Category: Corona Virus

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Coronavirus tally: Global cases of COVID-19 top 132.5 million and U.S. death toll above 556,000 – MarketWatch

April 7, 2021

The global tally for the coronavirus-borne illness rose above 132.5 million on Wednesday, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University, while the death toll rose above 2.87 million. The U.S. continues to lead the world by cases, at 30.8 million, or about a quarter of the global tally, and fatalities, at 556,529. The U.S. added at least 62,004 new cases on Tuesday, according to a New York Times tracker, and at least 907 people died. The U.S. has averaged 64,847 cases a day for the last week, up 19% from the average two weeks ago, as cases continue to rise despite the vaccination program, a trend experts say is due to states reopening and dropping restrictions on movement and overall pandemic fatigue. The U.S. vaccine program is making good headway, however, with the CDC's vaccine tracker showing that 19% of the population is now fully vaccinated and 32.6% have had at least one jab. President Joe Biden on Tuesday announced that the vaccine program would be open to all American adults by April 19, ahead of an earlier timetable of May 1.Outside of the U.S., Brazil is second globally in cases at 13.1 million and also second with a death toll of 336,947. India is third worldwide in cases with 12.8 million and fourth in deaths at 166,177. Mexico is third by deaths at 204,985 and 14th highest by cases at 2.3 million. The U.K. has 4.4 million cases and 127,126 deaths, the highest in Europe and fifth highest in the world.

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Coronavirus tally: Global cases of COVID-19 top 132.5 million and U.S. death toll above 556,000 - MarketWatch

What you need to know about the coronavirus right now – Reuters

April 7, 2021

(Reuters) -Heres what you need to know about the coronavirus right now:

FILE PHOTO: A band performs while crowds of people walk as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions are eased in Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S., April 4, 2021. REUTERS/Emily Elconin

Brazil deaths on track to pass worst of U.S. wave

Brazils brutal surge in COVID-19 deaths will soon surpass the worst of a record January wave in the United States, scientists forecast, with fatalities climbing for the first time above 4,000 in a day on Tuesday as the outbreak overwhelms hospitals.

Brazils overall death toll trails only the U.S. outbreak, with nearly 337,000 killed, according to Health Ministry data, compared with more than 555,000 dead in the United States.

But with Brazils healthcare system at the breaking point, the country could exceed total U.S. deaths, despite having a population two-thirds that of the United States, two experts told Reuters.

India posts record cases

Indias second wave of infections continued to swell as it reported a record 115,736 new cases on Wednesday, a 13-fold increase in just over two months.

The federal government has asked states to decide on local curbs to control the spread of the virus, but has so far refused to impose any national lockdown after the last one in 2020 devastated its economy.

The total number of cases since the first recorded infection in India just over a year ago now stands at 12.8 million, making it the third worst hit country after the United States and Brazil.

Japans Osaka cancels Olympic torch run

Japans western region of Osaka on Wednesday cancelled Olympic torch events scheduled across the prefecture, as record infections prompted its government to declare a medical emergency.

Health authorities fear a virus variant is unleashing a fourth wave of infections just 107 days before the Tokyo Olympics begin, with a vaccination drive still at an early stage.

The prefecture reported 878 new infections on Wednesday, a second-straight day of record numbers. Severe cases have filled about 70% of hospital beds in the region.

UK begins rollout of Moderna vaccine

Britain begins rolling out Modernas COVID-19 vaccine on Wednesday in Wales and expects to be using it in the rest of the United Kingdom in the coming days in a boost to the countrys health system after supplies of shots started to slow.

Moderna will become the third vaccine to be used in Britain after the Oxford-AstraZeneca and Pfizer jabs and comes as the supply of shots from Astra starts to slow due to manufacturing issues including at a site in India.

The United Kingdom has vaccinated 31.6 million people with a first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine - and administered 5.5 million second doses. It will soon have vaccinated half of its total population.

A third of survivors suffer neurological or mental disorders

One in three COVID-19 survivors in a study of more than 230,000 mostly American patients were diagnosed with a brain or psychiatric disorder within six months, suggesting the pandemic could lead to a wave of mental and neurological problems, scientists said on Tuesday.

Researchers who conducted the analysis said it was not clear how the virus was linked to psychiatric conditions such as anxiety and depression, but that these were the most common diagnoses among the 14 disorders they looked at.

Post-COVID cases of stroke, dementia and other neurological disorders were rarer, the researchers said, but were still significant.

Reporting by Linda Noakes, Editing by William Maclean

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What you need to know about the coronavirus right now - Reuters

COVID-19 update: Active coronavirus cases grow within Humble ISD this week – Houston Chronicle

April 7, 2021

Data on the coronavirus as of April 6 from Harris County Public Health can be viewed by zip code. These zip codes cover the Lake Houston area.

77396

4938 confirmed cases

173 active cases

4727 recovered

38 deaths

77346

5192 confirmed cases

172 active cases

4988 recovered

32 deaths

77338

3852 confirmed cases

122 active cases

3661 recovered

66 deaths

77339

1257 confirmed cases

205 active cases

1018 recovered

34 deaths

77345

756 confirmed cases

159 active cases

591 recovered

6 deaths

77044

4398 confirmed cases

156 active cases

4219 recovered

23 deaths

Totals

July 31: Total: 2,928 cases, 51 deaths

Aug 31: 4,572 confirmed cases, 80 deaths

Oct. 26: 7,818 confirmed cases, 116 deaths

Nov. 24: 9,127 confirmed cases, 129 deaths

Dec. 30: 11,878 confirmed cases, 143 deaths

Jan. 21: 14,890 confirmed cases, 158 deaths

Jan. 26: 15,632 confirmed cases, 159 deaths

Feb. 23: 17,344 confirmed cases, 165-170 deaths

March 30: 19,942 confirmed cases, 195 deaths

April 6: 20,393 confirmed cases, 199 deaths

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COVID-19 update: Active coronavirus cases grow within Humble ISD this week - Houston Chronicle

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 6 April – World Economic Forum

April 7, 2021

1. How COVID-19 is affecting the globe

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have now passed 131.7 million globally, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center. More than 664.64 million vaccination doses have been administered globally, according to Our World in Data.

New Zealand will allow quarantine-free visits from Australians starting 19 April, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said today.

Australia says it hasnt received more than 3 million doses of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine amid export curbs by the European Union.

Japans real wages rose for the first time in a year in February, the government said today. The rise was largely due to prices weakening as the pandemic continues to hit the economy, reports Reuters.

Spains coronavirus infection rate has risen from 151.8 cases per 100,000 to 163.4 cases per 100,000, as measured over the rolling 14-day average, official data has shown.

A planned reopening of all shops, gyms, hairdressers and outdoor hospitality will take place in England next week as planned, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said yesterday.

Bangkok, Thailands capital, will close 196 entertainment venues for two weeks, following a rise in COVID-19 cases.

Greece allowed shops to reopen under controlled conditions yesterday. Customers have to make appointments and comply with a three-hour limit for shopping, while retailers cannot allow in more than one customer per 25 square metres.

Portugal has entered the second phase of an easing of its COVID-19 lockdown, with caf and restaurant terraces, museums, non-food markets and fairs, small shops, middle schools and gyms allowed to open their doors from yesterday.

Cases are rising in many countries.

Image: Our World in Data

2. India reports 96,982 new COVID-19 cases

India has reported 96,982 new COVID-19 infections, taking its overall tally to 12.7 million, according to data from the health ministry.

Indias caseload is the worlds third highest, behind the United States and Brazil. Todays rise come after a record rise on Monday of 103,558 confirmed infections. With it, India became just the second country to report more than 100,000 new cases in a day.

The countrys daily infections have risen about 12-fold since hitting a multi-month low in early February.

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

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

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

3. Singapore to accept COVID-19 digital travel pass from next month

From next month, Singapore will accept visitors who use a mobile travel pass containing digital certificates for COVID-19 vaccines and tests, its aviation regulator said yesterday.

Singapore will accept the International Air Transport Association (IATA) mobile travel pass for pre-departure checks, where travellers can get clearance to fly to and enter Singapore by showing a smartphone application containing their data from accredited laboratories.

The pass was successfully tested by Singapore Airlines. More than 20 carriers are also testing the pass.

The success of our joint efforts will make IATAs partnership with the government of Singapore a model for others to follow, IATA director general Willie Walsh said in a statement.

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COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 6 April - World Economic Forum

Jon Husted to meet with Asian American neighbors over coronavirus tweet: Overnight News Links – cleveland.com

April 7, 2021

Asian American neighbors say Lt. Gov. Jon Husted will meet with them to discuss controversial coronavirus tweet (Read more)

Amy Acton announces she wont run for U.S. Senate (Read more)

69 overdose deaths in March put Cuyahoga County on pace to match 2017s record number of deaths (Read more)

Just over 43% of the age 16 and up population in Cuyahoga County has now received at least one dose of the coronavirus vaccine. Here are the rates for each county.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

Ohio coronavirus cases up 16.5% in last week; hospital patient count highest since March 2 - see latest statewide, county trends (Read more)

98 new deaths reported of Ohio residents with coronavirus: Tuesday update (Read more)

Did a CDC study say vaccinated people can stop wearing masks? Not yet, health experts say (Read more)

Matthew Ponomarenko appears in Parma Municipal Court via a live video feed from the Parma City Jail on aggravated murder charges in the death of his 5-year-old son, Jax. Parma Municipal Court Judge Kenneth Spanagel is pictured in the bottom right corner of the video feed.

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East Cleveland police officer injured in crash during pursuit (Read more)

Bond set at $1 million for Lorain man charged in Easter Sunday deadly shooting (Read more)

Video shows RTA officer shove mentally-ill man off Cleveland rapid platform onto tracks (Read more)

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Turns out Cleveland isnt growing its population during the pandemic its just losing fewer people (Read more)

Flood of Cleveland City Council candidates already circulating petitions to get on the 2021 ballot (Read more)

Cleveland nonprofit launches low-dollar mortgage wing to spur homeownership in East Side, low-income neighborhoods (Read more)

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Cleveland Heights-University Heights Schools to offer five-day, in-class schedule for fourth quarter (Read more)

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350-year-old oak tree cut down in Bay Village

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Jon Husted to meet with Asian American neighbors over coronavirus tweet: Overnight News Links - cleveland.com

Coronavirus: L.A. County surpasses 5 million vaccinations with 406 new cases and 23 new deaths reported as of April 6 – The Daily Breeze

April 7, 2021

Los Angeles public health officials reported 406 new cases of the coronavirus, bringing the total number of cases to 1,222,778 as of Tuesday, April 6.

Officials said there were 23 new deaths linked to the coronavirus, for a total 23,292 deaths since tracking began.

A total of 5,052,476 vaccinations have been administered in the county as of Monday.

There were 23 fewer hospitalization reported since Monday, reducing the official count of hospitalizations to 568. Thats a 93.6% decrease of hospitalizations from the Jan. 5 high of 8,915.

Data posted each day is preliminary and subject to change, officials emphasize. More information may become available as individual case investigations are completed.

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Coronavirus: L.A. County surpasses 5 million vaccinations with 406 new cases and 23 new deaths reported as of April 6 - The Daily Breeze

Middle East And Africa Struggle To Shake Off Economic Effects Of Coronavirus Pandemic – Forbes

April 7, 2021

Ships at the entrance of the Suez Canal, Egypt on March 29, while work continued to free the Ever ... [+] Given container ship which ran aground in the canal on March 23 (Photo: Mahmoud Khaled/Getty Images)

The Middle East and Africa are set to be the laggards when it comes to economic growth this year, according to the latest forecasts by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

In its World Economic Outlook report, released earlier today, the Washington D.C.-based organisation said the global economy should grow by 6% this year, following a 3.3% contraction in 2020.

Asian economies are set to lead the way, with growth of 8.6% across the region. The U.S. is also expected to perform strongly, with 6.4% growth. Latin America and the Caribbean are expected to expand by 4.6%, while the Euro area will grow by 4.4%. However, the Middle East and Central Asia region is expected to grow by 3.7%, while sub-Saharan Africa will post a growth rate of just 3.4%.

Gita Gopinath, director of the IMFs research department, said in a blog post that the IMF was now projecting a stronger recovery for the global economy compared with its January forecast, helped by the rollout of vaccines this year, the evolution of new ways of working and large financial commitments by some governments, notably the U.S.

Last year, only 27 countries posted any economic growth, as the coronavirus pandemic led to lockdowns and recessions. This year, almost everywhere will rebound to some extent. Only 14 countries are expected to see their economies contract further this year mostly small island states in the Caribbean or the Pacific, as well as Myanmar which is suffering from an increasingly brutal military coup.

The benefits of the rebound this year are not being evenly spread in other parts of the world though. The upgrades the IMF has made to its global growth projections are mainly due to improvements among advanced economies, including the U.S. and the eurozone countries. Low-income and emerging economies are expected to face greater difficulties, with larger losses in per capita GDP. These divergent recovery paths are likely to create wider gaps in living standards across countries compared to pre-pandemic expectations, wrote Gopinath.

This trend is true within regions as well as on the global level, with the outlook for individual economies dependent on factors including the severity of the pandemic, the success of vaccine rollout programmes, dependence on tourism, oil price developments and the varying ability of governments to enact policies to support their economies and societies.

The IMF report notes that, within the Middle East, countries that started vaccinations early on, such as the affluent Gulf Cooperation Council countries, face relatively better prospects, while fragile and conflict-affected states have seen their outlook darken. Among sub-Saharan African countries, it says that tourism-reliant economies will likely be worst affected.

International Monetary Fund chief economist Gita Gopinath speaking at a virtual press briefing in ... [+] Washington D.C. on October 13, 2020, on the release of a previous edition of the World Economic Outlook report. Photo: Xinhua/Liu Jie via Getty Images

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Middle East And Africa Struggle To Shake Off Economic Effects Of Coronavirus Pandemic - Forbes

We still dont know the origins of the coronavirus. Here are 4 scenarios. – National Geographic

April 7, 2021

The search continues for the origins of the virus that causes COVID-19and the pathway that it took to leap from animals to humans, wreaking havoc across the globe, infecting more than 129 million people, and killing more than 2.8 million.

Earlier this week, the World Health Organization released a report from a team of international researchers that traveled to China to investigate four possible scenarios in which the SARS-CoV-2 virus might have caused the initial outbreak. In the days since, however, world governments have expressed concern that the investigators lacked access to complete data, while scientists say that the report has shed little light on how the virus got jumpstarted.

Thats unsurprising given that it typically takes years to trace a virus back to its rootsif its possible at all, says Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Center for Global Health Science and Security at Georgetown University Medical Center. But in this case, she says, I think we do have enough evidence to say that some are more likely than others.

In the report, the team found that the virus most likely jumped from one animal to another before making its way to humans. They also looked at evidence supporting theories that the virus passed into humans directly from an original host animal, or that it traveled through the supply chain for frozen and refrigerated foods. In addition, the team addressed the possibility that the virus accidentally leaked from a laboratory in Wuhana scenario they determined is extremely unlikely.

Heres a look at the evidence the report lays out for each of the four theoriesand what experts make of them as possible origin stories for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

WHO ASSESSMENT: possible to likely

The first origin story for SARS-CoV-2 is simple: It suggests that the virus started out in an animalprobably a batthat came into contact with a human. Boom, infected. At that point, the virus immediately began to spread to other humans.

The WHO report cites strong evidence showing that most coronaviruses that infect humans come from animals, including the virus that caused the SARS epidemic in 2003. Bats are thought to be the most likely culprits, as they host a virus that is genetically related to SARS-CoV-2.

The report acknowledges the possibility that the virus spread to humans from pangolins or minks. But David Robertson, head of viral genomics and bioinformatics at the University of Glasgow, says the WHO joint team sampled many animal species beyond bats for the report. The analyses points to bats as the reservoir species.

So what you have to worry about then is how did it get from bats to humans? Robertson says. Did somebody go into an area, get infected, and then get a train to Wuhan?

Direct transmission between bats and humans is possible: Studies have shown that people who live near bat caves in southern Chinas Yunnan Province have antibodies to bat coronaviruses. But most humans generally dont spend much time around bats, unless they are bat scientists (who typically wear protective equipment). So its unclear why, if the virus jumped from bats directly to humans, the first outbreak would have occurred in Wuhan, a thousand miles away from the bat caves of Yunnan.

Furthermore, the report notes that it would take decades for even the closely related bat coronavirus to evolve into SARS-CoV-2. Since scientists havent found a bat virus that would provide the missing link, the WHO team assessed this theory as possible to likely.

WHO ASSESSMENT: likely to very likely

In the absence of a smoking gun showing that bats passed the virus directly to humans, scientists believe the more likely theory is that the virus first traveled through another animal, such as a mink or a pangolin. Unlike bats, these animals have regular contact with humansparticularly if theyre being raised on a farm or trafficked in the illegal wildlife trade.

If the virus jumped first to another animal, that might also explain how it adapted to be harmful to humansalthough Robertson says that the virus likely wouldnt have had to change much. Genomic analyses suggest that SARS-CoV-2 is a generalist virus rather than one specifically adapted to humans, explaining why it can easily jump among pangolins, mink, cats, and other species.

The WHO report points out that this is the path that previous coronaviruses have taken to infect humans. The SARS virus, for example, is thought to have passed from bats to palm civets before causing a human epidemic in 2002. Meanwhile, the virus that causes MERS has been found in dromedary camels throughout the Middle East.

Daniel Lucey, an adjunct professor of infectious diseases at Georgetown University Medical Center, says that the similarities between SARS-CoV-2 and its relatives SARS and MERS is a compelling argument that it might have started out the same way.

Now we have three coronaviruses that cause pneumonia and systemic illness and death, he says. Past is prologue.

But, if the theory holds true, its not clear what that intermediary animal might have been for SARS-CoV-2. The WHO team analyzed samples from thousands of farmed animals across China, all of which tested negative for the virus. Lucey argues that the WHO team didnt adequately test Chinas farmed minkone of the suspected intermediariesbut Rasmussen says the report itself acknowledges that it only scratches the surface.

Thats a fraction of the animals that are farmed or captured or transported for this purpose in China, she says. I think we havent done anywhere near enough sampling.

Theres a popular perception that we need some kind of justice or explanation and somebody needs to answer for this pandemic. But the real reason why we need to figure out the origin is so that it can inform our efforts to prevent another pandemic like this from happening.

ByAngela RasmussenVirologist at the Center for Global Health Science and Security at Georgetown University Medical Center

WHO ASSESSMENT: possible

Another theory holds that the virus may have come to humans through whats known as the cold chainthe supply line for distributing frozen and refrigerated foods. In this scenario, the virus might have actually originated outside of China but was imported either on the surface of food packaging or in the food itself.

This theory gained traction last summer after a couple of outbreaks in China, and there has since been some evidence suggesting that pathogens can survive longer in cold temperatures.

Still, while the cold chain might have played a role in new outbreaks, scientists say theres little reason to believe that it was the source of the pandemic. Theres no direct evidence that SARS-CoV-2 is responsible for foodborne outbreaks, while Rasmussen notes that COVID-19 rarely spreads through surfaceswhich was good news for those weary of wiping down their groceries.

Its not impossible, she says. You cant rule it out. But I dont think the evidence base is particularly strong for that.

Rasmussen says a more plausible way that the virus might spread through the food chain would be through wildlife thats farmed for human consumption. But, she points out, that bleeds over into the territory of the theory for an intermediate host.

Some critics claim that this theory is a red herring to push suspicion from China and onto other countries. Lucey considers this pathway the least likely of the four the joint team identified, arguing its implausible that the virus would have stayed viable on the packaging for as long as it took to import from Europe or elsewhere. He also questions why these infections would have turned up in Wuhan and nowhere else.

To me, its beyond far-fetched, he says.

WHO ASSESSMENT: extremely unlikely

The most controversial hypothesis for the origin of SARS-CoV-2 is also the one that most scientists agree is the least likely: that the virus somehow leaked out of a laboratory in Wuhan where researchers study bat coronaviruses. Originally promulgated by former President Donald Trump and his administration, this theory suggests that perhaps a researcher was infected in the labaccidentally or otherwiseor manipulated a coronavirus strain to create SARS-CoV-2.

Although there have been laboratory leaks in the past, the WHO report points out that theyre rare. The main evidence it cites to support this theory is the fact that researchers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology have sequenced the bat coronavirus straincalled CoV RaTG13, which is 96.2 percent similar to SARS-CoV-2, and its closest known relativeas part of their effort to prevent zoonotic viruses from spilling over to humans. A laboratory run by the Wuhan Center for Disease Control and Prevention has also worked with bat coronaviruses.

But thats just about the only evidence that supports this hypothesis. The WHO report says there is no record that any Wuhan laboratory was working with a virus more closely related to SARS-CoV-2 before the first cases of COVID-19 were diagnosed in December 2019, nor did any laboratory staff report any COVID-like symptoms suggesting that they had been infected. But scientists point out that the evidence both for and against the lab leak hypothesis is thin.

Lucey believes the lab leak theory is plausible, though less likely than zoonotic transmission, given the lack of evidence. He points out that there was no forensic investigation of the labs in Wuhan, and he questions why the WHO authorized the team to investigate the lab at all without the mandate to conduct such an investigation or team members with the subject-matter expertise to carry it out.

Theres not really any way to prove or disprove the lab leak theory based on whats been presented in this report, Rasmussen agrees, noting that to put the matter to rest there would need to be a forensic audit of lab records to look for the ancestral virus to SARS-COV-2. But my opinion is that the lab leak theory, while not impossible, is less likely to be the explanation.

Rasmussen explains that theres no evidence that SARS-CoV-2 is the result of genetic manipulation, nor is it likely that it could have been created by accident. Its incredibly difficult to culture a virus thats strong enough to cause human infections from a bat sample, she says. Meanwhile, similar viruses commonly occur in nature, making that the far likelier source.

Robertson says that supporters of the lab leak theory argue that SARS-CoV-2 has traveled too quickly and efficiently through the human population to be natural in origin. But if the virus is a generalist, as genomic studies show, he says its not surprising that it is so effective at infecting humans.

I think the evidence is pretty good that it didnt have to change much to be successful in humans, he says.

Although the WHO report may not have shed much light on the origins of SARS-CoV-2, Robertson says this is just the beginning of what can sometimes be a long process. But he says theres a public health imperative now to launch more rigorous follow-up studies.

Theres a virus somewhere out there thats very close to SARS-CoV-2, he says. That seems to be the bit thats terrifying.

Rasmussen says that the WHO report lays out a roadmap for further studies to discover the origins of the virus. It recommends better surveillance of captive and farmed animals to determine potential reservoir or intermediate hosts, as well as more sampling among batsboth in China and beyond, as there is also evidence of related coronaviruses circulating in regions such as Southeast Asia. The report also recommends in-depth epidemiological studies of the first COVID-19 cases.

Understanding how an outbreak got started helps scientists and governments pinpoint how to strengthen protectionswhether thats more rigorous surveillance for infections in animals and the food chain, or tighter biosafety protocols in laboratories.

Theres a popular perception that we need some kind of justice or explanation, and somebody needs to answer for this pandemic, Rasmussen says. But the real reason why we need to figure out the origin is so that it can inform our efforts to prevent another pandemic like this from happening.

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We still dont know the origins of the coronavirus. Here are 4 scenarios. - National Geographic

Brazil’s COVID-19 death surge set to pass the worst of record U.S. wave – Reuters

April 7, 2021

FILE PHOTO: Gravediggers wearing protective suits carry a coffin of a 32-year-old man who died from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) as spotlights illuminate the graves during night burials at Vila Formosa cemetery in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 30, 2021. REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli

RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Brazils brutal surge in COVID-19 deaths will soon surpass the worst of a record January wave in the United States, climbing well beyond an average 3,000 fatalities per day, scientists predict, as contagious new variants overwhelm hospitals.

Brazils overall death toll trails only the U.S. outbreak, with nearly 333,000 killed, according to Health Ministry data, compared with more than 555,000 dead in the United States.

But with Brazils healthcare system at the breaking point, the country could also exceed total U.S. deaths, despite having two-thirds the population, two experts told Reuters.

Its a nuclear reactor that has set off a chain reaction and is out of control. Its a biological Fukushima, said Miguel Nicolelis, a Brazilian doctor and professor at Duke University, who is closely tracking the virus.

Right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro has pushed back against mask-wearing and lockdowns that public health experts consider necessary. The country dragged its feet last year as the world raced to secure vaccines, slowing the launch of a national immunization program.

With weak measures failing to combat contagion, Brazils COVID-19 cases and deaths are accumulating faster than ever. On the other hand, a widespread U.S. vaccination campaign is rapidly curtailing what has been the worlds deadliest outbreak.

Nicolelis and Christovam Barcellos, a researcher at Brazilian medical institute Fiocruz, are separately predicting that Brazil could surpass the United States in both overall deaths and the record for average deaths per day.

As soon as next week, Brazil may break the record U.S. seven-day average for deaths, forecasts the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington. The U.S. average for daily deaths peaked at 3,285 in January.

The IHME forecast does not currently extend beyond July 1, when it projects Brazil could reach 563,000 deaths, compared with 609,000 U.S. casualties expected by then.

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Brazil's COVID-19 death surge set to pass the worst of record U.S. wave - Reuters

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