U.S. hospitalizations top 90,000 for the first time
Approximately 50 Americans are now dying every hour.
Adriana Diaz is a co-host of "CBS Mornings Plus," a third hour of "CBS Mornings" broadcast weekdays by several CBS-owned stations and simulcast on CBS News 24/7, CBS News and Stations' streaming news service. Diaz was named to the new role on "CBS Mornings Plus" in September 2024.
Previously, Diaz was anchor of the Saturday edition of the "CBS Weekend News" and a national correspondent. Her reporting breaking news and longform storytelling has been featured across all CBS News broadcasts and platforms, including the "CBS Evening News with Norah O'Donnell," "CBS Mornings," and CBS News 24/7.
At the start of 2023, Diaz and her team broke the story of the discovery of classified documents at a Washington think tank from President Biden's time as vice president.
Diaz has also interviewed key newsmakers, including landing Colin Kaepernick's only television interview about his book, "Colin Kaepernick: Change the Game," published after his social justice campaign that swept the nation. Diaz has also interviewed former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and U.S. Olympian Allyson Felix about prioritizing wellness and overcoming adversity.
Diaz also interviews newsmakers and conducted Colin Kaepernick's only television interview about his book, "Colin Kaepernick: Change the Game," published after his social justice campaign that swept the nation. Diaz also interviewed two pioneering women, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and U.S. Olympian Allyson Felix, about prioritizing wellness and overcoming adversity.
Diaz frequently conducts in-depth reporting on many of the most pressing issues facing communities of color locally and nationally. She regularly covers the gun violence epidemic, including interviewing Chicago gang members for a CBS docuseries about what they see as their fight for survival in some of the city's toughest neighborhoods
Diaz frequently conducts in-depth reporting on many of the most pressing issues facing communities of color locally and nationally. She regularly covers the gun violence epidemic, including interviewing Chicago gang members for a CBS docuseries about what they see as their fight for survival in some of the city's toughest neighborhoods.
She also reports on immigration and has chronicled the journeys of Central American families attempting to cross Mexico by foot to reach the United States. Recently, she reported on the busing of migrants from Texas to Chicago, overwhelming Chicago shelters and leading migrants to sleep on the floors of police stations.
Diaz spent a month covering the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, and was part of the CBS News team that won an Outstanding News Special Emmy for "39 Days," a primetime documentary about the Parkland student movement. She was also part of the network team that won an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for outstanding breaking news coverage of the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.
Diaz has also served as CBS News' Asia correspondent based in Beijing, where she used her Mandarin skills to report from China on U.S.-Chinese relations, Chinese politics, science and culture. Diaz reported from inside North Korea twice, documenting the country's political pageantry and isolation. Her Asia assignments also took her to the Korean Demilitarized Zone, South Korea, Japan, and Laos.
As a CBS Newspath correspondent, Diaz covered Pope Francis' visits to Brazil in 2013, Israel and the West Bank in 2014, Cuba in 2015 and Mexico in 2016. She was part of the first team dispatched to Havana to normalize relations with the U.S. in December 2014 and covered the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia.
Before joining CBS News, Diaz reported for Channel One News and hosted Yahoo's "Trending Now" web show. Earlier, Diaz was a financial analyst at Goldman Sachs working in Equity Sales and Trading.
She attended Princeton University, majoring in public and international affairs. She earned a master's degree in public affairs and public administration in a dual degree program at Columbia University and France's Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (Science Po).
A New York City native, Diaz attended Stuyvesant High School. She is also on the board of the Harmony Program, which provides music education to New York City students in underserved communities. Diaz was Miss New York USA 2006 and Miss New York Teen USA 2003. Her family is from the Dominican Republic, and she speaks Spanish, French, and Mandarin.
Approximately 50 Americans are now dying every hour.
By mid-December, hospitals could be overflowing with coronavirus patients in many parts of the country.
Wisconsin is facing one of the biggest COVID-19 surges in the country. Nearly a third of test results are now coming back positive and hospitalizations are up almost 40% in just two weeks.
The death toll is quickly approaching 230,000, according to Johns Hopkins University.
"I wish people would take this serious," a 73-year-old woman battling COVID-19 told CBS News.
Coronavirus hospitalizations are rising in 37 states, and rural hospitals are feeling the brunt of the fall surge.
The state of Wisconsin is setting records for new coronavirus cases, hospital admissions and deaths.
Two COVID-19 clinical trials were paused over possible safety concerns, but one doctor said these pauses are routine and reassuring.
The country is seeing roughly twice as many new cases today as it did at the start of April.
A 1923 Midwestern murder mystery film that was thought to be lost forever like many others has been found in a basement in Illinois, thanks in part to the coronavirus pandemic.
Data shows as many as 28 million people could be evicted in the comings months amid the coronavirus pandemic.
"These kids really came into this world against all odds," a new mother from Michigan said.
"We don't have the benefit of 'I should just stay home,'" a first-generation Mexican American tells CBS News of the need to make money during the pandemic.
Workers there tell CBS News they felt pressured to stay on the job — even after getting sick at the facility.
African Americans in Chicago account for more than 60% of COVID-19 deaths, though just 30% of the population.