Category: Corona Virus Vaccine

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Texas Has Too Many Cases to Reopen, Governor Warns – The New York Times

August 14, 2020

Government is in need of financial resources on an emergency basis with a view to mitigate the effects of Covid-19, Albert Kawana, the minister of Fisheries and Marine Resources, said in a statement. We do not produce medicines in Namibia nor do we manufacture medical equipment. In order to obtain these items, we have to buy them with foreign currency.

After mining and agriculture, fishing is the biggest foreign currency earner for Namibia, bringing in some $10 billion Namibian dollars ($565 million U.S.) annually.

Last month, the government ordered the closure of schools for 28 days as part of a new set of restrictions aimed at curbing rising virus cases.

Reporting was contributed by Sarah Almukhtar, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, Luke Broadwater, Nick Bruce, Damien Cave, Troy Closson, Emily Cochrane, Lindsey Rogers Cook, Shaila Dewan, Caitlin Dickerson, John Eligon, Sheri Fink, Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura, Robert Gebeloff, Matthew Haag, Mike Ives, Danielle Ivory, Sarah Kliff, Andrew E. Kramer, Isabella Kwai, Mark Landler, Apoorva Mandavilli, Patrick McGeehan, Sarah Mervosh, David Montgomery, Alan Rappeport, Emily Rhyne, Frances Robles, Amy Qin, Erin Schaff, Ed Shanahan, Julie Shaver, Michael D. Shear, Karan Deep Singh, Mitch Smith, Kaly Soto, Eileen Sullivan, Lucy Tompkins, Julie Turkewitz, Noah Weiland, Will Wright, Katherine J. Wu, Jin Wu, Elaine Yu, Mihir Zaveri, Carl Zimmer and Karen Zraick.

An earlier version of this briefing mistakenly attributed the falling rate of hospitalizations in Texas; the figure came from the Texas Department of State Health Services. It also included an incorrect figure for current hospitalizations in the state, which is 7,200.

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Texas Has Too Many Cases to Reopen, Governor Warns - The New York Times

Johns Hopkins: More than 750,000 people have died from COVID-19 across the world – FOX 10 News Phoenix

August 14, 2020

Here are the symptoms of COVID-19

Some of the most common symptoms are fever, a dry cough, shortness of breath and fatigue. But as the virus continues its rapid spread, additional symptoms are being identified.

LOS ANGELES - More than 750,000 people have died from the novel coronavirus across the world, a stark reminder of the viruss ongoing spread and severity.

Data compiled Aug. 13 by the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center shows there are more than 20 million confirmed COVID-19 cases worldwide, and over 5.2 million cases in the United States alone.

In addition to having more confirmed cases than any other country in the world, the U.S. also holds the unfortunate title of country with the most confirmed COVID-19 deaths with over 166,000, according to Johns Hopkins data.

The COVID-19 situation in the United States is so severe that American travelers are barred from visiting many countries in the European Union, despite the U.S. State Department lifting its Global Level 4 Health Advisory on Aug. 6.

RELATED:CoronavirusNOW.com, FOX launches national hub for COVID-19 news and updates

Following the U.S. in COVID-19 death counts is Brazil (104,000+), Mexico (54,000+), India (47,000+) and the United Kingdom (46,000+). Brazil surpassed the 100,000 death threshold on Aug. 8.

The nation of 210 million people has been reporting an average of more than 1,000 daily deaths from the pandemic since late May and reported 905 for the latest 24-hour period, according to an Aug. 8 report from the Associated Press.

President Jair Bolsonaro who himself reported being infected has been a consistent skeptic about the impact of the disease and an advocate of lifting restrictions on the economy that had been imposed by state governors trying to combat it. He has frequently mingled in crowds, sometimes without a mask.

In Europe, multiple nations are experiencing surges in COVID-19 infections. Not two months after battling back the coronavirus, Spains hospitals have started seeing patients who are struggling to breathe returning to their wards.

The deployment of a military emergency brigade to set up a field hospital in the northeastern city of Zaragoza this week is a grim reminder that Spain is far from claiming victory over the virus that overwhelmed the European country in March and April.

The Spanish governments top virus expert, Fernando Simn, said Thursday that the 3,500 hospital beds occupied nationally by coronavirus patients represented just 3% of the total capacity.

There are steps public transit riders can take to help reduce their coronavirus risk.

On Aug. 8, the Associated Press reported that Italy added another 347 coronavirus infections to its official tally, a day after it surpassed the 500-case barrier for the first time since late May.

Italy had 552 confirmed cases on Friday. With Saturdays update from the health ministry, Italys daily caseload returns to the 200-300 range of new infections it has maintained for the past several weeks.

Government officials have urged Italians to keep their guard up, given Spain, France and Germany have seen daily infections top the 1,000-mark recently after the easing of virus lockdown measures.

Italian officials have blamed the new clusters largely on newly arrived migrants and Italians returning home from vacation outside their home regions. Another 13 people died in the last day, making Italys confirmed COVID-19 death toll 35,203 sixth highest in the world.

RELATED:Infectious disease experts say it may take 1 year for COVID-19 vaccine to be widely available after approval

New Zealands first known community outbreak in more than three months grew to 17 cases on Thursday and is expected to increase. Health officials are still working to trace where the virus came from, and a lockdown imposed in Auckland could be extended well beyond an initial three days.

Before the cluster was detected this week, no case of local transmission had been reported in New Zealand in 102 days. All of its other cases were travelers quarantined after arriving from abroad.

As the coronavirus pandemic has progressed, there have been heightened questions and discussion over if and when a COVID-19 vaccine will be available to the public.

According to a survey from InCrowd, a medical research company, a majority of infectious disease experts believed it would likely take as long as a year before a coronavirus vaccine is widely available to the public after the vaccines approval.

Fauci previously said that he hoped a vaccine would be available by early 2021, although he did not provide a specific time frame.

The world could see its first increase in extreme poverty in over two decades.

During an Aug. 7 webinar hosted by Brown University, Fauci said that while he hopes a vaccine could be be 75% effective, one that is 50% to 60% effective would also be acceptable.

We dont know yet what the efficacy might be. We dont know if it will be 50% or 60%. Id like it to be 75% or more, Fauci said. What Im shooting for is somewhere between really good control and elimination.

Even if a vaccine was widely available, its efficacy could be hampered by Americans refusing to take it.

An Aug. 7 poll from Gallupshowed as many as one in three Americans said they would notget a vaccine for COVID-19, even if the vaccine was FDA-approved and there was no cost out-of-pocket.

Theres still no guarantee that an experimental vaccine, with one being developed by the National Institutes of Health and Moderna Inc., will really protect.

It normally takes years to create a new vaccine from scratch, but scientists are setting speed records this time around, spurred by knowledge that vaccination is the worlds best hope against the pandemic. The coronavirus wasnt even known to exist before late December, and vaccine makers sprang into action Jan. 10 when China shared the virus genetic sequence.

The United States has more confirmed COVID-19 cases than any country in the world.

Governments around the world are trying to stockpile millions of doses of those leading candidates so if and when regulators approve one or more vaccines, immunizations can begin immediately. But the first available doses will be rationed, presumably reserved for people at highest risk from the virus.

Russia on Tuesday became the first country to approve a coronavirus vaccine, a move that was met with international skepticism and unease because the shots have only been studied in dozens of people.

RELATED:Major airlines call for COVID-19 testing to restore US-Europe travel

President Vladimir Putin announced the Health Ministrys approval and said one of his two adult daughters already was inoculated. He said the vaccine underwent the necessary tests and was shown to provide lasting immunity to the coronavirus, although Russian authorities have offered no proof to back up claims of safety or effectiveness.

However, scientists in Russia and other countries sounded an alarm, saying that rushing to offer the vaccine before final-stage testing could backfire. Whats called a Phase 3 trial which involves tens of thousands of people and can take months is the only way to prove if an experimental vaccine is safe and really works.

The World Health Organization has urged that all vaccine candidates go through full stages of testing before being rolled out, and said Tuesday it is in touch with the Russian scientists and looks forward to reviewing Russias study data. Experts have warned that vaccines that are not properly tested can cause harm in many ways from harming health to creating a false sense of security or undermining trust in vaccinations.

Austin Williams and the Associated Press contributed to this story.

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Johns Hopkins: More than 750,000 people have died from COVID-19 across the world - FOX 10 News Phoenix

Do Inflammatory and Autoimmune Rheumatic Diseases Affect COVID-19 Illness Severity? – DocWire News

August 14, 2020

Hospitalized COVID-19 patients with connective tissue diseases may be at risk for increased illness severity, according to a recent study, but inflammatory arthritis may not have the same effect.

Since severe COVID-19 is associated with a hyperinflammatory process, it is of particular interest to investigate how pre-existing inflammatory diseases or the previous use of immunosuppressive agents influence COVID-19 expression, the study authors explained.

The researchers identified PCR+COVID-19 rheumatic patients with chronic inflammatory arthritis (including rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and spondyloarthritis) or connective tissue diseases (including systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjgrens syndrome, systemic sclerosis, polymyalgia rheumatica, and vasculitides) and compared them 1:1 to non-rheumatic controls matched based on age, sex, and PCR date. The primary outcome was severe COVID-19 (death, invasive ventilation, intensive care unit admission, or serious complications). The correlation between severe COVID-19 and potential prognostic variables was evaluated, adjusting for COVID-19 treatment.

Final analysis included 456 patients each in the rheumatic and non-rheumatic groups. Both cohorts had a mean ae of 63 years and were 41% male. In the rheumatic disease cohort, 60% of patients had inflammatory arthritis, and 40% had connective tissue disease. About three-quarters of patients (74%) were hospitalized. The risk of severe COVID-19 was 31.6% in the rheumatic cohort and 28.1% in the non-rheumatic cohort. In bivariate analysis, factors associated with increased COVID-19 severity risk in the rheumatic group were aging; male sex; and previous comorbidity including obesity, diabetes, hypertension, or cardiovascular or lung disease. Upon logistic regression analysis, the factors independently associated with severe COVID-19 disease were increased age (odds ratio [OR]=4.83; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.78 to 8.36), male sex (OR=1.93; 95% CI, 1.21 to 3.07), and connective tissue disease (OR=1.82; 95% CI, 1.00 to 3.30).

The researchers stated in their conclusion that among hospitalised patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases, having a [connective tissue disease] pose[s] a significantly greater risk for poor outcomes, whereas immunosuppressive therapies do not. Previously known risk factors as ageing and male sex also apply to patients with rheumatic diseases. This observation should help to tailor recommendations to specific diagnostic and therapeutic groups of patients with rheumatic diseases during this or future coronavirus pandemics.

The study was published in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

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Do Inflammatory and Autoimmune Rheumatic Diseases Affect COVID-19 Illness Severity? - DocWire News

State COVID-19 testing in Williamson County continues in Taylor on Aug. 15-16 – Community Impact Newspaper

August 14, 2020

The city of Taylor will host free state COVID-19 testing Aug. 15-16. (Courtesy Adobe Stock)

Testing will be conducted at Main Street Intermediate School located at 3101 N. Main St., Ste. 102, Taylor. It will begin at 9 a.m. and will remain operational until supplies last, the release said.

This is a walk-up site and will not require an appointment prior to being tested. People interested in getting tested will be asked to park and line up for their turn, it said.

It is important to note that this is a cheek swab test, so people cannot eat, drink or use tobacco products 20 minutes prior to the test, the release said.

Those who wish to be tested should bring a cell phone for on-site registration, it said.

Because there are no appointments, high demand may lead to a wait time. It is recommended a hat or umbrella is also brought to provide shade.

The site is available for all Texans even if they do not live in Williamson County; however, only Williamson County residents will be counted on the county's COVID-19 dashboard.

Williamson County commissioners approved funding for seven days worth of testing sites during an Aug. 4 meeting. The costs associated with conducting the tests is funded by the state agencies; however, the county is contributing to additional costs, such as water, snacks and additional sanitation supplies.

Future additional testing locations will be released at a later date.

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State COVID-19 testing in Williamson County continues in Taylor on Aug. 15-16 - Community Impact Newspaper

My (hopeful) pandemic pregnancy: Inside the world of IVF and COVID-19 — Its terrifying’ – KSAT San Antonio

August 14, 2020

Authors note: This is not MY personal story, per se, (despite the my pandemic pregnancy title), but a story told by our readers, week by week. Todays is shared by Sarah.*

You might have heard that being pregnant, trying to get pregnant, or delivering right about now is strange, in this age of coronavirus. But how? In what ways? Were going to show you -- with a different feature each week. To contribute your own experience, scroll all the way down to the bottom of this article and tap the link.

Going though in vitro fertilization, or IVF, under normal circumstances, can be a challenge, both mentally and physically -- and for some, thats phrasing it mildly.

Youre going in for bloodwork, sometimes every other day. Youre attending never-ending doctors appointments. Theres a ton on your mind and you just want everything to go well. Its an often-heavy process.

Take it from Sarah*, who asked that we not use her real name, for privacy reasons. Sarah is 32, married, and lives in Farmington Hills, Michigan. She didnt mince words when it came to describing her own IVF situation. Some examples:

Ugh. No one wants to hear of another human going through something like that.

So imagine then, that your support person, like in Sarahs case, her husband, is now unable to attend any of those painful procedures or appointments.

Its scary, Sarah said.

Its also unprecedented. Safe to say, no one assumed the globe would be gripped by a pandemic this year; a true health crisis -- and no one knows when things will return to normal.

But dont get her wrong: Sarah is grateful that shes able to proceed with IVF -- which, spoiler alert, she is. (More on that soon!)

She even added that the couple has decent insurance, and said for many, theyre not so lucky. Most insurance companies dont cover things like IVF, which can total as much as $40,000 for just one round.

But all that money talk, that feels stressful, too. Sarah said if she were to contract COVID-19, her cycle would be canceled. Thats a frightening thought, lingering over ones head.

So then youd be out money, time and pain, Sarah said. (Its like), is it worth it to be doing this?

Sarah has been knee-deep in all things IVF-related for much of the year. She began the journey and went through round one starting in February.

First up, she had two to three weeks of injections, to hopefully produce more eggs.

Sarah took the injections, and then doctors performed a surgery to retrieve her eggs. She said she got through it just fine.

Next, this is typically the time when, if you had any embryos that made it through the egg-retrieval process, the doctors will mix them with sperm, and then youd transfer.

For Sarah, this was when COVID-19 arrived in the United States and started becoming more and more of a growing concern.

She and her husband had ended up with one embryo, so the next step would be a second surgery to make sure nothing is blocking the implantation of said embryo.

But COVID hit right when I was scheduled to go in, Sarah said. So we decided to postpone (and) see how things would play out.

That felt frustrating for the couple, too.

Theyve been playing the waiting game for a long time -- married 6 years, and trying for a baby for about four of those years.

And we dont have a lot of time to wait, Sarah said. We dont want the issues (that led us to IVF in the first place) to get any worse, and were not getting any younger.

Sarah and her husband opted to move forward with the second surgery.

And with the coronavirus pandemic continuing, You had to go through it alone, when youre already scared, Sarah said.

Doctors were able to perform the transfer, but Sarahs husband wasnt allowed to attend.

The whole process is devastating, Sarah said. Youre getting ready to conceive a child and your husband cant even be there.

It was already a tense time.

Then, the couple learned that their embryo transfer failed.

You want answers right away, Sarah said. But doctors arent meeting. So you need to wait for a Zoom call. Youre not being able to see your results and youre not being able to get answers.

Having to survive the failed transfer during quarantine was really tough.

Most doctors (tell you) to stay busy and lean on your support system during all (the waiting), Sarah said.

Because indeed, there is a lot of waiting. More than you might imagine.

(When it comes to) waiting for results in IVF, theres waiting a week to find out if you were able to get any embryos after the first round of injections and egg retrieval surgery, Sarah said. (Then you wait) another two weeks after that for genetic testing on those embryos to see if they are viable, and then of course, the two weeks waiting to find out if youre pregnant after the embryo transfer to see if all your efforts worked.

And, considering coronavirus, Sarah said, all of the now-solo waiting felt especially challenging.

Youre just trapped at home and not able to stay busy to keep yourself mentally healthy, she recalled. I know for me, my friends and family have been my rock during these four years leading to IVF. ... Its been so hard, being isolated.

In discussing the future with Sarah, she sounds optimistic: Theres something cheerful in her tone, and shes so willing to open up and chat about all of this with a total stranger (editors note: which I so admire!)

She and her husband will try again. In fact, theyre set to start a second round of IVF in September.

Her husband has been one of her only comforts throughout this strange time, Sarah said, so she hopes she can have him present for more in-person appointments and procedures this time around. But the future remains incredibly uncertain.

We dont know whats going to happen, Sarah said. In an ideal world, Id probably wait. But with time constraints, you have to try.

Sarah and her husband will likely hole up a bit, leading up to their second IVF round. Luckily, they both have jobs that allow them to work from home. Its a seemingly small perk, but it becomes quite notable through all of this.

And then two weeks or so before the cycle, Sarah said, itll start: Theyll be extra cautious and they wont leave the house until its all over. Too much is at stake.

It makes sense.

Sarah said she wants to help show a different perspective when it comes to pregnancy.

After all, shes had just as many doctors appointments and stressors, if not more, than your average expecting mother.

I hope it helps others who are in the same boat, she said.

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My (hopeful) pandemic pregnancy: Inside the world of IVF and COVID-19 -- Its terrifying' - KSAT San Antonio

5 More People Fined for Violating CT COVID-19 Travel Restrictions: Governor’s Office – NBC Connecticut

August 14, 2020

The governor's office says they have fined five more Connecticut residents accused of violating the state's COVID-19 travel restrictions.

Failure to adhere to the guidelines, which require anyone traveling to Connecticut from the state's designated coronavirus hotspots to fill out a health questionnaire and quarantine for 14 days, is punishable by a $1,000 fine. Travelers may provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test to be exempted from the quarantine period, and there are some exceptions to the requirement - see the frequently asked questions below.

So far, seven Connecticut residents have been fined, the governor's office confirmed Wednesday night. The governor announced the first two on Monday.

The travel advisory and the associated penalties are serious. Gov. Ned Lamont is taking every step within his power to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, and the travel advisory fines are a critical part of keeping as many Connecticut residents safe as possible," Max Reiss, a spokesperson for the governor, said Wednesday.

The five new cases involve four Stamford residents returning from North Carolina and an Old Lyme resident returning from Texas. The governor's office said they were each fined $1,000 for failing to complete the travel advisory form. Their names were not released.

Lamont, as well as the governors of New York and New Jersey, enacted a quarantine order for travelers at the end of June to help keep infection rates low in the region. See the full list of restricted locations below.

This is the current list:

There currently are nostaterestrictions on international travel, the federal government continues to provide international travel recommendations for anyone living inside of the United States. For guidance on international travel, visit the "COVID-19 Travel Recommendations" section of the CDC's website.

Download the free NBC Connecticut App for the latest on the coronavirus pandemic, including live news conferences, a town by town breakdown of the latest cases in our state and push alerts with breaking news updates

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5 More People Fined for Violating CT COVID-19 Travel Restrictions: Governor's Office - NBC Connecticut

In the Wake of Covid-19 Lockdowns, a Troubling Surge in Homicides – The New York Times

August 11, 2020

KANSAS CITY, Mo. It started with an afternoon stop at a gas station. Two customers began exchanging angry stares near the pumps outside and no one can explain exactly why.

That led to an argument, and it escalated quickly as one of them pulled a gun and they struggled over it, according to the police.

Theres too many shootings. Please dont do this, the wife of one of the men pleaded, stepping between them.

But by the time the fight was over at the station on Kansas Citys East Side late last month, the all-too-familiar crackle of gunfire pierced the humid air, leaving another person dead in what has been an exceedingly bloody summer.

The onset of warm weather nearly always brings with it a spike in violent crime, but with much of the country emerging from weeks of lockdown from the coronavirus, the increase this year has been much steeper than usual.

Across 20 major cities, the murder rate at the end of June was on average 37 percent higher than it was at the end of May, according to Richard Rosenfeld, a criminologist at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. The increase over the same period a year ago was just 6 percent.

In few places has the bloodshed been more devastating than in Kansas City, where the city is on pace to shatter its record for homicides in a year. Much of it has involved incidents of random, angry violence like the conflict at the gas station disputes between strangers that left someone dead, or killings that simply cannot be explained. They have claimed the lives of a pregnant woman pushing a stroller, a 4-year-old boy asleep in his grandmothers home and a teenage girl sitting in a car.

They have also prompted a much-debated intervention from the federal government, an operation named after the 4-year-old Kansas City boy, LeGend Taliferro, that has sent federal law enforcement agents to at least six cities in an attempt to intervene.

Were surrounded by murder, and its almost like your number is up, said Erica Mosby, whose niece, Diamon Eichelburger, 20, was the pregnant victim pushing the stroller in Kansas City. Its terrible.

Nationally, crime remains at or near a generational low, and experts caution against drawing conclusions from just a few months.

But President Trump has used the rising homicide numbers to paint Democratic-led cities as out of control and to blame protests against police brutality that broke out after the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis in late May.

Extreme politicians have joined this anti-police crusade and relentlessly vilified our law enforcement heroes, Mr. Trump said during a White House news conference last month to announce Operation LeGend. He added that the effort to shut down policing in their own communities has led to a shocking explosion of shootings, killings, murders.

Criminologists dispute the presidents suggestion that the increase is tied to any pullback by the police in response to criticism or defunding efforts, and fluctuations in the crime rate are notoriously hard to explain. In many cities, the murder rate was on the rise before the pandemic, and a steep decline in arrests coincided with the start of social distancing, as measured by mobile phone records, according to a database compiled by David Abrams, an economist at the University of Pennsylvania law school.

Some experts have pointed to the pandemics destabilization of community institutions, or theorized that people with a propensity for violence may have been less likely to heed stay-at-home orders. But in city after city, crime overall is down, including all types of major crime except murder, aggravated assault and in some places, car theft.

In New York, where murders are up 30 percent over last year, city and police officials have tried to lay blame on a new law that lets many defendants go free without posting bond, as well as on the coronavirus-related mass release of people from jail. But the evidence shows that a steep decline in gun arrests beginning in mid-May was a more likely cause. Police officials in several cities have said the protests diverted officers from crime-fighting duty or emboldened criminals.

In Detroit, Chief James Craig said violence spiked but has started to go down over the past two weekends. We havent relaxed our enforcement posture like some cities, he said.

In Kansas City, homicides have been on a swift upward trajectory from the time a 41-year-old man named Earl Finch III was gunned down in a driveway in broad daylight on Jan. 5, the first murder of the year. Even the coronavirus lockdown did not slow the violence, though as in other cities it has escalated even further in the wake of reopenings.

After six new deaths over the weekend, 122 people have been killed this year, compared with 90 through the same time last year. The city is well on its way to surpassing its grim record of 153 murders in 1993. And by the end of July the city had matched the number of nonfatal shootings about 490 that it had all of last year.

Much of the violence in Kansas City has had little rhyme or reason, often stemming from petty arguments that boil over.

The short fuses may indicate restlessness and anger, criminologists and law enforcement officials said. The police have attributed about 30 of the homicides this year to arguments, some involving people with no serious criminal history. Economic hardship also appeared to be a factor in some of the killings. Only 15 were deemed drug-related. In almost 50 cases, the police have not yet determined a motive.

While disparities in things like education and employment have long plagued Kansas Citys East Side, a predominantly Black part of the city that has the citys highest murder rate, community leaders said there seemed to be an added sense of despair this year.

The Rev. Darren Faulkner, who runs a program that provides social support to those deemed most at risk of violence, said the latest wave of police killings of Black people has left many of his clients feeling hopelessly trapped in a system in which they will never thrive.

People have gotten to the point where they just dont give a damn, he said. I dont care about me. I certainly dont care about you. And so I can go shoot your house or shoot you right on the spot because you talked to me crazy, you looked at me crazy.

Spontaneous, one-on-one beefs have replaced gang feuds as a driver of shootings, said Maj. Greg Volker of the Kansas City Police Department.

If people could settle an argument without having to resort to shooting, violence would reduce, he said.

Another atypical trend this year is that in several cases, the gunmen and victims were not otherwise involved in criminal activity, Major Volker said, pointing to the gas station shooting in July.

The man now charged with murder in the case is a meatpacking worker, Isaac Knighten, 40, who devotes much of his time to mentoring Black men and boys, including teaching conflict resolution through Alpha Male Nation, a mentoring organization his brother started. His wife said he had turned his life around after serving time on drug charges from more than a decade ago.

After Mr. Knighten had a brief, hostile exchange with the other man in the parking lot, the man, Jayvon McCray, 28, pulled a gun and the men began to fight, according to the police.

Mr. Knightens wife, Shaynan, said in an interview that she had their five children get out of the car and run to a relatives house nearby. She and Mr. McCrays girlfriend both got between the men and urged them to calm down, according to the police.

Mr. Knighten eventually retrieved a gun from his car and fatally shot Mr. McCray, who the police said appeared to no longer be holding a gun.

Mr. Knightens lawyer, Dan Ross, said his client, who has been charged with second-degree murder, was defending himself. Surveillance footage shows that Mr. Knighten attempted to walk away from the dispute at least six times, but Mr. McCray kept coming after him, the lawyer said.

Another contributing factor to this years violence, Major Volker said, was the impact of the coronavirus stay-at-home order on the drug trade. Some dealers lost their regular buyers, so they sold to people they did not know people who may have been intent on robbing them. The result has been an uptick in drug robberies and shootings, especially in late March and early April.

The real explosion of killings in Kansas City came in May and June, with 44 murders combined, more than twice as many during those same months last year.

Im sure there will be academic studies for years to come as to what caused the spike of 2020, said Tim Garrison, the United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri. Im sure the lockdown didnt help. When you already have a stressed economic situation and you put a lot of folks out of work, and a lot of teenagers out of school, its a volatile situation.

Mr. Garrison oversees Operation LeGend, a surge of some 200 federal agents into Kansas City in an effort to help stem the violence. It has been met with suspicion and street protests, in part because the operation coincided with a militaristic federal intervention on the streets of Portland that was widely criticized for inflaming tensions there.

Mr. Garrison said trained federal investigators have beefed up existing task forces, seized dozens of guns, brought in suspects on existing warrants and helped arrest a dozen homicide suspects.

Jean Peters Baker, the prosecutor in Jackson County, said that in the murder cases she has received from Operation LeGend so far, the federal agents did not appear to have contributed the forensic investigative expertise that the federal authorities had promised.

Mr. Garrison pointed to a more recent arrest by the U.S. Marshals Service, saying that federal investigators had linked a firearm found in the suspects possession to four other shootings.

The operation has been expanded to seven other cities, all but one of which have seen an increase in homicides over last year. Some officials have welcomed the help, while others have promised to monitor federal agents for civil rights violations.

The federal operation represents the latest in a string of efforts that Kansas City has undertaken to try to get its violence under control over the years. Homicides dropped to a near record low of 80 in 2014, after the launch of a joint federal-local operation known as the Kansas City No Violence Alliance. But murders began ticking back up in subsequent years, and the police pulled back from the program. The department plans to launch a new effort in September that focuses on getting the most persistent violent offenders off the streets.

Charron Powell, LeGends mother, said she gave permission for her sons name to be used in the federal operation because she wanted the fight against violence to be his legacy. She called the killings senseless and said those responsible had met with too few consequences.

It may not work, she said, noting the opposition Operation LeGend has encountered from many in the city. Still, she said, its a good thing theyre trying theyre trying something.

John Eligon reported from Kansas City, Mo., and Shaila Dewan and Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs reported from New York. Ashley Southall contributed reporting from New York. Alain Delaqurire contributed research.

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In the Wake of Covid-19 Lockdowns, a Troubling Surge in Homicides - The New York Times

COVID-19 Daily Update 8-10-2020 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

August 11, 2020

The West Virginia Department of Health andHuman Resources (DHHR) reports as of 10:00 a.m., on August 10,2020, there have been 326,886 total confirmatorylaboratory results received for COVID-19, with 7,754 totalcases and 141 deaths.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of an83-year old male from Kanawha County and a 74-year old male from Logan County. Wemourn with all families suffering the loss of loved ones due to COVID-19, saidBill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary.

In alignment with updated definitions fromthe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the dashboard includes probablecases which are individuals that have symptoms and either serologic (antibody)or epidemiologic (e.g., a link to a confirmed case) evidence of disease, but noconfirmatory test.

CASESPER COUNTY (Case confirmed by lab test/Probable case):Barbour (29/0), Berkeley (671/27), Boone(101/0), Braxton (8/0), Brooke (63/1), Cabell (395/9), Calhoun (6/0), Clay(18/0), Doddridge (6/0), Fayette (151/0), Gilmer (17/0), Grant (120/1),Greenbrier (93/0), Hampshire (76/0), Hancock (108/4), Hardy (60/1), Harrison(223/3), Jackson (165/0), Jefferson (289/7), Kanawha (925/13), Lewis (28/1),Lincoln (87/0), Logan (234/0), Marion (187/4), Marshall (126/4), Mason (56/0),McDowell (63/1), Mercer (200/0), Mineral (121/2), Mingo (171/2), Monongalia(928/17), Monroe (20/1), Morgan (28/1), Nicholas (36/1), Ohio (266/3), Pendleton(40/1), Pleasants (11/1), Pocahontas (40/1), Preston (104/21), Putnam (194/1),Raleigh (248/7), Randolph (205/5), Ritchie (3/0), Roane (15/0), Summers (12/0),Taylor (55/1), Tucker (10/0), Tyler (13/0), Upshur (37/3), Wayne (208/2),Webster (4/0), Wetzel (43/0), Wirt (7/0), Wood (238/12), Wyoming (34/0).

Ascase surveillance continues at the local health department level, it may revealthat those tested in a certain county may not be a resident of that county, oreven the state as an individual in question may have crossed the state borderto be tested. Suchis the case of Marshall and Pleasants counties in this report.

Pleasenote that delays may be experienced with the reporting of information from thelocal health department to DHHR. Visitthe dashboard at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov for more detailed information.

On July 24,2020, Gov. Jim Justice announced that DHHR, the agency in charge of reportingthe number of COVID-19 cases will transition from providing twice-daily updatesto one report every 24 hours. This becameeffective August 1, 2020.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 8-10-2020 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Was COVID-19 made in a lab? Will a vaccine protect you forever? Does the sun help? Coronavirus myths are spreading in 25 languages here are the most…

August 11, 2020

Six months into the coronavirus pandemic, people are on edge and some folks are also confused. Adding to the increasingly chaotic nature of the information superhighway in 2020, others are sharing misleading information and outright falsehoods across the internet and on television.

Some outlandish rumors persist. To adherents of such beliefs, the coronavirus is a dastardly bioweapon designed to wreak economic armageddon on the West; a left-wing conspiracy to damage the re-election prospects of President Donald Trump; a virus that leaked from a laboratory in Wuhan, China.

A new study in the latest edition of the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene identified 2,311 reports of rumors, stigma and conspiracy theories in 25 languages from 87 countries related to COVID-19 across social media and, yes, online news media sites.

Do you have to wear a mask outdoors? Only medical-grade N95 surgical masks with goggles work, right, so why bother wearing a homemade face covering?

Paranoia politicizes a public-health emergency and distracts from potentially life-saving measures. Misinformation fueled by rumors, stigma, and conspiracy theories can have potentially serious implications on the individual and community if prioritized over evidence-based guidelines, the study said.

The most oft-shared claims were related to the seriousness of the illness, transmission and mortality rate (24%); the effectiveness of control measures (21%); treatments and cures touted online (19%); and the origins of pandemic (15%).

Of the 2,276 reports for which text ratings were available, 1,856 claims were false (82%). Health agencies must track misinformation associated with the COVID-19 in real time, and engage local communities and government stakeholders to debunk misinformation, the report found.

There are, of course, many nuances and truths mixed in with some rumors. Among the evidence-supported statements by members of the scientific community: Like the influenza vaccines, any future vaccine will likely only last a number of years, and not give everyone 100% immunity.

Do you have to wear a mask outdoors? Only medical-grade N95 surgical masks with goggles can help guarantee protection against the virus, so why bother wearing a homemade face covering? Health professionals and studies support the idea that face coverings can help stop the spread.

Exposure to the sun or to temperatures higher than 77 Fahrenheit (25 Celsius) doesnt prevent theCOVID-19virus or curethe disease, the Mayo Clinic says.

They have helped reduce contagion by reducing droplets being sprayed into the air during flu season, and scientists say they can similarly help now, particularly with the high number of asymptomatic carriers. Maskless joggers can leave a droplet slipstream of 30 feet outdoors.

Whats more, Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, earlier this month recommended wearing goggles as a complete method to help prevent contracting the coronavirus.

COVID-19 only affects older people, right? And its a few bad days or weeks in bed, and youre back to normal? Incorrect, and no: Lung scarring and heart and kidney damage may result from COVID-19, and some younger COVID-19 patients who were otherwise healthy are suffering blood clots and strokes.

A study of 60 COVID-19 patients published in the Lancet this month found that 55% of them were still displaying neurological symptoms during follow-up visits three months later, including confusion and difficulty concentrating, as well as headaches, loss of taste and/or smell, mood changes and insomnia.

Wont the summer sun and heat help? Exposure to the sun or to temperatures higher than 77 Fahrenheit (25 Celsius) doesnt prevent theCOVID-19virus or cureCOVID-19, according to a myth-busting guide from the Mayo Clinic.

You can get theCOVID-19virus in sunny, hot and humid weather. Taking a hot bath also cant prevent you from catching theCOVID-19virus, the article warns. Your normal body temperature remains the same, regardless of the temperature of your bath or shower.

Related:COVID-19 infections just hit 20 million worldwide why the actual number of cases is likely much higher

Here are some other popular misconceptions derailed by the Mayo Clinic: Cold weather and snow do not kill COVID-19.Antibiotics kill bacteria, not viruses. Drinking alcohol doesnt protect you from thevirus. And spraying it on your body doesnt help if you are infected.

The supplement colloidal silver, which has been marketed as atreatment, is not considered safe or effective for treating any disease. Theres no evidence that eating garlic protects against infection with theCOVID-19virus, the Mayo Clinic added. (It doesnt help with vampires either, because they dont exist.)

Another outlandish theory: Avoiding exposure to or use of 5G networks doesnt prevent infection with theCOVID-19virus. Viruses cant travel on radio waves and mobile networks. TheCOVID-19virus is spreading in many countries that lack 5G mobile networks, the organization said.

Cold weather and snow does not kill COVID-19. Radio waves and mobile networks dont cure or spread the virus.Antibiotics only kill bacteria.

Ultraviolet light and disinfectants can be used on surfaces, it added. But dont use a UV lamp to sterilize your hands or other areas of your body. UV radiation can lead to skin irritation and bleach can burn you.

Who tends to believe falsehoods? People who get their news from social-media platforms like Facebook FB, -1.12% and Twitter TWTR, +0.76% are more likely to have misperceptions about COVID-19, according to a recent study led by researchers at McGill University in Montreal.

Those that consume more traditional news media have fewer misperceptions and are more likely to follow public health recommendations like social distancing, concluded the paper, which was published in the latest issue of the Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review.

In the context of a crisis like COVID-19, however, there is good reason to be concerned about the role that the consumption of social media is playing in boosting misperceptions, says co-author Aengus Bridgman, a Ph.D. candidate in political science at McGill University.

Social-media platforms have been criticized for their failures to stop the spread of misinformation, especially concerning elections and the coronavirus pandemic, despite a number of new policies enacted since Russia used the platforms to interfere in the 2016 elections.

In May, Twitter marked tweets by President Donald Trump with a fact-check warning label for the first time, after the president falsely claimed mail-in ballots are substantially fraudulent. (He has continued to make such claims on social media and elsewhere.)

Paranoia politicizes a public-health emergency and distracts from potentially life-saving measures.

Earlier this month, social-media sites attempted to quash a video pushing misleading information about hydroxychloroquine as a COVID-19 treatment which led to Twitters partially suspending Donald Trump Jr.s account.

The video featured doctors calling hydroxychloroquine a drug used to treat malaria, lupus and rheumatoid arthritis for decades a cure for COVID, despite a growing body of scientific evidence indicating it is not an effective treatment for the coronavirus.

In April, the president floated the idea of using ultraviolet light inside the body or a disinfectant by injection as a treatment for coronavirus: I see the disinfectant where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. (The next day, Trump claimed he was not being serious.)

COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus SARS-CoV-2, had infected at least 20 million people globally and 5 million in the U.S. as of Tuesday. It had killed more than 737,394 people worldwide and at least 163,533 in the U.S. States and the South and West have seen a surge in cases.

The stock market has been on a wild ride in recent months. The Dow Jones Industrial Index DJIA, +0.83% and the S&P 500 SPX, +0.22% were trading higher Tuesday, while the Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -0.60% was lower as investors await round two of a fiscal stimulus.

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Was COVID-19 made in a lab? Will a vaccine protect you forever? Does the sun help? Coronavirus myths are spreading in 25 languages here are the most...

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