a horrible week but he sees the potential for progress. the governor is saying not so fast. let's listen. >> we are hoping new york will come down because cases are leveling off. >> no, we are looking about 21 days for a possible apex. >> elizabeth cohen, let me start with you nobody knows for certain but the governor is not as optimistic as the surgeon general clearly. >> right, absolutely. there has been reasons for that. the infectious disease are much more where the governor is. they say this is about the amount of time they expect to see the apex and remember that's
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just the apex. the outbreak is still going on after the apex. it will get better but it will still be bad. what i want people to remember that is what happens in new york is likely to happen in other places. john, we are all familiar with the flu. you don't get the flu just in new york or los angeles or washington. the flu eventually covers the entire countries. this virus in many ways much more contagious and people can spread it before they know they are sick which is not typically how the flu works. when we all look at new york. we should know that it very well to happen where we live. >> it is very point. it is the epicenter right now. as he calls it the cannery and the coal mine the govern. the governor is saying cases are up and death toll is sadly up. if there is a silver lining and i am not sure if i can use that
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term, the rate of hospitalizations are increasing but the rate of the increase has slowed some. what does it tell you, is that just a proof that social distancing works? >> i think it is proof that social distannicing is working effectively. the essence of what we do with a lot of our healthcare workers do is save looiives. the best day at work is the day we don't have to save someone's life. the message he's getting out is stopping the spread and flatten the curve is the most essential. >> doctor, let me stay with you. the governor talks about the need of four temporary hospitals set up with the help of the army corp. of engineers. he asked the united states four more today and should be there by monday is the latest estimate. what are you seeing in the emergency room today as oppose to yesterday and several days
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ago? >> what i am working right now, we are behind the curve of new york is. we are trying to do the best we can to stop the spread and prevent the situation from becoming as dire as it is with new york. all hospitals around the country are building capacity and working to increase that and trying to raise the availability to meet the urgent need. we try to triple or quadruple our ability to run ventilators in montana. >> we watch other places going through it and anticipating. let's hope for all. the case counts will go up everywhere. the president just this hour vented to general motors adding a number of ventilators he said
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they promise to deliver. kaitlan collins is joining our conversation. i want to go back to the governor of new york just moments ago. the president went on "hannity" last night and said this. >> when you are talking about ventilators, that's like buying a car. it is highly and expensive and very intricate piece of equipment. there is that saying we want 30,000 of them. 30,000, i don't think that certain things will materialized and a lot of equipment being asked for that they won't need. >> kaitlan, here is the governor's response. he's not as emotional but he said everybody is entitled to their own opinion. i don't operate on opinion then he went onto say, i feel, i think, i believe, make decisions based on data and science. so another confrontation between the president of the united states and the governor of new york. >> the president didn't mention
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cuomo on "sean hannity show." >> the president was down playing it last night talking about how some major hospitals only had two ventilators. of course the reason new yorkers need 30,000 ventilators right now because they are worried of patients they are seeing and worried of what to come in the next several weeks. it is noble you saw the president down playing those ventilators and the need we heard from hospitals. he's doing the opposite on twitter today. he's in the middle of this feud with gm right now because as cnn reported by "the new york times" we have confirmed there was going to be this announcement that the administration was planning to make with gm and another company to talk about producing thousand of ventilators. it hit a snag and reassessed. we are told it is not called off. the president's tweets he's not happy with gm. the reason the talks came to a snag, they were worried of how
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long it was going to take gm and other companies to make these ventilators and the price tag on it. not only where they'll pay for ventilators but gm want to pay to retool their factory because they don't make ventilators at this plant in indiana where they expect to make this. how is this going to move forward? it has been a clear name that they need more ventilators and we know they're looking for more informati options. you see the president continuing to lash out. another tweet he put out, he said general motors must open their stupidly abandoned plant in ohio or some other plants and he goes into all caps and saying start making ventilators now. he calls on ford to get going on ventilator, fast. gm sold that ohio plant last year. they don't own it anymore. really walking out of this, john, what people are going to
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be asking is that this is going to encourage the president to require government mandate these companies to make ventilators instead of talking to them and have them do on their own as they have been doing so far. >> help me through this. this is another example like the google website of the president now venting out, lashing at somebody else, blaming somebody else after he publicly over promised or he promised something that's way ahead of the facts. he says google is going to have a national website. google is still trying for a regional website in the san francisco area. he says these companies will produce ventilators. last night he lashed out at several governors in his remarks as well. what do we know inside of the sources of the president frustration and anger. >> the question is when it comes to ventilators, the president is down playing it and now he's getting help from other governors because they say they do not have enough ventilators in their hospitals and now the
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president is calling on private companies they have been in talks with making these ventilators to speed it up. ventilators are a complex machine. it is not something you can make as quickly as masks which has been a another question of whether or not there is enough in these hospitals because you are seeing doctors and nurses say they don't. the thing with ventilators this is not a new problem, the administration known about for several weeks now. it is something we have been quizzing them about daily at these press briefings, whether or not it is going to be enough or how many they project need forward as they are going through this coronavirus. so far they argued it is not necessary. the president seems to be making a different case on twitter. that's the question that's going to be. whether or not there are going to be enough ventilators which
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we should remind people are going to be life saving machines for people who have worse cases of coronavirus. >> we get the sense on the tweets as the president trying to make somebody else's problem. kaitlan collins. live at the white house. detroit is a surge city when it comes to coronavirus, why? 300 miles an hour, thats where i feel normal. having an annuity tells me my retirement is protected. protected lifetime income from an annuity can help your retirement plan ride out turbulent times. learn more at protectedincome.org.
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firstnet is the only officially authorized wireless network built with and for first responders. it's highly secure, eliminates throttling and cuts through the clutter of commercial traffic. it's the help you need to help the people who need you. the mayor of los angeles is warning his city could be days away of the crisis that's playing out in new york. hem help is arriving, mercy ship arriving, we are expecting a dramatic increase of coronavirus patients. that's a welcome docking, stephanie. >> reporter: for sure, john. getting here right as they said they would at 8:30 local time. the naval ship here with more than a thousand beds.
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this is welcome to los angeles. the mayor of los angeles is saying los angeles can be where new york is in six days' time. we are pacing behind them at about that rate. they are looking for more bed capacity in the area to make sure they are clearing out people who still have concerns. this patients here so they can free up space to allow for covid patients that'll free up ventilators and more patients could be in the same room. i spoke to a local emergency room doctor says after a covid patient in the room, it is a couple of hours that room is out of service because it has to go through deep cleaning. that's huge. that what this hospital does, they can do surgery on board and
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all of that will help relief tension. they are working with locals and state officials to make sure they are getting the right people and sourcing them here to get them here. that's what they are working on. we are taking a look at the numbers for the california overall right now talking about 3,000 cases, more than that and also the deaths of 65 people. l.a. county, we are looking at 21 deaths and 200 cases. obviously this is another hotbed in the country. that's why they are working to make sure they have the beds made because they do believe they are going to need it even though we are not at capacity right now. >> right now is the question, stephanie elam, appreciate that live report. as we salute our first responders. one of the hardest hit states is michigan. a staggering surge in reported cases. more than 2800 compares to just over 500 cases. a week ago, one of michigan's
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top health officials spoke with cnn, warning for states struggling to keep up. >> i have now got nurses and doctors on the front line using one mask for the entire shift. no we don't have enough. we are also going to need to build alternative care sites and we are looking at that. we need staff to help us get those up and running very quickly. >> unionijoining me now in mich. do we know exactly why they were starting to see this surge in detroit? >> well, there were a lot of theories and probably some good thinking out there about this. one of the first things is we are an international health traveling.
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the airport is very busy with students and business travels. we were one of the 11th airport in detroit. it was taking the extra screening from folks coming from china. you have that international hub. part of it just like any metropolitan area that's densely populated. that's going to help that spread. what's really unique to detroit even though we had this great economic revitalization going on right now, we still have this area of deep poverty. that means lack of access to healthcare and that in terms mean those chronic conditions going unchecked, hyper tension and diabetes and heart disease. >> and so this story is going to be with us more fomonths. our country is focusing on new york for obvious reasons for
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giant case loads they have. this is seattle and we were touching base in l.a. and california, when your governor came out yesterday and announcing the dramatic cases, you realize everyday where is it going to come up next. what ises the perspective there if you talk about inner city detroit but you have a state with rural area as well of resources and availability and the supply line, where is michigan? >> dr. calhoun was one of the first people who raised the alarm saying we don't have enough. we don't have enough personal protection. there were protective equipment we are hearing about and don't have enough ventilators. that's becoming really acute in the last few days. our hospitals are getting overwhelmed and you know they're asking for donations. they're struggling to use those masks all day. the masks that are supposed to be disposable. we have some anxious healthcare workers out there right now. >> let me ask you a question.
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let me try to ask you anyway. as this plays out, your healthcare system is stressed and you mention the specific challenges of inner city detroit over laying that with the excite and the stress of the economic, michigan taking a big piece of economic hitting here as well in terms of what it does in terms o f the healthcare system? >> our healthcare system is worried about their bottom line. of course, first priority is for patients. you know we got, we already have healthcare system that are struggling if time to time and they are worried. right now they're more concentrating right now and kind of balancing out patients but they're very worried. >> difficult days and weeks ahead. it is a tough time as we watch this going to pop up in different places. part of our reporting, really appreciate your help on the
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a book that you're ready to share with the world? get published now, call for your free publisher kit today! i . as the number of coronavirus surpasses half a million mark, researchers are trying the work
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for a cure. and natalie dean at the university of florida specializes in vaccine trials development. explain to our viewers what it is and what the hope is. >> very good, john. so what we are doing is trying to obtain the antibodies from people that are excellent responders to the virus so we can reproduce them and give them to other individuals to protect them from the virus or potential treat the virus. it is similar to plasma therapy that you have been hearing about and heard dr. fauci talked about it yesterday on your program.
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but, instead of using plasma for many individuals, something which is not scaleable, we'll get just a very best components of that mplasma and be able to produce it and giver it to a l of people. >> the timeline is similar to the vaccine. just about a year. we are in the midst of recruiting people to be able to do this. and natalie, the timeline, a lot of people are watching, they want to know when there may be treatments and a vaccine especially if we assume this will come back to us in another season, down the road. let me try this in lament term, i know there are a number of different atestimony there temp. what isra realistic of what is
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available. >> it is a one or two, things are been moving quickly. people are working very hard but there are a lot of necessary steps before a vaccine can be available before a wide population that includes animal testing and human trials and the big trial where the vaccine is safe and effective and finally factoring the vaccine up scale. >> as you go through trials, you need patient s to help you. do you have availability of everybody you need to know a, it works and b, it is safe. >> we are recruiting, john. >> we are asking volunteers who have recover from the virus to come here so they can donate.
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i believe we sent you the link of a site where you can go so you can provide us people who want to volunteer. >> that's great, we'll do that. it is a challenge and natalie as the conversation has played out, we are learning everyday new things as we are getting more testings around the united states and more patients treated and you learn more about it. in terms of what people are learning, dr. fauci has talked about this. maybe as the weather gets warmer, the cases do go down a little bit but it cycles back. are we certain about that or we are studying coronavirus to figure out if that's a fact? >> yes, i have never been too convinced of the argument that it may go away in the summer. the reality is we are seeing cases popping up in the southern hemisphere, we are seeing some transmissions there and places like singapore that have -- we
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are seeing transformation. there is not enough evidence to think it will go away in the summer just like the flu. >> it is a global challenge. your focus on your work. how does the collaboration work here. is people off doing what they think of small groups or constant conversations with colleagues around the world to learn the lesson of china, spain and italy to get the larger mass and database? >> john, this has been an incredible experience in how collaborative scientists can be. our team is working with people all over the world and all over the country to try to do this as rapidly as we can and learn from each other so we don't make mistakes. >> i want to thank you both for coming into help us explain. we want to make sure we do this fact-based has not always been
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the case. we appreciate both of you for the work you are doing. can't thank you enough. >> thank you, john, thank you for having must. >> thank you very much. >> good luck in your work. before we go, i want to zoom in on a somber example of our new coronavirus reality and our desperate need on the front line of the virus, 48 years old, new york city nurse tested positive last week. days later, he was dead. he may be the first nurse in the hardest hit city to die from the virus. his sister says he had asthma but otherwise healthy. she spoke with cnn this morning. >> unfortunately,eri everything happens so quickly. he told my parents that he was positive and had coronavirus and three days later, he sent me a text message and shared that he was in the icu and on avent later and he cou-- on a ventila
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he could not talk. six days later, he died. we could do something about this. that we didn't. it is time to save his life, it is challenging but that i don't get the sense that we are, i know we are not to be honest. i know we are not dealing with it now. that makes it hard because it is in veain if we are not going to give everything our healthcare workers need. you know chris -- it is disturbing of what is happening. i don't think america knows what the news is not sharing with us and what our healthcare workers are seeing and being asked to do. it is shameful.
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>> new york's governor insists hospitals should have enough protective gear for now but distribution is not as good as cnn could be. healthcare officials assisting the home of elderly. this is cnn/impa.com/impact. thank you for joining us today. brianna keilar continues our coverage after a quick break. stay safe. to help you stay informed of the latest news just say "coronavirus" into your xfinity voice remote to access important information and special reports from around the world. and to keep your kids learning at home, say "education" to discover learning collections for all ages from our partners at common sense media, curiosity stream,
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i am brianna keilar, welcome back to our coverage of coronavirus. the united states has hit a shocking milestone. the number of cases here are the most than any country in the world. the u.s. is 91,000 plus cases. more than china, more than italy and you can see this precipitous rise over the past few days here. new york is the epicenter for the united states here. as we see cases rise all across
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the country, there are several hot spots that are emerging. >> everyone's curve is going to be different. new york is going to look different than idaho or jackson, mississippi or new orleans. we see hot spots like dough tet and no, sew orleans. as cases rise across the united states, president trump has not walked away his expectation that the country will be able to roll away by easter. >> i think the president was trying to make an aspirational projection to give people some hopes. he's listening to us when we got to reevaluate in realtime and any decisions we make has to be on the data. >> billionaire bill gates says the partial shutdown across the countries are not enough to stop this spread.