The Daily - Four New Insights About the Coronavirus
Episode Date: July 6, 2020Infection rates broke records across the United States over the holiday weekend, with many of the most severe surges in areas that reopened fastest. One thing that seems to have played a factor: trans...mission indoors, such as in restaurants and bars. We break down the risk, and look at what else scientists have learned about the coronavirus and how it spreads. Guest: Donald G. McNeil Jr., a science and health reporter for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: Many scientists have been saying for months that the coronavirus lingers in the air indoors, infecting those nearby. But the World Health Organization has been slow to agree.Black and Latino residents of the United States are nearly twice as likely to die from Covid-19 as their white neighbors, according to new data that provides the most comprehensive look yet at coronavirus patients in America.
Transcript
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today.
As infection rates break new records across the U.S. this July 4th weekend,
four new insights into the virus from my colleague, science reporter Donald G. McNeil Jr.
It's Monday, July 6th.
Well, let me start by Donald saying happy 4th of July.
Thank you.
How did you spend it?
Saturday, I played softball in the morning. Socially distanced
softball. Softball? Yeah.
In New York City? In New York City, yeah.
Riverside Park. And then we went to dinner
last night in a friend's backyard
on Long Island
where we all sat as couples
together but six feet apart from each other
and sort of took turns going up to the table to get to the food
and sat and, you know, had a really nice time.
Mm-hmm. I have to imagine that even a socially distanced meal with you... and sort of took turns going up to the table to get to the food and sat and, you know, had a really nice time.
I have to imagine that even a socially distanced meal with you is challenging and that I think I would feel quite seen and judged, given your role.
Why?
I mean, I do tend to say six feet, six feet, six feet a lot at people.
See?
Because masks give people a false sense of security.
I mean, this is a big thing on the softball field is that people would both put on masks and they'd sit next to each other in the dugout making up the batting order and stuff like that.
And I'd go, no, air leaks out of the side of your masks.
And you're not always wearing masks.
Sometimes you're wearing it as a sort of a Captain Ahab blue beard under your chin.
So it's better to stay six feet apart. That way, if you're-
Do you remember a couple seconds ago how you asked me why it might be challenging to have a meal
with you? All right. All right. Touche. Touche.
So everything you just described, of course, is occurring in New York, where the infection rate has been generally declining or at least stabilizing.
So let's talk about the state of the pandemic in the rest of the country.
I wonder if you can give us a quick status update on this end of the July 4th weekend.
Okay.
end of the July 4th weekend. Okay. I think it's 39 states now have cases going up and, you know,
it's hitting hardest in the South and in the West, Texas, Florida, Arizona, California,
number of other states. And it's exactly what was predicted, you know, back in May when states were debating opening by Memorial Day, all public health experts said, if you open up when your case counts are rising, they're going to continue rising and start rising even faster.
And now we're seeing that.
For example, in Houston, doctors who knew the situation in New York are saying that what's happening there looks like what happened in New York in early April.
that what's happening there looks like what happened in New York in early April. Finding new beds, finding ventilators, lots of patients who are sick, patients who are on oxygen,
not as many dying yet, but with people on oxygen and on ventilators, they may find themselves in
the situation where they have to park refrigerated trucks behind the hospitals to hold the bodies
as they did in New York. So, Donald, correct me if I'm wrong. I think the U.S. is at about 50,000 infections a day right now. Dr. Anthony Fauci said we could get
up to 100,000. And if that's the case, what do we expect the attendant death count to start to look
like in the U.S.? I assume that's going to catch up with that.
Yeah, it'll catch up with it. I mean, but there's no reason to believe that 100,000 is the upper
limit. It all depends on how much social distancing we practice. I mean, this is the dance.
And do you close bars and restaurants? Do you open or close schools? Do you wear masks?
How much attention do people pay to the directions you give them? How much, you know, do they practice good social distancing?
You know, that very much affects the rate of spread of the virus.
Well, with that in mind, those big questions of kind of how we proceed through the rest of this pandemic. You have been doing a lot of reporting about the latest
learnings and insights into the virus that will very much guide how we answer those questions.
And we want to talk through those with you. So where do you think we should start?
Some of these insights are really more theories with some evidence to them, and some there's quite a bit of confidence in.
So we probably ought to start with something that there's a pretty high degree of confidence in among doctors.
And what is that?
When this all started, we thought of it as a lung disease, a respiratory disease,
because the first cases we
heard about, people got pneumonia. And that, of course, reminded us that the model for this
disease was the 1918 influenza epidemic. But we're learning that this coronavirus is very
different from an influenza virus. The influenza virus is attached to receptors in the lungs and the airway. This
gets into the body through the airway, through the lungs, but it really attaches to the insides
of the blood vessels. And so that makes it a vascular disease, a blood vessel disease.
And what are the implications of a virus like this being a vascular disease, a blood vessel disease, and not just a respiratory disease?
It means it affects every organ in the body that has lots of fine blood vessels in it, and not even just organs.
I mean, so it affects the lungs, which are the filter where the air gets into the blood, and you have lots of little fine blood vessels
surrounding the little sacs at the ends of your breathing tubes.
It attacks the kidneys because that's the filter
where the urine comes out of the blood,
so you have very fine networks of blood vessels there.
It attacks the gut because you have a network of blood vessels in your gut
where food gets into your body.
It attacks the brain because you have lots of fine blood vessels in your gut where food gets into your body. It attacks the brain because you have
lots of fine blood vessels in the brain. It doesn't attack the nerve cells in the brain,
which most of the brain is made of. It doesn't attack the muscle cells in the heart,
but it attacks the blood vessels that go through all those other parts. And so
when they do autopsies, they find like thousands of tiny little blood clots all over the body.
When they do autopsies, they find like thousands of tiny little blood clots all over the body.
You have lots of people who have strokes.
And as those blood clots clot up blood vessels to small areas of the brain, you may get dementia or disorientation. is the little capillaries in the hands and feet getting blocked and getting this inflamed,
painful, red or purple toe and finger syndrome. So it's just, it's more complicated to deal with a disease that can travel to any organ in the body.
So how does this new insight about the coronavirus, how does it change the way
we are going to approach the pandemic?
Before, the main thing you're looking for when you're looking to see if somebody's having a
problem is their blood oxygen level, because you're assuming that their problem is going to
be pneumonia. But if you realize that the problem could be kidney damage, heart damage, you do a
whole different battery of blood tests. So what you're saying is that doctors who previously were diagnosing COVID-19 through a set of well-established symptoms, right, now need to
expand that set of symptoms pretty broadly because it turns out this is looking to be vascular,
not respiratory. Yeah, that's right. It means that virtually anybody who comes into a doctor's
office feeling sick might have the coronavirus. If they come in with symptoms of a stroke,
it might be COVID. If they come in with symptoms of a heart attack, it might be COVID.
If they come in with what seems like arthritis in their feet, it might be COVID toe. And because we often don't have enough
tests or it takes a long time to get test results, the patient's at a real disadvantage because
if you don't know your patient has coronavirus, whatever symptom they've got now might become
greater, might spread to other organs. So the problem in your toes might literally spread
to your kidneys or your brain. And you want to know that that patient has a disease that can
spread throughout the body. In other words, more testing, fast testing becomes more imperative
once we have learned that so many symptoms may actually be a sign
of COVID-19. Absolutely. Okay. So what is the next big new insight we have into the coronavirus?
Well, people are always asking, is the virus mutating? Is it becoming different? And the
answer is yes. This virus always mutates. It makes one mutation about every two weeks.
The question is, are any of those mutations important?
And most of them aren't.
Most of them don't change the function of the virus at all.
But there has been one mutation that has become the object of a great deal of interest.
We know for sure that there are sort of two general clades of the virus,
the Wuhan strain and the other one called the Italian strain or sometimes the European strain.
Now, the Wuhan strain is obviously the original one. That's where the virus started. But, you know,
it went around Asia, then it went to Iran, then it went to Italy. And in Italy, sometime in February,
Iran, then it went to Italy. And in Italy, sometime in February, presumably, this mutation took place. Now, it has definitely not made the virus more dangerous, more lethal, more likely
to kill you, but it appears to have made it more transmissible. How so? Well, it appears that it
transmits between people five to ten times more easily.
Now, this is in dispute, but there's been work done in cells in the laboratory where they infected them with the two different strains.
And the mutation in the Italian strain seems to make the spikes on the outside of the virus, the spikes of the corona, more stable, better able to infect. And so that they
appear to be five to 10 times more capable at infecting cells as the old Wuhan version.
So the strain of this virus that has a better spike, the Italian strain, and is therefore
more transmissible, is crowding out the previous strain because it's
just doing a better, more effective job of infecting people. Yeah, that's right. It's
the natural progression for a virus. It's the way they tend to go. What do you mean?
Well, viruses over the course of infecting lots of hosts tend to become less lethal to those hosts and more transmissible. Like, for example, if
I have the virus and it mutates inside me and it turns into a more deadly strain,
I've now got two strains, and I pass on that virus to two people,
the person who gets the more deadly strain is more likely to go home go to bed and die
whereas the person who gets the less lethal more transmissible strain is going to go out to a
disco and infect 40 people right and if you do that enough times in the course of the virus
the virus always sort of naturally moves in the direction of the more transmissible
less lethal one, because that's
the one that spreads whenever it's given that kind of fork in the road. And so this is what
happened in 1918. The virus started off extremely deadly. It blew through an enormous chunk of the
population, probably 60 to 70% of all the people in the world. And then it disappeared for a while.
Then it turned up in pigs, and it was a pig virus
for a while. And then when enough humans who'd never had the virus were born, it reappeared in
people. But it reappeared as the H1N1 seasonal flu, the one that we know about as one of the
seasonal flus every year. But that virus became less lethal and more transmissible. And basically all viruses do that. And we might
be beginning to see the very first hints of that happening with this virus.
So if I'm in Texas or Arizona right now, and I'm testing positive for COVID-19,
it sounds quite likely that I've gotten the Italian mutation of this virus, right?
And that means I'm quite likely to spread it to somebody else
and not have the most horrible symptoms.
So does that partly help explain why infection rates are rising so rapidly in the U.S.?
Well, infection rates are rising rapidly in the U.S.
more because of human behavior than because of any changes in the virus.
I think it's wishful thinking to think that this virus is not dangerous.
It's really dangerous, and it's highly transmissible.
But because the Italian version of the virus spreads more effectively, that does suggest that the virus is becoming better at doing the thing it was designed to do, which is to
infect lots and lots of people. Yes. But I mean, the Italian version versus the Wuhan version isn't
the dead end. There are going to be many more mutations. It mutates every two weeks. There may
be other mutations turning up in the virus that turn out to be important. And we may call those
the Texas strain or the California strain or whatever, but we don't know them yet.
There's a lot of disagreement about this.
This is among scientists there, you know, as to whether or not it really is more transmissible.
And there's zero agreement that it's not even really any thought that it's less dangerous.
That completely remains to be seen.
We'll be right back.
So, Don, what is the next big new understanding we have into the virus at this point?
Well, there's more and more confirmation that you are much safer outdoors than you are indoors.
There's a study in China that looked at 318 clusters of transmission, and only one case involved outdoor transmission, and that was between two neighbors who had a long conversation with each other.
And there's recently been another study from Japan that suggests that your chances of getting the virus indoors are 20 times as high as it would be outdoors.
And what are these studies finding about why exactly that is?
I mean, I think we all have some understanding that when you're outside, the virus is just going to disperse and become more diffuse. Is that as complicated as it is? Well, there's always a little bit of wind outside. I mean, humidity
also makes droplets fall out of the air, but mostly it's the wind. And when people talk within
a few feet of each other, especially when they talk loud or when they laugh or when
they sing or shout or do anything like that, you put out this kind of invisible mist of little tiny
droplets that spews out of your mouth and sort of hangs around your head, but it also drifts
towards the other person. And so you're sitting inside each other's droplet cloud. And those
little tiny droplets, even if you're not feeling
the other person, in effect, spitting on your face, that droplet cloud can hold enough virus
to transmit the disease from one person to the other. And indoors, when there's no windows open,
it can sort of drift through the room, more or less at head level, and go past one person after
another at a cocktail party or inside a bar or like that,
and each person inhaling a little bit of that droplet cloud until the disease is spread to 20, 30, 40 people.
Whereas outdoors, the breeze just blows that away.
So standing six feet away outdoors, even without masks, is considered safe.
This is the idea that the virus becomes aerosolized,
and you're saying that indoors,
that poses a very significant danger.
Outdoors, because of wind, nowhere near as much.
Yeah, that's right.
So if being outdoors is less risky
and it's now been clinically shown,
I wonder if that explains something
you mentioned the last time that we spoke,
which is that you did not have a tremendous amount of fear that these protests that have occurred all over the United States over race and policing, that they would be a major source of infection.
And is that because they occurred outdoors? And is it so far the case that they haven't led to a meaningful spike in infections?
they haven't led to a meaningful spike in infections.
We have not seen any big spike in infections in the cities where most of the protests took place.
So it looks like they didn't lead to a lot of transmission.
That doesn't imply that everything is safe
just because it's outdoors.
The important thing is how far apart
people are when they're outdoors. So sitting right next to somebody else in front of a stage
at Mount Rushmore, for example, where the chairs are zip-tied together is not safe.
Masks or no masks, you still really want to try to keep six feet distance.
Donald, a couple of moments ago, you mentioned the danger of being indoors because of this
aerosolized virus mist that is not as great a danger outdoors.
But I want to linger on this question of the indoors for a moment, because the more I think
about it, that aerosolized mist would seem to make any indoor activity inherently dangerous. I wonder if that's an
accurate assessment. Yes. I mean, we've seen transmission of virus to large numbers of people
in funerals, in choir practices, at birthday parties, inside bars, in business meetings,
virtually any kind of indoor environment
you can imagine, there have been super spreader events. There may be ways to eventually make
indoor spaces safer. There's going to be no way to make them completely safe. And all this talk
about what's safe to do indoors brings us to really the most important question,
which is the most important indoor space we want to get functioning again, which is schools. Can
kids go to school safely? And again, the science isn't firm yet, but there are more and more hints that it may be safe or pretty safe to open the schools in the fall, especially for very young kids.
There's growing evidence that kids are not big transmitters of the virus to adults.
Denmark opened its schools in April, did not see a big spike up in cases.
Finland opened its schools in May, did not see a big spike up in cases. Finland opened its schools in May, did not see a big
spike up in cases. Even from the beginning in China, the Chinese said, you know, every time
they looked at clusters in families, almost never did they see a case where the child,
particularly the youngest child, was the one who introduced the virus into the family. Usually it
was parent infecting the kids, not the other way around.
We know that kids are big transmitters of flu viruses, and they do it because they cough and
sneeze like crazy. But if the biggest symptom that they're getting is inflammation rather than
coughing and sneezing, and that's the case, kids tend to get more sort of cranky, inflammatory,
unpleasant manifestations of the disease rather than something that looks like a cold.
Then it would make sense that that might be a reason why they're not big transmitters.
And what does this new insight about kids being less likely to transmit mean for the teachers who are going to stand or sit in front of them all day?
Does it mean that an adult teacher in a school is pretty safe teaching,
or does it not mean that at all?
I don't think we know the answer to that yet.
I mean, schools, you're bringing together a lot of kids,
but schools also bring together a lot of adults, teachers, staff, parents,
picking up the kids, things like that.
So schools are not going to be completely safe under any circumstances. But opening schools is so important to society, much more important
than opening restaurants, much more important than opening movie theaters. It probably needs
to be done really carefully, not just all back into the classroom, 30 kids to a classroom at all,
but it looks like it could be done. And that's really important because it's important for the kids,
for their development, for their feeding,
for their socialization.
And it's also important for the parents.
Parents can't go back to work
if they're stuck at home with their kids.
So it's a crucial part of getting both the economy going
and just the health of kids and health of parents.
So of all the insights that you have shared today,
this one seems like the silver lining, that reopening schools may be a somewhat safe undertaking.
Yeah, and that would be very good news for us.
Because if I'm being candid, everything else you have said sounds pretty bad, right?
I mean, it seems to be vascular, not respiratory, so it's going to be easy to miss symptoms.
It seems it's becoming more transmissible through mutations, right?
And the indoors presents very significant threats for non-kids because of this aerosolized mist.
And once the temperature drops, which it will do in a few months, and tens of millions of us are suddenly stuck indoors, then we're in for a lot
of trouble. Yeah. And the number of cases per day could rise well over 100,000 if we're not careful.
So yeah, I guess it's mostly bad news. Sorry. I'm hoping that the fact that the virus is becoming
more transmissible also means that it will become less lethal, which is good news.
But it hasn't done that yet.
So more transmission of a virus that's already bad is not a good thing, no question about it.
And all these things that we have just talked about would also seem to reinforce the need not just for social distancing, but for these government-mandated lockdowns, right? I mean, specific requirements
that say, don't go to a bar, don't go to a restaurant. And those will become even more
urgent as the warm weather yields to cold weather. Yeah. I mean, we have to realize we are just in
the opening phases of this pandemic. I mean, this is the second inning and there's still
more than 120,000 people dead. So we are doing the dance in, dance out of various forms of lockdown,
but we need to get to the point where we're all basically dancing to the same music, where all
governors accept the notion that when they have a problem that's getting out of control in their state, they react quickly.
And if they do that, they will save lives of their own citizens.
And I think we're beginning to see that in places like Texas, places like Arizona, places like Florida.
The governors have made major about faces in the last couple of weeks.
And they're getting the science that the thing you do today doesn't produce good effects until a month from today, because the people who got infected yesterday
are the ones who are going to be in your hospital three weeks from now. So they're beginning to
catch on, but we need to arrive at sort of a common understanding that we don't all have to
move in lockstep as a nation, but at the crucial moments, we need to take similar steps to save
lives. Thank you, Donald. We appreciate it.
Thank you. I was glad to be here.
We'll be right back. There is a new far-left fascism that demands absolute allegiance.
In a pair of back-to-back speeches over the weekend,
President Trump delivered harsh attacks against what he called
the radical far-left forces who are protesting police brutality
and tearing down monuments to America's racist past,
describing them as a threat to American values and heritage.
If you do not speak its language, perform its rituals, recite its mantras, and follow its commandments,
then you will be censored, banished, blacklisted, persecuted, and punished.
It's not going to happen to us.
The Times reports that the speeches,
delivered in front of Mount Rushmore and the White House,
signaled that Trump would seek once again
to exploit racial and cultural divisions
in an effort to win re-election.
I am here as your president to proclaim before the country and before the world,
this monument will never be desecrated. These heroes will never be defaced.
Their legacy will never, ever be destroyed. Their achievements will never be forgotten.
And Mount Rushmore will stand forever
as an eternal tribute to our forefathers
and to our freedom.
Neither event enforced social distancing rules,
and both were held despite pleas from public health officials
that they be canceled to avoid spreading the coronavirus.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.