Category: Corona Virus

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Johnson signals early end to all coronavirus restrictions in England – CNN

February 11, 2022

Johnson said he would present the government's strategy "for living with Covid" when parliament returns from a short recess on February 21.

"Provided the current encouraging trends in the data continue, it is my expectation that we will be able to end the last domestic restrictions -- including the legal requirement to self-isolate if you test positive -- a full month early," Johnson told lawmakers on Wednesday.

The requirement for those who test positive for coronavirus to self-isolate is currently due to expire on March 24. Under the current regulations in England, people have to isolate for at least five days if contacted by the National Health Service's contact tracers and must provide their addresses and the names of people in their household.

Covid-19 infection rates across the United Kingdom have fallen since a peak in early January but remain relatively high. On Tuesday, 66,183 new coronavirus cases were recorded in the UK, with 314 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, according to the latest government data. According to the latest figures from Our World in Data, 72.9% of the population of England is fully vaccinated against Covid-19.

'Opening the floodgates'

While Johnson's remarks will be welcomed by some in England, coming after nearly two years of coronavirus restrictions, others fear the country may be moving too fast to drop protective measures.

A spokesperson for the UK campaign group Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice accused Johnson of "opening the floodgates for Covid-19" while failing to consider the consequences for those most vulnerable to the disease.

"Whilst the Prime Minister is bragging about lifting restrictions a month early, we're struggling to keep up with the number of hearts that need to be drawn on the Covid Memorial Wall," said Lobby Akinnola, referencing a stretch of wall in central London where people bereaved by Covid-19 have painted tributes to loved ones.

"The Prime Minister might wish that this disease was no more dangerous than the flu, but the reality is that he is throwing the most vulnerable in our society to the wolves."

Paul Hunter, Professor in Medicine at the University of East Anglia, told the UK's Science Media Centre that Johnson's comments Wednesday were "quite a surprise," although there were "grounds for optimism" in falling infection rates, particularly among children.

"The concern for me remains our more vulnerable people, especially those who for medical reasons may not have responded as well to vaccine as we would have wished," Hunter said. "There needs to be robust procedures in place to ensure infections in this group are diagnosed early and antivirals are provided within hours of any positive result."

Simon Clarke, Associate Professor in Cellular Microbiology at the University of Reading, told the SMC that caution was needed. "If the requirement on infected individuals to isolate at home is lifted as indicated, it will be an experiment which will either be shown to be very brave or very stupid, but nobody knows for sure what the result will be," he said.

"Omicron may be on the wane in Europe but other parts of the world are still in the full flush of a surge in infections. In such circumstances, as we have seen before, the virus is in the best possible position to mutate again, and there is absolutely no certainty that any new variant would be less dangerous."

Renewed pressure

The photo was published as Johnson appeared in Parliament for Prime Minister's Questions.

"In the last few minutes, a photo has emerged of the Prime Minister in Downing Street, on the 15th of December 2020, surrounded by alcohol, food and people wearing tinsel... will the Prime Minister be referring this party to the police as it's not one of the ones already being investigated?" asked lawmaker Fabian Hamilton, of the opposition Labour Party.

Johnson responded: "In what he has just said, I am afraid he is completely in error."

In a statement released later Wednesday, London's Metropolitan Police Service said it was reviewing its earlier assessment, on the basis of the evidence available at that time, that the December 15 event did not meet the threshold for criminal investigation.

Officers investigating the alleged parties will send "formal questionnaires" to more than 50 people suspected to have attended these events, police said in an updated statement on Wednesday.

The questionnaire will ask participants for an account and explanation of their participation in the events under investigation. It stressed that the document has "formal legal status and must be answered truthfully" within seven days of receipt.

People who violated Covid-19 regulations at the time could be subject to retroactive fines, if police deem it appropriate, the Met said.

Police also said they were currently examining more than 500 pieces of paper and 300 images provided by the UK Cabinet Office.

CNN's Stephanie Halasz and Niamh Kennedy contributed to this report.

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Johnson signals early end to all coronavirus restrictions in England - CNN

Coronavirus cases continue to rise rapidly in Tonga – NPR

February 11, 2022

In this photo provided by the Australian Defense Force, debris from damaged buildings and trees are strewn around on Atata Island in Tonga following the eruption of an underwater volcano and subsequent tsunami. POIS Christopher Szumlanski/AP hide caption

In this photo provided by the Australian Defense Force, debris from damaged buildings and trees are strewn around on Atata Island in Tonga following the eruption of an underwater volcano and subsequent tsunami.

BANGKOK Coronavirus cases continue to rise rapidly in Tonga, and tests have confirmed that the particularly contagious omicron variant is behind the isolated Pacific island nation's first community outbreak since the start of the pandemic, officials said Thursday.

Health Minister Saia Piukala told reporters that 31 more people had tested positive for the virus, nearly doubling Tonga's active cases for the second day in a row to a total of 64, the online Matangi Tonga news portal and other media reported.

While the number may seem small, the nation of 105,000 had managed to escape thus far without any infections aside from a single case brought in from a missionary returning to Tonga from Africa last October, which was successfully isolated.

But with the deliveries of critically-important international aid following the Jan. 15 eruption of the massive undersea volcano and a resulting tsunami, two dock workers tested positive at the start of last week for COVID-19.

Despite efforts to contain the outbreak, it has been spreading and is now being reported in more areas, Piukala said.

Five tests that had been sent to Australia for analysis confirmed it was the omicron variant of the virus, he said.

Three people were confirmed killed in the eruption and tsunami, and several small settlements in outlying islands were wiped out. A thick layer of volcanic ash also blanketed the main island and tainted much of the drinking water, and may have damaged crops.

The only fiber-optic cable to the island was severed in the eruption, making communications sporadic, at best. With several areas now in complete lockdown, the Education Ministry has started home schooling with teachers giving lessons over FM radio.

The Red Cross and other health authorities have warned that as Tonga tries to deal both with the aftermath of the natural disaster and the coronavirus outbreak, its fragile health care system risks becoming quickly overwhelmed.

At the same time, Tonga's isolation which helped protect it from the virus for more than two years is now a liability, making it more difficult to provide outside assistance.

In a sign of hope, however, Piukala said all of the latest cases have so far only reported mild symptoms, and that all were vaccinated except for the children.

He did not say how many children were affected.

Tonga's vaccination program had already been doing well, but the current outbreak has led thousands of people to turn out for their first shots or boosters.

As of Wednesday, 98% of the country's eligible population, aged 12 and up, have received at least one dose and 88% are fully vaccinated. More than 67% of Tonga's total population has been fully vaccinated, according to the Health Ministry.

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Coronavirus cases continue to rise rapidly in Tonga - NPR

Coronavirus Tracker: Bexar County hospitalizations down by 25% over the past week – KENS5.com

February 11, 2022

Lower case totals have also signaled that the worst of the early-2022 surge may be behind San Antonio.

SAN ANTONIO For the third day in a row, Bexar County health authorities reported fewer than 1,000 new COVID-19 cases Thursday after tallying no such days in 2022 prior to Tuesday.

Thursday's total of 903 additional infections brought the seven-day case average down to 1,345the lowest it's been since New Year's Day, just before the worst surge of the pandemic sent the San Antonio area's numbers skyrocketing.

In another sign that the highly contagious omicron variant's grip may be loosening is continuously decreasing hospitalization levels. On Thursday there were 840 patients receiving treatment for COVID-19 symptoms in local facilities, which is the fewest since Jan. 10.

All but once in the last week have the number of Bexar County hospitalizations dropped. Since last Thursday, the number of local patients has gone down by 24.7%. Of those 840 patients currently hospitalized, 212 are in intensive care and 109 are using ventilators to help them breathe.

But additional virus-related deaths were also reported by Metro Health for a fourth straight day on Thursday, with six new fatalities. In all, 5,178 county residents have died from COVID-19 complications, while more than 511,000 have been diagnosed.

On Thursday Northside ISD officials announced they were ending a weeks-long mask mandate, effective Monday, while in Austin students at the University of Texas are petitioning for additional pandemic safety guidelines as omicron continues to be a threat.

Meanwhile, last week a San Antonio-based doctor testified to Congress about the potential effects of long-term COVID the country's health care infrastructure.

How Bexar County is trending

Vaccine Progress in Bexar County

The following numbers are provided by San Antonio Metro Health. A full breakdown can be found here.

The CDC states that "when a high percentage of the community is immune to a disease (through vaccination and/or prior illness)," that community will have reached herd immunity, "making the spread of this disease from person to person unlikely."

The City of San Antonio breaks down the vaccination rates by zip code on Metro Health's Vaccination Statistics page.

Coronavirus in Texas

The total number of coronavirus cases in the state since the pandemic began grew by 15,598 on Thursday, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services. That total includes 11,643 new confirmed cases and 3,955 new probable cases. More details can be found on this page.

Thursday's figures bring the total number of Texans diagnosed with COVID-19 to more than 6.423 million.

An additional 305 Texans have died from virus complications, meanwhile, raising the statewide death toll to 80,310.

Coronavirus symptoms

The symptoms of coronavirus can be similar to the flu or a bad cold. Symptoms include fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, and diarrhea, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

Most healthy people will have mild symptoms. A study of more than 72,000 patients by the Centers for Disease Control in China showed 80 percent of the cases there were mild.

But infections can cause pneumonia, severe acute respiratory syndrome, kidney failure, and even death, according to the World Health Organization. Older people with underlying health conditions are most at risk.

Experts determined there was consistent evidence these conditions increase a person's risk, regardless of age:

Human coronaviruses are usually spread...

Help stop the spread of coronavirus

Find a Testing Location

City officials recommend getting a COVID-19 test if you experience fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell, sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, or diarrhea.

Here's a Testing Sites Locatorto help you find the testing location closest to you in San Antonio.

Latest Coronavirus Headlines

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Coronavirus Tracker: Bexar County hospitalizations down by 25% over the past week - KENS5.com

Restrictive coronavirus countermeasures seem to be working at Olympics – Los Angeles Times

February 11, 2022

BEIJING

The coronavirus mitigation measures at the Winter Olympics can be invasive and baffling but they appear to be working.

Organizers reported nine new coronavirus cases Thursday, the third consecutive day that positive tests have been in the single digits.

The numbers represent a steep drop from the single-day high of 55 new cases recorded last week amid a flurry of pre-Games arrivals.

Since Jan. 23, organizers have reported 407 cases among the athletes, team officials, media and others inside the bubble separated from the rest of Chinese society where the Olympics are being held.

We are now seeing more people coming out of isolation than going into isolation, said Brian McCloskey, chairman of the expert medical panel for the Games. We like that, but it does not mean we are comfortable because we can never be comfortable with coronavirus.

The U.S. team reported no new positive tests among its 550-plus person delegation Thursday. One athlete is in isolation.

Though the exact total of bubble residents hasnt been made public, organizers are performing more than 70,000 coronavirus tests each day on those inside.

Every person in the bubble or closed loop, in Olympics jargon is required to have their throat swabbed each day to test for the coronavirus. The tests are tracked via bar codes the code on the vial containing the sample is scanned, followed by the code on the credential of the person being tested. To exit bubble hotels, the credential has to be scanned again as part of the screening process. Missing a test could result in being barred from leaving.

Anyone testing positive is whisked to an isolation facility. That hasnt always gone smoothly, as some of those isolated have complained about the size, cleanliness and other problems with the accommodations.

Some of the people who are now in isolation are there because they have been infected unfortunately and are unable to train at the training facility or work at their workplace, said Chun Huang, deputy director general of the organizers office and pandemic prevention and control. So they did have some complaints, and we responded to their complaints in a timely fashion.

There are temporary walls around the bubble hotels and police stationed out front. Those inside are limited to traveling between a small list of venues and hotels on special buses, taxis and bullet trains that arent used by the general public.

Disinfecting robots roam hotels, plastic dividers separate each person in dining rooms, plastic gloves must be used at buffets, venues have isolation rooms in case someone tests positive, staffers in hazmat suits are commonplace, and sensors automatically scan each persons temperature at entrances. Everyone must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or have served a 21-day quarantine in China before entering the bubble. Thats all in addition to the mandatory smartphone app where credential-holders are required to input their temperature and answer a list of questions about their health each day.

Wearing an N95 or KN95 mask is mandatory outside of your room, unless eating in approved areas.

When a journalist slipped her mask down for a half-second to bite into an apple inside the media room at the Yanqing National Alpine Centre earlier this week, a staffer ran over and demanded she stop. Other staffers carried signs reminding credential holders to wear masks at all times.

Staffers spray parking lots where new arrivals transfer buses with disinfectant. They do the same to parking lots and gates surrounding bubble hotels, always wearing hazmat suits. The staffers often spray each other when finished.

The measures reflect Chinas zero-tolerance approach to the coronavirus.

I feel like theyve thought of everything, to be honest, from a sanitation and disinfection standpoint, U.S. Alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin said last week.

She added: I feel like this is probably the most sanitary youre every going to get in an Olympic Village.

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Restrictive coronavirus countermeasures seem to be working at Olympics - Los Angeles Times

Unlocking the mystery of the "never COVID" cohort – Axios

February 11, 2022

Some people don't get COVID despite being exposed to the virus a mystery researchers are trying to unravel.

Why it matters: Understanding the small cohort of "never COVID" people could lead to new vaccine targets or other protections as the world enters the third year of the pandemic.

Driving the news: Using a highly debated method called a human challenge study, a British trial deliberately exposed people who were unvaccinated and had no evidence of prior infection by placing a droplet of SARS-CoV-2 in their nose. They found 16 out of 34 participants did not get infected, according to the pre-print paper posted recently.

The latest: Researchers are now trying to zero in on that question.

1. Cross-immunity from the four endemic human coronaviruses is one hypothesis. Those other coronaviruses cause many of the colds people catch and could prime B-cell and T-cell response to this new coronavirus in some people.

2. Multiple genetic variations may make someone's immune system more or less susceptible to the virus.

3. Mucosal immunity may play an underrecognized role in mounting a defense.

4. Where the virus settled on the human body, how large the particle was, the amount and length of exposure, how good the ventilation was and other environmental circumstances may also play a role, Openshaw says.

The bottom line: Vaccination and boosters, wearing masks, washing hands and good ventilation remain our most important tools in preventing infection or mitigating symptoms, Brooks says.

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Unlocking the mystery of the "never COVID" cohort - Axios

What the next generation of COVID-19 vaccines could look like – WXYZ

February 11, 2022

(WXYZ) COVID-19 vaccines have been instrumental in the fight against the pandemic. Life hasn't returned to normal yet, but vaccines have been highly effective against severe disease and death, saving countless lives and helping our already strained hospital systems from being overwhelmed.

Researchers are already working on the next generation of COVID-19 vaccines in hopes of fighting new strains of the virus and making it easier to deliver vaccines to here at home and around the world.

Nearly 5.9 million Michiganders are fully vaccinated but as we have seen variants can present major setbacks.

"The virus has changed. So, the vaccine that we made, in the beginning, is not the ideal vaccine for now," Dr. Matthew Sims, the director of infectious disease research at Beaumont Health, said.

Sims said the next generation of COVID-19 vaccines could offer help. Now, work is underway on an omicron-specific vaccine, the likely jumping-off point for the next coronavirus mutation.

"The new vaccine, even though it's not to that exact variant, it's close enough that it gives you a better protection. So, it gives you a new starting point," he said.

The holy grail would be a universal coronavirus vaccine, but thats unlikely. Sims says the virus mutates too quickly. Instead, what we may see is a coronavirus vaccine that combines the original shot and the next-gen vaccine offering broader coverage.

"If you mutate closer to the wild type or further from the wild type, you'll still get some good protection," he said.

The next generation of vaccines could change how we deliver the shot. Nasal sprays and pills would make distribution easier. But those versions may not be available this year. It could be soon.

"We are already hearing about technologically advanced vaccines that can help us with challenges and barriers and storage," Dr. Teena Chopra, a professor of infectious disease at Wayne State University, said.

She says easier storage will be key to reaching rural areas and less developed nations, a vital step in stopping viral variants. Chopra says for now, we need to focus on making current COVID-19 treatments more available.

"We have some great oral COVID drugs that are out there, but the availability is not as broad as it should be at this point," she said.

Those drugs are the next generation treatment. We have antivirals like remdesivir and monoclonal antibodies, and now research on a new pill treatment. But the backup is manufacturing. Chopra says rather than technological advancement to truly get beyond the pandemic, we need social innovation

"The U.S. has one of the lowest vaccine uptakes, and I think largely it is due to the lack of trust that our population has. So, I think we need to work on that trust component," she said.

That social innovation is key. The vaccines we have right now are really good, and future vaccines that are readjusted to omicron and that may offer broader protection will likely be available this year.

But, we need to partner social innovation and medical breakthroughs to build trust in the vaccine if we want to really beat back the pandemic.

Additional Coronavirus information and resources:

View a global coronavirus tracker with data from Johns Hopkins University.

See complete coverage on our Coronavirus Continuing Coverage page.

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What the next generation of COVID-19 vaccines could look like - WXYZ

From obscurity to a Nobel Prize nomination: Houston scientists acclaimed for their patent-free COVID-19 vaccine – The Texas Tribune

February 11, 2022

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Two years ago, when a pair of Houston scientists first began crafting a cheap, easy-to-make COVID-19 vaccine, they had a tough time finding support for it at home in the U.S., a country that rewards expensive, flashy new tech.

They could have used help with their goal of combating the virus both locally and abroad, where it was morphing into more dangerous variants headed for U.S. shores.

But the team at the Texas Childrens Hospital Center for Vaccine Development at Baylor College of Medicine, led by Drs. Maria Elena Bottazzi and Peter Hotez, worked on their patent-free vaccine with donated money in relative obscurity, failing to garner much outside interest.

Then one thing finally broke through and spoke to the people who had been overlooking their open-science approach to the vaccine known by its first producer as Corbevax. It came without strings or a secret formula, making it a true humanitarian pursuit that could finally reach the unvaccinated corners of the developing world.

Corbevax to beat inequity? read a CNN News ticker beside a televised interview with the scientists last month.

Now, just weeks after their vaccine won emergency use authorization in India, international news agencies are lining up for interviews. Curious investors are reaching out to the scientists on social media from around the world. U.S. lawmakers from both sides of the aisle are pressuring President Joe Biden to step in and support the vaccines distribution abroad.

The vaccine is being praised by scientists, members of the public and the media as the worlds COVID vaccine, the vaccine game changer and the way out of this global pandemic.

Theres even talk of a Nobel Peace Prize.

You are providing sorely needed ethical & scientific leadership. Texas should be proud! Ambassador Martin Kimani, Kenyas permanent representative to the United Nations, wrote on Twitter in early January.

And all of this buzz before a single shot of Corbevax has gone into an arm outside of clinical trials.

I think one of the reasons its been a bit viral is the fact that everybodys been talking about equity, equity, equity and nobody does much of anything, Bottazzi told The Texas Tribune. And then all of a sudden they learn that we have this vaccine that has been open science, with no proprietary technology. And theyre saying, Wait, where has this been?

The vaccine formula can be licensed by a vaccine producer in any low- or middle-income nation, which would then take ownership of it, produce it, name it and work with the government to get it to the people, Hotez said.

Corbevax, as it was dubbed by its Indian maker, was co-developed and manufactured by the biopharmaceutical company Biological E. Limited, headquartered in Hyderabad, India.

Doses are expected to be delivered to the Indian government starting next week for distribution to some half a billion people who are still unvaccinated in that country. Just over half the population of India is fully vaccinated, with another homegrown vaccine available there and a third recently authorized.

A halal version of the vaccine, for use in Islamic countries because it doesnt contain animal-based ingredients, is in clinical trials in Indonesia.

The protein-based COVID-19 vaccine technology is also licensed to vaccine producers in Bangladesh, South Africa and Botswana, with potential deals also in the works for Taiwan and Vietnam.

Those five countries alone are home to a billion people who are not fully vaccinated.

Hopefully, it will be game-changing for many countries, Bottazzi said.

Bottazzi and Hotez, both pioneers in the field of immunology, run Baylors National School of Tropical Medicine and have been developing coronavirus vaccines for more than a decade, including formulas for the SARS and MERS viruses.

Their vaccine uses the same recombinant protein technology already used for decades in the hepatitis B vaccine, a common childhood shot.

The vaccine technology has no intellectual property rights attached to it. That means the building blocks of the vaccine can be had for the price of a phone call. Once produced, the vaccine can be sold to governments for far less than any other vaccine currently on the market.

Our intent was to make it available to millions of people in the world who would otherwise not have access to COVID vaccines, said Hotez, dean of Baylor College of Medicines National School of Tropical Medicine.

The Indian government has secured a deal with Biological E to buy at least 300 million doses for less than $2 per dose. After that, Bio E has said it can make more than 1 million doses per month.

By comparison, the U.S. government is paying Pfizer about $20 per dose. Much of that is the cost of the intellectual property covered by the patent.

The idea of open science, open access and open source medicine and technology, like the patent pledge by Tesla in 2014, is not new, but its gaining traction for its focus on equal access over profit. Its critics argue that it can dampen competition and innovation.

There have been attempts to exempt COVID-19 vaccines from intellectual property rights and patents to increase global access, amid debate over whether that would result in more equitable distribution.

But much of the praise for Corbevax and its Texas inventors seems to be their willingness and that of Bio E and the investors to forgo a large profit in favor of the more altruistic goal of better access and distribution of the vaccine.

Last week, Bottazzi and Hotez were nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for practicing what Hotez calls Texas vaccine diplomacy, by creating a path for the entire world to be inoculated.

Dr. Hotez and Dr. Bottazzis effort to develop the Corbevax vaccine is truly one of international cooperation and partnership to bring health, security, and peace around the world by creating a COVID-19 vaccine and making it available and accessible to all, wrote U.S. Rep. Lizzie Fletcher, D-Houston, in her official nomination. It is a contribution that is of the greatest benefit to humankind.

Whether their new fame translates into dollars for continuing their work on advancing the coronavirus vaccine program remains to be seen, Bottazzi said.

She hopes that once the vaccine's safety data is published for peer review and the vaccine starts going into arms, more support will follow.

They have some powerful voices showing up for them now, too. U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Austin, called on Biden last week to help with its distribution to American allies overseas who are struggling with what he called ineffective and substandard vaccines from China and Russia.

While we recognize existing administration efforts to supply COVID-19 vaccines around the world, the global supply is woefully insufficient to meet urgent and pressing demands, McCaul wrote in a letter signed by a bipartisan group of more than a dozen members of the Texas congressional delegation.

All the Corbevax praise is coming in before the scientific trial data has been published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, seen by experts as an important public vetting process for a new vaccine or medication.

Im excited about it. I see a huge potential. I cant wait for something like this to come to fruition, said Dr. Jason Morrow, a physician and medical ethicist at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. And I also have to be measured and patient and wait for the data.

Data from company-run clinical trials in India proving that Corbevax is safe and effective was submitted to the Indian government regulators to review before they authorized it on Dec. 28 for emergency use.

Long before that, in the U.S., the Texas Childrens team published all of its information about the production processes for the vaccine technology in publicly available scientific journals.

The clinical trial results are not on the Indian regulators website yet, although early results have been released by the company and the team in public statements.

Biological E Limited reported during the approval process in India that in the companys clinical trials, Corbevax showed up to a 90% efficacy rate based onimmune-bridging studies, and none of the 3,000 people who participated in the final stage ofclinical trials had any serious adverse reactions. It also showed only a minimal drop in protection after six months.

When the companys testing methods and research are published in a scientific journal, that will give the public a look into how the researchers came to their conclusions about Corbevaxs effectiveness. Meanwhile, its creating some tension with those who want to support it but dont have all the facts yet.

The fact that its [Corbevax] open source, and its intended to be easy and cheap to make and to do so at a large scale is really exciting, and its exactly what we need to try to get the pandemic under control, Morrow said. But we need to see the data.

The data for all the clinical trials, which began over a year ago, is expected to be published within weeks or even days, Bottazzi said.

In 2020, the Houston teams work was passed over for funding by Operation Warp Speed, the public-private partnership created by the federal government to accelerate treatments and vaccines for COVID-19. Developing the COVID-19 vaccine technology and the co-development efforts of Corbevax from the lab to authorization cost the laboratories between $5 million and $7 million, Bottazzi said.

Thats when philanthropy stepped in, specifically the Robert J. Kleberg, Jr. and Helen C. Kleberg Foundation, the M.D. Anderson Foundation and the JPB Foundation in New York, along with several other anonymous individual donors.

Even Love, Titos, the philanthropic arm of Austin-based Titos Handmade Vodka, put in $1 million.

By comparison, Operation Warp Speed spent more than $12 billion in federal tax dollars to develop and distribute the vaccines launched by Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson. The three vaccines have been used to fully vaccinate nearly two-thirds of the U.S. population.

Those companies vaccines use messenger RNA, a molecule the virus needs to produce a spike protein and bind to human cells, to prompt the immune system to produce antibodies against that protein.

Its a method thats been in development since the 1970s and in clinical trials since 2008. Whats new about the mRNA vaccines are the systems for producing and delivering them in mass quantities. Thats the part that was patented by the mRNA vaccines creators in exchange for the pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and Moderna investing in the science behind it and funding the research. The cost of that investment gets passed on to the buyers, which include governments.

And the richer the government, the more vaccines it can buy. Some poor governments cant afford any at all, and they rely on donations from other countries, like the U.S., for what little vaccine they can get.

The Corbevax formula is also not new but unlike the mRNA shots, its recombinant protein technology has been in widespread use globally for decades. In some ways, that familiarity and older technology is what put Corbevax behind the newer, more modern mRNA vaccines in the race for funding two years ago.

Now the lack of a patent and the fact that the formula that can be replicated almost anywhere is flipping the script, making Corbevax the new and buzz-worthy vaccine while others can get bogged down in vaccine hesitancy, cost, production limitations and politics.

They [Hotez and Bottazzi] have found a way to get enough money to develop it without the people who are providing the money demanding intellectual property protection, said Dr. Benjamin Neuman, a Texas A&M University virologist who has been doing coronavirus research since 1996. Thats the trick. Finding a funder that is willing to say, Heres the money, lets do this for people everywhere, you know?

Every week, Bottazzi and Hotez field calls from more nations that are interested in the vaccine, that want to know how to obtain it and how to make it.

The World Health Organization is expected to issue an emergency use listing in the coming months for Corbevax, which could help fast-track it in other countries that need it.

For answers as to why vaccine equity in low- and middle-income countries matters, doctors say to look at the ravages of the omicron wave, which is just starting to subside nationwide and in Texas.

More than 64% of the worlds population has gotten at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, but the vast majority of those people are concentrated in wealthier, more developed countries, nations that are predominantly white. Only 10% of the people in poorer countries have received at least one shot.

An article published in the medical journal The Lancet last month, authored by a handful of scientists including Hotez, warned of the alarming inequities in access to testing, treatment and vaccines by poorer countries that have set the tone of this pandemic.

By September 2021, they wrote, 5.82 billion vaccine doses had been administered worldwide. Less than 2% of the people in less wealthy countries had received at least one dose.

Nations like Kenya, Uganda and South Africa, where the omicron variant was first publicly reported last Thanksgiving, are still dealing with vaccination rates ranging from 4% to under a third of the population.

Scientists have never confirmed a country of origin for omicron, and it was documented in white, wealthy, western European areas around the same time it was being reported by South Africa, but with no apparent geographical connection.

But the high numbers of unvaccinated people found in poorer countries make them particularly vulnerable to the ravages of new variants, experts say.

The World Health Organization estimates that for the pandemic to wane globally, vaccines should reach 70% of the world by mid-2022. Currently, about 3 billion people are still unvaccinated, and up to 9 billion doses are needed to get them all fully vaccinated and boosted.

Reducing virus spread abroad means fewer infections in the United States and Texas. It took less than a month between the time the omicron variant was first reported in South Africa and Europe and the time it was breaking records in some major Texas hospitals.

We all have an interest in everybody getting the vaccine, and that means we really need to build systems that can ensure equity, said Dr. Rachel Pearson, a hospital pediatrician at the Center for Medical Humanities and Ethics at UT Health San Antonio. We really need to have a more integrated global system with a focus on access in the developing world, because vaccine inequity has been a major source of unnecessary death and suffering.

Disclosure: Texas Childrens Hospital, the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, Titos Handmade Vodka and Texas A&M University have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribunes journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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From obscurity to a Nobel Prize nomination: Houston scientists acclaimed for their patent-free COVID-19 vaccine - The Texas Tribune

Coronavirus Roundup: There’s No New Mask Guidance Yet from the CDC – GovExec.com

February 11, 2022

The Homeland Security Department issued a new National Terrorism Advisory Bulletin earlier this week, which has pandemic-related warnings.

As COVID-19 restrictions continue to decrease nationwide, increased access to commercial and government facilities and the rising number of mass gatherings could provide increased opportunities for individuals looking to commit acts of violence to do so, often with little or no warning, said the bulletin. Meanwhile, COVID-19 mitigation measuresparticularly COVID-19 vaccine and mask mandateshave been used by domestic violent extremists to justify violence since 2020 and could continue to inspire these extremists to target government, healthcare and academic institutions that they associate with those measures. The bulletin runs through June 7. Here are some of the other recent headlines you might have missed.

Dr. Raj Panjabi, who most recently led the Presidents Malaria Initiative at the U.S. Agency for International Development, will become the new senior director for global health security and biodefense at the National Security Council, replacing Dr. Beth Cameron. Cameron joined the Biden administration to help re-establish the Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense, which former Trump national security adviser John Bolton had folded into another office as part of an effort to streamline the NSC, Axios reported on Tuesday. Cameron played an early role in shaping White House policy for what President Biden had deemed his No. 1 priority on the campaign trail: defeating the pandemic

A new report from the Government Accountability Office looks at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Health Resources and Services Administration, and the Federal Emergency Management Agencys efforts to provide vaccinations to underserved and historically marginalized racial and ethnic groups that were launched in February 2021. Although the available data was limited, our analysis suggests that while the programs vaccinated a greater share of some racial and ethnic groups compared to their shares of the population, disparities exist for other racial and ethnic groups, such as non-Hispanic Black persons, said the report. However, according to [the] CDC, some groups may have a higher likelihood of having missing race and ethnicity data, and the percentage of unknown race and ethnicity data may account for some, or even all, of the differences observed in comparing vaccinations among various racial and ethnic groups to their shares of the U.S. population.

Brian Miller, special inspector general for pandemic recovery, and Jean Saint-Elin, deputy assistant inspector general for auditing, spoke with Social Science Space in a recent interview about how his office looks for and investigates fraud in certain COVID-19 relief programs. We didnt want to wait for hotline complaints, where you wait for insiders to come forward, since with a five-year charter, we couldnt wait to do that, said Miller when asked how he goes about investigations. From the start, we were actively looking at data points, getting data. One of the first agreements I had that we reported in our 60-day report and then in our initial quarterly reports, was our agreements with other law enforcement agencies and we get information that way through agreements, so we can get data to see if people are defrauding the system.

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, CDC director, said during the COVD-19 briefing on Wednesday her agency is working on updated mask guidance for states, but hospitalizations and death rates are still high, so, as we work towards that and as we are encouraged by the current trends, we are not there yet. Many Democratic states have begun to roll back their mask mandates, which has caused some confusion.

A reporter asked during the briefingif people should be listening to their governors or the CDC. We've always said that these decisions are going to have to be made at the local level and that policies at the local level will look at local cases, theyll look at how local hospitals are doing, theyll look at local vaccination rates, Walensky said. And they, as I understand it, in many of these decisions are using a phased approach. Not all of these decisions are being made to stop things tomorrow, but they're looking at a phased approach. While reiterating this has to be done locally, she added: Im really encouraged that cases are continuing to drop dramatically, hospitalizations are continuing to drop dramatically as people are making these decisions and as we are working on our guidance.

On vaccines for children under age five, Jeff Zients, White House coronavirus response coordinator, said during the briefing operationally, we will be ready once [the Food and Drug Administration] and CDC make their recommendations. Since the vaccine is made specifically for young kids we're launching a new program specially for kids under five, he continued. We've secured enough vaccine supply for all kids in this age groupall 18 million.

On Thursday morning, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., filed cloture on Bidens nominee to lead the FDA. This nomination has been snared by political controversies on both the left and right, the Associated Press reported. A permanent FDA chief cant come soon enough for the beleaguered agency, which has been straining for months under an intense pandemic workload even as several scientific disputes have battered its reputation.

The Internal Revenue Service announced on Wednesday it will be suspending over a dozen additional letters it normally sends to taxpayers who owe additional taxes or for whom the IRS has no record of a return. This comes as the agency is working through its backlog of unprocessed returns due to the pandemic, a process that has received much scrutiny by lawmakers and other groups. IRS employees are committed to doing everything possible with our limited resources to help people during this period, said IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig. Our efforts are not limited to suspension of these additional letters and the possibility of similar actions going forward. We have redeployed and reallocated resources throughout the IRS and have implemented innovative strategies in an ongoing effort to provide a meaningful reduction in our inventories.

Help us understand the situation better. Are you a federal employee, contractor or military member with information, concerns, etc. about how your agency is handling the coronavirus? Email us at newstips@govexec.com.

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Coronavirus Roundup: There's No New Mask Guidance Yet from the CDC - GovExec.com

Covid-19 update: Daily Covid infections near quarter million in Germany – Pharmaceutical Technology

February 11, 2022

Global: The global Covid death toll has passed 5.7 million, with a figure of 5,789,807 according to researchers at Johns Hopkins University. Meanwhile, infections have raced past 400 million to a world wide figure of 405,994,662.

Daily infections are nearing the quarter million mark in Germany, as the country reported 247,862 new Covid-19 cases, compared with 234,250 the day before, according to the countrys public health authority RKI.

Novavax says its Covid vaccine has proved safe and effective in a study of 12- to 17-year-olds. Armed with the new data, Novavax plans to soon seek expanded use of its shots down to age 12. Later this year, it plans to begin testing in younger children.

US: Covid -19 infections have now passed 77.4 million. Meanwhile, the US coronavirus death toll has increased to more than 915,000 according to Johns Hopkins University data.

Nevada will no longer require masks in public, Governor Steve Sisolak announced Thursday in a press briefing. Earlier this week, other states with Democratic governors, including New York, New Jersey and Illinois, announced an easing of masking rules as the surge of infections caused by the Omicron variant subsides.

Federal, state and local law-enforcement agencies across the US are bracing for the possibility of a protest by truckers that could begin this weekend and carry into March, potentially including a cross-country caravan and disruptions to cities and major transportation routes. While its still not clear how serious the threat is, the US Department of Homeland Security warned law-enforcement agencies that protests could begin 13 February when the Super Bowl is played in Los Angeles and arrive in the nations capital in early March. Truckers could time their protests to coincide with President Joe Bidens State of the Union Speech on 1 March, according to a DHS alert.

Canada: The city of Windsor, Ontario, is seeking a court injunction to end the protest that has blocked freight traffic on the Ambassador Bridge for nearly 72 hours, setting the stage for a potential confrontation with demonstrators. A provincial court will hear the application at 12 p.m. New York time Friday, a city spokesperson said. A court order would clear the path for police to make arrests or tow vehicles to clear the streets, if necessary, Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens said. The legal move comes as protesters are digging in at the base of the bridge that connects Windsor with Detroit. Police have tried to persuade them to move to an area that doesnt block traffic, to no avail, Dilkens said in an interview.

EU: Brussels authorities have banned a pan-European freedom convoy of motorists protesting Covid restrictions from entering the Belgian capital, the regional government said in a statement. Reuters reports the convoy was expected to arrive at the home of European Union institutions and NATO on Monday. Authorities in Paris had earlier banned the convoy.

Spain: Spain dropped the mandatory use of face masks outdoors. Although they will remain compulsory at large open-air gatherings where social distancing is not possible, they will no longer be required in school playgrounds.

Netherlands: The Dutch government has said it aims to drop most of its coronavirus restrictions by the end of the month, as record levels of infections in recent weeks have only had a limited effect on hospital numbers.

UK: The UK recorded another 66,638 Covid infections and a further 206 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, according to the latest data on the governments coronavirus dashboard.

Meanwhile, Covid passes are to be scrapped and the need to wear face coverings in certain venues removed later this month as coronavirus cases continue to fall, the Welsh government has announced. The changes will be confirmed on Friday during the first three-week review of Waless alert level zero measures.

Finland: Finland will end testing and contact tracing for the majority of the population, leaving it up to people to test at home and isolate on their own when they have contracted the virus. Testing and contact tracing will focus more on high-risk groups, pregnant women, health-care and social workers, according to a statement on Thursday.

Italy: Italian outdoor and indoor nightclubs will reopen Friday. Access will be allowed only to those showing a reinforced green pass, which can only be obtained with the vaccine or after recovering from Covid. Mandatory use of masks open-air in will end all over the country.

New Zealand: New Zealand has hit a new record daily of community Covid cases, with 446 announced on Friday. That is an increase of 140 cases from the previous record, which was set the previous day. Cases are expected to climb steadily now that Omicron is spreading within New Zealand.

More people have arrived outside New Zealands parliament, as protesters calling for an end to a vaccine mandate and Covid-19 restrictions refused to end their demonstrations despite arrests by the police. Its been four days since protesters, inspired by truckers demonstrations in Canada, occupied the parliament lawns in the capital Wellington.

Australia: Australias immunization advisory body has recommended three doses of vaccine be required for people aged 16 and over to be considered fully vaccinated. People should not be considered up-to-date with their vaccinations if they have not received a booster within six months of their second dose of vaccine, the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation said in its clinical advice, updated on Thursday. The application of the advice was up to governments and private entities, it said. People who have had Covid-19 can defer their next dose for as long as four months after infection, down from ATAGIs previous recommendation of six months. Boosters are not recommended for people aged 5 to 15, it said.

China: China will fully support Hong Kong with its dynamic zero coronavirus strategy, its office overseeing matters in the city said, as the territory is expected to hit a new record for daily infections on Friday. The global financial hub will report at least 1,325 new coronavirus cases on Friday, broadcaster TVB reported, a new record.

Hong Kong: Hong Kongs current social distancing rules wont stop deaths, and nearly 1,000 residents may die by mid-June if there arent changes, according to researchers from the University of Hong Kong. Mitigation measures are needed to cut transmissions by 85% to get through the outbreak while minimizing fatalities, researchers said. The ultimate number of deaths depends on how long the city sustains the curbs now in place and any changes to them.

Africa: Africa is transitioning out of the pandemic phase of its Covid outbreak and moving towards a situation where it will be managing the virus long term, the World Health Organizations regional head for Africa said. Dr Matshidiso Moeti also said the number of Covid infections in Africa could be seven times higher than official data suggested, and deaths from the virus two to three times higher.

South Africa: The Omicron BA.2 subvariant makes up almost 100% of new coronavirus infections in South Africa, Tulio de Oliveira, a bio-informatics professor who runs gene-sequencing institutions and advises the countrys government on the pandemic, said on Twitter. BA.2 appears to be more transmissible than the original Omicron variant. There is no indication that it causes more severe disease. However, while South Africa was the first country to experience a major Omicron wave, the number of infections has tapered off. On Wednesday the country reported 3,628 new cases, down from a record of almost 27,000 on 15 December.

Americas: At least six auto plants around the US-Canada border have temporarily halted work as the impact from a protest blocking truck traffic into Detroit begins rippling through both nations economies. Toyota Motor Corp. said it will idle three plants in Ontario due to parts shortages caused by the bridge blockade. General Motors Co. canceled the evening shift Wednesday and Thursdays day shift at an SUV factory in Lansing, Michigan. Ford Motor Co. shut down an engine plant and cut the schedule at an assembly plant, both in Ontario, while Stellantis NV canceled shifts Wednesday night at multiple facilities in the US and Canada.

UK: AstraZeneca Plc plans to expand a new unit focused on vaccines and immune therapies rather than sell it or spin it off, Chief Executive Officer Pascal Soriot said in an interview. The business has been in the spotlight since the UK drugmaker in November announced its creation to focus on its Covid-19 shot, antibody combination and products targeting respiratory infections.

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Covid-19 update: Daily Covid infections near quarter million in Germany - Pharmaceutical Technology

Michigan COVID: Heres what to know Feb. 11, 2022 – WDIV ClickOnDetroit

February 11, 2022

DETROIT Michigan reported 7,527 new cases of COVID-19 and 330 virus-related deaths Wednesday -- an average of 3,763.5 cases over a two-day period.

The deaths announced Wednesday include 239 identified during a Vital Records review.

Wednesdays update brings the total number of confirmed COVID cases in Michigan to 2,026,646, including 30,747 deaths. These numbers are up from 2,019,119 cases and 30,417 deaths, as of Monday.

Testing has increased to around 50,000 to 60,000 diagnostic tests reported per day on average, with the 7-day positive rate at 17.66% as of Feb. 9 -- the lowest it has been since mid-December. Hospitalizations have decreased over the last three weeks.

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The states 7-day moving average for daily cases was 3,890 on Wednesday, Feb. 9, lower than the previous week. The 7-day death average was 93 on Feb. 9. The states fatality rate is 1.5%.

Michigan has reported more than 11.2 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine administered as of Feb. 1, with 69.8% of 16+ residents having received at least one dose, while 63.9% of 16+ residents are considered fully vaccinated.

Across Michigans entire population, 65.5% have received at least one COVID vaccine dose.

According to Johns Hopkins University, more than 76 million cases have been reported in the U.S., with more than 902,200 deaths reported from the virus. Globally, more than 10 billion vaccine doses have been administered, including more than 539 million doses in the U.S. alone.

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Worldwide, more than 393 million people have been confirmed infected and more than 5.7 million have died, according to Johns Hopkins University. The true numbers are certainly much higher, because of limited testing, different ways nations count the dead and deliberate under-reporting by some governments.

VIEW: Tracking coronavirus cases, outbreaks in Michigan schools

Jan. 19, 2022: For the first time since the start of the COVID omicron surge in Michigan, hospital officials with the Henry Ford Health System said theyre starting to see some signs of early progress.

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These trends are aligning and pointing in the right direction, said Bob Riney, president of health care operations and COO at Henry Ford Health.

Read here.

Michigan COVID-19 daily reported cases since Jan. 1:

Jan. 1 -- 12,247 new cases

Jan. 2 -- 12,247 new cases

Jan. 3 -- 12,247 new cases

Jan. 4 -- 13,673 new cases

Jan. 5 -- 13,673 new cases

Jan. 6 -- 20,346 new cases

Jan. 7 -- 20,346 new cases

Jan. 8 -- 14,841 new cases

Jan. 9 -- 14,841 new cases

Jan. 10 -- 14,842 new cases

Jan. 11 -- 14,229 new cases

Jan. 12 -- 14,229 new cases

Jan. 13 -- 18,557 new cases

Jan. 14 -- 18,557 new cases

Jan. 15 -- 17,201 new cases

Jan. 16 -- 17,202 new cases

Jan. 17 -- 17,202 new cases

Jan. 18 -- 17,202 new cases

Jan. 19 -- 17,202 new cases

Jan. 20 -- 16,775 new cases

Jan. 21 -- 16,776 new cases

Jan. 22 -- 13,124 new cases

Jan. 23 -- 13,124 new cases

Jan. 24 -- 13,124 new cases

Jan. 25 -- 13,711 new cases

Jan. 26 -- 13,712 new cases

Jan. 27 -- 13,155 new cases

Jan. 28 -- 13,154 new cases

Jan. 29 -- 7,080 new cases

Jan. 30 -- 7,081 new cases

Jan. 31 -- 7,081 new cases

Feb. 1 -- 9,401 new cases

Feb. 2 -- 9,402 new cases

Feb. 3 -- 4,902 new cases

Feb. 4 -- 4,903 new cases

Feb. 5 -- 3,299 new cases

Feb. 6 -- 3,299 new cases

Feb. 7 -- 3,300 new cases

Feb. 8 -- 3,764 new cases

Feb. 9 -- 3,763 new cases

Michigan COVID-19 daily reported deaths since Jan. 1:

Jan. 1 -- 60 new deaths

Jan. 2 -- 60 new deaths

Jan. 3 -- 60 new deaths (172 from past five days from vital records)

Jan. 4 -- 138 new deaths

Jan. 5 -- 139 new deaths (165 from past two days from vital records)

Jan. 6 -- 129 new deaths

Jan. 7 -- 130 new deaths (136 from past two days from vital records)

Jan. 8 -- 18 new deaths

Jan. 9 -- 19 new deaths

Jan. 10 -- 19 new deaths

Jan. 11 -- 175 new deaths

Jan. 12 -- 175 new deaths (282 from past two days from vital records)

Jan. 13 -- 125 new deaths

Jan. 14 -- 126 new deaths (140 from past two days from vital records)

Jan. 15 -- 100 new deaths

Jan. 16 -- 100 new deaths

Jan. 17 -- 100 new deaths

Jan. 18 -- 100 new deaths

Jan. 19 -- 101 new deaths (346 from past two days from vital records)

Jan. 20 -- 105 new deaths

Jan. 21 -- 105 new deaths (79 from past two days from vital records)

Jan. 22 -- 12 new deaths

Jan. 23 -- 12 new deaths

Jan. 24 -- 12 new deaths

Jan. 25 -- 190 new deaths

Jan. 26 -- 189 new deaths (268 from past two days from vital records)

Jan. 27 -- 86 new deaths

Jan. 28 -- 87 new deaths (121 from past two days from vital records)

Jan. 29 -- 21 new deaths

Jan. 30 -- 22 new deaths

Jan. 31 -- 22 new deaths

Feb. 1 -- 163 new deaths

Feb. 2 -- 164 new deaths (239 from past two days from vital records)

Feb. 3 -- 104 new deaths

Feb. 4 -- 105 new deaths (155 from past two days from vital records)

Feb. 5 -- 12 new deaths

Feb. 6 -- 13 new deaths

Feb. 7 -- 13 new deaths

Feb. 8 -- 165 new deaths

Feb. 9 -- 165 new deaths (239 from past two days from vital records)

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Michigan COVID: Heres what to know Feb. 11, 2022 - WDIV ClickOnDetroit

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