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        <title><![CDATA[‘60 Minutes’ correspondent Lesley Stahl says she fought coronavirus]]></title>
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        <link>https://usagag.com/2020/05/04/60-minutes-correspondent-lesley-stahl-says-she-fought-coronavirus/</link>
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            <media:title type="html">‘60 Minutes’ correspondent Lesley Stahl says she fought coronavirus</media:title>
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        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>CBS News “60 Minutes” correspondent Lesley Stahl said Sunday that she&#8217;s finally feeling well after a battle with COVID-19 that left her hospitalized for a week.</p><p>Stahl said she was “really scared” after fighting pneumonia caused by the coronavirus for two weeks at home before going to the hospital.</p><p>“One of the rules of journalism is ‘don’t become part of the story,&#8217; ” Stahl said at the end of Sunday&#8217;s broadcast. “But instead of covering the pandemic, I was one of the <strong>more-than-one-million Americans</strong> who did become part of it.”</p><p>Stahl, 78, is the dean of correspondents at television&#8217;s best-known newsmagazine. She joined “60 Minutes” in March 1991, and before that was moderator of the Sunday talk show “Face the Nation” and a Washington correspondent.</p><p>She landed the first television interview with Donald Trump after he was elected president, and the first with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi when she become speaker — both in 2007 and again in 2019.</p><p>Stahl said there was a cluster of “60 Minutes” employees with the virus. One “had almost no symptoms while others had almost every symptom you can imagine,” she said. “Each case is different.”</p><p>Stahl said she found an overworked and nearly overwhelmed staff when she was hospitalized but paid tribute to their care, and said she was wheeled out through a gauntlet of cheering medical workers when discharged.</p><p>“In the face of so much death, they celebrate their triumphs,” she said.</p><p>60 Minutes declined to name the hospital involved.</p><p>“Thanks to them, like so many other patients, I am well now,” she said. “Tonight, we all owe them our gratitude, our admiration and, in some cases, our lives.”</p><p>Stahl is arguably the most prominent television journalist to disclose they had the disease. <strong>CNN hosts Chris Cuomo</strong> and <strong>Brooke Baldwin</strong> have tested positive, the former continuing his prime-time show while fighting symptoms. ABC “Good Morning America” host <strong>George Stephanopoulos had it,</strong> but like many infected, had only mild symptoms.</p><p>The virus has infected 3.5 million people and killed more than 246,000 worldwide, including more than 66,000 dead in the United States, according to a count by Johns Hopkins University. Experts say the numbers are likely larger.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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