Category: Corona Virus

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Russia Claims to Be the First Country to Develop Coronavirus Shots for Animals – The New York Times

April 5, 2021

MOSCOW Russias state veterinary service said on Wednesday that it had become the first regulator in the world to approve a coronavirus vaccine for animals, intended for use on fur farms or for pet cats and dogs.

The agency said it had developed the vaccine for animals in part as a public health tool, lest the virus spread from animals to humans or in a worst-case scenario mutate in animals and then spread back to humans in a more virulent form. It could also revive fur farming after infections on mink farms devastated the business last year, it said.

The agency, the Federal Service for Veterinary and Phytosanitary Supervision, said it did not recommend routine vaccination of animals, for now. The World Health Organization has found no instances of infections in humans caused by pets, the agency said. Though cats and dogs do rarely catch the coronavirus, neither species gets very sick. Lions, tigers and snow leopards can also catch the coronavirus.

The Russian agency noted four reports of pet infections just in the last week, in Italy and in Mexico. It that said a vaccine for pets was needed as insurance against variants that might spread more easily.

We did this work for the future, the agencys deputy director, Konstantin Savenkov, said in a statement. We should be prepared to prevent a situation rather than deal with it later if it takes a negative turn.

The vaccine, called Karnivak-Kov, is intended for carnivores. The agency said it had carried out clinical trials on arctic foxes, cats, dogs, mink and other animals. The agency said it would begin industrial-scale production in Russia at a plant that manufactures veterinary drugs.

Fur farmers in Russia, as well as in Austria, Canada, Greece, Poland and the United States, have inquired about buying the vaccine, the agency said. The statement did not say when or if the vaccine would become available for pets.

The problem of animal infections came into focus last year when mink farms culled millions of the creatures because of infection.

Denmark killed all farmed mink some 17 million animals after the virus spread from a mink to a human. Separately, a farmed mink in Utah seemed to have passed the virus to at least one wild mink. Scientists have raised alarms about the virus establishing a reservoir in wild animals that could later spread back to people.

Russia last August also claimed to be the first country to approve a human vaccine, Sputnik V, though other candidates were in fact further along in clinical trials at the time. It has since promoted Sputnik V to countries around the world, bolstering the Kremlins soft power.

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Russia Claims to Be the First Country to Develop Coronavirus Shots for Animals - The New York Times

Coronavirus Tennessee: Cases, deaths and hospitalizations across the state in April – WATE 6 On Your Side

April 5, 2021

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) The Department of Human Services has announced that it will once again partner with The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee to provide support to help keep the states child care agencies open during the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to a news release, $15 million in grant assistance will be available to licensed agencies. The grants will be used for cleaning and sanitation, and operating expenses.

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Coronavirus Tennessee: Cases, deaths and hospitalizations across the state in April - WATE 6 On Your Side

Analysis-In mutant variants, has the coronavirus shown its best tricks? – Reuters

April 5, 2021

LONDON/CHICAGO (Reuters) - The rapid rise in different parts of the world of deadly, more infectious coronavirus variants that share new mutations is leading scientists to ask a critical question - has the SARS-CoV-2 virus shown its best cards?

FILE PHOTO: National Institutes of Health Director Francis S. Collins holds a model of SARS-CoV-2, the novel coronavirus, as he testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 2, 2020. Graeme Jennings/Pool via REUTERS/

New variants first detected in such far-flung countries as Brazil, South Africa and Britain cropped up spontaneously within a few months late last year. All three share some of the same mutations in the important spike region of the virus used to enter and infect cells.

These include the E484k mutation, nicknamed Eek by some scientists for its apparent ability to evade natural immunity from previous COVID-19 infection and to reduce protection offered by current vaccines - all of which target the spike protein.

The appearance of similar mutations, independent of one another, springing up in different parts of the globe shows the coronavirus is undergoing convergent evolution, according to a dozen scientists interviewed by Reuters.

Although it will continue to mutate, immunologists and virologists said they suspect this coronavirus has a fixed number of moves in its arsenal.

The long-term impact for the virus survival, and whether a limit on the number of mutations makes it less dangerous, remains to be seen.

It is plausible that this virus has a relatively limited number of antibody escape mutations it can make before it has played all of its cards, so to speak, said Shane Crotty, a virologist at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology in San Diego.

That could enable drugmakers to stay on top of the virus as they develop booster vaccines directly targeting current variants, while governments struggle to tame a pandemic that has killed nearly 3 million people.

The idea that the virus could have a limited number of mutations has been circulating among experts since early February, and gathered momentum with the posting of a paper showing the spontaneous appearance of seven variants in the United States, all in the same region of the spike protein (bit.ly/3wdqy57).

The process of different species independently evolving the same traits that improve survival odds is central to evolutionary biology. The vast scope of the coronavirus pandemic - with 127.3 million infections globally - allows scientists to observe it in real time.

If you wanted to sort of write a little textbook about viral evolution, its happening right now, Dr. Francis Collins, a geneticist and director of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, said in an interview.

Scientists saw the process on a smaller scale in 2018 as a dangerous H7N9 bird flu virus in China appeared to begin adapting to human hosts. But no pathogen has evolved under such global scrutiny as SARS-CoV-2.

Wendy Barclay, a virologist and professor at Imperial College London and a member of a scientific advisory panel to the UK government, said she is struck by the amazing amount of convergent evolution were seeing with SARS-CoV-2.

There are these infamous mutations - E484K, N501Y and K417N - which all three variants of concern are accumulating. That, added together, is very strong biology that this is the best version of this virus in the given moment, Barclay said.

Its not that this coronavirus is especially clever, scientists said. Each time it infects people it makes copies of itself, and with each copy it can make mistakes. While some mistakes are insignificant one-offs, the ones that give the coronavirus a survival advantage tend to persist.

If it keeps happening over and over again, it must be providing some real growth advantage to this virus, Collins said.

Some specialists believe the virus may have a limited number of mutations it can sustain before compromising its fitness - or changing so much it is no longer the same virus.

I dont think its going to reinvent itself with extra teeth, said Ian Jones, a professor of virology at Britains University of Reading.

If it had an unlimited number of tricks...we would see an unlimited number of mutants, but we dont, said Michel Nussenzweig, an immunologist at Rockefeller University in New York.

Scientists remain cautious, however, and say predicting how a virus will mutate is challenging. If there are limits on how the coronavirus can evolve, that would simplify things for vaccine developers.

Novavax Inc is adapting its vaccine to target the South African variant that in lab tests appeared to render current vaccines less effective. Chief Executive Stan Erck said the virus can only change so much and still bind to human hosts, and hopes the vaccine will cover the vast majority of strains that are circulating.

If not, Novavax can continue matching its vaccine to new variants, he said.

Researchers are tracking the variants through data-sharing platforms such as the Global Initiative on Sharing Avian Flu Data, which houses a huge trove of coronavirus genomes.

Scientists recently identified seven U.S. coronavirus variants with mutations all occurring in the same location in a key portion of the virus, offering more evidence of convergent evolution.

Other teams are conducting experiments that expose the virus to antibodies to force it to mutate. In many cases, the same mutations, including the infamous E484K, appeared.

Such evidence adds to cautious optimism that mutations appear to share many of the same traits.

But the world must continue tracking changes in the virus, experts said, and choke off its ability to mutate by reducing transmission through vaccinations and measures that limit its spread.

Its shown a very strong set of opening moves, Vaughn Cooper, an evolutionary biology specialist at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, said of this coronavirus. We dont know what the end game is going to look like.

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Analysis-In mutant variants, has the coronavirus shown its best tricks? - Reuters

Pennsylvania will study the impact of COVID on learning and teaching – The Mercury

April 5, 2021

The state Department of Education is planning to take a deep dive into the impact the COVID-19 pandemic has had on learning and teaching.

Acting Secretary of Education Noe Ortega announced recently that the state will spend nearly $1 million in federal grant funding to study the impact of COVID on students across the state and create recommendations for helping students and schools.

"Our school communities and families have remained resilient during the pandemic, and we are thankful for their ability to pivot throughout the challenges we have faced," Ortega said in a statement announcing the plan. "The ability for us to examine inequities in education will help us create responsive teaching and learning opportunities in future years."

Pennsylvania is one of seven states awarded the two-year federal grant. The state is working with the data analysis companyMathematica to conduct the research and plans to release a report late next year.

The goal of the study is provide state policymakers with an understanding of the challenges faced by students due to the pandemic and to provide insight on how to better respond to future epidemics.

It will look at whether some remote-learning strategies are more effective than others; at recruitment and retention strategies for teachers; and at ways to better identify students at risk of dropping out of school.

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Pennsylvania will study the impact of COVID on learning and teaching - The Mercury

Coronavirus cases are up in Ohio and reopening is in jeopardy – Mahoning Matters

April 5, 2021

Last week, the state reported 9,342 new confirmed cases, up from 7,835 the week before and7,019 threeweeks ago. Last week, that average rose to 167.1.

COLUMBUS Ohio has lost footing in its fight against the coronavirus, and the state's pandemic finish line is getting farther away.

Gov. Mike DeWine has said Ohio can reopen when it reports an average of 50 new cases per 100,000 people for two weeks. Two weeks ago, the state reported 146.9 new cases per 100,000 people. Last week, that average rose to 167.1.

Last week, Ohio reported 9,342 new confirmed cases, up from 7,835 the week before and7,019 threeweeks ago.

Three highly infectious variants of the novel coronavirus are responsible for most of the hundreds of genetic changes to the virus medical experts have recorded lately, state officials said.

"Ohio remains in a race against a virus that is now more contagious and is right back on our heels," said the state health department's Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff.

More than half of the state's detected coronavirus variants have been found in counties inside the state's northern zone, which includes the Mahoning Valley on its southeast corner.

TheOhio Public Health Advisory System mapshowed improvement on a county-by-county basis. This week,32 counties are orange, up from 32 last week. Four counties are yellow, up from two last week. The rest are red.

ColumbianaCounty remained orange.Mahoning andTrumbull counties remained red and are both considered to have a high incidence of coronavirus spread. Thenumber of new cases per capita has increased for all threecounties.

All threecounties meet the indicators fornew cases per capita andthe proportion of new cases occurring outside group settings such as long-term care or correctional facilities.

Mahoningand Trumbull counties also meetthe indicator for increasing number of new cases.

Mahoning County is abovethe statewide rate, with 33.22 percent of county residents having received the first dose of the vaccine. In Trumbull County, 31.21percent of residents have started to receive the vaccine, and 27.41 percent of Columbiana Countyresidents have started to receive the vaccine.

Here's a breakdown of how each complete week of the pandemic has looked like in Ohio so far. Data in bold reflect the peaks in new cases, deaths, hospitalizations and ICU admissions.

March 15 to March 21

March 22 to March 28

March 29 to April 4

April 5 to April 11

April 12 to April 18

April 19 to April 25

April 26 to May 2

May 3 to May 9

May 10 to May 16

May 17 to May 23

May 24 to May 30

May 31 to June 6

June 7to June 13

June 14to June 20

June 21 to June 27

June 28 to July 4

July 5 to July 11

July 12 to July 18

July 19 to July 25

July 26 to Aug.1

Aug.2 to Aug.8

Aug. 9 to Aug. 15

Aug. 16 to Aug. 22

Aug. 23 to Aug. 29

Aug. 30 to Sept. 5

Sept. 6 to Sept. 12

Sept. 13 to Sept. 19

Sept. 20 to Sept. 26

Sept. 27 to Oct. 3

Oct. 4 to Oct. 10

Oct. 11 to Oct. 17

Oct. 18 to Oct. 24

Oct. 25 to Oct. 31

Nov. 1 to Nov. 7

Nov. 8 to Nov. 14

Nov. 15 to Nov. 21

Nov. 22 to Nov. 28

Nov. 29 to Dec. 5

Dec. 6 to Dec. 12

Dec. 13 to Dec. 19

Dec. 20 to Dec. 26

Dec. 27 to Jan. 2

Jan. 3 to Jan. 9

Jan. 10to Jan. 16

Jan. 17 to Jan 23

Jan. 24 to Jan. 30

Jan. 31 to Feb, 6

Feb. 7 to Feb. 13

Feb. 14 to Feb. 20

Feb. 21to Feb. 27

Feb. 28 to March 6

March 7 to March 13

March 14 to March 20

March 21 to March 27

March 28 to April 3

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Coronavirus cases are up in Ohio and reopening is in jeopardy - Mahoning Matters

Fauci Expects Surge In Vaccinations To Keep A 4th Coronavirus Wave At Bay – NPR

April 3, 2021

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, testifies during a Senate hearing last month on the federal coronavirus response. Susan Walsh/Pool/Getty Images hide caption

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, testifies during a Senate hearing last month on the federal coronavirus response.

More than 56 million people in the U.S. have now been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Yet cases are rising again in some parts of the country, notably in Michigan and states in the Northeast.

But Dr. Anthony Fauci, the Biden administration's chief medical adviser, predicts that the U.S. won't see a fourth wave of the coronavirus as severe as the previous three, thanks to the uptick in vaccinations.

"It's kind of like a race between the potential for a surge and our ability to vaccinate as many people as we possibly can," he said in an interview Friday with NPR's Morning Edition. "And hopefully, if you want to make this a metaphorical race, the vaccine is going to win this one."

But he cautioned against prematurely pulling back on measures such as mask-wearing and physical distancing.

"I believe strongly that every day that goes by, we get closer and closer to getting an advantage," he said.

Read NPR's interview with Fauci, edited for clarity, below:

I wonder if you could explain what we're seeing, with cases in some parts of the country really surging?

Well, there are a couple of factors that are going on. As you know, some of the states and cities have pulled back a bit on the mitigation methods, namely pulling back on mask mandates and pulling back on the guidelines of crowded places and physical distancing. That, together with the fact that we're having a dominant variant that is circulating throughout the country. A variant, meaning a mutational change in the virus that, in this case, is giving it the capability of spreading more efficiently from person to person. So I think when you combine those two things, pulling back on some of the guidelines of public health at the same time as you have a more efficient virus spreading through the community is leading to those increases that you just referred to.

If this is a fourth wave, could it get as bad as any of the previous three?

You know, I really don't think that's going to happen. I mean, we got to always keep our guard up for those things. But the factor that we have now that we didn't have then is what you just mentioned a moment ago the number of people that have been vaccinated. We have, you know, over 50 million people who are fully vaccinated, just short of 100 million who have received at least one dose. And we are vaccinating about 3 million people per day. So in some respects, it's kind of like a race between the potential for a surge and our ability to vaccinate as many people as we possibly can. And hopefully, if you want to make this a metaphorical race, the vaccine is going to win this one. Which I believe it will, if we continue with the vaccine program, which has really been quite successful, at the same time as we don't prematurely declare victory and pull back too much on our mitigation policy.

Michigan is averaging upward of 5,000 new cases a day, and the governor there is asking for more vaccines. What do you think of that idea of having the federal government take vaccine from less hard-hit places and send it to hot spots?

What is happening is that the distribution is being put very much the responsibility at the local level, giving governors and mayors and others to move around within the state. As far as we know, the allocation per state still remains at the pro rata level, where you do it on the basis of population. Now, that could change, but right now we're looking at the possibility of the states themselves making a redistribution depending upon where they're seeing the surge.

How do you think we're doing on the pace of vaccinations? It sounds like you are optimistic, you're positive. Could it be going any faster though?

You know, you could always do things a little faster, but for example, we're likely going to be over 30 million vaccinations this past week. That is really good. And what we're doing and it just was announced yesterday [Thursday] that there's a thing called the COVID Community Corps. What we're doing is to get trusted messengers in the community and giving them the necessary information to go out and get people to get up there and get vaccinated as soon as vaccine becomes available to them. So it's a rather big push. It's a public education campaign, and it's referred to as the COVID-19 Community Corps. I think that will accelerate the distribution of vaccine. So I'm pretty optimistic that that will be value added.

In some places there still is vaccine skepticism. Donald Trump and people in his administration who downplayed the pandemic are no longer in power. Our colleague Pien Huang has been reporting on how the CDC is trying to rebuild public trust. The Biden administration certainly has been letting science speak. You are one of the most prominent voices, but it just seems like a lot of people aren't listening. I'm thinking of reporting that we did over spring break where lots of kids headed down to Florida. I'm thinking of, like you said, local officials lifting mask mandates. Why isn't the message getting through?

Well, I think there are several factors that are coming in here now. I think in general we have what we're referring to as COVID-19 fatigue. This has been going on now for, you know, 14 to 15 months, and people are just fatigued at that. We can't give up. And that's the reason why the messaging that I and my colleagues do all the time is that we need to hang in there just a bit longer. We are going to get through this. We are going to get this behind us for absolutely certain. The one thing we don't want to do is pull back prematurely. But you're right. I mean, it's not easy to get people who've been going through this for such a long period of time to say, "I'm not going to go on a spring break, and I'm not going to take a vacation." Everybody wants to do that. But I'm telling you, I believe strongly that every day that goes by, we get closer and closer to getting an advantage. And that means the vaccines that are being distributed at over 3 million per day is going to get us to the endgame where we want to be.

With all of the vaccines and all of the cases, do you think we might be approaching herd immunity? I know that's a difficult question to answer. I'm just curious.

You know, it's an elusive terminology because we don't know exactly with this particular virus what herd immunity would mean. You know, herd immunity means you get enough people who are immune either from prior infections, which would render them to be immune or vaccine. Putting those two together, you reach a certain critical level in the community where people are protected, that really the virus has no place to go. I mean, obviously, the more people you get vaccinated, the more people that successfully recover from COVID-19, the greater number of people you'll have to contribute to this concept of herd immunity. Since we don't know exactly what that number is, you just have to keep trying to get as many people vaccinated as you possibly can. Add it to the people who have recovered from infection would also contribute to that herd immunity.

And lastly, what's your message for people who are going to get together this weekend for Easter?

You know, enjoy the holiday, but continue to abide by the public health measures. If you're vaccinated and you're in a family setting, you can do a lot of things. You can get together without a mask and have a good time.

Ziad Buchh, Elena Moore, Denise Couture and Fernando Pizarro produced and edited the audio version of this story. Avie Schneider produced for the Web.

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Fauci Expects Surge In Vaccinations To Keep A 4th Coronavirus Wave At Bay - NPR

Hawaii to receive $32M in federal aid to support coronavirus vaccinations – KHON2

April 3, 2021

Posted: Apr 2, 2021 / 11:13 AM HST / Updated: Apr 2, 2021 / 11:13 AM HST

DOE employee Brian Hammond received his Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine on Friday, March 5. (Courtesy: Department of Health)

HONOLULU (KHON2) The Hawaii State Department of Health will receive a total of $32,834,105 in new federal funding to support the distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine statewide.

U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) made the announcement on Friday, April 2.

Get Hawaiis latest news sent to your inbox, click here to subscribe to News 2 You, a daily newsletter.

The funds may be used for all vaccine distribution efforts, including operating vaccination sites, supporting staff and systems to track vaccinations, and conducting community outreach.

These federal funds will help us crush this virus and get shots into arms all across our state,Schatz said.Vaccination is the light at the end of the tunnel of this pandemic, and this new money will help us get there even faster.

This funding comes from the American Rescue Plan Act, which was signed into law on March 11, and the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act of 2021, which was signed into law on December 27, 2020.

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Hawaii to receive $32M in federal aid to support coronavirus vaccinations - KHON2

Rick Carlisle cleared to rejoin Mavericks after coronavirus scare – The Official Home – Mavs.com

April 3, 2021

Rick Carlisle has rejoined the Mavericks for their trip to Washington after the teams 99-86 victory over New York under acting head coach Jamahl Mosley.

Carlisle, who was fully vaccinated three months ago, tested positive for the coronavirus Friday morning in New York and entered safety protocols while awaiting results of further testing.

He said before the game that his hope was that his morning test was a false-positive.

While its unknown if thats the case, clearly Carlisle got good returns on subsequent tests.

Rick has been cleared to travel with us to D.C., Mosley said, without elaborating.

Presumably, Carlisle will be back on the sideline Saturday against the Wizards. But it certainly was a strange Friday in New York.

In this year of the unexpected, I had an unexpected positive test this morning, Carlisle said on a conference call with reporters from his hotel room in New York about 90 minutes before the game. Theres a chance and theres a hope that it will be a false positive. Im fortunate to have been fully vaccinated since January. And so, this seems like possibly a mistake.

But for these reasons, obviously, Im entering the protocols. Ive been retested. There may need to be more retesting depending on what the league decides based on the entire situation. But Im hopeful that its a false-positive.

Carlisle had hoped to get his retest results in time to coach Friday night against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden. But that didnt happen, so Mosley, who is Carlisles defensive coordinator and top assistant, took over as the Mavericks courtside leader.

Mose is great. Im happy for him, said Kristaps Porzingis. Hes been working really hard. Hes a great communicator. He knows how to bring everybody together.

Added Luka Doni: He was great. Its not easy, but he did an amazing job. He managed the game perfectly. Were just happy to have this win for him.

None of the Mavericks players were forced to enter the COVID-19 health and safety protocols, Carlisle said, because his positive test result happened before he would become contagious.

The game-day testing is designed so that if this kind of thing happens and someone is positive, they can be pulled from circulation before the incubation period starts and someone that is positive actually becomes contagious, Carlisle said. So theres a system to this. To my knowledge, it wont affect any players ability to play tonight or any coachs ability to coach or staff ability to support the team.

Interestingly, it was Carlisles 1,500th game as a head coach on Friday. Hell get credit for the win even though Mosley was the acting head coach. But clearly, the Mavericks were in good hands with Mosley, Carlisle said.

This is a great opportunity for him, Carlisle said before the game. Hes obviously in my opinion ready for this kind of opportunity and this is something hell thrive in.

I contacted Jamahl (Friday afternoon) and let him know that its highly possible and perhaps likely that he would coach the team tonight. I think the extra couple of hours is key. I said its up to him, but he may want to adjust his pregame routine, some of his workout stuff on the floor with players just so he can do a little more mental preparation, but thats totally up to him.

Ive been a big supporter of his for a long time. Ive been a very strong advocate for him in all the interviews hes had the last couple years. And I see this as a great opportunity for him to show what hes capable of and our guys will play their butts off for him.

Mosley has been a finalist for several head coaching positions during the past couple of years.

Carlisle said he has no symptoms, which is what makes the positive test so curious.

I feel great, he said. I worked out early this morning. I feel good. But this is just one of these situations where we all got to be light on our feet.

Twitter: @ESefko

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Rick Carlisle cleared to rejoin Mavericks after coronavirus scare - The Official Home - Mavs.com

These are the latest COVID numbers in Georgia for April 1, 2021 – 11Alive.com WXIA

April 3, 2021

Here's the latest COVID-19 case, death and hospitalization data from the state.

ATLANTA We're breaking down the trends and relaying information from across the state of Georgia as it comes in, bringing perspective to the data and context to the trends.

Visit the 11Alive coronavirus page for comprehensive coverage, find out what you need to know about Georgia specifically, learn more about the symptoms, and keep tabs on the cases around the world.

State and federal officials with the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) are continually monitoring the spread of the virus. They are also working hand-in-hand with the World Health Organization to track the spread around the world and to stop it.

Appling 1879 63

Atkinson 767 16

Baldwin 3786 109

Barrow 8401 126

Bartow 10867 201

Ben Hill 1480 58

Berrien 1042 29

Bleckley 791 33

Brantley 899 30

Bulloch 5156 62

Carroll 7241 129

Catoosa 5385 61

Charlton 1044 23

Chatham 19506 394

Chattahoochee 2965 12

Chattooga 2174 60

Cherokee 21619 287

Clarke 12436 128

Clayton 22371 410

Coffee 4199 132

Colquitt 3466 73

Columbia 10764 157

Coweta 8409 181

Crawford 519 16

DeKalb 55219 873

Decatur 2106 54

Dougherty 5391 272

Douglas 11450 169

Effingham 3666 62

Emanuel 1713 51

Fayette 6423 142

Forsyth 17168 167

Franklin 2303 41

Fulton 78562 1193

Gwinnett 83585 1004

Habersham 4588 144

Haralson 1676 34

Henry 18283 272

Houston 9758 185

Jackson 8319 131

Jeff Davis 1275 37

Jefferson 1556 58

Laurens 3641 141

Liberty 3117 59

Lowndes 7582 136

Lumpkin 2718 61

Madison 2680 44

McDuffie 1620 39

McIntosh 668 14

Meriwether 1473 67

Mitchell 1498 73

Montgomery 707 20

Muscogee 13680 370

Newton 7191 207

Non-GA Resident/Unknown State 23707 445

Oglethorpe 1165 27

Paulding 10372 160

Pickens 2448 58

Randolph 463 32

Richmond 19207 389

Rockdale 5778 144

Seminole 731 17

Spalding 3861 147

Stephens 2932 75

Taliaferro 100 3

Tattnall 1824 42

Thomas 3487 112

Treutlen 622 22

Unknown 2462 11

Walton 7811 226

Washington 1599 56

Whitfield 14572 223

Wilkinson 723 27

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These are the latest COVID numbers in Georgia for April 1, 2021 - 11Alive.com WXIA

Undetected Coronavirus Variant Was in at Least 15 Countries Before its Discovery – UT News – UT News | The University of Texas at Austin

April 3, 2021

AUSTIN, Texas A highly contagious SARS-CoV-2 variant was unknowingly spreading for months in the United States by October 2020, according to a new study from researchers with The University of Texas at AustinCOVID-19 Modeling Consortium. Scientists first discovered it in early December in the United Kingdom, where the highly contagious and more lethal variant is thought to have originated. The journalEmerging Infectious Diseases, whichhas published an early-release version of the study, provides evidence that the coronavirus variant B117 (501Y) had spread across the globe undetected for months when scientists discovered it.

By the time we learned about the U.K. variant in December, it was already silently spreading across the globe, said Lauren Ancel Meyers, the director of the COVID-19 Modeling Consortium at The University of Texas at Austin and a professor of integrative biology. We estimate that the B117 variant probably arrived in the U.S. by October of 2020, two months before we knew it existed.

Analyzing data from 15 countries, researchers estimated the chance that travelers from the U.K. introduced the variant into 15 countries between Sept. 22 and Dec. 7, 2020. They found that the virus variant had almost certainly arrived in all 15 countries by mid-November. In the U.S., the variant probably had arrived by mid-October.

This study highlights the importance of laboratory surveillance, Meyers said. Rapid and extensive sequencing of virus samples is critical for early detection and tracking of new variants of concern.

In conjunction with the papers publication, consortium members developed a new tool that decision-makers anywhere in the United States can use in planning for genetic sequencing that helps to detect the presence of variants. To help the U.S. expand national surveillance of variants, the new onlinecalculatorindicates the number of virus samples that must be sequenced in order to detect new variants when they first emerge. For example, if the goal is to detect an emerging variant by the time it is causing 1 out of every 1,000 new COVID-19 infections, approximately 3,000 SARS-CoV-2 positive specimens per week need to be sequenced.

Health officials are looking for better ways to manage the unpredictability of this virus and future variants, said Spencer Woody, a postdoctoral fellow at the UT COVID-19 Modeling Consortium. Our newcalculatordetermines how many positive SARS-CoV-2 specimens must be sequenced to ensure that new threats are identified as soon as they start spreading.

He explained that the calculator has a second feature. It also helps labs figure out how quickly they will detect new variants, given their current sequencing capacity.

We created this tool to support federal, state and local health officials in building credible early warning systems for this and future pandemic threats, Meyers said.

More detailed information on the calculator ishere.

In addition to Meyers, authors of the Emerging Infectious Disease paper are Zhanwei Du, Bingyi Yang, Sheikh Taslim Ali, Tim K. Tsang, Songwei Shan, Peng Wu, Eric H.Y. Lau and Benjamin J. Cowling of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Control in Hong Kong and Lin Wang of the University of Cambridge.

The research was funded by Hong Kongs Health and Medical Research Fund, the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Meyersholds the Denton A. Cooley Centennial Professorship at The University of Texas at Austin.

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Undetected Coronavirus Variant Was in at Least 15 Countries Before its Discovery - UT News - UT News | The University of Texas at Austin

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