COVID-19 updates: Elizabeth Warren tests positive

The senator says she's experiencing "mild symptoms."

As the COVID-19 pandemic has swept the globe, more than 5.3 million people have died from the disease worldwide, including over 806,000 Americans, according to real-time data compiled by Johns Hopkins University's Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

About 61.4% of the population in the United States is fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


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Hospitals stretched thin in Wisconsin, Michigan

In Wisconsin, only 4% of ICU beds are available.

"This is getting really scary," Dr. Jamie Hess, an emergency physician at the University of Wisconsin, told ABC News.

"We're really reaching a crisis point where we have more patients to take care of then we have beds in the hospital or staff to care for them," Hess said.

Michigan has been struggling through a similar surge for nearly three months, with the state reporting more than 6,500 new cases each day. On average, more than 500 patients are being admitted to hospitals each day.

"Where we are right now feels a lot like the first surge back in March of 2020," Erin Dicks, a nurse manager at MICU Henry Ford Hospital, told ABC News. "We don't have enough beds to be able to manage this."

Dicks said so many patients are young.

"I think one of the biggest frustrating pieces for my staff is that they look at this as, this is preventable -- people don't have to die here," Dicks said.

-ABC News' Arielle Mitropoulos


Harvard joins list of universities mandating boosters

Harvard University will require boosters for all eligible members of the community, school officials said Thursday.

Earlier this week, Harvard warned of an increase in cases, saying the rise can be attributed to social events following the Thanksgiving break.

Omicron is likely already on campus, university officials added.

Harvard joins a growing list of colleges and universities moving to require third doses next semester for those eligible. Other schools include Stanford, NYU, University of Notre Dame, Syracuse, Smith College and Wellesley College.

-ABC News' Arielle Mitropoulos


Illinois reports highest case number of the year

In Illinois, 11,858 new cases were reported on Thursday -- the highest daily case number of all of 2021, ABC Chicago station WLS reported, citing state health officials.

Illinois confirmed its second omicron case Wednesday, detected in a suburban Chicago resident. That person is asymptomatic and vaccinated, WLS reported.


CDC recommends opting for Pfizer or Moderna over J&J when there's a choice

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has signed off on its advisory committee's recommendation that people who have a choice should get an mRNA vaccine, either Pfizer or Moderna, over the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

The updated recommendation comes after a review of new CDC data on rare blood clots linked to the J&J vaccine.

"Today's updated recommendation emphasizes CDC's commitment to provide real-time scientific information to the American public," CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said in a statement. "I continue to encourage all Americans to get vaccinated and boosted."


NYU and Princeton move to cancel end-of-year events, hold exams online

School leaders at both New York University and Princeton University announced Wednesday that they will take steps to cancel end-of-year events and move winter exams online amid a surge in COVID-19 cases on their respective campuses.

"Given that we've seen an uptick in cases among undergraduates during the last 24 hours -- including suspected cases of the highly contagious Omicron variant -- we hope to avoid letting the final exam schedule interfere with students’ travel home for Winter Break," Princeton University's dean, Jill Dolan, and vice president for campus life, Rochelle Calhoun, said in a joint statement. "We certainly don’t want you remaining on campus in required isolation through the holidays."

All indoor gatherings with food and those where face coverings cannot be worn must be canceled or postponed at Princeton's New Jersey campus from Thursday through Jan. 7, according to the statement.

A statement from New York University's provost, Katherine Fleming, executive Vice President, Martin Dorph, and head of the COVID-19 prevention and response team, Dr. Carlo Ciotoli, said they "strongly encourage that final examinations and/or assessments be changed to remote/online format." All discretionary, non-essential, non-academic gatherings and events at the school's campus in New York City must be canceled "immediately," according to the statement.

"The continuous review of the data from our COVID-19 testing program has indicated a considerable acceleration in the rate of new cases in our community," they said. "It’s not a cause for alarm, but it is a cause for concern, caution, and appropriate actions."

NYU has also joined a growing list of colleges and universities across the nation that are requiring all eligible members of the school community, including faculty and students, to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and receive a booster shot ahead of the upcoming spring semester.

Meanwhile, officials at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, announced Tuesday that they have moved the campus into a "level red" alert after identifying evidence of suspected cases of the omicron variant in a "significant" number of the school's COVID-19 positive samples from students.

According to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the omicron variant is estimated to account for more than 13% of newly confirmed COVID-19 cases in the New York and New Jersey area -- the highest proportion of any region of the United States.

-ABC News' Chris Donato and Arielle Mitropoulos