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Republicans are doing 'serious damage to our American democracy' by refusing to admit Donald Trump has lost - and risk American lives as COVID spirals out of control, says Nancy Pelosi

Speaker Nancy Pelosi charged congressional Republicans with helping the COVID pandemic spiral out of control by refusing to concede President Donald Trump lost the election.

'The election is over. Joe Biden is the president-elect,' she said Friday during her weekly news conference on Capitol Hill as she urged Republicans to accept the results and move forward with relief legislation.

'Republicans in Congress continue their tactics of delay, distort, and deny, which has led to deaths,' she said.

'The longer the Republicans keep up the charade, the further out of control the COVID crisis will spiral,' she noted.

Pelosi described it as 'a red alert, all hands on deck' moment.

'Our Republican colleagues want to focus elsewhere instead of recognizing it's a health emergency,' she charged

Speaker Nancy Pelosi called the pandemic a 'red alert, all hands on deck' moment and urged Republicans to support coronavirus relief legislation

Speaker Nancy Pelosi called the pandemic a 'red alert, all hands on deck' moment and urged Republicans to support coronavirus relief legislation 

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnellPresident Donald Trump

Pelosi said Republicans in Congress, led by Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, were causing the COVID pandemic to get worse by refusing to admit Donald Trump lost the election

The number of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations per day in the United States continues to rise - but the daily death toll has dropped again after surging to a six-month high. 

New infections across the country hit a record high for the third consecutive day with 153,496 cases on Thursday. Daily cases have repeatedly surged to all-time highs of more than 120,000 per day over the past week. 

Hospitalizations have also reached a single-day high with more than 67,000 patients currently being treated across the country. 

Deaths, however, dropped with 919 American dying on Thursday. It comes after the death toll spiked a day earlier to 1,893, which is the highest number of fatalities since May 8 during the initial peak of the outbreak. 

That surge was enough to push the seven-day rolling average of daily deaths back over the 1,000 mark after managing to stay below it for the past three months. 

Deaths are still down from the peak 2,000 fatalities recorded per day in the spring - a sign of better treatments and the increased share of cases among young people who are less likely to get sick and die.  

New infections across the country hit a record high for the third consecutive day with 153,496 cases on Thursday. Daily cases have repeatedly surged to all-time highs of more than 120,000 per day over the past week

New infections across the country hit a record high for the third consecutive day with 153,496 cases on Thursday. Daily cases have repeatedly surged to all-time highs of more than 120,000 per day over the past week

Deaths, however, dropped with 919 American dying on Thursday. It comes after the death toll spiked a day earlier to 1,893, which is the highest number of fatalities since May 8 during the initial peak of the outbreak. That surge was enough to push the seven-day rolling average of daily deaths back over the 1,000 mark after managing to stay below it for the past three months

Deaths, however, dropped with 919 American dying on Thursday. It comes after the death toll spiked a day earlier to 1,893, which is the highest number of fatalities since May 8 during the initial peak of the outbreak. That surge was enough to push the seven-day rolling average of daily deaths back over the 1,000 mark after managing to stay below it for the past three months

The country is facing what health experts say will be a dark winter because of the onset of cold weather and crowded holiday gatherings, as well as a disregard for mask-wearing and other precautions. 

The crisis is deepening at overwhelmed hospitals across the country with some reaching, or nearing, capacity. 

Eighteen states, most of which are in the Midwest, have reported record daily highs for COVID-19 patients in hospitals this week. 

The situation became so bad in North Dakota that the governor this week said nurses who test positive but have no symptoms can still work. 

Idaho clinics struggled to handle the deluge of phone calls from patients and one of Utah's biggest hospital systems is bringing in nearly 200 traveling nurses, some of them from New York City. 

Mississippi is running out of ICU beds with that state's capital city, Jackson, already at capacity and just 12 percent left statewide. 'Zero ICU beds in Jackson. Very few elsewhere. Please protect yourself and your family,' Mississippi State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs tweeted.  

In Wisconsin, the outbreak is now at such dire levels that its health department had to create a new category to track infections - as the state's daily cases surpassed what initial epicenter New York had at its peak. 

Hospital beds across Wisconsin are also nearing capacity. 

Hospitalizations have also reached a single-day high with more than 67,000 patients currently being treated across the country

Hospitalizations have also reached a single-day high with more than 67,000 patients currently being treated across the country

States re-imposing lockdown measures  

CALIFORNIA: Based on tiered system that affects counties differently. In hard-hit areas like Los Angeles County, people urged to stay at home. Bars, restaurants and gyms all closed. LA parks and golf courses are still open. 

CONNECTICUT: Restaurants must stop table service at 9.30pm and private gatherings have been cut to 10 people. 

IDAHO: Outdoor gatherings limited to 25% of maximum capacity and indoor ones to 50 people. Customers must remain seated in bars and restaurants. 

ILLINOIS: No indoor service in bars or restaurants, which must also close at 11pm. Gatherings are limited to 25 people. 

NEW MEXICO: Retail business must close by 10pm. Food and drink establishments can offer no more than 25% capacity for indoor dining. 

NEW YORK: Bars, restaurants and gyms must close at 10pm. Indoor private gatherings limited to 10 people. 

NEW JERSEY: Restaurants, bars, clubs and lounges to stop indoor dining by 10pm. All barside seating prohibited. All interstate games and tournaments for indoor K-12 sports banned. 

MINNESOTA: Restaurants and bars must shut by 10pm.

More than a dozen states have doubled their COVID-19 case loads in the last 14 days compared with the previous two-week period.

In the Midwest, Iowa was the worst affected state, followed by Minnesota, Michigan and Illinois. 

The surge in cases and hospitalizations has prompted some states - including New York, Maryland, Minnesota, Iowa, Utah and Illinois - to ramp up restrictions again this week that range from curfews on bars and restaurants to limiting private indoor gatherings to less than 10 people. 

School systems in Detroit, Indianapolis, Philadelphia and suburban Minneapolis are also now giving up on in-person classes. 

The governors of Oregon, Washington, California have formed a West Coast travel advisory requiring residents returning from out-of-state or visitors from the rest of the country to quarantine for 14 days. 

Amid the staggering numbers, some state leaders maintained a hands-off approach, pushing 'personal responsibility' rather than government-imposed restrictions such as mandatory mask-wearing. 

Reflecting what has largely been a divide between red and blue states, Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt of Oklahoma has refused to impose a mask mandate, citing concerns about enforcement and a 'one-size-fits-all' approach. Instead, he held a news conference this week with doctors who implored residents to wear masks.

In North Dakota, nurses opposed GOP Gov. Doug Burgum's move to allow health care workers who test positive to remain on the job, saying scientifically proven measures such as a mask mandate should be tried first. Burgum has declined to do that.

In Idaho, Republican Gov. Brad Little also resisted calls for a statewide mask requirement even as health clinics grappled with dozens of staff absences and thousands of calls from people seeking help.

In other states, officials tightened restrictions this week - though not as much as the lockdowns that were put in place when the virus first hit in the spring.

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot called on residents to cancel Thanksgiving gatherings, limit all social gatherings to 10 people, and stay home except for essentials, like work or getting groceries, starting on Monday.

Minnesota joined states including New York in ordering bars and restaurants to close by 10 p.m. Wisconsin's governor this week advised people to stay home. Utah's governor put in place a statewide mask mandate, while Indiana's governor extended his state's mask rule for another month.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said Thursday he will sign an executive order to give towns and cities the option to limit hours at nonessential businesses after 8 p.m. The mayor of Newark, New Jersey, imposed a 9 p.m. curfew for residents of three hard-hit ZIP codes.

Maine Gov. Janet Mills joined governors of six other states in the Northeast in suspending interstate youth hockey games.

Philadelphia dropped plans to start bringing students back to school on November 30. Michigan's largest school district, Detroit, said it will suspend in-person classes next week for its roughly 50,000 students, joining other districts that have shifted to online-only classes.

In New York City, the looming threat of a shutdown of the 1.1-million-student school system had families and teachers watching case numbers closely. Mayor Bill de Blasio has said that in-person schooling will be halted if the rate of tests coming back positive for the virus in the city reaches 3 percent. 

It comes after Dr Michael Osterholm, Joe Biden's new COVID advisor, said the US should go into a total national lockdown for six weeks to avoid 'virus hell' and suggested that the federal government pay workers while country is shutdown. 

Dr Anthony Fauci, however, has insisted a lockdown doesn't need to happen. 

'If we do the things that are simple public health measures, that soaring will level and start to come down,' he said on CBS This Morning. 

'You add that to the help of a vaccine, we can turn this around. It is not futile.' 

More than half of Americans say it's likely they won't comply with another month-long lockdown despite 61 percent believing that the virus is getting worse, according to a new Gallup poll released Thursday.  

This new wave is more widespread than the surges that happened in the spring and summer, which occurred in the Northeast and Sunbelt states, respectively. 

While fatalities could still potentially rise given it takes time for people to get sick and die, doctors believe the death toll might not be as bad as the initial waves because doctors now better know how to treat severe cases, meaning higher percentages of the COVID-19 patients who go into intensive care units are coming out alive. 

Patients also have the benefit of new treatments, namely remdesivir, the steroid dexamethasone and an antibody drug that won emergency-use approval from the Food and Drug Administration this week. 

A forecast from the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics estimates that the death toll could reach nearly 400,000 by February and a peak of 2,200 daily deaths by January. Researchers forecast that 63,000 lives could be saved if the majority of Americans wear masks and social distance. 

IHME researchers say that the likelihood that an infection will prove fatal has dropped by nearly a third since April due to improved treatment.

In the US, COVID-19 now kills about 0.6 percent of people infected with the virus, compared with around 0.9 percent early in the pandemic, their study found. 

IHME Director Dr Christopher Murray said the statistics reflect that doctors have figured out better ways to care for coronavirus patients, including the use of blood thinners and oxygen support. Effective treatments, such as the generic steroid dexamethasone, have also been identified.

Experts have struggled to accurately measure a crucial metric in the pandemic: the fatality rate, or percentage of people infected with the pathogen who are likely to die. 

The difficulty is exacerbated by the fact that many people who become infected do not experience symptoms and are never identified. 

IHME said it had been using an infection-fatality rate derived from surveys after accounting for age. 

Older people are at much higher risk of dying from COVID-19 than younger people.

'We know the risk is profoundly age-related. For every one year of age, the risk of death increases by 9 percent,' Murray said. 

The institute, an influential source of COVID-19 forecasts, said it has also determined that the fatality rate for COVID-19 is worse in communities with high levels of obesity.  

The group said it has now switched to an infection-fatality rate that varies over time - declining since the first pandemic wave in March and April by around 0.19 percent per day until the beginning of September. 

It also varies across locations as a function of obesity prevalence and continues to vary based on population distribution by age. 

IHME said its analysis of age-standardized fatality rates from more than 300 surveys suggests a 30 percent decline since March/April. 

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