Category: Corona Virus

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Omicron variant might not signal the end of COVID. Heres why – Deseret News

January 21, 2022

The omicron variant of the novel coronavirus could make COVID-19 more endemic unless theres a new coronavirus variant to contend with down the road.

The news: Dr. Anthony Fauci, the White House medical adviser on the coronavirus, told the Davos Agenda, a virtual event this week held by the World Economic Forum, that the omicron variant could infect so many people that COVID-19 will become an endemic disease, CNN reports.

Flashback: Fauci said over the weekend that the omicron variant could make more people immune to COVID-19, as I reported for the Deseret News. However, its too early to tell if omicron will have that staying power.

Why it matters: Faucis comments show that theres still more to figure out about the omicron variant and what it means for the future of COVID-19.

Yes, but: This doesnt mean you should try to get the omicron variant. The coronavirus can lead to long-term health issues. And even if omicron provides mostly mild symptoms, mild symptoms often mean youre as sick as you can possibly get without going to the hospital.

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Omicron variant might not signal the end of COVID. Heres why - Deseret News

‘Your great-great-great-grandchildren will still be getting immunized against coronavirus’: This Mayo Clinic doctor says it’s too late to eradicate…

January 21, 2022

Will we ever live in a world without COVID-19?

As the pandemic enters Year 3, many people are wondering if and when COVID-19, the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, will become endemic. Endemic refers to the observed level of a disease or the baseline predictable level with seasonal fluctuations like the flu whereas a pandemic is typically a global public health emergency with an unpredictable level of illness and/or death.

That is a long way off, and COVID-19 will always be with us, Dr. Gregory Poland, who studies the immunogenetics of vaccine response at the Mayo Clinic, told MarketWatch and Barrons in a live video interview on Wednesday.

Measles, a highly contagious airborne virus spread through coughing and sneezing, serves as a good point of comparison. It is a stable virus and does not change, with no variants. As such, measles has for the most part been eradicated in the U.S.

Will there come a day when COVID-19 goes the way of measles? Were hoping one day [measles] will be eradicated. Will that happen with coronavirus? No, it will not, Poland said. We are not yet at any stage where we could predict endemicity. Were not going to eradicate it. We have an animal reservoir now white-tailed deer in the U.S. that are infected with SARS-CoV-2, for example.

We are not yet at any stage where we could predict endemicity. Were not going to eradicate it.

So let me make a prediction, which will be hard for any of you to hold me to because we will all be dead by then, but your great-great-great-grandchildren will still be getting immunized against coronavirus, he added. How can I even say such a thing? If you got your flu vaccine this fall you were immunized against a strain of influenza that showed up in 1918 and caused a pandemic.

Coronavirus Update: South Africa study shows boosters failed to block omicron, bolstering case for face masks, distancing and hand washing

COVID-19 haskilled 853,230Americans. Currently, there is a daily average of 753,990 new cases in the U.S., up 29% over two weeks, according to theNew York Times tracker. Deaths currently have a daily average of 1,971, up 48% over 14 days. The COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub estimates that deaths to mid-March could be between 50,000 and 300,000.

A recent viewpoint essay in the Journal of the American Medical Association suggested the Biden administration needs to address the fact that COVID-19 is here to stay. As the U.S. moves from crisis to control, this national strategy needs to be updated. Policy makers need to specify the goals and strategies for the new normal of life with COVID-19 and communicate them clearly to the public, it said.

The new normal does not include eradication or elimination, it added. Neither COVID-19 vaccination nor infection appear to confer lifelong immunity. Current vaccines do not offer sterilizing immunity against SARS-CoV-2 infection. Infectious diseases cannot be eradicated when there is limited long-term immunity following infection or vaccination or nonhuman reservoirs of infection.

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'Your great-great-great-grandchildren will still be getting immunized against coronavirus': This Mayo Clinic doctor says it's too late to eradicate...

Could Omicron Mark the End of the Coronavirus Pandemic? Chicago’s Top Doc Weighs In – NBC Chicago

January 21, 2022

Chicago's top doctor said the question of whether or not the omicron variant will mark the end of the coronavirus pandemic isn't quite as cut and dry as many would like it to be.

While some have questioned whether the highly-transmissible omicron variant could signal a sign that future COVID variants will become less severe or signal the end of the pandemic, Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said there are a number of possibilities for the future of the virus.

"The short answer to that is - and the honest answer to that is - I do not know for sure what is going to 'happen next after omicron' and neither does anybody else in the world," Arwady said during a Facebook Live Thursday. "There are a lot of hypotheses that range from a best case scenario - best-case scenario would say this has been enough of a spread that we'll have enough people who have had protection and that protection will be more long lasting. I don't think there's anybody in the world really who looks at this closely who thinks this will be the last variant. In a best most rosy-case scenario, future variants would be less virulent, less likely to make people sick, ideally less infectious, etc."

That could be the case, she said. But what happens next could also be very different.

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

"There is nothing that says a future variant could not also be more virulent, make people sick, or not, you know, in a worst case scenario, not protect against those severe outcomes. I certainly hope that is not what is going to happen but it would be irresponsible to say that is not in you know in the range," she said. "So we have sort of a best case and worst case scenario."

Her comments echo those made by White House Chief Medical Adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci earlier this week.

"It is an open question whether it will be the live virus vaccination that everyone is hoping for," Fauci said via videoconference atThe Davos Agenda virtual event.

"I would hope that that's the case. But that would only be the case if we don't get another variant that eludes the immune response of the prior variant," he added.

Arwady said she feels confident that the U.S. will "be in a pretty good place, you know, for a few month" after the omicron surge subsides, but she noted that the virus is not as predictable as influenza, for example.

"COVID has not followed a seasonal pattern clearly at this point in the way influenza does," she said. "Really every three months we've been seeing surges. Nobody expected to see a delta surge across the summer in the U.S., for example. So I expect, as we've seen with prior surges, as we sort of come down, there will be a period of relative control and yes, we will move to be lifting restrictions and you know, taking advantage of that. In a best case scenario, things would stay in very good control, but it is way too early to call that."

Arwady said earlier this week that the delta variant "has been what we call out competed by omicron."

"Meaning that because omicron is so much more infectious, so much more contagious, that it has had the opportunity to spread very, very quickly and we see it sort of replaced delta," she said Tuesday.

As of Wednesday, just 0.7% of the city's cases were believed to be caused by the delta variant.

"You can see 99.3% is the estimate of all of the COVID cases are the omicron variant and just 0.7% are delta and nothing else is showing up at this point," she said.

Arwady added that additional variants are possible going forward - and other health experts agree.

Getting progressively better at evading immunity helps a virus to survive over the long term. When SARS-CoV-2 first struck, no one was immune. But infections and vaccines have conferred at least some immunity to much of the world, so the virus must adapt.

"The faster omicron spreads, the more opportunities there are for mutation, potentially leading to more variants, Leonardo Martinez, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Boston University, said.

When new variants do develop, scientists said its still very difficult to know from genetic features which ones might take off. For example, omicron has many more mutations than previous variants, around 30 in the spike protein that lets it attach to human cells. But the so-called IHU variant identified in France and being monitored by the WHO has 46 mutations and doesnt seem to have spread much at all.

"Should we be worried about a new variant? I don't think we're done with variants," Arwady said. "Mymoney would not be on that we would see a new, very concerning variant very soon, just because omicron has been so contagious and infectious and has out competed delta and others so fast, but omicron came really quickly, too."

What will happen next, remains to be seen.

"There are doomsday options out there, there are extremely positive... I think we'll probably be somewhere in the middle there," Arwady said. "And we will learn a lot more as we see, as we come out of this omicron surge."

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Could Omicron Mark the End of the Coronavirus Pandemic? Chicago's Top Doc Weighs In - NBC Chicago

Maui becomes first island to add COVID booster shot for full vaccination status – KHON2

January 21, 2022

KHON2 (HONOLULU) Maui Mayor Michael Victorino was the first in the state to propose the addition of a COVID-19 booster for those eligible in order to be considered fully vaccinated.

An official announcement from Gov. David Ige to add a coronavirus booster shot to Safe Travels Hawaii is still anticipated, but Maui is just days away from adding a booster to their Safer Outside program.

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Starting on Jan. 24, the COVID-19 booster shot will be a part of Mauis Safer Outside program it is a county program that requires businesses such as bars, gyms and restaurants to verify proof of vaccination.

For some operators, the changing rules are becoming a challenge to keep up with. Javier Barberi, the co-owner of Mala Tavern on Maui, said visitors are often confused and even take issue with the vaccination requirement.

Were doing our best to not get frustrated during this process because were having to deal with very impatient customers and staff that is constantly hearing a new message every couple of months, Barberi said. Their job is constantly changing.

Victorino introduced the change amid the high transmission of COVID-19 cases in the county and the state. He has also spoken in support of adding a coronavirus booster requirement to Safe Travels Hawaii.

Part of a statement from Victorino said:

Earlier this month, I asked Gov. Ige to consider revising Safe Travels Hawaii to require travelers to show proof of a booster shot. My suggestion came after a November announcement by the Hawaii Department of Health that CDC data demonstrated vaccine immunity weakens over time and booster shots can re-energize immunity.

Hawaii Countys Mayor Mitch Roth has also shown support in adding a COVID-19 booster to Safe Travels. The countys Communications Director Cyrus Johnasen said they would like to see additional layers of protection.

Johnasen said, Definitely pre-testing for all passengers. Trans-Pacific is something that we are supportive of, and that weve voiced up the chain of command to the governor.

According to Johnasen, Big Island is not considering required proof of vaccination for gyms or restaurants, but he said the county is working on a public-private partnership to help businesses have rapid coronavirus tests handy.

The tests are going to be individual rapid tests given to employees prior to their travels, Johnasen said. Upon return, those employees will then go ahead and have to take that test within 24 hours of returning to the workplace.

Find more COVID-19 news: cases, vaccinations on our Coronavirus News page

Officials have said changes to Safe Travels Hawaii are expected to take effect sometime in late February 2022.

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Maui becomes first island to add COVID booster shot for full vaccination status - KHON2

Here are the latest COVID-19 numbers for Thursday, January 20 – WNEP Scranton/Wilkes-Barre

January 21, 2022

PENNSYLVANIA, USA The Pennsylvania Department of Health confirmed 17,457 additional positive cases of COVID-19, bringing the statewide total to 2,523,589, on Thursday, January 20.

There were 326 new deaths identified by the Pennsylvania death registry on Tuesday.

The statewide total of deaths attributed to COVID-19 is 39,093, according to the department.

View the CDC COVID data trackerhere.

Watch more stories about the coronavirus pandemic on WNEP's YouTube page.

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Here are the latest COVID-19 numbers for Thursday, January 20 - WNEP Scranton/Wilkes-Barre

How Do We Talk About COVID? Explaining Common Pandemic Terms – News @ Northeastern – Northeastern University

January 21, 2022

As the SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, evolves, so too do the ways we talk about it.

Thats why its important to revisit some frequently used pandemic terms, not just to get a clearer sense of the situation at hand, but to better assess the potential dangers posed by the highly transmissiblebut less deadlyomicron variant currently spreading across the country.

We asked Northeastern experts to flesh out some important distinctions in how we describe the data, what it means to be exposed to the coronavirus, and how widespread infections actually are at this stage of the pandemic. Heres what they say.

What exposure means, and what happens after

Federal officials have said in recent days that nearly everyone will be exposed to the omicron variant, given its unprecedented infectiousness. But being exposed is not the same as being infected. Exposure simply means that a person has come into contact with an infected person, says Robert Baginski, associate clinical professor and director of interdisciplinary affairs for the Department of Medical Sciences at Northeastern.

Portrait of Robert M. Baginski, director of interdisciplinary affairs and associate clinical professor. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

The CDCs guidance on exposure has been the same since roughly the start of the pandemic. The federal agency defines exposure as having come into close contactless than 6 feetwith an unmasked infected person for longer than 15 minutes.

If youre exposed, two things can happenone being you dont get the virus, Baginski says. Your chance of not getting the virus is much higher if youre vaccinated, as we know.

The alternative is that you do become infected. Many people who contract COVID-19 develop symptoms, but manyespecially those who are vaccinated and boosteddo not.

To be infected means that the virus is actively replicating in a host, Baginski says. But that doesnt necessarily mean youll experience symptoms. So, in a patient, the assumption that youre not experiencing symptoms and therefore arent infected is wrong.

If youre vaccinated, not only are you less likely to fall ill, you are less likely to pass on the infection to someone else. Thats thanks to the vaccines ability to mitigate viral replication.

Of course, if youre not fully vaccinated, your chances of getting sick and spreading the infection are, therefore, higher. Exactly how much higher is still an open question, Baginski says. Thats why, he says, its important that people continue to wear a mask, keep their distance, and get vaccinated.

Cases vs. infections: What are we missing?

The sheer scale of the omicron outbreak has underscored some of the longstanding problems in the available data and reporting methods upon which officials rely. One such problem is the underdetection of actual infections in official case counts.

Alessandro Vespignani, director of the Network Science Institute and Sternberg Family Distinguished University Professor of physics, computer sciences, and health science at Northeastern University. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

The number of actual infections is likely amplified by a factor of five to ten, at least, says Alessandro Vespignani, director of the Network Science Institute and Sternberg Family Distinguished Professor at Northeastern.

By COVID-19 infections, officials mean the total number of people in whom the virus is currently replicating. Cases, on the other hand, are the number of known positive COVID-19 test results, as collected by local health authorities and reported by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. For a variety of reasons, countless infections are not represented in official case totals that are reported out each day; therefore, infections and cases are not interchangeable. Cases are a subset of total infections, the latter of which is unknowable.

With earlier, less-infectious variants, the discrepancy between reported cases and presumed infections was large, but probably not as wide as it is thought to be with omicron, Vespignani says.

One reason for that is that testing strategies are shifting. More people are relying on at-home tests to see if they have COVID-19, and not reporting their results to public health agencies.

While the CDC now recommends five days of isolation after testing positive, it does not require that results from at-home tests be reported to health authorities, according to its latest self-testing guidance. States like Massachusetts dont have reporting mechanisms for residents with positive at-home test results in hand to use in alerting authoritiescompounding the gap between official case counts and total infections.

Hospitalized with or for COVID-19?

Shifts back to in-person activities have been ushered in by analyses suggesting that omicron is less severe for fully vaccinated and boosted populations than previous variants. Still, record numbers of people are in the hospitals with COVID-19.

But those numbers might not reflect reality. In their count of hospitalized patients with COVID-19, hospitals also include patients who incidentally test positive for the virus while admitted for other, non-COVID-related reasons.

Many hospitals and public health officials are now working to redefine what constitutes a COVID-19 hospitalization to better account for those distinctionsbetween patients hospitalized for COVID-19 versus those with COVID-19 that happen to be hospitalized. States like Massachusetts have rolled out new guidance to reclassify hospitalizations accordingly, giving greater emphasis to those severely ill with the virus. The changes have shrunk totals in some hospitals by as much as 50%.

Despite the imperfections, the existing metricsfor hospital and testing reportingare still useful in keeping pace with pandemic fluctuations more broadly, Vespignani says; but theres always room for improving and refining methods to provide for more accurate surveillance.

All data are important, Vespignani says. We cant just discard the data. Cases might not be as important as before, but they are still an early indicator of how things are going.

For media inquiries, please contact media@northeastern.edu.

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How Do We Talk About COVID? Explaining Common Pandemic Terms - News @ Northeastern - Northeastern University

Will Omicron Leave Most of Us Immune? – The Atlantic

January 21, 2022

Even before Omicron hit the United States in full force, most of our bodies had already wised up to SARS-CoV-2s insidious spikethrough infection, injection, or both. By the end of October 2021, some 86.2 percent of American immune systems may have glimpsed the viruss most infamous protein, according to one estimate; now, as Omicron adds roughly 800,000 known cases to the national roster each day, the cohort of spike-zero Americans, the truly immunologically naive, is shrinking fast. Virginia Pitzer, an epidemiologist at Yales School of Public Health and one of the scientists who arrived at the 86.2 percent estimate, has a guess for what fraction of the U.S. population will have had some experience with the spike protein when the Omicron wave subsides: 90 to 95 percent.

The close of Omicrons crush, then, should bring the country one step closer to hitting a COVID equilibrium in which SARS-CoV-2s still around, but disrupting our lives far less. In the most optimistic view of our future, this surge could be seen as a turning point in the countrys population-level protection. Omicrons reach could be so comprehensive that, as some have forecasted, this wave ends up being the pandemics last.

Read: The worst of the Omicron wave could still be coming

But there is reason to believe that this ultra-sunny forecast wont come to pass. This wave will not be the last, Shane Crotty, of the La Jolla Institute of Immunology, told me. There are not many things that I am willing to be pretty confident about. But thats one of them. A new antibody-dodging variant, for one, could still show up to clobber us. And nearly everyone having some form of spike in their past isnt as protective as it might sound. In a few months time, American immune systems will be better acquainted with SARS-CoV-2s spike than theyve ever been. But 90 to 95 percent of people exposed doesnt translate to 90 to 95 percent protected from ever getting infected or sick again; more immune doesnt have to mean immune enough. By the time the country exits this wave, each of our bodies will be in radically different immunological spotssome stronger, some weaker, some fresher, some staler. Chart that out by demography and geography, and the defensive matrix only gets more complex: Certain communities will have built up higher anti-COVID walls than others, which will remain relatively vulnerable. The malleability of the virus and the United States patchwork approach to combatting it has always meant that COVID would spread unevenly. Now the sums of those decisions will be reflected by our immunity. Theyll dictate how our next tussle with the virus unfoldsand who may have to bear the brunt of it.

Collective immunity is the key to ending a pandemic. But its building blocks start with each individual. By now we know that immunity against the coronavirus isnt binaryand while no one can yet say exactly how much more protection Person A (triple vaxxed, recently infected) might have than Person B (twice infected, once vaxxed) or Person C (once infected, never vaxxed), we have figured out some of the broad trends that can toggle susceptibility up or down. Allowing for shades of gray, a persons current immune status hinges on the number of exposures [to the spike protein], and time since last exposure, John Wherry, an immunologist at the University of Pennsylvania, told me. Infections and vaccinations add protection; time erodes it away.

Part of this boils down to relatively basic arithmetic. Each exposure to SARS-CoV-2s spike protein, whether through injection or infection, can be expected to build iteratively on the quantity, quality, and durability of the bodys defenses The more intensely and more frequently the body is bothered, the more resources it will invest to fend off that same threat. While a duo of vaccines, for instance, isnt enough to reliably guard against less severe Omicron cases, a trio of shots seems to do the trick for most. It also pays to pace encounters judiciously. Crowd the second and third too close together, for instance, and the latters effect may be blunted; a several-months-long wait, meanwhile, can supercharge the bodys response by allowing immune cells sufficient time to mull what theyve learned.

The contents of an exposure can matter too, though immunologists still debate the protective merits of tossing a dangerous, bona fide virus into the mix. Infections can blitz a smorgasbord of proteins from a currently circulating variant into the airway, tickling out immune defenses that in-the-arm, spike-centric vaccines dont reliably rousebut they can also, you know, cause COVID, and leave wildly inconsistent levels of protection behind. Its really not worth the risk, Taia Wang, an immunologist at Stanford, told me. Those who already have both types of spike exposures in their history, though, seem to reap some of the relative benefits of eachthe two stimuli synergize, and patch each others gaps. Post-vaccination Omicron infections, in particular, could awaken immune cells that didnt respond to the original-recipe spike, broadening the range of defenders available for future fights.

Read: Should I just get Omicron over with?

Neither virus-induced immunity nor vaccine-induced immunity against infection seems to last terribly long, however. (Protection against severe disease, at least, has been quite a bit more stubborn, and some experts hold out hope that additional doses or infections might eventually get our defenses against milder cases to hold as well.) For now, people who have logged only a solo encounter with SARS-CoV-2s spike, or are many months away from their last viral brush, can reasonably assume that theyre vulnerable to infection again. The fewer past brushes with spike, the speedier that relapse will be, too. Responses might be especially ephemeral in certain people, including older or immunocompromised individuals, whose immune systems arent easily tickled by vaccines.

But its not always obvious why people respond differently to the same viruses or shots. Even within a demographic group, some people generate really robust responses, and others just never do, Wang told me. Projections based on a vaccine dosing schedule, or someones infection history, arent a surefire bet. All of this underlies, then, the massive disconnect between previously exposed and currently protected, Joshua Salomon, a health-policy researcher at Stanford whos collaborating with Pitzer to model Omicrons immunological impact, told me. Salomon, Pitzer, and their colleagues estimate that although a significant majority of Americans had rendezvoused with the spike protein by Octobers end, fewer than half were still reasonably well guarded against a future infection. (Most retained resilience against severe disease.) People who enter the well defended group can also exit it, and join the susceptibles again.

Two years, 530 million vaccine doses, and 68 million documented SARS-CoV-2 infections deep into the pandemic, the range of vulnerability in our population has never been larger or more unwieldy. Some high-risk people, never vaccinated or infected, have essentially no protection to speak of; many young, healthy individuals have been triply vaccinated, and are fresh off an Omicron breakthrough. Thats a huge, huge range, Wang told me, with a chasm of immunological possibility in between. And none of this accounts for the very real risk that another wonky and wily variant, distinct from Omicron and everything else weve seen before, could still upend every rosy immunological assumption we lay down, and send us into yet another devastating surge.

And when new variants show up, they will once again reveal the cracks and crevices where protection is lacking. In the same way that single individuals with different exposure histories cant be expected to achieve the same levels of immune protection, neither can communities with different pandemic histories. Fresh, good-quality immunity simply wont distribute evenlywere likely to see islands, separated by immense seas. Many of these differences will tie straight back to how inequitably we distributed vaccines, Elaine Hernandez, a health demographer at Indiana University at Bloomington, told me. Through first, second, and now third doses, weve managed to concentrate immune protection among the privileged. Shots remain proportionally sparse in poor communities, rural communities, low-resource communities; unvaccinated people also tend to concentrate geographically, Anne Sosin, a health-equity researcher at Dartmouth, told me, seeding fertile ground for the virus to fix in a population and spread. To date, there are still plenty of pockets that may have not yet had exposure to vaccination or the virus, Bertha Hidalgo, an epidemiologist at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, told me.

Read: Its a terrible idea to deny medical care to unvaccinated people

After flitting through urban centers, Omicron will find these isolated enclaves. It will pummel them. It will cause debilitating disease and death, but generate perhaps only a flimsy veneer of protection that, unbuttressed by vaccines, might not successfully ward off future waves. By one estimate, a third to half of all Americans may end up infected by Omicron by mid-February. The variant will not encounter all of those people on equal immunological footing, nor will it create such footing. Some people will be left with immune houses of straw, others of wood, others of brick, Sosin said. The virus is not an equalizer; it never has been.

Appending vaccinations on top of recent Omicron infections in less protected places could help even the playing fieldbut there may not be incentive to, as Omicron cases eventually fall away. In many parts of the country where vaccinations have struggled to gain traction, there is a predominant belief that infection means you are now immune, especially if you were quite sick, Hidalgo told me. If uptake of shots continues to be sluggish, the gaps in protection that existed before Omicron only stand to widen. This is the texture that national curves and figures obscure: knots of vulnerability that many Americans can easily ignore, but that the virus all too easily exploits.

Read: Our relationship with COVID vaccines is just getting started

Omicrons cross-country sweep wont amount to nothing. Immunity will be raised, on average, and we can still expect it to add friction to any future path the virus takes, Sarah Cobey, an infectious-disease modeler at the University of Chicago, told me. This may well be the last COVID surge that plays out in such a staggering fashion. We may, for a time, get a touch of reprieve. Even if a new antibody-dodging variant screeches onto the scene, there are limitations to how this virus can evolve, Marion Pepper, an immunologist at the University of Washington, told me. By this point, perhaps many immune systems will have seen enough to anticipate what hijinks the virus lobs at us next.

But future surges of infection will still carry their own problems. They may be more complicated to track, because they are more local; more asynchronous, because outbreaks will start and end at different times; more patchwork, because of the communities I worry weve left behind, Sosin told me. As immunity ebbs and flows, our fates will continue to splinter, at the level of both individual and population alike. And yet, our geographies are not so divided that the pathogen wont pass between them. When the threat is this infectious, its not our immunological differences that define us, but the common ground we offer the virus when we allow it to spread.

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Will Omicron Leave Most of Us Immune? - The Atlantic

Coronavirus Omicron variant, vaccine, and case numbers in the United States: Jan. 20, 2022 – Medical Economics

January 21, 2022

Total vaccine doses distributed: 654,197,025

Patients who've received the first dose: 249,702,939

Patients whove received the second dose: 209,509,297

% of population fully vaccinated: 63.1%

% of infections tied to the Omicron Variant: 99.5%

% of infections tied to the Delta Variant: 0.5%

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Coronavirus Omicron variant, vaccine, and case numbers in the United States: Jan. 20, 2022 - Medical Economics

Americans out sick because of COVID-19 surges to record 8.8 million | TheHill – The Hill

January 21, 2022

A record of9 million Americans are out sick due to the current surge of novel coronavirus cases in the country, representing about6 percent of the U.S. workforce,accordingto data collected by the Census Bureau.

Between Dec.29and Jan. 10, 8.8 million people told the Bureau they were not working due to COVID-19 diagnosis or were taking care of someone with an illness.

Another 3.2 million people told the Bureau they werent working due to concerns of the virus spreading and getting infected from it, up 25 percent from December.

"Time and time again, we see that this economic recovery is tied to the pandemic and public health measures,"Luke Pardue, an economist with payment service Gusto, toldCBS News.

The new figures are the highest since Census begandoing the survey around the start of the pandemic, topping last January's peak of 6.6 million workers out,according to The Washington Post.

The U.S. is currently dealing with a winter surge of COVID-19 infections as the omicron variant has taken hold across the nation.

According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) data, the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths continued to increase nationwide in the first week of January.

The health agency also said the omicron variant now accounts for 98 percent of virus cases in the U.S., CBS News reported.

The Labor Department also reported 286,000 first-time jobless claims last week, which was a jump from 55,000 jobless claims from the previous week and the highest total since October,thePost reported.

Oxford Economics's Nancy Vanden Houten told CBS News she expects new claims to return to about 200,000 a week once the omicron wave passes.

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Americans out sick because of COVID-19 surges to record 8.8 million | TheHill - The Hill

Is a universal coronavirus vaccine on the horizon? – National Geographic

January 19, 2022

Every time a new variant comes along, COVID-19 vaccine and drug makers reassess their recipes to see if they work against an evolving viruslike Omicron, which has spread quickly around the globe in little more than a month.

Since the start of the pandemic in December 2019, the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus that causes COVID-19 has mutated multiple times, giving rise to different variants. Because most vaccines were designed to recognize the original SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, or at least parts of it, more mutated variants like Omicron are better at escaping protection offered by the vaccines, although they still prevent severe disease.

Last month, vaccine makers talked about tweaking the formula to have an Omicron-specific vaccine handy, if needed. But Omicron wont be the last variant, says Stephen Zeichner, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Virginia Medical Center. Its pretty clear that the virus continues to evolve and going forward there is a need for a universal COVID-19 vaccine or even a universal coronavirus vaccine.

Since 2020, in preparation for the next deadly coronavirus outbreak, which experts think is only a matter of time, some scientists started developing vaccines that protect against multiple coronaviruses. Many efforts currently focus on known sarbecoviruses, which include SARS-CoV-1 and SARS-CoV-2, and some SARS-like bat viruses that have the potential to jump from animals to humans.

Early tests in animal models are showing promising results. The great thing about having such vaccines is that they could handle potentially new [SARS-CoV-2] variants as well as the next horrible spillover viruses thatll come down the road, says structural biologist Pamela Bjrkman at the California Institute of Technology, who is developing a universal vaccine for some SARS-like viruses.

Omicron, the latest version of the virus classified as a variant of concern by the World Health Organization on Nov. 26, 2021, has nearly 50 genetic mutations compared to the original SARS-CoV-2 strain. More than 30 of these are on the club-shaped spikes protruding from the virus surface that facilitate its entry into host cells. The spike is also the region of the virus that COVID-19 vaccines target to prevent serious disease.

Human coronaviruses were first identified in the mid-1960s and rarely caused severe disease. But that changed in 2002, when a fatal respiratory illness caused by a new coronavirus SARS-CoV linked to cave-dwelling bats emerged in China and spread to 29 countries, infecting nearly 8,000 people, and leaving more than 700 dead. A decade later, another new coronavirus, MERS-CoVthat emerged in Saudi Arabia and presumably originated in batshas infected more than 2,000 people in 37 countries and killed nearly 900 to date. The danger posed by coronaviruses originating in animals became even more apparent with SARS-CoV-2, which has resulted in nearly 332 million confirmed worldwide cases and more than five million deaths since its emergence in late 2019.

While short-sightedness and limited funding have hindered the development and testing of these vaccines, recent investments like the non-profit Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations $200 million program and the National Institutes of Healths $36.3 million research fund means that pan-coronavirus virus vaccinesat least for SARS-like virusesmay be a reality sooner than many imagined.

The goal of such vaccines is to generate a broad immune response against multiple coronaviruses and its variants.

The effort that is farthest along is a vaccine developed by researchers at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, which has been tested in humans as part of a Phase I trial. The vaccine, which borrows technology developed for making universal flu vaccines, entails a soccer ball-shaped nanoparticle with 24 faces decorated with multiple copies of the original SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. Peer reviewed research conducted in monkeys showed the vaccines ability to generate antibodies that neutralize and block the entry of SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2 and its major variants (excluding Omicron, which was not tested) into animal cells. The repetitive and ordered display of the coronavirus spike protein on a multi-faceted nanoparticle may stimulate immunity in such a way as to translate into significantly broader protection, Kayvon Modjarrad, co-inventor of the vaccine, stated in a press release. His team is currently analyzing the Phase I data. National Geographic reached out to Walter Reed multiple times for more details, but they declined to comment until the results of the Phase I trials are published.

Other universal coronavirus vaccine efforts involve targeting a slow evolving, genetic and structurally similar region on the viruseswhere antibodies bind as part of a bodys immune response to a foreign invaderor additionally engaging the bodys immune cells called T cells.

Zeichner, for instance, is focusing on the fusion peptide region, which is part of the coronavirus spike protein that aids the entry of the virus into host cells, to develop a pan-coronavirus vaccine. It is extremely conserved among all coronaviruses, he says. It doesnt mutate very much. Along with colleagues, he tested a proof-of-concept vaccine using a SARS-CoV-2 fusion peptide and early results indicated that in pigs the vaccine provided some protection against a different coronavirus, called porcine epidemic diarrhea virus, that doesnt infect humans. His team is now collaborating with researchers at Virginia Tech and the International Vaccine Institute in Seoul to further develop and continue testing the vaccine against different SARS-CoV-2 variants and other coronaviruses.

Bjrkman and her colleagues, on the other hand, are focusing on a more specific target: the spike proteins receptor-binding domain (RBD). Its the region of the spike to which most antibodies bind to prevent SARS-CoV-2 from entering the host cell; it is also the region within which mutations occur, giving rise to variants. For the vaccine, they used RBD proteins from up to eight virusesincluding the original SARS-CoV-2 and other SARS-like coronaviruses isolated from batsthat were fused onto a nanoparticle with 60 faces. By injecting this vaccine into mice, Bjrkman and her colleagues found the animals produced diverse antibodies, which in follow-up experiments blocked infections caused by several SARS-like viruses, including coronavirus strains not used to create the vaccines.

To Bjrkman, this suggests that the animals immune system might be learning to recognize common features between the coronaviruses and that her mosaic vaccine, with pieces selected from multiple viruses, might be useful when new SARS-like viruses or new SARS-CoV-2 variants emerge. Her team is currently gearing up to test the vaccine in humans.

Vaccine researcher Kevin Saunders at the Duke Human Vaccine Institute is also focusing on the RBD, but a very specific part of it, to make a pan-SARS-like virus vaccine. When the pandemic began in early 2020, Saunders and his colleagues began hunting for antibodies that would inactivate SARS-like viruses. They examined antibodies present in frozen stored cells of an individual who recovered from SARS-CoV infection and another individual previously infected with COVID-19.

They identified a potent antibody dubbed DH1047 occurring in cells from both patients that could block infections in which mice that had been injected withseveral bat and human coronaviruses, including SARS-CoV-2 variants. A closer look revealed the antibody bound to the same small section of the spike proteins RBD in different coronaviruses, which became the vaccine target.

By injecting monkeys with multiple copies of this SARS-CoV-2 RBD piece fused to a nanoparticle, Saunders and his colleagues demonstrated the vaccines ability to protect against not just SARS-CoV-2 but several other coronavirus infections. The team is now testing different iterations of this nanoparticle vaccine by introducing RDB sections from other coronaviruses to broaden the hosts immune response.

Sometimes you make hundreds of versions of these [vaccines] and test them in animals before deciding on a version to study in humans, says Julie Ledgerwood, deputy director and chief medical officer at the National Institutes of Healths Vaccine Research Center. Its not simple, she says.

Meanwhile, scientists are also trying to figure out how these vaccines could cover not just SARS-like viruses but MERS and other more distantly-related coronaviruses too. The sequence diversity and structural differences between coronaviruses that fall into different groups is going to be a challenge, Saunders says. Some scientists propose a different vaccine for different coronavirus families.

For now, though, the need for at least a pan-SARS-like coronavirus vaccine cannot be ignored. Were no longer thinking of this as itll be great to have this for the next pandemic, Saunders says. Were thinking of this as a great tool to stop this pandemic.

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Is a universal coronavirus vaccine on the horizon? - National Geographic

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