Category: Corona Virus

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With vaccinations up, why arent Ohio coronavirus numbers going down? – cleveland.com

March 26, 2021

CLEVELAND, Ohio - While coronavirus cases are surging in many states, especially just to the north in Michigan, the bad news in Ohio is merely that they have leveled off or just inched up a bit over the last couple of weeks.

This raises some important questions.

Why arent case numbers continuing to shrink in Ohio with so many more people being vaccinated each week? Are there pockets of big increases geographically in the state waiting to spread? What role are the more contagious variants of the virus playing? And could this somewhat modest increase in case numbers statewide of late just be the lull before the storm - the return of a fall-like surge in cases across Ohio?

There are indications that the vaccine is beginning to have a real impact in limiting the spread of the virus, yet even with vaccinations started on about 3 million people across the state, 3-in-4 Ohioans have not received a single shot.

Its literally a race between how fast we can get people vaccinated and how fast people are willing to take the vaccine versus the variant. It now looks like we have enough fire power to keep going and going, Gov. Mike DeWine said Thursday, expressing confidence that the worst of the pandemic is within weeks of coming to an end.

Dr. Amy Edwards, infectious disease physician at University Hospitals in Cleveland, said that with 25% of the Ohioans vaccinated so far, thats clearly not enough to turn back variants of the virus beginning to spread.

If Ohio could hold steady in the number of new coronavirus cases for about four to six weeks, the state could get closer to 60% of the population vaccinated and a fourth wave of the virus will be averted, Edwards said.

I dont think anybody thinks thats actually going to happen, and so I think the fourth wave will be driven by these variants, she said.

The good news is that even if those who have been vaccinated contract a variant of the virus, their chances of dying or even ending up in the hospital are extremely rare, Edwards said.

There was a rare jump in cases for Ohio on Friday, as the state reported 2,742 new cases - the highest number for any day since Feb. 23.

Vaccinated individuals who get exposed to the variant, as opposed to the regular variant of COVID, they are more likely to get sick the vaccine is not as effective but it does still appear to protect against severe disease and death, even with a variant, she said.

It has become apparent in recent weeks that the vaccines are making a difference in Ohio. The first groups targeted were older Ohioans.

Close to 70% of those age 70 and up have now received at least one dose, in comparison to less than 20% of Ohioans under the age of 50. And older Ohioans are now accounting for smaller and smaller shares of both cases overall and those severe cases that have resulted in hospitalizations.

With an early focus on vaccinating older Ohioans, those people have begun to account for a smaller share of all known coronavirus cases. This chart is based on the month each case was reported by the Ohio Department of Health.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

For example, Ohioans age 70 and up accounted for 10.9% of the cases reported in January, yet just 5.8% of the March cases through Thursday.

Meanwhile the share of cases for those under the age of 30 has grown from 33.1% in January to 37.9% of all Ohio cases reported to date in March. Children under the age of 16 have not been approved to receive vaccines by the federal government, and vaccinations for young adults just recently opened up in Ohio.

More dramatic than the age change in cases has been the shift in hospitalizations. Among all coronavirus patients admitted in January, 49.5% were at least 70 years old. The share of hospitalizations for this age group has dropped to 32.4% for March.

Meanwhile, every other age group - Under 29, age 30 to 49 and age 50 to 69 - now take up larger shares of the hospitalizations.

Hospitalizations by age group in Ohio show a sharp drop for older Ohioans since they became the first group approved to receive vaccines.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

Increases sharper than Ohios are being reported in more than 20 states across the county, with perhaps no better example than neighboring Michigan - going from close to 1,050 cases a day in mid- to late-February to about 3,900 a day recently, according to tracking by Johns Hopkins University.

Is the rapid spread in Michigan starting to show up in Ohio? So far, it does not appear so.

In a comparison of seven-day case totals from March 11-17, when Ohio hit its low for the year, to the seven days through Thursday with slightly larger numbers overall, the county-by-county changes were fairly sporadic across the state - not concentrated in a single region or two.

At least 100 cases were reported in the last week for 23 Ohio counties, offering a large enough sample for a better comparisons than in smaller places with just a handful of cases.

The change in case rates for these counties were generally within a range of plus or minus 20% over the last seven days versus March 11-17. And those with the largest swings were not clustered geographically.

Cases were up 72.6% in Hancock County, the sharpest increase among these 23 counties, while they were down 31.3% in Medina County, representing the biggest drop.

As for Ohios three large counties, cases were up 6.9% in Franklin and 6.6% in Cuyahoga, but down 2.3% in Hamilton County.

Ohio counties with at least 100 newly reported cases in the last week, and how their rate changes compare to the statewide average.Rich Exner, cleveland.com

That leaves the question: beyond new variants, what else could be causing Ohios recent, modest increase?

Dr. Andy Thomas, Ohio State University Wexler Medical Centers chief clinical officer, said COVID-19 fatigue may also be a factor in cases these days, with people taking fewer precautions.

There are certainly people who, as the weather has gotten nicer, have gotten out more. Ive gotten the sense of that COVID fatigue that we talked about in the fall has returned this spring, he said.

Thomas believes variants will also become the predominant form of COVID-19, but he doesnt have a timeline for when that will occur. Hes seen predictions for mid-April or the end of April, but he said he cant be certain, since Ohio seems to be lagging in the spread of variants.

We are nowhere near where Florida is or Southern California in terms of the percent of variants, he said. Its certainly not a secret the variants are coming, and theyre more contagious.

Thomas believes Ohios vaccine strategy in which older Ohioans were prioritized because they are more at risk of hospitalization and death could be key if Ohio has an uptick of infections.

Even though were at risk of seeing an increase in the number of cases, my hope is we are not at risk of seeing a rapid increase in hospitalizations and deaths, he said.

All of which has the governor speaking optimistically, but with caution.

It is going to take all of us, DeWine said. Everybody in every community to encourage everyone to get vaccinated. Were going to move pretty quickly from the point where we didnt have enough vaccine to we do have plenty of vaccine.

Previous coverage

Ohios coronavirus case rate increases; 55 counties on red alert this week

Ohio officials report 1,501 new coronavirus cases: Thursday update

Ohio nursing home coronavirus cases decline again; state now reporting 7,055 deaths

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With vaccinations up, why arent Ohio coronavirus numbers going down? - cleveland.com

The 2 key reasons coronavirus cases are rising again – The Daily Briefing

March 26, 2021

Even as President Biden on Thursday announced a more ambitious target of vaccinating 200 million Americans during his early months in office, the United States is once again experiencing a surge in Covid-19 cases, leading experts to warn the country has not yet defeated the novel coronavirus.

Webinar series: 'Stay Up to Date' with the latest vaccine news and more

The United States last week administered an average of 2.5 million Covid-19 vaccine doses per dayup from an average of 2 million vaccine doses per day at the beginning of March, according to Bloomberg's Vaccine Tracker.

If the United States continues to administer vaccine does at this pace, the country would surpass President Biden's new goal of administering 200 million doses before his 100th day in officean increase from the 100 million dose target that Biden had announced at the time of his inauguration.

Biden announced the updated goal during a news conference Thursday, the New York Times reports.

According to CDC data, about 133.3 million doses of the vaccines had been administered in the United states as of Thursday morning. About 87.3 million Americans had received at least one dose, and about 47.4 million had been fully vaccinated, the data shows.

Overall, 26% of the U.S. population has received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, and 14.3% have been fully vaccinated as of Thursday morning, the data shows. When broken down by age groups, the data shows 71% of Americans ages 65 and olderwho are among the most vulnerable to severe cases of Covid-19have received at least one dose of a Coivd-19 vaccine, and more than 44% have been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus.

Although vaccinations have accelerated, recent data indicates the number of coronavirus cases is climbing once again after declining for months.

According to data compiled by the Times, the United States' average daily number of newly reported coronavirus cases over the past week was 58,579up by 3% compared with the average from two weeks ago.

The Times' data showed that, as of Friday morning, the rates of newly reported coronavirus cases were "staying high" in 25 states that have reported a daily average of at least 15 newly reported cases per 100,000 people over the past week. Those states are Alaska, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia.

In addition, the rate of newly reported coronavirus cases was "going up" as of Friday morning in Hawaii, Oregon, Washington, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, which have had comparatively lower case rates, the Times reports.

Even as cases are increasing, new hospitalizations and deaths are continuing to decline. According to the Times' data, 39,439 Americans with Covid-19 were hospitalized on Thursdaydown by 10% from the average from two weeks ago. Further, 1,270 new deaths were linked to the coronavirus on Thursday, down 31% from the average two weeks ago.

Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics sciences at the University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), said the latest data indicates the United States is experiencing "a localized surge" in coronavirus cases, "but we could see it everywhere [i]f we are not quick to dialing back or imposing mandates to slow down the surge." Mokdad added, "We are not out of danger."

Experts have said the recent uptick in coronavirus cases likely stems from two key factors: states easing coronavirus-related restrictions, and the spread of more transmissible coronavirus variants.

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said she's concerned eased restrictions coupled with spring break could hurt the progress the United States has made in containing the coronavirus epidemic.

"What concerns me is the footage of what's happening in spring breakers, in people who are not continuing to implement prevention strategies while we get fully scaled up," Walensky said during a White House Covid-19 briefing. "We need to hang in there for just a little while longer because we can see a time in the next couple of months where we will have a lot more people vaccinated and we will really be able to blunt infection rates," she added.

Meanwhile, IHME attributed the increase in cases in the northern half of the United States in part to "the spread of the B.1.1.7 variant." CDC is currently studying the spread of more contagious variants in the United States, Roll Call reports.

Health officials are urging states to not ease measures aimed at containing the coronavirus until a larger share of the U.S. population is vaccinatedand they're asking Americans to continue to wear face masks and follow other precautions.

"I'm often asked, 'Are we turning the corner?' My response is really more like, 'We are at the corner. Whether or not we turn the corner remains to be seen,'" Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and chief medical advisor for the White House's Covid-19 response, said at a press briefing. "We do have a lot of challenges in front of us with regard to the high level of daily infections" (Stolberg, New York Times, 3/25; Watson/Johnson, Associated Press, 3/26; Gorman, Reuters, 3/25; Querolo/Court, Bloomberg, 3/25; Sullivan, The Hill, 3/24; Baker/Witherspoon, Axios, 3/25; Caldwell, CNN, 3/26; Kopp, Roll Call, 3/24; Maxouris/Colbert, CNN, 3/26;

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The 2 key reasons coronavirus cases are rising again - The Daily Briefing

Coronavirus Tracker: Hospitalizations on the rise for a second straight day – KENS5.com

March 26, 2021

Facts, not fear: We're tracking the latest numbers from the coronavirus pandemic in San Antonio and across Texas.

SAN ANTONIO We're tracking the latest numbers from the coronaviruspandemic in San Antonio and across Texas. Here are the latest numbers reported by Bexar and surrounding counties:

More county case information is available through theTexas Department of Health Services COVID-19 dashboard.

How Bexar County is trending

We've tracked how many coronavirus cases have been confirmed in Bexar County from the time officials began reporting cases in March 2020. The graphic below shows the number of cases since June and charts those daily case numbers along a 7-day moving average to provide a more accurate picture of the overall coronavirus case curve in our area and the direction we're trending amid the pandemic.

On Thursday, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg reported an additional 210 coronavirus cases in Bexar County. At least 203,191 county residents have been diagnosed with the virus, and the seven-day rolling case average rose to 179.

Three new virus-related fatalities were reported; the local death toll rose to 3,076.

31 patients were admitted into area hospitals in the last 24 hours; 188 concurrent patients are receiving treatment for COVID as hospitals rose for a second straight day Thursday. Of those 188 patients, 39 are on ventilators and 69 are in intensive care.

Monday's weekly update of the Warning Signs and Progress Indicators for Bexar County saw Bexar County holding steady at the low-risk level. The positivity rate dropped to 2.3 percent, which is the lowest rate since April 2020, when Metro Health began tracking data.

Coronavirus in Texas

The total number of novel coronavirus cases in the state since the pandemic began grew by 3,234 on Thursday, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services. That total includes 2,167 new confirmed cases, 788 new probable cases, and a backlog of 279 cases. More details can be found on this page.

Thursday's figures bring the total number of Texans diagnosed with COVID-19 to more than 2.759 million.

Meanwhile, state health authorities reported an additional 132 deaths from coronavirus complications in Texas. In all, 46,868 Texans have died from COVID-19 complications.

The number of concurrent hospitalizations across the state, dropped by 51 over the last 24 hours to 3,410 COVID-19 patients receiving treatment for their symptoms across the state, as of Thursday.

The state, meanwhile, estimates that about 2.607 million Texans have recovered, while 98,916 Texans remain ill with COVID-19.

The latest update from the Texas Education Agency showed that there have been at least 194,936 cumulative cases among staff and students on Texas public school campuses through March 14. That number comprises 127,196 positive student cases and 67,740 staff cases. More information can be found here.

The TEA typically releases new data on school cases on Fridays.

Latest Coronavirus Headlines

Coronavirus symptoms

The symptoms of coronavirus can be similar to the flu or a bad cold. Symptoms include fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, and diarrhea, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

Most healthy people will have mild symptoms. A study of more than 72,000 patients by the Centers for Disease Control in China showed 80 percent of the cases there were mild.

But infections can cause pneumonia, severe acute respiratory syndrome, kidney failure, and even death, according to the World Health Organization. Older people with underlying health conditions are most at risk.

Experts determined there was consistent evidence these conditions increase a person's risk, regardless of age:

Human coronaviruses are usually spread...

Help stop the spread of coronavirus

Find a Testing Location

City officials recommend getting a COVID-19 test if you experience fever or chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, new loss of taste or smell, sore throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, or diarrhea.

Here's a Testing Sites Locatorto help you find the testing location closest to you in San Antonio.

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Coronavirus Tracker: Hospitalizations on the rise for a second straight day - KENS5.com

144 more Ohioans have died with coronavirus, cases up 2,742: Friday update – cleveland.com

March 26, 2021

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The federal government said 144 more Ohioans have died with the coronavirus, bringing the total to 18,526 on Friday.

Cases were up 2,742 since Thursday, to a total of 1,008,913. Fridays case count is much higher than the 21-day rolling average of 1,556 cases.

For cases, the state follows the federal Centers for Disease Control and Preventions definition, which includes those diagnosed through genetic PCR or antigen tests, or people diagnosed in a clinical setting -- experiencing symptoms who are linked to a confirmed COVID-19 case, among other criteria.

For deaths, the state quit calculating the figure and now relies on twice weekly reports from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The last report was on Tuesday, when there were 18,382 deaths of Ohio residents with COVID-19.

Another 52,119 received second doses of vaccine or the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine on Friday, bringing the total number of fully vaccinated Ohioans to just over 1.76 million people. This is 15.09% of the population.

Other figures from Fridays Ohio Department of Health report:

-2.9% of PCR and molecular coronavirus tests were positive on Wednesday, the most recent day with positivity. The seven-day rolling average positivity rate is 3%.

-944 people were hospitalized with COVID-19 in Ohio facilities, six more people than on Thursday.

Outside Ohio:

Worldwide, over 125.6 million coronavirus cases have been tracked by Johns Hopkins University, including 2.7 million deaths.

In the U.S., there have been 30 million cases, and 547,000 deaths.

Following the U.S. in deaths is Brazil, with 303,000 and Mexico, with 200,000.

More coverage:

With vaccinations up, why arent Ohio coronavirus numbers going down?

Ohio officials report 1,501 new coronavirus cases: Thursday update

Audit finds Ohio coronavirus data generally accurate, but handling of information inefficient

FEMA giving Ohio $8.7 million to cover cost of Cleveland coronavirus mass vaccination site

Continue reading here:

144 more Ohioans have died with coronavirus, cases up 2,742: Friday update - cleveland.com

Hamilton County health director led the fight against COVID-19. Then it took his life. – IndyStar

March 26, 2021

Governor Eric Holcomb gives COVID-19 update on Tuesday, March 23, 2021. Indianapolis Star

Before the first case of COVID-19 reached the United States, Barry McNulty kept a close watch onthe virus' development in China in January, 2020.

McNulty, administratorof the Hamilton County Health Department, told his son Zach he had little doubt it would soon be a local problem.

From the beginning he knew it would come to the U.S., Zach McNulty said.

Twelve months later, the disease came for McNulty. He died Dec. 17 at Riverview Health in Noblesville after nearly a month in the hospitalbattling coronavirus. The death shocked friends and families who knew McNulty, 59, as a healthy and robust outdoorsman as well as a fastidious health professional who guided the county through the height of the deadly pandemic.

He was constantly helping us understand how serious this thing was so we could know what protocols to put in place, said Hamilton County Commissioner Mark Heribrandt. He was stressing handwashing, mask wearing, all off it. We went mobile, had virtual meetings very quickly because of him.

The first coronavirus death in Hamilton County was onMarch 30, 2020, and the county had recorded 407 deaths as of Thursday.

Zach McNulty said the irony of his fathers death was also instructive: it highlighted the perniciousness of the deadly disease and the value of cherishing the day and loved ones.

COVID-19 vaccine: How to get a shot in Indiana

This virus has changed all of our lives, but in many it has brought focus back onto what is most important and essential to us, McNulty, 32, said at A Night of Reflection, Hamiltons Countys tribute to coronavirus victims March 13, his first public comments on the cause of his fathers death.

McNulty said Wednesday the event, which was attended by county health workers, politicians, and police and firefighters, was a way to tell them to carry on his mission.

The Night of Reflection was also a chance for Zach to eulogize his father for those who knew the popular McNulty but couldnt attend the limited attendancememorial in January.

Barry McNulty was an adventure traveler, hunter, fisherman, boater, beekeeper and rock climber. He coached youth baseball and was a longtime member of the Noblesville First United Methodist Church and the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.

He was a husband,father of two sons and brother to three siblings. Henever stopped dreaming of his next adventure.

In his day job, McNulty seamlessly switched from turkey vest to lab coat as an employee of the health department for 33 years, 24 of them spent as director. He served as a Noblesville city councilman for eight years and on the Noblesville Board of Zoning Appeals for more than 30 years.

McNulty took annual hunting and fishing trips, such as fly fishing in Wyoming or hunting in the Dakotas, and often brought along Zach, who is now a naturalist for the Hamilton County parks.

My love of the outdoors started with my parents, McNulty told IndyStar.

Barry McNulty also had an endless list of things he wanted to do -- some which he got to and some he didnt -- such as attending the Rose Bowl to seehis alma mater Purdue play, or dove hunting in Argentina.

He hunted for pheasant, turkey and deer in southern Indiana, where he had a property, and raised bees and had served as vice president of the Beekeepers of Indiana.

McNulty had been considering retirement before he got sick and bought the boat of his dreams, a 43-foot North Pacific yacht. He and his wife of 35 years, Ann, planned on trying to complete the Great North Loop, a 6,000-mile course extending from the eastern seaboard up through the Great Lakes, down the Mississippi River and around the Gulf Coast.

Indiana COVID map: Slight virus spread improvement as state plans to lift restrictions

The retirement plans got more serious the longer McNulty spent in the hospital when it became apparent hed have a long recovery, his son said.

They might have been thinking about being snowbirds in Florida, he said.

In the days before his death, things were looking up and it appeared he may be released, said Heirbrandt, who kept in touch with McNulty throughout the hospitalization.

He was telling me Im going togo home for Christmas, Heirbrandt said.

Zach said he couldnt see his father when he was hospitalized because he had contracted COVID-19, too. His mother was able to see her husband during his last four day,but McNulty was short of breath and it was hard to speak. Instead, they communicated with notes, which she has saved.

Zach last spoke to his father through a Facetime call the day before he died.

Jason LeMaster, who worked with McNulty for 24 years and has succeeded him as health administrator, said McNulty kept in touch through texts the entire time, usually with words of encouragement rather than instruction.

If anyone in the department got a text they would share it with everyone else.

He mentored me and he put people in place who he was sure knew what to do, said LeMaster, who was good friends with the director, learned to hunt with him and last year began to raise bees.

He said December was a busy time --coronavirus caseloads were spiking and the department was planning how to distribute the first shipments of the Moderna vaccine.

But McNulty had built the department to meet just such challenges, he said.

McNulty sent his last textto LeMaster a week before he died. LeMaster made a 10x12 inchprint of the words set against a backdrop of a mountain range -- which he framed -- to remind him of his friend and to remind him to stay dedicated to public health.

So proud of all of you, I have always said we have the best PH team in the state, it read.

Call IndyStar reporter John Tuohy at 317-444-6418. Email at john.tuohy@indystar.com and follow on Twitter and Facebook.

Read or Share this story: https://www.indystar.com/story/news/local/hamilton-county/2021/03/26/hamilton-county-indiana-covid-19-death-barry-mcnulty/6995169002/

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Hamilton County health director led the fight against COVID-19. Then it took his life. - IndyStar

Coronavirus response | Families of balanced-calendar students weigh options for unusual year – Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

March 26, 2021

CHAMPAIGN When Brendan and Amy Ellis son, Victor, began attending Kenwood Elementary School six years ago, they didnt know how much theyd enjoy its balanced- calendar schedule, which includes a shortened summer and three-week breaks in the fall and spring.

That quickly changed.

Were like, Hey, we get three weeks in October to do whatever we want, so we can go to Disney World or whatever when its a lot cheaper, and in March, we can do whatever we want, said Brendan, whose daughter, Molly, is now also a student there. But then, even cooler, June comes around, and were like, Hes back to school in six weeks.

He got his sillies out for six weeks and then hes back to school and its like, Hey, hes learning something and not forgetting.

Last year, returning to school in July simply wasnt possible with the coronavirus pandemic putting plans for the school year in flux.

So for the first time, the current students at Kenwood and Barkstall experienced a long summer and long stretches with minimal breaks.

For the 2021-22 school year, the Champaign school district is offering two options for families: fully in-person classes or the districts Distance Learning Academy, a regular-calendar school that will act as a separate school.

The district will send parents a request to make a decision on March 29, and the decision they make will be in effect for the entire year, although theyll have a chance to revisit their choice at the semester break as long as in-person space is available.

Thats a really hard choice, said Ashley Hallock, whose son, Luke, is in fourth grade at Kenwood. This year has been hard on all of us. But for the boys not to be able to go hang out with their friends, thats taking a toll as well.

That means families of Kenwood and Barkstall elementary students will have a decision that not only affects whether they attend school virtually or in person, but also whether they go to school with a balanced calendar or a regular calendar.

And with balanced-calendar schools resuming classes on July 22, that leaves less time for critical questions to be answered, including whether children will be able to be vaccinated.

If we were doing in person, wed be excited about the return to a balanced calendar, Elli said. But were kind of afraid right now.

Were excited that they have balanced, but we might not be in person. Were going to wait to see how we get a vaccine. When is a vaccine available for 9-year-olds? Once Mollys vaccinated, once Victor gets vaccinated, were like, Shove them in the school. But were kind of like, Eh, how are we going to do this?

A year after the district struggled with its decision as to whether to invite kids back into classrooms for the start of the year, its up to parents this year to weigh the risk against the reward.

Well have to figure out the lesser of two evils, Hallock said. There really isnt a great option. I dont necessarily fault the district for that, but I dont feel that with the time were going to have to make a decision, we wont have enough information to make a decision.

Continue reading here:

Coronavirus response | Families of balanced-calendar students weigh options for unusual year - Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

Georgia reports first case of coronavirus variant that was initially detected in Brazil, health officials say – 11Alive.com WXIA

March 24, 2021

The variant, which was originally detected in Manaus, Brazil, appears to be more contagious than the original COVID-19 strain

ATLANTA A coronavirus variant detected in Brazil has emerged in Georgia, according to the state'sDept. of Public Health.

The variant, which was originally detected in Manaus, Brazil, appears to be more contagious than the original COVID-19 strain, according to the Associated Press. It can potentially be contracted by someone who was already infected or who has been vaccinated.

According to the CDC, this variant contains a set of additional mutations that may affect its ability to be recognized by antibodies. This variant was first detected in the United States at the end of January.

They said this variant was first identified in travelers from Brazil, who were tested during routine screening at an airport in Japan in early January.

The DPH spokesperson said the one case they know about was detected in Newton County. It is known as the P.1 variant. The CDC says there are at least 54 total cases in the United States.

The state is reporting 15 cases of another variant, first discovered in South Africa, known as B.1.351.

There are 351 known cases in Georgia of the B.1.1.7 variant which got a lot of attention that originated in the United Kingdom.

With the new variants originating across the globe, it is important to know that very few COVID tests are actually checking for these new variants.

11Alive is focusing our news coverage on the facts and not the fear around the virus. We want to keep you informed about the latest developments while ensuring that we deliver confirmed, factual information. We will track the most important coronavirus elements relating to Georgiaon this page.

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Georgia reports first case of coronavirus variant that was initially detected in Brazil, health officials say - 11Alive.com WXIA

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