KEY POINTS
  • The Department of Health and Human Services said the rate of deaths from the coronavirus in the United States should begin to fall in the "next couple of weeks."
  • The seven-day rolling average of coronavirus infections is beginning to drop, and U.S. health officials predict hospitalizations will go down next week and mortality rates will follow in about two weeks, Adm. Brett Giroir, an assistant secretary for health at HHS, said.
  • "Nobody's letting up their foot from the gas," he added. "If we throw caution to the wind, go back to the bars, this will all go into reverse."
An employee wearing a protective mask cleans a men's room door at a Bloomingdale's store in New York, June 22, 2020. stores.

The Department of Health and Human Services said Thursday that the rate of deaths from the coronavirus in the United States should begin to fall in the "next couple of weeks."

The seven-day rolling average of coronavirus infections is beginning to drop, and U.S. health officials predict hospitalizations will go down next week and mortality rates will follow in about two weeks, Adm. Brett Giroir, an assistant secretary for health at HHS, said during a press briefing with reporters.