Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
International

Experts call Trump's rosy virus message misguided

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Oct, 2020 10:51 PM
  • Experts call Trump's rosy virus message misguided

Should people fear the coronavirus?

Public health experts say 1 million worldwide deaths are among reasons to be concerned, if not fearful, and to take everyday precautions despite rosy advice from the still-recovering president.

“Don’t let it dominate you. Don’t be afraid of it. You’re going to beat it,” Donald Trump said in a White House video released after he left the hospital Monday.

In the United States alone, more than 210,000 people weren’t able to beat it.

The seven-day rolling average for new U.S. cases has climbed over the past two weeks to almost 42,000 per day. The nation also sees more than 700 COVID-19 deaths each day.

COVID-19 also is deadlier than the flu, despite Trump's claim otherwise. Flu has killed 12,000 to 61,000 Americans annually since 2010, according to CDC estimates.

It is true that the vast majority of people who get COVID-19 develop only mild symptoms. But experts can’t predict which patients will develop dangerous or deadly infections. And only a small percentage of Americans have been sickened by the coronavirus, meaning the vast majority are still at risk for infection.

It is true, as Trump said in the video, that medicines have been found that can treat the virus, reducing chances for severe illness and death. But there is still no cure for it and no definitive date for when an effective vaccine might become widely available.

Another reason for concern is uncertainty over which patients will develop lasting complications affecting the lungs, heart, kidneys and other organs. While these are more common in patients with severe infections, persistent symptoms lasting several months have occurred even in those with mild disease. Fatigue is among the most common.

Taking everyday precautions including wearing masks and social distancing to curb disease spread doesn’t mean the virus is dominating people's lives, said Dr. Khalilah Gates, an assistant professor of medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago.

“There are things we need to do collectively to make sure we minimize the mortality,” Gates said. “That’s not domination. That’s just being willing to make changes so we can all get through this in a much better and safer way.”

MORE International ARTICLES

PICS: Thousands Participate In Annual 'Sikh Day Parade' In New York

PICS: Thousands Participate In Annual 'Sikh Day Parade' In New York
Thousands of Sikhs in the US have participated in the annual 'Sikh Day Parade' in the heart of Manhattan here, spreading awareness about the faith amid incidents of hate crimes against the minority community.

PICS: Thousands Participate In Annual 'Sikh Day Parade' In New York

Indian-Origin Woman Harleen Maggo, Grandparents Killed In Fire At New York Home: Report

Indian-Origin Woman Harleen Maggo, Grandparents Killed In Fire At New York Home: Report
Harleen Maggo and her paternal grandparents Ragvir Kaur-Kainth, 82 and Pyara Kainth 87, died in the tragic incident late on Saturday night.

Indian-Origin Woman Harleen Maggo, Grandparents Killed In Fire At New York Home: Report

Indian Woman Killed, Buried At UAE Home. Husband Puts Up 'For Rent' Sign, Leaves For Kerala

Indian Woman Killed, Buried At UAE Home. Husband Puts Up 'For Rent' Sign, Leaves For Kerala
Initial investigations by the police revealed that the accused husband, who also had another wife, had sent his other wife to India with his two children before committing the crime.

Indian Woman Killed, Buried At UAE Home. Husband Puts Up 'For Rent' Sign, Leaves For Kerala

Mother Strangles Two Children, Hangs Herself In Andhra Pradesh

Mother Strangles Two Children, Hangs Herself In Andhra Pradesh
The woman in Andhra Pradesh's Kakinada took the extreme step following domestic unrest, police said.

Mother Strangles Two Children, Hangs Herself In Andhra Pradesh

Man Finds Leopard In Room Where His Children Slept, Neighbours Kill It

Man Finds Leopard In Room Where His Children Slept, Neighbours Kill It
The leopard has been killed by the locals, a police official said.

Man Finds Leopard In Room Where His Children Slept, Neighbours Kill It

Indian-Origin Man Niket Shah In US Charged With Stealing $250,000 In Ponzi Scheme

Indian-Origin Man Niket Shah In US Charged With Stealing $250,000 In Ponzi Scheme
An Indian-origin man has been charged with stealing more than $250,000 in a Ponzi scheme in which his friends and coworkers invested.

Indian-Origin Man Niket Shah In US Charged With Stealing $250,000 In Ponzi Scheme