Category: Corona Virus

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Opinion | What if Covid Were 10 Times Deadlier? – The New York Times

September 19, 2021

I think Ive come to believe that even if the Covid death toll was 10 times what it currently is, the MSNBC host Chris Hayes wrote a few days ago on Twitter, the politics of all of it wouldnt be appreciably different.

I like this question because Im interested in Covid counterfactuals whether ideology and identity and in-group loyalty determined everything about the pandemic response and whether theres a world where Donald Trump went all in for strict disease-fighting measures and liberals turned anti-lockdown in response and one in which Trump won re-election and hesitation over the Trump vaccine ended up stronger on the left.

But those are strictly political counterfactuals, whereas Hayes raises a more medical one: How much of our polarized response to Covid-19 is independent of the nature of the disease itself?

Heres a quick case that hes right. At the pandemics outset, skeptics of a sweeping response argued that public health authorities were overestimating the diseases dangers, and many conservatives were eager to believe them. The Hoover Institutions Richard Epstein famously predicted Covid would claim only 5,000 lives in the United States. The Stanford epidemiologist John Ioannidis speculated that 10,000 deaths could be a reasonable expectation which, absent media hysteria, would feel no different from a bad flu year. Over subsequent months skeptics talked about a casedemic, in which testing would find more cases but deaths would remain relatively low, and in June 2020, Mike Pence famously downplayed predictions of a second wave.

Today its clear that the public-health authorities got all kinds of things wrong, and many bad decisions especially about closing schools were made in an atmosphere of panic. Still, on the fundamental question of how bad the disease would be, the authorities were more right than their more optimistic critics. Even with rapidly developed vaccines, weve had 670,000 reported coronavirus deaths and counting. Thats fewer, yes, than some of the absolute worst-case projections. But its still more than 50 times more deaths than the early predictions from people who thought the authorities were panicking too quickly.

In that sense weve already run a version of Hayess counterfactual. Covid has been deadlier than many people on the right hoped or predicted, and yet the partisan divide that took shape last spring hasnt really budged, with Republicans still taking the libertarian side in debate after debate closures, masks, now vaccine mandates.

But Im still not sure Hayes is right about the Covid 10 times worse scenario being basically identical to this one in its divisions. As bad as the coronavirus has been, most people who get it still come out OK, children are especially unlikely to be hospitalized or die, and deaths are concentrated in a population, the elderly in nursing homes, that (to our shame) we already keep somewhat out of mind.

Yes, long-haul Covid is a real problem, but America is good at ignoring its chronic illness epidemics. Yes, there does seem to be a notable tendency for right-wing talk radio hosts to die of the disease but in the big picture of celebrities, the most famous deaths are more obscure than seemed likely when Tom Hanks or, for that matter, Trump himself fell ill.

And as terrible as it is that one in 500 Americans has died of Covid, its still much easier to have gone through the pandemic without having a close friend or family member die of it as I have not, for instance than it would be were the toll one in 50.

Before the pandemic, I once built a column around the psychiatrist-blogger Scott Alexanders concept of the scissor, which describes a controversy or idea or event perfectly calibrated to divide people while making them think that the other side is bonkers. Arguably Covids death rate makes it a perfect scissor: Its high enough to make the alarmed feel vindicated but still low enough that many skeptics feel vindicated as well.

Whereas if the fatality figures were one-tenth as high, I suspect there would be much more internal liberal debate over the wisdom of the sweeping early response. And if they were 10 times higher, I think there might have been more red-state support for public-health restrictions of all kinds.

But that doesnt mean that the country would have been more unified in a Covid 10 times worse world. Instead, there would be more regional fractures, more governors trying to close borders and restrict travel, more vicious interstate fighting over medical resources, more frenzied culture wars over which drugs to try experimentally, more total panic and meltdown around schools.

And since the one thing we dont seem to be doing yet is preparing for the next pandemic, my fear is that within the next 20 years well encounter an invisible enemy that puts the Hayes counterfactual to a test.

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Opinion | What if Covid Were 10 Times Deadlier? - The New York Times

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 16 September – World Economic Forum

September 17, 2021

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have passed 226.39 million globally, according to Johns Hopkins University. The number of confirmed deaths stands at more than 4.65 million. More than 5.79 billion vaccination doses have been administered globally, according to Our World in Data.

Indonesia is in talks with the World Health Organization (WHO) and drug companies to become a global manufacturing hub for vaccines, its health minister has told Reuters.

The US Food and Drug Administration has said that booster doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine might not be needed - but that the third shot does generate a higher immune response.

The Australian state of Victoria has reported its biggest one-day rise in COVID-19 cases of 2021. However, a surge in vaccinations nationwide has seen almost 70% of adults having now received a first dose.

Panama is set to offer tourists COVID-19 vaccines in a bid to boost an industry hit hard by the pandemic.

The Canadian province of Alberta has introduced a COVID-19 vaccine passport system to combat a fourth wave of the virus.

Chile has announced plans to reopen its borders to tourists ahead of the Southern Hemisphere summer.

Sweden will ramp up efforts to boost its COVID-19 vaccine coverage. "More efforts are needed to make vaccine coverage even higher and more equal," Health and Social Affairs Minister Lena Hallengren told a news conference.

Moderna has released data from its large COVID-19 vaccine trial showing that protection wanes over time - supporting the case for booster doses, the company said in a news release.

93% of US employers surveyed in August required or encouraged employee COVID-19 vaccinations, with 7 in 10 testing all or some of their workers. The survey was conducted by Arizona State Universitys College of Health Solutions, with support from The Rockefeller Foundation.

Daily new confirmed COVID-19 cases per million people in selected countries.

Image: Our World in Data

COVID-19 cases have risen by a third in North America over the past week, due to rises in the US and Canada, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) said yesterday.

New infections have doubled in the Canadian province of Alberta, where hospitals are facing staffing shortages, PAHO said.

Most South American countries are seeing continuing declines in COVID-19 cases and deaths, though. However, that's not the case across the region. Infections are rising in Costa Rica, Guatemala and Belize, the organization said.

And while infections have slowed in the Caribbean, Grenada, Barbados, Bermuda and Jamaica have all seen cases jump.

Overall, the Americas reported a near 20% increase in new cases, PAHO said.

The organization also warned that children are representing a larger percentage of hospitalizations and deaths as a result of COVID-19.

The United States is developing a 'new system for international travel', a senior White House official said yesterday.

The new system will include contact tracing, but Jeff Zients said that there are no immediate plans to relax any travel restrictions.

"The American people need to trust that the new system for international travel is safer even as we - I mean at that point - we'll be letting in more travelers," Zients said on Wednesday, adding it will eventually replace existing restrictions.

"We are exploring considering vaccination requirements for foreign nationals traveling to the United States," Zients said.

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told the same meeting with the US Travel and Tourism Advisory Board that the spike in COVID-19 cases is preventing any easing of restrictions.

"We want to move to a metrics-based system," Raimondo said. "Before we can do that, we have to get a better handle on the domestic situation, which requires us to get everyone vaccinated."

Each of our Top 50 social enterprise last mile responders and multi-stakeholder initiatives is working across four priority areas of need: Prevention and protection; COVID-19 treatment and relief; inclusive vaccine access; and securing livelihoods. The list was curated jointly with regional hosts Catalyst 2030s NASE and Aavishkaar Group. Their profiles can be found on http://www.wef.ch/lastmiletop50india.

Top Last Mile Partnership Initiatives to collaborate with:

Written by

Joe Myers, Writer, Formative Content

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 16 September - World Economic Forum

Putin: Dozens in inner circle infected with coronavirus – ABC News

September 17, 2021

Russian President Vladimir Putin says dozens of his staff have been infected with the coronavirus and that he will continue his self-isolation because of the outbreak

ByThe Associated Press

September 16, 2021, 12:33 PM

2 min read

MOSCOW -- Russian President Vladimir Putin says dozens of his staff have been infected with the coronavirus and that he will continue his self-isolation because of the outbreak.

The Kremlin announced earlier this week that he would self-isolate after someone in his inner circle was infected although Putin had tested negative for the virus and he's fully vaccinated with Russia's Sputnik V. But Putin said Thursday the infections were extensive.

Cases of coronavirus have been identified in my immediate environment, and this is not one, not two, but several tens of people. Now we have to observe the self-isolation regime for several days, he said by video link to a summit of the Russia-led Collective Treaty Security Organization.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that those infected were mainly those who take part in ensuring the work and activities of the head of state, his security. None of the cases are severe, he said.

Although Russia was the first country to roll out a coronavirus vaccine, less than 30% of the country is fully vaccinated.

The national coronavirus task force says about 7.2 million infections have been recorded in the country of 145 million, with 195,835 deaths.

Follow APs pandemic coverage at:

https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic

https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-vaccine

https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

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Putin: Dozens in inner circle infected with coronavirus - ABC News

UK scientist warns over relaxation of Covid travel rules – The Guardian

September 17, 2021

One of the scientists behind the UKs testing network for quickly identifying Covid variants of concern has urged the government to continue surveillance of coronavirus cases brought in to the UK from abroad.

Alan McNally, a professor in microbial evolutionary genomics who worked on setting up the lighthouse laboratories, made the comments amid reports ministers are preparing to overhaul Covid travel restrictions, including a relaxing of test rules.

It has been reported that double-jabbed travellers will no longer need to take a more costly PCR test after returning from green countries, but take a cheaper lateral flow test instead, while pre-departure tests, taken 72 hours before a passenger flies home are also likely to be scrapped.

It is only positive PCR tests that are referred for genomic sequencing the process that identifies whether the infection was caused by a new variant of coronavirus.

McNally said: It kind of makes sense if you look at the rates of Covid in the UK right now, theyre high, so probably lateral flow tests will be sufficient for travellers.

But I dont think we can just completely remove all controls on travel and travel-associated Covid, we know from the past that travel-associated Covid is very high risk to this country.

The devils in the detail in this and I would really hope there will be a very strong mandate that any lateral flow positive test from travel have to get a confirmatory PCR test because in my opinion we still that genome level surveillance of Covid cases being introduced into the UK from abroad.

He added: I do think its vitally important we do genome surveillance on travel Covid cases.

McNally said there were two groups of people that needed genome surveillance: those who had been double vaccinated but were hospitalised and those who had travelled, adding: If were not monitoring travel-related Covid cases we can end up in big trouble.

As well as changes to the travel testing regime, it is understood ministers are to slash the number of red list countries. The traffic light system will be overhauled, with the amber tier removed so there is a clearer distinction between go and no go destinations.

Currently, scientists working at the Joint Biosecurity Centre suggest changes to the three lists depending on each countrys Covid case, vaccine and variant levels, though ministers vet these and make the ultimate decisions.

Speaking on Sky News on Friday, the environment secretary, George Eustice, said: My understanding is no decisions have been taken yet, there may be a meeting today to review this.

Government insiders told the Guardian the ultimate aim was to simplify the rules, after Labour called for the amber list to be scrapped in order to clarify guidance on which destinations are relatively safe and which are not.

However, they also admitted it would have the effect of providing a greater incentive to the 10% of those eligible to be vaccinated who had not yet had their first jab, given the extra money people would have to pay for a PCR test instead of a cheaper lateral flow one, as well as avoiding the hassle of having to self-isolate.

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UK scientist warns over relaxation of Covid travel rules - The Guardian

Coronavirus hospitalizations up to 13 in Ulster, two of them in ICU, executive says – The Daily Freeman

September 17, 2021

Ulster County Executive Pat Ryan reported on Thursday that 13 county residents are currently hospitalized with COVID-19, up two from last week.

Of those, he said two are in intensive care.

During a Thursday live-stream video on Facebook, Ryan said that while active cases of the virus currently at 602 are holding steady in the county they remain too high and there are far too many positive cases.

Ryan said the countys rate of breakthrough COVID cases among vaccinated individuals is 0.7% and encouraged residents who have not already been vaccinated to do so. There is no excuse not to be vaccinated at this point in Ulster County. We know its safe and we know it works, he said.

Homebound individuals can get vaccinations in their homes by calling (845) 443-8888, Ryan said.

Dutchess County on Thursday reported one recent death from COVID-19 along with a spike in active cases of the virus.

Schools were closed on Thursday in observance of Yom Kippur. but the Saugerties school district reported on Wednesday one new staff case of COVID at the Cahill Elementary School, one new staff case at Grant D. Morse Elementary School, two new student cases at the junior high school and one new student case at the senior high school.

Kingston schools have not updated the website since Tuesday when the district reported two new positive students at Kingston High School along with two quarantined students at the high school.

The New York state COVID School Report Card website is being updated and remained unavailable on Thursday.

Here are the latest available local COVID-19 statistics.

Ulster County: 602 reported Thursday, down 27 from the previous day. (Peak was 2,622 on Jan. 30.)

Dutchess County: 743 reported Thursday, up 43 from the previous day. (Peak was 2,576 on Jan. 16.)

Ulster County: 4.5%.

Dutchess County: 4.79%

Ulster County: 17,675 confirmed cases, 16,797 recoveries, 276 deaths. (No new deaths reported Thursday.)

Dutchess County: 33,251 confirmed cases, 480 deaths. (One new death reported Thursday.)

Ulster County: 63.51% fully vaccinated, 70.4% with at least one dose of a two-dose regimen, 80.4% of 18+ population with at least one dose.

Dutchess County: 58.32% fully vaccinated, 65.5% with at least one dose of a two-dose regimen, 75.6% of 18+ population with at least one dose.

Appointments: vaccinateulster.com, bit.ly/dut-vax, bit.ly/ny-vaxme.

For online local coverage related to the coronavirus, go to dailyfreeman.com/tag/coronavirus.

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Coronavirus hospitalizations up to 13 in Ulster, two of them in ICU, executive says - The Daily Freeman

2 more Mainers have died and another 715 coronavirus cases reported across the state – Bangor Daily News

September 17, 2021

This story will be updated.

Two more Mainers have died as health officials on Friday reported another 715coronavirus cases across the state.

Fridays report brings the total number of coronavirus cases in Maine to 83,322,according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Thats up from 82,607 on Thursday.

Of those, 59,652have been confirmed positive, while 23,670were classified as probable cases, the Maine CDC reported.

With two more Mainers succumbing to the virus, the statewide death toll rose to 981.

The number of coronavirus cases diagnosed in the past 14 days statewide is 5,744. This is an estimation of the current number of active cases in the state, as the Maine CDC is no longer tracking recoveries for all patients. Thats up from 5,693 on Thursday.

The new case rate statewide Friday was 5.34 cases per 10,000 residents, and the total case rate statewide was 622.55.

Maines seven-day average for new coronavirus cases is 484.9, up from 456.4 the day before, up from 348 a week ago and up from 173.3 a month ago. That average peaked on Jan. 14 at 625.3.

The most cases have been detected in Mainers younger than 20, while Mainers over 80 years old make up the majority of deaths. More cases and deaths have been recorded in women than men.

So far, 2,404Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness causedby the new coronavirus. Information about those currently hospitalized was not immediately available.

The total statewide hospitalization rate on Friday was 17.96 patients per 10,000 residents.

Cases have been reported in Androscoggin (9,256), Aroostook (2,926), Cumberland (19,369), Franklin (1,712), Hancock (1,904), Kennebec (7,801), Knox (1,481), Lincoln (1,394), Oxford (4,116), Penobscot (9,061), Piscataquis (915), Sagadahoc (1,646), Somerset (3,082), Waldo (1,887), Washington (1,225) and York (15,546) counties. Information about where an additional case was reported wasnt immediately available.

An additional 1,193 vaccine doses were administered in the previous 24 hours. As of Friday, 867,045 Mainers are fully vaccinated, or about 73.22 percent of eligible Mainers, according to the Maine CDC.

As of Friday morning, the coronavirus had sickened 41,788,118people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 670,027deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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2 more Mainers have died and another 715 coronavirus cases reported across the state - Bangor Daily News

WHO warns lack of COVID-19 vaccine supply in Africa could make it breeding ground for new variants and ‘send the whole world back to square one’ -…

September 17, 2021

The World Health Organization made another urgent plea to developed nations to make a greater effort to get vaccines against the coronavirus-borne illness COVID-19 to Africa, and prevent the continent from turning into a breeding ground for new variants that may prove resistant to existing vaccines.

The staggering inequity and severe lag in shipments of vaccines could end up sending the whole world back to Square 1, said Matshidiso Moeti, WHOs Africa director at a Thursday news briefing.

The comments came as the WHO-backed Covax alliance, which was created to get vaccine supply to lower-income countries, was forced to cut its projected shipments to Africa this year because of global shortages. Africa is now expected to be able to vaccinate just 17% of its population by year-end, far below the 40% goal set by the WHO earlier this year.

As long as rich countries lock Covax out of the market, Africa will miss its vaccination goals, Moeti said.

Her comments were echoed by WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who called on world leaders attending next weeks United Nations General Assembly to prioritize vaccine equity, fulfill their dose-sharing pledges and facilitate the sharing of technology, know-how and intellectual property to allow for regional manufacturing of vaccines.

More than 5.7 billion vaccine doses have been administered globally, but 73% of all doses have been administered in just 10 countries, Tedros said. High-income countries have administered 61 times more doses per inhabitant than low-income countries. The longer vaccine inequity persists, the more the virus will keep circulating and evolving, and the longer the social and economic disruption will continue.

The comments came as a panel of independent experts that acts as advisers to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration were convening to review data and take a vote on whether Americans need booster shots of vaccine. Pfizer PFE, -0.69% and Moderna MRNA, -3.43%, which stand to make billions of dollars from a booster program, have both said this week that they believe people over the age of 16 should get a booster dose.

Read also: Nursing homes are now facing a COVID resurgence, and a staffing shortage will only make it worse

But many medical experts disagree and say the data shows vaccines remain effective at preventing severe disease and death, as MarketWatchs Jaimy Lee reported.

Is it necessary at this point? Does the data justify a mass rollout to 150 million [or] 200 million Americans who are younger and in good health? asked John Moore, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College. What we have got to get away from is this idea that the vaccines are failing, because theyre just not.

See also:Alaska joins Idaho in rationing health care as hospitals are packed with COVID patients, and WHO says Africa is being left behind in vaccine push

The meeting is scheduled to end at 3.45 p.m. Eastern time. The FDA is not obliged to follow the committees recommendations, but it often does.

Meanwhile, the U.S. continues to record almost 2,000 COVID deaths a day, according to a New York Times tracker, the vast majority of whom are unvaccinated people. New cases are averaging 150,366 a day, while hospitalizations are averaging 97,424, the highest readings since winter.

Florida surpassed 50,000 coronavirus deaths on Thursday, with more than one-fourth of those succumbing this summer as the state battled a fierce surge in infections fueled by the delta variant, the Associated Press reported.

Florida has the 11th worst per-capita death rate among the 50 states, the CDC says. New Jersey, Mississippi and New York have had the worst, but Florida has risen from the 17th spot in the past two weeks.

Overall, about one in every 400 Florida residents who were alive in March 2020 has since died of COVID-19. Only cancer and heart disease have killed more Floridians during that period, according to state health department statistics. Those have each killed about 70,000 Floridians.

Gov. Ron DeSantis has opposed face-mask and vaccine mandates and even cut funding from schools for mandating that unvaccinated children wear face masks. Children below the age of 12 are not yet eligible for vaccination.

Dispatches from a Pandemic:COVID-19 long haulers are frustrated with unvaccinated friends, worried about reinfection, and mired in medical bills

The CDCs vaccine tracker shows that 54% of Americans are fully vaccinated, meaning they have had two shots of the vaccines developed by Pfizer with German partner BioNTech BNTX, -4.28% or Moderna, or one of Johnson & Johnsons JNJ, -0.59% one-jab regimen.

Some 63.5% of the overall population has received at least one dose.

In a sign of how exhausted nurses have become, many are quitting their jobs, with 62% of U.S. hospitals reportinga nurse vacancy rate higher than 7.5%, according to a 2021 NSI Nursing Solutions report. Many have taken to social media to document the abuse they receive from patients who refuse to accept that COVID is real, even as their oxygen levels sink to the point of death.

Dont miss:Shoulda Got the Shot: New PSAs employ real people rather than science and data to encourage unvaccinated Americans to change their minds

Elsewhere, Cambodia has started to vaccinate 6- to 11-year-olds, to make it safe for them to return to school in person, the AP reported. The move comes as regulators in other countries await data from clinical trials seeking to determine the safety and efficacy of vaccines in that age group.

The first civil lawsuit over an outbreak at an Austrian ski resort in March 2020 was set to be heard in a court on Friday, AFP reported. Thousands of people from 45 countries claim they were infected at the resort of Ischgl and are accusing authorities there of not responding quickly enough. The suit is being brought on behalf of the family of 72-year-old Hannes Schopf, who died after contracting the virus in Ischgl.

Italy has introduced one of the most aggressive measures of the pandemic, making it mandatory for all workers to show proof of vaccination, a recent negative test or recovery from a COVID infection, the Washington Post reported. Workers who fail to comply could be fined or suspended without pay, but not fired.

In London, transport officials are reporting a spike in accidents on the Tube due to passengers, fearing COVID infection, declining to use handrails, according to local media.

The Daily Telegraph and Evening Standard said there were 12 serious injuries on the Tube network between April and June, and 23 on buses more than any quarter throughout 2020-21.

The global tally for the coronavirus-borne illness climbed above 227 million on Friday, while the death toll rose to 4.67 million, according todata aggregated by Johns Hopkins University.

The U.S. continues to lead the world with a total of 41.8 million cases and 670,034 deaths.

India is second by cases after the U.S. at 33.4 million and has suffered 444,248 deaths.

Brazil has the second highest death toll at 589,246 and has reported 21 million cases.

In Europe, Russia has recorded the most fatalities at 193,111, followed by the U.K. at 135,134.

China,where the virus was first discovered late in 2019,has had 107,792 confirmed cases and 4,849 deaths, according to its official numbers, which are widely held to be massively underreported.

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WHO warns lack of COVID-19 vaccine supply in Africa could make it breeding ground for new variants and 'send the whole world back to square one' -...

Covid restrictions force some retailers to rethink Vietnam as a manufacturing hub – CNBC

September 17, 2021

Workers fold clothing at a Thai Son S.P. Co. garment factory in Binh Thuan province, Vietnam.

Maika Elan | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Prolonged coronavirus restrictions in Vietnam have become a bigger headache for retailers, particularly those that rely on the region for manufacturing footwear and apparel, as the holiday season approaches.

The worries led Wall Street research firm BTIG to downgrade Nike shares last week. BTIG cited serious production issues for the sneaker maker since it last reported earnings. Supply chain challenges are expected to be a hot topic when Nike's next fiscal quarter financial report drops after the stock market closes next Thursday.

The troubles go beyond Nike. The risk has grown for a number of other retailers, which have been hampered by supply-chain delays as they wait for production facilities in Vietnam to get back up and running, according to recent comments to analysts and investors.

The difficulties have even made some companies reconsider decisions to move production out of China and into Vietnam.

On Monday, authorities announced a two-week extension of restrictions in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's business hub and Covid outbreak epicenter. Under the restrictions, factories have been subject to rules that require them to either keep workers on site or completely suspend operations. Experts also note that restrictions in northern Vietnam have not been as stringent as rules in the southern part of the country.

Some retailers have expressed hope the pressure will ease. Leggings maker Lululemon has said it anticipated factories in Vietnam would start a phased reopening in the middle of September.

The high-end furniture chain RH, meantime, has targeted a restart in southern Vietnam in October. It hopes to ramp up production to full capacity by the end of the year.

The manufacturing slowdown, coupled with longer transit times and heightened transportation costs, led RH to delay the launch of its contemporary furniture collection until next spring. It also delayed mailing fall catalogs.

For now, many businesses are watching and waiting to see how the restrictions and manufacturing activity will evolve. But the picture will likely grow bleaker as the holidays approach.

The obstacles in Vietnam join a litany of other supply chain troubles, ranging from a shortage of cargo shipping containers to backlogged ports and a limited number of truck drivers. Some companies that moved manufacturing out of China and into Vietnam in the past few years in a bid to diversify their supply chains and avoid tariffs have gone as far as to say they are bringing production back to China.

During a presentation with investors last week, Designer Brands Chief Executive Officer Roger Rawlins said he spoke to another industry CEO who told him that because of the slowdown in Vietnam, six years of supply chain work was undone in six days.

"When you think about the amount of effort everyone was putting into getting out of China, and now one of the only places where you can get the goods is China," Rawlins said. "It really is crazy, the roller coaster everyone has been on here."

Rawlins noted that because Designer Brands sells less workout apparel and performance footwear, such as running and basketball shoes, the company has fared better than some of its peers through the lockdown measures in Vietnam. Categories including so-called athleisure have traditionally relied on the country.

The retail companies with some of the greatest exposure to Vietnam include Ugg and Hoka parent Deckers Outdoor, Michael Kors parent Capri Holdings, Columbia Sportswear, Nike, Coach owner Tapestry, Under Armour and Lululemon, according to an analysis by BTIG.

Manufacturing troubles in Vietnam may not have much effect in the third quarter, BTIG analyst Camilo Lyon said in a report to clients. It could cause more issues in the fourth and holiday quarter and likely into the first half of next year, Lyon said.

"Many brands have proactively cut orders in anticipation of capacity constraints and backlogs once factories are back up and running post-lockdown," Lyon noted. "Many larger brands have moved or attempted to move some production to other countries."

Products tracked by BTIG that normally take about three months to produce in parts of Asia are now taking 12 weeks longer because of backlogs.

"It may take 5 to 6 months for factories to be back up and running normally post-lockdown," Lyon said. "This includes 4 to 5 weeks of delay in receiving raw materials and another 8 weeks for a factory to work through its backlog of production."

Factories in Vietnam will also likely have trouble getting workers to return after authorities lift Covid-related restrictions, BTIG said.

Urban Outfitters CEO Richard Hayne told analysts in late August that the retailer's biggest concern has been receiving inventory, specifically dresses and bottoms that have been on order from Vietnam.

"We have a situation in Vietnam ... where the country is completely closed," he explained. "We have a lot of product there, and we're trying to get it in."

A few months earlier, Covid outbreaks made India a trouble spot for the retail industry, before conditions improved there, Urban Outfitters said. Vietnam then started to pose challenges, the company said.

Donna Dellomo, CFO of the furniture company Lovesac, said the company has shifted orders out of Vietnam and back into China to try to minimize risk.

"We know that the inventory that comes in from China is impacted by tariffs, but it allows us to stay in-stock on our inventory, which is super important to us, as it is to our customers," she said on an earnings conference call earlier this month.

Nike produced some 350 million pairs of sneakers in Vietnam last year, BTIG estimated. The research firm predicts as many as 160 million pairs might not be made this year because of the shutdowns.

Nike declined to comment, as the company is in a quiet period ahead of its earnings report.

CNBC's Michael Bloom contributed to this reporting.

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Covid restrictions force some retailers to rethink Vietnam as a manufacturing hub - CNBC

Coronavirus cases in NYC schools as 2021-2022 academic year begins: When does a student need to quarantine? – SILive.com

September 17, 2021

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. The 2021-2022 academic year is underway, as approximately 1 million students returned to New York City public schools for in-person learning on Monday and many classrooms across the city, including Staten Island, have already been closed -- or partially closed -- due to coronavirus (COVID-19) cases.

So what happens if there is a positive coronavirus case in your childs school or classroom?

Positive coronavirus cases are reported to the city Department of Education (DOE) Situation Room, which then investigates and prepares a notification to school staff and families.

Families will be notified if there is a confirmed COVID-19 case in their childs school, which will include whether your child is considered a close contact.

If your child int a close contact, he or she will be able to continue attending in-person instruction.

If your child is a close contact to the positive COVID-19 case, whether a student will be forced to quarantine will be dependent on vaccination status.

If your child is in elementary school

Currently, the coronavirus vaccine is not available to children under the age of 12. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorized the use of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine for 12- to 15-year-olds in the United States in May.

As a result of the vaccine not yet being available to younger students, if there is a positive case in an elementary school class, all students will be required to quarantine for 10 days and will be provided live remote instruction from their teacher throughout the length of the quarantine period.

If your child is in middle or high school

If your child is vaccinated and not symptomatic

Students over the age of 12 who are vaccinated and dont have any COVID symptoms will not be required to quarantine, and will continue to attend school for in-person instruction. These students are encouraged to get tested for the coronavirus three to five days after exposure out of an abundance of caution.

If your child is vaccinated and symptomatic

Students over the age of 12 who are vaccinated, but are symptomatic, will be required to quarantine for 10 days and will be provided with remote learning materials, but will not receive live instruction.

If your child isnt vaccinated

Middle school and high school students who are unvaccinated will be required to quarantine for 10 days and will be provided with remote learning materials, but will not receive live instruction.

Quarantined students who are unvaccinated can test back into in-person instruction by taking a coronavirus test on Day 5 of their quarantine. If the test comes back negative, students may return on Day 7 of the quarantine period.

In the event of a partial classroom closure, quarantining students will receive office hours for every course in which they are enrolled. Office hours could include individual or small group tutorials, check-ins on assignments and answering questions.

When do schools or classrooms close due to COVID cases?

According to the DOE, schools will be closed only when its determined by the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) that there is widespread transmission in the school.

The city expects school closures will be limited.

Is there more information about instruction if a student needs to quarantine?

In the event of a full classroom or full school closure, students will receive synchronous (live) remote instruction.

In the event of a partial classroom closure, students who are quarantining will receive asynchronous (self-paced learning that isnt live) remote instruction, with support from teachers through office hours. Fully vaccinated students (vaccine-eligible students are age 12 and older) who are asymptomatic and not required to quarantine will continue to receive in-person instruction.

The DOE created a table that outlines the type of instruction students will receive in the event of any type of coronavirus-related closure dependent on vaccination status.

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Read more from the original source:

Coronavirus cases in NYC schools as 2021-2022 academic year begins: When does a student need to quarantine? - SILive.com

Mass shootings in the US increased during the coronavirus pandemic, study finds – CNN

September 17, 2021

Researchers focused on data between April 2020 and July 2021 from the Gun Violence Archive on mass shootings, in which four or more people were killed or injured, not including the shooter.

In that 15-month period, there were 343 more mass shootings, 217 people killed and 1,498 people injured in the US, than expected.

The team observed an increase in mass shootings after May 2020, compared to trends in previous years. There were 88 such shootings in July 2020, 42 in July 2019 and 45 in July 2018, the team noted.

Last year, there were 611 mass shootings around the country, compared with 417 a year earlier, according to Gun Violence Archives. This year there have been 498 mass shootings, 34 just in September so far.

After April 2020, the team said that there were an average of .78 additional daily mass shootings, .49 additional people killed each day and 3.40 additional people injured each day.

Increases in mass shootings during the pandemic were observed across the 882 cities included in the data, but cities with both low and high pre-pandemic mass shootings -- as opposed to cities in the middle of the range -- contributed most to the overall increase in fatalities.

The large increase in mass shootings during the pandemic is consistent with the idea that this violence may be influenced by social and economic factors, the researchers note.

CNN's Theresa Waldrop contributed to this report.

Link:

Mass shootings in the US increased during the coronavirus pandemic, study finds - CNN

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