Category: Corona Virus

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South Dakota National Guard activated to help with COVID-19 testing efforts – KELOLAND.com

August 31, 2021

PIERRE, S.D. (KELO) Nine soldiers with the South Dakota National Guard are helping Monument Health with COVID-19 testing in the western part of the state.

The soldiers were activated to Belle Fourche, Custer, Rapid City, Spearfish and Sturgis.

The soldiers are activated under FEMA Title 32, so their efforts will be federally funded.

In a statement, Governor Kristi Noem says she spoke with all three South Dakota hospital systems to ask what they needed as cases start to rise again.

Monument shared a need for help with testing efforts.

Testing efforts help us to identify and isolate cases to slow the spread of the virus, Noem said in the email.

The members began their work Tuesday morning.

Testing volume in August was 115 percent higher than it was in July, according to Emily Leech, Director of the Monument Health Laboratory Services.

The health care system says that in the last seven days, 2,856 COVID-19 PCR tests were completed and 844 were positive for a positivity rate of 29.6 percent.

Leech says assistance from the National Guard will allow Monument Health to test more patients and fully utilize testing equipment.

The latest update from the state health department said the Rapid City hospital was at 100 percent capacity.

A month ago, the Monument Health system had fewer than 10 hospitalized COVID-19 patients. As of Monday, Aug. 30, the number had increased to 110.

Dan Daly with Monument Health says as of Tuesday, the health care system has 108 COVID-19 patients. He says that is more than the 104 patients treated when COVID-19 peaked in November 2020 in South Dakota.

A Monument spokesman tells us they are not turning anyone away. He says if someone needs a bed, they will find one.

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South Dakota National Guard activated to help with COVID-19 testing efforts - KELOLAND.com

How Long Does Immunity To COVID-19 Last? : Goats and Soda – NPR

August 31, 2021

All around the world, there seem to be signs that immunity to SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes the disease COVID-19, doesn't last very long after you're vaccinated.

Israel is now having one of the world's worst COVID-19 surges about five months after vaccinating a majority of its population. And in the U.S., health officials are recommending a booster shot eight months after the original vaccine course.

So, how long does immunity last after two doses of the vaccine? Six months or so? And at that point, how much protection is left over?

It all depends on which type of immunity you're talking about, says immunologist Ali Ellebedy at Washington University in St. Louis. Six months after your vaccine, your body may be more ready to fight off the coronavirus than you might think.

"If you were vaccinated six months ago, your immune system has been training for six months you are better ready to fight a COVID-19 infection," says Ellebedy.

A series of new studies, including two led by Ellebedy, suggests that mRNA vaccines like those from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna trigger the immune system to establish long-term protection against severe COVID-19 protection that likely will last several years or even longer, Ellebedy says.

To understand what he's talking about, let's say you received the second Moderna or Pfizer vaccine six months ago. Right away, your immune system got to work and began making antibodies.

These antibodies are a bit like archers outside the moat of a castle. They set up in the lining of your nose and throat, ready to shoot down (aka neutralize) any SARS-CoV-2 particles that try to enter the moat (aka your nasal tissue).

These antibodies can prevent an infection, says bioimmunologist Deepta Bhattacharya at the University of Arizona. They stop the virus from entering cells and setting up shop. They are the body's front-line defense.

But right after vaccination, this initial round of antibodies has a few problems. The antibodies are a bit wimpy. They're not that well trained at killing SARS-CoV-2, and they're not very durable, Bhattacharya says.

About a month after the second mRNA shot, the number of antibodies in the blood reaches its peak level and then starts to decline. The antibodies themselves degrade and the cells that make them die, a study published in the journal Nature reported in June.

This happens with every vaccine, whether it's for COVID-19, the flu or measles, Bhattacharya says. "In every single immune response, there is a sharp rise in antibodies, a period of sharp decline, and then it starts to settle into a more stable nadir."

The media has largely focused on this decline of antibodies as the cause of "waning immunity." And it's true, Bhattacharya says, that this decline in antibodies, combined with the high potency of the delta variant, which began dominating many countries this year, is likely increasing the rate of infection in fully vaccinated people.

"If you get a big dose of delta, as the variant often gives, the virus can slip past the initial wall of antibodies," he says. "So I think we may be seeing some signs of that. But the [level of breakthrough infections] is probably not as dramatic as I think it's being made out to be."

Why? Because the media has largely overlooked several key facts about the antibodies present eight months after the vaccine. For starters, they're more powerful than the original ones triggered by the vaccine, Bhattacharya says.

While the first round of archers (antibodies) was out guarding the moat of your castle (respiratory tract), the immune system wasn't just sitting around idly, hoping those soldiers would be enough. Instead, it was busy training better archers and a whole bunch of foot soldiers too.

After your second shot, the immune system sets up a training center in the lymph nodes to teach special cells how to make more powerful antibodies, the Nature paper from June reported.

"The quality of the antibody improves over time. It takes far fewer of those new antibodies to protect you," Bhattacharya says. "So I think that worrying about antibody decline is not something that's productive," he adds.

At the same time, the cells that make these souped-up antibodies become souped up themselves, he adds. In the training center, they learn how to make a huge amount of the highly powerful antibodies.

"These cells are remarkable," Bhattacharya says. "They're estimated to spit out something like 10,000 antibody molecules per second." So you don't need many of these cells to protect you against a future infection.

"We've done some back-of-the-envelope calculations to figure out how many of these cells are needed to protect a mouse from a lethal infection. It's three," Bhattacharya says. "Of course, we're bigger than mice. But you get the sense that it doesn't take many to offer good protection."

On top of that, these cells learn something remarkable in the training center: how to persist. "They're essentially given the gift of eternity," says immunologist Ellebedy.

He and his colleagues have found that by about six months after vaccination, these antibody-producing cells go into the bone marrow, where they can live for decades, perhaps even a lifetime, studies have found, and continue to produce antibodies the entire time. In one 2008 study, researchers identified antibodies that could neutralize the 1918 flu in the blood of people who were exposed to the virus 90 years earlier.

"We looked in the bone marrow and have seen these cells in people previously infected with SARS-CoV-2," Ellebedy says. "Now we are finishing research that shows these cells appear in the bone marrow after vaccination as well."

Called long-lived plasma cells, these cells will likely pump out antibodies into the blood for decades, Ellebedy says, giving people some sustained, long-term protection against SARS-CoV-2. (There is a caveat: If the virus changes too much, these antibodies won't be as effective.)

"The antibodies are maintained at very low levels, but they're the first line of defense against an infection," Ellebedy says. "If you're taken by surprise by SARS-CoV-2, these antibodies will slow down the replication of the virus" until reinforcements come along.

And reinforcements will likely come!

On top of training up better archers (antibodies) and factories to create them (plasma cells), the immune system has also been training up the equivalent of foot soldiers, several studies have found. These foot soldiers are called memory B cells and memory T cells, and they largely serve as a surveillance system, looking for other cells infected with SARS-CoV-2.

"They're patrolling all over," Ellebedy says, checking to see if a cell has SARS-CoV-2 hiding in it. "It's almost like going through the neighborhood, house by house, and just making sure it's clean."

These foot soldiers can't prevent an infection from initially occurring, but they can quickly stop one once it occurs, says immunologist Jennifer Gommerman at the University of Toronto. "Because of the vaccine-generated 'memory' of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, you get a very brisk cellular immune response."

OK. So now we've got all the information to understand what's going on with the COVID-19 vaccine and immune durability.

About six months after the shots, the antibodies in the blood have fallen as expected. They're also a bit less effective against the delta variant. "Together, that means there are more symptomatic infections as we go further out from the vaccination rollout," Gommerman says.

But in vaccinated people, these infections will most likely be mild or moderate because the immune system isn't starting from scratch. In fact, it's the opposite. It has been training cells and antibodies for months.

"You still have all this immunity inside of your body that will then say, 'OK, we've had a breach, and it's time to bring in the cellular immunity and respond to this threat,' " Gommerman says. "And because of vaccination, you have cells that can do that really quickly."

And so, overall, you'll be less sick than if you weren't vaccinated and be much less likely to end up in the hospital, she says.

"That's really what the vaccines were designed to do to teach the immune system to deal with this invader if an infection does occur," Gommerman says. "And the vaccines do that remarkably well."

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How Long Does Immunity To COVID-19 Last? : Goats and Soda - NPR

What we know (and dont know) about Ohios surging coronavirus numbers – cleveland.com

August 31, 2021

CLEVELAND, Ohio Despite widely available vaccines, Ohios coronavirus numbers have surged to levels not seen since January.

Newly reported cases are running about 21 times higher than they were at the start of the second week of July. Hospitalizations have also increased significantly, and there are signs that deaths are starting to edge up. All this while the return of students to schools and dorms has triggered fears that the spread could become worse.

With this, the thirst for data has also increased. Cleveland.com has renewed efforts to share more of this information with a team of reporters following various aspects of the coronavirus pandemic, from hospitalizations and cases to vaccines and schools. (A few links to recent reports can be found at the bottom of this story.)

But with almost every piece of information released by the Ohio Department of Health, its important to keep in mind what is known and is not known.

What we know: Cases unquestionably are up sharply. The daily average of newly reported cases over the last week stood at 4,461 a day on Monday. On July 8, this average was a low for the year of just 211 a day, making worries at the time appear to be in the rearview mirror. Newly reported cases are now running higher than at any time since January, just after the start of vaccinations.

What we dont know: While the state health department updates case counts daily, the updates do not include breakdowns of how many of those newly infected were fully vaccinated, nor do they include information for how many of those tested positive are showing symptoms. But we do know more people are being tested either because they have symptoms, may have been exposed or as a routine precaution. The state reported 250,603 tests in the seven days through Monday, up from just 149,555 the first seven days of August. More tests undoubtedly uncover more symptom-free cases.

What we know: Coronavirus hospitalizations have been the most reliable metric in tracking the spread of the virus in the state since the onset of the outbreak early last year, cutting through some of the problems in tracking total case numbers, especially when testing is uneven. The sickest people go to the hospital. The Ohio Hospital Association relays coronavirus patient counts daily to the state health department. There were 2,412 coronavirus patients in the preliminary county for Monday, up 12-fold from a summer low of just 202 on July 6. Jumping just as sharply has been the number of these patients in intensive care units 696 on Monday versus 50 on July 11. The recent counts are back to where they were in January.

What we dont know: How many of the recent patients went home because their health conditions improved and how many died. More on the death statistics next.

What we know: Coronavirus-attributed deaths, as reported by the state, have ticked up slightly in recent weeks, with 110 reported last week versus 75 and 58 the previous two weeks. A total of 20,799 Ohio deaths have been attributed to the pandemic, peaking in late December.

What we dont know: Exactly how many people have died recently as delta has taken hold. The state health department in early March abandoned efforts to track coronavirus-related deaths in a timely manner. Until then, the state used reports from hospitals, urgent care centers and local health districts in reporting deaths, making corrections later if necessary if causes changed once cases were reviewed by the federal Centers for Disease Control. Now the state ignores the early reports, waiting instead for CDC rulings based on death certificates that routinely take several weeks and often months. So when a person dies in a hospital, it will be weeks or months before that person is included in the death totals.

What we know: Vaccinated people are much less likely to get severely sick, and this is holding true with the delta variant. Overall for the year, the state reports that just 2.3% of the coronavirus hospitalizations (469 of 20,767) have involved fully vaccinated people. That includes pre-delta cases. This share has increased recently as delta has taken over, but is still small. Fully vaccinated people accounted for 6.1% and 6.2% of the hospitalizations in the cases added to the states report each of the last two weeks. Overall, 56% of the Ohioans old enough to be vaccinated (age 12 and up) have completed all required doses. This includes close to 80% of those age 65 and up. For the year, 76 of the 7,035 deaths (1.1%) have involved fully vaccinated people.

What we dont know: Overall case rates in Ohio for the vaccinated population, and details for those partially vaccinated such as people who received just one of two required doses.

What we know: In addition to what individual school districts are reporting, the state health department each Thursday releases a report of total cases for students and staff since Aug. 9, and cases reported the previous week. Details are listed on the health departments website for each public school district and private school.

What we dont know: Real-time information statewide. The report issued each Thursday is based on data the state receives from local health departments the previous Monday through Sunday. The local health departments collect the data from the schools, before it is sent on to the state.

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What we know (and dont know) about Ohios surging coronavirus numbers - cleveland.com

New Zealand reports first death linked to Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine – Reuters

August 31, 2021

WELLINGTON, Aug 30 (Reuters) - New Zealand reported its first recorded death linked to the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, the health ministry said on Monday, after a woman suffered a rare heart muscle inflammation side effect.

The report comes as the country battles an outbreak of the Delta variant of the coronavirus after nearly six months of being virus free. It followed a review by an independent panel monitoring the safety of the vaccines.

"This is the first case in New Zealand where a death in the days following vaccination has been linked to the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine," the ministry said in a statement, without giving the woman's age.

The vaccine monitoring panel attributed the death to myocarditis, a rare, but known, side effect of the Pfizer (PFE.N) vaccine, the ministry added.

The board said the myocarditis "was probably due to vaccination", according to the ministry. The health ministry said other medical issues at the same time could have influenced the outcome after vaccination.

Myocarditis is an inflammation of the heart muscle that can limit the organ's ability to pump blood and can cause changes in heartbeat rhythms.

Pfizer said it recognised there could be rare reports of myocarditis after vaccinations, but such side effects were extremely rare.

"Pfizer takes adverse events that are potentially associated with our vaccine very seriously," the company said.

"The benefits of vaccination with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine continue to greatly outweigh the risk of both COVID-19 infection and vaccine side effects, including myocarditis," Pfizer said.

A health worker draws a dose of Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine from a vial during a vaccination event hosted by Miami - Dade County and Miami Heat, at FTX Arena in Miami, Florida, U.S., August 5, 2021. REUTERS/Marco Bello/File Photo

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Regulators in the United States, the European Union and the World Health Organization have said that mRNA vaccines from Pfizer with German partner BioNTech and by Moderna (MRNA.O) are associated with rare cases of myocarditis or pericarditis, an inflammation of the lining around the heart, but that the benefits of the shots outweigh any risks.

The cases, affecting mainly younger men, tend to be mild and treatable but can lead to serious illness and hospitalization.

There have been no U.S. deaths reported for young adults who developed myocarditis after being given the mRNA vaccines, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said on Monday.

Separately, it also said that a total of 2,574 U.S. cases of myocarditis or pericarditis had been reported. More than 330 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines have been administered in the United States.

The risk of myocarditis was 18.5 per million doses given among people aged 18 to 24 after their second Pfizer dose and 20.2 per million for that age group among Moderna second dose recipients. The risk decreases with age, according to the CDC analysis based on its national reporting system.

The EU's drug regulator said on July 9 that five people had died due to the heart side effect after receiving either of the two mRNA vaccines in the European Economic Area, all of whom were elderly or had other diseases. More than 200 million mRNA doses have been administered in the region.

New Zealand has provisionally approved use of the Pfizer/BioNTech, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N) and AstraZeneca (AZN.L) vaccines, but only the Pfizer vaccine has been approved for rollout to the public. More than 3 million doses have been given so far, mostly to people over 50.

New Zealand reported 53 new COVID-19 cases on Monday, taking its tally of infections in the current outbreak to 562, amid a nationwide lockdown enforced this month to limit spread of the Delta variant.

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Reporting by Praveen MenonAdditional reporting by Ludwig Burger in Frankfurt and Caroline Humer in New York; Editing by Christian Schmollinger, Clarence Fernandez, Nick Macfie and Bill Berkrot

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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New Zealand reports first death linked to Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine - Reuters

Ohio school districts fall like dominoes to the coronavirus in their opening weeks: This Week in the CLE – cleveland.com

August 31, 2021

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Just days into the academic year, some Ohio schools have already transitioned to remote learning or canceled class entirely as the states August coronavirus report showed the highest daily COVID-19 case counts Ohio has experienced in seven months.

Were talking about how schools are reacting -- and whether they will scramble today to submit plans for online learning plans to the state -- on This Week in the CLE.

Listen online here.

Editor Chris Quinn hosts our daily half-hour news podcast, with Leila Atassi, Jane Kahoun and me.

Youve been sending Chris lots of thoughts and suggestions on our from-the-newsroom text account, in which he shares what were thinking about at cleveland.com. You can sign up for free by sending a text to 216-868-4802.

Here are the questions were answering today:

Whats the latest news on school districts falling victim to COVID and cancelling classes just as the school year begins?

How much money is Joe DAmbrosio getting from the state to compensate him for the prosecutorial misconduct that put him in prison for over 20 years, including on Death Row, for a murder he did not commit?

Whats the little piece of good news that reporter Eric Heisig found in new Census results for Cleveland?

What was Jane Kahouns best day, and what was her worst, in her nearly 37 years of journalism in our Cleveland newsroom, a career that comes to a close this very day? What was her favorite story, and which one was the most difficult?

What are some of the names that people listen to this podcast thing we should use as we contemplate changing it to more accurately reflect what we talk about?

What are people saying about the big changeover in Cleveland leadership we are seeing in business, non-profits and government?

Is the battle between Westlake and Cleveland over Westlake exiting the Cleveland Water system finally over?

Why is suddenly fashionable for Republicans to attack big business?

We have an Apple podcasts channel exclusively for this podcast. Subscribe here.

Do you get your podcasts on Spotify? Find us here.

If you use Stitcher, we are here.

RadioPublic is another popular podcast vehicle, and we are here.

On Google Podcasts, we are here.

On PodParadise, find us here.

And on PlayerFM, we are here.

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Ohio school districts fall like dominoes to the coronavirus in their opening weeks: This Week in the CLE - cleveland.com

Conservative talk radio host who opposed vaccinations dies after 3-week COVID-19 battle – USA TODAY

August 31, 2021

Marc Bernier, a talk radio host in Daytona Beach for 30 years, died after a three-week battle with COVID-19.

Bernier, 65, has been remembered in the Florida community in recent days as a conservative who sought out and aired others' points of view.

He alsowas an outspoken opponent of vaccinations.

Volusia County, Florida Sheriff Mike Chitwood, a longtime guest on Bernier's radio show onWNDB, said a representative of the Florida station confirmed to him that Bernier died Saturday night.

Chitwood said he had appeared regularly on Bernier's show for the last 15 years, first as Daytona Beach police chief and then as sheriff. He said the two didn't always agree on everything, but that never got in the way of their friendship.

Jim Rose, a retired attorney who hosted his own weekly show on WNDB for 15 years recalled Bernier as a good interviewer who made guests feel at ease.

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Pat Northey, a Democrat who served on the Volusia County Council for 20 years, wasamong the liberals who werewelcomed on Bernier's show in a way that's not done on many of the nationally syndicated conservative talk shows.

"I don't think he's as right-wing as what his show is," Northey said. "I think he has an understanding of moderation. ... I find he can be persuaded. He's not dug in on any issue."

Bernier had issues with vaccines for years.

Mel Stack, an attorney and friend who regularly advertised on the program, said Bernier's anti-vaccinationviews were not based on politics, but personal experience based on howhe believed vaccines had impacted people near to him.

Bernier's concerns extended to the COVID-19 vaccines.

When Bernier reunited with Justin Gates, a vice president at Sports Network International in Ormond Beach, Florida and a longtime friend of Bernier, for a newshow on Dec. 19, the Pfizer vaccine had only gotten its initial approval about a week earlier. Gates asked Bernier whether he would get the jab.

Bernier responded: Im not taking it.

Gates: Come on!

Bernier: Are you kidding me? Mr. Anti-Vax? Jeepers.

Gates: Ever?

Bernier: No.

COVID-19 cases have spiked in Florida from earlier in the summer. Between Aug. 20 and Aug. 26, the state documented 151,749 new coronavirus cases.

Approximately 68 percent of eligible Florida residents are vaccinated against the virus, according to state data.

Mark McKinney, theWNDBoperations director, did not confirm Bernier's vaccinationstatus toThe Daytona Beach News-Journal, while the host was hospitalized. However, he noted that"If you've listened to his show, you've heard him talk about how anti-vaccine he is on the air."

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Conservative talk radio host who opposed vaccinations dies after 3-week COVID-19 battle - USA TODAY

Top reasons why unvaccinated Coloradans are refusing COVID-19 shot – FOX 31 Denver

August 31, 2021

DENVER (KDVR) A new study highlights the latest reasoning why some unvaccinated Coloradans are refusing to get the COVID-19 shot.

According to analysts at QuoteWizard who reviewed the latest data on vaccine hesitancy here in Colorado, these are the top reasons:

(Respondents were allowed to choose multiple reasons, so the percentages in the table below wont add up to 100%.)

When we looked at Colorado specifically what we really found is that people are getting less concerned about the side-effects as COVID cases start to raise, explained Nick VinZant, a senior research analyst at QuoteWizard. But while theyre getting less concerned about side-effects, theyre becoming more skeptical about the government. So we have seen a big increase in people who are more skeptical about the government and the vaccine in Colorado over the last couple of weeks.

To collect the data, analysts looked into Household Pulse Survey vaccine hesitancy data. They also compiled vaccine hesitancy data on demographics. According to analysts at QuoteWizard, the rate of unvaccinated was taken from the United States Census Bureau Survey on Explore COVID Vaccine Attitudes.

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Top reasons why unvaccinated Coloradans are refusing COVID-19 shot - FOX 31 Denver

Intelligence Review Yields No Firm Conclusion on Origins of Coronavirus – The New York Times

August 29, 2021

WASHINGTON American intelligence agencies have not been able to determine if the coronavirus pandemic was the result of an accidental leak from a lab or if it emerged more naturally, according to declassified portions of a report to the White House that were released on Friday.

The nations spy agencies, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said, are unlikely to reach a conclusion without more cooperation from China or new sources of information.

In a statement, President Biden said the United States would continue working to understand the origins of the virus and he called on China to be more transparent about what led to its emergence there in late 2019 before spreading rapidly across the globe.

We will do everything we can to trace the roots of this outbreak that has caused so much pain and death around the world, so that we can take every necessary precaution to prevent it from happening again, Mr. Biden said. Critical information about the origins of this pandemic exists in the Peoples Republic of China, yet from the beginning, government officials in China have worked to prevent international investigators and members of the global public health community from accessing it.

As debates about the pandemics origins and Chinas role intensified, Mr. Biden ordered the nations intelligence agencies three months ago to draft a report on the source of the virus.

After the review, the National Intelligence Council and four other intelligence agencies reported that they believed the virus that causes Covid-19 was most likely created by natural exposure to an infected animal through an animal infected with it, or close progenitor virus.

Before the review was conducted, only two agencies favored the natural exposure theory. But the new report said the intelligence council and other agencies favoring the natural theory had only low confidence in their conclusions a sign that the intelligence behind the determination was not strong and that assessments could change.

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On the other side of the debate, one agency said it had concluded, with moderate confidence, that the pandemic was the result of a laboratory-associated incident in China. According to the declassified report, analysts at that agency gave weight to the risky nature of work on coronaviruses. The agency also said the accident most likely involved experimentation, animal handling or sampling by the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

There were two labs in Wuhan doing work on the coronavirus before the pandemic, but intelligence agencies have mostly focused on the work done at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

The announcement from the director of national intelligence did not identify the agency that favored the laboratory-leak theory. But current and former officials said the F.B.I. believed that the virus was created in the lab. One former official said the bureau believed the virus probably escaped into the public from lab technicians.

An F.B.I. spokeswoman declined to comment.

The intelligence agencies all agreed that the virus was unlikely to have been created as any kind of biological weapon, the same stance the U.S. government has maintained for more than a year. The agencies also agreed that the initial exposures that caused the outbreak occurred no later than November 2019, according to the declassified conclusions.

Critical to the debate over the origins of the virus, American intelligence officials do not believe the Chinese officials knew about it at the time of the outbreak, the report said.

The I.C. assesses Chinas officials did not have foreknowledge of the virus before the initial outbreak of Covid-19 emerged, the declassified report said, using the initials for the intelligence community.

Aug. 24, 2021, 4:52 p.m. ET

The three-month review Mr. Biden ordered was done to bring more scientific expertise into the examination of the pandemics origins. Intelligence agencies used that period to examine a trove of data that had not been fully scrutinized.

That data, taken from the Wuhan Institute of Virology, did not provide any additional information that persuaded additional agencies that a lab leak was possible.

The key piece of missing data, according to intelligence officials, is clinical virus samples from early cases in China.

Neither American intelligence officers, nor scientists around the world, have samples of the virus from the earliest known cases. That includes samples from a group of three Wuhan laboratory workers who became hospitalized with flulike symptoms last January.

Obtaining virus samples from early cases in China could help identify a location of interest or occupational exposure, the declassified report said.

Some American officials believe China has more access to such samples than it has been willing to share. The reluctance to cooperate has raised suspicions among some analysts.

American intelligence officials do not believe the Chinese government necessarily knows how the virus was created, but some think officials in Beijing are worried about what a real investigation would discover and have moved to block the World Health Organization and others from a full inquiry.

These actions reflect, in part, Chinas governments own uncertainty about where an investigation could lead as well as its frustration the international community is using the issue to exert political pressure on China, the declassified report said.

The investigation of the theory that the virus was accidentally created in the lab has made some people uneasy, especially those who believe the accusation is racist.

Sonal Shah, the president of the Asian American Foundation, questioned the intelligence communitys entire effort to examine the origins of the pandemic, and said it could increase the risk of violence against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

Even though the administrations report today contains no clear conclusions, it will likely breed misinformation, she said.

Others have defended the examination and said that neither theory is inherently racist. They have argued that a clearer understanding of the pandemics origins can help prevent a future global health crisis.

Mr. Biden said the United States would keep working with other nations and the World Health Organization to get access to more information from China.

We must have a full and transparent accounting of this global tragedy, he said. Nothing less is acceptable.

Adam Goldman contributed reporting.

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Intelligence Review Yields No Firm Conclusion on Origins of Coronavirus - The New York Times

Coronavirus in UK: Britons, Unfazed by High Covid Rates, Weigh Their Price of Freedom – The New York Times

August 29, 2021

Such is the strange new phase of Britains pandemic: The public has moved on, even if the virus has not. Given that Britain has been at the vanguard of so many previous coronavirus developments from incubating variants to rolling out vaccines experts say this could be a glimpse into the future for other countries.

We dont seem to care that we have these really high infection rates, said Tim Spector, a professor of genetic epidemiology at Kings College London who has been leading a major study of Covid-19 symptoms. It looks like were just accepting it now that this is the price of freedom.

Some of that equanimity may stem from the fact that Britains case rate, while high, has not yet risen anywhere near the level that government officials predicted when they lifted virtually all Covid restrictions last month. Some may be because so many Britons are vaccinated, fewer serious cases are being reported. And some of it may simply reflect fatigue, after 17 months of baleful headlines and stifling lockdowns.

Theres a feeling that finally we can breathe; we can start trying to get back what weve lost, said Devi Sridhar, the head of the global public health program at the University of Edinburgh. Its really difficult to ask people not to mix for a prolonged period, especially if there is no solution.

With nearly 80 percent of the adult population fully vaccinated and the virus still circulating widely, Professor Sridhar said, Britain may be a model for other countries of whether you can manage Covid in a sustainable way. The evidence, she added, was inconclusive because Britain still faces critical challenges, like the reopening of schools on Wednesday.

That will almost certainly drive rates up further, particularly because Britain has resisted vaccinating children and younger teenagers. But epidemiologists are loath to make specific predictions because many were proved wrong in July when cases fell immediately after Freedom Day, when most restrictions were lifted.

New cases, in any event, are a less all-important metric than they once were, given that a much smaller percentage of those infected end up in the hospital than in the earlier stages of the pandemic. Almost 970 people were admitted to hospitals on Aug. 24, the most recent date for which data is available. That compares with 4,583 on Jan. 12, the peak of the last wave of infections.

Hospitalizations are rising, however, as is the fatality rate. Admissions last week were up 6.7 percent over the previous seven-day period, while deaths were up 12.3 percent, totaling 133 people on Saturday. With a backlog of patients with other illnesses, doctors say the National Health Service has little slack to cope with another influx of Covid victims.

Weve found rising numbers of cases, and we are under a lot of pressure again, said Susan Jain, a specialist in anesthesia and intensive therapy who works in the intensive care unit at the Homerton University Hospital in East London. All our Covid cases are unvaccinated by choice.

The government of Prime Minister Boris Johnson, preoccupied with the chaotic military withdrawal from Afghanistan, has said little about the rising hospital numbers or indeed about the pandemic at all in recent weeks.

Relieved that the more gloomy predictions of spiraling cases have not materialized, the government argues that its strategy has been vindicated, with infections manageable because of the success of its vaccination campaign.

Nadhim Zahawi, the minister responsible for the vaccine rollout, compared the daily total of new cases with a similar moment in December. There were **five times** the number of deaths we see today, he wrote on Twitter, adding, The vaccines are working.

Still, critics said a death toll of around 100 a day should not be a source of pride. Moreover, they said, Britains early lead in the vaccination race meant that some protection from inoculations was starting to fade.

Aug. 29, 2021, 10:14 a.m. ET

It is a grim new normal, said Gabriel Scally, a visiting professor of public health at the University of Bristol and a former regional director of public health.

Britains Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunization is likely to recommend booster shots soon, but they will initially be targeted at people with weakened immune systems.

Because Britain was one of the first big countries to do mass vaccination, Professor Scally said, it will be one of the first to experience the waning of immunity an issue that has afflicted Israel, another early vaccine adopter. And despite its robust rollout, Britain has not reached the highest levels of population immunity because millions of young people remain unprotected.

The governments policy on vaccinating younger teenagers is in flux, with no decision yet on whether to go ahead with a campaign to jab those 12 to 15, though Britains medical regulator has authorized a vaccine for this age group.

The rollout of the vaccine program for adults has been incredibly impressive, but, for children and young people it has been frankly shambolic, Camilla Kingdon, the president of the Royal College of Pediatrics and Child Health, said this month.

At the same time, public observance of measures to contain the spread of the virus seems to be slipping, a factor that some epidemiologists said accounted for Britain having a higher case rate than countries like France and Spain, where infections are now falling.

I do wear masks indoors in public places, said Philip Crossley, 69, walking on a street in the northern city of Bradford. I noticed a lot of people dont. Maybe thats not a big problem, but they still could carry the virus.

UnderstandVaccine and Mask Mandates in the U.S.

According to official survey data, about nine in 10 Britons said they had used face coverings within the past seven days when outside their homes. But anecdotal evidence suggests that compliance is much spottier, even on buses and subways in London, where wearing a mask is still compulsory.

After most restrictions were lifted, the transport police lost legal responsibility for enforcement of that rule. That left the task to transportation workers, who have been advised by one union to avoid confrontations with the public.

Our members have no enforcement powers, and its a bit of a farce, really, the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers said in a statement. Its an impossible situation, so our advice to our members is that they should not substitute for the police and should stay safe.

Outside Downing Street, an anti-lockdown protester, Simon Parry, said he had never worn a mask on public transportation and had yet to be challenged.

I get people looking at me like I want to kill my grandmother, he conceded before adding that he thought the argument was moving his way and that one woman had recently shed her face mask after an exchange on the subway. I make it my mission to get someone to take a mask off in the Tube, he said.

One government minister, Greg Hands, tweeted a picture of himself on the subway wearing a mask, but complained that only about half of the passengers around him were doing likewise.

The office of Londons mayor, Sadiq Khan, said its data showed that 82 percent of passengers said they always wore face coverings on subway trains and buses, a solid number given the central governments decision not to adopt a national mandate for face coverings on public transportation.

Other critics blame the governments mixed messages, pointing to members of Mr. Johnsons Conservative Party, many of whom abandoned their masks when they returned to a crowded chamber of Parliament recently to discuss Afghanistan. The governments official position is that people should wear face coverings when confined indoors.

For some who objected to Britains recurring lockdowns, the return to normalcy was both welcome and overdue. But some said the tensions between freedom and security could easily resurface.

The intensity has gone out of the debate, but it will come back if there is another wave, said Jonathan Sumption, a former justice on Britains Supreme Court who has been an outspoken critic of the lockdowns.

If it does come back, he added, well then be in the position that even the vaccines dont work. What is the exit route?

Aina J. Khan contributed reporting from Bradford, England.

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Coronavirus in UK: Britons, Unfazed by High Covid Rates, Weigh Their Price of Freedom - The New York Times

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