Coronavirus news and updates: Does Florida’s spike in cases make it a new ‘epicenter’?; mask rules on airplanes from the FAA – USA TODAY

How does coronavirus enter the body, and why does it become fatal for some compared to just a cough or fever for others? USA TODAY

As several states start to see a surge in COVID-19 cases since reopening, Ohio has not.

Ohio has gradually lifted its stay-at-home order over the past six weeks. The result: a plateau in newly reported cases and a decline in hospitalizations, both reported and estimates of people currently hospitalized. The trend in New York is alsolookinggood right now.

Florida, meanwhile, has had a noteworthy increase. Critics are saying Gov. Ron DeSantis is letting the outbreak get out of control but he is attributing the rise to more testing among low-risk individuals. He says he wont roll back reopening efforts.

CNN takes it a step further. They talked to an expert who said the state has the makings of becoming the "next large epicenter."

By the numbers:The coronavirus isn't going away anytime soon. Confirmed cases in the United States are more than 2.1 million, according to the Johns Hopkins University dashboard. America's death toll is nearing118,000. Globally, there are more than 8.4 million confirmed cases and almost450,000 people have died.

We want to hear your stories. Tell us how the pandemic has affected your life by recording a short audio clip for the Corona Diaries project.

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What we're reading

FYI:Employers cannot require COVID-19 antibody testing for employees returning to work, the EEOC says, but they can require other things of you. Read more from USA TODAY's Jessica Guynn.

'Smoke and mirrors':Coronavirus infections at meatpacking plants have risen from under 5,000 cases at the end of April to more than 24,000. President Donald Trump's meatpacking order has failed to keep workers safe, a USA TODAY investigation finds.

Can HIV research help find an answer? Researchers are diving deep into human genetics, hoping to find clues that might explain why many people brush off COVID-19 without even knowing they have it, while others are hospitalized or even die from the disease. Read more.

Can dogs sniff out coronavirus? Unclear, but USA TODAY's fact check team finds a claim that researchers are looking at dogs as a possible candidate to detect the disease is indeed true.

Please call for help if you need it.Thousands of anxious, stressed, isolated and uncertain callers are flooding helplines nationwide. They are teenagers and senior citizens. They have lost jobs, homes and relatives. Some express suicidal thoughts or fears that their positive COVID-19 test is a death sentence. Others reach out in the throes of a panic attack.Read more.

Want more advice on how to cope? Sign up for USA TODAY's newsletter: Staying Apart, Together.

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Contributing: Jackie Borchardt, Cincinnati Enquirer; John Kennedy and Zac Anderson, Palm Beach Post

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Coronavirus news and updates: Does Florida's spike in cases make it a new 'epicenter'?; mask rules on airplanes from the FAA - USA TODAY

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