Category: Corona Virus

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Turkey lifts all Coronavirus restrictions for Indian travellers – Times of India

June 7, 2022

Yes, you can now travel to the very beautiful Turkey, sans COVID restrictions. In a recent travel update, the government of Turkey has removed all the COVID-related restrictions for Indian travellers. Turkey Tourism Board said that with this move, the nation is hoping for the highest-ever number of Indian tourists this year. Before this, travellers from India were needed to provide a negative RT-PCR test report or vaccination certificate to enter the country.

However, starting today, Indian travellers can enter Turkey without any such requirements, making it easier. The board said that no proof of vaccination or proof of recovery or a negative RT-PCR report will be required for Indians to visit Turkey.

Among this huge number, 50000 were Indian tourists only! This is the reason why Turkey is so hopeful of a full recovery in tourism this year, now that people are eager to travel and experience unexplored destinations.

For those who dont know, Turkey was voted as one of the top destinations for Free Independent Travelers (FIT) and Meeting, Incentive Travel, Conferences and Events (MICE) tourists from across the globe.

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Turkey lifts all Coronavirus restrictions for Indian travellers - Times of India

Corona Virus In Lanzarote – Lanzarote Information

June 5, 2022

Lanzarote latest coronavirus information updated daily

17th March 2022

The government has ceased recording daily covid numbers, instead offering a bi-weekly report. For that reason, well cease to post the numbers daily here and leave this article up to retain the historical data you can see below.

Lanzarote has had 69deaths from Covid 19 since the epidemic began.

Peak Numbers

These are the peak numbers and the date when they occurred:

Active Cases 6651 20th January 2022

In Hospital 66 28th January 2021

In ICU 23 8th February 2021

Stay up to date with the latest information with our famous weekly Lanzarote Newsletter.

For information about what Lanzarote is like for tourists, post Covid lockdown, go here: What is Lanzarote like now?

Lanzarote was locked down on 14th March 2020. All essential businesses were closed, travel to and from the island stopped, and there were very strict rules about leaving your home, with only one person allowed at a time and for essential reasons only.

The first death from Covid was on 25th March 2020, when a 71 year old German resident lost his life. Within two days, two more had died.

On 29th March 2020, the lockdown was extended until 9th April. But this time, there were over 1,000 cases across the islands, and more than 30 people had died.

On 10th April 2020, the lockdown was extended for a further 14 days, and it was noted that Spain had introduced one of the worlds strictest lockdowns, but also that it was having the desired effect in The Canaries, which had one of the lowest infection rates in the world.

On 26th April 2020, Lanzarote moved into the first phase of a Lockdown de-escalation. This was a four phase process, which was aimed at seeing life return to normal over a period of time. At each stage, the rules were relaxed one by one. Lanzarote progressed through the phases quickly, due to very low numbers of infections.

On 21st May 2020, it became compulsory to wear face masks in public indoor spaces, or whenever not able to maintain social distance.

On 28th May, the last patient from the first wave left the ICU. At that point, Lanzarote had only three active cases.

On 22nd June Lanzarote left the final phase of lockdown and entered what was called The New Normality.

In early September 2020, amid rising cases, additional measures were imposed in Lanzarote, which included a requirement to wear masks at all times indoors and outdoors, except while eating and drinking, swimming or sunbathing. This was the second wave.

On 22nd October, air corridors were opened with UK and Germany.

On 26th October, the Spanish government brought back a state of alarm due to rapidly rising numbers in the second wave.

Lanzarote rode the second wave, peaking at over 600 active cases by the beginning of November, but new measures quickly brought the numbers right down again in late November and into December.

In December, the government announced special rules around Christmas, with the aim of allowing smaller gatherings of families, but containing them. At the same time a new system of traffic lights was introduced, with Red, yellow and green options, based on infection rate, and each with its own set of rules.

In early January 2021, Lanzarote moved into the yellow and then the red traffic light zone in consecutive weeks due to rapidly rising numbers following Christmas gatherings.

One 23rd January 2021, a new Brown traffic light level 4, was introduced, as the number of ICU patients in Lanzarote hospital reached a critical point. At this stage, for the first time during the pandemic, there were more than 1,000 active cases on the island, and we were firmly in the third wave.

On 2nd March 2021, Lanzarote was moved to Level 3 of restrictions as the post Christmas peak of more than 1100 active cases finally fell below 300. The island had been in Level 4 for 6 weeks.

On 11th March 2021, it was announced that Lanzarote would move down to Level 2 of restrictions as active cases fell well below 100. We were in Level 3 for 10 days.

On 9th May 2021, Spain State of Alarm ended after 14 months. Control on Covid measures was passed back to the autonomous regions, in our case The Canary Islands.

On 30th June, the last patient left hospital in Lanzarote, and for the first time in almost a year, there were no patients in hospital with Covid.

On 2nd July 2021, Lanzarote was moved to level 1 restrictions, the lowest level.

On 24th July 2021, Lanzarote was moved back to level 2 of restrictions.

On 30th August 2021, a 60 year old man died from Covid, the 51st on the island and the first since May 2021. He had been suffering from various other ailments.

On 3rd September 2021, Lanzarote was moved back to level 1 of restrictions, the lowest level.

On 21st November 2021, Lanzarote was moved once again to level 2, as numbers of active cases increased on the island.

On 10th January 2021, Lanzarote was moved to level 3.

On 20th January, for the first time since late December, the overall number of active Covid cases on the island started falling from a peak of 6651. This was the 6th or Omicron wave.

On 17th March 2020, just over two years after lockdown started, the Canaria government stopped recording case numbers on a daily basis.

The best way to stay in touch with all the Lanzarote news is by subscribing to our famous Lanzarote newsletter, which goes out every Friday morning and is now 700 editions old. Every week, its packed with all the news, latest articles, upcoming events, photos and a video which we shoot fresh from somewhere on the island.

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Corona Virus In Lanzarote - Lanzarote Information

Coronavirus in Oregon: New weekly cases fall amid drop in testing; hospitalizations exceed 300 – OregonLive

June 5, 2022

Newly identified coronavirus cases fell for the first time since the second omicron wave began in late March, with 13% fewer new infections reported during the week ending Monday as compared to the week ending May 23.

Average daily new cases dropped from a recent peak of nearly 1,690 per day one week ago to about 1,450. State health officials have previously indicated they believe the current COVID-19 wave may be reaching its peak.

But the reported decline comes in conjunction with the Memorial Day holiday weekend, which saw a nearly 20% drop in testing compared to the same timeframe in the previous week. Test positivity rates remain high, averaging 13.7% over the past four days, indicating that more testing would have caught more cases.

The reported decline in cases ends eight consecutive weeks of rising case tallies. The Oregonian/OregonLive calculated the decline using cumulative case numbers reported Tuesday compared to the total from a week earlier, instead of the typical Monday reporting cycle. Thats because the Oregon Health Authority declined to release cumulative counts for the Memorial Day holiday.

Meanwhile, hospitalizations have climbed to 303 and, according to an Oregon Health & Science University forecast, could max out at about 330 occupied beds next week.

Since it began: Oregon has reported 765,449 confirmed or presumed infections and 7,635 deaths.

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Where the newest cases are by county in the eight days since May 23: Baker (16), Benton (334), Clackamas (1259), Clatsop (67), Columbia (124), Coos (135), Crook (61), Curry (38), Deschutes (696), Douglas (211), Gilliam (1), Grant (10), Harney (18), Hood River (65), Jackson (462), Jefferson (54), Josephine (130), Klamath (66), Lake (6), Lane (1064), Lincoln (97), Linn (282), Malheur (18), Marion (862), Morrow (5), Multnomah (2982), Polk (242), Sherman (2), Tillamook (60), Umatilla (73), Union (24), Wallowa (10), Wasco (73), Washington (2114) and Yamhill (212).

Hospitalizations: 303 people with confirmed coronavirus infections are hospitalized, up 25 since Monday, May 23. That includes 29 people in intensive care, up five since May 23.

Vaccinations: As of May 23, the state has reported fully vaccinating 2,913,135 people (68.3% of the population), partially vaccinating 288,435 people (6.8%) and boosting 1,640,138 (38.4%).

New deaths: Since May 23, the Oregon Health Authority has reported 44 additional deaths connected to COVID-19.

Fedor Zarkhin

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Coronavirus in Oregon: New weekly cases fall amid drop in testing; hospitalizations exceed 300 - OregonLive

Severe Covid cases more likely in highly polluted areas – The Guardian

June 5, 2022

People who contract Covid-19 are more likely to suffer severe symptoms if they have been exposed to air pollution for long periods.

A study found that people who live in places where there are high levels of the atmospheric pollutant nitrogen dioxide had higher chances of ending up in intensive care units (ICUs) or of needing mechanical ventilation after they had caught Covid.

Nitrogen dioxide is released into the atmosphere when fossil fuels are burned, and the gas is known to have harmful effects on peoples lungs. In particular, endothelial cells which form a thin membrane lining the inside of the heart and blood vessels become damaged, and this inhibits the transfer of oxygen from inhaled breath to a persons blood.

Our results show a positive association between long-term nitrogen dioxide exposure and Covid-19 fatality and Covid-19 incidence rate, said the team of German researchers, who were led by Susanne Koch, of Universittsmedizin Berlin, a large teaching hospital.

Scientists had previously made links between Covid and air pollution, but few studies have concentrated on cases that were particularly severe or on underlying health conditions in those affected by the disease.

Koch and her team used air pollution data to calculate average levels of nitrogen dioxide for each county in Germany. The highest was found in Frankfurt, while the lowest was experienced in Suhl, a small county in Thuringia, the group revealed in its report, which was presented last week to Euroanaesthesia, the annual meeting of the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care in Milan.

The group also studied data on how many Covid patients in German hospitals had required ICU treatment and mechanical ventilation during one month in 2020. These figures were adjusted for other factors, such as pre-existing health conditions.

After analysing their results, the team reported that on average, 28 ICU beds and 19 ventilators were needed for Covid patients in each of the 10 counties that had the lowest long-term nitrogen dioxide exposure. These figures contrasted with an average of 144 ICU beds and 102 ventilators needed in the 10 counties with the highest long-term exposure.

The research has worrying implications. In the UK, 75% of urban areas in 2019 had illegal levels of air pollution, underscoring the fact that the British government has made almost no progress on legal obligations that should have been met in 2010. During lockdown, there was a temporary decrease in nitrogen in some areas. However, traffic and pollution are returning to past levels in many towns and cities.

According to the Royal College of Physicians, air pollution causes the equivalent of 40,000 early deaths a year, and has been linked to cancer, asthma, stroke and heart disease, diabetes, obesity and changes linked to dementia. Now evidence is mounting that Covid should be added to this list.

The German study did not prove a causative relationship between air pollution and severe Covid, the researchers admitted. However, they did suggest a plausible causal link that could explain the relationship between severe Covid and levels of nitrogen dioxide in the atmosphere.

Coronavirus is known to bind to the Ace-2 receptor when it enters cells after infecting a person. This receptor has many key roles, one of which involves helping the body to regulate levels of angiotensin II, a protein that increases inflammation. In other words, Ace-2 helps to put the brakes on inflammation.

However, when Covid binds to Ace-2, these brakes are removed. It is also known that air pollution causes a similar release of controls over angiotensin II. So the combination of Covid and long-term air pollution exposure would lead to more severe inflammation, more severe Covid and more need for ICUs and mechanical ventilation, the team argued.

Exposure to ambient air pollution can contribute a range of other conditions, including heart attacks, strokes, asthma and lung cancer, and will continue to harm health long after the Covid-19 pandemic ends, added Koch. A transition to renewable energy, clean transportation and sustainable agriculture is urgently needed to improve air quality. Reducing emissions wont just help to limit climate crisis, it will improve the health and the quality of life of people around the world.

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Severe Covid cases more likely in highly polluted areas - The Guardian

Seniors prime target of weaker COVID-19 wave in Minnesota – Star Tribune

June 5, 2022

When COVID-19 finally found its way to Worketu Gigesa after two years of her family protecting her the infection hit her hard.

The 97-year-old was admitted to Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis this week, despite the circulating strains of coronavirus appearing to cause less severe illness than earlier versions in the pandemic.

"She didn't want to eat, she didn't want to drink, and she got weak," said her daughter, Demitu Abdissa. "I didn't know what was going on and I got worried and called 911."

Gigesa's experience reflects a statistical reality, even as the current COVID-19 wave shows signs of receding or leveling off in Minnesota ahead of a predicted milder summer. Whatever COVID-19 risk remains this spring, it has largely shifted back to seniors.

More than 90% of the COVID-19 deaths identified so far in May in Minnesota have been in people 65 and older above the 66% among that population in December, when delta and earlier omicron variants took an elevated toll on younger, unvaccinated adults. The last time more than 90% of the state's pandemic deaths involved seniors was December 2020, before vaccine was widely available.

COVID-19 deaths have declined across all age groups in Minnesota since the start of 2022 just more rapidly among younger adults. Provisional federal data showed a decline in COVID-19 deaths among nonelderly adults in Minnesota from 385 in December to seven so far in May. The comparable decline in senior deaths was 755 to 89.

The declines reflect strong levels of immunity, vaccinations and antiviral drugs to combat the pandemic, but people still need to protect others around them who are vulnerable, said Dr. Ruth Lynfield, state epidemiologist and medical director of the Minnesota Department of Health.

"You need to know your exposure history. Have you been infected recently? Have you been vaccinated and boosted?" she said. "Certainly throwing on a mask should be like carrying an umbrella. It shouldn't be a big deal and, if you're going to interact with someone who is very fragile, absolutely you want to do whatever you can to protect that person."

COVID-19 hospitalizations in Minnesota have increased from a recent low of 183 on April 10 to 446 on Thursday, but many have been incidental meaning the patients were admitted for other reasons and tested positive upon routine screening. The number of patients requiring intensive care has increased over the past week, but still represents only 10% of the total COVID-19 hospitalizations. That rate reached 30% at other severe points in the pandemic.

Patients admitted for COVID-19 this spring are more likely to be seniors than they were during this winter's severe pandemic waves, said Dr. Mark Sannes, an infectious disease specialist for HealthPartners, which includes Regions Hospital in St. Paul and Methodist Hospital in St. Louis Park. However, these patients tend to also have other health conditions and symptoms.

"Is that COVID, or is that something else?" he said. "That is kind of the nuanced presentation that I think we are seeing in that older population right now."

Seniors still vulnerable

Gigesa lives with her daughter and son-in-law at their home in Minneapolis. Abdissa, a food service worker at the Minneapolis-St. Paul Airport, said she took the threat of COVID-19 seriously when the pandemic emerged.

"I just used a mask and cleaned all the time to protect her," she said.

Abdissa said she hasn't ever tested positive herself and isn't sure how her mother got infected twice this year. The first infection in January was worse, but the second one in May was frightening because it came so quickly and after COVID-19 vaccinations and two booster shots.

The vaccine likely helped, though, the daughter said: "That's why she is alive, I think."

The spread of the coronavirus appears much wider than is reflected in Minnesota's confirmed case counts, which include only publicly reported test results and not popular at-home rapid tests. The virus, as a result, has found its way back to vulnerable seniors and into nursing homes and other congregate-care facilities.

Infections among residents of the facilities reached 455 in the last week of April, according to Minnesota's latest weekly pandemic report. That is the highest total since early February, but still far below the peak in January.

Low staff vaccination rates aren't helping, but many infections are among vaccinated workers as well, said Jean Peters, president of Elder Voice Family Advocates. Lax infection control at understaffed facilities is likely fueling the spread of COVID-19 among residents.

"It is my belief that the temp checks, masking, hand washing, protective eyewear [practices] are not being followed," she said. "How can they be when staffing is stretched, and the staff that is there may not be trained or is overwhelmed as they try their best to provide the basic of cares?"

Nearly 46% of Minnesota's 12,649 COVID-19 deaths have involved long-term care residents. That rate dropped to a low of 20% of COVID-19 deaths in Minnesota this December, but has since increased back to 44% in May.

Hope for declines

Where the pandemic goes from here is unclear. Viral levels have been declining in much of Minnesota based on testing data and sampling of wastewater. However, viral levels are rising in northeastern Minnesota, and sewage sampling in the Twin Cities has found rising rates of the BA.4 and BA.5 coronavirus variants that caused a surge of COVID-19 in South Africa. The surge mostly involved milder illnesses, though.

"We hope now that school is out that numbers will come down even further," Sannes said, "similar to what we have seen the last two Junes."

Breakthrough infections in vaccinated people are more common this spring, but vaccines are still difference-makers in terms of the severity of illness, said Dr. Peter Henry, chief medical officer for the Brainerd Lakes region of Essentia Health. Among the 45 COVID-19 patients admitted to Essentia hospitals on Friday, 36 were unvaccinated or older adults overdue for boosters.

Broader use of the antiviral Paxlovid could help address risks to vulnerable seniors now that supplies have improved. Lynfield said the state has been reaching out to long-term care facilities to make sure they are comfortable determining which residents with COVID-19 qualify for treatment and offering it quickly enough.

Henry said Essentia calls every patient with a positive test and offers treatment if eligible. The doctor took Paxlovid after testing positive for COVID-19 this spring despite receiving two booster doses of vaccine. Worsening symptoms subsided after he took the pills.

"Then for three to four days it was like a cold," he said. "Not even a bad one."

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Seniors prime target of weaker COVID-19 wave in Minnesota - Star Tribune

Travel Agents Pushing for Change in International COVID-19 Testing Policy – NBC Connecticut

June 5, 2022

You can drive from Mexico or Canada into the United States without proof of a negative COVID-19 test, but you cant fly into the states without one.

Travel agents in Connecticut and around the country say its an executive order that needs to change.

No other countries are requiring this testing. Other countries have realized that its not going to change the spread of infection and its not required to go out of the country, said Amanda Klimak, president and co-owner of Largay Travel in Waterbury.

Klimak is also a member of the American Society of Travel Advisors.

Shell be with fellow agents lobbying on Capitol Hill for change later this month.

Probably one of the most absurd, irrational pieces of legislation that Ive ever witnessed in my time, said Paul Largay, CEO of Largay Travel, whose family business has spanned three generations.

Largay has not only heard of his clients having to quarantine overseas, but he was in the same boat too after disembarking from a river cruise in Lisbon, Portugal.

Full coverage of the COVID-19 outbreak and how it impacts you

And the doctor told me I had to quarantine for seven days. The concierge corrected him and said, No, no, theyve changed that to five, he said. This is the greatest frustration we have is that no one really knows the rules -- including the doctors.

Its not just confusion and stress in countries overseas with the U.S. policies, but local agents say its also impacting business and making people rethink their trips.

Agents here in Connecticut have heard of folks faking doctors notes or even flying into Canada or Mexico and driving across the border to avoid getting stuck abroad since driving into the U.S. doesnt require a test like flying does.

When you do come back into the country, no one in the U.S. checks those test results, its all dependent on people overseas when you check in for your flight, said Klimak.

Its not just Largay Travel that tells us the executive order is ineffective.

Frenchs Worldwide Travel says its a nightmare.

And even a Wethersfield Travel agent and her family were stuck in Aruba after her daughter tested positive mid-trip.

NBC Connecticut reached out to the White House and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about the executive order.

At this time our international travel guidance remains the same. CDC is evaluating all guidance and orders based on the latest science and state of the pandemic, and we will communicate any updates publicly if and/or when they change, a CDC spokesperson said.

The fact that they reduced the mask mandate on domestic flights and yet they still keep the testing, it just doesnt make sense. I dont know why a flight from New York to LA doesnt require testing, but if youre flying from Paris to New York somehow thats a higher risk, said Klimak.

Agents NBC Connecticut heard from say having to quarantine is costing travelers thousands of dollars to extend their trip.

It was a great trip, but an unhappy ending, said Dan DeSoto of Sarasota, Florida.

A birthday and anniversary bucket list adventure to Scotland and Ireland for the DeSotos had a less than desirable ending when they got their COVID-19 tests the day before their return trip home.

Low and behold she comes out positive. Im negative, said DeSoto, So were like shocked because she has no symptoms.

Two days later, DeSoto says he tested positive, and his wife tested negative, which meant extending their trip for a week to quarantine, costing $5,000 more before he could go home.

Largay Travel agents say they've seen significant others leave their loved ones abroad only to get COVID-19 when theyre back in the states or quarantine days continue to stack up in a foreign country because another family member gets sick.

How do you reconcile that the government will allow people to drive across the border, to sail into the country, but if you want to fly into the country you have to test negative. Where is the rational reasoning behind that?, said Largay.

Desoto is the first to tell you he doesnt want to spread the coronavirus, but he says the rule just doesnt seem to make sense.

When I tested negative, I couldn't get out of the hotel fast enough.

Travel agents we spoke to say they dont want to discourage anyone from traveling abroad. Theyre just hoping the rule gets changed.

In the meantime, they urge travelers to get travel insurance that protects them if they get sick before or during their trip.

They suggest taking a test before leaving for the trip and mid-trip so if youre positive, you can start your quarantine then instead of the hours before your flight.

And of course, they say having an agent is a perk because they can help you rebook if necessary.

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Travel Agents Pushing for Change in International COVID-19 Testing Policy - NBC Connecticut

The 10-year-olds symptoms passed but then worse ones set in. Her case shows how little we know about long COVID in kids – San Francisco Chronicle

June 5, 2022

Shyne Staples leaps up and executes a flawless forward roll across a gym mat. She flips into a cartwheel, stands on her hands, then climbs a rope before spinning around a high bar in her San Mateo gymnastics class.

Like many 10-year-old girls, Shyne likes flying around the gym, Simone Biles-style. But unlike most of them, Shyne begins class already in pain, and the exertion puts her to sleep 90 minutes after its over.

Shyne has long COVID.

Lingering, debilitating effects of the coronavirus were identified early in the pandemic, and new studies suggest that at least 1 in 5 adults has ongoing symptoms. But few studies have focused on children who, like Shyne, find their childhood disrupted by COVID months after recovering.

Theres pain. And sometimes children have headaches. But fatigue is characteristically the most common persistent symptom, said Dr. Roshni Mathew, a pediatric infectious disease expert at Stanford Childrens Health who doesnt treat Shyne but sees other children with long COVID in her practice.

Shyne Staples, 10, exercises on a rope at Peninsula Gymnastics in San Mateo.

The World Health Organization defines long COVID as symptoms lasting at least two months after probable or confirmed coronavirus infection that cannot be explained by an alternative diagnosis. The National Institutes of Health is spending $1.15 billion to spur research into the phenomenon that can cause a wide range of symptoms, including brain fog, loss of smell, racing heart and chronic fatigue. In April, President Biden unveiled the National Research Action Plan on long COVID to accelerate the research effort.

Studies indicate that millions of people around the world are plagued by long COVID. Vaccination before infection appears to reduce but not eliminate the risk. A new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 20% of adults under 65 who had tested positive for the coronavirus developed persistent symptoms, as did 25% of those over 65. A large national survey from 23andMe released in May roughly echoed the findings.

But how many children are affected by long COVID and for how long remains elusive. In the U.S. alone, children represent 19% of all COVID cases more than 13 million kids.

A pediatric study of long COVID published in February in the journal Lancet Child & Adolescent Health compared more than 3,000 British 11- to 17-year-olds who tested positive against a similar group that did not. Neither group reported feeling entirely healthy three months after testing. But researchers found that nearly 30% of the adolescents who had tested positive for the coronavirus experienced multiple symptoms, including fatigue, headaches and shortness of breath, compared with 19% for those who had not.

Shyne Staples, 10, takes a class at Peninsula Gymnastics in San Mateo.

Long COVID Kids, a support group in the U.K., features photos of 50 children from around the world on its website holding placards identifying their ongoing symptoms. The youngest is 5, and the oldest 16.

The sign held by one 12-year-old American girl lists memory loss, heart damage and passing out among her symptoms all devastating for a person of any age. A U.K. 10-year-old peeks out from behind a lineup of 17 symptoms, including nausea and chest pain, under the heading Day 293.

Shyne is not on the page. But she could be.

She tested positive for COVID-19 on Jan. 9, a few days after her adult brother. Her fraternal twin sister, Samantha, stayed healthy, as did her parents. But after Shynes COVID infection faded, along with her sore throat and stuffy nose, other, worse symptoms set in.

Deseree Solano of San Mateo is the mother of fraternal twins Samantha and Shyne Staples. Shyne, 10, got COVID-19 in January and continues to experience symptoms.

I started getting pain in my arms, my neck and my shoulders and legs, she said, as she practiced backbends on the living room rug of the familys home in San Mateo. Before that, the pain was, like, here, she said, pointing to a spot on her forehead just above her gold-rimmed glasses.

The first pains appeared on Jan. 16. For a while, her mother, Deseree Solano, kept a symptom diary. Feb. 16: Neck and shoulder pain. Feels like she has bruises everywhere. Feb. 19: Face started throbbing ... very winded. Blank staring. March 10: Ear pain, armpit pain, legs. Shoulders, hair loss and now depression. April 20: Leg and back pain. Last week lips started bleeding again. Very tired. Still has hair loss.

Shynes thick brown hair continues to fall out. We thought it was the shampoo, said Samantha, her twin. But it wasnt, because my hair was fine.

Its all since COVID, Solano said. Before then, Shyne would be the first person up and ready for school. Now I have to wake her up numerous times, and Samantha is up before her and ready. Shyne is not a kid to be lazy or get up late.

She stayed home from school for two months before feeling ready to return, despite the pain and other symptoms that persist even now, more than four months later.

Sometimes its, like, burning and pain at once. Its always there, Shyne said of the discomfort in her arms, shoulders and calves. I cant eat a lot. Like I want to throw up.

Solano said her daughter sometimes has difficulty breathing but tries to hide it because she dreads going back to the doctor.

At many medical centers, including Kaiser, where doctors diagnosed Shyne with the post-viral syndrome, patients are not treated specifically for long COVID but are sent to specialists for the individual ailments they complain about.

Krista Prasadi, 10, chats over FaceTime with her best friend, Shyne Staples. Krista often provides a shoulder for her friend to lean on when Shyne is having painful symptoms of long COVID.

A kid with persistent headaches may land in the neurology clinic, said Mathew, the pediatric infectious disease expert at Stanford, who said she often sends children back to their pediatrician after ensuring that no active disease is causing their symptoms.

Its a common experience of long COVID sufferers of all ages that their medical tests come back normal, suggesting nothing is wrong. Shyne, for example, feels like she has bruises but there are none to be seen.

Researchers, including those at UCSFs Long-term Impact of Infection with Novel Coronavirus, or LIINC, study, point to three likely causes for long COVIDs odd symptoms: persistent inflammation caused by the coronavirus, hidden bits of the virus that remain in the body and autoimmunity when the bodys own immune system turns on itself.

In February, researchers at the State University of New York reported the case of an 11-year-old girl with persistent abdominal pain and nausea in the Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition. After an endoscopy, colonoscopy and other therapies found nothing wrong, doctors wondered if the coronavirus infection she had had three months earlier could still be causing trouble. They looked for evidence and found it.

Twins Samantha (left) and Shyne Staples, 10, at their San Mateo home. Shyne got COVID-19 in January and continues to experience symptoms.

They discovered nucleocapsid proteins, which are associated with the coronavirus, in the lining of her gastrointestinal tract. Her prolonged symptoms, with evidence of chronic inflammation, strongly suggests a direct consequence of COVID, they wrote.

University of Southern California researchers also found evidence of a COVID connection in three children with brain inflammation autoimmune mediated encephalitis and published their study in January in the Journal of Child Neurology. All three improved after receiving high-dose intravenous corticosteroids, which reduce inflammation, the study said.

Yet clear, clinical evidence of a connection between the coronavirus and ongoing symptoms is often lacking or hard to find, leading some doctors to be skeptical about whether children actually experience long COVID.

Dr. Geraldina Lionetti, a pediatric rheumatologist at UCSF Benioff Childrens Hospitals, said she wasnt comfortable saying whether long COVID in children was real because there may be other potential causes for their symptoms including physical and psychological aftereffects of the pandemic itself.

Twins Samantha and Shyne Staples as babies.

Its very difficult to distinguish between symptoms of long COVID and being on lockdown, Lionetti said.

Megan Carmilani, who founded a support group called Long COVID Families, used to find such skepticism infuriating but has made peace with it. To me, all the doctor is saying is, I dont have the knowledge or skills to help, she said.

Carmilani, 43, never had long COVID, but she strongly relates to children who do, because she has had post-viral symptoms since getting mononucleosis at age 14. It wasnt until 2017 that doctors made the connection between her ongoing symptoms and her adolescent illness.

I dont want another child to wait decades for proper medical care, Carmilani said from her home near Pittsburgh.

She points to research showing that ongoing illnesses prompted by initial viral infections are not uncommon. They include long COVID, chronic fatigue syndrome (myalgic encephalomyelitis) and Epstein-Barr, which can cause mononucleosis, among others. Yet the mysterious aftereffects have been ignored and underfunded, she said, especially in pediatrics.

Carmilani founded Long COVID Families to give children the support she lacked, she said. I needed an adult to say: Your symptoms are real. There is a community to support you, and we are going to work together to get you the care you need.

Today, the group has about 2,000 participants and easily 500 children with long COVID, Carmilani said.

Shynes mother has appreciated the community. Its been helpful mentally to have a group of other people that understand what I am going through, she said.

As for Shyne, understanding comes from Krista Prasadi, 10, who is as caring a friend as a kid could hope for.

She tells me how much pain shes in, said Krista. I ask her if shes OK.

And I hope, like, she can feel better.

Nanette Asimov is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: nasimov@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @NanetteAsimov

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The 10-year-olds symptoms passed but then worse ones set in. Her case shows how little we know about long COVID in kids - San Francisco Chronicle

When Will This COVID Wave End? – The Atlantic

June 5, 2022

In mid-March, I began to notice a theme within my social circle in New York, where I live: COVIDit finally got me! At that point, I didnt think much of it. Only a few of my friends seemed to be affected, and case counts were still pretty low, all things considered. By April, images of rapid tests bearing the dreaded double bars were popping up all over my Instagram feed. Because cases had been rising slowly but steadily, I dismissed the trend to the back of my mind. Its presence nagged quietly throughout May, when I attended a party at a crowded hotel and hurled myself into a raging mosh pit. As I emerged, sweating, cases were still creeping upward.

Only last week, more than two months later, did cases finally stop rising in New Yorkbut theyve plateaued more than theyve fallen back to Earth. If you simply look at the case counts, this surge is not even in the same stratosphere as the peak of Omicron during the winter, but our current numbers are certainly a massive undercount now that rapid tests are everywhere. The same sort of drawn-out wave has unfolded across the Northeast in recent months, and frankly, its a little weird: The biggest waves that have struck the region have been tsunamis of infections that come and go, as opposed to the rising tide were seeing now. Other parts of the country currently seem poised to follow the Northeast. In the past two weeks, cases have noticeably increased in states such as Arizona, South Carolina, and West Virginia; Californias daily average case count has risen 36 percent. In April, I called the coronaviruss latest turn an invisible wave. Now Im starting to think of it as the When will it end? wave.

Read: Is America in the middle of an invisible wave?

Consider New York City, which by this point has been the epicenter of several waves, including the one were dealing with now. When Omicron arrived last fall, cases jumped very quickly as the new, more transmissible variant broke through existing immune defenses and infected lots of people, who spread the virus like wildfire. A combination of factors quickly extinguished the flame: People got boosted, the public-health messaging changed and some people changed their behaviors, and eventually so many had gotten sick that the virus had fewer people to infect. Thats not what seems to be happening now. For one thing, the shape of the curve feels different: From December 2021 to mid-February 2022about two and a half monthsOmicron erected a skyscraper on the charts. Since March, the current wave has drawn just the rising half of what looks to be a modest hilland, again, the true shape is much taller. Broadly, the same trends have played out elsewhere, too. Now its June, and fresh images of rapid-test results are still circulating within my social circle. Why has this wave felt so different?

The major reason, public-health experts told me, is that Americans, on the whole, are more protected against COVID now than they were during previous times when infections have soared. Omicron was a completely new variant when it first hit during the winter, and it swept through a large chunk of the country. We built a lot of immunity due to so many people getting sick, Marisa Eisenberg, an epidemiologist at the University of Michigan, told me. So far, that immunity seems to dampen the spread of the two new forms of Omicron that are behind the current, stretched-out wave of cases. Its imperfect, but its at least some protection, Joe Gerald, a public-health professor at the University of Arizona, told me. As we take people out of the susceptible pool, basically the math works against a large and fast outbreak, so it would tend to slow transmission and make the size of the wave smaller.

Another major factor at play is the onset of warmer weather, especially in colder parts of the country. Schools nearly out, if it isnt already, and though people are getting together and traveling more, theyre likely doing so outdoors. In other words, even if people are getting infected with new Omicron strains, theyre not able to spread it as efficiently. These arent ideal transmission conditions for this usually winter virus, Gerald said. Seasonality may also be one reason that cases first rose in the Northeast, given that the When will it end? wave began when it was relatively cooler and people were inclined to gather indoors.

Read: COVID sure looks seasonal now

The UCLA epidemiologist Tim Brewer said hes confident that COVID is settling into similar seasonal patterns as illnesses such as the flu and the cold. Weve seen smaller waves before outside of the winter months, he pointed out. Whats going on right now is very similar to what happened if you look back at 2020, around June through July. It had this gradual rise in cases and then things kind of leveled off for a while. Hopefully [soon] theyll level off. That being said, what were seeing now is not identical to earlier stages of the pandemic: Reported cases are much, much higher now versus in summer 2020, and thats before you account for all the missed infections right now. Also the onset of the summer 2020 wave was not as maddeningly slow as this one has been.

Meanwhile, reported cases are continuing to climb in other regions, namely the South and Southwest. That raises the uncomfortable, frustrating possibility that well be stuck in this wave for quite some time. But then again, even that is hard to know right now, especially as our view of basic pandemic numbers is so murky. What makes it difficult to understand how a new wave might play out is that were still struggling to understand what the size of our susceptible population is, how many people have truly been infected, and how quickly immunity wanes from both vaccination and prior infection, Gerald said. Eventually, as we learn more about this virus, we might get better at predicting its next turn. But for now, theres also going to be weirdo surges that happen whenever they happen, Eisenberg added.

Theres no sugarcoating it: The When will it end? wave is frustrating. Were entering our third pandemic summer, and yet again cases are high enough that activities such as indoor dining and weddings can come with a real fear of getting sick. But that pattern of slow and steady spread has benefits as well. Its exactly what we need to prevent our health-care system from getting overwhelmedwith all the side effects of delayed procedures and hospital burnout that comes along with that. Some 25,000 Americans are currently hospitalized with COVID, compared with more than 150,000 at the height of Omicron. Theres a reason flatten the curve became an early pandemic sloganby drawing out infections, were helping to ensure that hospitals have space for us when we need it, whether thats for COVID or any other reason.

But we shouldnt get too comfortable. This winter could be bad once againthe Biden administration predicts that well see 100 million new cases during the fall and winter, and a new variant could still worsen that outlook. Such a dire situation is not inevitable, though. If anything, the When will it end? wave is a reminder that dramatic, all-consuming surges are not necessarily our destiny. Slowing this virus down, whether thats through vaccinations or ventilation upgradesor, in this case, the fortunate coincidence of immunity and weathercan go a long way. The more we interfere with the ability of this virus to replicate and transmit, the fewer the cases will be, and the less we interfere with its ability to replicate and transmit, the more cases there will be, Brewer said. Its just as simple as that.

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When Will This COVID Wave End? - The Atlantic

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