Category: Corona Virus

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The coronavirus is becoming more infectious. Heres how to protect yourself – San Francisco Chronicle

January 27, 2021

Just as the holiday-driven surge of coronavirus cases in the Bay Area appears to be slowing down, public health experts have a new battle on their hands: Mutations to the virus that make it more infectious, or able to partly evade treatments and vaccines, could lead to another sharp rise in infections.

What does that mean for you?

While scientists are working frantically to determine the risks posed by these variants, including one that took hold in the Bay Area in December and was linked to several major outbreaks, experts recommend people double down on safety protocols.

We have to be especially more careful independent of these variants because theres so many more people walking around infected today than there were in October, said John Swartzberg, an infectious disease expert at UC Berkeley. And because some of the variants may make it easier to get infected, it adds to the message of being more careful.

Here are steps to avoid the coronavirus, no matter the variant. Many are familiar safety measures, and experts say they should be taken more seriously than ever.

Wear a better mask or two: There is still a lot scientists do not know about the variants. But they have confidence that the primary route of infection is through airborne particles.

Bandannas, or common cloth masks with just one layer, may not afford enough protection. Experts say that the best cloth masks have three layers where the user can add filters between two cloth layers. The goal is to filter out enough viral particles to prevent you from hitting the threshold needed for infection.

Wearing a good mask, not just a single layer cotton mask or a gaiter, is sufficient when you combine it with social distancing and avoiding to the maximum extent being around other people, Swartzberg said.

Another option is double-masking with two cloth masks, or a surgical mask underneath and a cloth one over it which President Biden has sometimes done. Some experts also recommend over-the-head masks versus ones with ear loops for an improved fit.

Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Georgetown University, said on the podcast In the Bubble: From the Frontlines said that she wears two masks when she goes to the store.

What people need to be thinking about is really doubling down on the measures they should have already been taking, she said. If youre exposed to more particles, youre more likely to get infected.

Loyce Pace, a member of President Bidens COVID-19 advisory board, said the same precautions scientists have been advising all along still work.

We still want people to be masking up, she said Thursday on a webcast hosted by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. We still need people to limit congregating with people outside their household. We still need people to be washing their hands and really being vigilant about those public health practices, especially as these variants emerge.

Keep your distance, and cut down trips to the grocery store: Even if you have added layers of protection or access to a medical N95 mask, Swartzberg warns against going out and taking more risks.

Stay home as much as possible, and avoid gatherings, Rasmussen said.

If thats not possible, make sure youre always wearing a mask, make sure youre physically distancing; if you can ventilate the space that youre in, thats wonderful, she said.

You should also continue to limit the time you are around others who are not in your household.

Swartzberg said since the latest surge, he re-evaluated everything he does in terms of minimizing contact with people outside of his bubble.

We just have to put more work into avoiding other human beings, he said.

Anyone who can order groceries, meals and other necessities online ahead of time to be delivered or picked up curbside should take advantage of those services. For many who are unable to do that, having a strategy for when you leave the house can be helpful.

If you have to go to the grocery store, put more time in planning out exactly what you need, Swartzberg said. Get through the store as fast as possible, imagine where everything is in your mind. Try to go at a time when there are fewer people in the store early in the morning or late at night.

Get vaccinated: Vaccines are expected to remain effective against some variants.

But there are signs that some identified in South Africa and Brazil might be less susceptible to vaccines.

A recent study shows that nearly half of samples taken from people who were infected with the South African variant resisted neutralization by antibodies from convalescent plasma. A variant found in Brazil might also be resistant to convalescent plasma. Those studies raise concern that the variants may also be resistant to vaccine-induced antibodies.

But more research on both of these variants needs to be done and also on the Bay Area variant, which needs more study before scientists determine whether vaccines will be fully effective against it. The highly infectious and potentially more deadly British variant, B117, is believed to be containable via the vaccine.

This means there is an added urgency to get shots into the arms of as many people as possible, to slow the spread of the virus and its mutations. And over time, the vaccine formula may need to be tweaked to combat variants.

The slow rollout and the variants are connected because now were not only in a race against COVID, but were now in a different, slightly different race against a competition thats running faster than it was before, Robert Wachter, chair of the UCSF Department of Medicine, said on the In the Bubble podcast. So we have to run even faster to get people vaccinated, and get on top of this.

Aidin Vaziri and Kellie Hwang are San Francisco Chronicle staff writers. Email: avaziri@sfchronicle.com, kellie.hwang@sfchronicle.com

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The coronavirus is becoming more infectious. Heres how to protect yourself - San Francisco Chronicle

Martinsville-region COVID-19/coronavirus daily update from state, nation and world: Jan. 26 – Martinsville Bulletin

January 27, 2021

Three new deaths from COVID-19 were reported this morning in the West Piedmont Health District. Those deaths appeared in the Virginia Department of Health's database, but those deaths could have occurred at just about any time. VDH often awaits death certificates to confirm cause of death. We don't know much about individual deaths, but each case is tracked by a person's residence. There was one death each in Martinsville, Henry County and Franklin County. That's now 160 residents of the health district who have died from the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, and Henry County and Martinsville have combined to account for 100 of them (68 in the county and 32 in the city). Franklin County now has had 32 deaths. There also were 87 new cases and 2 hospitalizations. Franklin County, where schools resumed in-person learning today, had 40 new cases, and Henry County and Martinsville had 23 new cases apiece. Patrick County had 1 new case. Martinsville had both new hospitalizations. Because VDH's website was malfunctioning throughout Tuesday morning, additional information was not available....On Monday, the first day that many residents could sign up for the vaccine, some 18,000 had by late afternoon....Patrick Henry Community Colleges Division of Technology moved quickly to get PHCC running remotely for virtual learning during the pandemic....President Biden says he hopes the U.S. willsoon be able to administer 1.5 million doses of coronavirus vaccinea day, and the Defense Department is consideringdeploying thousands of troops to help reach that goal. One official said up to 10,000 troops could be involved. While Americans wait for vaccinations, health officials say they're extremely worried about new COVID-19 variants detected in the U.S. One expert sayseveryday activities are now much more dangerous because of them. In New Zealand, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says thecountry's borders may stay shut for most of the yearto ward off outbreaks. At the core of the Amazon rainforest in Brazil, the city of Manaus offers acautionary tale for health care systems on the brink of collapse: tens of thousands of new graves, no beds or oxygen tanks and a second wave promising even more misery.....Californias health department released to the public previously secret projections for future hospital intensive care unit capacity throughout the state, the key metric for lifting the coronavirus stay-at-home order....Britain appears ready to order some travelers arriving from abroad to isolate in hotels at their own expense in an attempt to stop the import of new virus variants....The Virginia Department of Health reportsthis morning there have been 483,326 cases and 6,081 deaths statewide -- up by 93 since Monday. Some 20,860 people have been hospitalized. Henry County has had 3,578 cases, with 246 hospitalizations and 68 deaths. Martinsville has had 1,317 cases, with 112 hospitalizations and 32 deaths. Patrick County has had 1000 cases including 76 hospitalizations and 28 deaths. Franklin County has had 3,206 cases, 103 hospitalizations and 32 deaths. Danville has reported 3,412 cases (64 deaths), and Pittsylvania County has had 3,952 (46 deaths).Johns Hopkins University's real-time mapshowed 99,802,069 cases worldwide and 2,142,650 deaths. In the U.S. there have been 25,298,405 cases and 421,239 deaths because of COVID-19.

(134) updates to this series since Updated 13 hrs ago

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Martinsville-region COVID-19/coronavirus daily update from state, nation and world: Jan. 26 - Martinsville Bulletin

Arkansas, Oklahoma among top 10 states with the fewest coronavirus restrictions – wreg.com

January 27, 2021

(KTAL/KMSS) Oklahoma and Arkansas are among the top five states in the U.S. with the fewest coronavirus restrictions, according to rankings released Tuesday by personal finance website Wallet Hub.

WalletHub says it compared the 50 states and the District of Columbia across 14 key metrics, ranging from whether restaurants are open to whether the state has required face masks in public and workplace temperature screenings.

Oklahoma came in first in the country among states with the fewest restrictions. Arkansas came in at number 4, Louisiana 22nd, and Texas 28th.

Oklahoma ranks as the state with the fewest coronavirus restrictions in part because it is one of just four states that have not taken any action on face coverings in public, and one of 19 states that have no limits on large gatherings, said Jill Gonzalez, WalletHub analyst. Oklahoma has reopened all non-essential businesses, and it is one of only 13 states that neither require nor recommend working from home.

Here are the top 10 states WalletHub says have the least COVID-19 restrictions:

Here are the top 10 states with the most COVID-19 restrictions:

Data compiled by the website shows four out of the top five states with the fewest restrictions are also among those with the highest death rates: Oklahoma, South Dakota, Arkansas, and Florida. The tenth on the list, South Carolina, also ranks among the highest in WalletHubs death rate rankings. But the rest of the states that make up the bottom half of the top 10 states with the fewest restrictions are all among the lowest-ranked in death rates: Iowa, Utah, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Alaska.

WalletHub also shared some answers to Frequently Asked Questions along with the release of the state-by-state rankings on coronavirus restrictions:

How might the results of the election impact COVID-19 restrictions?

The results of the election will likely bring about a more uniform COVID-19 response across the U.S., as the Biden administration will likely use the power of Federal Government dollars to encourage states to follow the same types of plans, said Jill Gonzalez, WalletHub analyst. We may also see an additional stimulus to help support people whose livelihoods are impacted by COVID-19 restrictions.

Is there a correlation between how restrictive a state is and its unemployment rate?

There is a moderate correlation between a states restrictiveness and its unemployment rate, said Jill Gonzalez, WalletHub analyst. WalletHubs analysis found that 68% of states with few COVID-19 restrictions had low unemployment rates. This makes sense because states with fewer restrictions allow more places to open, which in turn provides more opportunities to work.

Should states strictly enforce their COVID-19 restrictions?

States should strictly enforce their COVID-19 restrictions because otherwise there is no incentive for people to follow the rules. If there are no consequences for disobeying a states mask mandate, for example, people will be more likely to try to enter crowded areas without masks, which in turn will contribute to the spread of the virus, said Jill Gonzalez, WalletHub analyst. Fines are a good deterrent to make sure Americans follow COVID-19 restrictions, and enforcement will also minimize the need for citizens to play the police.

California has experienced the most coronavirus cases overall in the U.S. How has that impacted the states restrictions?

California has the most coronavirus restrictions in the U.S., and is one of only four states to ban all gatherings currently, said Jill Gonzalez, WalletHub analyst. All non-essential businesses in California are closed. The state is one of only a few with a statewide order for partial school closures, as well as a limited quarantine, too.

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Arkansas, Oklahoma among top 10 states with the fewest coronavirus restrictions - wreg.com

Coronavirus by the numbers for Tuesday, January 26 – WMBB – mypanhandle.com

January 27, 2021

Posted: Jan 26, 2021 / 07:14 PM CST / Updated: Jan 26, 2021 / 07:14 PM CST

Floridas total cases: 1,667,763, 9,594 case increaseFlorida Residents: 1,637,296, 9,466 case increaseResident Hospitalizations: 70,802, 456 case increaseResident Deaths: 25,673, 227 case increaseNon-Resident Deaths: 407, 4 case increase

Total confirmed cases globally: 100,201,258, 683,407 case increaseTotal deaths globally: 2,154,530Total recovered globally: 55,316,924

Total confirmed cases in the U.S.: 25,424,174, 235,446 case increaseTotal deaths in the U.S.: 424,690, 4,994 case increase

To find the most up-to-date information and guidance on COVID-19, please visit the Department of Healths dedicatedCOVID-19 webpage. For information and advisories from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), please visit theCDC COVID-19 website.

For any other questions related to COVID-19 in Florida, please contact the Departments dedicated COVID-19 Call Center by calling1-866-779-6121.The Call Center is available 24 hours per day.Inquiries may also beemailed toCOVID-19@flhealth.gov.

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Coronavirus by the numbers for Tuesday, January 26 - WMBB - mypanhandle.com

Coronavirus variants will prolong the pandemic. But heres how it could end – San Francisco Chronicle

January 25, 2021

More than 130 years ago, a brutal respiratory virus swept across the globe, killing a million people out of a worldwide population of 1.5 billion before fading away, eventually overshadowed in history by the deadlier 1918 influenza pandemic.

That 1890 pandemic, which some scientists believe was caused by a coronavirus, may offer a glimpse of the modern worlds escape from COVID-19 or at least one possible path in a future thats still largely clouded by uncertainty.

The United States is in a desperate race to speed up vaccinations and develop herd immunity that would end the pandemic. But with several variants of the virus emerging, including one or more that could make the vaccines less effective, its increasingly unclear what the finish line looks like.

One possibility would be an echo of the 1890 pandemic: The virus slowly drops off as countries develop herd immunity because of a large majority of the population being infected or getting vaccinated. After anywhere from a few years to a few decades, it circulates mainly among children and rarely causes anything more serious than the sniffles.

Or the virus could be stamped out, or close to it, with vaccines. It could disappear like smallpox, or be pushed to such low levels in the U.S. that it shows up only in isolated clusters, as with measles.

Or it could turn into something like influenza, with the world in a constant battle to adjust vaccines to changing variants and keep the virus under control. The stakes, however, will be much higher if the coronavirus remains as deadly as it is far deadlier than the flu or mutates to become worse.

Weve had a cold reality moment in the pandemic with the arrival of several new variants, including one in the Bay Area, in recent months, said Fyodor Urnov, director of technology and translation at UC Berkeleys Innovative Genomics Institute. Scientists had believed that this coronavirus wasnt as changeable as other viruses, but that belief was upended as the virus mutated quickly setting up a race to stamp it out before more undesirable mutations arise.

This virus is a formidable enemy, Urnov said.

The vaccines are well tuned to the coronavirus that currently is dominant around the world itself a variant of the original virus first identified in Wuhan, China, one year ago. The vaccines most likely will work against four new variants that have appeared suddenly in the past two months, including one that seems to have settled in the Bay Area and other parts of California.

But studies suggest that at least one of those variants, found in South Africa, may be able to partially evade the vaccine. The Bay Area variant has a mutation that concerns scientists, who are conducting tests to determine whether its resistant to some antibodies meant to fight the virus, though at this time they believe the vaccine will be effective.

And scientists worry that as the coronavirus continues to spread around the world, more variants will emerge, potentially with mutations that could undermine efforts to control it.

In a race between a pathogen and a host, the pathogen is going to mutate to try to adapt and be a better pathogen. As the host develops a better immune response, the pathogen develops ways of evading the immune response. And it goes on forever that way, said Dr. Joel Ernst, an infectious disease expert at UCSF.

I think were going to be in pretty good shape in the near term, he said. But I dont think we know yet what the ultimate potential of this virus is.

Many scientists like Ernst believe the new variants, even those that appear to be more infectious, wont have a dramatic impact on the current pandemic. They also think the vaccines will remain effective enough to reach at least a temporary herd immunity.

But the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has warned that a particular variant first identified in the United Kingdom and which has been found in at least 22 states could dominate in the United States by March. That variant is roughly 50% more infectious than the currently dominant virus and would undoubtedly fuel more cases and a surge in hospitalizations and deaths, the CDC warned.

Preliminary findings reported Friday also suggest the variant may be deadlier than other versions, but more research needs to be done.

Only 72 cases of the U.K. variant have been identified in California, but its assumed to be more widespread. And another variant has been identified that may also cause faster spread of disease. That one appears to have gained significant traction in parts of the Bay Area and Los Angeles County in the past month.

Either or both of those variants could prompt delays in lifting current stay-home orders or reopening schools, infectious disease experts have warned. Or they could lead to a new wave of infections in the spring that might once again overwhelm hospitals in much of the state.

The U.K. variant is more infectious in children as well as adults, studies have found, though kids are still less likely overall to be infected or have serious illness. None of the approved vaccines has been tested in children yet.

The variants also could have no effect on the short-term course of the pandemic, as long as they respond well to vaccines and the state picks up its immunization efforts. Scientists are trying to understand how the variants behave in their human hosts.

Theres no reason to panic, Dr. Grant Colfax, director of the San Francisco Department of Public Health, said at a news briefing last week. This is going to be part of this pandemic, as we see variants emerge. Were just going to have to learn more about them.

But a prolonged pandemic would further impact livelihoods of millions of Californians.

Ashley Voss, who opened a Mission District art gallery six months before the pandemic arrived, worries that Californias variant could lead to a longer lockdown. Visitors are sparse, especially because restaurants are closed, so fewer people wander through the neighborhood. And the city cant say when that will change.

The troubling thing is, weve never encountered something like this in our lifetimes, so we dont have a playbook on how to navigate this, Voss said. Its difficult trying to figure out how to plan for the future.

Most public health and infectious disease experts believe that with a strong national immunization campaign and a few more months of aggressive social distancing and other protective measures, the United States will come out from under this darkest period of the pandemic.

But the outlook beyond that is murky.

A study out of Emory University this month suggested an outcome similar to what some experts believe happened after the 1890 pandemic. A new virus crashed over the world, causing widespread illness and death among populations that had no natural immunity. Then, after years or possibly decades, the virus either mutated to become less severe or the world built enough immunity that its now toothless.

That coronavirus is now one of four that cause the common cold. Most children are infected with that coronavirus by the time theyre 5, and its as inconsequential in adults as it is in kids.

This could imply that our normal, tame coronaviruses that we see today have arisen in the same fashion as the virus were seeing now, said Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, an infectious disease expert at Stanford. And over time this virus will mutate into a more benign form. And with our ability to build up immunity, well be progressively getting less and less sick from it.

This theory is based on a few premises: That the current coronavirus almost never causes serious illness in young children, and that everyone else in the population will eventually develop some degree of immunity, so even if theyre reinfected they dont get very sick. Also, it assumes that the virus will mutate to cause less serious disease over time, which is often the case with new pathogens as they adapt to their hosts and become less hostile.

It may not disappear, it may stay, but if it stays it may become a normal, regular cold virus, Maldonado said.

It may be possible to eradicate this coronavirus. But that will require a combination of luck and a successful global vaccination effort.

If the vaccines remain as effective as they proved in clinical trials, if the immunity they produce is long-lasting, and if the world gets to herd immunity in all corners, then COVID-19 could disappear entirely, or close to it. But it would take years, and potentially decades, to get to that point.

We may not be able to eradicate it like we did with smallpox. But we can at least get it to a level, once we get a sufficient number of people vaccinated, where the virus will have no toehold, said Dr. Catherine Blish, a Stanford infectious disease expert. Hopefully we just vaccinate everyone and get rid of it altogether. But we will be dealing with this for a while.

Global immunization would be a necessary but monumental task. The vaccines would have to reach countries devastated by war and poverty, along with the pockets of vaccine-resistant communities in the United States. Any gaps in immunity would be opportunities for the virus to spread and mutate, and potentially turn out vaccine-resistant variants.

This is a global problem, said Dr. Warner Greene, an infectious disease expert with the Gladstone Institutes in San Francisco. Its a pandemic, and were only as strong as our weakest link. Were only as strong as our smallest herd.

Perhaps the most likely, and least satisfying, end to the pandemic is not much of an end at all: The coronavirus keeps spinning out variants, scientists keep refining vaccines, and the world learns to live with COVID-19.

This might be the outcome if the vaccines dont provide sterilizing immunity, the kind of protection that lasts for the rest of peoples lives. Depending on how long immunity lasts, people may need regular boosters as often as every year.

There are reasons to be hopeful, though. Even if vaccine immunity isnt permanent, it may provide long-lasting protection that prevents serious illness or death, so another mass immunization effort may not be necessary.

Plus, the vaccines that have been developed can be easily changed to keep pace with variants, infectious disease experts say. If a variant emerges that is able to elude vaccines, developers can tweak the recipe and probably have it ready to inject within a few months.

But that would require constant vigilance to quickly identify new variants and a strong system for vaccine distribution. The coronavirus would remain a threat for decades.

These variants could make us very busy and could prevent a full success of the vaccine, said Dr. Melanie Ott, director of the Gladstone Institute of Virology. Yes, we can adapt the vaccine. But we know the influenza vaccine is not 100% effective, and every year we have to guess what will be the predominant strain and build the vaccine. We really want to avoid that. But we might end up in a situation that is similar to what we have with influenza.

The United States will get some measure of control over the coronavirus eventually, infectious disease experts said. Between vaccination efforts and the natural immunity people will have from being infected, the country will almost certainly reach herd immunity, and that will make a profound dent in the spread of disease here.

How long that takes is unclear, and depends as much on peoples behaviors as on the virus itself. Variants that arent quite as responsive to vaccines may mean more people need to be vaccinated to reach herd immunity. Addressing vaccine hesitancy could add months to the timeline. But if everything goes smoothly, some communities may get to herd immunity by autumn.

Even if the virus cant be quashed, it can be contained, experts said. Im mildly but not exceptionally concerned about the future of this pandemic, Blish said. The good news is weve learned a lot from this, and well be able to respond even better and faster next time.

When COVID-25 comes along, the world will be more ready.

San Francisco Chronicle

staff writer Michael Williams contributed to this story.

Erin Allday is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: eallday@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @erinallday

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Coronavirus variants will prolong the pandemic. But heres how it could end - San Francisco Chronicle

Next 189 more coronavirus cases have been reported in Maine – Bangor Daily News

January 25, 2021

Another 189 coronavirus cases have been reported across the state, Maine health officials said Sunday.

The number of coronavirus cases diagnosed in the past 14 days statewide is 7,489. This is an estimation of the current number of active cases in the state, as the Maine CDC is no longer tracking recoveries for all patients. Thats down from 7,579 on Saturday.

Its the fewest new cases Maine has seen since Nov. 23, when only 182 were reported across the state. That comes amid a dayslong trend in lower new cases over the past several days, and about 10 days since Maine saw a record-high 824 cases.

No new deaths were reported, leaving the statewide death toll at 544.

Sundays report brings the total number of coronavirus cases in Maine to 36,787, according to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention. Thats up from 36,598 on Saturday.

Of those, 29,913 have been confirmed positive, while 6,874 were classified as probable cases, the Maine CDC reported.

The new case rate statewide Sunday is 1.4 cases per 10,000 residents, and the total case rate statewide is 273.71.

The most cases have been detected in Mainers in their 20s, while Mainers over 80 years old make up the majority of deaths. More cases and deaths have been recorded in women than men.

A technical problem delayed the release of more detailed data on Sunday, Maine CDC spokesperson Robert Long said.

So far, 1,326 Mainers have been hospitalized at some point with COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus. Of those, 189 people are currently hospitalized, with 55 in critical care and 22 on ventilators. There are 95 critical care beds out of 394 available, and 224 ventilators out of 320 available. Of alternative ventilators, 443 are available.

Cumulatively, there have been 109,262 vaccinations, with 86,605 Mainers having received the first dose and 22,657 the second.

New Hampshire reported 625 new cases on Sunday and 10 deaths. Vermont reported 149 new cases and one death, and Massachusetts reported 4,641 new cases and 77 deaths.

As of Sunday morning, the coronavirus had sickened 25,014,783 people in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as well as caused 417,539 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins University of Medicine.

Nationwide, 21.1 million doses of the vaccine have been administered, according to Bloomberg.

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Next 189 more coronavirus cases have been reported in Maine - Bangor Daily News

China pushes fringe theories on coronavirus pandemic origins, spreads doubt about effectiveness of Western vaccines – KTLA

January 25, 2021

Chinese state media have played up questions about Pfizers COVID-19 vaccine and whether it could be lethal to the very old. A government spokesperson suggests the coronavirus could have emerged from a U.S. military lab.

As the ruling Communist Party faces growing questioning about Chinas vaccines and renewed criticism of its early COVID response, it is hitting back by encouraging fringe theories that some experts say could cause harm.

State media and officials are sowing doubts about Western vaccines and the origin of the coronavirus in an apparent bid to deflect the attacks. Both issues are in the spotlight because of the ongoing rollout of vaccines globally and the recent arrival of a WHO team in Wuhan, China, to investigate the origins of the virus.

While fringe theories may raise eyebrows overseas, the efforts also target a more receptive domestic audience. The social media hashtag Americans Ft. Detrick, started by the Communist Youth League, was viewed at least 1.4 billion times last week after a Foreign Ministry spokesperson called for a WHO investigation of the biological weapons lab in Maryland.

Its purpose is to shift the blame from mishandling by (the) Chinese government in the pandemics early days to conspiracy by the U.S., said Fang Shimin, a now-U.S.-based writer known for exposing faked degrees and other fraud in Chinese science. The tactic is quite successful because of widespread anti-American sentiment in China.

Yuan Zeng, an expert on Chinese media at the University of Leeds in Great Britain, said the governments stories spread so widely that even well-educated Chinese friends have asked her whether they might be true.

Inflaming doubts and spreading conspiracy theories might add to public health risks as governments try to dispel unease about vaccines, she said, saying: That is super, super dangerous.

In the latest volley, state media called for an investigation into the deaths of 23 elderly people inNorwayafter they received the Pfizer vaccine. An anchor at CGTN, the English-language station of state broadcaster CCTV, and the Global Times newspaper accused Western media of ignoring the news.

Health experts say deaths unrelated to the vaccine are possible during mass vaccination campaigns, and a WHO panel has concluded that the vaccine did not play a contributory role in the Norway deaths.

The state media coverage followed a report by researchers in Brazil who found the effectiveness of a Chinese vaccine lower than previously announced. Researchers initially said Sinovacs vaccine is 78% effective, but the scientists revised that to 50.4% after including mildly symptomatic cases.

After theBrazilnews, researchers at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, a government-supported think tank, reported seeing an increase in Chinese media disinformation about vaccines.

Dozens of online articles on popular health and science blogs and elsewhere have explored questions about the effectiveness of the Pfizer vaccine at length, drawing on an op-ed published this month in the British Medical Journal that raised questions about its clinical trial data.

Its very embarrassing for the government, Fang said in an email. As a result, China is trying to raise doubts about the Pfizer vaccine to save face and promote its vaccines, he said.

Senior Chinese government officials have not been shy in voicing concerns about the mRNA vaccines developed by Western drug companies. They use a newer technology than the more traditional approach of the Chinese vaccines currently in use.

In December, the director of the Chinese Centers for Disease Control, Gao Fu, said he cant rule out negative side effects from the mRNA vaccines. Noting this is the first time they are being given to healthy people, he said, there are safety concerns.

The arrival of theWHOmission has brought back persistent criticism that China allowed the virus to spread globally by reacting too slowly in the beginning, even reprimanding doctors who tried to warn the public. The visiting researchers will begin field work this week after being released from a 14-day quarantine.

The Communist Party sees the WHO investigation as a political risk because it focuses attention on Chinas response, said Jacob Wallis, a senior analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

The party wants to distract domestic and international audiences by pre-emptively distorting the narrative on where responsibility lies for the emergence of COVID-19, Wallis said.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying got the ball rolling last week by calling for the WHO investigation of the U.S. military lab. The site had been mentioned previously by CGTN and other state-controlled outlets.

If America respects the truth, then please open up Ft. Detrick and make public more information about the 200 or more bio-labs outside of the U.S., and please allow the WHO expert group to go to the U.S. to investigate the origins, Hua said.

Her comments, publicized by state media, became one of the most popular topics on Sina Weibo.

China isnt the only government to point fingers. Former President Donald Trump, trying to deflect blame for his governments handling of the pandemic, said last year he had seen evidence the virus came from a Wuhan laboratory. While that theory has not been definitively ruled out, many experts think it is unlikely.

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China pushes fringe theories on coronavirus pandemic origins, spreads doubt about effectiveness of Western vaccines - KTLA

Downward trends in COVID cases and hospitalizations, race to get vaccine doses before variants spread – WWLTV.com

January 25, 2021

The state recorded 1,641 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 as of Sunday, down from over 2,000 less than two weeks ago.

NEW ORLEANS Sunday's coronavirus update further cements a trend that health experts in Louisiana have been encouraged by in recent days: the state appears to be on the back end of its third wave of COVID cases.

With just over 3,600 new cases reported over the weekend, it doesn't appear at first that Louisiana is going through a downward swing. But newly reported cases per day have steadily dropped from their peak near the beginning of the month. Currently, the numbers on the dashboard only reflect numbers from January 24.

Deaths also appear to be down from earlier in the month, although that data especially is hard to determine trends in because of the long time between infection and death for some patients and the lack of Saturday reporting by the LDH.

But hospitalizations are the real sign that Louisiana is in a better place than it was at the start of 2021. The state recorded 1,641 patients hospitalized with COVID-19 as of Sunday, down from over 2,000 less than two weeks ago.

But even as hospitalizations drop, the state's healthcare systems teeter on the brink of collapse. In Region 3, which is the LDH-designated term for hospitals on the Northshore, there are only 13 ICU beds available, meaning a large spike in COVID numbers there could seriously strain their ability to provide care.

And healthcare officials are extremely worried about another spike. A variant of the coronavirus often referred to as the U.K. variant has been found in Louisiana already. While the strain is not any more deadly than the standard strain of the virus, it is more contagious, meaning it has a higher chance of infecting somebody who is taking precautions against transmission.

Despite this, epidemiologists say the current Pfizer and Moderna vaccines should be effective against the strain.

Nationwide, there is a race to vaccinate as many people as possible before the U.K. strain and other variations of the coronavirus that have been reported in recent weeks begin to spread rapidly.

That race has hit snags in Louisiana, with Ochsner Health reporting Friday that they were receiving 70% fewer vaccine doses at hospitals and clinics than they did in the first four weeks of distribution.

The healthcare network has had to delay and cancel appointments to get the shots because they simply don't have the supply needed to handle all of them.

The Biden administration has pledged to vaccinate 100 million people in the president's first 100 days in office.

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Akron bar cited for violating Ohio coronavirus health orders – cleveland.com

January 25, 2021

AKRON, Ohio An Akron bar was cited Saturday night for violating health orders put in place by the Ohio Department of Health to try and slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Pegasus Lounge, on West Wilbeth Road in Akrons Kenmore neighborhood, was cited about 11:20 p.m. by the Ohio Investigative Unit, according to a news release.

OIU agents went to the bar and saw about 25 patrons still inside with drinks in-hand. The current cut-off for alcohol sales at bars and restaurants is 10 p.m.

The agents say that several of the patrons were standing around, and no social distancing measures were in place, the news release says.

The Akron bar was one of three establishments in the state to receive an OIU citation Saturday night. The other two are in Zanesville and Marion.

The administrative case brought against Pegasus Lounge will be heard by the Ohio Liquor Control Commission for possible penalties, including fines or the suspension or revocation of liquor permits, according to the OIU. You can find cases that have been heard by the liquor control commission and their findings here.

Read more coronavirus-related coverage on cleveland.com:

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Akron bar cited for violating Ohio coronavirus health orders - cleveland.com

Coronavirus outbreak connected to Louisiana Classic wrestling tournament, LDH says – The Advocate

January 25, 2021

The state Department of Health announced a coronavirus outbreak connected to last week's 48th Louisiana Classic wrestling tournament in Gonzales, saying the department has received more than 20 reports of athletes, staff and attendees testing positive for COVID-19.

Approximately 400 wrestlers took part in the two-day event at the Lamar-Dixon Expo Center.

Officials said anyone who attended the tournament on either day should consider themselves exposed to the virus and should immediately get tested even if they are not experiencing symptoms.

They added that all individuals who attended the tournament should quarantine to prevent further spread.

Photos and videos taken by The Advocate from the tournament show social distancing wasn't being enforced and while some spectators were wearing face masks, many weren't.

A top LHSAA official issued a memo Friday to all LHSAA wrestling schools, informing them that multiple student-athletes involved in the tournament had recently tested positive for COVID-19.

In the meantime, some LHSAA wrestling events were going on as scheduled this weekend.

Obviously, this is extremely complicated, assistant executive director Adam MacDowell said Friday evening, before the LDH issued its guidance. As soon as I get documents from the LDH, I will send it along to our member schools for further guidance.

Meanwhile, said MacDowell, who wrote the memo and who coordinates LHSAA wrestling, some wrestling events carried on.

What we are advising at this point, without having additional communication with the LDH, is that each individual school and school program contact their local regional health director and go through their protocols if they participated in that (Louisiana Classic) tournament, MacDowell said. I know there are a number of dual meets and tournaments that have been canceled. But I also know some are still in play.

The LHSAA advising schools to contact local health department officials is consistent with protocol that began over the summer, when member schools began practicing for fall sports after last springs lockdown that grounded all LHSAA spring sports.

Though volleyball, football, soccer and basketball contests have been canceled by either COVID cases or contact tracing, most have involved a small number of schools. The Louisiana Classic featured schools from across the state. Spectators were only allowed on the second day, when fewer competitors were involved.

MacDowell cited John Curtis as an example of a school that is moving forward with its Saturday wrestling tournament. MacDowell said Curtis officials told him they contacted local health officials and were cleared to compete. The Lafayette Parish Wrestling Duals also took place Saturday as scheduled.

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Coronavirus outbreak connected to Louisiana Classic wrestling tournament, LDH says - The Advocate

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