Several studies have suggested that the number of corona pandemic deaths in the United States will reach the threshold of 100 by next June, ruling out at the same time that the spread of infection in this country will stop during the summer, while the White House denied knowing these studies.

The New York Times published a document that it says belongs to an internal report of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and indicates that this government body expects a new spurt in infection by the middle of this month, with the number of daily deaths almost doubling in early June to reach 3,000 .

The number of victims has so far exceeded 68,000, and the rate of new daily injuries since the beginning of April has reached 30,000, which makes high figures inevitable.

In a statement to Agence France-Presse, Nicholas Reich, professor of biological statistics at the University of Massachusetts, said, "In my personal assessment, we will reach 100,000 deaths early June."

"We can get there sooner or later, but we notice between 5,000 and 10,000 deaths a week, and this is unlikely to change soon," Reich added.

Others estimate that the United States will cross the 100,000 mark by that date, based on two models released by Columbia University. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology expects to reach 113,000 deaths by that date.

"We will lose 75,000, 80,000, or 100,000 people," US President Donald Trump told Fox television, saying that stopping the country's economic wheel would have allowed the death of a million and a half million people "at least."

In response to a New York Times report, the White House confirmed that the document had not been brought up to Anthony Fawcci, Corona Virus Team Officer.

White House spokesman Jad Derry told local media that the expectations in the published document did not reflect any example of the data the team had analyzed.

He added that US President Donald Trump's guidelines for returning economic activities to work have adopted a scientific approach that has been approved by leading federal health and infectious disease experts.