Coronavirus cases may be 'near a plateau': Johns Hopkins doctor
Coronavirus cases may be 'near a plateau': Johns Hopkins doctor
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Dr. Thomas Inglesby on whether the US is sufficiently flattening the coronavirus curve
Infectious disease expert Dr. Thomas Inglesby, director of the Center for Health Security at Johns Hopkins University, joins Chris Wallace on ‘Fox News Sunday.’
Director of the Center for Health Security of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Dr. Thomas Inglesby told "Fox News Sunday" host Chris Wallace that we may be nearing a plateau in coronavirus cases in the United States.
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"It looks like in the last few days, if you look across the country and you average out the numbers, that we are near a plateau in the number of cases," he said.
However, Inglesby says that a plateau doesn't necessarily mean that we will immediately see a drop in overall cases.
"It could be that this plateau carries on for a while," Inglesby added. "We've seen in other countries where they've started to have lower case counts over time that it could take days or weeks for the numbers to even get cut in half. So I think while we may be at a peak, we hope we are, it's still going to take time for us to start to bring the case numbers down especially in the places which are the biggest hot spots."
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When it comes to tracking the coronavirus, Inglesby says that "all models are just approximations" with their own strengths and limits, so he isn't "confident in any particular model" to give a specific timeline as to when we will see an end to the virus. Instead, it depends on what we do collectively as a country.
"I think it's hard to see out beyond a couple of weeks," he said. "This isn't preordained what the final outcome will be in terms of overall numbers. It depends on our collective reaction, what we do with social distancing, whether or not we develop therapies over time that work, our overall ability to track cases and to build public health capacity around the country, that's going to be crucial for us to try and get control of this over time."
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