Disneyland reopened on Friday and New York’s mayor predicted the big city will be up and running again at full strength by July 1, as the number of Americans fully vaccinated against COVID-19 closed in on 100 million.
Visitors
cheered and screamed with delight as the Southern California theme park swung
open its gates for the first time in 13 months in a powerful symbol of the U.S.
rebound, even though the self-proclaimed Happiest Place on Earth is allowing
only in-state guests for now and operating at just 25% capacity.
The reopening
and similar steps elsewhere around the country reflect increasing optimism as
COVID-19 deaths tumble and the ranks of the vaccinated grow — a stark contrast
to the worsening disaster in India and Brazil and the scant availability of vaccines
in many poor parts of the world.
While the
overall number of lives lost to COVID-19 in the U.S. has eclipsed 575,000,
deaths have plummeted to an average of about 670 per day from a peak of around
3,400 in mid-January.
As of Friday
morning, more than 99 million Americans, or over 38% of all adults, had been
fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
About 55% of adults had received at least one dose.
However, about
8% of those who have gotten one dose of either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine
have not returned for their second shot, officials said. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the
nation’s top infectious disease expert, said it is important to complete the
course to gain maximum protection against the coronavirus.
“Make sure you
get that second dose,” he said at a White House briefing.
CDC officials
also reported Friday that it was anxiety — not a problem with the shots — that
caused reactions in dozens of people at vaccine clinics in five states in early
April.
Many of the 64
people fainted or reported dizziness. Some became nauseated or vomited, and a
few had racing hearts, chest pain or other symptoms. None got seriously ill.
In New York,
Mayor Bill de Blasio said Thursday he expects to see COVID-19 restrictions
lifted and the city “fully reopen” by July 1. He cited rising vaccination rates
and decreasing hospitalizations.
“We are ready
for stores to open, for businesses to open, offices, theaters, full strength,”
he said on MSNBC.
However, New
York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has maintained throughout the crisis that such decisions
are his alone, and he said Thursday that he would like to lift restrictions
even sooner if possible.
“I don’t want
to wait that long. I think if we do what we have to do, we can be reopened
earlier,” he said.
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