Category: Corona Virus

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How COVID-19 Can Kill You – Everyday Health

May 14, 2022

The first time I autopsied someone who may have died from COVID-19 was nerve-wracking. This was back at the start of the pandemic, in February 2020, when I was working as a forensic pathologist in the Oakland, California coroners office.

The man, a middle-aged executive, had spent a week on a business trip in China and returned with a fever and cough. Hed gone to an urgent care center and was prescribed antibiotics, but he collapsed at home a few days later and died in the emergency department of the local hospital.

Id been paying close and worried attention to the reports coming out of Wuhan of a novel coronavirus. I hadnt been told where in China this executive had been, but I did know that a cough and fever were the exact symptoms epidemiologists had identified for the new condition.

If this man was going to undergo an autopsy, his body could expose my team and potentially many others to a disease that was, as our overseas medical-worker colleagues were reporting, untreatable, highly contagious, and deadly.

I called the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta for support. Two epidemiologists flew in to assist me with the autopsy.

I made my discovery as soon as I opened the chest cavity and put my scalpel into an artery of the lungs: a granular, red, spiral glob of coagulated blood that popped right out when I cut across it. It was a pulmonary embolism, a blood clot that had formed in the large vessels of his legs, traveled to his heart, and then lodged in the lungs.

The clot blocked blood flow through the lungs, preventing oxygen from reaching the rest of the body. Minutes later, the man was dead.

If the executive had died from COVID-19, Id have expected to see the effects of pneumonia, a viral infection. The lungs wouldve been firm and rough to the touch but they werent. So based on what we all knew at the time, we ruled out COVID-19 as a cause of death and speculated that the man had developed the blood clot after sitting immobile for hours on a transpacific flight.

The next week, PCR tests from the CDC confirmed this was not a death from COVID-19.

Or was it? After learning more about this virus over the last two years and conducting several autopsies on people who died of blood clots soon after recovering from COVID-19 now Im not so sure.

We know today that COVID-19 can cause sudden death because the virus has a predilection to attack endothelial cells, which pave the blood vessel highways to all our organs. In the same way that rough roads can result in traffic backups and crashes, damaged endothelial cells can lead to blood clots, which can cause strokes and heart attacks.

The bodys first responders, white blood cells, attack the infected endothelial cells, causing more problems: inflamed organs and internal scarring.

Were now learning that the coronavirus targets endothelial cells in every part of the body, causing long-term damage that pathologists like me can see as scars and blood clots in the organs of patients who have died after having recovered from COVID-19. Were learning, then, that COVID-19 is a multisystem illness in both the acute and long-term phases.

In long COVID, which can affect up to 30 percent of those infected, scientists can see the damaging effects of the virus on organs that rely on healthy blood flow.

Brain fog? Pathologists put brain tissue under the microscope and see dead nerve cells and inflammatory cells where they shouldnt be, surrounding blood vessels.

Heart palpitations and fainting spells? There could be pale white scars in the red heart muscle, which interrupt signal delivery in its electrical system.

Shortness of breath and fatigue? Pink and white patches clog up parts of the lung tissue that should be empty spaces ready to fill with air.

Persistent loss of smell?Recent studies have shown that in some people the nerve damage associated with this long COVID symptom is severe and irreversible.

COVID-19 can cause permanent damage that affected individuals might carry with them for the rest of their lives. We may find, in the near future, that its also shortening their life spans.

I work in New Zealand now. Up until a few weeks ago, there were few deaths from the novel coronavirus, thanks to a successful public health strategy that involved closed borders and coordinated measures like lockdowns, managed isolation, testing, and contact tracing.

When the delta variant of COVID-19 finally infiltrated the community in late 2021, New Zealand was already highly vaccinated, and public masking and vaccine passport mandates were in place. The per capita death rate has remained extremely low compared to other countries, despite spikes in infections and hospitalizations with the ongoing omicron wave.

So what am I seeing now when I look inside the body of someone who has died with or from COVID-19? The same things we saw at the start of the pandemic in the United States: heart attacks with cardiac rupture and blood clots in the lungs (pulmonary emboli).

Some of my patients are even testing negative for COVID-19 at the time of autopsy, yet can be confirmed as having had the disease because family members report they were exposed, and they had shown positive rapid tests a week before death.

Thats why I wonder if I had actually missed a COVID-related death in that very first case I investigated, my Bay Area executive from February 2020. What if he had been exposed to COVID-19 while in China but had recovered, thus testing negative weeks later, when his body came to my morgue for autopsy? What if he had recovered from COVID-19, but the endothelial cell damage caused by the virus eventually caused a blood clot to lodge in his lungs?

Excess death data is already showing us that overall mortality has been increasing in countries with rampant spread of COVID-19. There is also data emerging that COVID-19 causescognitive decline, and that the harm the disease does to the cardiovascular system increases risk ofsudden death from strokes and heart attacks within a year of a patients infection.

What does this mean to us as individuals at a time when politicians are declaring the pandemic over and transglobal corporations are cheering the lifting of mask and vaccine mandates?

I can tell you what Im doing: everything I can to limit repeated exposure to this virus. I am vaccinated and double boosted, and I have vaccinated my children. Im masking up. I only use N95 masks, and I havent eaten indoors with strangers in months. I try to avoid travel as much as possible, and limit my interactions to a small bubble of family and friends. I vote for politicians who have shown they will fund healthcare and support the disabled. I can only control what I do.

And heres what I know as a doctor who does autopsies: A virus that causes permanent organ damage is not worth messing with.

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How COVID-19 Can Kill You - Everyday Health

More COVID-19 cases ahead? Coronavirus levels in Eastern Mass. waste water are on the rise again – The Boston Globe

May 14, 2022

The waste water levels are now back where they were in early February.

The increases come as Massachusetts cases and hospitalizations have also been gradually rising and the CDC has designated seven Massachusetts counties, including Suffolk County, home of the states largest city, Boston, and Middlesex County, the most populous county, as having high levels of the virus.

The CDC recommends that, in areas with high virus levels, people wear masks in indoor public spaces. The Boston Public Health Commission has also recommended masking in indoor public spaces. Several large school districts in Greater Boston, including Belmont, Cambridge, Lexington, and Somerville, also dashed out notices to families over the weekend and Monday, urging parents to, once again, consider masks for their children in classrooms. Some said they would be testing children more frequently, and others indicated they were weighing whether to bring back temporary mask requirements.

Experts have been concerned about the arrival of Omicron subvariants, including BA.2 and BA.2.12.1, reigniting the pandemic.

The Eastern Massachusetts waste water levels dropped precipitously from their Omicron peak, bottomed out in early March, then began rising again. The rise was interrupted by a dip last month, but the levels have now more than bounced back.

The waste water and other COVID-19 metrics, however, remain at much lower levels than the Omicron wave that crashed over the region during the winter.

Waste water from 43 communities, including Boston, converges at the MWRAs Deer Island plant on Boston Harbor for treatment before being piped miles into the ocean. The water is tested for traces of the deadly virus. The MWRA reports numbers for both the southern and northern regions of its system. The testing determines the number of SARS-CoV-2 RNA copies per milliliter of waste water.

In the northern MWRA region, the seven-day average was 797 RNA copies/mL as of Monday. Thats up from a low of 101 on March 9. The levels peaked at 8,644 on Jan. 5.

In the southern region, the seven-day average was 810 RNA copies/mL on Monday, up from a low of 92 copies/mL on March 1. But its a far cry from the high of 11,446 RNA copies/mL reached on Jan. 3.

With indications that the virus is on the rise again, some people are sticking to precautions such as masking and avoiding indoor dining, others are abandoning them, and others are taking a middle-ground approach.

Kay Lazar of the Globe staff contributed to this report. Material from prior Globe stories was used in this report.

Martin Finucane can be reached at martin.finucane@globe.com. Christina Prignano can be reached at christina.prignano@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @cprignano.

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More COVID-19 cases ahead? Coronavirus levels in Eastern Mass. waste water are on the rise again - The Boston Globe

Latest numbers on Georgians who have died or been ill with coronavirus – The Atlanta Journal Constitution

May 14, 2022

31,693 The number of confirmed COVID-19 deaths in Georgia since the onset of the pandemic, according to the state Department of Public Health.

2 million Georgia has confirmed 1,962,028 COVID-19 cases since the beginning of the pandemic. This is only known COVID-19 infections, so it does not include undiagnosed cases or those confirmed with at-home tests.

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Latest numbers on Georgians who have died or been ill with coronavirus - The Atlanta Journal Constitution

House Speaker Brad Wilson tests positive for COVID-19 same day as governor – KSL.com

May 14, 2022

House Speaker Brad Wilson, R-Kaysville, left, and Senate President Stuart Adams, R-Layton, talk prior to a panel discussion on the 2022 legislative session in Salt Lake City on March 8. Wilson tested positive for COVID-19 late Thursday, his office confirmed. (Scott G Winterton, Deseret News)

Estimated read time: 1-2 minutes

SALT LAKE CITY Utah House Speaker Brad Wilson tested positive for COVID-19 late Thursday, his office confirmed.

Wilson "began experiencing mild cold-like symptoms last night and tested positive. He's resting at home and doing well," a spokeswoman for Wilson's office told KSL.com Friday.

When asked whether he had been exposed to it by Gov. Spencer Cox who announced he tested positive for the coronavirus Thursday morning the spokeswoman said it's unknown when or where Wilson got exposed.

Cox on Thursday said he was notifying people he was in close contact with, as he had various public appearances on Tuesday and Wednesday. But his office said "very few people" at those events would be considered exposed to the virus, as they would have needed to be within 6 feet of him for 15 minutes or longer, according to U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations.

Wilson's office said it's his first time testing positive for the disease during the pandemic.

The two cases in Utah leaders come as the state continues to experience a rise in COVID-19. The Utah Department of Health on Thursday announced 3,385 new COVID-19 cases confirmed in the past seven days an average of 484 cases each day. One additional death was also reported. The count does not include Utahns using home tests.

Hospitalizations, however, remain low as just 77 patients in Utah hospitals had COVID-19 as of Thursday.

After Cox announced he tested positive, Utah Department of Health officials said it's "a good reminder that the disease is still circulating in our communities."

"Most people who are infected with COVID-19 have mild symptoms, especially if they are up-to-date with their COVID-19 vaccinations. The vaccines have been shown to be safe and effective, and provide protection against serious disease," state health officials said.

A lifelong Utahn, Ashley Imlay covers state politics and breaking news for KSL.com.

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House Speaker Brad Wilson tests positive for COVID-19 same day as governor - KSL.com

Registered nurse reflects on pandemic, ongoing battle against COVID-19 – KSHB 41 Kansas City News

May 14, 2022

KANSAS CITY, Mo. One registered nurse who worked through the entire pandemic is looking back on the past two years as National Nurses Week comes to a close.

Heather Vasquez says the fight against COVID-19 continues, with cases still popping up in Kansas City and beyond.

According to the Mid America Regional Council Database, since the start of May, the daily number of new Covid-related hospitalizations has been less than 60 a day and the average number of daily cases sits at 163 as of Friday.

I think you just, you grieve as a nurse. Nurses grieve and then you put your mask back on and head into the next room because you have to be there, Vasquez said.

She works in the emergency department at Saint Luke's Health System and says while current numbers are optimistic, the pandemic has taught her and the team to prepare for the unexpected.

Right now, Saint Lukes doctors are seeing an increase in patients who have developed complications from the virus.

Doctors are seeing people coming in who had COVID-19 and are still experiencing shortness of breath and people who experienced strokes and other heart-related complications after a virus diagnosis. In addition, the majority of those patients are between 30 to 40 years old.

We know that it's not, it's not done, but it's it is definitely down. We also see a lot of patients with like long haul symptoms, ongoing heart complications, breathing complications, things like that, Vasquez explained.

Its also no secret that COVID-19 has changed the health care industry and many front line workers are burnt out.

Vasquez says she understands why many of her colleagues left.

You had a new pandemic that maybe most of us would only worry about, like seeing in movies, and all of a sudden it's coming through your front doors and we weren't sure exactly what to do at first. The rules were changing constantly, recalled Vasquez.

She says that constant change continues to motivate her to show up to work, but that doesnt come without sacrifices.

At one point she was balancing work, school and being a mom.

The stress of coming home from work of having a stressful shift and seeing the things you saw during your shift at that time, coming home, educating my son, and then trying to stressfully you know, get through school and all that was too much stress, Vasquez said. So I had to take a step back from school for now.

Its unclear when she will be able to go back to school, so Vasquez says her focus is caring for her patients and her Saint Lukes family.

We have to be prepared to help people that need it in the ER we're the ones that save the day, so we're coming in to save the day, Vasquez said.

At last check, Saint Lukes Health System had 17 COVID-19 patients across their hospitals. For reference that is up from their lowest point at five patients system-wide in late April.

We want to hear from you on what resources Kansas City families might benefit from to help us all through the pandemic. If you have five minutes, feel free to fill out this survey to help guide our coverage: KSHB COVID Survey.

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Registered nurse reflects on pandemic, ongoing battle against COVID-19 - KSHB 41 Kansas City News

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) WHO Thailand Situation Report 235 – 11 May 2022 – Thailand – ReliefWeb

May 11, 2022

Situation Analysis

New cases, severe cases, ventilated cases and deaths have all shown a weekly decrease. The average number of new laboratory-confirmed (PCR positive) COVID-19 cases reported per day (8005) decreased by 35% in the past 7 days compared to the previous week (12,407). The average number of probable (ATK positive) cases reported per day over the last 7 also decreased by 24%

Bangkok continues to report the highest daily number of COVID cases (with a weekly average of 2,390) but reported a 7-day average decrease of 22.7% compared to the week before

The reduction in new cases has seen the average daily number of all currently 'active' COVID-19 cases (93,955) over the last seven days decrease by 35% compared to the previous week (which showed a decrease of 21%). Most cases continue to be monitored in hospitels, community isolation and home isolation. The average number of COVID cases occupying hospital beds per day over the past week (29,678) decreased by 21%

The weekly average number of daily deaths decreased by 45%. However, the daily average count of deaths remains high at 60. Although this is a significant drop from an average of 108 the week prior, most of these deaths would have been prevented if vaccination rates were higher The average daily number of severe COVID-19 cases over the past seven days (1,580) represented a decrease of 11% over the previous week (1,733).

The average daily number of ventilated COVID-19 cases over the past seven days (757) has decreased by 7.6% compared to the number the week before (827)

Although nationally new cases are decreasing, the policy of not confirming all probable cases by PCR testing, as well as the widespread use of rapid antigen tests (including those available 'over the counter' that may not be reported), continues to make it difficult to accurately monitor actual case counts. From the data reported, the high transmissibility of the Omicron variant is clear, with approximately half of all cases in Thailand reported in the last 4-months, when the Omicron variant started to dominate circulation

Vaccination in Thailand continues to significantly reduce levels of severe illness and deaths caused by circulating COVID-19 strains. High vaccination rates also help to reduce the transmission of COVID-19. The COVID-19 situation in Thailand is improving, but there remains a long way to reduce the burden of ventilated cases and deaths from COVID-19 in Thailand. Vaccination rates remain low in some provinces and some important risk groups.

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Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) WHO Thailand Situation Report 235 - 11 May 2022 - Thailand - ReliefWeb

Bill Gates Tests Positive for Coronavirus – The New York Times

May 11, 2022

Bill Gates, who has donated millions to pandemic relief efforts, tested positive for the coronavirus, he said on Tuesday.

Mr. Gates, 66, said on Twitter that he was isolating with mild symptoms and that he was vaccinated and boosted. It was not clear if this was the first time he had tested positive for the coronavirus. He also said that he would participate virtually in a meeting on Tuesday with people from his foundation.

In recent months, Mr. Gates, a co-founder of Microsoft and one of the richest men in the world, has focused his considerable resources on the pandemic. He published a book last week called How to Prevent the Next Pandemic, in which he explains how countries could pull off a coordinated effort to avert pandemics and eliminate all respiratory diseases.

He has been outspoken about how the global health authorities should respond to the pandemic and distribute vaccines. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation said it has donated millions to organizations including Gavi and the World Health Organization to fund testing, treatments and vaccine distribution. (The Gateses divorced last year, but both expressed continued commitment to the foundation.)

In January, Mr. Gates said on Twitter that once Omicron goes through a country, the virus could be treated more like seasonal flu.

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Bill Gates Tests Positive for Coronavirus - The New York Times

Here’s what the White House’s grim coronavirus warning means for you – CNN

May 10, 2022

A version of this story appeared in CNNs What Matters newsletter. To get it in your inbox, sign up for free here.

Washington CNN

You dont make the timeline, the virus makes the timeline.

That was Dr. Anthony Faucis message for an anxious nation when the novel coronavirus first began to spread across the US. More than two years later, his words have new relevance in the face of a disturbing warning from the White House.

CNNs Kaitlan Collins reports: The Biden administration is issuing a new warning that the US could potentially see 100 million Covid-19 infections this fall and winter, as officials publicly stress the need for more funding from Congress to prepare the nation.

Bill Gates says preventing next pandemic will cost $1 billion a year

The projection of 100 million potential infections is an estimate based on a range of outside models that are being closely tracked by the administration and would include both the fall and winter, a senior administration official told CNN. Officials say this estimate is based on an underlying assumption of no additional resources or extra mitigation measures being taken, including new Covid-19 funding from Congress, or dramatic new variants.

Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House Covid-19 response coordinator, confirmed the warning during an interview on ABC News Sunday, but stressed that whether that happens or not is largely up to us as a country.

Were looking at a range of models, both internal and external models, and what theyre predicting is that if we dont get ahead of this thing, were going to have a lot of waning immunity, this virus continues to evolve, and we may see a pretty sizable wave of infections, hospitalizations and deaths this fall and winter, Jha said.

Already, cases of Covid-19 are rising again. Infections have increased by more than 50% compared with the previous week in at least eight states. Parts of New York have moved into the high designation of Covid-19 community level, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention metrics.

But could the virus really infect 100 million Americans this fall and winter? We asked Dr. Syra Madad, an epidemiologist at NYC Health + Hospitals, about the White Houses warning and what it might mean for you. Our conversation, conducted over the phone and lightly edited for flow and brevity, is below.

WHAT MATTERS: What do you make of this warning from the White House?

MADAD: I think its an extremely important warning that everybody in the United States, whether youre unvaccinated or vaccinated and boosted, should certainly take heed of because weve been in this rodeo before and we know what to do.

We have the tools and resources to protect ourselves and protect those around us. Its important that people are aware that the risk level around them is increasing. And so there are things that you can do to reduce your risk of getting infected, and certainly having a severe outcome.

When we talk about severe outcome, we know that the Covid-19 vaccines are working and holding up really well against the most severe outcomes, which is hospitalization, ICU-level care and death. At the same time, we want to make sure that theres also funding in place where pharmaceutical companies can invest in bivalent, multivalent Covid-19 vaccines.

WHAT MATTERS: Officials say the White House estimate is based on an underlying assumption of no additional resources or extra mitigation measures being taken. It sounds like you agree that additional resources would make a big difference?

MADAD: Oh, absolutely. I think the best part about these predictions is that they are predictions at the end of the day. There are models that are projecting whats going to happen in the future, and we know that we have the resources and tools to change that future.

We can prevent I would say by and large that number, that amount of people getting infected. And I think that theres a couple of questions and probably points of clarification that Ill make on that 100 million number itself.

Its unclear where they got that particular ballpark number of infections from one can only predict its probably a combination of waning immunity in addition to obviously the Americans that havent even gotten fully vaccinated. We still have millions of Americans that have only had one dose. We have millions of Americans that havent even gotten one dose. And so its a combination of all of those factors, along with those that are immunocompromised.

Whats important is that theres transparency where this number is coming from. I just laid out some of the factors that are probably going into this number, but its important that we do understand what are the factors that are coming into play in this model.

WHAT MATTERS: Most of the US is fully vaccinated, and a lot of people are exhausted from the last two years. How do you get people to pay attention to warnings at this point in the pandemic?

MADAD: Its a great question, and we know pandemic fatigue is real and it has already set in here in the United States. We certainly are out of the acute phase of the pandemic, meaning that its not red sirens, even though we know obviously hundreds of Americans are still, unfortunately, dying every day, and thousands of Americans are still getting infected every day. And we know thats certainly an underestimate.

But because this virus and this disease is much more manageable because of the tools that we have, people are much more complacent. And I understand that; we are going onto year three. People want to go back to enjoying the life that they knew before this pandemic.

At the same time, I think its just important that people realize we are still in a pandemic. As much as we dont want to be in one, that is the reality. And its not just shaped by whats happening here in the United States. Its also shaped by what is happening around the world. And were seeing more and more of these subvariants pop up both here in the US as well as around the world. Its just important that people realize that its not over until its over all around the world.

We need to just continue to be cautious. I think that we can do all the things that we love doing, but doing so in a safer manner, knowing that theres much more virus in the community.

I think really understanding it from the standpoint of: You shouldnt want to get infected. You shouldnt want to get sick, even if its something thats manageable. For me, I think its also the risk of long Covid. Im not necessarily afraid of getting infected with the virus, even though I am still avoiding it. I am still masking in large indoor gatherings because I just dont want to get sick. I am actually afraid of long Covid. I dont know what the repercussions will look like in the long term.

WHAT MATTERS: What are the best metrics for people to pay attention to?

MADAD: So I would look at wastewater surveillance, which is an early indicator of telling you theres something brewing in the community and cases are rising.

I would also continue to look at the CDCs transmission level map. That kind of gives a good indication of where transmission levels are in your given community. And we know many places in the US are getting into that medium level of Covid-19 transmission, certainly here in New York City.

I still would want to know: Are hospitalization rates going up in my given community? Would there be a hospital available to me in the off chance I do get infected and I require hospitalization? But thats more of a lagging indicator.

WHAT MATTERS: Anything else youd like to add?

MADAD: The White House is in a very tough position. They are fighting for more funding. Theyre making it very transparent that they are very concerned. They want to make sure that people understand that this is no joke.

That 100 million number is a very large number, and so its really important that Congress understands that we are still in the pandemic, even though a lot of folks have put the pandemic behind them. You know, we could go back very, very quickly to the state that we were in just a few months ago with Omicron, with significant numbers of Americans getting infected.

We dont want to go back to that state, right? So we need to make sure Congress understands that this is really important for them to continue funding.

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Here's what the White House's grim coronavirus warning means for you - CNN

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