Category: Corona Virus

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Vietnam Faces a Wave of Covid Cases and a Troubling New Variant – The New York Times

June 3, 2021

For more than 20 years, the husband and wife were stalwarts of their evangelical community: pastors who founded a small church in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, where they led services and distributed food and clothing to the needy.

Now, the couple are pariahs. They have been blamed by the authorities for a major coronavirus outbreak, are facing a criminal investigation and have been held accountable on social media for a lockdown in their neighborhood and a ban on religious services nationwide.

The Protestant pastors, Phuong Van Tan and Vo Xuan Loan, who are hospitalized with Covid-19, are accused by city health officials of allowing parishioners to pray together without wearing masks, a violation of coronavirus protocols that officials say resulted in an outbreak in May linked to more than 200 cases.

Vietnam has prided itself on successfully containing the coronavirus since the pandemic began. As the countrys neighbors tallied their dead and imposed nationwide lockdowns, the Vietnamese government kept the virus at bay by relying on strict quarantine measures, diligent contact tracing and localized lockdowns.

The Communist nation has recorded 7,572 cases and just 48 deaths since January of last year, according to a New York Times database. By contrast, nearby Malaysia, which imposed a national lockdown on Tuesday, has recently recorded higher case numbers in a single day.

But the church cluster in Ho Chi Minh City, outbreaks at factories in the countrys north and the emergence of a troubling new variant all suggest that Vietnams luck may be running out. More than half of the countrys cases have occurred in the past month.

Vietnam is now officially entering the pandemic, Tran Van Phuc, a doctor who posts frequently about the virus, wrote on Facebook. The next 12 months will be the most difficult in controlling the number of infections so as not to overwhelm the health system and limit the number of deaths.

Dr. Phuc said the countrys low rate of vaccinations combined with the new outbreaks place Vietnam in the position that many countries faced early last year.

On Monday, the government ordered a two-week lockdown of the Go Vap District of Ho Chi Minh City, home to about 700,000 people and the neighborhood in which the couples church, Revival Ekklesia Mission, is located. Residents were ordered to stay home as much as they could, work from home if possible, avoid other people and wear masks in public. A smaller part of the city, Thanh Loc Ward in District 12, was placed under the same order.

Large gatherings have been banned across the city, Vietnams most populous, and the government said it planned to test its nine million inhabitants.

Health officials believe that the church cluster started with Ms. Loan, who traveled to Hanoi, the capital, in late April and began experiencing symptoms about two weeks later. They contend that churchgoers gathered in close quarters for their services, did not wear masks and did not report their illnesses.

Ms. Loan, her husband, Mr. Tan, and the couples son, daughter and son-in-law are all hospitalized with the virus.

These days, in our hospital beds, we grieve both physically and mentally about what is going on, Mr. Tan, 60, wrote in a Facebook post, in which he asked for forgiveness. On behalf of the entire church, my wife and I, as pastors, would like to sincerely apologize to all the community.

Reached at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Ho Chi Minh City, where she is being treated, Ms. Loan, 65, contradicted the official account of her illness. She believes she contracted the virus after her return from Hanoi and was not the source of the cluster.

June 3, 2021, 12:25 p.m. ET

She also denied that parishioners gathered without wearing masks. She said the church had received a donation of 2,000 masks that she distributed to church members and neighbors.

It is not true, she said. I am the one who always asked people from my church to wear a mask. I brought masks to all the people of the church and to people in the community.

Ms. Loan and Mr. Tan founded the Revival Ekklesia Mission in the 1990s after the government dissolved the evangelical church where they had belonged. Theirs is one of many such small churches in Vietnam, which historically were harassed by the Communist government. But the authorities have gradually become more tolerant of religion, and the church received a government license in 2005.

The church is also their home. Before the pandemic, services attracted up to 50 people, Ms. Loan said.

The cluster at the church coincided with outbreaks elsewhere in Vietnam and the discovery of a dangerous new variant of the virus that combines traits of variants found earlier in India (recently renamed the Delta variant) and in Britain (now known as Alpha).

Officials say the variant found in Vietnam, which does not have a Greek letter appellation, becomes transmissible soon after infection and spreads easily through the air. Four cases of the variant have been identified through genetic sequencing, health officials said. They believe it is already widespread in the country and is partly to blame for the surge in cases. The current outbreak has now spread to at least 30 of Vietnams municipalities and provinces.

The new variant has not been detected in the church cluster. But five patients connected to the church were found to have the Delta variant, which itself is highly transmissible.

Larger clusters have been found in factories in two provinces in northern Vietnam where manufacturing for international companies is concentrated. Health officials said crowded, poorly ventilated workplaces contributed to the viruss spread.

Perhaps because of the governments past success in containing the virus, it has been slow to acquire vaccines. With a population of about 97 million people, Vietnam has administered just over one million doses so far, according to a New York Times database, one of the lowest rates in the world.

In recent weeks, officials have redoubled their efforts to procure vaccines and have called on businesses, organizations and the public to contribute ideas and money to speed up the process of importing them.

Vietnams president, Nguyen Xuan Phuc, said on Sunday that he had written a letter to President Biden praising his effort to make vaccines more available globally and proposing that the two countries strengthen cooperation in the research and production of Covid-19 vaccines, the local news media reported.

With the surge in infections, an attendant wave of fear has gripped the country, and the court of public opinion has weighed in to blame and criticize the pastors on social media. There, users accused the couple of polluting the community and operating an infectious society. Others called for Ms. Loan to be jailed.

Some in the community, however, said the government was making scapegoats of the couple when it should have done more to prevent the surge by curtailing travel in April, when infections began edging up.

They are also just victims of the pandemic, said Thuan Dang, 33, who was employed by a tour company until restrictions on the arrival of foreign tourists left him jobless last year.

The pastors daughter, Phuong Tuong Vi, said in a post on Facebook that the events had been traumatic and the insults hurtful. She said that church members always complied with the regulations and that health officials still have not pinpointed where the cluster originated. Even so, she said, her parents face the loss of the church that they built.

At this very moment, the state has not found the source of the infection, she said, and we are both victims and criminals.

Originally posted here:

Vietnam Faces a Wave of Covid Cases and a Troubling New Variant - The New York Times

McKee, RI Department of Health to hold coronavirus briefing at 1 pm – WPRI.com

June 3, 2021

Posted: Jun 3, 2021 / 11:36 AM EDT / Updated: Jun 3, 2021 / 12:36 PM EDT

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WPRI) For the first time since last year, Rhode Islands COVID-19 briefing will be held at the State House instead of at the Veterans Memorial Auditorium.

Gov. Dan McKee and the R.I. Department of Health are scheduled to hold their bi-weekly briefing at 1 p.m.

Watch the briefing live right here on WPRI.com and in the WPRI 12 news app.

McKee announced that COVID-19 briefings will now be held on a bi-weekly basis, along with bi-weekly briefings on issues unrelated to the pandemic.

The outdoor mask requirement for all Rhode Islanders, regardless of their vaccination status, was dropped on Wednesday by the governor.

The state also passed the milestone of over 550,000 people being fully vaccinated.

With more than half of Rhode Islands population now fully immunized, McKee announced at his last briefing that they would begin winding down operations at the mass vaccination sites in South Kingstown and Woonsocket.

McKee is expected to announce when the mass vaccination site at the Dunkin Donuts Center will begin ramping down at the briefing Thursday.

A school guidance timeline is also expected to be discussed.

The next COVID-19 briefing is scheduled for Thursday, June 17.

Read more here:

McKee, RI Department of Health to hold coronavirus briefing at 1 pm - WPRI.com

A Return to Normal? Not for Countries With Covid Surges and Few Vaccines. – The New York Times

June 3, 2021

BOGOT, Colombia In Colombia, nearly five hundred people a day have died of the coronavirus over the last three weeks, the nations most dramatic daily death rates yet. Argentina is going through the worst moment since the pandemic began, according to its president. Scores are dying daily in Paraguay and Uruguay, which now have the highest reported fatality rates per person in the world.

The vaccines are coming too late, said Mara Victoria Castillo, whose 33-year-old husband, Juan David, died in May as he waited for the Colombian government to extend shots to his age group.

Deep into the second year of the pandemic, the world is dividing along a powerful, and painful, line: Those who have vaccines, and those who do not.

As rich nations like the United States prepare for a return to normalcy at least half of the populations there and in Britain and Israel have received at least one dose of a vaccine, sending cases plummeting some poorer nations, scrambling for shots and heaving under weary health systems and exhausted economies, are seeing their worst outbreaks since the start of the pandemic.

This is the case in Malaysia, Nepal and other nations in Asia. But in few places is the situation as bleak as South America, which has the highest rate of new infections in the world, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. Uruguay, Argentina, Colombia and Paraguay have all ranked in the top 10 in cases per 100,000 residents over the past week.

Social networks in Paraguay have become obituaries in motion: Rest in peace professor, reads one. My mother has died, reads another, my heart is broken into a million pieces. In Argentina, in-person classes in Buenos Aires province, the countrys most populous district, have largely been called off as officials scramble to control cases.

Ms. Castillo said the death of her husband, a father of three, had left her so disillusioned that she has come to believe the globes only solution is God.

Six weeks ago, Claudia Lpez, the mayor of Colombias capital, Bogot, told residents they should ready themselves for the worst two weeks of their lives. But instead of reaching a peak, followed by a fall, new cases and deaths have surged and then stayed there.

Some governments Argentina, South Africa, Malaysia, Thailand and others have responded to the sharpening health crisis by putting new lockdowns in place. Others have given up on that strategy altogether. In late May, Ms. Lpez announced that the city would reopen on June 8, and that she was repealing nearly all movement restrictions related to the pandemic. All students should return to school that day, she added.

It sounds absolutely contradictory, from an epidemiological point of view, to have 97 percent ICU occupancy and to announce a reopening, she said, but from the point of view of the social, economic and political context, with deep institutional mistrust, unacceptable poverty, and unemployment that is especially affecting women and young people, it is necessary to do so.

In Colombia, rising virus cases and deaths have coincided with the largest explosion of social anger in the countrys recent history, bringing thousands of people to the streets to protest poverty exacerbated by the pandemic, among other issues, and prompting concern that the protest movement will spread throughout the region.

Experts say that the only way to stamp out the virus in these regions and the world is to rapidly increase vaccinations, which have raced ahead in the United States and Europe while lagging in many other countries around the world.

June 3, 2021, 12:25 p.m. ET

In North America, 60 vaccine doses have been administered for every 100 people, compared with 27 in South America and 21 in Asia, according to data from the Our World in Data project at the University of Oxford. In Africa, the rate is two doses per 100 people.

During a two-day trip to Costa Rica for meetings with Central American officials, U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken was asked repeatedly about American plans for vaccine distribution to the hard-hit region, where vaccination rates remain low.

In March, the Biden administration said it would send 2.5 million vaccine doses to Mexico and 1.5 million to Canada as a loan. By April, Mexico said it had received 2.7 million.

In all, President Biden has committed to distributing 80 million vaccine doses overseas by the end of June.

Appearing on Tuesday with Costa Ricas president, Mr. Blinken provided no specifics, but said the Biden administration would announce sometime in the next week to two weeks its plans for the process by which we will distribute those vaccines, what the criteria are, how we will do it. He later said the announcement could come as early as Thursday.

About 11 billion shots are needed to vaccinate 70 percent of the worlds population, the rough threshold needed for herd immunity, according to researchers at Duke University, but only a fraction of that number has been manufactured so far.

The Biden administration has also said it will donate $4 billion to Covax, a World Health Organization program that will supply vaccines to countries in need.

The reasons for the surges vary across countries, but together they reflect the challenge of maintaining vigilance against a highly transmissible, airborne virus for long periods of time, balanced against economic and social considerations, said Claire Standley, an assistant research professor at Georgetown University.

Globally, new infections have declined from their peak of more than 800,000 recorded cases a day in late April. Still, half a million people are reported infected with the virus daily, and there were more infections in the first five months of this year than in all of 2020.

As the pandemic drags on, countries that have kept cases low for more than a year, such as Australia and Singapore, are seeing pockets of new infections that have prompted partial lockdowns and further delayed plans to reopen borders.

Global vaccine access has been woefully inequitable, with a handful of high-income countries dominating procurement agreements and receipt of initial batches, Dr. Standley said.

Many less-wealthy countries have not received the vaccines they were promised.

Among them is Vietnam, which in 2020 kept infections low through rigorous quarantining and contact tracing. The Vietnamese government has ordered vaccines from multiple providers but received doses only from the Covax global vaccine center and the Russian government.

Barely one million people, or 1 percent of Vietnams population, have received even one shot, and the country is now experiencing its worst outbreak yet: 4,000 cases in the past month, more than the total in the previous 16 months.

In South America, countries that imposed lockdown measures found that they did not function as well as in the United States and Europe at stopping the spread of the virus because many low-income day laborers had to continue to work, said Matthew Richmond, a sociologist at the London School of Economics. As new outbreaks emerge, the regions lack of investment in medical care, especially in rural areas, has put health systems at risk of collapse and delayed the rollout of vaccines, he said.

The combined effect of social inequality and weak state capacity have meant these countries have not been able to reduce transmission, treat those with severe symptoms or vaccinate populations at the same scale or speed as in the United States and Europe, Dr. Richmond said.

As the United States and Europe barrel at least, seemingly toward a summer in which vaccinated people are once again able to hug, travel and host dinner parties, a sort of vaccine apartheid could emerge in which rich countries shut off travel with nations where the virus remains endemic, Dr. Richmond said. But the newest outbreaks underscore that as long as the virus circulates widely, border closures could mean little. And new variants could emerge that are more resistant to vaccines.

The ongoing devastation being wreaked by Covid-19 in the global south should be reason enough for the rich countries to want to enable a quick and cheap global vaccine rollout, Dr. Richmond said. If its not, enlightened self-interest should lead them to the same conclusion.

Reporting was contributed by Michael Crowley in San Jos, Costa Rica; Santi Carneri in Asuncin, Paraguay; Daniel Politi in Buenos Aires; and Sofa Villamil in Bogot, Colombia.

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A Return to Normal? Not for Countries With Covid Surges and Few Vaccines. - The New York Times

Coronavirus: What’s happening in Canada and around the world on June 2 – CBC.ca

June 3, 2021

The latest:

Ontario students will not be returning to school for the remainder of this academic year, Premier Doug Ford confirmed Wednesday.

He said while many of the stakeholdershe consulted last week suggested reopening schools on a regional basis, he said the medical input he got could not guarantee that sending kids back to in-person learning wouldn't lead to thousands of new COVID-19 cases in the province. He said the focus instead would be to get kids outdoors.

"I want schools to hostin-person outdoor graduation events and other opportunities for you to meet with your friends and reconnect outside before the end of the year," he said.

"It is unequivocally a wrong decision," said Dr. Barry Pakesof the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of Public Health, following the announcement. Pakestold the CBC's Andrew Nichols thatschools have never been a primary source of virus transmission in the population.

WATCH | Pakes reacts toFord's decision:

Ford said he is also hopeful that the province might be able to enter Stage 1 of reopening before mid-June as currently planned, depending on what public health officials advise.

Ontariohealth officials on Wednesday reported 733 new cases of COVID-19 and 25 additional deaths. Hospitalizations in the province stood at 708, with 576 people in ICU due to COVID-19.

Ontario's stay-at-home order lifted Wednesday, but most other public health measures remain in place.

-From CBC News and The Canadian Press, last updated at 1:10 p.m. ET

WATCH | Variant 1st seen in Indiaa 'major concern' for Canada, respirologist says:

As of 6p.m. ET on Wednesday, Canada had reported 1,385,279confirmed cases of COVID-19, with 29,277considered active. A CBC News tally of deaths stood at 25,612. More than24.5million vaccine doses havebeen administered so far across the country, with nearly 60 per cent of adults now immunized with at least one dose, according toCBC's vaccine tracker.

Nova Scotia entered the first phase of itsreopening plan on Wednesday, just hours beforeNewfoundland and Labrador residents learned the details of that province's plan to lift COVID-19 restrictions.

The first step in Nova Scotia reopens schools in most of the province and allows retail stores to operate at 25 per cent capacity and restaurant patios to reopen at maximum capacity. Schools in the Halifax and Sydney areas are set to open their doors on Thursday.

The province reported 17 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday and two additional deaths.The province has also confirmed its first case of a rare blood-clotting condition known as vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia a man in his 40s who received his first dose of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine in early May.

Officials say he developed symptoms about two weeks after vaccination and is recovering after receiving treatment.

Nova Scotia's five-step plan is based on vaccination rates and other healthindicators, including case numbers and hospitalizations, but a spokesperson for hotel operators is urging the government to add a "little bit of clarity" around timelines.

The shift in Nova Scotia came just hours beforehealth officials inNewfoundland and Labradoroutlined their plan for reopening.

Newfoundland and Labrador which will move through a multi-phase reopening plan tentatively set to begin with a transition period onJune 15reported 17 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday.

New Brunswickhealth officials reported 12 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday.The province had140 active reported cases of the infection with seven patients in hospital, including two in intensive care, officials said.

There were no new cases reported onPrince Edward Islandon Wednesday.

In Quebec, health officials reported 288 new cases of COVID-19 and five additional deaths on Wednesday.

Across the North, there were no new cases reported inNunavut, YukonortheNorthwest Territorieson Wednesday.

The Northwest Territories saidvisitors fromYukon are now exempt from its isolation requirements.

Northwest Territories residents and non-residents need to submit an exemption request to the public health office.Travellers applying for the exception must have been in Yukon or the Northwest Territories for at least 14 days.

InManitoba, where dozens of critical care patients have been transferred out of province for treatment, health officials on Wednesday reported 267new cases of COVID-19 and sixadditional deaths.

Alberta has also offered to help ease some of the stress on Manitoba's health-care system, and said it will take up to10 patientsat ICUs in Edmonton or Calgary.Forty-six patients have alreadybeen sent to Ontario and Saskatchewan.

Manitoba Health announced Wednesday that a 30-year-old man from the province who had been treated in an Ontario ICU since May 20 died of COVID-19.

Saskatchewan,meanwhile, reported 130new cases of COVID-19 Wednesday and one additional death. The update came one day after Premier Scott Moe said that the province's mandatory mask order could be lifted as early asJuly 11.

Health officials inAlbertareported four deaths and 410new cases onWednesday, nearly double the case number from the previous day. The government isfacing questionsabout a dinner attended by Premier Jason Kenney and three of his ministers, which appeared to break public health guidelines.

British Columbiahealth officials reported four deaths and 194 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, the second day in a row the province has recordedfewer than 200.

-From CBC News and The Canadian Press, last updated at 7 p.m. ET

As ofWednesday evening, more than171.5million cases of COVID-19 had been reported around the world, according to a database from Johns Hopkins University. The reported global death toll stood at more than 3.6million.

In theAmericas,U.S. President Joe Biden announced a "month of action" to urge more Americans to get vaccinated before the July 4 holiday, including an early summer sprint of incentives and a slew of new steps to ease barriers and make getting shots more appealing to those who haven't received them.

Biden is closing in on his goal of getting 70 per centof adults at least partially vaccinated by Independence Day essential to his aim of returning the nation to something approaching a pre-pandemic sense of normalcy this summer.

In theAsia-Pacificregion,50 days out from the Olympics,COVID-19 case numbers are still high and hospitals remain under strain despite a state of emergency inJapan. The country is also one of the least vaccinated in the world.

Still,Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga remains determined to host the Summer Games, already postponed for a year, and has extended the current emergency until June 20, a month before the Games are to start.

Taiwan reported a rise in domestic infections after six days of falls, and unveiled details of a mass vaccination plan that aims to eventually cover 1.7 million people a week.

In theMiddle East,Israel's Health Ministry said it found the small number of heart inflammation cases observed mainly in young men who received Pfizer's vaccine in Israel were likely linked to their vaccination.

InAfrica,Egypt aims to vaccinate 40 per centof its population against coronavirus by the end of 2021, the prime minister said in a televised address on Wednesday. By the end of Wednesday, 2.5 million people will have been vaccinated from a total of sixmillion people who signed up on the government's registration platform, Mostafa Madbouly said.

In Europe,French President Emmanuel Macron is moving up the COVID-19 vaccination schedule, saying youths aged12 to 18 can get inoculations starting June 15. The announcement came just three days after 18-year olds began getting vaccinated.

Spain's government and regional authorities have agreed to allow some bars and night clubs to reopen, 10 months after they closed nationwide.Health Minister Carolina Darias says low-risk regions could open their bars until 2 a.m. with 50 per centof indoor capacity, while bars in high-risk areas will remain closed.

-From The Associated Press and Reuters, last updated at 9:45p.m. ET

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Coronavirus: What's happening in Canada and around the world on June 2 - CBC.ca

Coronavirus Data for June 1, 2021 | mayormb – Executive Office of the Mayor

June 3, 2021

(Washington, DC) The Districts reported data for Tuesday, June 1, 2021 includes 11 new positive coronavirus (COVID-19) cases, bringing the Districts overall positive case total to 49,011.

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

Tragically, 1,135 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

49,011*

100

25,516

100

23,304

100

191

100

Unknown

64

<1

20

<1

39

<1

5

3

0-18

6,314

13

3,130

12

3,159

14

25

13

19-30

13,202

27

7,234

28

5,905

25

63

33

31-40

9,710

20

4,994

20

4,676

20

40

21

41-50

6,277

13

3,167

13

3,094

13

16

8

51-60

5,796

12

2,856

11

2,922

13

18

10

61-70

4,182

9

2,099

8

2,073

9

10

5

71-80

2,104

4

1,138

5

961

4

5

3

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Coronavirus Data for June 1, 2021 | mayormb - Executive Office of the Mayor

Exponential rise in Covid cases in DRC capital, reports WHO – The Guardian

June 3, 2021

The UNs health agency said on Thursday that it detected a surge of coronavirus cases late last month in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

An exponential rise in the spread of Sars-CoV-2 virus has been recorded in Kinshasa, the World Health Organization (WHO) said in a weekly report.

The rise mirrored a clear deterioration in the wider province of Kinshasa, it said.

A DRC health ministry official confirmed: The third wave of Covid-19 is already there its the Indian (Delta) and South African (Beta) variants.

This wave could be deadlier than the previous ones, the official said, blaming lax adherence to social distancing and face masks.

The WHO said the mortality rate across the country was unchanged at 2.5%, but noted concern about the presence of the Delta variant in Kinshasa.

Prof Jean-Marie Kayembe, a member of DRCs anti-coronavirus taskforce, told the UNs Radio Okapi that the region was in the third [wave] at the moment a conclusion, he said, that stemmed from rising numbers of cases and saturation of healthcare centres.

Kinshasa has a population of about 15 million people, many of whom live in poor, crowded conditions. So far, the city and DRC itself have been relatively spared from the impact of coronavirus compared with South Africa the worst-hit country in Africa and states in other continents.

However, the daily national figures have risen from several dozen cases in past weeks to 243 on Thursday. As of Wednesday, the DRC had recorded 32,176 confirmed cases of the disease, of which 789 were fatal.

The capital accounted for 22,348 of these cases, many of them concentrated in the wealthy district of Gombe, home to prosperous Congolese and travelling expatriates.

Thirty-two legislators and several aides to President Flix Tshisekedi are among those who have died.

Visit link:

Exponential rise in Covid cases in DRC capital, reports WHO - The Guardian

For the first time in over a year, the US records a daily average of fewer than 20,000 new Covid-19 cases – CNN

June 2, 2021

The daily average of new cases dropped to about 17,248 as of Monday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. However, that number might be lower than reality, as some cases from the weekend and the Memorial Day holiday might not have been reported yet. But now, the US is heading in the right direction, thanks to a powerful ally in the battle against the pandemic: Covid-19 vaccines.

"Cases, hospitalizations and deaths are all declining because of the millions of people who have stepped forward and done their part to protect their health and the health of their communities to move us out of this pandemic," US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said in a recent White House briefing.

"This is ... another clear piece of evidence that New York City is coming back strong," the mayor said. "Let's drive Covid out of New York City once and for all."

The US can push its Covid-19 numbers lower and help prevent Covid-19 outbreaks if more Americans are inoculated.

"We all have more work to do," White House Covid-19 Response Team senior adviser Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith said recently. "We have to continue to ensure everyone who is a 'yes' does not face barriers to vaccination."

Moderna seeks full FDA approval for its emergency authorized vaccine

While new Covid-19 cases keep dropping as more Americans get vaccinated, Moderna said Tuesday it's seeking full approval for its vaccine from the US Food and Drug Administration.

Since December, Moderna's two-shot vaccine has been distributed under an FDA emergency use authorization for Americans 18 and older.

On April 13, the company announced its vaccine maintained over 90% efficacy six months out -- the length of follow-up time needed to apply for FDA approval.

Moderna is the second company to seek such approval in the US. On May 7, Pfizer announced it was starting its own application for people 16 and older, following an April 1 announcement that its clinical trials showed over 91% efficacy after six months.

Experts say they expect vaccine protection will last much longer than six months, to be confirmed as more data comes in.

Moderna said it will keep submitting trial data "on a rolling basis over the coming weeks with a request for a Priority Review." A priority review asks the FDA to take action within six months, compared to the 10 months designated under standard review.

Both Pfizer and Moderna are also studying their vaccines in children as young as 6 months. Last month, the FDA granted Pfizer's vaccine an emergency use authorization for children 12 to 15.

Full FDA approval could motivate some vaccine-hesitant Americans to roll up their sleeves, according to research released Friday by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

"Frankly, the only real difference was in length of follow-up" for efficacy, Offit said.

"The effectiveness and efficacy data in the Phase 3 trials and now in the real world ... is excellent," Offit said.

The first big holiday with millions fully vaccinated

Meanwhile, for the first time in more than a year, millions of vaccinated Americans safely enjoyed close holiday gatherings without masks on Memorial Day.

In California, "it feels very, very close to normal," Santa Monica resident Bob Alfera said. "And it's nice to see people really all in a good mood."

Health experts hope vaccinations will blunt a post-holiday spike this year. But vaccines only work if people take them.

"It's great news that people can see their friends, they feel comfortable to travel because they're vaccinated," former Harvard Medical School professor William Haseltine said.

"The bad news is if you are not vaccinated, you are still at risk, and your risk is about as high as it was before."

Vacationers also enjoyed Miami Beach, Florida, over the weekend, but the mayor said he worried "too many people are coming" to the scenic city.

"The virus is still here," Mayor Dan Gelber said. "The volume of people that have been coming here is very unprecedented."

US sees lowest child case numbers in months

As of May 27, nearly 4 million children had tested positive for the virus since the pandemic's start.

Children made up between 6% and 19.6% of those who were tested for Covid-19, according to the states that reported numbers, and between 5.2%-34.6% of children tested were positive for the virus, depending on the state.

"At this time, it still appears that severe illness due to COVID-19 is rare among children," the report said. "However, there is an urgent need to collect more data on longer-term impacts of the pandemic on children, including ways the virus may harm the long-term physical health of infected children, as well as its emotional and mental health effects."

CNN's Michael Nedelman, Jen Christensen, Laura Ly, Rebekah Riess, Naomi Thomas, Sahar Akbarzai, Pete Muntean and Greg Wallace contributed to this report.

Excerpt from:

For the first time in over a year, the US records a daily average of fewer than 20,000 new Covid-19 cases - CNN

Coronavirus: Heres how much of California is fully vaccinated and the tier assignments as of June 1 – LA Daily News

June 2, 2021

As of Tuesday, June 1, the California Department of Public Healths vaccine dashboard showed about 46.2 million doses have been shipped throughout the state (1 million more than a week ago) and of those, 37.5 million have been administered.

Vaccinations in California

According to Bloombergs dashboard tracking vaccine distribution, 57% of Californias population has received at least one shot and 44.3% of residents are fully vaccinated (up from 41.7% a week ago). California has the highest daily rate of doses administered in the country at 163,850 down from 258,249 a week ago). The second-highest rate belongs to Texas with 97,462. California was administering about 350,000 doses per day a month ago.

Los Angeles (9.52 million), San Diego (3.42 million) and Orange (3.1 million) counties have administered the most doses to date in California.

Fully vaccinated by county

The chart below compiled by George Karbassis on the website ncovtrack.com shows the percentage of residents in each California county who have had at least one shot or are fully vaccinated. State, nation and world data is compiled on the site as well.

According to ncovtrack.com these are the percentages at which Southern California counties are fully vaccinated:

Los Angeles: 42.8%

San Diego: 47.11%

Orange: 44.09%

Riverside: 34.69%

San Bernardino: 31.56%

The map below is from the California Department of Public Healths COVID-19 vaccinations dashboard and shows vaccinations by ZIP code. Click on the image to go to the site. It may take a few minutes to load.

Vaccinations by age in California:

Data is update once a week on Wednesdays.

Tier assignments as of June 1

On April 6, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a plan to fully reopen Californias economy on June 15 if current COVID-19 trends hold. California would end its four-colored tier system at that point. Newsom has since said Californias mask mandate might be lifted on June 15 as well.

Until then, the state continues to make weekly adjustments to its tier system and, based on Tuesdays update changes take effect Wednesday none of Californias 58 counties remain in the purple tier (considered widespread risk). There will be 4 counties in the red tier (four less than a week ago); 35 counties in the orange tier (moderate risk, the same as week ago); and 19 in the yellow tier (minimal risk, four more than a week ago). There were just seven counties in the yellow tier a month ago.

On Nov. 24, the state had 41 counties in purple, 11 counties in red, four in orange, two in yellow.

Counties are assigned to a tier based on metrics showing the speed and the spread of the virus in their borders.

The states progression in tiers since Sept. 22:

Here are the California county vaccination totals as of June 1:

Here are the California county vaccination totals as of May 25:

Here are the California county vaccination totals as of May 4:

Here are the California county vaccination totals as of April 13:

Here are the California county vaccination totals as of April 6:

Here are the California county vaccination totals as of Feb. 22:

Sources: covid19ca.gov, California Department of Public Health, U.S. Census, U.S.D.A, California State Association of Counties

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Coronavirus: Heres how much of California is fully vaccinated and the tier assignments as of June 1 - LA Daily News

Southeast Asia’s coronavirus surge prompts shutdowns and alarm – Reuters

June 2, 2021

A sharp rise in coronavirus cases from new variants in parts of Southeast Asia that had been less affected by the pandemic has prompted new restrictions, factory closures and attempts to rapidly scale up vaccination programmes across the region.

The number of daily new COVID-19 cases in Malaysia has soared past India's on a per capita basis, while total cases in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and East Timor have all more than doubled in the past month.

Thailand, which was the second country to record infections after China, had won plaudits for containing its first wave of cases, but its death toll has risen ten-fold over two months - though at just over 1,000 is still low by global standards.

Adding to concerns, Vietnamese officials revealed the discovery over the weekend of a "very dangerous" combination of Indian and UK COVID-19 variants, which spreads quickly by air.

"COVID-19 infection rates are very alarming in countries across Southeast Asia," Alexander Matheou, Asia Pacific Director, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, told Reuters. "The more dangerous and deadly variants highlight the urgent need for much faster global sharing and manufacture of vaccines to contain this outbreak and to help avoid huge mass casualties."

In the absence of vaccines, containment is the priority.

Vietnam crushed earlier waves - and the country of 98 million has still suffered fewer than 50 deaths - but new distancing measures started in its business hub Ho Chin Minh City on Monday. read more

In the north of the country, factories supplying global tech firms such as Apple and Samsung are operating below capacity because of outbreaks, industry sources said.

Thailand's largest agribusiness, Charoen Pokphand Foods Pcl closed a poultry factory for five days after workers tested positive for COVID-19. Thousands more cases have been found at factories, construction sites and prisons.

As Malaysia ordered a "total lockdown" from Tuesday to stem the spread, officials said some factories could keep operating at reduced capacity. read more

SLOW VACCINATION

Malaysia has tried to step up its vaccination campaign, but fewer than 6% of people have received at least one dose of a vaccine - barely half the proportion in India.

Some Southeast Asian countries had placed less emphasis on vaccine procurement than Western countries or simply could not afford them and now have limited access.

"With a smaller segment of the population that is protected from vaccination, the vast majority of the population remains susceptible," said Teo Yik Ying, dean of the Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health at the National University of Singapore.

"The healthcare systems in several Southeast Asian countries are either at risk of being or already have been completely overwhelmed."

Only the wealthy city state of Singapore has comparable vaccination rates to Western countries with over 36% getting at least one injection, but the appearance of cases from new variants there has also prompted new closures this month.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong was due to outline a stragegy for opening up the country, whose economy depends on its place as a regional business and transport hub.

"The solution: testing, contact tracing, and vaccinating, all faster, and more," Lee said.

Health officials are also watching closely for any resurgence in Indonesia and the Philippines, the region's two most populous countries, which were both hit hard by the pandemic last year.

The Philippines recorded its highest number of daily infections in four weeks on Friday. Indonesia's seven-day average of new cases reached its highest in more than two months on Sunday.

A surge of cases has also been reported near Myanmar's Indian border - raising concerns about a health system that has collapsed since a Feb. 1 coup. read more

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Southeast Asia's coronavirus surge prompts shutdowns and alarm - Reuters

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