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Fauci: Coronavirus could kill over 100,000 Americans

Fauci also said it's not yet time for social distancing guidelines to be pulled back.
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Dr. Anthony Fauci said Sunday that he anticipates the coronavirus could kill 100,000 to 200,000 Americans while infecting "millions" of others.

Speaking on CNN's "State of the Union," Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said, however, that he does not want to be held to that prediction because the outbreak of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, is "such a moving target."

Fauci's comments come as the much of the nation is shut down to contain the spread of the disease, which first appeared in China late last year. As of Sunday evening, about 139,000 coronavirus cases have been confirmed in the U.S., the highest total of any nation, with at least 2,400 deaths, according to figures compiled by NBC News.

Fauci was asked about President Donald Trump's remarks last week indicating that he would like to see the country back at full speed by Easter, which is just two weeks from Sunday, and that he would reconsider his administration's guidelines on social distancing this week.

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Speaking Sunday, Fauci said that how soon guidelines can begin to be relaxed depends on how many "rapid tests" — ones that can deliver results in less than an hour — can be made widely available across the country.

"To put a time on it, I don't know, it's going to be a matter of weeks. It's not going to be tomorrow, and it's certainly not going to be next week," Fauci said. "It's going to be a little bit more than that.

"We're a group, we're a task force, we're going to sit down and we're going to talk about it," Fauci added. "But obviously, what you see me describe, it's a little iffy there. So we'll take it as it comes, we'll look at it, and if we need to push the date forward, we will push the date forward."

On NBC's "Meet the Press," Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House's coronavirus response coordinator, said "no state, no metro area will be spared from the virus."

"Every metro area should assume that they will have an outbreak equivalent to New York," she said, pointing to the area with the highest number of confirmed cases so far.

Speaking on "Fox News Sunday," Dr. Tom Inglesby, director of the Center for Health Security at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said he doesn't believe Trump's Easter timeline is realistic.

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"I think as we've seen in Italy, for example, which is a number of weeks ahead of the United States in its epidemic, that even with very serious, very aggressive social distancing measures where people have been kept at home, schools have been closed, everyone is recommended not to leave their homes, that this disease has continued to spread, and it is causing national crisis," he said.

"So at this point, I think what we need to do is really stick with what other countries that have had more success have done which is — they've largely been in Asia: Singapore, Hong Kong, South Korea, China, Taiwan — they have put in place social distancing measures until they've gotten control of the epidemic convincingly," he said. "And at that point begun to try experiments with loosening it."

Inglesby said he believes the U.S. will get to that point, just not as soon as mid-April.

"Obviously, we need to as a country get to a point where people can go back to work, but if we go back to work too quickly, this epidemic is going to spread widely and aggressively," he said. "And we won't have a normal economy in that case, anyway."