Category: Corona Virus

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Masks now recommended in 10 N.J. counties with high COVID transmission, CDC says – NJ.com

May 21, 2022

Masks are now recommended indoors and on public transportation in 10 New Jersey counties, after coronavirus levels increased in Salem County and pushed it into the high transmission category, the Center For Disease Control and Prevention said on Thursday.

Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Gloucester, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Salem and Sussex counties are considered high community levels of the virus, the CDC says. Cumberland County is the only level with low counties; the others are all considered medium.

Just five weeks ago, all New Jersey counties were considered areas of low community levels. But virus levels have increased sharply, with the seven-day average of new cases increasing 138% from a month ago.

The seven-day average for new cases was 4,034 as of Thursday, the highest seven-day average since February.

Community levels of the virus are recalculated every Thursday based on virus levels from the preceding week. Levels are calculated based on admissions to hospitals and the percent of inpatient beds used by COVID patients.

Cant see the map? Click here.

Hospitalizations remain below the peak levels seen in January during the height of the omicron wave. The rate of transmission stands at 1.29, meaning the outbreak is expanding.

The BA.2 strain of COVID-19 has been spreading in New Jersey for weeks, though at much lower rates than the Omicron surge in December and January. Officials have said the Omicron stealth sub-variant appears to spread more easily but generally does not cause more severe illness.

Community levels are calculated differently from transmission levels, the latter of which should only be used by health care facilities, the CDC says.

There is no mask advisory for residents living in low or medium transmission areas if they are not at high risk of serious illness, the CDC says.

Those who are a high risk for severe illness should discuss if they should mask up with their doctor when transmission rates are medium, the CDC says. Wide-spread masking is not recommended unless transmission levels are high.

At all transmission levels, the CDC recommends staying up-to-date with vaccinations and getting tested if you have COVID symptoms.

With reporting by NJ Advance Media staff writer Deon Johnson.

Thank you for relying on us to provide the journalism you can trust. Please consider supporting NJ.com with a subscription.

Katie Kausch may be reached at kkausch@njadvancemedia.com. Tell us your coronavirus story or send a tip here.

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Masks now recommended in 10 N.J. counties with high COVID transmission, CDC says - NJ.com

CDC now lists Ashtabula, Lorain counties as having ‘high’ levels of COVID-19, meaning masks are recommended for all people in indoor public spaces -…

May 21, 2022

In addition, eight other Northeast Ohio counties are currently at a 'medium' risk, meaning masks could be a good option for high-risk individuals.

CLEVELAND COVID-19 cases in Ohio have been climbing for weeks, and now, we're starting to see the effects of that increase on the community at-large.

According to the CDC's guidelines, Ashtabula and Lorain counties now have "high" community levels of COVID, the first time in months any part of the state has seen those risk assessments. This means health experts are advising all residents in those counties to wear face masks while in indoor public spaces, regardless of vaccination status.

Following a surge in cases last winter caused by the highly contagious omicron variant, the CDC updated its guidelines to better account for coronavirus hospitalizations after originally using case numbers as the overriding factor. While new infections per capita still play a role, new hospital admissions now help determine if doctors recommend face coverings or not, especially in counties where infections are under 200 per 100,000 residents in the past week.

When it comes to Ashtabula and Lorain counties, however, both regions have reported more than 200 new COVID-19 cases per capita over the last seven days, meaning the threshold of new hospitalizations per capita is now 10 instead of the usual 20. The CDC reports Lorain County has had 229.16 new infections and 10.4 new hospital admissions per 100,000 citizens in the last week, while Ashtabula is dealing with a whopping 332.16 new cases per capita and 10.7 new infections.

There is another indicator that could put counties with such levels of spread in the "high" zone, and that's if at least 10% of all hospital beds are occupied by COVID patients over an average of seven days. Thankfully, Ashtabula and Lorain's percentages sit at just 2.9% and 2.7%, respectively, but those figures could rise if community spread continues at its current pace.

The Ohio Department of Health says that of the state's more than 72,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations since the start of 2021, more than 93% have involved people who were not fully vaccinated against the virus. The CDC reports 64.2% of Lorain County's total population has been fully vaccinated, compared to just 53.3% in Ashtabula County.

In "high" counties, those who are immunocompromised or who have close contact with such individuals are also advised to avoid high-risk areas or gatherings, if possible. In addition, eight other Northeast Ohio counties have risen to "medium" risk for COVID-19, meaning masks could be the best option for high-risk individuals:

It should be noted that these guidelines from the CDC are merely recommendations and not necessarily required by law, although private businesses in Ohio are still free to implement their own policies. Despite issuing a statewide indoor mask mandate from August of 2020 to June of 2021, Gov. Mike DeWine has indicated he won't take similar measures this time around, partly due to a controversial new law that now largely limits his ability to implement health orders.

In new numbers released Thursday, Ohio reported more than 19,000 new coronavirus cases in the past week, compared to just over 3,000 seven weeks prior. Active hospitalizations have also been creeping up, but still sit at just 640, or less than 3% of all available beds. Nearly all of the state's cases are now caused by the omicron BA.2 or BA.2.12.1 variants.

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CDC now lists Ashtabula, Lorain counties as having 'high' levels of COVID-19, meaning masks are recommended for all people in indoor public spaces -...

Farm and Food: How forces were joined to keep employees in coronavirus-rife meat plants – South Bend Tribune

May 21, 2022

Alan Guebert| South Bend Tribune

Its no surprise that the nations five largest meatpackers, according to a May 12 government report, engaged in a concerted effort with Trump Administration political officials to insulate themselves from coronavirus-related oversight.

After all, the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis (the Committee), the body charged with oversight of governments response to the pandemic, released a 23-page Memorandum last October that mapped how meatpackers and the Trump Administration joined forces to keep employees working in coronavirus-rife meat plants.

Those efforts paid off big time for Big Meat but proved deadly for their employees. According to the Committee, tens of thousands became infected with coronavirus and nearly 300 died of it.

Still, Trumps Big Ag supporters were uncharacteristically silent after the May 12 report was released. None rose to declare it fake news or partisan hackery.

They didnt because they couldnt. The 12-member Committee is decidedly bipartisan; its seven Democrats and five Republicans feature James Clyburn, the Dems third highest ranking House member, and Steve Scalise, the Republicans second most powerful member.

As for facts, the Committee has bushels gleaned from 29 public hearings and 151,000 pages of evidence. Twenty-six of the May 12 reports 61 pages are footnotes documenting every detail of the meatpackers actions to influence government, often the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).

The evidence is remarkable for how brazen the meatpackers and their Big Ag allies especially the North American Meat Institute (NAMI) were in pushing their private agenda on public officials and how reflexively responsive government again, especially USDA was to the backdoor lobbying and backroom deals.

For example, meatpackers knew their plants were coronavirus hotbeds even as they lobbied to keep them open. An April 2020 email from a doctor in a hospital near JBS … facility, tells JBS that 100% of all COVID-19 patients we have in the hospital are either direct employees or family member[s] of your employees, and warn[s] that your employees will get sick and may die if this factory continues to be open.

The meatpackers prevailed because, the Committee reports, of a pattern of interference by Trump-appointed USDA officials with state and local health departments … with career [USDA] staff being walled off, and leaving no paper trail of such meetings.

The report names names. One was USDAs Under Secretary for Food Safety Mindy Brashears, whose efforts delighted the packer lobbyists who later crowed how fortunate it was to have USDA as their primary regulator because it was representing [the] industrys interests in every important interagency conversation.

Brashears was more than helpful: A few months later, a meatpacking lobbyist told [another meatpacking] executive that Brashears hasnt lost a battle for us in connection with efforts to block a local health department order to regulate coronavirus measures in a (named) facility.

Theres more. The report details how the meatpackers drafted the federal order to keep their plants open and how the Trump White House requested that they then issue positive statements and social media about the Presidents action …

For example, meatpackers were so sure they could push Trump Administration officials to issue an Executive Order to keep meatpacking plants open that Julie Anna Potts, the CEO of packer lobbyist NAMI, emailed Tyson Foods boss Noel White on April 18, 2020, to note, As of my conversations with USDA, they still think that they are … in better shape with POTUS than other agencies.

But, Potts related, I have said we have to see some results!

On April 28, her meatpacker members got their results: the White House ordered plants to remain open. Big Meats capture of government was complete.

But The results, reports the Committee, …were tragic: during the first year of the pandemic, workforces for the Big Five packers alone saw at least 59,000 worker infections, at least 269 deaths, and countless more cases and deaths among meatpacking-adjacent communities …

And, most likely, the only punishment any of the Big Five packers Tyson Foods, JBS USA, Smithfield, Cargilland National Beef will ever face for all the predicted illness and death is this detailed, shame-filled, soon-to-be-forgotten report.

Alan Guebert is an agricultural journalist. See past columns atfarmandfoodfile.com.

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Farm and Food: How forces were joined to keep employees in coronavirus-rife meat plants - South Bend Tribune

So, Have You Heard About Monkeypox? – The Atlantic

May 21, 2022

Updated at 9:51 a.m. on May 20, 2022

Yesterday afternoon, I called the UCLA epidemiologist Anne Rimoin to ask about the European outbreak of monkeypoxa rare but potentially severe viral illness with dozens of confirmed or suspected cases in the United Kingdom, Spain, and Portugal. If we see those clusters, given the amount of travel between the United States and Europe, I wouldnt be surprised to see cases here, Rimoin, who studies the disease, told me. Ten minutes later, she stopped mid-sentence to say that a colleague had just texted her a press release: Massachusetts Public Health Officials Confirm Case of Monkeypox.

The virus behind monkeypox is a close relative of the one that caused smallpox but is less deadly and less transmissible, causing symptoms that include fever and a rash. Endemic to western and central Africa, it was first discovered in laboratory monkeys in 1958hence the namebut the wild animals that harbor the virus are probably rodents. The virus occasionally spills over into humans, and such infections have become more common in recent decades. Rarely, monkeypox makes it to other continents, and when it does, outbreaks are so small, theyre measured in single digits, Thomas Inglesby, the director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, told me. The only significant American outbreak occurred in 2003, when a shipment of Ghanaian rodents spread the virus to prairie dogs in Illinois, which were sold as pets and infected up to 47 people, none fatally. Just last year, two travelers independently carried the virus to the U.S. from Nigeria but infected no one else.

The current outbreaks in Europe and the U.S. are different and very concerning. The first case, which was identified in the United Kingdom on May 7, fit the traditional pattern: The individual had recently traveled to Nigeria. But several others hadnt recently been to endemic countries, and some had had no obvious contact with people known to be infected. This suggests that the monkeypox virus may be surreptitiously spreading from person to person, with some number of undetected cases. (The incubation period between infection and symptoms is long, ranging from five to 21 days.) Its uncommon to see this number of cases in four countries at the same time, Inglesby said. (The count is now 11: Since we spoke on Wednesday, monkeypox has also been confirmed in Sweden, Italy, Germany, Belgium, France, Canada, and Australia.)

These monkeypox outbreaks are also unique because well theyre occurring in the third year of a pandemic, when the public is primed to be more acutely aware of outbreaks, Boghuma Kabisen Titanji, a physician at Emory University, told me. I dont think thats necessarily a good thing. When it comes to epidemics, people tend to fight the last war. During the West African Ebola outbreak of 2014, American experts had to quell waves of undue paranoia, which likely contributed to the initial downplaying of the coronavirus. Now, because the U.S. catastrophically underestimated COVID, many Americans are panicking about monkeypox and reflexively distrusting any reassuring official statements. I dont think people should be freaking out at this stage, Carl Bergstrom of the University of Washington told me, but I dont trust my own gut feelings anymore, because Im so sick of all this shit that I tend to be optimistic.

Monkeypox, then, is a test of the lessons that the world has (or hasnt) learned from COVID. Can we better thread the needle between panic and laxity, or will we once again eschew uncertainty in a frantic quest for answers that later prove to be wrong?

To be clear, monkeypox isnt COVIDtheyre different diseases caused by different viruses with markedly different properties. COVID was completely unfamiliar when it first appeared, but monkeypox is a known quantity, and experts on the virus actually exist. One of them, Andrea McCollum of the CDC, told me that based on existing studies, monkeypox doesnt spread easily, and not over long distances through the air. It transmits via contaminated surfaces or prolonged proximity with other people, which is why most outbreaks have been small, and why people have mostly transmitted the disease to either household members or health-care workers. This isnt a virus that, as far as were aware, would really take off in a population like COVID, she said. It really requires close contact for human-to-human transmission.

Of course, we have heard that before. In early 2020, many experts claimed that COVID spread only via contaminated surfaces or close-splashing dropletshence the six-feet rules and hygiene theater. Now it is widely accepted that the disease spreads through smaller and farther-reaching aerosol particleshence the importance of ventilation and masks. But that doesnt mean history is repeating with monkeypox. A 2012 study suggested that the virus can persist in aerosols for several daysbut that was under artificial laboratory conditions, and persistence is just one small part of the infection process. Chad Roy, an aerobiologist at Tulane University School of Medicine who led that study, told me that compared to the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, monkeypox is "an altogether different virus and the risk of natural transmission by aerosol far less likely. And the fact remains that past monkeypox outbreaks have been inconsistent with a virus that travels as easily as the coronavirus. Monkeypox does not scream airborne at me; COVID-19 did, Linsey Marr, an aerosol expert at Virginia Tech, told me.

Then again, Marr is less certain about monkeypox than she was about COVID. And Titanji notes that our knowledge of monkeypox is based on just 1,500 or so recorded cases, as of 2018. Ive seen a lot of people writing as if everything we know about monkeypox is definitive and finalized, but the reality is that it is still a rare zoonotic infection, she said. For that reason, Im in Team Cautious, she said. We cant use what happened with previous monkeypox outbreaks to make sweeping statements. If weve learned anything from COVID, its to have humility.

For decades, a few scientists have voiced concerns that the monkeypox virus could have become better at infecting peopleironically because we eradicated its relative, smallpox, in the late 1970s. The smallpox vaccine incidentally protected against monkeypox. And when new generations were born into a world without either smallpox or smallpox-vaccination campaigns, they grew up vulnerable to monkeypox. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, this dwindling immunity meant that monkeypox infections increased 20-fold in the three decades after smallpox vanished, as Rimoin showed in 2010. That gives the virus more chances to evolve into a more transmissible pathogen in humans. To date, its R0the average number of people who catch the disease from one infected personhas been less than 1, which means that outbreaks naturally peter out. But it could eventually evolve above that threshold, and cause more protracted epidemics, as Bergstrom simulated in 2003. We saw monkeypox as a ticking time bomb, he told me.

This possibility casts a cloud of uncertainty over the current unusual outbreaks, which everyone I spoke with is concerned about. Are they the work of a new and more transmissible strain of monkeypox? Or are they simply the result of people traveling more after global COVID restrictions were lifted? Or could they be due to something else entirely? So far, the cases are more numerous than a normal monkeypox outbreak, but not so numerous as to suggest a radically different virus, Inglesby told me. But he also doesnt have a clear explanation for the outbreaks unusual patternsnor does anyone else.

Answers should come quickly, though. Within days, scientists should have sequenced the viruses from the current outbreaks, which will show whether they harbor mutations that might have changed their properties. Within weeks, European epidemiologists should have a clearer idea of how the existing cases began, and whether there are connections between them. As for the U.S., McCollum told me that she is standing by for more cases. The day after we spoke, another suspected case was announceda patient being cared for at Bellevue Hospital in New York City.

The U.S. is, of course, in a better position with monkeypox than with COVID. Although the nation hadnt planned for a coronavirus pandemic, it has spent decades thinking about how to handle smallpox bioterrorism. The two cases of monkeypox in 2021 provided handy test runs for those plans, which are now unfolding smoothly. For example, the case in Massachusetts was identified when the patients physician, having reviewed reports from the U.K., called the states public-health department on Tuesday. Within 12 hours, the department had collected and tested the patients samples. The next day, more samples arrived at the CDC, which confirmed monkeypox. All of that worked really well, McCollum said. Were a fairly well-oiled machine.

Also, theres already a vaccine. One smallpox vaccine is 85 percent effective at preventing monkeypox and has already been licensed for use against the virus. And as another bioterrorism precaution, stockpiles of three smallpox vaccines are large enough to vaccinate basically everyone in the U.S. Inglesby said. And though monkeypox patients usually get just supportive care, a possible treatment does exist and has also been stockpiled: Tecovirimat, or TPOXX, was developed to treat smallpox but would likely work for monkeypox too.

Monkeypox may also be less deadly than is frequently claimed. The oft-cited fatality rate of about 10 percent applies to a strain that infected people in the Congo Basin. The West African strain, which several of the current cases have been linked to, has a fatality rate closer to 1 percentand thats in poor, rural populations. We havent seen fatalities in people whove had monkeypox in high-resource settings, Rimoin said.

Still, as COVID has shown, even when a disease doesnt kill you, it can hardly count as mild. Monkeypox might not take off in the way that COVID did, but for those who get it, it remains a substantial illness, McCollum said. If individuals are sick, theyre often sick for two to four weeks. Its urgent to identify people early, get them treatment, and identify contacts. It helps that one common symptom is an obvious rash, which looks like an extreme version of chickenpox. But unlike chickenpox, the monkeypox rash is usually preceded by a fever, the lesions are initially more painful than itchy, and the lymph nodes are often inflamed. The constructive thing to do is to make sure that the public is aware of what monkeypox looks like, Titanji said.

For that reason, she added, its important to avoid stigmatizing infected people. Many of the current cases are in men who identify as gay, bisexual, or men who have sex with menan unusual pattern not seen in previous monkeypox outbreaks. That has raised questions about a new route of transmission, but sex obviously involves prolonged close contact, which is how the virus normally spreads. As COVID showed, early narratives about a disease can rapidly and prematurely harden into accepted lore. And if those narratives turn into stigma, they could stop people from coming forward with symptoms.

Communication might prove to be one of monkeypoxs hardest challenges, as it has been with COVID. We need leaders who are saying, Heres what we know; heres what we dont know; well find out; and well be back tomorrow, Inglesby said. But some leaders have lost credibility during the recent pandemic, while others are being drowned out by armchair experts who have amassed large followings. All of a sudden, everyones an expert in monkeypox, Titanji said.

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So, Have You Heard About Monkeypox? - The Atlantic

N.J. reports 4,015 cases, 7 COVID deaths as the 7-day average is nearly 140% higher than a month ago – NJ.com

May 21, 2022

New Jersey on Saturday reported seven more COVID-19 deaths and 4,015 new confirmed positive tests as the seven-day average continues to compared to a month ago.

The average was 3,960 on Saturday, up 10% from a week ago and up 139% from a month ago. Though the statewide rate of transmission dropped slightly Saturday to 1.25 compared to 1.28 the prior day. When the transmission rate is over 1, that means each new case is leading to at least one additional case and the outbreak is expanding.

There were 836 patients with confirmed or suspected coronavirus cases reported across the states 71 hospitals as of Friday night. Hospitalizations still remain significantly lower than when they peaked at 6,089 on Jan. 10 during the Omicron wave.

There were at least 188 people discharged in that same 24-hour period ending Friday, according to state data. Of those hospitalized, 117 were in intensive care and 39 were on ventilators.

The positivity rate for tests conducted on Sunday, the most recent day with available data, was 18.85%.

The state on Saturday also reported 1,378 probable cases from rapid antigen testing at medical sites.

The BA.2 strain of COVID-19 has been spreading in New Jersey for weeks, though at much lower rates than the Omicron surge in December and January. Officials have said the Omicron stealth sub-variant appears to spread more easily but generally does not cause more severe illness.

For the week ending April 30, BA.2 accounted for 91.4% of the positive tests sampled (slightly up from 89.4% the previous week), while the BA2.12.1 omicron subvariant accounted for 6% of positive tests sampled (down from 6.7% the previous week).

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now lists 10 New Jersey counties with high transmission rates Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Gloucester, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Salem and Sussex. Those in high-risk areas are recommended to wear a mask indoors in public and on public transportation and stay up-to-date on vaccination, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Ten counties are in the medium risk category: Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Passaic, Somerset, Union and Warren. Cumberland County is at low. Masks are not recommended in the medium and low regions.

New Jersey has reported 2,021,344 total confirmed COVID-19 cases out of more than 17.7 million PCR tests conducted in the more than two years since the state reported its first known case March 4, 2020.

The Garden State has also recorded 331,306 positive antigen or rapid tests, which are considered probable cases. And there are numerous cases that have likely never been counted, including at-home positive tests that are not included in the states numbers.

The state of 9.2 million residents has reported 33,610 COVID-19 deaths 30,552 confirmed fatalities and 3,058 probable.

New Jersey has the seventh-most coronavirus deaths per capita in the U.S. behind Mississippi, Arizona, Oklahoma, Alabama, Tennessee, and West Virginia as of the latest data reported Tuesday. Last summer, the state still had the most deaths per capita in the country.

The latest numbers follow a major study that revealed even a mild case of COVID-19 can significantly affect the brain. Long COVID the term commonly used to describe symptoms stemming from the virus long after a person no longer tests positive has been found to affect between 10% and 30% of those who contract the infection, regardless of whether they have a mild or serious case.

More than 6.89 million of the 8.46 million eligible people who live, work or study in New Jersey have received the initial course of vaccinations and more than 7.8 million have received a first dose since vaccinations began here on Dec. 15, 2020.

More than 3.74 million people in the state eligible for boosters have received one. That number may rise after the FDA on Tuesday approved booster shots for healthy children between the ages of 5 and 11. U.S. regulators authorized the booster for kids hoping an extra vaccine dose will enhance their protection as infections once again creep upward.

For the week ending May 8, with about 59% of schools reporting data, another 8,923 COVID-19 cases were reported among staff (2,461) and students (6,462) across New Jerseys schools.

Since the start of the academic year, there have been 116,771 students and 34,685 school staff members who have contracted COVID-19 in New Jersey, though the state has never had more than two-thirds of the school districts reporting data in any week.

The state provides total student and staff cases separately from those deemed to be in-school transmission, which is narrowly defined as three or more cases linked through contact tracing.

New Jersey has reported 807 total in-school outbreaks, including 5,671 cases among students and staff. That includes 82 new outbreaks in the latest weekly report ending May 16. The state reported 72 in-school outbreaks the previous week.

At least 9,049 of the states COVID-19 deaths have been among residents and staff members at nursing homes and other long-term care facilities, according to state data.

There were active outbreaks at 323 facilities, resulting in 3,482 current cases among residents and 3,144 cases among staff, as of the latest data.

As of Saturday, there have been more than 527 million COVID-19 cases reported across the globe, according to Johns Hopkins University, and more than 6.28 million people died due to the virus.

The U.S. has reported the most cases (more than 83.2 million) and deaths (at least 1,002,025) of any nation.

There have been more than 11.44 billion vaccine doses administered globally.

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Matt Arco may be reached at marco@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter at @MatthewArco.

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N.J. reports 4,015 cases, 7 COVID deaths as the 7-day average is nearly 140% higher than a month ago - NJ.com

COVID: On the road with the ‘vaccine convoys’ critical to keeping up the fight against coronavirus – Sky News

May 21, 2022

It is difficult to know what COVID is doing to the people of Africa.

The World Health Organization (WHO) says the death toll has been vastly undercounted in much of the world, but poor data collection in most African countries makes it difficult to assess the true impact on the continent.

Evidence on COVID-related deaths in South Africa suggests there are serious grounds for concern. Experts at South Africas Medical Research Council believe hundreds of thousands of deaths have been lost in the paperwork. The real death toll is thought to be three times the official number of 101,000.

Health officials are also grappling with worryingly low rates of vaccination in many African countries. As a whole, only 17% of Africans have been fully vaccinated against COVID, a rate that lags far behind other parts of the world - like Europe (65.7%), Asia (69%), and South America (74.5%).

These dismal numbers are compounded by the fact that the drive to vaccinate the public in dozens of African nations has effectively stalled.

In fact, nearly half the vaccine doses delivered to the continent so far have gone unused.

This time last year, health officials in Africa were trying to find a way to secure supplies after wealthier nations reserved most of the stock.

Now, they need to figure out how to get them into peoples arms. It is absolutely critical that they succeed.

Are 'vaccine convoys' the solution?

Abandoning the global effort to reach the WHOs 70% vaccination target may lead to the emergence of deadly new variants, thereby derailing the world's precarious attempts to live with the virus.

But the task is immense. In South Africa, less than half the adult population is vaccinated. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, just 1.2% is fully immunised.

It has become clear to leading figures like Dr Ian Sanne, who leads the health organisation Right to Care, that governments and institutions need to rethink the way they distribute vaccines.

"At the moment, the politicians and our procurement (systems) are focused on getting vaccines into the country, but the harder part is that we have to deliver them and roll them out," he said.

"And you've seen what it takes to bring these vaccines into remote areas."

Right to Care, with funding from the US government's development agency, USAID, has put together a number of "vaccine convoys" to venture into some of the most remote and impoverished areas of South Africa's Eastern Cape.

We joined a convoy as it bounced its way down a series of near-impassable tracks, before reaching a village called Lundini. Its 800 or so residents have never been offered a COVID vaccine.

It was a time-consuming process, requiring planning and specialist personnel - and plenty of money. Dr Sanne says he can vaccinate someone near Johannesburg for around US $9, but it takes nearly three times that amount to administer a jab in the rural parts of the Eastern Cape.

But this may be the only way to do it.

'We understand the mistrust - the fear'

I asked a teacher called Ethel Numbezi why she had not gone to the city of Durban, on the coast, to get a jab. She burst into laughter.

"It would be too difficult," she said, trying to stifle her laughter, "because it's far way away from us."

While many of these logistical challenges can be fixed with funding, there is another problem proving much harder to solve. We noticed that Right to Care's nurses often struggled to convince people in Lundini to have the jab. Some residents said they were scared - and just about everyone seemed a little nervous.

I asked nurse Vuyelwa Lubando to explain.

"They say sometimes the government want to eliminate, um, because of the, um"

Nurse Lubando pointed her skin.

"You mean, black people?" I asked.

"Yes."

"The government wants to get rid of black people?"

"So we are trying to tell them there is no such (thing)."

Myths surrounding COVID vaccine side effects have become a major headache for health officials, but Heena Brahmbhatt, a senior advisor to USAID, says the vaccine convoys are a good way to get around it.

"We all underestimated the mistrust, the level of fear, the use of social media to spread disinformation, but if you get (vaccines) to the people, they are likely to get vaccinated. You can see people lining up (behind me). You barely get this in urban settings in South Africa any more."

Read more: What's the COVID situation in your local hospital?

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Disturbing data shows scale of problem

The situation in many other African countries is worse, as so-called vaccine hesitancy combines with other factors to suppress vaccination rates.

Data from the WHO dashboard reveals that levels of so-called "vaccine absorption", or the use of available stocks of COVID vaccines, is pitifully low in countries like Cameroon, where only 15% of its supply has been used.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, just 8% of available vaccines have been administered while in Burundi, that number is a disturbing 2%.

If you take the average number of vaccinations administered in each country since the pandemic began and calculate how long it would take to meet the WHO's 70% target - if that rate continued into the future - the numbers raise troubling questions.

Based on past performance, Cameroon would not reach the 70% target until 2036. The DRC would require an additional 41 years or to 2070 to satisfy the WHO target. The people of Burundi would have to wait until 2194 at which point they would have died.

Read more: Who will get autumn COVID booster jabs?

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This is an academic exercise, a reflection of how some countries have fared up until this point, and it shows how much more work is left to do - a point made by Liya Temeselew, policy associate at the Tony Blair Institute.

"Despite competing priorities and limited resources, governments in Africa continue to use innovative methods for vaccine campaigns," she said.

"For example, in Ghana, vaccine campaigns include intensive social awareness campaigns to combat vaccine hesitancy and health workers going door to door to make vaccines more accessible to people.

"The international community needs to work alongside governments and invest in last mile delivery to ensure the health and economic cost of COVID-19 is minimised."

This is calculated by taking the number of people that need to be vaccinated to cover 70% of each country's population, and dividing this number by the average number of people fully vaccinated each month thus far. This calculation assumes that there will be no significant increase or decrease in vaccine demand and supply in the future.

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COVID: On the road with the 'vaccine convoys' critical to keeping up the fight against coronavirus - Sky News

Learn 4 strange symptoms of the Corona virus – brytfmonline.com

May 19, 2022

More than two years after the pandemic began, hundreds of thousands of Covid cases are still reported around the world every day.

With the advent of new variants, the Symptoms of covid disease It also evolved.

Initially, for example, the UK National Health Service (NHS), and the British SUS considered fever, cough, loss or change of smell or taste as the main symptoms that could indicate illness.

Now, recently updated NHS guidelines say we should watch for symptoms including sore throat, stuffy or runny nose, and Headache.

But what about some of the less obvious signs and symptoms? From skin lesions to hearing loss, new studies are increasingly showing us that the symptoms of Covid disease are not limited to a cold or flu Normal.

Skin problems associated with Covid are not uncommon. In fact, a British study published in 2021 found that one in five patients had only a rash and no other symptoms.

Covid-19 can affect the skin in several ways. Some people may have maculopapular rash (flat, raised spots), while others may have hives (raised, itchy spots).

So-called Covid toes are characterized by red, swollen or ulcerated skin lesions on the toes. These symptoms are more common in adolescents or young adults with mild or no symptoms.

Most skin lesions caused by the Covid virus tend to disappear after a few days or in some cases a few weeks without the need for any specific treatment.

However, if the skin itches or hurts severely, it is advisable to see a doctor who may recommend applying the cream.

During infection, including SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes covid-19), our body naturally tries to express that it is exposed to an unusual amount of stress.

Covid nails include changes such as:

Data on how many people have these nail problems is limited, but it is estimated that they can affect 1% to 2% of Covid patients.

Covid nails tend to appear in the days or weeks after infection, as the nails grow back. While it may be painful at first, most nails tend to return to normal within a few weeks.

While these changes could be indicative of Covid disease, they could be caused by different things. For example, Poes lines could be the result of chemotherapy or another infection.

Hair loss is perhaps an underestimated symptom of Covid-19, often occurring a month or more after an acute infection.

In a study of nearly 6000 people who were infected with the new Corona VirusHair loss was the most common post-coronavirus symptom, reported by 48% of participants.

Hair loss has been particularly prevalent among people with severe Covid and white women.

It is believed that the reason for this is that the hair feels pressure on the body, which leads to excessive shedding.

In fact, hair loss can also be caused by other stressful events such as childbirth. The good news is that over time your hair will grow naturally.

As with other viral infections such as flu its the measlesCOVID-19 has been found to affect cells of the inner ear, with hearing loss or tinnitus (a persistent ringing sensation in the ear) sometimes after infection.

In a study of 560 participants, hearing loss was reported in 3.1% of patients with covid-19, while tinnitus occurred in 4.5% of cases.

Another study, with 30 people diagnosed with covid-19 and 30 people without the disease, none of whom had pre-existing hearing problems, researchers found that covid-19 is associated with damage to the inner ear, which leads to hearing problems at longer frequencies . .

Although for most patients this resolves on its own, cases of permanent hearing loss associated with Covid have been reported.

We dont understand exactly what causes these symptoms, but we do know that the most important role is played by a process called inflammation.

Inflammation is our bodys natural defense mechanism against pathogens. SARS-CoV-2 in this case. It involves the production of cytokines (also called cytokines), which are proteins important in controlling the activity of immune cells.

Overproduction of these proteins, as part of the inflammation caused by Covid infection, can cause sensory deficits, which may explain why some people develop hearing loss and tinnitus.

It can also modify the networks of capillaries, which are very small blood vessels that supply blood to organs, including the ears, skin, and nails.

The symptoms we describe here are not unique to Covid infection. However, if you notice any of these symptoms, you should get tested for coronavirus, especially if you are in an area where the virus is common.

You may also want to call your doctor, especially if your symptoms get worse or cause you severe discomfort. At the same time, rest assured that most of these symptoms will likely improve over time.

* Vasilius Vasilo is Professor of Cardiology, Rano Baral is a Visiting Research Fellow (FY2 Academic Institution), and Vasiliki Tsambasian is a Clinical Fellow in Cardiology at the University of East Anglia, UK.

This article was originally published on the academic news site The Conversation and is republished here under a Creative Commons license. Read the Spanish version here.

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Ashley Biden and Xavier Becerra Test Positive for the Coronavirus – The New York Times

May 19, 2022

Xavier Becerra, the U.S. secretary of health and human services, tested positive for the coronavirus on Wednesday, his department said, hours after the White House announced that Ashley Biden, the daughter of President Biden and the first lady, Jill Biden, had tested positive.

Neither is considered a close contact to Mr. Biden, according to the administration. A close contact is someone who has been less than six feet away from an infected person for at least 15 minutes over a 24-hour period, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions guidelines.

Ms. Biden, 40, was scheduled to travel with Dr. Biden to Ecuador on Wednesday afternoon but will no longer make the trip with her mother. Earlier this month, Ms. Biden was to accompany Dr. Biden on her trip to Eastern Europe to visit Ukrainian refugees, but on the night of the trip, the White House said that Ms. Biden had been in close contact with someone who tested positive for the coronavirus and would stay behind.

Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, said Wednesday that Mr. Biden had not seen his daughter in several days.

Mr. Becerra tested positive for the virus Wednesday morning in Berlin, where he was to participate in meetings for Group of 7 health ministers, Sarah Lovenheim, assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Health and Human Services, said in a statement.

Mr. Becerra is fully vaccinated and boosted and is experiencing mild symptoms, the statement said. He will continue to work in isolation.

Mr. Becerra was last at the White House on Thursday and is not considered a close contact to Mr. Biden, according to Ms. Lovenheim. The White House requires masks and social distancing when officials meet with the president.

Ms. Biden and Mr. Becerra are among a handful of prominent people in the presidents orbit who have recently tested positive for the coronavirus, renewing concern about Mr. Bidens potential exposure, though none have been considered close contacts. Susan Rice, the White House domestic policy adviser, tested positive last week.

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Ashley Biden and Xavier Becerra Test Positive for the Coronavirus - The New York Times

You will be exposed to the coronavirus, Oregon health officials say, though COVID-19 wave relatively mild – OregonLive

May 19, 2022

Oregons chief disease specialist threaded a fine line Wednesday between cautioning Oregonians to protect themselves amid a surge in coronavirus infections while not ordering or even recommending statewide measures to prevent infection.

The current bump in identified COVID-19 infections, with a daily average of more than 1,400 reported cases per day, may be reaching its peak, Dr. Dean Sidelinger said at a now-monthly COVID-19 media update Wednesday. But the sustained growth in cases and hospitalizations means the pandemic is not yet over.

If youre in a gathering of people outside your home, sooner or later you will be exposed to the virus, Sidelinger said. The risk of exposure and infection exists in every Oregon community.

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In the more than two years since the pandemic began, Oregon has reported an average daily case load higher than 1,400 for only about four months. And underscoring how widespread the disease is likely to be, the epidemiologist said most cases now are not reported to the state, because some people get their results through an at-home test, which doesnt have to be reported, or simply dont get tested at all.

Everyone in a county where the federally-determined risk level is medium should consider wearing a mask, Sidelinger said. Multnomah, Washington and Clackamas counties are at that risk level, as are Deschutes, Columbia and Benton counties. He also encouraged people who are unvaccinated, older, immunocompromised, at risk of severe disease or who live with anyone in those categories, to wear a mask.

The key marker of the severity of the current pandemic bump, hospitalizations, remains far below the peaks reached in either the omicron or delta waves. Thats expected to remain true through the peak, projected to hit 321 occupied beds by June 10. Hospitalizations approached 1,200 at the height of the delta wave. As of Tuesday, 255 people were hospitalized with COVID-19, according to Oregon Health Authority data.

OHA is optimistic that the overall number of Oregons hospitalized patients with COVID-19 will not exceed our hospital systems ability to care for them, Sidelinger said.

As for what happens after this wave is over, Sidelinger said he expects Oregon wont see sustained case growth through the summer thanks to immunity from recent infections and vaccinations and because people will be spending time outdoors.

But if new variants develop in Oregon, in other states or countries that come to Oregon, that could change as we move inside in the fall, Sidelinger said.

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You will be exposed to the coronavirus, Oregon health officials say, though COVID-19 wave relatively mild - OregonLive

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