Anthony Fauci said he 'strongly suspects' that Covid-19 deaths will go down in the winter and suggested that even vaccinated people wear their masks outside. Fauci - during an interview with Greta Van Susteren, which will be aired on Sunday - was asked if he expected another surge in Covid cases this winter caused by different variants. 'I strongly suspect that you're going to start seeing the deaths go down similar to the hospitalizations; how quickly they go down and how thoroughly they go down is going to depend a lot on a number of circumstances, which will be influenced by things like the colder weather, people doing things indoors,' Fauci said. However, Fauci stressed that masks should remain in use even by vaccinated people when they step out of their home. 'When you have a lot of infection in the community, even though you're vaccinated, when you are not home but outside in congregate settings in the public, wearing masks, I think would be very prudent,' he said. Anthony Fauci (left) told Greta Van Susteren (right) in an interview, which will air on Sunday, that he 'strongly suspects that you're going to start seeing the deaths go down similar to the hospitalizations' Fauci said that the number of new Covid infections and deaths in the coming months will be influenced by 'colder weather, people doing things indoors (and) how well they go by the CDC guidelines. He also suggested: 'Even though you're vaccinated, when you are not home but outside congregate settings in the public, wearing masks, I think would be very prudent' Fauci also noted that there has been a 'turnaround in the slope' in the prevalence of cases and hospitalizations over the last few weeks. On Thursday, the US reported 110,060 new infections, with a seven-day rolling average of 112,792. That is a 32 percent decline from the 166,113 average reported four weeks ago and the lowest figure seen since early August, according to a DailyMail.com analysis. Deaths have recently been on the rise, with 2,718 virus-related fatalities recorded on Thursday and a seven-day rolling average of 2,043 - a 45 percent increase from the 1,401 average deaths recorded a month ago. But Fauci added that while 'deaths are still up, it's really flattening, so it's a lagging indicator'. However, not all experts agree. Emergency physician and public health professor at George Washington University Leana Wen told The Hill that she's concerned people will become 'complacent because they think that the delta wave is passing us'. 'We have seen this happen before, where there is a rise in the number of cases, then a decline, and then people let down their guard. And as a result, we plateau at a very high level of cases. That's unacceptable,' she added. On Friday, the US hit a grim milestone and surpassed 700,000 Covid deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. That figure is more than the number of Americans who died during World War I, World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War combined. To put the number into context, it is also about equivalent to the populations of Nashville, Tennessee, or Washington, DC, and just a bit smaller than the population of Denver, Colorado. More than 4.7million people have died from Covid-19 around the world, according to Johns Hopkins, which means the US accounts for 14.8 percent of all deaths, but just five percent of the global population. The heartbreaking figures come exactly three-and-a-half months after America recorded 600,000 lives lost due to the virus. Although the first deaths from the virus in the US weren't reported until February 2020, it was confirmed last month that the earliest death actually took place on January 9, 2020. It took until May to reach the first 100,000 dead. The toll hit 200,000 deaths in September and 300,000 in December. Then it took just over a month to go from 300,000 to 400,000 and about two months to climb from 400,000 to the brink of 500,000. A new CDC ensemble forecast predicts that weekly deaths will fall to as low as 5,300 by the week ending October 23, a decline from the current weekly total of 14,000 The death rate has dramatically slowed, taking four months and one week to hit 600,000 deaths. It took about three-and-a-half months to hit the 700,000 mark. As devastating as that 700,000 figure is, the true death toll is believed to be higher than official counts. Currently, black Americans account for 11.9 percent of all Covid-19 deaths, Hispanics for 26.9 percent, whites for 51.5 percent and Asians at 3.1 percent, each figure about equal to their share of the US population. However, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says that after adjusting for age and other factors, blacks and Latinos are between two and three times more likely to die of Covid than whites. All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility