Category: Corona Virus

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Why We Don’t Know the Animal Origins of the Coronavirus – Scientific American

June 13, 2021

Over the past century, many notable viruses have emerged from animals to cause widespread illness and death in people. The list includes the pathogens behind pandemic influenza, Ebola, Zika, West Nile fever, SARSand now COVID, brought on by the virus SARS-CoV-2. For all of these microbes, the animal species that served as the original source of spillover was hard to find. And for many, that source still has not been conclusively identified. Confirming the circumstances and key participants involved in the early emergence of an infectious disease is a holy grail of this type of scientific inquiry: difficult to track and even more difficult to prove.

In ideal conditions, the first human cases involved in a zoonotic disease spillover (when a pathogen jumps from animals to humans) are reported in connection to animals present at the time of the event. This happens when the cluster of cases is large enough to be investigated and reported. But it is not necessarily the first time spillover occurred. Most spillovers are limited to more narrow animal-to-human cases. Once pathogens start to spread by human-to-human transmission, the tracks leading back to the initial animal source grow faint and become nearly impossible to follow.

Thus, animal sources for viruses that cause pandemics often remain shrouded in mystery. For some viruses, animal sources have been implicated after years or decades of large-scale international investigations. For other viruses, animal sources are highly suspected, but enough evidence has yet to be produced to pinpoint an exact species or range of species. Typically, lines of evidence are drawn over time through a trove of peer-reviewed publications, each building on the research that came before it, using more precise methods to narrow the field of possible sources. The scientific process is naturally self-correcting. Often seemingly contradictory hypotheses can initially flood the field, especially for high-impact outbreaks. But eventually, some of them are ruled out, and lines of investigation are narrowed.

Frequently, this investigative research only points to a group of suspected species, possibly a few most likely genera or, more often, an entire taxonomic order. That is because the virus has not actually been found in the suspected animal source in such cases. The evidence instead revolves around closely related viruses or their most recent common ancestors, based on inferred evolutionary history. If a virus was found in animal samples after the same pathogen caused widespread transmission among humans, it is possible that the virus spilled from humans back into animals. That happens often enough with viruses that can infect a range of animal species that the possibility needs to be presumed until it is ruled out.

The best way to rule out such spillback is to examine archives of specimens that were collected and stored prior to the initial outbreak. For these retrospective studies to work well, the specimens need to be the ideal type of samples, and they must come from the correct species and be stored in a way that allows scientists to recover the virus of interest.

Most viruses of interest typically infect animal hosts for only a matter of days. Detection of viruses that cause pandemics thus require sample sizes that are orders of magnitude higher than what is needed to detect endemic diseases or viruses that are long-lived in their host. One could get lucky, but rigor in scientific inquiry demands large sample sizes to power these types of analyses.

Investigations into an animal source that immediately follow a viral emergence event have an additional challenge. Because an outbreak in animals likely would have preceded the outbreak in humans, infections in animals would have already peaked. Few or none of them would still be infected. Immediately postoutbreak, the probability of identifying infection in live animals could be especially low, thus requiring even larger sample sizes. In China, it is not surprising that scientists did not find SARS-CoV-2 in potential animal sources immediately after the human outbreak in Wuhan. Nor does that result indicate there is a problem with the wildlife spillover theory. This is a difficult search that takes time.

Immunologic evidence of previous infection can be detected in a possible animal host in the form of antibodies, but new serological assays must be developed for a new virus. At best, this type of evidence is nondefinitiveand at worst, it leads us in the wrong direction in the hunt. Antibody responses to viruses are notoriously cross-reactive: the serological assays will react in the same way to related viruses, both known and as yet unrecognized. These assays must be evaluated and validated in every species, and there is no gold standard test for a new virus in a new animal. Any efforts to apply new tests to animals would need to be verified with repeated testing and supporting data.

As the scope of investigations broaden, other challenges must be met. Which species should be prioritized? Which locations should be investigated? Heading down the wrong path leads nowhere and wastes valuable time. Viral infections in animal populations are notoriously unpredictable, governed by dynamics that can only be uncovered with in-depth longitudinal studies after a virus has been found.

That brings us to the speed at which science works. Transdisciplinary collaborative research to investigate a novel virus takes extra time: detection techniques must be tailored to the new pathogen and customized to answer an array of research questions. Scientists are cautious about overinterpreting data and making unwarranted assumptions.And in the midst of a pandemic, understanding origins might not be the most pressing issue. During COVID, many scientists have pivoted to research that might help save lives this yearby modeling the trajectory of spread, characterizing SARS-CoV-2 variants and investigating the chances that the virus could spill back into different animals that serve as a new viral reservoir, ultimately threatening people again.

Timely exploration of the source of SARS-CoV-2 is important, but future pandemic preparedness requires a deep understanding of the mechanisms involved in the emergence of a much wider array of viruses with pandemic potential. With such knowledge, we will have better than a few vague and scattered clues the next time a novel disease emerges.

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Why We Don't Know the Animal Origins of the Coronavirus - Scientific American

China Returns to Its Strict Covid Restrictions to Fight a New Outbreak – The New York Times

June 13, 2021

BEIJING Neighborhoods under strict lockdown. Thousands quarantined. Millions tested in mere days. Overseas arrivals locked up for weeks and sometimes months.

China has followed variations of that formula for dealing with the coronavirus for more than a year and a new outbreak suggests that they could be part of Chinese life for some time to come.

China appeared to get the coronavirus under control nearly a year ago. But hundreds of millions of Chinese people remain unvaccinated. New variants of the coronavirus have appeared, and questions remain about whether Chinas self-made vaccines can stop them.

The latest cases have been found in Guangzhou, capital of the southern province of Guangdong. The authorities have blamed the Delta variant, which has caused widespread loss of life in India.

The city tested practically its entire population of 18.7 million between Sunday and Tuesday, some of them for the second time. It has also put neighborhoods with a total of more than 180,000 residents into total lockdowns, with practically no one allowed out except for medical testing.

The early infections appear to have jumped from person to person at a cluster of eateries. Each infected person has infected more people than in any previous outbreak that China has confronted, Zhang Zhoubin, deputy director of the Guangzhou Center for Disease Control, said at a news conference.

The epidemic faced by Guangzhou this time is an unprecedented opponent, and it requires more resolute and decisive measures to deal with it, he said.

Test facilities in Guangzhou have been operating around the clock. Lines are long. Residents wake early to try to beat the rush, but still find delays.

Mandy Li, a longtime resident of the citys Liwan District, where most of the infections have occurred, said she set her alarm clock for 3:30 a.m. She still had to wait an hour.

In the queue, there was a family of three, she said. Some woke their kids to line up, and some had strollers. But everyone was cooperative and quiet, as we know some volunteers and medical workers worked very hard and theyve been there all this time without rest.

Chinas approach has evolved since the coronavirus first emerged, when Beijing initially put harsh restrictions on hundreds of millions of people. Today its lockdowns are focused on neighborhoods rather than cities or provinces. China has made vaccination the centerpiece of its strategy.

Still, many of the core tenets remain for a huge and densely populated country: vast testing, strict limits on movement and intense scrutiny of arrivals from other countries.

Foreign businesses have worried that those limits on international travelers could snarl their plans. A European Union Chamber of Commerce survey released this week found that three-quarters of member companies said they had been adversely affected by travel restrictions, usually by hindering them from bringing in key engineers or executives.

Beijing has demanded that travelers from dozens of countries spend two weeks in employer-supervised quarantine even before flying to China. Once there, travelers must spend at least two weeks and sometimes three or longer in government-supervised quarantine, even if they are fully vaccinated. Rounds of tests can turn up a possibly false positive, leading to more tests and additional days or weeks in isolation.

A German national who flew into Shanghai last month said that he had been sent to a hospital isolation room for three days because he tested positive for antibodies, which he attributed to taking a second vaccine dose 16 days earlier.

June 13, 2021, 1:23 p.m. ET

Nurses took his blood twice a day and performed six throat swabs, four nasal swabs and two anal swabs daily, said the German, who insisted on anonymity to avoid offending the authorities. The hospital room had no towels, no toilet paper and no television, and the bed was a steel plate with a thin mat, he said.

The German said that, after consistently testing negative for the virus, he was allowed to spend the remaining 11 days of isolation in a government-supervised quarantine center.

Many businesses expect that China may retain stringent travel restrictions through February, when Beijing will host the Winter Olympics, and possibly through autumn of next year, when the Chinese Communist Party will hold its party congress.

Many foreigners in China face a choice: If they leave to visit spouses, children and other family members elsewhere, they may be unable to re-enter the country later because of the pandemic restrictions.

There is absolutely a growing fatigue for a lot of the foreigners who are here, said Jacob Gunter, senior policy and communications manager at the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.

At home, Chinas leaders are pushing its people to get vaccinated. It has administered about 800 million doses by the governments count, compared with 300 million administered in the United States. Yin Weidong, the chairman and chief executive of Sinovac Biotech, one of Chinas main vaccine manufacturers, told state television last Friday that Chinese regulators had approved the emergency use of vaccines in children as young as 3.

Still, administering 800 million doses almost all of the vaccines require two shots means most of Chinas 1.4 billion people have not been fully vaccinated. Some people remain hesitant to get the shots, and Chinese media outlets have used the Guangzhou outbreak to encourage skeptics to get inoculated.

The spread of the virus has raised fresh questions about the effectiveness of Chinas vaccines, particularly against variants. The Seychelles last month and now Mongolia in the past three weeks have both had large numbers of infections despite high vaccination rates. Both have used the Sinopharm vaccine from China, although the Seychelles also relied partly on AstraZeneca vaccines.

The Delta variant now circulating in Guangzhou has also shown the ability in other countries to infect some people who had already been vaccinated, a phenomenon known as vaccine escape. Research elsewhere has found that to be a particular problem for people who have received only a first injection of a two-jab vaccine and are then exposed to the Delta variant.

Researchers in Britain have found that receiving only the first of two shots of the Oxford-AstraZeneca or Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines may be only 30 percent effective in preventing infection with the Delta variant, said Raina MacIntyre, who heads the biosecurity program at the Kirby Institute of the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia.

After two doses, effectiveness appears to rise to 60 percent with the AstraZeneca vaccine and 88 percent with Pfizer-BioNTech. With the degree of vaccine escape there is with the Delta variant, you really do need people to be fully vaccinated, she said.

Mr. Yin, of Sinovac, told Chinas state-run television on Saturday that a third shot of his companys vaccine produces a tenfold increase in antibodies within a week. But Chinese vaccine manufacturers are not yet recommending a third dose.

As far as China is concerned, in fact, completing the two-shot immunization is the most important task for all the public, he said.

In the meantime, Guangzhou has tried to turn its virus setback into a showcase for local technologies. Officials there said they had used 31 driverless shuttle vans and trucks to send food and other critical supplies into locked down neighborhoods to avoid exposing delivery personnel.

By Tuesday, Guangdong Province had 157 people in hospital with the virus and was announcing about 10 new cases per day. The province and also Guangzhou itself have banned anyone since last weekend from leaving unless they have a valid reason and a negative nucleic acid test for the virus within the preceding 48 hours.

Unlike many places around the world, Guangzhou at least does not have to worry about running out of pandemic supplies: It is coincidentally a hub for manufacturing and exporting them. Chen Jianhua, chief economist of the Guangzhou Bureau of Industry and Information Technology, said at a news conference on Wednesday that the citys daily production capacity was 91 million masks and seven million sets of coronavirus detection chemicals.

Albee Zhang contributed research.

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China Returns to Its Strict Covid Restrictions to Fight a New Outbreak - The New York Times

Covid in NY: Coronavirus positive test rate hits another record low – syracuse.com

June 13, 2021

Syracuse, N.Y. -- New York states rate of positive coronavirus tests continues to fall, reaching a new record low Saturday, the state reported.

The rate of positive tests dropped to 0.35%, the lowest single-day rate since the pandemic began. The seven-day positive rate was 0.42 yesterday. A news release from Gov. Andrew Cuomos office said that tied with Massachusetts for the lowest rate in the country.

Central New Yorks rate was higher, but still falling. Saturdays rate was 0.68%, down from 0.8% on Thursday.

A total of 110,437 tests were administered in New York state Saturday; 383 of them were positive.

The number of patients hospitalized fell by 51, to 630. Eight people died of Covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. A total of 42,864 New Yorkers have died of Covid-19 since the pandemic began in early 2020.

Cuomos office said nearly 46,000 vaccine doses were administered Saturday, bringing the total so far to 20,061,871. Of New Yorkers 18 and older, 69.7% have had at least one vaccine dose.

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Covid in NY: Coronavirus positive test rate hits another record low - syracuse.com

What is the new coronavirus Delta variant, and should Americans be worried? – USA TODAY

June 11, 2021

Dr. Anthony Fauci is warning about a COVID-19 variant, "Delta," that has become the dominant strain in the United Kingdom. "We cannot let is happen here," he said, as U.S. health officials reported overall positive trends. (June 8) AP Domestic

As COVID-19 restrictions are lifted andthe pace of vaccinations has slowed in the U.S., the rise of a new coronavirus variant worries some health experts. The variant,known as the Delta orB.1.617.2 , was first detected in India and has spread to more than 60 countries. In the United Kingdom, it accounts for about 60% of coronavirus cases.

In the U.S.,it currently accountsfor 6% of infections, though in some states it accounts for over 18% of sampled coronavirus cases, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

So what is it about the Delta variant that has health experts worried?USA TODAY spoke to two experts for their take.

Dr. Bhakti Hansoti is an associate professor of emergency medicine and international health at Johns Hopkins University and Bloomberg School of Public Health. Hansoti said Delta variant infections in India and the U.S.come with all the samesymptoms of the original Sars-CoV-2 virus, just more severe.

Hansoti said doctors have seen an increased likelihood of hearing loss, severe stomach pains and nauseain patients infected with the new variant. In most cases, patients are more likely to be hospitalized, require oxygen treatments and endure other complications.

Coronavirus variant that first appeared in India arrives in U.S.: Here's what to know.

No, if you received your second dose.

Anew study from Public Health Englandshowed two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine were 88% effective against symptomatic disease from the Delta variant, and even more successful at preventing hospitalizationand death.The study, however, found one dose of the Pfizer vaccine was only 33% protective.

"So without that (second dose)it still leaves them very vulnerable [to sickness] and this variant is highly transmissible,"Hansoti told USA TODAY.

Jonathan Baktari,CEO ofe7 Healtha health care and wellness company,said the Delta variant is a testament to why it's important to get both doses of the vaccine.

Vaccines against variants: Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine protects against virus variants, study shows

The CDCsays coronavirus variants are the result ofchanges to the virus' genes. Every time a virus replicates, mutations naturally occur in its genetic material. The CDC lists a total of nine common variants it'smonitoring.

Fact check: Coronavirus variants come from mutations, not vaccines

Baktari said the biggest threat with the Delta variant is its ability to infect easily and quickly. He compared it to a sticky object if one infected person is in a room and talks or sneezes, it will easier stick to another person.

"The aerosol will release the virus and the virus has an easier time sticking to its next victim as it were," Baktari said.

Hansoti's concerns lie not just with the variant but with Americans'urge to return to normal this summer. People are burned out from months of social distancing and isolation. It's time for socializing, holidays and vacations.Those activities mixed with a highly transmissible variant is a worry, especially among the unvaccinated.

"It's the confluence of all of these things,decreasing restrictions and then a highly transmissible variant with increased severity of illnesson a platform of a burned-out, overstretched health system, which could potentially be a chaotic third wave for America," Hansoti said.

"Get vaccinated and wait two weeks. Remain careful and stay home if you feel any type of sickness," Baktarirecommends.He added that combatting vaccine hesitancy and reaching herd immunity is the key to reducing the spread of the Delta variant and all coronavirus variants.

Rather than resorting to an "all or nothing" response, Hansoti said it's time to establish a "new normal"to prevent further surges.

"We need masking in public areas, limited gathering sizes and increased scrutiny in schools and public spaces where people can besymptomatic," Hansoti said. "If not, after the Delta variant, another variant will just come and surge again."

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What is the new coronavirus Delta variant, and should Americans be worried? - USA TODAY

The Highly Contagious Delta Variant Is On The Rise In The U.S. – NPR

June 11, 2021

The Delta variant, or B.1.617.2, is now the dominant strain of SARS-CoV-2 in the U.K. and is causing surges of COVID-19 in parts of the country. Mark Kerrison/Getty Images hide caption

The Delta variant, or B.1.617.2, is now the dominant strain of SARS-CoV-2 in the U.K. and is causing surges of COVID-19 in parts of the country.

The Delta variant, which was first detected in India, now accounts for more than 6% of all infections in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And this highly transmissible variant may be responsible for more than 18% of cases in some Western U.S. states.

The variant, also known as B.1.617.2, is spreading rapidly in the United Kingdom and has quickly become the dominant strain there, responsible for more than 90% of infections and causing surges of COVID-19 in some parts of England.

"We cannot let that happen in the United States," Dr. Anthony Fauci said.

Speaking at a White House COVID-19 briefing Tuesday, Fauci warned that the Delta variant may be associated with more severe disease and a higher risk of hospitalization.

The good news is that the vaccines look like they can protect people against the Delta variant. A new study from Public Health England showed two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine were 88% effective against symptomatic disease from the Delta variant compared with 93% effectiveness against the Alpha variant, the variant first detected in the U.K. The vaccine only provided 33% protection after just one dose.

Fauci urged everyone who has received the first dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines to make sure to sign up for a second. "And for those who have still not been vaccinated yet, please get vaccinated," he said.

He said vaccination is the best way to protect yourself and to stop this variant from spreading and becoming dominant in the U.S.

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The Highly Contagious Delta Variant Is On The Rise In The U.S. - NPR

DC lifts the last of its coronavirus restrictions – WTOP

June 11, 2021

The pandemic is far from over in D.C., but as COVID-19 positivity and transmission rates decline and more people get vaccinated, the city is lifting the last of its coronavirus restrictions.

The pandemic is far from over in D.C., but as COVID-19 positivity and transmission rates decline and more people get vaccinated, the city is lifting the last of its coronavirus restrictions.

Starting Friday, bars and nightclubs can open at full capacity again, meaning you can hit the dance floor of your favorite downtown club or head into the uptown dive that serves beer just the way you like it.

Likewise, there are no more capacity restrictions or waivers needed at the citys biggest sports venues. The seating restrictions were actually lifted in time for Thursday nights Nationals game, though it was rained out.

The next home games for the Mystics and D.C. United can be played in front of a full house when those teams host visiting squads next week.

Right now D.C. is estimated to have about 57.6% of its total population (and just under 70% of D.C.s adults) at least partially vaccinated, with about 48% fully inoculated against the coronavirus.

Like WTOP on Facebook and follow @WTOP on Twitter to engage in conversation about this article and others.

Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

2021 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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DC lifts the last of its coronavirus restrictions - WTOP

Dutchess County now has fewer than 100 active cases of coronavirus – The Daily Freeman

June 11, 2021

The number of active COVID-19 cases in Dutchess County is below 100 for the first time in almost 15 months.

Editors note: In the interest of public safety, critical coronavirus coverage is being provided free to all readers. Support reporting like thiswith a subscription to the Freeman.

The county reported Friday that it had 97 active cases of the coronavirus, down from the 102 it reported Thursday and the first sub-100 total since 98 cases were reported on March 22, 2020, less than two weeks into the local outbreak.

The Dutchess County caseload, like that in neighboring Ulster County, has been falling precipitously this year as vaccinations ramp up. Dutchess reported a pandemic high of 2,576 active cases of COVID on Jan. 16, just as vaccinations were starting.

Ulster Countypeaked at 2,622 active cases on Jan. 30. The number it reported Friday was just 33, though that was four more than the total reported the previous day.

Ulster has been under the 100-case mark since May 25.

In Dutchess County, there have been 29,460 confirmed cases of COVID since the local outbreak began in March 2020 and 445 COVID-related deaths. Dutchess reported no new deaths on Friday.

The county reported five-COVID-related hospitalizations on Friday, down one from the previous day, and said itslatest seven-day rolling average of positive test results was 0.48%.

Ulster County has had 15,198 confirmed cases of COVID since March 2020, including 14,901 recoveries and 264 deaths. Like Dutchess, Ulster reported no additional deaths on Friday.

Ulster's latest daily rate of positive test results is 0.9% (nine new diagnoses out of 991 test results).

According toNew York state's online vaccine tracker,109,188 Ulster County residents, or 61.1% percent of the population, had received at least one dose of a two-dose vaccine regimen as of Friday, and 97,550 (54.6%) had completed the vaccination series.

The state also said 70.9% of Ulster residents ages 18 and older had received at least one dose.

In Dutchess County, 164,653 residents, or 56.1% of the population, had received at least one dose as of Friday, and 144,374 (49.2%) were fully vaccinated, according to the state.

The state also said 65.9% of Dutchess residents 18 and older had received at least one shot.

New York state on Friday reportedjust one new case of COVID-19 in area school districts an off-site student of Kerhonkson Elementary School.

For online local coverage related to the coronavirus, go to bit.ly/COVID19DF.

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Dutchess County now has fewer than 100 active cases of coronavirus - The Daily Freeman

Live Updates: Latest News on Coronavirus and Higher Education – 6 hours ago – Inside Higher Ed

June 11, 2021

Student Mental Health Is Worse During COVID-19

June 11, 6:17 a.m. Another study has found that student mental health worsened during the pandemic, The Washington Post reported.

In the study, researchers tracked 217 students who were freshmen in 2017.

Prior to the pandemic, students stress levels rose and fell, usually in tandem with midterm and final exams. Since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, rates of depression and anxiety have soared.

-- Scott Jaschik

Rhodes to Charge Unvaccinated Students $1,500 a Semester

June 10, 6:20 a.m. Rhodes College will charge students who are not vaccinated against COVID-19 a $1,500 fee per semester, The Memphis Commercial Appeal reported.

The fees will cover testing costs.

"A campus-wide commitment to vaccination will mean that we can move towards full capacity and reduced masking allowing for the intentional in-person campus life experience that we all love about Rhodes," said Meghan Harte Weyant, vice president for student life. "We hope our students will choose to be vaccinated to keep themselves, our campus and community safe."

-- Scott Jaschik

Marquette to Require Students to Get Vaccines

June 8, 6:18 a.m. Marquette University announced that it would require students to be vaccinated against COVID-19, The Wisconsin State Journal reported.

It is the third Wisconsin private institution to require the vaccines. Beloit College and Lawrence University have also done so.

The University of Wisconsin system is not requiring vaccines at this time. Last week, Republicans held a hearing on a bill that would ban UW campuses and state technical colleges from requiring vaccines or mandating testing as a condition of being on campus.

-- Scott Jaschik

Stetson Offers Vaccinated Students Chance to Win Free Tuition

June 7, 6:06 a.m. Stetson University, a private institution in Florida, is giving two undergraduate students full tuition for one year as part of a COVID-19 vaccination incentive program.

Undergraduate students who provide proof of vaccination against COVID-19 by July25 will be eligible for a drawing to win one of two one-year, full-tuition awards. Vaccinated undergraduate and graduate students will also be eligible to win a $1,000 award in one of eight weekly drawings Stetson is hosting between June11 and July30. To be eligible for the drawings, students must be attending classes in person and be enrolled full-time.

Stetsons goal is for 70 to 80percent of its population to be vaccinated against COVID-19. As of Friday, 28percent of members of the university community had reported to Stetson they were fully vaccinated.

-- Elizabeth Redden

LSU Faculty Demand COVID-19 Vaccine Rule

June 3, 6:20 a.m. The Faculty Council at Louisiana State University has passed a resolution calling for the university to require all students to be vaccinated by the fall.

Kevin Cope, a faculty member, told WWL News, It has not been clear to the administration the depth at which the faculty feels anxiety or concern about the situation on campus.

However, state attorney general Jeff Landry sent a letter to university leaders saying a mandate would violate state and federal laws.

-- Scott Jaschik

Indiana U Will Require Vaccination, but Not Proof

June 2, 6:19 a.m. Indiana University on Monday announced that it will keep a vaccine requirement announced last month to fight COVID-19, but it will drop a requirement that students and employees provide proof that they have been vaccinated.

"As part of the accelerated exemption process, those receiving the vaccine are no longer required to upload documentation," the university announcement said. "Instead, they can certify their status as part of a simple attestation form that will be available on June2. Special incentives will be offered to those opting to upload documentation, as well. Details on the incentive program will be announced later this week."

The attorney general of Indiana last week said the university could not require people to submit proof that they have been vaccinated.

-- Scott Jaschik

Catholic U Is Only College in D.C. Without Vaccine Requirement

June 1, 6:15 a.m. Catholic University of America is the only college in Washington without a vaccine requirement, The Washington Post reported.

John Garvey, the universitys president, said he believes most people on campus will get vaccinated on their own before the fall semester starts. We found that 70percent of the community had already been vaccinated with at least one shot, and this was nearly a month ago, said Garvey, referencing a recent universitywide survey. It was clear we would get to 80, 85percent in a couple of months.

But some students are pushing for a requirement. I think its too big of a risk to not look into enforcing it, said Nathan Highley, a rising senior. When students are participating in the community, going to stores, going to restaurants, it puts those unvaccinated and elderly members of the community at risk.

-- Scott Jaschik

Indiana U Responds to Attorney General

May 28, 6:15 a.m. Indiana University responded Thursday to a ruling by Attorney General Todd Rokita that the institution could require all students, faculty members and other employees to get vaccinated against COVID-19, but not require them to demonstrate that they have been vaccinated.

A spokesman told WANE News, Indiana University is requiring the COVID-19 vaccine because its the only way the university can confidently return to the experiences and traditions our students, faculty and staff have told us are important to them: in-person classes, more in-person events and a more typical university experience. In yesterdays opinion, the attorney general affirmed that it is legal for us to require a vaccine, including one under an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA). His opinion questioned specifically the manner in which we gathered proof of vaccination. Although we disagree with that portion of his opinion, we will further consider our process for verifying the requirement.

-- Scott Jaschik

Indiana Attorney General Says IU May Not Require Proof of Vaccination

May 27, 6:16 a.m. Todd Rokita, the attorney general of Indiana, has ruled that Indiana University may not require students, faculty members and other employees at the university's campuses to demonstrate that they have been vaccinated against COVID-19.

The requirement of proof violates a new state law against any unit of state government requiring an "immunization passport," Rokita said.

However, the new law does not ban Indiana University from requiring vaccination, he said.

The new law "only prohibits public universities from requiring proof of the COVID-19 vaccine; it does not prohibit them from requiring the vaccination itself," Rokita said.

-- Scott Jaschik

North Carolina Governor Will Use COVID-19 Funds for Student Aid

May 26, 6:17 a.m. North Carolina governor Roy Cooper, a Democrat, has directed that $51.4million in COVID-19 relief funds from the federal government be used for student access to higher education.

The funds will primarily help community college students. Cooper will create the Longleaf Commitment program with $31.5million to guarantee that graduating high school seniors from low- and middle-income families receive at least $2,800 in federal and state grants to cover tuition and most fees at any of the states 58 community colleges.

The governor will also spend $5million to support mental health initiatives at state postsecondary institutions.

-- Scott Jaschik

Tulane to Pay $500 to Employees Who Get Vaccinated

May 25, 6:20 a.m. Tulane University announced that it will pay $500 to employees who show that they are completely vaccinated against COVID-19, 4WWL News reported.

Michael A. Fitts, president of Tulane, said that currently, 66percent of faculty and staff have reported their COVID-19 vaccination. The university wants to reach 90percent by July31. Part-time employees may receive $250.

Students are required to get the vaccine.

-- Scott Jaschik

Indiana U to Require Vaccine

May 24, 6:16 a.m. All students, faculty members and other employees at all Indiana University campuses will be required to get the COVID-19 vaccinations before the fall semester starts.

The move is relatively unusual for a public university in a conservative state.

"This new requirement will allow the university to lift most restrictions on masking and physical distancing this fall. Knowing that the vast majority of the IU community is vaccinated is the only way the university can confidently return to in-person classes, more in-person events and a more typical university experience," said a statement from the university.

-- Scott Jaschik

Washington State Public Four-Year Colleges Go Test Optional, Permanently

May 21, 6:18 a.m. Public four-year colleges in Washington State have gone test optional, permanently.

"The decision to move to permanent test-optional policies reaffirm our sectors commitment to reduce barriers for students. Further, as we enter a period of post-COVID-19 recovery, we continue our commitment to learn from this historic challenge and embrace long-term changes that best serve our students and state," said a joint statement from the provosts or vice president of academic affairs of the eight universities.

They are Central Washington, Eastern Washington, Washington State and Western Washington Universities, Evergreen State College and the Universities of Washington at Bothell, Seattle and Tacoma.

-- Scott Jaschik

Penn Health to Require Employee Vaccinations

May 20, 6:16 a.m. The University of Pennsylvania Health System, to set an example for those who remain hesitant, will require all employees to be vaccinated, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.

Most major employers in the area are encouraging but not requiring vaccinations.

That includes the University of Pennsylvania, which is requiring students but not employees to be vaccinated.

-- Scott Jaschik

Federal Judge Preserves Part of Suits Over Payments Last Spring

May 19, 6:17 a.m. A federal judge has preserved part of suits against the University of Delaware over last spring's period of remote instruction, the Associated Press reported.

Judge Stephanos Bibas ruled that the students are not entitled to sue over tuition. But he said suits over fees for student services were another matter. At a minimum, the fees claims are going to survive and proceed to discovery here, he said.

The university maintained that all payments should be exempt from suits. This is a contract and agreement Once your register, tuition and fees are due in full, a lawyer said.

But a lawyer for the plaintiffs said, They promised one thing, and didnt deliver it.

-- Scott Jaschik

Universities Lift Mask Requirements

May 18, 6:22 a.m. Many universities are lifting mask requirements.

Among them are: Mercer University, the University of Florida, the University of Tennessee at Knoxville and Weber State University.

-- Scott Jaschik

U System of Georgia Adjusts Mask Policy

May 17, 6:20 a.m. The University System of Georgia has adjusted its mask policy, WSBTV News reported.

In the fall, fully vaccinated employees and students will not be required to wear a mask while in class or at other activities.

Those who have not been vaccinated are "strongly encouraged" to continue wearing their masks inside.

-- Scott Jaschik

U of Rochester Develops App to Show Vaccine Status

May 14, 6:18 a.m. The University of Rochester has developed an app for students to demonstrate their confirmed vaccination status.

Students must supply the information to the university and then receive a green check mark to show.

The app is ready for use at commencement events.

-- Scott Jaschik

Penn State's Faculty Senate Calls for Mandatory Vaccines

May 13, 6:10 a.m. The Faculty Senate of Pennsylvania State University has voted -- 113 to 31 -- to require students and employees to be vaccinated by the fall, WTAJ News reported.

The vote is not binding on the administration. Provost Nicholas Jones said officials are currently working on incentives to get vaccinated.

So for students, were looking at opportunities to provide discounts at Penn State Eats and the bookstore. Were looking for drawings for resident hall students for free housing, upgraded meal plans, pizza parties, concert tickets, gift cards. For commuter students, drawings for meal plans, pizza parties, bakery gift boxes, snack boxes, concert tickets, gift cards, he said.

-- Scott Jaschik

U of Richmond Eases Restrictions

May 12, 6:16 a.m. The University of Richmond is moving from orange to yellow in its restrictions on campus Saturday, WRIC News reported.

Among the rules changes:

-- Scott Jaschik

UMass Faces Threat Over Suspension of Maskless Students

Read more:

Live Updates: Latest News on Coronavirus and Higher Education - 6 hours ago - Inside Higher Ed

Washington Offers Joints To Adults Who Get The COVID-19 Vaccine : Coronavirus Updates – NPR

June 11, 2021

Washington is offering free, pre-rolled joints to adults who get the COVID-19 vaccine. Here, a person smokes a joint in The Netherlands. Robin Van Lonkhuijsen/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

Washington is offering free, pre-rolled joints to adults who get the COVID-19 vaccine. Here, a person smokes a joint in The Netherlands.

Still anxious about getting the COVID-19 vaccine? Washington state is offering adults a relaxing new incentive marijuana joints.

The program, launched by the state's Liquor and Cannabis Board and named "Joints for Jabs," runs until July 12 and allows state-licensed dispensaries to give qualifying customers one pre-rolled joint at an in-store vaccination clinic.

Eligible participants must be 21 years old or older and have to have received their first or second dose during that visit.

This is only the latest among Washington's abundant vaccination incentives, which include free tickets to sports events and a lottery totaling up to $1 million. Just a few weeks ago, the Liquor and Cannabis Board announced an incentive that allows breweries, wineries, and restaurants to offer free drinks to vaccinated adults.

Washington's newest promotion reflects a multitude of unique vaccination incentives being offered across the country, and the state isn't the first to offer weed.

In exchange for proof of vaccination, an Arizona dispensary's "Snax for Vaxx" campaign provides free joints and edibles. In Washington, D.C., cannabis advocacy group D.C. Marijuana Justice distributed joints at vaccination sites on April 20.

As of June 9, nearly 49% of Washington residents have been fully vaccinated.

Josie Fischels is an intern on NPR's News Desk.

The rest is here:

Washington Offers Joints To Adults Who Get The COVID-19 Vaccine : Coronavirus Updates - NPR

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