Category: Corona Virus

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‘Lab Leak’ Probe Welcomed But Many Scientists Still Believe It’s A Natural Virus : Goats and Soda – NPR

May 29, 2021

President Biden directed the intelligence agencies to look for evidence of an accident at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (pictured). Many scientists still think its more likely the virus came form the wild. Hector Retamal /AFP via Getty Images hide caption

President Biden directed the intelligence agencies to look for evidence of an accident at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (pictured). Many scientists still think its more likely the virus came form the wild.

This week, President Biden directed his intelligence agencies to take another look at whether the coronavirus resulted from a lab accident in China. For many, the announcement felt like a big change, putting what had been a conspiracy theory about the virus's origins back on the table.

But not much has changed for Robert Garry, a microbiologist at Tulane University who has analyzed the genome of the coronavirus. "Nothing's really tipped me or made me flip-flop or anything about it," he says. "I'm more convinced than ever that this is a natural virus."

Garry and many other scientists, including the President's chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci, continue to believe the preponderance of evidence points toward a natural source. That's been the case for every previous disease known to infect humans.

Nevertheless, this week's announcement has created room for what some researchers hope can be a more balanced discussion of the possibility of a laboratory accident. "I think it opens the door for other scientists to weigh in without being called conspiracy theorists," says Alina Chan, a geneticist at MIT's Broad Institute who has long argued for the laboratory theory to be more thoroughly considered.

A natural origin would be more in line with what's come in the past. "The historical basis for pandemics evolving naturally from an animal reservoir is extremely strong," Fauci told senators at a hearing earlier this week. Ebola, HIV and the major influenza viruses all came from nature, he said.

In the case of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, Garry sees parallels to another natural outbreak. Most of the first reported cases of this virus were in wet markets in the Chinese city of Wuhan. Wet markets were also central to the outbreak of the original SARS virus, which began spreading in the early 2000s.

Back then, the virus was traced quickly. "People got lucky," he says. "They were able to identify the restaurants the first cases ate at, and then go back to the wildlife farms where they'd bought the civets as it turns out." Those civets had been infected by bats.

The fact that nobody's pinpointed the source for the new coronavirus isn't particularly unusual, adds Garry. It can take years to figure out a source; the natural source of the Ebola virus remains a mystery, for example. But he thinks it's out there: "It's just a matter of time before we find the progenitor in a bat or some other species."

Ian Lipkin, at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University, is another researcher who's taken a hard look at the genetics of this virus. He says that there's no evidence for human manipulation. In fact, the way the virus infects people is so quirky, he thinks it couldn't have been made in a lab.

"We would not have known how to design this virus, even if we had wanted to do so," he says. "When I say 'we,' I really do mean the scientific community, whether we mean scientists in Europe or the U.S. or China, for that matter."

But he adds, it is still possible that a scientist in China could have found the coronavirus in nature and that a lab accident ensued. "It's possible that the virus was brought into the laboratory, that it was grown inside a cell line, that somebody became infected and left the laboratory inadvertently and carried the virus with them."

The laboratory in question, the Wuhan Institute of Virology, has collected viruses from bats in the field and has published some of the genetic sequences. So far, none have matched SARS-CoV-2.

Nevertheless, "both scenarios are still on the table," says geneticist Chan. Chan says she herself hasn't reached any conclusions about whether a lab is responsible: "There's nothing that's a smoking gun," she says.

The intelligence community is also unsure. In a brief statement, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence said that the nation's intelligence agencies believed both a lab accident and a natural outbreak were possibilities.

Most agencies did not reach a conclusion, while two supported the natural cause theory and one the lab leak with "low/medium confidence." That could mean that the intel is based on just a few sources, or on sources that are unreliable, says Eric Brewer, a former National Security Council staffer now at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "The bottom line is that there's a lot of uncertainty," he says.

Former President Trump frequently mentioned the lab leak theory without providing evidence, and Chan says that gave the discussion a political taint: "I was compared to insurrectionists and Qanon" for raising the possibility, she says.

She and other scientists had hoped a World Health Organization mission to China earlier this year might conduct a more serious examination of the theory. But it fell far short of her expectations because China obstructed investigators. "They always had to be chaperoned by people from the government, they were always being monitored," she says.

Chan was one of more than a dozen scientists who signed on to a letter in the journal Science calling for a more open look at the possibility the virus came from a lab. She welcomes the intelligence review that Biden ordered and believes it may be the only way, at this stage, to gather evidence on the origins of the coronavirus. "Will China suddenly become one of the most transparent countries on earth?" she says. "I cannot imagine how that will happen."

In the end, all three scientists agree that the available evidence is far from conclusive, and all welcome further investigation. The question of where the virus came from needs to be answered, says Chan. "Our lives depend on finding out how this virus got started," she says, "so we can prevent another one from getting started five to 10 years from now."

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'Lab Leak' Probe Welcomed But Many Scientists Still Believe It's A Natural Virus : Goats and Soda - NPR

Rise in U.K. coronavirus cases stokes concern over third wave – pressherald.com

May 29, 2021

LONDON The number of new coronavirus infections in the U.K. hit a near two-month high Friday as British regulators authorized the use of the single-dose vaccine from Johnson & Johnson.

The latest authorization, which takes the number of vaccines in the U.K.s armory to four, comes amid growing speculation that the new variant of the virus first identified in India may prompt the British government to delay its next planned easing of lockdown restrictions in England.

Government figures showed that another 4,182 new confirmed cases were reported across the U.K., the highest daily figure since April 1. The cases bring the total number of confirmed infections reported over the past seven days to 20,765, a 24 percent increase from the previous week. The rise prompted scientists to say the U.K. is now in the midst of a third wave of the pandemic.

The number of cases remains well below the daily high of nearly 70,000 recorded in mid-January, during the peak of the second wave, but the upward trend has raised questions about the U.K. governments plan to lift all remaining social restrictions on June 21. The government, which has lifted restrictions in stages and allowed pubs and restaurants to resume indoor service last week, has said it will make a decision on the next planned easing on June 14.

The variant identified in India is believed to be responsible for up to 75 percent of new cases in the U.K. and is more transmissible than the previously dominant strain of the virus.

Critics argue that the Conservative government is to blame for the variants seeding in the U.K. They say officials acted too slowly to impose the strictest quarantine requirements on everyone arriving from India, which is in the midst of a catastrophic resurgence of the virus.

Many scientists say the increase in cases is no surprise but that the rapid rollout of vaccines will provide a firewall in a country that has seen Europes highest virus-related death toll at more than 127,500. While the most vulnerable people should have vaccine protection, there are worries the virus could spread widely among younger adults.

As of Friday, 58 percent of the British population had received at least one vaccine dose and around 35 percent had gotten two shots. The U.K. vaccination program started with the oldest age groups and aims to have offered a jab to all adults by the end of July.

It seems almost certain that we will face a third episode of rising COVID-19 infections, said James Naismith, a professor of structural biology at the University of Oxford. It seems likely that the Indian variant will mostly confine itself to the unvaccinated younger population. It is much less likely to cause serious disease in this group. However, less likely is not the same as zero. With large enough numbers of infections, appreciable numbers will get seriously ill.

Also Friday, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency said the vaccine by Johnson & Johnson met the expected standards of safety, quality and effectiveness. The regulator previously authorized the two-dose regimens developed by Pfizer/BioNTech, AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford, and Moderna.

The regulator said the vaccine developed by J&J subsidiary Janssen has been shown to be 67 percent effective overall in preventing COVID-19 infection and 85 percent effective in preventing severe disease or hospitalization. It can be be stored at refrigerator temperatures of 36 to 47 degrees Fahrenheit, which the regulator said makes it ideal for distribution to care homes and other locations.

Details of which groups will get the vaccine have yet to be determined. There was speculation it might only be administered to older adults after it was linked to reports of rare blood clots.

The Johnson & Johnsons vaccine looks set to be used as part of the countrys planned booster program in the fall. The British government has amended its order from last year of 30 million J&J doses to 20 million.

As Janssen is a single-dose vaccine, it will play an important role in the months to come as we redouble our efforts to encourage everyone to get their jabs and potentially begin a booster program later this year, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said.

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Rise in U.K. coronavirus cases stokes concern over third wave - pressherald.com

Argentina records 41,080 new cases in one day as it happened – The Guardian

May 29, 2021

The first winner of Ohios first $1 million Vax-a-Million vaccination incentive prize was driving home when she received a call about the good news from the state governor Mike DeWine, AP reports.

A whirlwind, Abigail Bugenske, 22, said on Thursday morning during a news conference. It absolutely has not processed yet. I am still digesting it and I like to say that it feels like this is happening to a different person. I cannot believe it. Bugenske said she plans to donate to charities but then invest most of it.

The winner of a full college scholarship was eighth grader Joseph Costello of Englewood near Dayton. Very excited, Costello said as he sat between his parents, Colleen and Rich, during the virtual news conference. Although its a long way off, Joseph said hes thought about Ohio State or Miami of Ohio for college.

Bugenske said she received the Moderna vaccine as soon as she was eligible, long before the lottery was announced. The Costellos said they were already vaccinated and had planned to have their children vaccinated by the end of the month, but the lottery announcement inspired them to move those appointments up.

During a scheduled visit to Cleveland, the US president Joe Biden said, Ohio has a new millionaire! I tell you what, who wouldathunk it, a million bucks for getting a vaccine? But its working.

More than 2.7 million adults signed up for the $1 million prize and more than 104,000 children aged 12-17 entered the drawing for the scholarship, which includes tuition, room and board, and books. Four more $1 million and college scholarship winners will be announced each Wednesday for the next four weeks.

DeWine, a Republican, announced the program May 12 to boost lagging vaccination rates.

The Ohio Lottery conducted the first drawing Monday afternoon at its draw studio in Cleveland using a random number generator to pick the winners ahead of time, and then confirmed the eligibility of the ultimate winner.

Participants must register to enter by phone or via the Vax-a-Million website. Teens can register themselves, but parents or legal guardians must verify their eligibility. The names of entrants who dont win will be carried over week to week. The deadline for new registrations is just before midnight on Sunday.

I know that some may say, DeWine, youre crazy! This million-dollar drawing idea of yours is a waste of money, the governor said when he announced the incentive. But with the vaccine now readily available, the real waste, is a life lost to Covid-19, the governor said.

The concept seemed to work, at least initially. The number of people in Ohio aged 16+ who received their first dose jumped 33% in the week after the state announced the lottery, according to an Associated Press analysis.

But the same review also found that vaccination rates are still well below figures from earlier in April and March.

More than 5.2 million people in Ohio had at least started the vaccination process as of Monday, or about 45% of the state. About 4.6 million people are done getting vaccinated, or 39% of the state.

Nationally, more than 165 million Americans have started the vaccination process, or about nearly 50% of the population. More than 131 million are fully vaccinated, or nearly 40%.

Vax-a-Million is open to permanent Ohio residents who have received either the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine or their first part of the two-dose Pfizer or Moderna vaccination.

DeWines proposal inspired similar vaccine-incentive lotteries in Colorado, Maryland, New York state and Oregon.

In Colorado, the Democratic governor Jared Polis said the state will have a weekly lottery for five residents to win $1 million to incentivise vaccinations. Colorado is setting aside $5 million of federal coronavirus relief funds that would have gone toward vaccine advertising for five residents to win $1 million each.

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Argentina records 41,080 new cases in one day as it happened - The Guardian

Majority of MLB teams have relaxed coronavirus protocols as two more join list – ESPN

May 29, 2021

A majority of Major League Baseball's 30 teams have been able to relax coronavirus protocols after two additional clubs qualified and raised the total to 16 franchises reaching 85% vaccinations for players and other on-field personnel.

However, the pace of vaccinations has slowed markedly.

The commissioner's office and players' association said Friday that three additional teams had reached the 85% level of having received final doses and would be able to relax protocols within the next two weeks once they are fully vaccinated. The teams were not identified.

1 Related

Relaxed protocols include dropping the requirements for face masks in dugouts and bullpens and loosening restrictions on mobility during road trips.

MLB said more than 84% of all Tier 1 individuals -- such as players, managers, coaches, trainers and support personnel -- had been partially or fully vaccinated, up just 0.1% from the previous week, and 81.2% had been fully vaccinated, up 2.4% from the previous week.

This season, there have been 62 positive COVID-19 tests -- from 34 players and 28 staff -- among 176,260 samples tested, a 0.035% positive rate. The positive tests are among 23 teams.

Also Friday, the Philadelphia Phillies said they will return to 100% capacity at Citizens Bank Park for their June 4 game against the Washington Nationals. Philadelphia had said May 13 that they would reach full capacity June 12 against the New York Yankees. The change allows full houses for six additional games.

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Majority of MLB teams have relaxed coronavirus protocols as two more join list - ESPN

Here’s why schools are on alert over new coronavirus variants – CNN

May 29, 2021

The UK outbreaks are still relatively small, but they serve as a cautionary tale for countries across the world that are returning to in-person education.

Scientists believe some of the new variants of the virus, including the B.1.617.2 variant first identified in India, might be more contagious. That could mean social distancing measures that were strong enough to prevent the spread of the "original" virus may not be sufficient to stop transmission of these new strains.

As more schools reopen and new variants become dominant, outbreaks among younger students may become inevitable. Children are currently excluded from vaccination programs in most of the world. Even in the US, one of the few countries currently vaccinating younger people, children under the age of 12 are not eligible for the shot.

As of Tuesday, the B.1.617.2 variant had been found in 54 countries, according to the World Health Organization. While the variant remains uncommon in the US, its share of cases overall is growing, data from the CDC show.

On May 11, the WHO said the United Kingdom had reported the largest number of cases of the strain outside India, although it cautioned that the data may be incomplete, since it depends on countries' abilities to conduct genetic sequencing.

Public Health England says the proportion of B.1.617.2 cases is growing fast.

Two towns in the north of the country, Bolton and Bradford, have seen major outbreaks of the strain in recent weeks.

Kit Yates, a mathematical biologist and senior lecturer at the University of Bath, said the number of cases among children between the ages of 10 and 14 has never been higher in Bolton.

Yates said the three worst-impacted age groups in the area are all children and teenagers, with most cases recorded in kids between the ages of 10 and 14, followed by those aged 15 to 19 and then those in the five to nine age bracket.

"The rates of infection seem highest among school-age children, where rises were seen earlier, and this now appears to be spreading to older age groups" in areas with B.1.617.2 outbreaks, said Deepti Gurdasani, an epidemiologist and senior lecturer at Queen Mary University in London.

Schools could be driving outbreaks

"The variant seems to have spread among children first, and became dominant among children, before gaining dominance in other age groups," she said.

What experts don't yet know is whether the high number of cases among children means they might be more susceptible to the new variants, or whether there is something about the school environment that makes the new variants spread more easily.

Schools have been open as normal in the UK since March, with attendance compulsory for all but the most vulnerable students. Meanwhile, many other restrictions remain in place, so schools are among the few places where people are mixing freely.

"We did see rises in prevalence [in] school-age children when schools first went back [in March]," Yates said. "This is probably as a result of large numbers of unvaccinated individuals being in close contact with each other indoors for long periods of time," he added.

The UK is now vaccinating people over the age of 32. Official data from the government show that more than 72% of adults have received at least one dose of the vaccine, with 44% now classed as fully vaccinated.

"You may see a skew in the age distribution of cases; as you get higher levels of vaccination in the elderly, you're more likely to see younger people getting infected," said Mike Tildesley, an associate professor at the University of Warwick. "I mean, it's not going to increase the number in that age group to compensate, but it may be that you see an increased proportion."

Jason Oke, senior statistician at the Nuffield department of primary care health sciences at the University of Oxford, said outbreaks in schools might continue for some time, because it is unlikely the virus will be completely eliminated any time soon.

"I might be pessimistic, but I think there are always going to be little pockets, places where it can spread quickly and it's difficult to see how we can overcome that, other than taking children out of schools, which I don't think we really want to do," he said, adding that while there are children with underlying health conditions who are more at risk from the virus, Covid-19 isn't dangerous to most children.

The biggest risk stemming from school outbreaks is that children will bring the virus home and spread it to more vulnerable people, but that risk is being eliminated fast with vaccinations.

Worries in Singapore

The UK isn't the only country seeing new cases among children. Singapore, which has also identified cases of the B.1.617.2 variant, shut nearly all its schools last week after a handful of new cases emerged there. Announcing the closures, the country's education minster Chan Chun Sing said there were worries about the new strains affecting younger children.

However, the ministry later said on its official Facebook page that there was little evidence children are more prone to catching the new variant.

The UK government doesn't appear too concerned about the variants spreading in schools -- so far, at least. As of last week, the government no longer requires masks to be worn in schools.

Gurdasani said the decision to lift the mask mandate went directly against scientific advice.

"It's very concerning that the UK government, which claims to be 'following the data,' has completely ignored the data and decided to remove masks from schools against all scientific advice," Gurdasani said. "We see several school outbreaks and rapid spread among school-age children across parts of England ... it's clear that we need to be strengthening these mitigations, rather than weakening them."

Some experts say it is possible the increase in cases in schools looks dramatic because the UK has significantly expanded its coronavirus testing program, with all children aged 12 and over now tested twice a week -- even if they don't show any symptoms.

"We've got really good testing capabilities to detect cases that maybe we missed before, in the younger age groups who perhaps don't even have any symptoms," said statistician Oke.

And while there have been significant spikes in infections among children in Bolton and other areas affected by the B.1.617.2 variant, little is known about how serious these cases have been.

"We don't know anything about the cases clinically -- we don't know if they've got symptoms, we don't know if people are unwell, we might be picking up lots of mild, asymptomatic cases," he said.

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Here's why schools are on alert over new coronavirus variants - CNN

Study finds majority of severe Covid-19 cases had longterm symptoms, as officials race to vaccinate – CNN

May 27, 2021

All these promising signs suggest the summer of 2021 could be very different from a year ago.

Half of the adult population is now fully vaccinated, according to data published Wednesday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In the past week, the US averaged about 28,000 daily new cases, a 19% drop compared to the previous week, according to the CDC.

However, a new study underscored the importance of vaccinating more people as it detailed how some of those who had Covid-19 can suffer from symptoms months later.

Researchers from Stanford University conducted a review of 45 existing studies that followed 9,751 patients in the months after a Covid-19 infection. They found 73% of the patients had at least one symptom 60 days after diagnosis, symptom onset or hospital admission. That finding was consistent even in studies that followed patients up to six months.

The researchers also found across the studies that 40% of participants experienced fatigue, 36% had shortness of breath and another 25% reported an inability to concentrate, often referred to as brain fog.

"We had no data on individuals who got Covid-19 and simply went about their day, so we don't want to cause a lot of alarm with the value of 73% of people experiencing long-term outcomes," Tahmina Nasserie, a Ph.D. candidate in epidemiology and population health at Stanford University and the lead author of the study, told CNN. "We want people to understand that these are mainly hospitalized so we can only generalize our findings for that particular population."

Race to vaccinate

During a Wednesday subcommittee hearing of the House Committee on Appropriations, CDC officials were asked what keeps them up at night.

"Variants, and the concern that people won't get vaccinated and the fact that we're not serving everybody in the country equally," Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky responded.

Dr. Anne Schuchat, the CDC's principal deputy director, added: "I think we have to remember the rest of the world and that while it's getting better here there are many places at risk -- so until we're all out of this, none of us are out of this."

Health experts have recently turned their focus to persuading young people to get vaccinated.

Young children when they become infected are less likely to have serious disease compared to an elderly person or a person who has an underlying health condition, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

However, they "are not exempt from getting serious illness," he said during President Joe Biden's YouTube town hall on Covid-19 vaccination. "So you want to protect the youngsters, be they adolescents, be they young children."

Country continues to reopen

For many Americans, the Memorial Day holiday weekend marks the start of the summer season -- and experts are increasingly hopeful given the trend of fewer Covid cases and more vaccinations.

"It means a lot. It means that the summer is looking bright," said Dr. Monica Gandhi, professor of medicine and associate division chief of the division of HIV, infectious diseases and global medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

And local leaders are gearing up for a possibly near-normal summer.

New Orleans on Friday will begin expanding how people are allowed to gather, including opening gyms at 100% capacity.

Large indoor events will be allowed at 50% capacity without masks and distancing, 100% capacity with masks required, or 100% capacity without masks if people provide proof of vaccination or a negative Covid-19 test within 72 hours.

For large outdoors events, 75% capacity will be allowed without masks and distancing, 100% capacity with masks required, or 100% capacity without masks if people provide proof of vaccination or a negative test within 72 hours.

National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell said the league expects full stadiums for all 32 teams next season.

"We do think it will be a much more normal experience than it has," Goodell said on a conference call on Wednesday.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy announced on Monday that MetLife Stadium, home of the New York Jets and Giants in East Rutherford, would be permitted to operate at full capacity next season.

In Kentucky, Gov. Andy Beshear announced that in-person visitation at all of Kentucky's Department of Corrections state prisons and Department of Juvenile Justice facilities will resume the week of June 20.

The new in-person visitation guidelines only apply to 14 state prisons and not to county jails. Visitors will have to schedule their visitation in advance, Beshear said.

As of earlier this week, 76% of adult inmates housed in state custody have been vaccinated.

"And so, to those in custody -- good for you! Good for you! I know you've seen the harms of this virus and thank you for responding in such a responsible way," the governor said.

CNN's Ryan Prior, Jamiel Lynch, Rebekah Riess, Gregory Lemos, Jacob Lev and Stephen Collinson contributed to this report.

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Study finds majority of severe Covid-19 cases had longterm symptoms, as officials race to vaccinate - CNN

Immunity to the Coronavirus May Persist for Years, Scientists Find – The New York Times

May 27, 2021

Immunity to the coronavirus lasts at least a year, possibly a lifetime, improving over time especially after vaccination, according to two new studies. The findings may help put to rest lingering fears that protection against the virus will be short-lived.

Together, the studies suggest that most people who have recovered from Covid-19 and who were later immunized will not need boosters. Vaccinated people who were never infected most likely will need the shots, however, as will a minority who were infected but did not produce a robust immune response.

Both reports looked at people who had been exposed to the coronavirus about a year earlier. Cells that retain a memory of the virus persist in the bone marrow and may churn out antibodies whenever needed, according to one of the studies, published on Monday in the journal Nature.

The other study, posted online at BioRxiv, a site for biology research, found that these so-called memory B cells continue to mature and strengthen for at least 12 months after the initial infection.

The papers are consistent with the growing body of literature that suggests that immunity elicited by infection and vaccination for SARS-CoV-2 appears to be long-lived, said Scott Hensley, an immunologist at the University of Pennsylvania who was not involved in the research.

The studies may soothe fears that immunity to the virus is transient, as is the case with coronaviruses that cause common colds. But those viruses change significantly every few years, Dr. Hensley said. The reason we get infected with common coronaviruses repetitively throughout life might have much more to do with variation of these viruses rather than immunity, he said.

In fact, memory B cells produced in response to infection with SARS-CoV-2 and enhanced with vaccination are so potent that they thwart even variants of the virus, negating the need for boosters, according to Michel Nussenzweig, an immunologist at Rockefeller University in New York who led the study on memory maturation.

People who were infected and get vaccinated really have a terrific response, a terrific set of antibodies, because they continue to evolve their antibodies, Dr. Nussenzweig said. I expect that they will last for a long time.

The result may not apply to protection derived from vaccines alone, because immune memory is likely to be organized differently after immunization, compared with that following natural infection.

That means people who have not had Covid-19 and have been immunized may eventually need a booster shot, Dr. Nussenzweig said. Thats the kind of thing that we will know very, very soon, he said.

Upon first encountering a virus, B cells rapidly proliferate and produce antibodies in large amounts. Once the acute infection is resolved, a small number of the cells take up residence in the bone marrow, steadily pumping out modest levels of antibodies.

To look at memory B cells specific to the new coronavirus, researchers led by Ali Ellebedy of Washington University in St. Louis analyzed blood from 77 people at three-month intervals, starting about a month after their infection with the coronavirus. Only six of the 77 had been hospitalized for Covid-19; the rest had mild symptoms.

Antibody levels in these individuals dropped rapidly four months after infection and continued to decline slowly for months afterward results that are in line with those from other studies.

Some scientists have interpreted this decrease as a sign of waning immunity, but it is exactly whats expected, other experts said. If blood contained high quantities of antibodies to every pathogen the body had ever encountered, it would quickly transform into a thick sludge.

Instead, blood levels of antibodies fall sharply following acute infection, while memory B cells remain quiescent in the bone marrow, ready to take action when needed.

Dr. Ellebedys team obtained bone marrow samples from 19 people roughly seven months after they had been infected. Fifteen had detectable memory B cells, but four did not, suggesting that some people might carry very few of the cells or none at all.

It tells me that even if you got infected, it doesnt mean that you have a super immune response, Dr. Ellebedy said. The findings reinforce the idea that people who have recovered from Covid-19 should be vaccinated, he said.

Five of the participants in Dr. Ellebedys study donated bone marrow samples seven or eight months after they were initially infected and again four months later. He and his colleagues found that the number of memory B cells remained stable over that time.

The results are particularly noteworthy because it is difficult to get bone marrow samples, said Jennifer Gommerman, an immunologist at the University of Toronto who was not involved in the work.

A landmark study in 2007 showed that antibodies in theory could survive decades, perhaps even well beyond the average life span, hinting at the long-term presence of memory B cells. But the new study offered a rare proof of their existence, Dr. Gommerman said.

Dr. Nussenzweigs team looked at how memory B cells mature over time. The researchers analyzed blood from 63 people who had recovered from Covid-19 about a year earlier. The vast majority of the participants had mild symptoms, and 26 had also received at least one dose of either the Moderna or the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

So-called neutralizing antibodies, needed to prevent reinfection with the virus, remained unchanged between six and 12 months, while related but less important antibodies slowly disappeared, the team found.

As memory B cells continued to evolve, the antibodies they produced developed the ability to neutralize an even broader group of variants. This ongoing maturation may result from a small piece of the virus that is sequestered by the immune system for target practice, so to speak.

A year after infection, neutralizing activity in the participants who had not been vaccinated was lower against all forms of the virus, with the greatest loss seen against the variant first identified in South Africa.

Vaccination significantly amplified antibody levels, confirming results from other studies; the shots also ramped up the bodys neutralizing ability by about 50-fold.

Senator Rand Paul, Republican of Kentucky, said on Sunday that he would not get a coronavirus vaccine because he had been infected in March of last year and was therefore immune.

But there is no guarantee that such immunity will be powerful enough to protect him for years, particularly given the emergence of variants of the coronavirus that can partially sidestep the bodys defenses.

The results of Dr. Nussenzweigs study suggest that people who have recovered from Covid-19 and who have later been vaccinated will continue to have extremely high levels of protection against emerging variants, even without receiving a vaccine booster down the line.

It kind of looks exactly like what we would hope a good memory B cell response would look like, said Marion Pepper, an immunologist at the University of Washington in Seattle who was not involved in the new research.

The experts all agreed that immunity is likely to play out very differently in people who have never had Covid-19. Fighting a live virus is different from responding to a single viral protein introduced by a vaccine. And in those who had Covid-19, the initial immune response had time to mature over six to 12 months before being challenged by the vaccine.

Those kinetics are different than someone who got immunized and then gets immunized again three weeks later, Dr. Pepper said. Thats not to say that they might not have as broad a response, but it could be very different.

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Immunity to the Coronavirus May Persist for Years, Scientists Find - The New York Times

Biden Asks U.S. Intel To Push For Stronger Conclusions On The Coronavirus’ Origins – NPR

May 27, 2021

A laboratory building at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China, is seen on May 13, 2020. Hector Retamal/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

A laboratory building at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China, is seen on May 13, 2020.

President Biden said on Wednesday that he has asked the U.S. intelligence community to push to get closer to a "definitive conclusion" on how the pandemic started.

In a statement, Biden said the intelligence community has "coalesced around two likely scenarios" that the coronavirus either came from human contact with an infected animal, or from a laboratory accident in Wuhan, China.

He said most intelligence entities don't believe there's sufficient information to reach a conclusion about the virus' origins, and the three intel entities that lean toward one explanation or another only have "low or moderate confidence" in their conclusions.

"As of today, the U.S. Intelligence Community has 'coalesced around two likely scenarios' but has not reached a definitive conclusion on this question," Biden said in the statement. He added: "I have now asked the Intelligence Community to redouble their efforts to collect and analyze information that could bring us closer to a definitive conclusion, and to report back to me in 90 days."

He said he wants intel officials to identify "areas of further inquiry," including from China, and the United States would continue to push China to provide access to data.

"Back in early 2020, when COVID-19 emerged, I called for the CDC to get access to China to learn about the virus so we could fight it more effectively," he said. "The failure to get our inspectors on the ground in those early months will always hamper any investigation into the origin of COVID-19."

"Lab leak" theory

The first known cases of the novel coronavirus came from Wuhan, where there is a lab, the Wuhan Institute of Virology, that works with bat coronaviruses.

The notion that the virus had "escaped" from the lab that there had been some sort of accident and then someone got sick emerged in the early days of the pandemic, but was largely dismissed as highly unlikely by most scientists.

Some researchers and far-right commentators latched onto the idea, however, and the theory spread, especially in conservative news circles and among Republicans.

Former President Donald Trump, long a purveyor of right-wing conspiracies, also bought into the idea that the coronavirus had come from a lab accident and spent much of the remaining months of his administration criticizing China for allowing it to spread, occasionally employing racist language to describe the virus.

Recent reporting from the Wall Street Journal, which cited a U.S. intelligence report that said three Wuhan Institute researchers became sick enough in November 2019 to seek hospital care, has refocused attention on the lab leak theory.

"Now everybody is agreeing that I was right when I very early on called Wuhan as the source of COVID-19," Trump said in a statement Tuesday.

Most scientists continue to think the virus is more likely to be natural in origin.

"I feel the likelihood is still high that this is a natural occurrence," Dr. Anthony Fauci, Biden's chief medical adviser, told Congress Wednesday, "but since we cannot know 100% whether it is or is not, other possibilities exist and for that reason, I and my colleagues have been saying that we're very much in favor of a further investigation."

In a statement Wednesday, a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in the U.S. wrote the lab leak theory off as nothing more than a smear campaign.

"Lately, some people have played the old trick of political hype on the origin tracing of COVID-19 in the world. Smear campaign and blame shifting are making a comeback, and the conspiracy theory of 'lab leak' is resurfacing," the person said.

"Since the outbreak of COVID-19 last year, some political forces have been fixated on political manipulation and blame game, while ignoring their people's urgent need to fight the pandemic and the international demand for cooperation on this front, which has caused a tragic loss of many lives."

In March, following an investigation on the ground in China, the World Health Organization released a joint report with Beijing on the origins of the pandemic that concluded that the lab leak hypothesis was "extremely unlikely."

But WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus responded that he didn't believe the team's assessment of the lab leak possibility was extensive enough.

Biden wants to "press" China

Biden in his Wednesday statement said the U.S. would continue to work to ascertain the origins of the pandemic.

He added: "The United States will also keep working with like-minded partners around the world to press China to participate in a full, transparent, evidence-based international investigation and to provide access to all relevant data and evidence."

Adam Schiff, D-Calif., chair of the House Intelligence Committee, said the panel continues to review the United States' findings in relation to the origins of the virus and sharply criticized China for its "obstruction" of the investigation.

"Beijing's continued obstruction of a transparent, comprehensive examination of the relevant facts and data about the source of the coronavirus can only delay the vital work necessary to help the world better prepare itself before the next potential pandemic," Schiff said in a statement. "Nonetheless, I am confident that the [intelligence community] and other elements of our government will continue to pursue all possible leads and provide an updated, evidence-based finding in line with the President's 90-day requirement. It is critical that we allow the [intelligence community], and other scientific and medical experts, to objectively weigh and assess all available facts, and to avoid any premature or politically-motivated conclusions."

NPR's Geoff Brumfiel contributed reporting.

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Biden Asks U.S. Intel To Push For Stronger Conclusions On The Coronavirus' Origins - NPR

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 27 May – World Economic Forum

May 27, 2021

1. How COVID-19 is affecting the globe

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have passed 168.4 million globally, according to Johns Hopkins University. The number of confirmed deaths stands at more than 3.49 million. More than 1.74 billion vaccination doses have been administered globally, according to Our World in Data.

France has joined Germany and Austria in imposing a mandatory quarantine period on arrivals from Britain. It comes as the variant first detected in India spreads in the UK.

India has recorded 211,298 new COVID-19 cases, with 3,847 new deaths.

The US Food and Drug Administration has given emergency use authorization to an antibody treatment developed by Vir Biotechnology and GlaxoSmithKline for treating mild-to-moderate COVID-19 in people 12 and over.

Roughly 15% of Brazil's 210 million people have COVID-19 antibodies, researchers said yesterday.

The Philippines will authorize the use of the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for children aged 12-15, the head of its Food and Drugs Administration has said.

France's average daily number of new COVID-19 cases has fallen to its lowest level since mid-September.

Many people who've been infected with COVID-19 will make antibodies for the rest of their lives, according to a new study published in Nature.

The vaccine rollout remains uneven.

Image: Our World in Data

2. Victoria, Australia to enter COVID-19 lockdown

The Australian state of Victoria will enter a one-week COVID-19 lockdown, which will require residents to remain at home except for essential business. It comes as authorities race to contain an outbreak.

"We're dealing with a highly infectious strain of the virus, a variant of concern, which is running faster than we have ever recorded," Victoria Acting Premier James Merlino told reporters in Melbourne.

"Unless something drastic happens, this will become increasingly uncontrollable."

The cluster of cases in Melbourne has risen to 26, with the number of virus-exposed sites rising to more than 150.

Several infected people had visited crowded areas in the city, including sports stadiums and a large shopping centre.

As part of work identifying promising technology use cases to combat COVID, The Boston Consulting Group recently used contextual AI to analyze more than 150 million English language media articles from 30 countries published between December 2019 to May 2020.

The result is a compendium of hundreds of technology use cases. It more than triples the number of solutions, providing better visibility into the diverse uses of technology for the COVID-19 response.

To see a full list of 200+ exciting technology use cases during COVID please follow this link.

3. COVID-19 deaths in the Americas might be higher than reported

The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) has warned that the real number of COVID-19 deaths in the Americas might be higher than official statistics show. Almost half of global deaths from COVID-19 have been reported in the region.

"According to new projections, many more people are dying from COVID complications or from the pandemic's indirect impacts, like disruptions to essential services, that have put their health at risk," PAHO director Carissa Etienne said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) warned last week that COVID-19 deaths were being significantly undercounted across the globe.

For 2020, deaths stood at 1.8 million, but the true 2020 global death toll is now estimated to be closer to 3 million people.

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.

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