US air travel soars ahead of Thanksgiving despite Covid-19 warnings

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Us Air Travel Soars Ahead Of Thanksgiving Despite Covid-19 Warnings
Travellers walk through Newark International Airport in New Jersey on Saturday. Photo: Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images
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By Daniel Trotta

Millions of Americans are defying health warnings and travelling ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday, likely exacerbating a surge in coronavirus infections just before a series of promising new vaccines become widely available.

With Covid-19 infections in the US hitting a record 168,000 per day on average, Americans are flocking to crowded airports against the advice of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the US surgeon general and Dr Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert.

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Some 1 million passengers passed through airport screenings on Sunday, the highest number since the pandemic swept into the US in mid-March. It was the second time in three days that passengers screened topped 1 million, the US Transportation Security Administration said.

Meanwhile, the seven-day average number of US Covid-19 deaths rose for a 12th straight day, reaching 1,500 as of Monday, according to a Reuters tally of official data.

That has further taxed already exhausted medical professionals, as coronavirus hospital admission have surged nearly 50 per cent over the past two weeks and the United States has surpassed 255,000 deaths and 12 million infections since the pandemic began.

“I'm asking Americans, I'm begging you: hold on a little bit longer,” Surgeon General Jerome Adams told the ABC News show “Good Morning America” on Monday. “We want everyone to understand that these holiday celebrations can be superspreader events.”

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US-HEALTH-VIRUS-HOLIDAY-TRAVEL
US numbers have alarmed authorities enough to advise that people stay home for the Thanksgiving holiday. Photo: Kena Betancur/AFP via Getty Images

Still, many Americans refused to follow the health advice that could save their lives.

In Grant County, West Virginia, diners and bar patrons ignored signs asking them to wear masks, saying they were unhappy with Governor Jim Justice's recent imposition of a mask mandate for indoor spaces.

Janel Henritz, whose family owns the Smoke Hole Caverns log cabin resort in the small town of Cabins, said she believed dealing with the virus should be a matter of personal responsibility, not government mandates.

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“If you do not feel comfortable going out, then stay at home. No one is telling you to come in my store to come shopping,” Henritz (36) told Reuters. “I don't like being controlled.”

White House reception

Even the White House is ignoring the advice of the Trump administration's own experts.

First lady Melania Trump is hosting a November 30th “holiday reception” at the White House, according to an invitation seen by ABC News. Representatives for the White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the report.

A series of White House events in recent months have been linked to a rash of outbreaks, including President Donald Trump's own bout with the disease from late September into early October. A White House aide and four others have tested positive in recent days.

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Help could arrive soon. The head of the US campaign to rapidly deploy a vaccine said the first Americans could start receiving vaccinations as early as mid-December, and another global drug company on Monday unveiled promising trial results on a vaccine candidate.

US healthcare workers and other high-risk people could start getting vaccinations produced by Pfizer within a day or two of regulatory consent next month, Dr Moncef Slaoui, chief scientific adviser for “Operation Warp Speed,” said on Sunday.

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Britain's AstraZeneca said on Monday its vaccine could be 90 per cent effective when administered in two different doses a month apart, late-stage trials showed.

That could potentially offer a new tool to fight the global pandemic that is cheaper, easier to distribute and faster to scale up than rival vaccines, with as many as 200 million doses available by the end of 2020 and 700 million doses by the end of the first quarter of 2021.

Pfizer, working with German partner BioNTech, says its vaccine was 95 per cent effective.

Other pharmaceutical companies making progress include Moderna, which is expected to seek separate approval later in December, and Johnson & Johnson, which is working on a single-dose vaccine.

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