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US Surpasses 20 Million Confirmed Coronavirus Cases

Healthcare worker Demetra Ransom comforts a patient in the Covid-19 ward at United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Texas on December 4, 2020. The U.S. has surpassed 20 million confirmed coronavirus cases.
Mark Felix
/
AFP via Getty Images
Healthcare worker Demetra Ransom comforts a patient in the Covid-19 ward at United Memorial Medical Center in Houston, Texas on December 4, 2020. The U.S. has surpassed 20 million confirmed coronavirus cases.

The United States has reached a sobering milestone to mark the new year.

On Friday, the first day of 2021, the U.S. recorded its 20 millionth confirmed coronavirus case since the beginning of the pandemic.

That's according to numbers from Johns Hopkins University, which reported 20,037,736 cases and 346,687 deaths in the U.S. on at the time of publication on Friday. Over 83 million coronavirus cases have been confirmed world wide.

The U.S. reached 10 million cases on Nov. 9. In less than two months, the country doubled its total number of infections.

The nation accounts for nearly a quarter of all infections in the world and a fifth of all deaths.

And a coronavirus variant — one believed to be more contagious but not more deadly — was discovered in three states this week.

Two vaccines have been approved by the FDA and are now being distributed in the U.S. — granting a glimmer of hope in the battle against the virus. Both vaccines — one by Pfizer-BioNtech and one by Moderna — demonstrate high efficacy rates.

However, the country fell behind on its goal to administer 20 million doses by the end of 2020. Almost 2.8 million Americans have received the vaccine, according to the CDC.

At the current rate it would take years to vaccinate enough Americans to get the pandemic under control, according to NBC News.

President-elect Joe Biden vowed the U.S. would pick up the pace on Tuesday during a speech detailing his COVID-19 response plans.

"We need to be honest: The next few weeks and months are going to be very tough, a very tough period for our nation — maybe the toughest during this entire pandemic," Biden said Tuesday. "I know it's hard to hear, but it's the truth."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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