New York health provider may have fraudulently obtained COVID-19 vaccine

The vaccine was then given to members of the public not yet eligible.

A pandemic of the novel coronavirus has now infected more than 80.2 million people worldwide and killed over 1.7 million of them, according to real-time data compiled by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.


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LA County reaches record level of hospitalizations

Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer updated residents on the jump in coronavirus cases and said that hospitals have seen a huge jump in numbers.

There are currently 5,709 currently hospitalized for COVID-19, which is the highest number of patients since the pandemic began, according to the health data. Roughly 21% of patients are in the Intensive Care Unit and 15% are on ventilators, Ferrer said.

She added that from Nov. 9 to Dec. 17, the average daily hospitalizations of people with COVID-19 increased by 481%.

"If we don’t change how we’re going to celebrate the winter holidays, we’ll experience a surge, on top of a surge, on top of a surge," Ferrer said.

The county recorded 56 new deaths, 11,271 new cases and has a 14% cumulative positivity rate.

-ABC News' Cammeron Parrish contributed to this report.


Virgin Atlantic says it will require UK travelers to test negative before departure

A representative from Virgin Atlantic told ABC News it will implement a new protocol for United Kingdom travelers that mandates a COVID-19 test before boarding flights to the U.S.

"With the health and safety of our customers and people always our number one priority, we will require all travelers to present evidence of a negative LAMP or PCR COVID-19 test, taken up to 72 hours prior to departure, including on-site at the airport," the representative said in a statement.

The new requirement goes into effect on Dec. 24.

The change comes after New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo called on international airlines to test passengers for the coronavirus before getting on a plane to the U.S. A variant of the virus has been discovered in Britain and prompted several countries to suspend travel from the U.K.

-ABC News' Nate Luna contributed to this report.


California stay-at-home orders will likely be extended

California’s stay-at-home orders -- currently in effect for 98% of the state’s population -- will likely be extended, Gov. Gavin Newsom said.

A three-week stay-at-home order was issued in a region of California when it fell below 15% intensive care unit capacity. The stay-at-home order can only be lifted when ICU capacity returns to above 15%.

Two of the five regions, Southern California and San Joaquin Valley, currently have 0% capacity.

The Bay Area and the Greater Sacramento area also under a stay-at-home order. Northern California is the state’s only region not under the order.

California has 17,190 coronavirus patients in hospitals -- a 63% increase in the last two weeks.

California has deployed 607 state workers to 75 health care facilities in 24 counties that were requesting extra assistance. Newsom said he has asked the Department of Defense for 10 teams of 20 health care workers, and he is also asking a team that’s been working in Imperial County to extend its stay until the end of January.

ABC News’ Matt Fuhrman contributed to this report.


Biden gets vaccinated

President-elect Joe Biden was administered the Pfizer vaccine on Monday afternoon at ChristianaCare Hospital in Delaware.

Dr. Jill Biden was vaccinated earlier on Monday.

Dr. Anthony Fauci is expected to get vaccinated Tuesday, according to the National Institutes of Health.

President Donald Trump has not been vaccinated because doctors wanted him to wait after he received monoclonal antibody treatment following his COVID-19 diagnoses, U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams said Monday.

"His doctors, who I've spoken with, wanted people to understand that if you have recently been given monoclonal antibodies, the FDA says you should wait several weeks before you get vaccinated,” Adams told reporters. “So the reason the president has not gotten vaccinated yet is because his doctors have advised him to wait."

ABC News' Ben Gittleson contributed to this report.


Increase in MIS-C seen in LA County

An increasing number of children are being infected with multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), according to a statement Saturday relased by Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors Chair Hilda L. Solis, supervisor to the First District.

"It is heartbreaking that every day, more than 14,000 Los Angeles County residents are testing positive for COVID-19. It is even more painful to see an increasing number of children being infected by MISC-C. There is a misconception that COVID-19 only impacts those who are older or those with underlying health conditions. At this point in the crisis, we can say for certain that COVID-19 causes severe consequences in people of all ages, including children, and even without underlying health conditions. In Los Angeles County, the Latinx community is bearing the brunt of COVID-19 and MISC-C cases," the statement read.

There have been 51 total cases of MIS-C in children, including one child death. All 51 children with MIS-C were hospitalized and nearly 50% of the children were treated in the intensive care unit. Of the children with MIS-C, 31% were under the age of 5 years old, 38% were between the ages of 5 and 11 years old, and 31% were between the ages of 12 and 20 years old. Latinx children account for nearly 73% of the reported cases, according to the statement.

Experts say the inflammatory syndrome resembles toxic shock syndrome and Kawasaki disease, itself a rare inflammatory disease typically affecting children under the age of 5, and has the potential to be deadly.

-ABC News' Matthew Fuhrman, Olivia Rubin and Soo Rin Kim