5:13 p.m.: Georgia issues shelter in place order

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced a shelter-in-place order for the entire state starting Friday.

The state currently has more than 4,600 confirmed coronavirus cases, and 139 deaths and Kemp noted 1 in 4 residents are likely asymptomatic or pre-symptomatic. The order will be in effect until April 13 and includes exemptions for buying groceries, getting medical supplies and essential services.

Kemp also said the state's kindergarten to 12th grade schools will be closed for the rest of the academic year.

4:50 p.m.: NYC needs 15,000 ventilators by end of April: Mayor

New York City -- the U.S. city hit hardest by the pandemic -- needs 15,000 ventilators, 65,000 medical beds and 20,000 ICU beds by the end of April, the mayor said.

\"What I want to see now is absolute seamlessness in terms of how supplies and equipment go into our hospitals and immediately get distributed where they're needed,\" Mayor Bill de Blasio said.

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Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters
PHOTO: U.S. Army National Guard personnel distribute boxes of free meals to residents in the East Harlem section of Manhattan during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease in New York, April 1, 2020.
>

\"There's also ongoing efforts to get personnel. This is a growing concern as we go forward, but again, one where we see a tremendous response,\" the mayor said. \"So many New Yorkers have volunteered, folks with medical training of all kinds.\"

As of Wednesday evening, 1,374 people had died in New York City due to COVID-19, and 45,707 patients contracted the disease, according to the city's health department.

As the number of cases rise, the city is setting up new hospital facilities from the USNS Comfort hospital ship to the Javits Center in Manhattan to 65 beds in Central Park to up to 350 beds at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens.

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Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images
PHOTO: A hearse backs into a refrigerated truck to pick up the bodies of the deceased outside of the Brooklyn Hospital on April 1, 2020, in New York.
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Meanwhile, the city's public hospitals are being transformed into all-ICU facilities amid the coronavirus pandemic, according to the city health system.

\"This virus is no match for the people of New York City,\" de Blasio said.

Former New York Police Commissioner James O’Neill is returning to the city to serve as a COVID-19 senior adviser, the mayor announced Wednesday.

O’Neill will oversee the supply and distribution of personal protective and medical equipment within city hospitals.

\"PHOTO:
Jefferson Siegel/Reuters
PHOTO: The first patient arrives at a newly constructed field hospital in the East Meadow of Central Park during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease in the Manhattan borough of New York, April 1, 2020.
>

Tune into ABC at 1 p.m. ET and ABC News Live at 4 p.m. ET every weekday for special coverage of the novel coronavirus with the full ABC News team, including the latest news, context and analysis.

3:40 p.m.: California schools closed for rest of the year

California's school campuses will remain closed for the rest of the academic year and the state will now turn to \"distance learning,\" Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday.

The governor announced a new partnership with Google to provide students with Chromebooks and internet.

\"Schools are closed but classes are in,\" he said.

Nearly every school district in the state has been surveyed to determine technology needs, officials said.

\"It's a challenge that we must meet\" for the state's six million students, said Tony Thurmond, the California state superintendent of public instruction.

\"PHOTO:
Orange County Register via ZUMA Press
PHOTO: Students and a parent wave to their teachers and staff from Wells Middle School as they drive through the neighborhood in Riverside, Calif., March 31, 2020.
>

The governor, a father of four, also acknowledged the extra stress the transition to home learning puts on parents, particularly mothers.

\"Deep respect and admiration to all the mothers out there, all the parents ... I know how difficult it is,\" Newsom said.

3 p.m.: West Virginia becomes 15th state to postpone primary

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice said the state's May 12 primary will now be pushed back to June 9 due to the coronavirus pandemic.

\"We’re still going to proceed ahead on our absentee ballots. At the end of the day, I want this to be the biggest turnout of all time,\" Justice said.

West Virginia is now the 15th state to postpone its primary, joining Alaska, Wyoming, Ohio, Georgia, Hawaii, Maryland, Connecticut, Indiana, Rhode Island, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Louisiana, Kentucky and New York, as well as Puerto Rico.

Global coronavirus cases climbed over 900,000 on Wednesday, just one day after the number of diagnosed cases topped 800,000.

2:30 p.m.: Global coronavirus cases top 900,000

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POOL/AFP via Getty Images
PHOTO: Medical staff install patients infected with the COVID-19 aboard a high speed train at a train station in Paris on April 1, 2020, as part of the evacuation of 36 patients in two separate trains towards hospitals of Brittany.
>

World Health Organization Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday he's \"deeply concerned about the rapid escalation and global spread of infection.\"

\"PHOTO:
Bernat Armangue/AP
PHOTO: Julian Fernandez Mascaraque, 59, attends the burial of his mother Rosalia Mascaraque, 86, during the coronavirus outbreak in Zarza de Tajo, central Spain, Wednesday, April 1, 2020.
>

\"Over the past five weeks, we have witnessed a near exponential growth in the number of new COVID-19 cases, reaching almost every country, territory and area,\" he said.

He noted that the death toll has more than doubled in the past week and projected that in the next few days \"we will reach 1 million confirmed COVID-19 cases, and 50,000 deaths.\"

\"PHOTO:
Georgi Licovski/EPA via Shutterstock
PHOTO: A man with protective mask carries disinfectant near the hotel which serves as a state quarantine for people that arrived from abroad during the snowfall in the center of Skopje, Republic of North Macedonia, April 1, 2020.
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WHO officials are also still gathering all available evidence about masks and continue to evaluate the potential use of masks more broadly to control COVID-19 transmission at the community level.

\"WHO recommends the use of medical masks for people who are sick and those caring for them,\" the director-general said, \"however, in these circumstances, masks are only effective when combined with other protective measures.\"

\"This is still a very new virus, and we are learning all the time,\" Dr. Tedros said.

He added that the WHO is continuing to work with governments and manufacturers to step up the production and distribution of personal protective equipment, including masks.

\"PHOTO:
Ng Han Guan/AP
PHOTO: Vendors prepare vegetables behind barriers surrounding a neighborhood in Wuhan in central China's Wuhan province on April 1, 2020.
>

1:35 p.m.: 5 who tested positive die at NJ nursing home

Those in nursing homes are especially vulnerable to the coronavirus. Among the nursing homes facing COVID-19 outbreaks is CareOne at New Milford in New Jersey, where five residents who tested positive have died, the center said.

As of Tuesday, 16 residents and six staff members had been diagnosed with the coronavirus, CareOne said.

\"We are actively testing patients and awaiting results, and screening at higher levels than CDC guidelines,\" CareOne said.

Other deaths at the nursing home are being investigated beyond the five who have already tested positive, CareOne added, but did not specify how many other deaths are being examined.

In New Jersey, 93 out of the state's 375 long-term care facilities are reporting at least one COVID-19 case, officials said Wednesday.

1 p.m.: Cuomo pushes for at-home tests

In New York state -- the hardest hit by the pandemic -- the death toll has climbed to 1,941, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Wednesday.

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Stephanie Keith/Getty Images
PHOTO: A pharmacist works behind plastic sheeting while wearing personal protective equipment in the Elmhurst neighborhood on April 1, 2020, in New York.
>

The second hardest-hit state is neighboring New Jersey, where 267 have died, said Cuomo.

The governor warned that the apex -- or top of the curve -- is projected to be roughly at the end of April. Cuomo referred to the apex as the top of a mountain where the \"next battle\" will be.

Over 83,000 people have tested positive in New York state. Of those, 12,000 patients are in hospital, including 3,000 in intensive care units, Cuomo said.

\"PHOTO:
Stephanie Keith/Getty Images
PHOTO: A medical worker speaks with people outside of Elmhurst Hospital on April 1, 2020, in New York.
>

Six-thousand have been discharged from hospitals, Cuomo said.

\"Anyone can get this disease. Relatively young people, strong people, people who take a lot of vitamin pills, people who go to the gym a lot,\" Cuomo said. \"There is no superhero who is immune.\"

The governor said rapid testing at home would be the best solution going forward.

\"Not only do you get up and get the economy running, you end the anxiety,\" Cuomo said.

\"PHOTO:
Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters
PHOTO: A patient is wheeled across as bridge between buildings inside Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease in New York, April 1, 2020.
>

Gov. Cuomo said his younger brother, CNN anchor Chris Cuomo, is \"doing fine enough\" after testing positive for the coronavirus on Tuesday morning.

\"He has a fever, he has chills, symptoms of basically a very bad flu,\" the governor said.

The governor admitted that the diagnoses scared him, calling his younger brother his best friend.

\"I couldn't protect my own brother ... he couldn't protect himself,\" he said.

But the governor commended the younger Cuomo, calling him \"gutsy\" for continuing to anchor his CNN show while quarantined in the basement, even on the same day as his diagnosis.

\"In some ways this can be very instructive,\" the governor said, to \"show the country what it means to have coronavirus\"

\"My pop would be proud. I love you little brother,\" Gov. Cuomo said.

The governor also announced Wednesday that he's closing down New York City playgrounds after residents failed to comply with social distancing rules.

\"PHOTO:
The New York Times via Redux
PHOTO: A desolate playground in the West Village neighborhood of Manhattan on March 27, 2020.
>

\"No density, no basketball games ... no violations of social distancing,\" he said. \"The NYPD has to get more aggressive.\"

Open spaces in New York City parks will remain available, he said.

12:21 p.m.: 10 charged for holding engagement party in violation of distancing orders

Ten Lakewood, New Jersey, residents have been charged for holding an engagement party Tuesday, disobeying the governor's executive order which bans social gatherings.

The couple who hosted the party at their home, along with eight guests, were charged with violating any rule or regulation adopted by the governor during a state of emergency, said Ocean County Prosecutor Bradley Billhimer and Lakewood Township Police Chief Gregory Meyer.

The couple who hosted the gathering were also charged with six counts of child engagement because six children were in attendance.

The engagement party marked the third day in a row for charges in Lakewood in connection to disobeying the executive order.

On Monday, two men were charged with maintaining a nuisance after they hosted a gathering of about 35 people, said police.

On Sunday, a couple was charged with five counts of child endangerment after their five children were at a gathering of about 40 to 50 people at their home.

11:40 a.m.: NFL agent's parents die 6 minutes apart

NFL agent Buddy Baker said his parents died six minutes apart from COVID-19.

The couple, married for 51 years, were in \"perfect health\" before contracting the virus, Baker said in a video posted to Twitter.

\"Hopefully this can be a catalyst for a change. Practice social distancing, wash your hands as regularly as you can and importantly stay at home,\" said Baker, who represents Washington Redskins running back Terry McLaurin and Indianapolis Colts tight end Jack Doyle, among others.

\"It's going to take all of us banding together and deciding we're gonna stop the spread of this virus,\" Baker said.

In loving memory of my mom and dad- please make the tough and right choice and help stop the spreading of this virus. pic.twitter.com/FqVEWjdscq

— Buddy Baker (@ESG_Baker) March 31, 2020

11:10 a.m.: Wimbledon canceled due to pandemic

The 2020 Wimbledon championships has been canceled due to the escalating worldwide coronavirus pandemic and will next be held from June 28 to July 11, 2021.

\"PHOTO:
Andy Rain/EPA via Shutterstock
PHOTO: A security guard patrols at the All England Lawn Tennis Club in Wimbledon, London, April 1, 2020.
>

Ian Hewitt, chairman of the All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club, said in a statement, \"This is a decision that we have not taken lightly, and we have done so with the highest regard for public health and the wellbeing of all those who come together to make Wimbledon happen.\"

\"It has weighed heavily on our minds that the staging of The Championships has only been interrupted previously by World Wars but, following thorough and extensive consideration of all scenarios, we believe that it is a measure of this global crisis that it is ultimately the right decision to cancel this year’s Championships,\" Hewitt said.

10:22 a.m.: United Kingdom death toll jumps by over 500 in 24 hours

The United Kingdom's death toll has climbed to a total of 2,352 -- an increase of 563 in the past 24 hours, the country's highest single-day rise in fatalities since the pandemic began.

This comes after the U.K.'s death toll jumped by 381 on Tuesday.

\"PHOTO:
Henry Nicholls/Reuters
PHOTO: Paramedics and an ambulance are seen outside the Excel Centre, London while it is being prepared to become the NHS Nightingale Hospital, as the spread of the coronavirus disease continues, in London, April 1, 2020.
>

Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Charles, Prince of Wales (who is first in line to the British throne) are both among the 29,474 people diagnosed with COVID-19 in the U.K.

What to know about the novel coronavirus:

9:45 a.m.: 1,400 NYPD members test positive for coronavirus

In hard-hit New York City, 1,400 members of the police department have tested positive for the coronavirus, says New York City Police Commissioner Dermot Shea.

\"PHOTO:
NurPhoto via Getty Images
PHOTO: NYPD officers prepare to disperse people who gathered to check out the USNS Comfort on March 31, 2020, in New York.
>

About 17% of the department -- 6,172 employees -- are now out sick, Shea said.

\"We are scrambling but that shouldn’t have a negative connotation,\" Shea told CNN. \"We’ve added a lot to our repertoire: reaching out to New Yorkers who need help, delivering food.\"

Despite the large percentage of sick calls, Shea said there are still plenty of cops on corners and in cars. He did concede the department is \"planning for all eventualities\" should the number of infections within the NYPD climb.

9:27 a.m.: FBI Academy suspends classes

While the FBI and other law enforcement agencies continue to insist their security posture has not been hindered by the spread of the coronavirus, the crisis has now led to a temporary pause in training classes for the bureau’s next generation of leaders at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia.

The FBI said training classes will resume \"when safe and appropriate as recommended by our chief medical officer.\"

8:02 a.m.: Spain's diagnosed cases top 100,000

The number of diagnosed cases of the novel coronavirus in Spain surpassed 100,000 on Wednesday.

The Spanish Ministry of Health recorded 7,719 newly diagnosed cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours, bringing the nationwide total to 102,136 -- an 8% increase.

\"PHOTO:
Manu Fernandez/AP
PHOTO: A member of Spain's Emergency Army Unit stands next to a bus carrying COVID-19 patients who are waiting to be transported from Gregorio Maranon hospital to a temporary hospital in Madrid, Spain, on April 1, 2020.
>

The health ministry also reported 864 new fatalities from the disease, bringing the country's death toll to 9,053 -- a 10.5% increase.

Spain has the second-highest nationwide death toll from COVID-19 following Italy, according to the latest count from Johns Hopkins University. The two countries account for half of all the world's fatalities from the virus, with a collective total of more than 21,000.

7:18 a.m.: US Surgeon General says extended social distancing guidelines may not be enough

U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams acknowledged Wednesday that the additional 30 days of nationwide social distancing guidelines may not be enough time for some states and cities to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus, \"depending on where they are on the curve.\"

\"We're looking at this next 30 days as an opportunity for the entire country to really understand if we do the right things, then we can flatten our curve in our own different areas and actually get to the other side,\" Adams said in an interview on \"Good Morning America.\"

\"The most important thing to know is that if you are aggressive about mitigation, you can get through to the other side and usually in about three weeks or so to hit your peak and start to see cases come down,\" he added. \"I feel confident that we can get through to the other side if we all cooperate and do our part together.\"

\"PHOTO:
ABC News
PHOTO: Surgeon General Jerome Adams appears on "Good Morning America," April 1, 2020.
>

Adams said they've asked the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to \"take another look\" at whether having more people wear masks will help prevent transmission of COVID-19. But he emphasized that \"the most important thing right now to do is for people to stay at home.\"

\"Initially, the CDC, the World Health Organization and my office recommended against the general public wearing masks based on the best available science at the time, in terms of whether or not it prevented the wearer from catching coronavirus,\" he said. \"Now, we've learned about this disease -- and we've always said, we're going to learn more, we're going to adjust -- and we've learned that there is a fair amount of asymptomatic spread.\"

\"PHOTO:
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images
PHOTO: A woman wearing a mask, as a precautionary measure against the novel coronavirus, passes a stop sign in Mount Rainier, Maryland, near Washington, D.C., on March 30, 2020.
>

Adams noted that members of the general public do not need to wear N95 masks.

\"If you take one of those N95 masks, you may be taking it out of the hands of a health care worker who desperately needs it to care for patients,\" he added.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said at a press briefing Tuesday that both CDC and White House officials are having a \"very active discussion\" about whether to recommend the broad use of masks in the U.S.

6:35 a.m.: Congo's former president dies from COVID-19

The former president of the Republic of Congo, Jacques Joaquim Yhombi-Opango, has died in Paris from complications related to the novel coronavirus, officials said Wednesday. He was 81.

Yhombi-Opango's family reportedly said he had been ill before contracting the virus.

Yhombi-Opango was an army officer who rose to power as Congo-Brazzaville's head of state in 1977, following the assassination of the previous president. He was ousted in 1979 by the country's current leader, Denis Sassou Nguesso.

The former president later spent several years in prison after being accused of taking part in a plot to overthrow Sassou Nguesso.

Yhombi-Opango served as prime minister between 1994 and 1996 during Pascal Lissouba's presidency. And when the country spiraled into civil war in 1997, Yhombi-Opango fled into exile in France.

5:47 a.m.: Turkmenistan reportedly bans the word 'coronavirus'

The government of Turkmenistan, one of the world's most closed countries, has reportedly banned the word \"coronavirus.\"

The word has been removed from health information brochures distributed in schools, hospitals and workplaces, and state-run media are no longer allowed to use the word, according to independent news website Turkmenistan Chronicle, which is blocked within the country.

\"PHOTO:
Igor Sasin/AFP/Getty Images
PHOTO: Turkmenistan's President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov holds a Turkmen shepherd dog, locally known as Alabai, as he takes part in celebrations for the Day of the Horse in Ashgabat, April 28, 2018.
>

Police in plainclothes are arresting people wearing face masks or talking about the coronavirus pandemic on the street, according to Radio Azatlyk, the Turkmen-language service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

So far, Turkmenistan has not reported any cases of the novel coronavirus. The country's president has ordered public spaces to be disinfected as a protective measure.

\"The Turkmen authorities have lived up to their reputation by adopting this extreme method for eradicating all information about the coronavirus,\" Jeanne Cavelier, head of Reporters Without Borders' Eastern Europe and Central Asia desk, said in a statement Tuesday. \"This denial of information not only endangers the Turkmen citizens most at risk but also reinforces the authoritarianism imposed by President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov. We urge the international community to react and to take him to task for his systematic human rights violations.\"

3:30 a.m.: China reports 1,367 asymptomatic cases under observation

There are 1,367 people with asymptomatic infections of the novel coronavirus under medical observation in China, according to the the country's National Health Commission.

China began publishing the number of asymptomatic cases on Wednesday. The infected individuals, who show no symptoms but are still believed to be contagious, were excluded from the official tally of confirmed cases.

\"Monitoring data has shown that some asymptomatic people have caused second-generation transmission among their close contacts, and they have set off a small number of clusters of infections,\" Chang Jile, head of the National Health Commission's disease control bureau, said on Tuesday, as quoted by state-run newspaper China Daily.

Those with asymptomatic cases of COVID-19 as well as their close contacts will be quarantined in centralized facilities for 14 days. The asymptomatic individuals won't be released until they test negative for the virus twice, according to Chang.

\"PHOTO:
Ng Han Guan/AP
PHOTO: Quarantined returnees queue up for a COVID-19 test at a quarantine hotel in the city of Wuhan in China's central Hubei province on March 31, 2020.
>

More research is needed to understand the length of the contagion period of asymptomatic individuals as well as the strength and pathway of their transmission, according to China's National Health Commission.

\"Some experts believed that because asymptomatic people show no symptoms of coughing or sneezing, the chance of them spreading the virus is relatively small compared to confirmed patients,\" the commission said in a statement Tuesday, noting how difficult it is to detect these cases and prevent them from spreading. \"It is infeasible to make the discovery and isolation of asymptomatic cases as the dominating virus-control measure, so we will continue to focus on confirmed cases and their close contacts.\"

Since the first cases emerged in the city of Wuhan in China's central Hubei province back in December, the country has reported 81,554 confirmed cases of COVID-19 nationwide, as of Tuesday. It's unclear whether that figure includes asymptomatic cases.

A total of 76,238 patients have recovered from the disease and have been released from hospitals, while another 3,312 patients have died. Seven new deaths were reported Tuesday, all but one in Hubei province, according to the National Health Commission.

ABC News' Luke Barr, Aicha El Hammar, Dragana Jovanovich, Kendall Karson, John Verhovek, Aaron Katersky, Alex Mallin, Josh Margolin, Kirit Radia, Christine Theodorou and Karson Yiu contributed to this report

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