Category: Corona Virus

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The blunt truth about what comes next with Covid-19 – CNN

August 15, 2021

Editors Note: Kent Sepkowitz is a CNN medical analyst and a physician and infection control expert at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York. The views expressed in this commentary are his own. View more opinion on CNN.

CNN

The unrelenting Covid-19 pandemic is now well into its fourth wave. Although more than half of the United States is fully vaccinated, the wildly contagious Delta variant is causing trouble throughout the country, with some areas seeing more daily infections than ever before.

Though this moment is unsettling, sooner (we hope) or later the Delta variant will pass. It may be difficult to believe, but its inevitable. The 1918 Spanish flu, for which there was no vaccine, infected about a third of the world and eventually fizzled out after three waves, although the virus itself never fully went away: scraps of its genes can be found even in todays influenza strains

What goes up eventually comes down. The B.1.1.7 variant of the virus that causes Covid-19 first identified in the UK and now referred to as the Alpha variant, routed much of the US over the winter before cases dropped back down, in large part due to the vaccine rollout.

Similarly, we should keep in mind that pandemics eventually end, often receding into pockets of disease here and there, either because a society effectively controls it, a vaccine is administered widely enough to hem it in, the virus itself changes into something less threatening, the weather changes or some other mysterious force that seems to govern epidemics comes into play.

Which raises the next question now forming in the minds of scientists and veteran worriers everywhere: what will happen once the Delta variant has finished infecting whomever it will infect? Will the horror show finally end? Or will there be yet another wave of yet another variant, one that can evade the current vaccines? Are we looking at an even worse lockdown than the grim pre-vaccine hunkering that we saw in 2020?

No one knows. I repeat: no one knows. No one can know. Which means even though we might be approaching an awkward start-stop, yes-no, relax-panic, is it really over? phase, we are stuck flying blind. Sorry. But regardless of the irreducible uncertainty, were bound to see articles many, many articles, like this one and interviews many, many interviews on what comes after the Delta variant. Even though planning doesnt always make perfect, considering the range of maybes is the only way to prepare.

Here is my guess on whats ahead. The Delta variant will continue to overwhelm unvaccinated communities. Right now, Mississippi and Oklahoma, both of which have vaccination rates that are lower than the national average, have unimaginably high rates of test positivity, exceeding 50%; an additional six states have test positivity rates that are higher than 20%. While Florida and Alabama do not release this data to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center, they are also likely to be high in both states, given the rising case numbers there.

And these are the rates before millions of unvaccinated pre-teens are marched off to school, many unmasked and undistanced. This will likely lead to more spread and more soul-crushing tragedy, much of it vaccine-preventable. This surge of new cases, which we saw at the start of the school year in 2020, will take a while to settle down. And by then, we will be looking at the winter when the prospect of being stuck indoors hour after hour will feel particularly grim.

But despite all this, I am somewhat optimistic. At this point in the pandemic, 69% of the eligible US population have received at least a single dose of vaccine and within a few months, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is likely to approve the current mRNA vaccines for Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) in pre-teens. There are only so many unvaccinated people at this point who can get infected. While breakthrough cases certainly do happen, they remain a small minority of overall cases at least for now.

Thus, even with the persistent proliferation of anti-vaccine, anti-mask and anti-distancing messages, states with high vaccine rates did indeed pull themselves out of the sky-is-falling misery of the winter. While there is of course backsliding as the Delta strain takes hold, these states continue a relatively normal existence. Yes, masks are back in many cases, and there are difficult decisions ahead about schools and the need for booster shots.

In contrast, states with low vaccination rates are on a much more difficult path and will not establish equipoise with the virus until thousands and thousands more become ill. The ones that survive, combined with those already vaccinated, will eventually provide a comparable collective immunity that will allow them to establish something resembling normalcy though at tremendous cost of life, health and resources.

Of course, this all may fall apart due to a second problem introduced by our disjointed response to the pandemic. By prolonging the time it takes to control the pandemic, we have dramatically increased opportunities for new variants to emerge, including one with a potential doomsday mutation that renders our current crop of vaccinations useless. Though possible, this seems unlikely. Vaccines are not like antibiotics; the latter typically tend to either work or not work at all. Vaccines on the other hand, likely by provoking the many different prongs of the immune system, may lose some edge against new variants but not with the same dramatic off-on suddenness of antibiotics. As studies have shown, the mRNA vaccines remain quite effective, though admittedly less so against the Delta variant.

Plus, the scientific community has long had experience chasing after the genetic contortions of various viruses and bacteria. The genetic composition of influenza is famously shifty, requiring a new vaccine each year that aims at the four likeliest strains. Pneumococcus, the most common bacterial cause of pneumonia, also can change serotypes (similar to strains), making adjustments a necessity. But we have the tools to identify and adjust to these changes relatively quickly.

All of this is, of course, only my educated guess. Covid-19 behaves in ways weve never seen before theres the lack of clear seasonality, the transmissibility before clinical illness and the hyperinflammation that causes the bulk of serious clinical illness. With vaccines as with so much else, Covid-19 may not play by the previously established rules.

Uncertainty abounds right now as it has for the entire pandemic. The only real certainty we have is this: the worlds herd will eventually become immune to the Delta variant one way (via vaccine) or another (through infection, disease and possible death). Humans can decide between the options but the virus has declared its intent.

As for what the world will look like post-Delta, that too remains uncertain. But Covid-19 looks increasingly like its here to stay. Much like the seasonal flu, we will probably have coronavirus outbreaks in the years ahead, with good years and bad years and better and worse vaccine boosters. And much like measles, whooping cough and other preventable infections, there will continue to be relatively small groups of people who prefer to forgo vaccines, despite the many risks. This, of course, could then endanger the rest of the population.

Regardless of what the post-Delta world holds, we need to do much better in the here and now. Despite the overwhelming scientific evidence that supports the use of vaccines and other precautionary measures including masks, the demoralizing one-sided debate about their efficacy continues. Meanwhile, more than 621,000 people including young children have already died and more will die, be it from the Delta variant or whatever comes next.

It appears this debate, fueled largely by misinformation, will continue until the public recognizes that the pandemic is caused by an infectious disease and not political opportunism. Given this simple fact, it will not be stopped by threats or protests or speeches, but rather by vaccination and other preventive measures just like so many infectious diseases before it.

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The blunt truth about what comes next with Covid-19 - CNN

In the West, a Connection Between Covid and Wildfires – The New York Times

August 15, 2021

The same team of Harvard researchers also published the first study to find a clear connection between long-term exposure to air pollution and Covid-19 death rates last year.

The new study included reported infections, not just deaths, which makes it especially interesting, said John Balmes, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and an expert on the health effects of pollution who was not involved in the research. Its one thing for air pollution to be increasing the severity of the coronavirus infection, its another for it to be increasing reported cases, he said.

After decades of tightening air quality regulations, the air in many American cities is cleaner now than its been in 50 years. But in the West, increased wildfire smoke threatens to undo those advances, said Loretta Mickley, an atmospheric chemist at Harvards John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and one of the papers authors.

As the planet warms, droughts intensify and the West becomes drier, wildfires are starting earlier, growing larger, spreading faster and reaching higher elevations. In California alone, a record 2.5 million acres burned during the 2020 wildfire season, 20 times what had burned the previous year.

We are really talking about climate change, said Francesca Dominici, a biostatistician at Harvards T.H. Chan School of Public Health and senior author of the paper. I hope that this is providing an additional piece of evidence for why its important to get our act together to combat climate change.

Wildfire smoke may contribute up to half of the PM 2.5 in some parts of the western United States. It is so far unclear whether wildfire smoke is more or less toxic than smoke from diesel combustion or power plants.

Dr. Dominici noted that the analysis did not include individual patient data or consider other factors such as mask mandates.

Researchers are currently investigating whether fine particulate matter can spread the coronavirus.

The research does not bode well for this year, Dr. Dominici said, as wildfires started early and the pandemic is still raging in the United States, with a Delta variant that tends to be more contagious. She added: I think the wildfires will have the same, if not worse impact on Covid-19 cases and deaths among the unvaccinated.

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In the West, a Connection Between Covid and Wildfires - The New York Times

Will we reach herd immunity for the new coronavirus? – The Guardian

August 15, 2021

The Office for National Statistics Covid infection survey estimates that, either through vaccination or infection, an extraordinary 94% of adults now have antibodies to Sars-CoV-2.

So why are cases increasing and why does vaccine star Prof Sir Andrew Pollard say herd immunity for Covid-19 is mythical?

The reproduction number R is the average number of people infected by someone infected with Sars-CoV-2. If everyone in the population were susceptible, as in the start of an epidemic, this is labelled R0 (the basic reproduction number). For vanilla Sars-CoV-2, R0 was about three; with the Delta variant, it is about seven.

Suppose that among these seven people who would on average be infected, six were immune, the virus would only get passed on to one new person and the epidemic would stop growing. In this scenario, R would be effectively one. So, in theory, when 1 1/R0 of the population are immune, we reach herd immunity, which for Sars-CoV-2 is 6/7 = 86% of the population.

So whats the problem? First, the neat formula does not describe real life: immunity is not uniformly spread and people do not mix evenly. Second, including children, the proportion of the population with antibodies is likely to be less than 94%. Third, the formula requires sterilising immunity: stopping infection in potential hosts. For this kind of virus, vaccinations reduce but do not eliminate the risk of infection, subsequent transmission and severe disease.

Sars-CoV-2 differs from measles, which has a very high R0 of about 16, but for which full vaccination or survived infections probably bestow lifelong immunity. Of course, measles can still spread when those lacking immunity are close, such as when young people who had not been vaccinated following the MMR scare in the early 00s grew up and started gathering at music festivals.

Sars-CoV-2 is becoming endemic, meaning continued recurrent outbreaks, especially in communities with low levels of immunity. We shall all remain at some risk, which is a difficult message for those with extreme anxiety about Covid-19. But while herd immunity may be an unattainable goal, every step towards it helps.

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Will we reach herd immunity for the new coronavirus? - The Guardian

Disney really needs the coronavirus to go away – CNN

August 15, 2021

A version of this story first appeared in CNN Business Before the Bell newsletter. Not a subscriber? You can sign up right here.

London CNN Business

Disney shares are up more than 5% in premarket trading after the entertainment giant added more steaming video subscribers than Wall Street expected and reported a strong recovery for its theme park business.

But the company still cant escape the coronavirus pandemic.

Disney (DIS) shares have gained less than 1% this year, badly trailing the S&P 500 index, which has increased by more than 20% since January 1. Disney (DIS) may struggle to make up that ground until the pandemic recedes.

Video gains: Disney+, the companys streaming service, could stand to gain more subscribers if the Delta variant keeps people at home. The service grew to 116 million subscribers in the quarter ended July 3, exceeding the 112 million figure that Wall Street analysts expected.

But the companys massive theme park and movie businesses remain exposed to the coronavirus, and their recovery could be slowed or reversed by the more contagious Delta variant.

We did not anticipate nor did I think anybody the resurgence of Covid with the Delta variant that would have such a significant impact on the marketplace, CEO Bob Chapek told analysts on Thursday.

Chapek was responding to a question about how Disney would handle the release of its next two potential blockbusters, Free Guy and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.

Both films will spend 45 days in theaters before heading to Disney+, a departure from the strategy the company used for Black Widow, which was released simultaneously in theaters and on the streaming service.

Chapek said that Disney cant change its plan for Free Guy because of promises made when the film was acquired, while distribution commitments prevent last-minute changes to the rollout of Shang-Chi.

The marketplace is rapidly changing, Chapek added. But at some point, youve got to put a stake in the ground and say, this is what were going to do, and thats where we ended up on Shang-Chi and Free Guy.

Another problem: Disneys decision to release Black Widow on its streaming service prompted a lawsuit from star actress Scarlett Johansson, who has sued the company, saying the strategy reduced her compensation.

Orlando Sentinel/Tribune News Service/Getty Images

In this file photo, guests wear masks at Walt Disney World in Florida.

Theme parks also remain vulnerable to Delta.

Revenue from Disneys parks division increased by more than 300% in the most recent quarter to $4.3 billion, and Chapek said bookings continue to show strong demand.

But one of the companys biggest parks, Disney World, is located in Florida, a Delta variant hot spot. And other tourism companies have issued warnings about Delta, including Southwest Airlines and Airbnb.

Disney World and Disneyland are already requiring employees and guests to wear masks and face coverings once again when indoors.

Investors are ready to reward Disney for the progress its made. But with Delta continuing to spread, its too soon to say the company is out of the woods.

Chinas worst coronavirus outbreak in a year has authorities taking dramatic measures to stamp out new infections.

But while locking down cities, canceling flights and suspending trade may bring the virus back under control, those actions risk stalling an already precarious recovery, reports my CNN Business colleague Laura He.

While the numbers of coronavirus cases remain small by comparison with recent surges in infections in the United States and Europe, China has aggressively revived its zero-Covid strategy.

It has isolated some cities, closed down entertainment venues, canceled flights and rolled out mass testing as it tries to contain the spread measures not seen at this scale since the beginning of the pandemic last year. Some trade at a major container port near Shanghai was even suspended this week after a worker tested positive for the virus.

Those drastic moves have already prompted some economists to slash their growth projections for the worlds second largest economy.

The impact: Goldman Sachs analysts forecast Chinas GDP to grow by just 2.3% in the third quarter from the previous quarter dramatically lower than the 5.8% increase they originally expected.

With the virus spreading to many of Chinas provinces and local governments reacting swiftly to control the spread of the highly contagious Delta variant, we have begun to see softening in national aggregate data, the analysts said in a research report earlier this week, adding that they expect services like travel, catering and entertainment to be affected.

Despite the anticipated slump in the third quarter, the analysts still expect the recovery largely to remain intact this year. For all of 2021, they expect Chinas economy to grow 8.3%, slightly lower than a previous estimate of 8.6%.

Middle-Earth is moving from New Zealand to the United Kingdom, reports my CNN Business colleague Diksha Madhok.

Amazon Studios announced Thursday that it is moving the filming of the second season of its highly anticipated, and extremely expensive, Lord of the Rings series to the United Kingdom.

The shift from New Zealand to the UK aligns with the studios strategy of expanding its production footprint and investing in studio space across the UK, Amazon said in a statement.

The first season of the series is being produced in New Zealand at a cost of nearly half a billions US dollars and is set to debut on September 2, 2022 on Prime Video.

Remember: Nearly two decades ago, Peter Jacksons The Lord Of The Rings trilogy, which won 17 Academy Awards, was largely filmed in New Zealand and showcased the countrys natural scenery.

New Zealand is not pleased about Amazons decision.

The Amazon Studios decision in no way reflects the capabilities of our local film industry or the talents of the people who work in it. This is a multinational company that has made a commercial choice, Economic Development Minister Stuart Nash said in response.

Nash said that Amazon was spending more than $460 million in New Zealand to produce the first season. He said that following the decision to relocate production, the government would pull some financial incentives that had been awarded to Amazon.

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Disney really needs the coronavirus to go away - CNN

New Covid variants will set us back a year, experts warn UK government – The Guardian

August 15, 2021

Ministers are being pressed to reveal what contingency plans are in place to deal with a future Covid variant that evades current vaccines, amid warnings from scientific advisers that such an outcome could set the battle against the pandemic back a year or more.

Recent papers produced by the governments Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) have suggested that the arrival of a variant that evades vaccines is a realistic possibility. Sage backed continued work on new vaccines that reduce infection and transmission more than current jabs, the creation of more vaccine-production facilities in the UK and lab-based studies to predict evolution of variants.

With the arrival of a new variant seen as one of the main dangers that could intensify the crisis once again, prominent scientific figures stressed the risks. Prof Graham Medley, a member of Sage and a leader of the governments Covid modelling group, said it was clearly something that the planners and scientists should take very seriously as it would put us back a long way.

It is not that different to the planning that needs to be done between pandemics a new variant that was able to overcome immunity significantly would be essentially a new virus, he said. The advantage would be that we know we can generate vaccines against this virus and relatively quickly. The disadvantage is that we would be back to the same situation we were in a year ago, depending on how much impact current immunity had against a new variant. Hopefully, evolution is slow, so that new variants arise that are only marginally evasive rather than one big jump. Dr Marc Baguelin, from Imperial Colleges Covid-19 response team and a member of the governments SPI-M modelling group, said preventing the importation of variants of concern with moderate to high immune-escape properties would be critical, as these could lead to future waves orders of magnitude larger than the ones experienced so far.

It is unlikely that such a new virus evades entirely all immunity from past infection or vaccines, he said. Some immunity should remain at least for the most severe outcomes such as death or hospitalisation. We would most likely be able to update the current vaccines to include the emerging strain.

But doing so would take months and means that we might need to reimpose restrictions if there were a significant public health risk. The amount of restrictions would be a political decision and would need to be proportionate with how much this virus would evade current vaccines.

It comes with a further loosening of restrictions in England on Monday when fully vaccinated people and under-18s will no longer be legally required to self-isolate if they come into close contact with someone with Covid. They will be advised, but not obliged, to take a PCR test instead. Daily Covid cases have been hovering around the 30,000 mark. The latest figures, from 13 August, showed that a further 32,700 had tested positive and another 100 deaths were reported.

Meanwhile, all 16- and 17-year-olds in England will be offered a first dose of vaccine over the next week to give them some protection before schools return in September. Health secretary Sajid Javid urged older teenagers not to delay. Get your jabs as soon as you can so we can continue to safely live with this virus and enjoy our freedoms by giving yourself, your family and your community the protection they need, he said.

Boris Johnsons former senior adviser Dominic Cummings has already called on the government to publish a variant escape vaccine contingency plan and suggested MPs should explore ways of forcing ministers to do so. One scientist, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they would like to see the publication of the national risk assessment relating to Covid-19 contingency plans.

Munira Wilson, the Liberal Democrat health spokesperson, is backing the move. It is critical that people have confidence in Boris Johnsons Covid strategy and trust him not to repeat the same mistakes of the last 18 months, she said. Through refusing to self-isolate, breaking their own rules and making mistakes that have cost lives, the government has lost public trust. Transparency is the only way to begin winning that trust back.

Stephen Reicher, professor of psychology at the University of St Andrews, said: It very much makes sense to be prepared. Scotland is setting up its standing committee on pandemics. It will be interesting to see what emerges on a UK level.

In the longer-term we need a systematic inquiry into what went wrong (and right) so we are prepared and also so that we can institute systemic changes to protect us. The pandemic has been like a barium meal which has exposed so many deficiencies in our society. We can no longer pretend we are not aware of them. This has been a deafening wake-up call. Lets make sure we dont press the snooze button.

Government sources said Public Health England and others were monitoring the situation through rapid surveillance and genomic sequencing of the virus. A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said the vaccination programme had built a wall of defence.

We are committed to protecting the progress of the vaccine rollout and our world-leading genomics capabilities are at the forefront of global efforts to stay ahead of variants, with over half a million samples genome-sequenced so far, they said.

Official figures show the UK recorded 93 new Covid-related deaths and 29,520 new cases yesterday.Data from Public Health England shows two doses of Covid-19 vaccines are more than 90% effective against hospitalisation from the Delta variant, the dominant strain in the UK.

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New Covid variants will set us back a year, experts warn UK government - The Guardian

As Children’s COVID Cases Surge, There’s Another Virus On The Rise – NPR

August 15, 2021

At the moment there is little data available on the impact of contracting COVID-19 and the respiratory syncytial virus (pictured), and whether together they can make a person sicker. But health officials worry it could put young patients who are not eligible for the coronavirus vaccine at greater risk. BSIP/UIG Via Getty Images/Universal Images Group via Getty hide caption

At the moment there is little data available on the impact of contracting COVID-19 and the respiratory syncytial virus (pictured), and whether together they can make a person sicker. But health officials worry it could put young patients who are not eligible for the coronavirus vaccine at greater risk.

Early versions of COVID-19 largely spared children but the delta variant proved to be much less discriminating, and has led to more child hospitalizations. Now, health care workers on the front lines say there is another frightening prospect looming: a surge in children diagnosed with a combination of COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus.

Pediatric hospitals in Texas and around the country are reporting unseasonably early outbreaks of RSV, a respiratory virus that mostly manifests as a mild illness with cold-like symptoms in adults but that can cause pneumonia and bronchiolitis in very young children. The CDC reports it can be life-threatening in infants and young adults.

At Texas Children's Hospital in Houston on Thursday, 25 of 45 hospitalized pediatric patients were diagnosed with RSV as well as COVID-19. "A hospitalization rate much higher than for either virus alone," according to officials.

At the moment there is little data available on the impact of contracting both viruses and whether the two together can make a person sicker. But health officials worry it could put young patients who are not eligible for the vaccine at greater risk.

RSV infections typically occur in the late fall, winter and early spring, the CDC explains.

"But last year, during all of the COVID-19 outbreaks and all of our social restriction measures, we did not see RSV the way we normally see it," Dr. Pia Pannaraj, an infectious diseases specialist at Children's Hospital in Los Angeles told NPR.

That meant infants and young children who would have gotten it last year, didn't. Now, as many states have lifted mask mandates and other restrictions, Pannaraj says, doctors are starting to see a resurgence of the virus.

In Texas, the spike began in the final week of June.

"This is definitely earlier than normal," she said.

The absence of widespread RSV last season means that "babies up until about a year and a half or two years of life are at risk," Pannaraj explained, saying that parents and doctors will have to be extra vigilant for symptoms, including coughing, lack of appetite, and excessive sleeping and lethargy. They can also suddenly stop breathing.

In many ways, she noted, they're similar symptoms to COVID-19. "So [parents and physicians] need to look out for both of those infections."

Pannaraj says the RSV surge began in southern states, many of which are in the fourth wave of the pandemic. But there is now evidence of a spread across the country, including Los Angeles.

"And it's on its way up," she said, adding that it is difficult to project if the number of cases will peak where they do during non-pandemic times.

At this point, she noted, some states have already reported cases as high as they would typically be in the winter. Other states have experienced short-lived spikes that go up and down.

It's likely officials will see a decline in RSV infections in places that are renewing indoor masking mandates and social distancing, she said.

So far Southern California has not seen many co-infections meaning a person has both COVID-19 and RSV, according to Pannaraj.

"But that doesn't mean that it won't happen," she remarked. "In fact, we probably have to assume that it will happen."

It's likely a matter of a few months, she said.

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As Children's COVID Cases Surge, There's Another Virus On The Rise - NPR

MAINE 188 more coronavirus cases have been reported across Maine BANGOR DAILY NEWS – Bangor Daily News

August 15, 2021

Another 188coronavirus cases have been reported across the state, Maine health officials said Saturday.

Saturdays report brings the total number of coronavirus cases in Maine to 72,521,according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Thats up from 72,333 on Friday.

Of those, 52,676have been confirmed positive, while 19,845were classified as probable cases, the Maine CDC reported.

No new deaths were reported Saturday, leaving the statewide death toll at 904.

The number of coronavirus cases diagnosed in the past 14 days statewide is 2,058. 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 1,961 on Friday.

The new case rate statewide Saturday was 1.40 cases per 10,000 residents, and the total case rate statewide was 541.85.

Maines seven-day average for new coronavirus cases is 174.7, up from 170 a day ago, up from 122.7 a week ago and up from 27.9 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, 2,204 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus. Of those, 68 are currently hospitalized, with 35 in critical care and 14 on ventilators.

The total statewide hospitalization rate on Saturday was 16.47 patients per 10,000 residents.

Cases have been reported in Androscoggin (8,621), Aroostook (2,092), Cumberland (17,911), Franklin (1,444), Hancock (1,491), Kennebec (6,849), Knox (1,254), Lincoln (1,169), Oxford (3,771), Penobscot (6,844), Piscataquis (648), Sagadahoc (1,519), Somerset (2,414), Waldo (1,344), Washington (1,006) and York (14,144) counties.

An additional 912 vaccine doses were administered in the previous 24 hours. As of Saturday, 780,118 Mainers have received a first dose of the vaccine, while 825,459 have received a final dose.

New Hampshire reported 242 new cases on Saturday and one death. Vermont reported 157 new cases and no deaths, while Massachusetts reported 1,298 new cases and 11 deaths.

As of Saturday afternoon, the coronavirus had sickened 36,605,648 people 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 621,060 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

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MAINE 188 more coronavirus cases have been reported across Maine BANGOR DAILY NEWS - Bangor Daily News

NC Rep. Keith Kidwell, wife in hospital after being diagnosed with COVID-19 – WNCT

August 15, 2021

Rep. Keith Kidwell (NC Legislature photo)

WASHINGTON, N.C. (WNCT) NC Rep. Keith Kidwell, who serves District 79 and Beaufort County, announced on Friday that he is in the hospital after his wife was diagnosed with COVID-19. It has since been learned both have been diagnosed with the coronavirus.

House Speaker Tim Moore confirmed Kidwells hospitalization to the News & Observer Friday afternoon. The Raleigh publication IndyWeek.com first reported the news on Thursday.

It was initially unclear whether Kidwell had COVID-19. IndyWeek.com reported Kidwell had symptoms associated with coronavirus. The publication reported Rep. Larry Pittman, a Concord Republican, read a message from Kidwell on the NC House floor on Thursday, saying My fever seems to have gone Just walking to the bathroom is exhausting.

Dozens gathered outside Vidant Beaufort Hospital Friday evening to pray for Keith and his wife, Vicki. Carolyn Garris, who has known the couple for years and organized Fridays event, confirmed to WNCT that both had been diagnosed with COVID-19.

Garris said the event was a way to let the Kidwells know the community is there for them. Garris said Kidwell has done so much for the community.

We just want to put a smile on his face to let him know were here for them like hes always here for us, Garris said.

Garris said Rep. Kidwell was admitted to the hospital on Friday while his wife was admitted earlier this week.

Some people say well you shouldnt be gathering because of COVID, Garris said. We need to get back, and this is a prime example of a community coming together. Were all here for the same reason, support.

Kidwell has been vocal about not wearing a mask. He is the chief sponsor of House Bill 572, which would not allow Gov. Roy Cooper to issue an executive order to require vaccination. The bill passed the NC House in May but has not moved further in the NC Senate.

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NC Rep. Keith Kidwell, wife in hospital after being diagnosed with COVID-19 - WNCT

Your Weekend Reading: The Third Coronavirus Vaccine Shot Is Coming – Bloomberg

August 15, 2021

A third shot is coming.U.S. regulators authorized giving an extra dose of Covid-19 vaccine to the most vulnerable people, but its a decision that comes with a price, as it could further exacerbate vaccine inequality across the world. Australia is facing its worst crisis since the pandemic began, while Austin, Texas, haswarnedresidents thesituation there is dire. Contrast that with the U.K., which isslowly emerging from the latest waveeven after the government pushed ahead with an almost full reopening. Sam Fazeli explainsin Bloomberg Opinion, the fast-spreading delta variant has increased infection riskamong children, and the world apparentlyneeds quickernot moreantigen tests.

The dramatic unravelling of the situation in Afghanistan puts U.S. President JoeBidensreputation for foreign-policy expertise at risk, Jonathan Bernstein writes in Bloomberg Opinion. In another black eye for the U.S., the International Monetary Fund is handing a $1 billion lifeline to Belaruss authoritarian regime.

Humanity is facing a climate code red, the United Nations said in a witheringassessment of the challenges ahead. The past decade was probably hotter than any period in the past 125,000 years, and mankind is undoubtedly the culprit. Infernos like the Dixie Fire are now the new normal for California.

An American flag near the rubble of the Greenville Library, destroyed along with the entire town by Californias Dixie Fire.

Photographer: Maranie Staab/Bloomberg

Business school programsimproved their online performance in 2021, but students remain anxious to meet in person comeSeptember. U.S. public schoolsare headed for a legal showdown on whether wearing masks should be required. And in China, the education crackdown is forcing tutors below the radar.

Andrew Cuomos resignation as NewYorks governorhas Wall Street fretting over its political clout. Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul, who will replace him, vowed a speedy effort to move onfrom the scandal and fight the pandemic. Heres her plan for the Empire State.

Remember the lumber surge? Turns out anunintended victim of the hot U.S. real estate marketand the soaring wood prices that resultedwas cheese. But if you want a real bargain,check out the random assortment of secondhand knick-knacks andvintage thingies along some 690 miles of the worlds biggest yard sale.

Vintage road signs in Jamestown, Tennessee.

Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg

With almost $8.6 billion in giftsannouncedin just 12 months, MacKenzie Scott has vaulted to the top of philanthropic giving. For someone who is singlehandedly reshaping nonprofits, Scotthas only given the public glimpses into the thinking driving her decisions. So toget a better sense of which causes are benefiting from Scotts coffersand where she might turn her attention to nextBloomberg categorized, by location and type, all 786 gifts she has given so far.

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Your Weekend Reading: The Third Coronavirus Vaccine Shot Is Coming - Bloomberg

Mississippi hospital puts beds in parking garage to cope with COVID-19 surge – Reuters

August 15, 2021

Health care workers arrive for the morning shift at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, in the state capital of one of the first U.S. states to declare themselves fully open after a year of lockdowns, and closures during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Jackson, Mississippi, U.S. March 9, 2021. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Aug 13 (Reuters) - The crush of new COVID-19 infections in Mississippi has become so dire that the state has turned to efforts reminiscent of the earliest days of the U.S. pandemic, when a field hospital was set up in New York's Central Park and a medical ship was moored in the Hudson River.

With an overload of coronavirus patients and a shortage of healthcare workers in the state, the University of Mississippi Medical Center (UMMC) opened up a 20-bed field hospital in its parking garage on Friday morning.

It plans to open a mobile hospital tent early next week, staffed by a medical team sent by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The hospital opened a similar triage center in its parking garage in the spring of 2020.

Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves said that the federal government had denied his state's request for the same U.S. Navy hospital ship - the USNS Comfort - that docked in Manhattan in March 2020 to relieve hospitals of their COVID-19 patient burden. At the time, New York was the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak in the United States.

"The ask for the ship was as much about the over 500 personnel that come with it as it was about the actual physical facility," Reeves said at a news conference on Friday.

He said he welcomed any of those federal medical workers to Mississippi but like many of his fellow Republicans also vowed never to force people to wear masks, which are known to be an effective defense against the spread of the coronavirus.

"I believe every individual ought to make what they believe to be the best decision for themselves," he said. Reeves told reporters that he and his family had been vaccinated but said there were "risks" associated with both getting vaccinated and remaining unvaccinated.

Low vaccination rates and the more infectious Delta variant of the coronavirus have driven a surge of COVID-19 cases across the United States, overwhelming some state medical systems.

It is also sending more children to hospital. On Friday, there were 1,871 pediatric patients hospitalized across the United States, according to CDC data, more than at any other time in the pandemic.

Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Oregon have reported record numbers of overall COVID-19 hospitalizations this month, according to a Reuters tally, stretching intensive care units near capacity and forcing states to seek medical aid from the federal government.

Republican governors in southern states such as Florida and Texas have banned mask mandates and threatened to withhold funding from schools that impose them, however. The White House is considering reimbursing school officials who lose pay from flouting the ban.

NUMBERS WORSENING

The number of daily cases across the country has doubled in the last two weeks, according to a Reuters tally, reaching a six-month peak, while the average number of daily deaths has increased 85% in the last 14 days.

Florida, Mississippi, and Oregon logged unprecedented COVID-19 case levels in August, with Mississippi reaching its record-high daily case count of 5,023 on Friday, according to a Reuters tally and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

On Friday, Oregon Governor Kate Brown said she was sending 500 National Guard members to assist overwhelmed hospitals, with 1,500 members in total available to help.

Brown said that a statewide indoor mask mandate she issued this week, along with rising fears of this fourth COVID surge, is not the news her constituents hoped to be hearing by late summer.

"The harsh and frustrating reality is that the Delta variant has changed everything," Brown said in a taped message.

Weekly cases in the state have doubled while weekly deaths have tripled in the past two weeks.

On Thursday, 1,578 COVID-19 patients were currently admitted in Mississippis hospitals, the highest since the pandemic started last year. More than 90% of its ICU beds were occupied, according to data from HHS.

The state has struggled with a 142% jump in hospitalizations in the past two weeks, according to a Reuters analysis.

A Republican Mississippi state lawmaker announced on Thursday that he had received a vaccination after "struggling" with the decision for months and consulting two doctors.

"The infection numbers among the unvaccinated made me pull the trigger," state Senator Joel Carter Jr. said in a tweet.

Reporting by Anurag Maan in Bengaluru, Julia Harte and Peter Szekely in New York, and Gabriella Borter in Washington, D.C.; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall and Daniel Wallis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Mississippi hospital puts beds in parking garage to cope with COVID-19 surge - Reuters

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