COVID-19 updates: American Airlines to require employee vaccinations

The airline's CEO and president informed employees in a letter Friday.

The United States has been facing a COVID-19 surge as the more contagious delta variant continues to spread.

More than 700,000 Americans have died from COVID-19 while over 4.7 million people have died from the disease worldwide, according to real-time data compiled by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

Just 65% of Americans ages 12 and up are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to data from the CDC.


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Hospitalized kids at critical level in Ohio

Ohio has the nation's second-highest total of pediatric COVID-19 hospitalizations.

As of Wednesday morning, more than 210 children were hospitalized with COVID-19 in the state.

Children appear to be getting sicker than at previous points in the pandemic, according to front-line workers, particularly adolescents who have not been vaccinated.

Dayton Children's Hospital is among those impacted. Hospital officials say they've seen a record number of patients since the end of the summer.

"[It's] pretty hard to keep our heads above water, day in and day out," charge nurse Will Andres told ABC News.

Another concerning trend, doctors say, is the number of children who are forced to stay alone in the hospital because their parents are also battling COVID-19.

Michele Nadolsky, a clinical team leader in the emergency room, added, "One of our biggest concerns is what's going to happen in six months to a year from now, after [the] child has recovered from the acute illness of COVID-19, and what kind of symptoms or long-term effect is it going to have on them."

-ABC News' Arielle Mitropoulos


Former CDC director warns against government shutdown during pandemic

A government shutdown would sideline important cancer and infectious disease research at the CDC amid the pandemic, former CDC director Tom Frieden told ABC News.

Frieden led the CDC during the Obama administration and through the 16-day government shutdown in 2013.

"Although people who are directly responding to a pandemic would be exempt from furlough, it harms the rest of the agency and makes it harder to do everything ... whether it's answering emails, responding to requests, helping to investigate problems. It has a dampening effect on the agency being to able to do its job protecting Americans," he said.

"The staff at the CDC have basically been fighting the pandemic for 18 months. This would add insult to injury," Frieden said. "We had to furlough people who were working on prevention of cervical and breast cancer ... on the prevention of heart attacks and strokes ... on people collecting data on the health of Americans. And all of that makes people less safe and corrodes agency morale."

-ABC News' Ben Siegel


CDC urges pregnant women to get vaccinated

The CDC on Wednesday issued an urgent health advisory to try to increase vaccinations among women who are pregnant, recently pregnant or may become pregnant.

Just 31% of pregnant people have been vaccinated, the CDC said.

As of Monday, pregnant people accounted for 125,000 COVID-19 cases and 161 deaths, the CDC said.

"Cases of COVID-19 in symptomatic, pregnant people have a two-fold risk of admission into intensive care and a 70 percent increased risk of death," the CDC said.

The agency said it's calling "on health departments and clinicians to educate pregnant people on the benefits of vaccination and the safety of recommended vaccines."


About 118 million Americans remain unvaccinated

Approximately 118 million Americans remain completely unvaccinated, including 70 million over the age of 12, according to federal data.

On Wednesday, the U.S. is likely to reach a significant vaccine milestone of 200 million adults vaccinated with at least one dose.


Alaska currently has the country's highest infection rate with daily cases up by nearly 2,500% since mid-July, according to federal data.

West Virginia, once a model for its vaccine rollout, now has more hospitalized patients than at any point in the pandemic.

But states including Florida, Mississippi, Louisiana and Georgia appear to be improving, federal data show.

Nationwide, around 79,000 people are hospitalized, down by more than 20% since the beginning of September. Even so, ICU capacities in several states, including Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Kentucky and Texas, remain at critical levels.


-ABC News' Arielle Mitropoulos