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COVID-19 updates: US has 1st day since November with fewer than 100K new cases

The U.S. reported just over 96,000 newly confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Sunday.

Last Updated: February 9, 2021, 6:46 AM EST

A pandemic of the novel coronavirus has now infected more than 105 million people worldwide and killed over 2.3 million of them, according to real-time data compiled by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.

Latest headlines:

Here's how the news developed this week. All times Eastern.
Feb 02, 2021, 7:26 PM EST

COVID-19 death toll tops 17,000 in California's hard-hit Los Angeles County

The number of people in Los Angeles County who have died from COVID-19 has surpassed 17,000.

On Tuesday, the county's public health department reported 205 new fatalities from the disease for a total of 17,057.

Los Angeles County has confirmed more COVID-19 cases than any other county in the United States -- and more than twice as many as Illinois' Cook County, the second-highest, according to data complied by Johns Hopkins University. 

The Martin Luther King Hospital emergency entrance is a hub of activity on Jan. 27, 2021, in Los Angeles.
Jim Ruymen/UPI via Shutterstock

Los Angeles County surpassed 10,000 COVID-19 deaths on Dec. 30 -- adding more than 7,000 new fatalities in a little over a month. By comparison, there were 7,000 COVID-19 deaths reported between February and October, according to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health.

Nearly half of all COVID-19 deaths in the county -- 8,405 -- were among Hispanic/Latino residents, according to the health department.

The county is continuing to make progress in reducing transmission, the health department said, with 3,763 new confirmed cases reported on Tuesday. Though that number is "substantially higher than the number of cases we saw in September," when there were fewer than 1,000 daily new cases, according to the health department.

ABC News' Bonnie McLean contributed to this report.

Feb 02, 2021, 6:35 PM EST

US shipping 1 million vaccine doses directly to pharmacies next week 

The U.S. government will begin shipping 1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines directly to select pharmacies next week, Jeff Zients, White House coordinator on COVID-19, announced Tuesday.

The doses will go to 6,500 pharmacies on Feb. 11 -- and are on top of the 10.5 million doses already scheduled to be delivered next week, Zients said. 

Pharmacist John Forbes gives the Moderna GOVID-19 vaccine to Meghan Bohlander, a physician's assistant, at the Medicap Pharmacy in Urbandale, Iowa, Jan. 5, 2021.
Jack Kurtz/ZUMA Wire via Newscom

The participating pharmacies include:

-Walgreens (including Duane Reade)
-CVS Pharmacy, Inc. (including Long’s)
-Walmart, Inc. (including Sam’s Club)
-Rite Aid Corp.
-The Kroger Co. (including Kroger, Harris Teeter, Fred Meyer, Fry’s, Ralphs, King Soopers, Smiths, City Market, Dillons, Mariano’s, Pick-n-Save, Copps, Metro Market)
-Publix Super Markets, Inc.
-Costco Wholesale Corp.
-Albertsons Companies, Inc. (including Osco, Jewel-Osco, Albertsons, Albertsons Market, Safeway, Tom Thumb, Star Market, Shaw’s, Haggen, Acme, Randalls, Carrs, Market Street, United, Vons, Pavilions, Amigos, Lucky’s, Pak n Save, Sav-On)
-Hy-Vee, Inc.
-Meijer Inc.
-H-E-B, LP
-Retail Business Services, LLC (including Food Lion, Giant Food, The Giant Company, Hannaford Bros Co, Stop & Shop)
-Winn-Dixie Stores Inc. (including Winn-Dixie, Harveys, Fresco Y Mas)

ABC News' Anne Flaherty contributed to this report.

Feb 02, 2021, 2:28 PM EST

7.8% of US population has had at least 1 vaccine shot

Twenty-six million people in the United States -- which is 7.8% of the country's population -- have received one or more doses of COVID-19 vaccines, according to a report from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

People wait in line in a Disneyland parking lot to receive Covid-19 vaccines on the opening day of the Disneyland Covid-19 vaccination "super Point-of-Dispensing" (POD) site, in Anaheim, Calif.
Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images, FILE

COVID-19 cases and hospital admissions are continuing to decline nationally, while adult intensive care unit occupancy rates and deaths remain high in several states.

The country's seven-day average for new COVID-19 hospital admissions has dropped from a peak of 16,485 on Jan. 9 to 11,369 -- a 31% decline, the report said.

Patients rest in a hallway in the overloaded Emergency Room area at Providence St. Mary Medical Center on Jan. 27, 2021 in Apple Valley, Calif.
Mario Tama/Getty Images

California, Texas, Georgia, Alabama and Oklahoma are the only states where ICU occupancies are above 85%, the report said.

ABC News’ Brian Hartman and Josh Margolin contributed to this report.

Feb 02, 2021, 1:21 PM EST

Fauci says next 6 weeks will be 'full-court press' on virus variants

Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to U.S. President Joe Biden, said new, more contagious variants of the novel coronavirus are the top concern in the country right now and that the next six weeks will be critical.

"We're going to be doing … a full-court press on non-pharmacologic interventions [like masks] as well as getting as much vaccine out as we possibly can," Fauci, who is also the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said at the International Aids Society conference on Tuesday.

In this Jan. 21, 2021, photo, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, speaks with reporters in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, D.C.
Alex Brandon/AP, FILE

"It's a very stressful situation ... when you have that much virus circulating, you're going to get a lot of mutations, no doubt about it," he added. "It's almost a race of trying to suppress the level of replication before we get so many accumulation of both the South African and other mutants as well as mutants of our own."

ABC News’ Cheyenne Haslett contributed to this report.

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