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The number of people infected with the Zika virus in Florida has grown by ten, bringing the total to 14; on the 50th anniversary of a mass shooting at UT Austin, a new controversial gun law has gone into effect
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The number of people infected with the Zika virus in Florida has grown by ten, bringing the total to 14; on the 50th anniversary of a mass shooting at UT Austin, a new controversial gun law has gone into effect
There are now 10 new cases of locally-contracted Zika virus in Florida. Infectious diseases specialist at NYU Langone Dr. Daniel Eiras joins CBSN with more on the growing Zika virus concerns and how health officials may stop the spread.
Dr. Anthony Fauci of the NIH says pregnant women, no matter where they are, should take precautions to prevent contracting the Zika virus. This comes as the CDC issues a U.S. travel advisory, and 14 cases have been reported in Florida.
The number of people infected with the Zika virus in Florida has grown by ten, bringing the total to 14. On Monday, the CDC took the unusual step of issuing a travel advisory for the area where the virus has been transmitted by mosquitoes. David Begnaud reports from Miami.
The CDC has issued a statement warning pregnant women to avoid travel to part of the Miami area after 10 new cases of Zika virus were spread by mosquitoes there. CBS News correspondent David Begnaud joins CBSN with the latest.
In Florida, it is all but certain that four Zika cases came from local mosquitoes. Well over 1,600 travel-related cases are reported in the U.S. Meanwhile, Congress went on its summer recess without approving funds to fight Zika. Now Senate Democrats want members to cut their break short. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director Dr. Anthony Fauci joins "CBS This Morning" from Bethesda, Maryland, to discuss the Zika threat.
A South Florida neighborhood is now ground zero for Zika in America. Officials believe four people who tested positive for the virus were infected close to home. There are renewed calls for Congress to return from vacation and pass an emergency funding bill to prevent the virus from spreading. Marlie Hall shows us what officials in Florida are doing to fight Zika.
Mosquitoes have apparently picked up the Zika virus and are now spreading it in south Florida; It's been over a year since Steve Hartman helped his dad pack up move out of the family home for good.
CBS News' chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook has been warning for months about the inevitable occurence of local Zika transmissions. It seems that time has arrived in Florida. He weighs in on how Americans can protect themselves.
Mosquitoes have apparently picked up the Zika virus and are now spreading it in south Florida. There are four cases so far, the first in the U.S. transmitted locally. The state has now embarked on an extensive spraying program to wipe out as many mosquitoes as possible. David Begnaud reports.
Florida is now believed to be the first state in the U.S. to have cases of Zika virus locally transmitted by mosquitoes. Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, joins CBSN's Vladimir Duthiers with the latest.
Florida Gov. Rick Scott says four cases of Zika appear to have been spread locally by mosquitoes. CBS News medical contributor Dr. Tara Narula has the details.
Beginning Friday, one of Florida's largest blood banks will start testing for the Zika virus in every blood donation it receives. Meanwhile, parts of south Florida are being asked to stop collecting blood because of the latest Zika fears. David Begnaud reports on how disease experts are taking precautions and responding to the threats of the mosquito-borne illness.
The Food and Drug Administration has asked blood banks in Florida's Dade and Broward counties to stop collecting blood immediately. Officials are trying to stem the possibility of an outbreak of the Zika virus. David Begnaud reports.
A man was arrested in Orlando after cops mistook glaze from a Krispy Kreme donut for meth. CBSN's Reena Ninan has more details.
The Democratic National Convention has opened with the party chair resigning due to an email leak; Southern California fire crews faced a fourth day of relentless flames on Monday
Terrorism is not suspected in a deadly shooting at a club in Fort Myers, Florida Sunday night. Two people were killed and 17 were wounded. Most of the victims were teenagers. Mark Strassmann is following this.
Two people were killed in a nightclub shooting in Fort Myers, Florida. Authorities detained three people in connection to the Club Blu shooting, which left more than a dozen injured.
Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the outgoing chair of the Democratic National Committee, was booed by protesters while speaking to the Florida delegation. She agreed to step down from the DNC after hacked emails were leaked, showing party officials appearing to oppose Bernie Sanders' candidacy in the primaries.
It's the final night of the Republican National Convention and Donald Trump will accept the nomination for president; on the final night, CBS News' John Dickerson and Bob Schieffer weigh in on the highs and lows of the Republican National Convention so far
The state of Florida is investigating a police shooting in North Miami. An officer shot and wounded an unarmed black man who was lying on his back with his hands in the air. The victim was a mental health worker trying to return an autistic patient to a group home. Jericka Duncan reports.
New video shows the moments leading up to the police shooting of Charles Kinsey, an unarmed man with his hands up in Florida. Caretaker Kinsey was in the street trying to coax an autistic man who wandered away back to a mental health center. From his hospital bed, Kinsey shares his account of how things unfolded. Vinita Nair reports.
Florida health officials are investigating what may be the first transmission of the Zika virus from a mosquito in the U.S. The patient does not appear to have traveled to a region with an outbreak of the virus. CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss the Miami case.
Florida is overrun with lionfish and the Sunshine State is trying to eat its way out of the invasion. Native to the south Pacific and Indian Oceans, they threaten Florida's underwater ecosystem. David Begnaud reports on how residents are waging war on the exotic fish with their stomachs.
Following terrorist attacks in Istanbul and Bangladesh this week, security concerns are on the minds of many Americans traveling this weekend; Shamayim Harris is a one-time school administrator who's now leading a group of mostly volunteers in the redevelopment of her Detroit-area neighborhood
President Trump, Vice President JD Vance and Erika Kirk spoke at Sunday's memorial service for Charlie Kirk, founder of Turning Point USA, at State Farm Stadium in Arizona.
Gary Cohn, IBM vice chair and director of the National Economic Council in the first Trump term, said for companies in a "very difficult environment," cutting down on the cost of labor is "the one lever they can pull."
Scientists hope genetically modified mice will curb the spread of Lyme disease. They headed to Nantucket — home to a large population of the mice, ticks and deer spreading Lyme — to pitch their idea.
In an interview with CBS News' "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," the French president pushed back on criticism for recognizing a Palestinian state.
More than 140 countries have already taken that step and more are expected to do so at the U.N. General Assembly this week, including France.
President Trump is renewing his call to reestablish a U.S. presence at Bagram, even saying "we're talking now to Afghanistan" about the matter.
Gabrielle formed on Wednesday over the central Atlantic Ocean and became a hurricane on Sunday. It's the seventh named storm of the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season.
One person is dead and several people were wounded during a shooting Saturday night at Sky Meadow Country Club in Nashua, New Hampshire.
Authorities in the Dominican Republic said they have confiscated cocaine transported by a speedboat that was destroyed recently by the U.S. Navy.