STAMFORD, CONNECTICUT - MAY 5: A nurse draws blood for a COVID-19 antibody test from Guatemalan immigrant Junior as his father Marvin looks on at a clinic on May 5, 2020 in Stamford, Connecticut. They were also re-tested for COVID-19 to see if they are now negative, a month after getting sick from coronavirus. Marvin's wife Zully, also sick with COVID-19, gave birth to Marvin's son Neysel on April 2. Hospital staff performed an emergency C-section to save the child and Zully was put on a ventilator. Her baby, Neysel could not go home, as his father Marvin and brother Junior were COVID-19 positive and quarantined there. After several weeks in the hospital, Zully responded well to antibody blood plasma transfusions and was able to return home. The infant is in the temporary care of elementary school teacher Luciana Lira. The K-5 Bilingual /ESL instructor, who teaches Junior at Hart Magnet Elementary in Stamford, will continue caring for the baby until his family tests COVID-negative, and they can all be reunited. The Stamford non-profit Building One Community (B1C) immigrant resource center is assisting the family during this time. John Moore/Getty Images/AFP
Cd. Victoria, Tamaulipas.- En Tamaulipas siguen los contagios en recién nacidos así como en menores de edad; una niña de pocos meses de nacida es reportada en Matamoros con COVID-19, al igual que un niño de 13 años en Mante y en Tampico un niño de 12 y otro de 14 años han sido también contagiados.
La secretaria de Salud, Gloria Molina Gamboa, afirma que el riesgo de contagio por COVID-19 sigue siendo alto, en el último reporte se confirman 195 casos y 20 fallecimientos asociados a la enfermedad, por lo que insistió en reforzar las medidas de protección sanitaria al salir de casa.
Con la última actualización, la cifra oficial asciende a 25,742 positivos acumulados, de los cuales 20,791 se han recuperado y 1,941 han sido defunciones.
Molina Gamboa pidió a la población no bajar la guardia y ser ciudadanos responsables, hacer uso del cubrebocas, evitar aglomeraciones y mantener la sana distancia con otras personas para continuar la desaceleración de la transmisión del COVID-19.