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Covid Live Updates: Biden to Announce 500 Million More Tests and Military Help for Hospitals

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Officials said the teams would assist Michigan, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio and Rhode Island. The Australian Open will operate at significantly reduced spectator capacity.
Officials said the teams would assist Michigan, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio and Rhode Island. The Australian Open will operate at significantly reduced spectator capacity. Biden is set to announce the purchase of 500 million more tests for Americans. Teachers across France stage a one-day walkout over Covid rules. The police in China detain a testing lab official on suspicion of helping spread the virus. Iraq plans to bar unvaccinated people from entering the country. The Australian Open must again limit spectators, but some matches could be full. U.S. college enrollment dropped again in the fall of 2021, despite the arrival of vaccines. ‘The Daily’ hears from teachers, students and parents about the Chicago schools standoff. President Biden on Thursday will direct his staff to purchase an additional 500 million coronavirus tests for distribution to Americans, doubling the government’s previous purchase as his administration seeks to respond to the highly contagious Omicron variant, White House officials said. The announcement, which is set to come when Mr. Biden delivers remarks on the pandemic, brings to 1 billion the total number of tests to be given away free of charge. Officials said the additional tests are being ordered to meet future demand. But it is unclear when the tests will be available. Mr. Biden announced the first batch of 500 million tests just before Christmas, and the first batch from that announcement will not start being delivered until later this month, according to White House officials. Details about how Americans can request those tests, including a government-run test website, are slated to be unveiled on Friday. White House officials did not say when the new batch of 500 million tests will be manufactured and ready for distribution. The announcement about tests comes as the president also plans to announce on Thursday that the administration is sending military medical personnel to six states, the beginning of a deployment of 1,000 service members to help hospitals deal with a surge in cases from the Omicron variant, White House officials said. Mr. Biden is scheduled to appear alongside Lloyd J. Austin III, the defense secretary, and Deanne Criswell, the director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, at the White House to detail the teams heading to hard-hit communities across the country. Mr. Biden said late last month that he would be tapping the military to help hospitals early in January. Officials said the new teams of doctors, nurses and other medical personnel would begin arriving at hospitals in Michigan, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio and Rhode Island. They said the teams would help triage patients arriving at hospitals, allowing short-staffed emergency departments to free up space. The deployments are part of the Biden administration’s efforts to tackle the latest surge of cases caused by the highly contagious Omicron variant. As it has surged, so have new cases, reaching more than 780,000 a day across the country. The number of Americans hospitalized with Covid-19 has hit a record high of about 142,000. Mr. Biden is also expected to make additional announcements on Thursday about the administration’s efforts to handle the pandemic. For Mr. Biden, the inability to get control of the pandemic has helped drag down his approval ratings as he enters his second year in office. His aides are intent on publicly communicating their efforts to deal with the virus. Since Thanksgiving, when Omicron was first discovered in South Africa, the administration has sent over 800 military and emergency personnel to 24 states, tribes and territories, officials said, not counting the personnel Mr. Biden is set to announce on Thursday. In addition, more than 14,000 National Guard members have been activated in 49 states to help at hospitals with vaccinations, testing and other medical services, officials said. Those deployments have been paid for by the American Rescue Plan, a law that Mr. Biden championed at the beginning of his term. Officials said there would likely be further deployments of military medical personnel in the days ahead as the country continues to struggle with the pandemic. — Michael D. Shear Teachers across France staged a one-day walkout on Thursday to protest changing Covid testing rules that they say have disrupted classes and are now too lax to protect against the Omicron variant that is tearing across the nation. Many teachers’ unions also planned protest marches, with one of the largest expected to start in Paris on Thursday afternoon. The Education Ministry said that nearly 40 percent of elementary-school teachers and nearly a quarter of secondary-school teachers were on strike, although the unions put those figures much higher. The ministry did not say how many schools were closed for the day, but one of the biggest unions said that it expected about half of elementary schools to close because of the walkout. The stop-work action, which most of the country’s teaching unions supported, posed a serious challenge for President Emmanuel Macron’s government, which has taken pride in keeping its schools open longer than many other European countries during the pandemic. “I fundamentally believe the choice that we made to keep schools open is the right choice,” Mr. Macron said at a news conference on Tuesday. But the policies put in place to keep schools open have come at a cost. The government set up complex testing rules meant to spare whole classes from being sent home or entire schools from having to shut down over a small number of positive cases. Officials then changed the rules twice in a matter of days, confusing millions of parents and teachers. The testing protocols led to snaking lines of exasperated parents and children standing in the cold outside pharmacies and medical laboratories.

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