Category: Corona Virus

Page 504«..1020..503504505506..510520..»

Coronavirus Cases At The Tokyo Olympics Continue To Increase – NPR

July 29, 2021

A passerby looks on while wearing a protective face covering inside an empty Olympic Stadium, host to the Athletics competition, at the Tokyo Olympic Games on Thursday. Patrick Smith/Getty Images hide caption

A passerby looks on while wearing a protective face covering inside an empty Olympic Stadium, host to the Athletics competition, at the Tokyo Olympic Games on Thursday.

Organizers at the Tokyo Summer Olympics have reported one of the highest daily increases of coronavirus cases since they started keeping records on July 1.

Since Wednesday, 24 people linked to the Games have tested positive including three athletes. That brings the total of Olympic-related officials to catch the virus to 193 people, including 20 athletes.

The increase comes the same day government officials in Tokyo reported the highest-ever number of daily cases (3,865) in the capital since the pandemic began last year.

Health experts in Japan warn that the surge is straining local hospitals. But organizers of the Tokyo Olympics are downplaying the danger. "We've been trying to minimize the impact to the local medical system. And in that respect, we've been absolutely right on track to deliver the safe and secure games for both perspectives," said Takaya Masa, a spokesman for Tokyo 2020.

Speaking during a news conference at the Olympic media press center, Masa did say that two non-Japanese people who tested positive during the Games are now in the hospital, but their cases are not serious.

The Summer Olympics are being held without spectators in Tokyo as the city remains under a state of emergency because of the coronavirus.

Follow this link:

Coronavirus Cases At The Tokyo Olympics Continue To Increase - NPR

TribCast: A troubling increase in Texas’ coronavirus numbers – The Texas Tribune

July 29, 2021

Sign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

In this weeks episode, Matthew speaks with Karen, Ross and Heidi about the rising COVID-19 case numbers in Texas and conference realignment in college sports.

Join us Sept. 20-25 at the 2021 Texas Tribune Festival. Tickets are on sale now for this multi-day celebration of big, bold ideas about politics, public policy and the days news, curated by The Texas Tribunes award-winning journalists. Learn more.

Go here to read the rest:

TribCast: A troubling increase in Texas' coronavirus numbers - The Texas Tribune

Covid-19 Outbreak: News and Analysis on Coronavirus on July 29 – Bloomberg

July 29, 2021

New York Citys daily average cases passed 1,000 for the first time in almost three months, though hospitalizations remain relatively low. Diners soon will be required to be vaccinated to eat indoors at some of the citys most famous restaurants, including Gramercy Tavern and Union Square Caf.

President Joe Biden called on Congress to extend a moratorium on home evictions that is set to expire on July 31 as the delta variant continues to spread throughout the U.S.

Read more from the original source:

Covid-19 Outbreak: News and Analysis on Coronavirus on July 29 - Bloomberg

Phuket restricts travel from other Thai regions as COVID-19 cases surge – Reuters

July 29, 2021

July 29 (Reuters) - Thailand's Phuket will ban travel from the rest of the country from Aug. 3-16 to try to stop a surge in coronavirus cases from spreading to the resort island, but overseas visitors will be largely unaffected, the foreign ministry said on Thursday.

Phuket is at the heart of efforts to revive Thailand's tourism industry, a major revenue earner that has been devastated by the pandemic.

Since July 1, tourists fully vaccinated against COVID-19 have been allowed to move freely on the island, with no self-isolation on arrival, an initiative dubbed the "Phuket sandbox". read more

Thai Foreign Ministry spokesman Tanee Sangrat said the new travel rules will restrict movement to Phuket from elsewhere in Thailand, meaning foreign visitors who stay on the island will not be affected.

Tourists who have stayed on Phuket for more than 14 days will be allowed to leave for other parts of Thailand and can re-enter Phuket only if they have international flights booked from the island's airport, Tanee said.

An order signed by Phuket's provincial governor said exceptions would also be made for medical supplies and personnel and supplies of fuel, money and food.

Operating hours have been restricted for some venues on Phuket and some have been ordered to close as authorities try to limit any impact from the rise in infections across the country.

Thailand has in the last few months been struggling with its worst COVID-19 outbreak since the start of the pandemic, driven by the highly contagious Delta variant, first detected in India.

The national COVID-19 task force reported 17,669 coronavirus cases and 165 deaths on Thursday, both record highs. It said 21 of the fatalities had died at home.

Hospitals in Thailand's capital Bangkok and the surrounding provinces are running out of capacity due to the surge in infections. More than 1,200 people are waiting for hospital beds and over 6,000 have called a hotline in the last week requesting treatment, health authorities said.

"We don't know where to put the sick people anymore, the ER (emergency room) units in many hospitals have to be temporarily closed because they no longer have bed spaces," Department of Medical Services head Somsak Akksilp told a news conference.

There are more than 37,000 hospital beds, including in makeshift field hospitals, in Bangkok and surrounding provinces, according to the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration.

Thailand won plaudits for containing the coronavirus for most of last year, but authorities have struggled to halt the wave of cases starting in April that has taken total infections to 561,030, with 4,562 fatalities.

Reporting by Panu Wongcha-um and Panarat Thepgumpanat; Editing by Ed Davies and Catherine Evans

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

View post:

Phuket restricts travel from other Thai regions as COVID-19 cases surge - Reuters

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 29 July – World Economic Forum

July 29, 2021

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have passed 195.9 million globally, according to Johns Hopkins University. The number of confirmed deaths stands at more than 4.18 million. More than 3.97 billion vaccination doses have been administered globally, according to Our World in Data.

New South Wales, Australia, has recorded its largest one-day increase in COVID-19 cases since the pandemic began.

Johnson & Johnson said yesterday the US Food and Drug Administration has extended the shelf life of its single-shot COVID-19 vaccine from 4.5 to 6 months.

American pole vaulter Sam Kendricks has been ruled out of the Olympics after testing positive for COVID-19, which has, in turn, led to members of the Australian team being put into isolation.

It comes as a Tokyo 2020 spokesperson confirmed that two people attending from overseas have been hospitalized with COVID-19. Neither case was said to be serious.

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has told his government to open the country's COVID-19 vaccination programme to anyone who wants a vaccine.

Federal agencies across the US have mandated masks at federal buildings in COVID-19 hotspots, following new instructions issued by the White House Office of Management and Budget.

It comes as the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that two-thirds of US counties had COVID-19 transmission rates high enough to warrant indoor mask-wearing.

Cambodia is set to introduce a lockdown in eight provinces bordering Thailand from midnight tonight. It's hoped the measure will prevent the spread of the Delta variant in the country.

New Zealand's health regulator has given provisional approval for the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine. It's only been using the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine in its inoculation programme so far.

Alberta, Canada, is dropping its quarantine requirement for close contacts of COVID-19 cases. It comes as the neighbouring state of British Columbia reintroduces mandatory mask-wearing.

Restrictions could be tightened in Viet Nam's major cities in response to rising COVID-19 cases, authorities said yesterday.

Daily COVID-19 vaccine doses administered per 100 people in selected countries.

Image: Our World in Data

Fully vaccinated arrivals to England from the European Union and United States will not need to quarantine from next week. Devolved administrations in Scotland and Wales said they would follow suit.

The move is seen as a major boost for airlines and travel companies, although some warned that more was needed and criticised the move as coming too late.

"It's the right thing, it should be done, but like I said it is little bit too late," easyJet CEO Johan Lundgren told LBC.

France is not included in the exemption, with the UK government citing the presence of the Beta variant there.

The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) has warned that COVID-19 continues to hit the Americas hard. Argentina, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador and Paraguay are all among the countries with the world's highest weekly death rates.

The last week saw more than 1.26 million COVID-19 cases and nearly 29,000 deaths reported in the region.

"As COVID continues to circulate, too many places have relaxed the public health and social measures that have proven effective against this virus," PAHO Director Carissa Etienne told a briefing.

And with just 16.6% of the population of Latin America and the Caribbean fully vaccinated against COVID-19, there are significant hurdles still to overcome.

"The good news is that vaccines work against the variants, including Delta, in terms of preventing severe disease and death. The bad news is that we do not have yet enough vaccines to stop community transmission," Etienne added.

The COVID Response Alliance for Social Entrepreneurship is a coalition of 85 global leaders, hosted by the World Economic Forum. Its mission: Join hands in support of social entrepreneurs everywhere as vital first responders to the pandemic and as pioneers of a green, inclusive economic reality.

Its COVID Social Enterprise Action Agenda, outlines 25 concrete recommendations for key stakeholder groups, including funders and philanthropists, investors, government institutions, support organizations, and corporations. In January of 2021, its members launched its 2021 Roadmap through which its members will roll out an ambitious set of 21 action projects in 10 areas of work. Including corporate access and policy change in support of a social economy.

For more information see the Alliance website or its impact story here.

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.

See the rest here:

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 29 July - World Economic Forum

Breakthrough COVID-19 infections after vaccination can lead to long-haul symptoms, Israeli study shows – USA TODAY

July 29, 2021

COVID-19 breakthrough infections: Can vaccinated people get infected?

People who are fully vaccinated can get COVID, but experts say they're unlikely to get severely ill.

Staff video, USA TODAY

Nearly 3% of medical workers in a new Israeli study contracted COVID-19 even though they were vaccinated, and 19%of them still had symptoms six weeks later.

Although the vaccines were never expected to be perfect, the findings raisequestions about theirprotectionand suggest that evenvaccinated people could experience long-term symptoms such as such as fatigue, brain fog and shortness of breath.

Dr. Ashish Jha,dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, said he finds it concerning though not conclusive that people had lingering symptoms weeks after getting sick.

"There really may be a risk here, but we don't know how big a risk and how much of a problem it is," he said.

Most of the people in the study who got sick had mild symptoms, and none were hospitalized.

But Jha said he was troubled that young, healthy people would get so-called breakthrough infections within a few months of vaccination. Scientists expectedprotection towane over time, and they expected the vaccines to be less effectiveamong older people and those with pre-existing health conditions.

But that's not who got sick in this study.

Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, said she's not surprised that a number of health care workers would become infected after being vaccinated because they're constantly exposed to sick people.

"It makes sense to me that health care workers would be particularly susceptible to breakthrough infections," she said via email, "making mitigation procedures (universal masking) even more important in health care settings."

The good news is that none of the 39 people who got infected passed the coronavirus on to anyone else, according to the study, published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Coronavirus vaccines were never designed to perfectly protect people against all infections, noted Dr. Eric Topol, a cardiologist who foundedand directsthe Scripps Research Translational Institutein California.

He said current vaccines are great at preventing serious infection deep in the lungs, but not at blocking infection in the upper airways. What's needed, he said, is a nasal-spray vaccine that would stop the coronavirus from taking hold at all.

Topol said he wishes the federal government had prioritized a nasal vaccine along with shots.

"It would have been the perfect combination," he said.

Some researchers believed vaccines would reduceviral loads, and people with lower viral loads would be less likely to have lingering symptoms.Topol said the new study brings thatinto question.

"Those who are vaccinated did everything right, but some are going to go on to long-COVID, and that's really unfortunate," he said.

The study followed about 1,500 Israeli health care workers for four months after they received the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Anyone who tested positive more than 11 days after thesecond dose was considered a breakthrough case.

Thirty-nine people 2.6% of the total were diagnosed with the virus. One was immunosuppressed;the rest were healthy, including nurses, maintenance workers and a few doctors.

All 37peoplefor whom data was available were infected by an unvaccinated person, usually within their homes.

Two-thirds had mild symptoms; the rest had none at all.

Six weeks after their diagnosis, 19% reported they still had at least one symptom: loss of smell, cough, fatigue, weakness, difficulty breathing, ormuscle pain.Nine employees 23% weren't healthy enough to return to work after 10 days of required quarantine. One hadn't gone back after six weeks.

Most had thealpha variant of the virus, which is more contagious than the original version, but less infectious than the delta variant that now accounts for most cases in the United States.

Whether delta is more dangerous in addition to being more contagious remains unclear, Jha said.

"The evidence really, reallyis mixed on whether delta is more virulent," he said."I can point you to some studies that argue that it is and other studies that argue that it isn't, but none of them are particularly definitive."

Topol said the best protection is to get vaccinated and practice social measures like wearing a mask.

"Don't take the delta stress test. Keep a mask on," he said. "With the vaccine, you can be confident, but you can't be100% confident."

ContactKaren Weintraub at kweintraub@usatoday.com.

Health and patient safety coverage at USA TODAY is made possible in part by a grant from the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation and Competition in Healthcare. The Masimo Foundation does not provide editorial input.

COVID vaccine mandates: Could private businesses help curb new surge?

More than 50 health care and medical groups called for employers of health and long-term care workers to mandate COVID-19 vaccines.

Staff video, USA TODAY

Here is the original post:

Breakthrough COVID-19 infections after vaccination can lead to long-haul symptoms, Israeli study shows - USA TODAY

MLB game postponed due to 12 positive coronavirus tests within Washington Nationals team – CNN

July 29, 2021

Laurence Kesterson/AP

Four Washington Nationals players, including Trea Turner, and eight staff members have tested positive for the coronavirus. Turner was pulled from Tuesday's game after he tested positive for Covid-19.

CNN

The Washington Nationals game against the Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday has been postponed due to a dozen Covid-19 cases within the Nationals organization.

Nationals manager Dave Martinez said on a video news conference that four players and eight staff members had positive tests results for the coronavirus.

The manager said some people had symptoms and some were asymptomatic. None appeared to be very sick, he added.

Im very concerned. We all took rapid tests today, he said. Well follow up. Well get some additional results tomorrow. Hopefully, no one else will test positive.

MLB postponed the evening game in Philadelphia to allow for continued testing and contact tracing for members of the Nationals. Martinez said he sent the team back to the hotel.

On Tuesday, Martinez pulled shortstop Trea Turner from their game against the Phillies, after testing positive for Covid-19.

Martinez told reporters after the game Turner was in isolation, but did not reveal whether the shortstop had been vaccinated. He said Wednesday he couldnt name the other players who had tested positive. Martinez said he thought most of the people involved were vaccinated.

This is the second instance involving Covid cases within the team this season.

In April, the Nationals season-opening series against the New York Mets was postponed. At the time, Washington placed nine players on the teams Covid-19 injured list as a result, with four of those being from positive tests, while the others being deemed close contacts.

MLB has rescheduled the game as part of a doubleheader on Thursday.

Go here to read the rest:

MLB game postponed due to 12 positive coronavirus tests within Washington Nationals team - CNN

Coronavirus Data for July 27, 2021 | mayormb – Executive Office of the Mayor

July 29, 2021

(Washington, DC) - The Districts reported data for Tuesday, July 27, 2021 includes 40 new positive coronavirus (COVID-19) cases, bringing the Districts overall positive case total to 50,268.

The District reported that one additional resident lost her life due to COVID-19.

Tragically, 1,148 District residents have lost their lives due to COVID-19.

Visit coronavirus.dc.gov/data for interactive data dashboards or to download COVID-19 data.

Below is a summary of the Districts current ReOpening Metrics.

Below is the Districts aggregated total of positive COVID-19 cases, sorted by age and gender.

Patient Gender

Total Positive Cases

%

Female

%

Male

%

Unknown

%

All

50,268*

100

26,195

100

23,900

100

173

100

Unknown

64

<1

21

<1

38

<1

5

3

0-18

6,546

13

3,261

13

3,260

14

25

15

19-30

13,588

27

7,476

28

6,055

25

57

33

31-40

10,024

20

5,145

20

4,843

20

36

21

41-50

6,422

13

3,228

12

3,179

13

15

9

51-60

5,891

12

2,900

11

2,977

13

14

8

61-70

4,234

9

2,129

8

2,097

9

8

5

71-80

2,122

4

1,151

5

966

4

5

3

Link:

Coronavirus Data for July 27, 2021 | mayormb - Executive Office of the Mayor

The Fourth Surge Of The Coronavirus Pandemic Is Accelerating, Gov. Edwards Calls It ‘Scary’ – WWNO

July 28, 2021

Louisiana hit another record-high day for COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations on Tuesday.

Cases and hospitalizations are on a near-vertical rize in the state as the fourth surge of the coronavirus pandemic accelerates.

Gov. John Bel Edwards called the numbers increasingly scary. Louisiana has the fastest-growing number of cases per capita of any state in the U.S. The nation is now recording the highest number of new COVID-19 cases in the world, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The state health department saw over 6,700 cases of COVID-19 reported in one day, the second-highest single-day case count since January, when the pandemic was at its peak.

Another 169 people were hospitalized in a single day the largest daily increase in hospitalizations since March of 2020, when the coronavirus first struck and made a global hotspot of Louisiana.

A total of 1390 people are hospitalized with COVID-19, 113 of them on ventilators.

Hospitals are at risk of running out of space with the onslaught of COVID patients.

All LCMC hospitals and Our Lady of the Lake hospital in Baton Rouge announced on Monday theyre pausing new, non-urgent surgical procedures requiring an inpatient bed. Other hospitals have drastically limited visitations.

The Louisiana Department of Corrections has again suspended all visitation and volunteer programs at state-run prisons until at least mid-August.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also issued new guidelines for everyone, including vaccinated people and children, to wear a mask indoors. Last week, Edwards announced a similar advisory.

He again pleaded for people to get vaccinated.

This surge is on us, and that means it is up to each of us to do our part to bring it to an end, Edwards said.

Over 1400 sites across the state offer COVID-19 vaccines, which are free.

Follow this link:

The Fourth Surge Of The Coronavirus Pandemic Is Accelerating, Gov. Edwards Calls It 'Scary' - WWNO

Indoor (And Outdoor) Masking Guidance In Light Of New CDC Recommendations : Goats and Soda – NPR

July 28, 2021

To mask or not to mask: That is the question for vaccinated people as the delta variant surges. The answer may depend on the situation, experts say. Here, these roller coaster riders mask up at Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park, Calif. Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images hide caption

To mask or not to mask: That is the question for vaccinated people as the delta variant surges. The answer may depend on the situation, experts say. Here, these roller coaster riders mask up at Knott's Berry Farm in Buena Park, Calif.

Each week, we answer frequently asked questions about life during the coronavirus crisis. If you have a question you'd like us to consider for a future post, email us at goatsandsoda@npr.org with the subject line "Weekly Coronavirus Questions." See an archive of our FAQs here.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is now recommending face coverings for vaccinated people in certain situations. Please tell me exactly when to mask up.

If you hung your mask up in May after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said face coverings were no longer necessary for vaccinated people, you're probably not eager to start masking up once more. And with Tuesday's announcement that some vaccinated people should mask up again in certain situations because of the spread of the highly contagious delta variant, your head may be spinning.

The new guidance is targeted at vaccinated people who live in areas with "high and substantial transmission," and it focuses on indoor settings.

Given that the recent rise in hospitalizations is probably because of people no longer wearing masks at the appropriate time, says Charlotte Baker, assistant professor of epidemiology at Virginia Tech, many health experts welcomed the reversal.

But there are many unanswered questions as people look for guidance in specific situations: Do I really need to mask up at the grocery store? How about on a college campus that requires students to be vaccinated? What about roller coasters?

"It's so subjective and situational," says May Chu, a clinical professor of epidemiology at the Colorado School of Public Health, who led the research on masks and respirators for the World Health Organization. "It's easier to think it through if you know what the risks are that you need to evaluate."

To help you assess and mitigate your risk in specific situations, we asked specialists in ventilation, masking, public health and infectious disease for their input. They recommend thinking about the following questions when deciding whether to doff or don. Warning: The first few questions have easy answers, but they get trickier.

Are you vaccinated? This is one of the only clear-cut answers: If you haven't gotten jabbed yet, your risk in any public situation is high enough to wear a mask always.

Will everyone else there be vaccinated? On the flip side, when you're sure everyone else is vaccinated, experts agree the risk is so low there's no need to mask.

Do you have a cold, the flu or COVID-19-like symptoms? If you do, quarantine at home (and get tested if you have symptoms of COVID-19). And if you have just a garden-variety cold or flu and have to go out, wear a mask for the health of everyone around you.

Are you going to be outside? Virus particles dilute rapidly outdoors. Virginia Tech aerosol expert Linsey Marr has compared it to a droplet of dye in the ocean: "If you happen to be right next to it, then maybe you'll get a whiff of it. But it's going to become diluted rapidly into the huge atmosphere."

Our experts believe that most vaccinated people are safe without masks in most outdoor situations without prolonged close contact.

These next questions don't come with neat, stand-alone answers. Consider each response as one piece of the puzzle as you make your mask decision.

Are transmission rates low to moderate in your county? In areas with high rates of vaccination, test positivity rates have fallen to the lowest levels since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic (under 5% is considered low). With low levels of virus circulating, going out without a mask is much safer. However, keep your eye on that rate as cases start rising again because of that delta variant, says Stanford University infectious disease fellow Abraar Karan. "The change over time will tell you in which direction the epidemic is heading," he says.

Whom do you live with?If you live with unvaccinated people (including children) or with people 65 and older or anyone else especially susceptible to the coronavirus, wearing a mask could reduce your risk of developing a rare breakthrough infection and passing it on to them.

"If you live in a high-risk area and with vulnerable elderly folks who haven't been vaccinated or even if they have, I would recommend masking up indoors in close spaces until we have more data about the necessity for boosters [for older adults and other vulnerable populations]," Karan says.

Will it be so crowded that you cannot maintain 6 feet of distance between people?If you're shoulder to shoulder with people, it's prudent to wear a mask depending on how long you're there and especially if you're in a higher-prevalence area, Chu says.

Will people be singing? Cheering? Screaming? Exercising? Even when you're inside, there are different considerations. Consider a sports bar with people shouting and cheering, a bar with a crowded dance floor and people singing versus a silent prayer meeting, Chu says.

Are there open windows if you're inside?That's an indication of good ventilation most people won't know whether the air change rate is more than four times per hour or whether the venue has MERV 11+ filters or portable HEPA air filtration units, Marr points out.

High ceilings are also a bonus: That's an indication that there's good potential for dilution, Marr says.

None of the experts has tossed their masks. Baker, the Virginia Tech epidemiology professor, continues to mask up whenever she is indoors with anyone who may not be vaccinated. "I feel really naked not wearing one," she says.

"Erring on the side of caution doesn't hurt anybody," says Jessica Malaty Rivera, an infectious disease epidemiologist who has worked with the COVID Tracking Project. "And wearing masks does not deny the effectiveness of these vaccines."

And as for roller coasters? It's a tricky one, Baker acknowledges, since you're outside but close to others. If you knew everyone on the ride was vaccinated, it'd be OK to skip the mask. In lieu of that?

"I would wear a mask," she says.

Sheila Mulrooney Eldred is a freelance health journalist in Minneapolis. She has written about COVID-19 for many publications, including Medscape, Kaiser Health News, Science News for Students and The Washington Post. More at sheilaeldred.pressfolios.com. On Twitter: @milepostmedia.

See the rest here:

Indoor (And Outdoor) Masking Guidance In Light Of New CDC Recommendations : Goats and Soda - NPR

Page 504«..1020..503504505506..510520..»