U.S. Election Day Renews Record of Coronary Pneumonia Diagnosis Before President Inauguration May Add 140,000 New Coronary Deaths

  The latest data from Johns Hopkins University shows that there were 91,530 new confirmed cases of new coronary pneumonia in the United States on November 3 Presidential Election Day, the second highest record ever.

As of now, the United States has an average of 86,300 confirmed cases of new coronary pneumonia. 21 states reported on November 3 that the number of confirmed cases increased within seven days and reached a new high. 36 states reported that the hospitalization rate of new coronary patients increased by at least 5%. Especially serious, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, New Mexico, Ohio, South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin, Wyoming and other states all have record hospitalization rates .

  The University of Washington Institute of Health Indicators and Evaluation predicts that the rising hospitalization rate may indicate that another 140,000 people in the United States will die from the new crown pneumonia before the president’s inauguration day on January 20 next year.

(CCTV reporter Liu Xiaoqian)