Category: Corona Virus

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G League looking into claim made by Jeremy Lin that he was called ‘coronavirus’ on court – ESPN

March 2, 2021

The G League is investigating a claim made by Jeremy Lin that he was called "coronavirus" during a game, a league official told ESPN's Marc J. Spears on Friday.

In a Facebook post Thursday, Lin, the former NBA guard now playing for the Santa Cruz Warriors of the G League, spoke out about the racism he believes the Asian American community continues to deal with and offered examples that he said he has experienced.

"Being a 9 year NBA veteran doesn't protect me from being called 'coronavirus' on the court," he wrote.

Lin didn't specify when he was called that, and it was unclear if the incident occurred in the G League bubble in Orlando, Florida, where Lin currently is playing as a member of Santa Cruz, the Warriors' affiliate.

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On Friday night, Golden State coach Steve Kerr said he'd like to see the NBA investigate Lin's claim.

"I just saw the Facebook post just now," Kerr said. "Really powerful. I applaud Jeremy for his words and echo his sentiments regarding racism against the Asian American community. It's just so ridiculous and obviously spawned by many people, including our former president [Donald Trump], as it relates to the coronavirus originating in China. It's just shocking. I don't know -- I can't wrap my head around any of it, but I can't wrap my head around racism in general."

Lin became the first American-born NBA player of Chinese or Taiwanese descent when he broke in with the Warriors during the 2010-11 season. He became best known for a hot scoring stretch -- one that led to wins with the New York Knicks during the 2011-12 season -- that was described as "Linsanity." In total, the former Harvard star averaged 11.6 points and 4.3 assists in 480 games in the NBA from 2010 to 2019.

He previously had spoken out about racist taunts he received while playing, saying in a 2017 podcast that while some came during his time in the NBA, they were far worse during his four years at Harvard while competing on the road from 2006 to 2010.

In his Facebook post Thursday, Lin said the current generation of Asian Americans "is tired of being told that we don't experience racism."

"We are tired of being told to keep our heads down and not make trouble," he wrote. "We are tired of Asian American kids growing up and being asked where they're REALLY from, of having our eyes mocked, of being objectified as exotic or being told we're inherently unattractive. We are tired of the stereotypes in Hollywood affecting our psyche and limiting who we think we can be. We are tired of being invisible, of being mistaken for our colleague or told our struggles aren't as real.

"I want better for my elders who worked so hard and sacrificed so much to make a life for themselves here. I want better for my niece and nephew and future kids. I want better for the next generation of Asian American athletes than to have to work so hard to just be 'deceptively athletic.'"

Before his G League stint this season, Lin had been playing in the Chinese Basketball Association.

When asked specifically about whether he would like to see an investigation regarding Lin's claim, Kerr quickly answered Friday.

"Oh yeah, for sure," he said. "As I said, I saw the post, the reference was a little bit vague, so I think it would be good to know what happened."

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G League looking into claim made by Jeremy Lin that he was called 'coronavirus' on court - ESPN

The Latest: Thailand begins COVID-19 vaccinations – KTIV

February 28, 2021

BANGKOK Thailand started its first vaccinations Sunday with 200 public health officials receiving the Sinovac vaccine from China.

Health Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul was given the first shot at a hospital near Bangkok, followed by the deputy health minister and other senior officials.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who attended the vaccination ceremony, said the public should have confidence in the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine, as it has been approved by authorities in Thailand and other countries.

Prayuth did not receive the vaccine on Sunday because he is older than Sinovacs recommended age, which is 18-59. Prayuth is 66.

Thailand received the first 200,000 doses of the Sinovac vaccine on Wednesday. They are part of the governments plan that has so far secured 2 million doses from Sinovac and 61 million doses from AstraZeneca.

Thailand has had more than 25,000 confirmed cases and 83 deaths from COVID-19.

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THE VIRUS OUTBREAK:

J&Js one-dose shot cleared, giving U.S. a 3rd COVID-19 vaccine

Plunging demand for COVID-19 tests may leave US exposed

Biden hails House passage of $1.9 trillion virus bill, now to Senate

New York state mandates dance zones, distancing when weddings resume

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Follow all of APs pandemic coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic, https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-vaccine and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

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HERES WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING:

WASHINGTON The U.S. now has a third vaccine to prevent COVID-19.

The Food and Drug Administration on Saturday cleared a Johnson & Johnson shot that works with just one dose instead of two.

Health experts have anxiously awaited a one-and-done option to help speed vaccinations. The virus has already killed more than 510,000 people in the U.S. and is mutating in increasingly worrisome ways.

The FDA said J&Js vaccine offers strong protection against what matters most: serious illness, hospitalizations and death. One dose was 85% protective against the most severe COVID-19 illness, in a massive study that spanned three continents.

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LONDON Church bells rang out and a World War II-era plane flew over the funeral service of Captain Tom Moore, in honor of the veteran who raised millions for Britains health workers by walking laps in his backyard.

Captain Tom, as he became known, died Feb. 2 at age 100 after testing positive for COVID-19. Just eight members of the veterans immediate family attended Saturdays private funeral service, but soldiers carried his coffin and formed a ceremonial guard.

Daddy, you always told us Best foot forward and true to your word, thats what you did last year, Moores daughter Lucy Teixeira said at the service.

Moore, who served in India, Burma and Sumatra during World War II, set out to raise a modest 1,000 pounds for Britains NHS by walking 100 laps of his backyard by his 100th birthday last year. But donations poured in from across Britain and beyond as his quest went viral.

His trademark phrase Please remember, tomorrow will be a good day inspired the nation at a time of crisis. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in July at Windsor Castle.

A version of the song Smile singer Michael Bubl recorded for the funeral was played. So was My Way by Frank Sinatra, as Moore requested.

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MILAN The Lombardy region where Milan is located is heading toward a partial lockdown on Monday. Mayor Giuseppe Sala said in a video message he was disturbed by scenes of people gathering in public places, often with their masks down.

Italy has failed to flatten the curve on the fall resurgence, with numbers of new infections and deaths remaining stubbornly high amid new variants creating new outbreaks. The Italian Health Ministry reported 18,916 new infections and 280 deaths on Saturday.

The regions of Lombardy, Piedmont and Marche will go into partial lockdown on Monday, meaning no table service at bars and restaurants. Police vans blocked entrance to Milans trendy Navigli neighborhood Saturday evening after the mayor announced increased patrols to prevent gatherings during a spring-like weekend.

Basilicata and Molise will be designated red zones on Monday, which means upper grades will have remote learning and non-essential stores are closed. A 10 p.m. curfew remains in effect throughout the country.

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ALBANY, N.Y. New Yorks new coronavirus-era dance rules arent exactly Footloose strict, but dont plan on cutting loose and kicking off the Sunday shoes with just anybody.

The state says when wedding receptions resume next month, guests will be allowed to hit the dance floor only with members of their immediate party, household or family seated at the same table.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo previously announced weddings can begin again on March 15. Venues will be restricted to 50% of capacity, up to 150 guests, and all must be tested for coronavirus beforehand.

Dancers must wear face masks and stay within their own dancing areas or zones.

Happy couples can still take a twirl for a ceremonial first dance, and other couples can join in, but they must all stay 6 feet apart.

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BISMARCK, N.D. Nearly 10% of residents in North Dakota have completed both doses of the COVID-19 vaccine.

The North Dakota Department of Health data indicates nearly 70,000 people in the state, or 9.5% of the population, have received the full two-dose series. More than 126,000, or 17.3%, have received the first dose.

North Dakota reported three COVID-19-related deaths on Saturday, bringing the states confirmed death toll to 1,445. Another 71 cases were confirmed, for a total of 99,780 overall.

Meanwhile, the North Dakota Department of Commerce announced $20 million in grants to help the states hotels, motels and lodging businesses that lost revenue due to the pandemic.

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INDIANAPOLIS Nearly 900 new cases of the coronavirus and 27 more deaths have been reported in Indiana.

The Indiana Department of Health says the 897 newly diagnosed cases bring the states confirmed total to 660,942 since the start of the pandemic.

The state has registered 12,125 deaths, while another 431 probable deaths have been reported based on clinical diagnoses in patients with no positive test on record.

More than 981,000 Indiana residents have received a first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and 552,241 are fully vaccinated.

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JUNEAU, Alaska The federal government has approved Alaskas plan to give the states fishing industry almost $50 million in pandemic relief.

Commercial applicants will be required to provide evidence that the coronavirus pandemic caused them to lose at least 35% of revenue in 2020. Applications will be accepted from March until May.

Alaska Department of Fish and Game Deputy Commissioner Rachel Baker says the final plan excludes commercial permit holders who fish in Alaska but live in other states that received coronavirus relief. Payments could begin as early as June.

CoastAlaska reported Friday the decision came after two major revisions to the plan and more than 200 public comments from every industry sector.

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CARIBOU, Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine wants the Biden administration to reconsider U.S.-Canada border restrictions that were imposed a year ago because of the pandemic.

Her letter came less than a week after Department of Homeland Security announced the U.S., Mexico and Canada had jointly agreed to maintain land border restrictions until March 21.

Collins wrote in a letter to DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas that an equitable solution is needed for border communities that recognizes lower risk levels.

Only Canadian citizens, Americans with dual citizenship and family members and partners can cross for nonessential purposes.

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SEATTLE People looking for a unique outdoor dining option during the pandemic can now make a run to the home of the Seattle Seahawks.

A dining series called Field to Table kicked off this month at Lumen Field. It features four-course meals from local chefs, plus a view of the NFL stadium normally reserved for players and coaches.

Diners eat their meals under an open-sided tent on the field, near the north end zone.

Event producer Sam Minkoff says the series original dates quickly sold out, but additional reservations will be available soon.

A portion of the proceeds go to the nonprofit Big Table, which helps struggling restaurant and hospitality workers. Seattle area eateries recently resumed reduced-capacity indoor seating after being restricted to takeout or limited outdoor seating.

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The Latest: Thailand begins COVID-19 vaccinations - KTIV

Opinion | The Final Push to End the Coronavirus Pandemic in the U.S. – The New York Times

February 28, 2021

Vaccines have brought the United States tantalizingly close to crushing the coronavirus within its borders. After months of hiccups, some 1.4 million people are now being vaccinated every day, and many more shots are coming through the pipeline. The Food and Drug Administration has just authorized a third vaccine a single-dose shot made by Johnson & Johnson while Pfizer and Moderna are promising to greatly expand the supply of their shots, to roughly 100 million total doses per month, by early spring.

If those vaccines make their way into arms quickly, the nation could be on its way to a relatively pleasant summer and something approaching normal by autumn. Imagine schools running at full capacity in September and families gathering for Thanksgiving.

But turning that if into a when will require clearing additional hurdles so that everyone who needs to be vaccinated gets vaccinated. This is especially true for racial minorities, who are being disproportionately missed by the vaccination effort.

Theres plenty of disagreement among experts as to why America is still having problems with vaccine uptake. Some officials have suggested that the main cause is that too many people are hesitant to get the vaccine. Others point the finger at overcautious public health officials who they say have undersold the promise of the vaccines. Still others point to long lines at clinics as proof that far more people want the vaccine than can actually get it.

There is probably some truth to all of these hypotheses, and the underlying problems are not new. Vaccine hesitancy had been growing steadily in America long before the current pandemic, so much so that in 2019 the World Health Organization ranked it as one of the leading global health threats. At the same time, poor health care access and other logistical constraints, such as a lack of public transportation and limited internet access, have long impeded public health efforts in low-income communities.

To maximize the number of Americans getting vaccinations, policymakers need to tackle each of these crises with greater urgency than they have so far.

As supply increases, health officials should mount ambitious vaccination campaigns modeled on ones that have worked to curb diseases in other countries. That will mean not relying solely on web portals for scheduling vaccine appointments. It will mean going block by block and door to door, through high-risk communities especially. It will mean setting up employee vaccination sites at schools, grocery stores, transit hubs and meatpacking plants, and community clinics at houses of worship, with local leaders promoting and running them.

The easier you can make it for people to get vaccinated, the more likely your program will be to succeed, said Dr. Walter Orenstein, a former director of the national immunization program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Its really that simple.

Outreach efforts cost money. But theyre far less expensive than allowing the pandemic to fester. Congress has appropriated some money to help states with vaccine rollout. It should offer more, and states should put as much of those resources as possible toward vaccination efforts that meet people where they are.

Health officials should also recognize that vaccine hesitancy has many root causes deliberate disinformation campaigns, mistrust of medical authorities in marginalized communities, ill-considered messaging by health officials. The best way to counter that is with campaigns that are locally led, that clearly outline the benefits of vaccination and that frame getting the shot as not just a personal choice but a collective responsibility.

Doctors and scientists can help those pro-vaccine messages stick by minding their own public communications. Its crucial to be transparent about what vaccines will and wont do for society overselling now will only sow more mistrust later.

That said, underselling is its own problem. Its true that these vaccines will not immediately restore the world to total normalcy. But they will eventually allow people to hug their loved ones, to return to their offices and to be protected from dying from or becoming seriously ill with Covid-19. Health officials should be clear about that.

Policymakers at the highest levels of government should press social media companies and e-commerce sites to curb the most aggressive purveyors of vaccine disinformation.

To not only quell this pandemic but to try to prevent the next one, America will need to improve its health system and its public health apparatus, both of which have significant holes. The problem with a lot of the response is that it was predicated on the idea that we have a good system in place for doing adult immunizations across the country, said Dr. Peter Hotez, a vaccine expert at Baylor College of Medicine. The fact is, we really dont.

In the end, lawmakers and the people who vote them into office will have to address the much broader problems that this pandemic has exposed.

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Opinion | The Final Push to End the Coronavirus Pandemic in the U.S. - The New York Times

Can vaccinated people still spread the coronavirus? – The Conversation US

February 28, 2021

Editors note: So youve gotten your coronavirus vaccine, waited the two weeks for your immune system to respond to the shot and are now fully vaccinated. Does this mean you can make your way through the world like the old days without fear of spreading the virus? Deborah Fuller is a microbiologist at the University of Washington working on coronavirus vaccines. She explains what the science shows about transmission post-vaccination and whether new variants could change this equation.

The short answer is no. You can still get infected after youve been vaccinated. But your chances of getting seriously ill are almost zero.

Many people think vaccines work like a shield, blocking a virus from infecting cells altogether. But in most cases, a person who gets vaccinated is protected from disease, not necessarily infection.

Every persons immune system is a little different, so when a vaccine is 95% effective, that just means 95% of people who receive the vaccine wont get sick. These people could be completely protected from infection, or they could be getting infected but remain asymptomatic because their immune system eliminates the virus very quickly. The remaining 5% of vaccinated people can become infected and get sick, but are extremely unlikely to be hospitalized.

Vaccination doesnt 100% prevent you from getting infected, but in all cases it gives your immune system a huge leg up on the coronavirus. Whatever your outcome whether complete protection from infection or some level of disease you will be better off after encountering the virus than if you hadnt been vaccinated.

Transmission happens when enough viral particles from an infected person get into the body of an uninfected person. In theory, anyone infected with the coronavirus could potentially transmit it. But a vaccine will reduce the chance of this happening.

In general, if vaccination doesnt completely prevent infection, it will significantly reduce the amount of virus coming out of your nose and mouth a process called shedding and shorten the time that you shed the virus. This is a big deal. A person who sheds less virus is less likely to transmit it to someone else.

This seems to be the case with coronavirus vaccines. In a recent preprint study which has yet to be peer reviewed, Israeli researchers tested 2,897 vaccinated people for signs of coronavirus infection. Most had no detectable virus, but people who were infected had one-quarter the amount of virus in their bodies as unvaccinated people tested at similar times post-infection.

Less coronavirus virus means less chance of spreading it, and if the amount of virus in your body is low enough, the probability of transmitting it may reach almost zero. However, researchers dont yet know where that cutoff is for the coronavirus, and since the vaccines dont provide 100% protection from infection, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that people continue to wear masks and social distance even after theyve been vaccinated.

New variants of coronavirus have emerged in recent months, and recent studies show that vaccines are less effective against certain ones, like the B1351 variant first identified in South Africa.

Every time SARS-CoV-2 replicates, it gets new mutations. In recent months, researchers have found new variants that are more infective meaning a person needs to breathe in less virus to become infected and other variants that are more transmissible - meaning they increase the amount of virus a person sheds. And researchers have also found at least one new variant that seems to be better at evading the immune system, according to early data.

So how does this relate to vaccines and transmission?

For the South Africa variant, vaccines still provide greater than 85% protection from getting severely ill with COVID19. But when you count mild and moderate cases, they provide, at best, only about 50%-60% protection. That means at least 40% of vaccinated people will still have a strong enough infection and enough virus in their body to cause at least moderate disease.

If vaccinated people have more virus in their bodies and it takes less of that virus to infect another person, there will be higher probability a vaccinated person could transmit these new strains of the coronavirus.

If all goes well, vaccines will very soon reduce the rate of severe disease and death worldwide. To be sure, any vaccine that reduces disease severity is also, at the population level, reducing the amount of virus being shed overall. But because of the emergence of new variants, vaccinated people still have the potential to shed and spread the coronavirus to other people, vaccinated or otherwise. This means it will likely take much longer for vaccines to reduce transmission and for populations to reach herd immunity than if these new variants had never emerged. Exactly how long that will take is a balance between how effective vaccines are against emerging strains and how transmissible and infectious these new strains are.

[Research into coronavirus and other news from science Subscribe to The Conversations new science newsletter.]

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Can vaccinated people still spread the coronavirus? - The Conversation US

Coronavirus response | Wheels of justice to resume grinding in Champaign County – Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

February 28, 2021

URBANA With the health of Champaign County improving daily, the judiciary is ready to welcome jurors back.

Three big courtrooms. Three masked judges. No waiting.

After postponing jury trials in December, January and February, Champaign County Presiding Judge Randy Rosenbaum said they will begin again Monday.

Whether actual or not, there was a perception of a backlog of cases, particularly people in jail who wanted a trial, he said. Normally, one judge at a time handles felony trials. To help with the backlog, I have assigned three judges to handle felony trials for the next two weeks.

The trial moratorium was declared in mid-December to prepare for a predicted post-holiday surge in COVID-19 cases. The idea was to keep people who did not absolutely need to be in the courthouse out of it.

With the number of infections decreasing and the ranks of the vaccinated increasing, Rosenbaum rallied the troops to start the wheels of justice turning fully.

After a lot of tinkering with the details, the process should be fully operational Monday.

Rosenbaum and Judge Roger Webber normally hear all the felony jury trials. Judge Jason Bohm, who handles a civil caseload, is on backup to hear any cases that Rosenbaum and Webber cant handle.

While there is a possibility of three trials going on at once, the selection of jurors to hear those trials, assuming they materialize, will be staggered to keep the numbers manageable. Defendants frequently accept negotiated plea agreements once they know trials are set to begin. And sometimes, key witnesses cant be found and trials either have to be continued or cases dismissed.

Those summoned for jury duty may watch their orientation video virtually at home, and are encouraged to do so.

Those who dont have the ability to do that can watch it in the spacious jury assembly room on Monday.

Rosenbaum said summonses were sent to 120 people, 20 more than usual. He and his colleagues are hoping that most of those summoned will show up to insure an ample pool.

Were moving the lawyers further away from the jurors, we are spreading out the jurors farther, and are putting more Plexiglas between lawyers and jurors, Rosenbaum said of some of the courtroom modifications.

Of the 11 courtrooms in the 19-year-old courthouse, three are considerably larger than the other eight. They were designed for high-volume dockets like traffic and arraignment.

Turns out they fit the bill for being able to spread out and are now earmarked for trials only during the two weeks jurors are in the house.

To prepare those courtrooms, county maintenance workers removed the first two rows of benches on one side of the gallery behind the bar that separates the public from the court and jury.

That was done to be able to spread the 12 jurors and two alternates out so they will be at least 6 feet apart. The schematic involves putting five jurors in the jury box, one in front of the jury box, four in front of the bar, and four just behind the bar in chairs where the uncomfortable 90-degree benches normally are.

As with the jury trials done during the summer, jurors will go to two separate jury rooms during their breaks. When it comes time to deliberate, they will be put in one of the smaller courtrooms so they can spread out.

The logistics of just how many spectators may be in the courtroom is still being calculated, Rosenbaum said.

Jury trials typically dont hold the same allure for the public as a blockbuster movie premiere, but the occasional high-profile murder case can mean lots of supporters for both victims and defendants.

Trials must be open to the public so Rosenbaum said there may be a trial where courthouse staffers will have to reconfigure seats to safely accommodate all who would like to be present.

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Coronavirus response | Wheels of justice to resume grinding in Champaign County - Champaign/Urbana News-Gazette

The Religion of the City: Cars, Mass Transit and Coronavirus – ArchDaily

February 28, 2021

The Religion of the City: Cars, Mass Transit and Coronavirus

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Religion is a uniquely human reality. As are cities. As we emerge from our burrows of sequestration, the silent cities and places of worship will become human again, versus the present sad memory of what they once were.

We will recover from another human reality, the pandemic and when we do we will be forced to address some questions. Before this century, the automobile was once seen as the way Americans could create a new reality: a huge middle class that could control its life by using the freedom that cars gave them to go where they wanted, when they wanted, and to live where they wanted. Before this latest change of sequestration, that vision of what cars meant to our culture was changing especially in cities.

Mass transit, the lifeblood of many cities, is seen as a universal good as the inevitable direction all humanity should follow. The climate crisis meant that the more people traveled together the less carbon was created. So mass transit was an answer, until using it infected millions of people with the Coronavirus virus.

But mass transit is just one way to fight the climate crisis. You could also recreate cities to Live Work Learn Play in one community, with hundreds of these places knitted together within existing communities. For a generation, city planner Jeff Speck advocated the creation of Walkable Cities as the future of our urban life if we were to reduce our carbon footprint and assert aesthetic control of our environment from the profit-driven creation of segregated zoning districts and residential towers in our cities.

In that full-on prescription of a movement away from living in suburbia and in skyscrapers, John Massengale wrote a terrific book Street Design: The Secret to Great Cities and Towns in 2014 with Victor Dover (it even had a foreword by HRH The Prince of Wales!). A fully formed future was offered, in both common sense and aesthetic experience. Cars are seen fully subordinated in our cities, with fully realized examples in Europe projected to be our future. But the world has hit a change time, and these visions may change too.

The common denominator of the last 40 years of urban rethinking in light of the climate crisis and the failures of centralized, functionally segregated cities are obvious. In the last century, cities were often gutted to allow unlimited car movement and access. These inhuman, dangerous and plain ugly brutalizations of our cities undeniably showed that cars are The Great Satan. But ideology often collides with cultural realities. With religious fervor, New Urbanism has been visioned with cars as necessary evils, and or cities being changed to limit their impact.

But all religions run up against the world they exist in. After World War 2, American religion itself was seen as essential, necessary, fully integrated into our culture, with over 75% of the population being engaged in it. Now, that interest is being halved. I think that a post-pandemic world will create yet more change for our cities and religion.

Human needs do not change, but human values do. The extreme devotion to cars and religion of the mid-XX century has reversed, but I think the full-stop on so much of our XXI century lives caused by the pandemic has caused rethinking by many. Anecdotally, places of worship, which were largely prohibited from traditional functioning for a year, are changing, not dying. The buildings built to be central in our lives, religious sacred spaces are seen as being less essential, not only because fewer people are devoted to traditional worship, but are shown that gathering in a building is not essential after sequestration prevented it, but churches survived. I think that the relationship between our cities, cars, and mass transit will be changed by the pandemic, too and by the way, cars are evolving. Cars may not be consigned to the ash bin of urban planning as visioned before the pandemic.

In this century, cities are making great efforts to limit car use within their borders, but the total miles driven on American roads was increasing before the pandemic (and has year on year) after a dip caused by the Great Recession, even though whole neighborhoods are becoming pedestrian-only.

But Manhattan, the epicenter of both Coronavirus and mass transit, has seen car use spike and mass transit use crater as people need to travel, but are terrified to pack subways and busses, and some places are just too far to walk. Many cities like New Haven and San Francisco have taken dramatic steps to discourage car use including extensive traffic calming efforts in a time where the alternative to newly risky mass transit use is, in fact, cars, and that means that more traditional internal combustion engines will sit and spew carbon into the air.

Independent of this changing time, the electric car revolution is in full throttle. Manufacturers like Volvo are dedicating themselves to be fully electric in their engines, reducing emissions. The objections to carbon production by cars will become mute in the next generation, so the objections to the rampage of cars through our cities will become more aesthetic and lifestyle-focused.

Those living during sequestration in cities are universally depressed over all the things they cannot do shows, museums, dining. Some have simply left to go out to places that are less dense suburbia, a place where cars still rule communities and culture. The once-proud beacons of religious faith, churches, and other places of worship, are being abandoned too. But while the buildings are empty, the congregations are still connected, some are even growing, connected through the internet. The conventional wisdom is that Zoom and live streaming are a temporary fix to a pandemics brutal isolation, but these electronic alternatives may actually revive worship that had seen a full-on erosion of in-building presence for decades.

Could it be that despite traffic calming that same reliance on virtual living will crimp the need for and economic viability of mass transit? If so, will cars, especially electric cars, become newly viable within our cities? If so, designers will, once again, envision ways to integrate quiet, emission-less cars into an urban fabric that has spent two generations focused on the elimination of the automobile as the denominator of so much of urban life.

Outcomes often happen that we cannot know, let alone follow our carefully crafted motivations.

We invite you to check out ArchDaily's coverage related to Coronavirus, read our tips and articles on Productivity When Working from Home, and learn about technical recommendations for Healthy Design in your future projects. Also, remember to review the latest advice and information on COVID-19 from the World Health Organization (WHO) website.

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The Religion of the City: Cars, Mass Transit and Coronavirus - ArchDaily

The Coronavirus Is Plotting a Comeback. Heres Our Chance to Stop It for Good. – The New York Times

February 26, 2021

Across the United States, and the world, the coronavirus seems to be loosening its stranglehold. The deadly curve of cases, hospitalizations and deaths has yo-yoed before, but never has it plunged so steeply and so fast.

Is this it, then? Is this the beginning of the end? After a year of being pummeled by grim statistics and scolded for wanting human contact, many Americans feel a long-promised deliverance is at hand.

We will win against the virus and regain many aspects of our pre-pandemic lives, most scientists now believe. Of the 21 interviewed for this article, all were optimistic that the worst of the pandemic is past. This summer, they said, life may begin to seem normal again.

But of course, theres always a but researchers are also worried that Americans, so close to the finish line, may once again underestimate the virus.

So far, the two vaccines authorized in the United States are spectacularly effective, and after a slow start, the vaccination rollout is picking up momentum. A third vaccine is likely to be authorized shortly, adding to the nations supply.

But it will be many weeks before vaccinations make a dent in the pandemic. And now the virus is shape-shifting faster than expected, evolving into variants that may partly sidestep the immune system.

The latest variant was discovered in New York City only this week, and another worrisome version is spreading at a rapid pace through California. Scientists say a contagious variant first discovered in Britain will become the dominant form of the virus in the United States by the end of March.

The road back to normalcy is potholed with unknowns: how well vaccines prevent further spread of the virus; whether emerging variants remain susceptible enough to the vaccines; and how quickly the world is immunized, so as to halt further evolution of the virus.

But the greatest ambiguity is human behavior. Can Americans desperate for normalcy keep wearing masks and distancing themselves from family and friends? How much longer can communities keep businesses, offices and schools closed?

Covid-19 deaths will most likely never rise quite as precipitously as in the past, and the worst may be behind us. But if Americans let down their guard too soon many states are already lifting restrictions and if the variants spread in the United States as they have elsewhere, another spike in cases may well arrive in the coming weeks.

Scientists call it the fourth wave. The new variants mean were essentially facing a pandemic within a pandemic, said Adam Kucharski, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

The United States has now recorded 500,000 deaths amid the pandemic, a terrible milestone. As of Wednesday morning, at least 28.3 million people have been infected.

But the rate of new infections has tumbled by 35 percent over the past two weeks, according to a database maintained by The New York Times. Hospitalizations are down 31 percent, and deaths have fallen by 16 percent.

Yet the numbers are still at the horrific highs of November, scientists noted. At least 3,210 people died of Covid-19 on Wednesday alone. And there is no guarantee that these rates will continue to decrease.

Very, very high case numbers are not a good thing, even if the trend is downward, said Marc Lipsitch, an epidemiologist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston. Taking the first hint of a downward trend as a reason to reopen is how you get to even higher numbers.

In late November, for example, Gov. Gina Raimondo of Rhode Island limited social gatherings and some commercial activities in the state. Eight days later, cases began to decline. The trend reversed eight days after the states pause lifted on Dec. 20.

The viruss latest retreat in Rhode Island and most other states, experts said, results from a combination of factors: growing numbers of people with immunity to the virus, either from having been infected or from vaccination; changes in behavior in response to the surges of a few weeks ago; and a dash of seasonality the effect of temperature and humidity on the survival of the virus.

Parts of the country that experienced huge surges in infection, like Montana and Iowa, may be closer to herd immunity than other regions. But patchwork immunity alone cannot explain the declines throughout much of the world.

The vaccines were first rolled out to residents of nursing homes and to the elderly, who are at highest risk of severe illness and death. That may explain some of the current decline in hospitalizations and deaths.

But young people drive the spread of the virus, and most of them have not yet been inoculated. And the bulk of the worlds vaccine supply has been bought up by wealthy nations, which have amassed one billion more doses than needed to immunize their populations.

Vaccination cannot explain why cases are dropping even in countries where not a single soul has been immunized, like Honduras, Kazakhstan or Libya. The biggest contributor to the sharp decline in infections is something more mundane, scientists say: behavioral change.

Leaders in the United States and elsewhere stepped up community restrictions after the holiday peaks. But individual choices have also been important, said Lindsay Wiley, an expert in public health law and ethics at American University in Washington.

People voluntarily change their behavior as they see their local hospital get hit hard, as they hear about outbreaks in their area, she said. If thats the reason that things are improving, then thats something that can reverse pretty quickly, too.

The downward curve of infections with the original coronavirus disguises an exponential rise in infections with B.1.1.7, the variant first identified in Britain, according to many researchers.

We really are seeing two epidemic curves, said Ashleigh Tuite, an infectious disease modeler at the University of Toronto.

The B.1.1.7 variant is thought to be more contagious and more deadly, and it is expected to become the predominant form of the virus in the United States by late March. The number of cases with the variant in the United States has risen from 76 in 12 states as of Jan. 13 to more than 1,800 in 45 states now. Actual infections may be much higher because of inadequate surveillance efforts in the United States.

Buoyed by the shrinking rates over all, however, governors are lifting restrictions across the United States and are under enormous pressure to reopen completely. Should that occur, B.1.1.7 and the other variants are likely to explode.

Feb. 25, 2021, 7:19 p.m. ET

Everybody is tired, and everybody wants things to open up again, Dr. Tuite said. Bending to political pressure right now, when things are really headed in the right direction, is going to end up costing us in the long term.

Another wave may be coming, but it can be minimized.

Looking ahead to late March or April, the majority of scientists interviewed by The Times predicted a fourth wave of infections. But they stressed that it is not an inevitable surge, if government officials and individuals maintain precautions for a few more weeks.

A minority of experts were more sanguine, saying they expected powerful vaccines and an expanding rollout to stop the virus. And a few took the middle road.

Were at that crossroads, where it could go well or it could go badly, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

The vaccines have proved to be more effective than anyone could have hoped, so far preventing serious illness and death in nearly all recipients. At present, about 1.4 million Americans are vaccinated each day. More than 45 million Americans have received at least one dose.

A team of researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle tried to calculate the number of vaccinations required per day to avoid a fourth wave. In a model completed before the variants surfaced, the scientists estimated that vaccinating just one million Americans a day would limit the magnitude of the fourth wave.

But the new variants completely changed that, said Dr. Joshua T. Schiffer, an infectious disease specialist who led the study. Its just very challenging scientifically the ground is shifting very, very quickly.

Natalie Dean, a biostatistician at the University of Florida, described herself as a little more optimistic than many other researchers. We would be silly to undersell the vaccines, she said, noting that they are effective against the fast-spreading B.1.1.7 variant.

But Dr. Dean worried about the forms of the virus detected in South Africa and Brazil that seem less vulnerable to the vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna. (On Wednesday, Johnson & Johnson reported that its vaccine was relatively effective against the variant found in South Africa.)

About 50 infections with those two variants have been identified in the United States, but that could change. Because of the variants, scientists do not know how many people who were infected and had recovered are now vulnerable to reinfection.

South Africa and Brazil have reported reinfections with the new variants among people who had recovered from infections with the original version of the virus.

That makes it a lot harder to say, If we were to get to this level of vaccinations, wed probably be OK, said Sarah Cobey, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Chicago.

Yet the biggest unknown is human behavior, experts said. The sharp drop in cases now may lead to complacency about masks and distancing, and to a wholesale lifting of restrictions on indoor dining, sporting events and more. Or not.

The single biggest lesson Ive learned during the pandemic is that epidemiological modeling struggles with prediction, because so much of it depends on human behavioral factors, said Carl Bergstrom, a biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.

Taking into account the counterbalancing rises in both vaccinations and variants, along with the high likelihood that people will stop taking precautions, a fourth wave is highly likely this spring, the majority of experts told The Times.

Kristian Andersen, a virologist at the Scripps Research Institute in San Diego, said he was confident that the number of cases will continue to decline, then plateau in about a month. After mid-March, the curve in new cases will swing upward again.

In early to mid-April, were going to start seeing hospitalizations go up, he said. Its just a question of how much.

Now the good news.

Despite the uncertainties, the experts predict that the last surge will subside in the United States sometime in the early summer. If the Biden administration can keep its promise to immunize every American adult by the end of the summer, the variants should be no match for the vaccines.

Combine vaccination with natural immunity and the human tendency to head outdoors as weather warms, and it may not be exactly herd immunity, but maybe its sufficient to prevent any large outbreaks, said Youyang Gu, an independent data scientist, who created some of the most prescient models of the pandemic.

Infections will continue to drop. More important, hospitalizations and deaths will fall to negligible levels enough, hopefully, to reopen the country.

Sometimes people lose vision of the fact that vaccines prevent hospitalization and death, which is really actually what most people care about, said Stefan Baral, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Even as the virus begins its swoon, people may still need to wear masks in public places and maintain social distance, because a significant percent of the population including children will not be immunized.

Assuming that we keep a close eye on things in the summer and dont go crazy, I think that we could look forward to a summer that is looking more normal, but hopefully in a way that is more carefully monitored than last summer, said Emma Hodcroft, a molecular epidemiologist at the University of Bern in Switzerland.

Imagine: Groups of vaccinated people will be able to get together for barbecues and play dates, without fear of infecting one another. Beaches, parks and playgrounds will be full of mask-free people. Indoor dining will return, along with movie theaters, bowling alleys and shopping malls although they may still require masks.

The virus will still be circulating, but the extent will depend in part on how well vaccines prevent not just illness and death, but also transmission. The data on whether vaccines stop the spread of the disease are encouraging, but immunization is unlikely to block transmission entirely.

Its not zero and its not 100 exactly where that number is will be important, said Shweta Bansal, an infectious disease modeler at Georgetown University. It needs to be pretty darn high for us to be able to get away with vaccinating anything below 100 percent of the population, so thats definitely something were watching.

Over the long term say, a year from now, when all the adults and children in the United States who want a vaccine have received them will this virus finally be behind us?

Every expert interviewed by The Times said no. Even after the vast majority of the American population has been immunized, the virus will continue to pop up in clusters, taking advantage of pockets of vulnerability. Years from now, the coronavirus may be an annoyance, circulating at low levels, causing modest colds.

Many scientists said their greatest worry post-pandemic was that new variants may turn out to be significantly less susceptible to the vaccines. Billions of people worldwide will remain unprotected, and each infection gives the virus new opportunities to mutate.

We wont have useless vaccines. We might have slightly less good vaccines than we have at the moment, said Andrew Read, an evolutionary microbiologist at Penn State University. Thats not the end of the world, because we have really good vaccines right now.

For now, every one of us can help by continuing to be careful for just a few more months, until the curve permanently flattens.

Just hang in there a little bit longer, Dr. Tuite said. Theres a lot of optimism and hope, but I think we need to be prepared for the fact that the next several months are likely to continue to be difficult.

Read more from the original source:

The Coronavirus Is Plotting a Comeback. Heres Our Chance to Stop It for Good. - The New York Times

Timeline: One year of coronavirus in Rhode Island – The Providence Journal

February 26, 2021

Journal Staff| The Providence Journal

Feb. 27: Marc Thibault, the 48-year-old vice principal of student life at Saint Raphael Academy in Pawtucket, is admitted to The Miriam Hospital five days after returning from a school-organized trip to Italy.

March 1: The Department of Health announces the first two confirmed cases of coronavirus in Rhode Island. Both are connected to the Saint Raphael trip to Italy.

March 9: Although only four Rhode Islanders have tested positive in total, Gov. Gina Raimondo declares a state of emergency, authorizing the National Guard to assist in the state's response.

March 11: Hours after the World Health Organization declares coronavirus a global pandemic, the University of Rhode Island suspends in-person classes.

March 12: Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza declares a state of emergency, canceling all city events and revoking entertainment licenses.

March 13: Raimondo moves up the April vacation week, after students at Cranston High School West and Springbrook Elementary School in Westerly test positive for the virus. Visits to nursing homes are halted.Twin River casinos close. Newport cancels St. Patrick's Day parade.

March 16: Public Masses in the Diocese of Providence are canceled until further notice.

March 17: Raimondo shuts down in-person dining, bans crowds of 25 or more. Elorza closes Providence Place mall. Health officials say "community spread" of virus occurring in Rhode Island, though only 32 cases have been confirmed.

March 20: National Guard activated to deliver food and assist in testing.

March 22: Raimondo orders all public recreation and entertainment venues to close, as well as close-contact businesses such as gyms, barbershops and tattoo parlors.

March 23: Public schools in Rhode Island transition to distance learning.

March 24: Raimondo orders travelers arriving at T.F. Green Airport to quarantine for 14 days. Colleges and universities begin canceling commencement exercises.

March 25: State health officials learn of the first positive case in a nursing home, Oak Hill Center, inPawtucket.

March 26:Raimondo says that while the spread of COVID-19 in the United States has accelerated, the speed of our response has also been incredibly fast. ... We are ahead of this virus in Rhode Island.

March 27: A day after the governor orders residents of New York to quarantine after entering Rhode Island, state police and National Guard troops begin stopping cars with New York plates at the Connecticut border.

March 28: Rhode Island reports its first two coronavirus deaths. (The state now says the first death occurred on March 19.) Raimondo issues stay-at-home order, closes "nonessential" retail, bans gatherings of five or more. The governor tells those who are flouting her orders to "knock it off."

March 30: Bernard A. Bernie Lanzi, the mayor of Golden Crest, dies at the North Providence nursing home. By April 6 nine other residents had died there, more than 50 had tested positive.

April 3: Raimondo closes state beaches and parks, announces that field hospitals will be set up in the Rhode Island Convention Center, at a former Citizens Bank building in Cranston and in a former Lowe's hardware store in North Kingstown.

April 6: CVS begins offering free, rapid coronavirus testing outside the closed Twin River Casino. The rapid testing is not, however, available at nursing homes.

April 7: More than 100,000 Rhode Islanders have filed claims for unemployment since the start of the pandemic.

April 18: Raimondo orders employees at "customer-facing" businesses to wear masks. "Ill be the first to admit, it feels strange, she says. This is not normal... but its the right thing to do.

April 24: With cases and deaths surging, Raimondo announces that nursing-home workers will be eligible to receive hazard pay, and that National Guard "strike teams" will help with testing there.

April 25: The peak of the first wave. Known infections average 370 a day over a seven-day period, with 12% of tests coming back positive. About 100 protesters demonstrate outside the State House against Raimondo's restrictions.

April 27: Raimondo announces a multi-phase plan for reopening the Rhode Island economy, starting in early May.

April 29: Raimondo cancels large, signature summer events in Rhode Island, including the Newport Folk Festival, Newport Jazz Festival and Washington County Fair.

May 5: Raimondo requires Rhode Islanders to wear face coverings in all public places. State authorities say they are investigating hundreds, if not thousands, of complaints of unemployment fraud. David Butziger and David Staveley, former owners of the closed Remington House restaurant in Warwick, become the first two people charged with defrauding the Paycheck Protection Program.

May 9: Rhode Island's stay-at-home order is lifted, and state enters Phase One of its reopening. Nonessential retailers and state parks reopen with restrictions. Hospitals allowed to resume nonessential procedures.

May 18: Restaurants allowed to reopen for outdoor dining.

May 19: State unveils "CRUSH COVID" contact-tracing app. Raimondo says she would like to see 90% of the state's population sign up.

May 25: Memorial Day. Two state beaches, East Matunuck and Scarborough, reopen with limited parking and no restrooms.

May 30: Houses of worship allowed to reopen at 25% capacity.

June 1: Rhode Island enters Phase Two of reopening plan. Gyms and salons can reopen with limited capacity, all state beaches reopen, child-care facilities reopen, offices allowed to bring a third of work force back on site. Indoor dining resumes with 50% capacity limit.

June 8: Twin River casinos reopen, by invitation only.

June 29: Raimondo announces that quarantine rules will apply to people entering the Rhode Islandfrom states where more than 5% of coronavirus tests are positive.

June 30: Rhode Island enters Phase Three of reopening plan, which allows for larger gatherings and a reopening of indoor recreation facilities. While most of the country is seeing surging coronavirus caseloads, the seven-day new-case average in Rhode Island falls to 40, its lowest point since March. It has not been that low since.

July 11: Rhode Island surpasses 1,000 coronavirus deaths. The majority are associated with nursinghomes.

July 28: Visits can resume at Rhode Island's hard-hit nursing homes.

July 29: With virus cases on the rise again, Raimondo lowers the social-gathering limit from 25 to 15, and says she will not move Rhode Island into Phase Four reopening in early August as she had planned.

Aug. 4: New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Massachusetts all add Rhode Island to their list of states facing travel restrictions. While Rhode Island is eventually removed from three of those states' lists, Massachusetts continues to restrict travelers from Rhode Island due to the state's case rate.

Sept. 5: Rhode Island's midsummer uptick in cases appears to have abated. For fifth straight day, fewer than 1% of coronavirus tests in the state are positive. The seven-day new-case average falls to lowest point in nearly seven weeks.

Sept. 14: Most public schools reopen for in-person learning, for the first time since mid-March.

Sept. 18: Providence College says 120 students have tested positive for COVID over three days. College shifts to remote learning.

Sept. 30: Rhode Island sees most new cases in a single day since May. Raimondo says young adults are driving the increase in cases.

Oct. 15: With cases continuing to rise, Raimondo orders businesses to close break rooms for 30 days.

Oct. 21: 470 Rhode Islanders test positive for the virus, shattering the previous high set in April.

Nov. 5: Raimondo announces a series of new business restrictions and a "stay-at-home advisory" from late evening through 5 a.m. essentially a voluntary curfew.

Nov. 11: More than 1,000 Rhode Islanders test positive for the virus in a single day, for the first time.

Nov. 19: Raimondo announces a two-week "pause," which will take effect after Thanksgiving, in an effort to slow surging cases. The pause involves increased restrictions on businesses but allows most to remain open. Social gatherings involving more than one household are prohibited. It will ultimately be a three-week pause.

Nov. 30: Field hospitals in Providence and Cranston, which were never used in the spring, begin receiving patients for the first time.

Dec. 6: Rhode Island leads country in new coronavirus cases, per capita, over the previous seven days. It will maintain this sad distinction for 10 straight days.

Dec. 7: The peak of the second wave. Known infections average 1,329a day over a seven-day period, with 10.4% of tests coming back positive.

Dec. 12: State announces that Health Director Dr. Nicole Alexander-Scotthas tested positive for coronavirus. Raimondo, who is a close contact, entersquarantine.

Dec. 13: In the deadliest single day of the pandemic in the state, 30 COVID-positive Rhode Islanders die.

Dec. 14: The firstPfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccines are administered in Rhode Island, to high-risk hospital workers. Rhode Island Hospital emergency physicianDr. Christian Arbelaez receives the first shot.

Dec. 30: The state begins an effort to vaccinate members of the general public in Central Falls, the community hardest-hit by the virus.

Jan. 5: Rhode Island surpasses 2,000 coronavirus-related deaths.

Jan. 7: Raimondo is nominated by President-elect Joe Biden to be U.S. commerce secretary. She abruptly stops answering questions from the media about the state's coronavirus response, and turns the regular vaccine briefings over to Alexander-Scott.

Feb. 15: With Rhode Island near the bottom of the country in the percentage of residents who have received a vaccine shot, and in the percentage of allocated vaccine doses used, Lt. Gov. Dan McKee says he is "not satisfied" with the vaccine rollout.

Feb. 18:Rhode Island opens two mass-vaccination sites, at the Dunkin' Donuts Center and on Sockanosset Cross Road in Cranston. (Opening thesites had been planned before McKee criticized the vaccine rollout). Within a few days, the state begins to climb toward the middle of the pack in percentage of population vaccinated and percentage of shots administered.

Feb. 22: With the number of hospitalized coronavirus patients just a third of the peak from December, the state announces plans to shut the field hospitals in Providence and Cranston.

See more here:

Timeline: One year of coronavirus in Rhode Island - The Providence Journal

New Findings on 2 Ways Children Become Seriously Ill From the Coronavirus – The New York Times

February 26, 2021

A large nationwide study has found important differences in the two major ways in which children have become seriously ill from the coronavirus, findings that may help doctors and parents better recognize the conditions and understand more about the children at risk for each one.

The study, published on Wednesday in the journal JAMA, analyzed 1,116 cases of young people who were treated at 66 hospitals in 31 states. Slightly more than half the patients had acute Covid-19, the predominantly lung-related illness that afflicts most adults who get sick from the virus, while 539 patients had the inflammatory syndrome that has erupted in some children weeks after they have had a typically mild initial infection.

The researchers found some similarities, but also significant differences in the symptoms and characteristics of the patients, who ranged from infants to 20-year-olds and were hospitalized last year between March 15 and October 31.

Young people with the syndrome, called Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children or MIS-C, were more likely to be between 6 and 12 years of age, while more than 80 percent of the patients with acute Covid-19 were either younger than 6 or older than 12.

More than two-thirds of patients with either condition were Black or Hispanic, which experts say most likely reflects socioeconomic and other factors that have disproportionately exposed some communities to the virus.

Its still shocking that the overwhelming majority of the patients are nonwhite and that is true for MIS-C and for acute Covid, said Dr. Jean A. Ballweg, medical director of pediatric heart transplant and advanced heart failure at Childrens Hospital & Medical Center in Omaha, who was not involved in the study. Theres clearly racial disparity there.

For reasons that are unclear, while Hispanic young people seemed equally likely to be at risk for both conditions, Black children appeared to be at greater risk for developing the inflammatory syndrome than the acute illness, said Dr. Adrienne Randolph, the senior author of the study and a pediatric critical care specialist at Boston Childrens Hospital.

One potential clue mentioned by the authors is that with Kawasaki disease, a rare childhood inflammatory syndrome that has similarities with some aspects of MIS-C, Black children appear to have greater frequency of heart abnormalities and are less responsive to one of the standard treatments: intravenous immunoglobulin.

The researchers found that young people with the inflammatory syndrome were significantly more likely to have had no underlying medical conditions than those with acute Covid. Still, more than a third of patients with acute Covid had no previous medical condition. Its not like previously healthy kids are completely scot-free here, Dr. Randolph said.

The study evaluated obesity separately from other underlying health conditions and only in patients who were age 2 or older, finding that a somewhat higher percentage of the young people with acute Covid had obesity.

Feb. 25, 2021, 7:19 p.m. ET

Dr. Srinivas Murthy, an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of British Columbia, who was not involved in the study, said he was not convinced that the findings established that healthy children were at higher risk for MIS-C. It could be mostly a numbers game, with the proportion of kids infected and the proportion of healthy kids out there, rather than saying that theres something immune in healthy kids that puts them at a disproportionately higher risk, he said.

Overall, he said, the studys documentation of the differences between the two conditions was useful, especially because it reflected a reasonably representative set of hospitals across the U.S.

Young people with the inflammatory syndrome were more likely to need to be treated in intensive care units. Their symptoms were much more likely to include gastrointestinal problems and inflammation and to involve the skin and mucous membranes. They were also much more likely to have heart-related issues, although many of the acute Covid patients did not receive detailed cardiac assessments, the study noted.

Roughly the same large proportion of patients with each condition more than half needed respiratory support, with slightly less than a third of those needing mechanical ventilation. Roughly the same small number of patients in each group died: 10 with MIS-C and eight with acute Covid-19.

The data does not reflect a recent surge in cases of the inflammatory syndrome that followed a rise in overall Covid-19 infections across the country during the winter holiday season. Some hospitals have reported that there have been a greater number of seriously ill MIS-C patients in the current wave compared with previous waves.

I am going to be fascinated to see comparison from Nov. 1 forward versus this group because I think we all felt that the kids with MIS-C have been even more sick recently, Dr. Ballweg said.

An optimistic sign from the study was that most of the severe cardiac problems in young people with the inflammatory syndrome improved to normal condition within 30 days. Still, Dr. Randolph said any residual effects were still unknown, which is why one of her co-authors, Dr. Jane Newburger, associate chief for academic affairs in Boston Childrens Hospitals cardiology department, is leading a nationwide study to follow children with the inflammatory syndrome for up to five years.

We cant say 100 percent for sure that everythings going to be normal long-term, Dr. Randolph said.

See original here:

New Findings on 2 Ways Children Become Seriously Ill From the Coronavirus - The New York Times

Ukraine records 50% spike in coronavirus cases – WBNG-TV

February 26, 2021

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) Ukraine has recorded a 50% increase in the number of daily new COVID-19 infections, a day after authorities launched the countrys vaccination campaign. Health Minister Maxim Stepanov said Thursday that 8,147 new infections were found over the past day, up from 5,424 a day earlier. He did not speculate on the cause of the spike, but said the country so far has not detected the presence of the more contagious British virus variant. The surge is alarming for the country whose understaffed medical system is already struggling to treat coronavirus patients, particularly in the hard-hit western regions where cases rose significantly after a two-week lockdown in January.

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Ukraine records 50% spike in coronavirus cases - WBNG-TV

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