COVID-19 watch
Tracking Hardship - April 16, 2021
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The infrastructure is more than roads and bridges edition. Infrastructure can be physical – roads, bridges, housing, broadband, and safe water, for example. But we also must invest in human infrastructure – care work and job training are prime examples. As the U.S. begins what experts fear could be a long and arduous trek to economic recovery, we have important choices to make. Will we go small, essentially applying a band-aid or two to an economy ravaged by pandemic and recession? Or will we make the sound and robust investments we need to rebuild in a way that would promote opportunity and racial and gender equality and make the post-World War II generations proud? The choice is ours. The path we choose will say much about who we are and our aspirations as a potentially great nation.
Meanwhile, there is good news to share but troubling news as well. The good news? The CDC reports that 24 percent of all Americans are now fully vaccinated, and 38 percent have received at least one shot. The concerning news? Earlier this week, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome H. Powell warned that re-opening the economy too quickly could fuel another rise in COVID-19 cases, arguing that the country has not completely turned the corner and the pandemic still poses great risks to economic recovery. And Anthony Fauci, pressed in a hearing on when restrictions should be lifted, said that should be when new cases are down below 10,000 per day. On April 15, there were over 74,000 new cases, and the 7-day average for new cases was up 8 percent over two weeks before.
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The shocking increase in drug overdose deaths during a one-year period that included the first six months of the pandemic, according to new White House data released this month. Between August 2019 and August 2020, 88,000 Americans died from drug overdoses. Tweet this.
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Black women are more than three times as likely to die from COVID-19 as white men, a new study finds. Through the pandemic, experts have assumed that men are more likely to die from COVID-19 than women. While this might be true overall, such an outcome does not transcend all racial boundaries. Tweet this.
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The nation’s prisons, jails, and detention centers have been among the most dangerous places when it comes to contracting COVID-19 and dying from it, the New York Times reports. Over the past year, 1,400 new infections and seven deaths were reported, on average, per day in these facilities. Tweet this.
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The Tax Policy Center estimates that households making less than $25,000 annually will see an after-tax income gain of 20 percent due to the American Rescue Plan – and about 35 percent if they have children. Tweet this.
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The number of adults living with children who said their households sometimes/often didn’t have enough to eat during the previous week, or 11.2 percent. That number was higher for Latinx and Black households with children – about 19 percent, or nearly one in five. It was about 7 percent for white households with children and 5 percent for Asian households with children. Tweet this.
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