Category: Corona Virus

Page 679«..1020..678679680681..690700..»

The Coronavirus Is Never Going Away – The Atlantic

August 4, 2020

In the best-case scenario, a vaccine and better treatments blunt COVID-19s severity, making it a much less dangerous and less disruptive disease. Over time, SARS-CoV-2 becomes just another seasonal respiratory virus, like the four other coronaviruses that cause a sizable proportion of common colds: 229E, OC43, NL63, and HKU1. These cold coronaviruses are so common that we have likely all had them at some point, maybe even multiple times. They can cause serious outbreaks, especially in the elderly, but are usually mild enough to fly under the radar. One endgame is that SARS-CoV-2 becomes the fifth coronavirus that regularly circulates among humans.

In fact, virologists have wondered whether the common-cold coronaviruses also got their start as a pandemic, before settling in as routine viruses. In 2005, biologists in Belgium studied mutations in the cold coronavirus OC43, which likely evolved from a closely related coronavirus that infects cows. Because genetic mutations accumulate at a somewhat regular rate, the researchers were able to date the spillover from cows into humans to the late 1800s. Around this time, a highly infectious respiratory disease was killing cows, and even more curiously, in 1889, a human pandemic began killing people around the world. The older people were, the more susceptible they were. This illness, which produced malaise, fever, and pronounced central nervous system symptoms, was linked to influenza based on the antibodies found in survivors half a century later. But the cause was never definitively proved from tissue samples.

Could it have been a coronavirus that jumped from cows to humans? This is all speculative, and the possible links between the other three cold coronaviruses and past pandemics are even less clear, says Burtram Fielding, a coronavirus researcher at the University of the Western Cape. But, he says, I wouldnt be surprised. It would also be good news, in a way, because it would suggest that COVID-19 could become less deadly over time, making that transition from pandemic to common cold.

Read: Why the coronavirus has been so successful

With a virus, there is a general trade-off between how contagious it is and how deadly it is. SARS and SARS-CoV-2 are illustrative points of comparison: The earlier virus killed a much higher proportion of patients, but it also did not spread as easily. And what a virus ultimately wants to do is keep spreading, which is much easier to do from a live, walking host than a dead one. In the grand scheme of things, you know, a dead host doesn't help the virus, says Vineet Menachery, a coronavirus researcher at the University of Texas Medical Branch. The other four coronaviruses may also be less deadly because we have all encountered them as children, and even if our immunity does not prevent us from getting them again, it may still prevent severe disease. All of this, along with immunity from vaccines, means that COVID-19 is likely to become far less disruptive down the line.

See more here:

The Coronavirus Is Never Going Away - The Atlantic

What you need to know about coronavirus Monday, Aug. 3 – KING5.com

August 4, 2020

Find developments on the COVID-19 pandemic and the plan for recovery in the U.S. and Washington state.

Where cases stand in Washington

Washington gyms and fitness facilities will need to nearly triple the minimum distance required for patrons exercising indoors, except for those practicing certain team sports.

New COVID-19 guidance issued by Gov. Jay Inslee increases the requirement of six feet of distance between patrons to 300 square-feet, which is just over 17 feet of space. Gyms larger than 12,000 square feet will be capped at 25 percent.

In addition, showers, hot tubs, saunas, and tanning beds at multi-use facilities will be closed, as will steam rooms, squash courts, and racquetball courts.

Negotiators of another coronavirus relief bill met Monday in the Capitol as issues like food for the poor and aid to schools moved to the forefront. The White House is seeking opportunities to boost President Donald Trump, like more $1,200 stimulus payments.

Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants big money for state and local governments. All sides predict a long slog ahead despite the lapse of a $600-per-week expanded unemployment benefit at the end of July. Several more days of talks are expected.

A Norwegian cruise ship line halted all trips and apologized Monday for procedural errors after a coronavirus outbreak on one ship infected at least 5 passengers and 36 crew members. Health authorities fear the ship also could have spread the virus to dozens of towns and villages along Norway's western coast.

Seattles Argosy Cruises announced it will close its public tours and private charters for the remainder of the 2020 season.

The company said the seasonal closure is due to the "evolving uncertainty around COVID-19 and its unprecedented impacts on the tourism industry."

The Harbor Cruise and Evergreen Excursion will conclude service on Sunday, August 2, the company said.

A Chicago woman who last month became the nation's first COVID-19 patient to undergo a double lung transplant said Thursday that she woke up days later, unaware about the surgery and unable to "recognize my body.

Mayra Ramirez said that before she fell ill she was an independent, active person who moved from North Carolina to Chicago in 2014 to work as a paralegal. She said she had an autoimmune condition, but was otherwise healthy. She had gone on a three-mile run shortly before becoming ill and heading for the hospital.

Pac-12 athletes from several schools threatened not to play if their demands on racial injustice and coronavirus safety measures aren't met.

A group of Pac-12 football players on Sunday threatened to opt out of the coming season unless its concerns about competing during the COVID-19 pandemic and other racial and economic issues in college sports are addressed.

Continued here:

What you need to know about coronavirus Monday, Aug. 3 - KING5.com

Can Humans Give Coronavirus to Bats, and Other Wildlife? – The New York Times

August 4, 2020

Many people worry about bats as a source of viruses, including the one that has caused a worldwide pandemic. But another question is surfacing: Could humans pass the novel coronavirus to wildlife, specifically North American bats?

It may seem like the last pandemic worry right now, far down the line after concerns about getting sick and staying employed. But as the spread of the novel coronavirus has made clear, the more careful we are about viruses passing among species, the better off we are.

The scientific consensus is that the virus originated in bats in China or neighboring countries. A recent paper tracing the genetic lineage of the novel virus found evidence that it probably evolved in bats into its current form. The researchers also concluded that either this coronavirus or others that could make the jump to humans are likely present in bat populations now we just havent found them yet.

So why worry about infecting new bats with the current virus? The federal government considers it a legitimate concern both for bat populations, which have been devastated by a fungal disease called white-nose syndrome, and for humans, given potential problems down the road.

The U.S. Geological Survey and the Fish and Wildlife Service, two agencies involved in research on bats, took the issue seriously enough to convene a panel of 12 experts to analyze the likelihood of human-to-bat transmission of the virus, SARS-CoV-2, in North America.

Another team of scientists, mostly from the two agencies, assessed the expert opinions and issued a report in June. They concluded that there is some risk, although how much is hard to pin down. Taking precautions, like wearing masks, gloves and protective clothing, could significantly cut it down.

Kevin Olival, a vice president for research at EcoHealth Alliance, an independent group and an author of the report, said that as the virus began to spread around the globe, there was a real concern that not only North American but wildlife populations all over the world could be exposed.

While the group studied interactions between North American bats and scientific researchers, Dr. Olival said wildlife-control workers and people who rehabilitate injured bats, for example, may come into contact with bats even more than researchers do.

Evaluating risk meant trying to cope with unknowns piled on unknowns: the risk of an infected research scientist or wildlife worker encountering bats; the risk of the bats becoming infected in that situation; the risk of an infected bat passing the virus onto other bats so that the virus becomes established in the population.

The authors of the paper concluded there was a risk of humans infecting bats with the novel coronavirus. How much risk? You might say little, or small, or unknown, but this report is from two federal agencies, so it describes the risk as non-negligible.

Although the issue of how bat researchers should conduct their work may seem narrow, the potential consequences are broad. The report notes that if SARS-CoV-2 became established in North American bats, it would allow the virus to keep propagating in animals even if it didnt cause disease. And the virus could potentially spill back over to humans after this pandemic is contained.

Another concern involves how readily the coronavirus might spread from bats to other kinds of wildlife or domestic animals, including pets. Scientists have already shown that domestic cats and big cats can become infected, and domestic cats can infect each other. Ferrets are easily infected, as are minks. On the suspicion that they may be passing the disease to people, Spain and the Netherlands have slaughtered thousands of minks at fur farms.

A small number of infected pets has gotten a good deal of publicity. But public health authorities like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have said that, although information is limited, the risk of pets spreading the virus to people is low. They do recommend that any person who has Covid-19 take the same precautions with their pets that they would with human family members. National Geographic reported Thursday that the first U. S. dog known to have tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, had died. The dog, Buddy, apparently had lymphoma.

Updated August 3, 2020

As to the susceptibility of North American bats, Dr. Olival was not aware of any published work on whether they can be infected with the virus. Researchers in Hong Kong have reported that in a lab the coronavirus infected the intestinal cells of Chinese rufous horseshoe bats. A report this month in The Lancet found that fruit bats could become infected with the virus.

Beyond bats, Dr. Olival said that scientists should be concerned about how they conduct research on wildlife in general and consider what precautions to take to avoid potentially infecting one species or another. One step, he said, would be evaluating research goals to weigh what level of contact would be necessary.

In some cases, he said, observation and data recording could be done without handling animals. If not, gloves and other precautions make sense, although some old-school researchers have balked at the suggestions, he said.

He said his group continues to recommend, the highest level of personal protective equipment when you work with wildlife, because its not just a risk that you will pick up something from the wildlife, but that you dont give something back to them.

He acknowledged that research precautions with wildlife will have a very small effect, given the greater number of people who hunt wildlife or come into contact in other ways. Education efforts are underway to try to change some of those practices; in addition that, he said, researchers should set some kind of standard.

See the rest here:

Can Humans Give Coronavirus to Bats, and Other Wildlife? - The New York Times

A Coronavirus Vaccine Is Coming. Just Dont Call It Warp Speed. – The New York Times

August 4, 2020

How many people need to be protected by a vaccine before its recommended for widespread use? Ideally, rates of disease will be 70 percent lower in vaccinated people than in unvaccinated people. The World Health Organization says a vaccine should be at minimum 50 percent effective, averaged across age groups. (We know from influenza that vaccines dont always work as well on older adults whose immune systems have declined.)

This benchmark is crucial because a weak vaccine might be worse than no vaccine at all. We do not want people who are only slightly protected to behave as if they are invulnerable, which could exacerbate transmission. It is also costly to roll out a vaccine, diverting attention away from other efforts that we know work, like mask-wearing, and from testing better vaccines.

The last thing Phase III trials do is examine safety. Earlier trials do this, too, but larger trials allow us to detect rarer side effects. One of those rare effects researchers are paying attention to is a paradoxical phenomenon known as immune enhancement, in which a vaccinated persons immune system overreacts to infection. Researchers can test for this by comparing the rates of disease severe enough to require hospitalization across the two groups. A clear signal that hospitalization is higher among vaccinated participants would mark the end of a vaccine.

The speed of the trials depends on how quickly we can detect a difference between the two groups. If two vaccinated people became sick versus 10 who got a placebo, it could be because of chance. But if it were 20 compared to 100, we would feel much more confident that the vaccine was working.

Key to getting a quick result is placing the trial in outbreak hot spots where people are most likely to be infected. We can even target the highest-risk people within those areas, using mobile teams to travel to neighborhoods, bringing the trial directly to the people. Some trials explicitly prioritize essential workers like health care workers or grocery employees. Others are simply focused on enrolling large numbers of participants as fast as possible.

Combining those efforts, it could take as little as three to six months to generate enough convincing safety and efficacy data for companies to apply for expedited review by the Food and Drug Administration.

There are ways for vaccines to be approved without definitive efficacy data, based on animal or immune response data instead, but the bar is extremely high, and for good reason. A precondition is that efficacy trials are not possible, typically because the disease is so rare or sporadic that it would require hundreds of thousands of participants to be followed for many years to tell if the vaccine is effective (rabies, for example). That is not the situation here.

Read the original here:

A Coronavirus Vaccine Is Coming. Just Dont Call It Warp Speed. - The New York Times

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 3 August – World Economic Forum

August 4, 2020

1. How COVID-19 is affecting the globe

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have topped 18 million around the world, according to Johns Hopkins University of Medicine. The number of confirmed coronavirus deaths now stands at more than 689,000.

July was the worst month for cases since the outbreak began in many countries, the Guardian reports. Nearly 8 million cases were recorded in July alone.

Cases in Latin America, the world's worst-affected region, have neared 5 million with 200,000 deaths recorded on 1 August.

Stricter measures are being imposed in the state of Victoria, Australia, after a 'state of disaster' was declared. An overnight curfew has been imposed, schools have closed and only one member of the household is allowed to leave once a day, to pick up essentials.

The US is entering 'new phase', with the virus widespread in both rural and urban areas, White House expert Dr Deborah Birx told CNN.

Manila and surrounding provinces in the Philippines are going back into lockdown from 4 August, as infections jumped to more than 100,000.

The outbreak in Danang, Viet Nam has spread to at least four factories, with a workforce of around 3,700.

2. WHO chief: COVID-19 'once-in-a-century' crisis

The Director-General of the World Health Organization said the COVID-19 pandemic is a "once-in-a-century health crisis" which will have effects "felt for decades to come".

Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus was speaking at the fourth meeting of the Emergency Committee on COVID-19 at which it was unanimously agreed the outbreak still constitutes a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC).

"Many countries that believed they were past the worst are now grappling with new outbreaks," he added.

"Some that were less affected in the earliest weeks are now seeing escalating numbers of cases and deaths. And some that had large outbreaks have brought them under control."

Responding to the COVID-19 pandemic requires global cooperation among governments, international organizations and the business community, which is at the centre of the World Economic Forums mission as the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation.

Since its launch on 11 March, the Forums COVID Action Platform has brought together 1,667 stakeholders from 1,106 businesses and organizations to mitigate the risk and impact of the unprecedented global health emergency that is COVID-19.

The platform is created with the support of the World Health Organization and is open to all businesses and industry groups, as well as other stakeholders, aiming to integrate and inform joint action.

As an organization, the Forum has a track record of supporting efforts to contain epidemics. In 2017, at our Annual Meeting, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) was launched bringing together experts from government, business, health, academia and civil society to accelerate the development of vaccines. CEPI is currently supporting the race to develop a vaccine against this strand of the coronavirus.

The WHO first declared a PHEIC on 30 January - when there were fewer than 100 cases and no deaths outside China.

The committee advised countries to support research efforts and enable equitable allocation of diagnostics, therapeutics and vaccines.

July was the worst month for COVID-19 infections.

Image: WHO

3. Ninety-minute COVID-19 tests to be rolled out in UK

Testing times for COVID-19 will be cut from up to 48 hours to just 90 minutes in Britain, with new on-the-spot tests available next week.

Millions of DNA and swab tests will be sent out to hospitals, care homes and laboratories, Reuters reports, which can also detect influenza - and won't need to be administered by a health professional.

Health secretary Matt Hancock said: The fact these tests can detect flu as well as COVID-19 will be hugely beneficial as we head into winter, so patients can follow the right advice to protect themselves and others."

Meanwhile, diners in the UK can get 50% off their bill from 3 to 31 August at restaurants participating in the government's Eat Out to Help Out scheme, designed to kick-start the food industry.

Here is the original post:

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 3 August - World Economic Forum

Coronavirus in Wisconsin: 922 new confirmed cases, one additional death – Green Bay Press Gazette

August 3, 2020

There were 922confirmed cases of COVID-19 and one coronavirus-related death statewide, health officials reported Sunday.

The positive cases make up9.6% of the 9,643 tests processed since Saturday, according to the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

As of Sunday,337people were in hospitals with known cases of the virus. Of those, 110were in intensive care, according to the Wisconsin Hospital Association.

Over 54,920people have tested positive for the virus; 9,994of reported cases remain active, while 80.1% of people have recovered from COVID-19.

The Department of Health's weekly ratings of county COVID-19 activity were reportedWednesday.Note that ratings are based on a combination of total new cases per 100,000 people over the past two weeks and the percent change in new cases between the past seven days and the seven days before that. Parentheses reflect a change in the activity level from the previous week's rating.

Global cases have surpassed 17.8million, and deaths neared 680,800as of mid-Sunday, according to Johns Hopkins University.More than 4.6million of those cases and 154,750 deaths were in the United States.

Contact Benita Mathew at (920) 309-3428 or bmathew@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @benita_mathew.

Read or Share this story: https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/2020/08/02/coronavirus-update-922-new-confirmed-cases-wisconsin-one-new-death/5567935002/

Link:

Coronavirus in Wisconsin: 922 new confirmed cases, one additional death - Green Bay Press Gazette

After Plummeting, the Virus Soars Back in the Midwest – The New York Times

August 3, 2020

The Northeast, once the viruss biggest hot spot, has improved considerably since its peak in April, when the region suffered more than any other region of the country. Yet cases are now increasing slightly in New Jersey, Rhode Island and Massachusetts, as residents move around more freely and gather more frequently in groups.

Across the country, deaths from the coronavirus continue to rise. The country was averaging about 500 per day at the start of July. Over the last week, it has averaged more than 1,000 daily, with many of those concentrated in Sun Belt states. On Wednesday, California, Florida and Texas reported a combined 724 deaths, about half the national total.

Houston, the fourth-largest city in the country, has been adjusting to a new normal where the only thing certain is that nothing is certain. After cases and hospitalizations seemed to level off and even decrease in recent days, Harris County on Friday broke a single-day record with 2,100 new cases.

I think to a certain extent, we saw a spike because people were fatigued over it, said Alan Rosen, who leads the Harris County Precinct One constables office. They were fatigued over hearing about it every day. They were fatigued about being cooped up in their house and being away from people.

People there have been coping with the lulls and peaks of a physical, emotional, fiscal and logistical crisis from an invisible foe nearly three years after surviving Hurricane Harvey, one of the worst disasters in American history.

It is a roller coaster, said Mr. Rosen, who recovered after getting infected with the virus in May. Its not like a hurricane thats coming through and we know what to do. We know we got to clean up and rebuild and everybody is accustomed to the time frame. But with this, there are just so many unknowns.

Julie Bosman reported from Chicago, Manny Fernandez from Houston and Thomas Fuller from Alturas, Calif. Mitch Smith contributed reporting from Chicago.

Go here to see the original:

After Plummeting, the Virus Soars Back in the Midwest - The New York Times

How Italy Turned Around Its Coronavirus Calamity – The New York Times

August 3, 2020

ROME When the coronavirus erupted in the West, Italy was the nightmarish epicenter, a place to avoid at all costs and a shorthand in the United States and much of Europe for uncontrolled contagion.

You look at whats going on with Italy, President Trump told reporters on March 17. We dont want to be in a position like that. Joseph R. Biden Jr., the presumptive Democratic nominee, used Italys overwhelmed hospitals as evidence for his opposition to Medicare for All at a presidential debate. It is not working in Italy right now, he said.

Fast forward a few months, and the United States has suffered tens of thousands more deaths than any country in the world. European states that once looked smugly at Italy are facing new flare-ups. Some are imposing fresh restrictions and weighing whether to lock down again.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain on Friday announced a delay to a planned easing of measures in England as the infection rate there rose. Even Germany, lauded for its efficient response and rigorous contact tracing, has warned that lax behavior is prompting a surge in cases.

And Italy? Its hospitals are basically empty of Covid-19 patients. Daily deaths attributed to the virus in Lombardy, the northern region that bore the brunt of the pandemic, hover around zero. The number of new daily cases has plummeted to one of the lowest in Europe and the world, said Giovanni Rezza, director of the infective illness department at the National Institute of Health. We have been very prudent.

And lucky. Today, despite a tiny uptick in cases this week, Italians are cautiously optimistic that they have the virus in check even as Italys leading health experts warn that complacency remains the jet fuel of the pandemic. They are aware that the picture can change at any moment.

How Italy has gone from being a global pariah to a model however imperfect of viral containment holds fresh lessons for the rest of the world, including the United States, where the virus, never under control, now rages across the country.

After a stumbling start, Italy has consolidated, or at least maintained, the rewards of a tough nationwide lockdown through a mix of vigilance and painfully gained medical expertise.

Its government has been guided by scientific and technical committees. Local doctors, hospitals and health officials collect more than 20 indicators on the virus daily and send them to regional authorities, who then forward them to the National Institute of Health.

The result is a weekly X-ray of the countrys health upon which policy decisions are based. That is a long way from the state of panic, and near collapse, that hit Italy in March.

This week, Parliament voted to extend the governments emergency powers through Oct. 15 after Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte argued the nation could not let its guard down because the virus is still circulating.

Those powers allow the government to keep restrictions in place and respond quickly including with lockdowns to any new clusters. The government has already imposed travel restrictions on more than a dozen countries to Italy, as the importation of the virus from countries is now the governments greatest fear.

There are a lot of situations in France, Spain, the Balkans, which means that the virus is not off at all, said Ranieri Guerra, assistant director general for strategic initiatives at the World Health Organization and an Italian doctor. It can come back at any time.

There is no doubt that the privations of the lockdown were economically costly. For three months, businesses and restaurants were ordered closed, movement was highly restricted even between regions, towns and streets and tourism ground to a halt. Italy is expected to lose about 10 percent of its gross domestic product this year.

But at a certain point, as the virus threatened to spread uncontrollably, Italian officials decided to put lives ahead of the economy. The health of the Italian people comes and will always come first, Mr. Conte said at the time.

Italian officials now hope that the worst of the cure came in one large dose the painful lockdown and that the country is now safe to resume normal life, albeit with limits. They argue that the only way to start up the economy is to keep tamping down the virus, even now.

The strategy of closing down completely invited criticism that the governments excessive caution was paralyzing the economy. But it may prove to be more advantageous than trying to reopen the economy while the virus still rages, as is happening in countries like the United States, Brazil and Mexico.

That does not mean that calls for continued vigilance, as elsewhere in the world, have been immune to mockery, resistance and exasperation. In that, Italy is no different.

Masks often are missing or lowered in trains or buses, where they are mandatory. Young people are going out and doing the things young people do and risk in that way spreading the virus to more susceptible parts of the population. Adults started gathering at the beach and for birthday barbecues. There is still no clear plan for a return to school in September.

There is also a burgeoning, and politically motivated, anti-mask contingent led by nationalist Matteo Salvini, who on July 27 declared that replacing handshakes and hugs with elbow bumps was the end of the human species.

At his rallies, Mr. Salvini, the leader of the populist League party, still shakes hands and wears his mask like a chin guard. In July, during a news conference, he accused the Italian government of importing infected immigrants to create new clusters and extend the state of emergency.

This week, Mr. Salvini joined other mask skeptics nicknamed the negationists by critics for a protest in the Senate library, along with special guests such as the Italian crooner Andrea Bocelli, who said he did not believe the pandemic was so serious because I know a lot of people and I dont know anyone who ended up in an I.C.U.

But the countrys leading health experts say that the lack of severe cases is indicative of a decrease in the volume of infections, as only a small percentage of the infected get very sick. And so far, Italys malcontents have not been numerous or powerful enough to undermine what has been a hard-won trajectory of success in confronting the virus after a calamitous start.

Italys initial isolation by European neighbors at the outset of the crisis, when masks and ventilators were hardly pouring in from across the borders, may actually have helped, Mr. Guerra, the W.H.O. expert, said.

Updated July 27, 2020

There was competition initially, there was no collaboration, Mr. Guerra said. And everyone acknowledged Italy was left alone at that time. As a result, he said, what they had to do at that time because we were left alone turned out to be more effective than other countries.

Italy first quarantined towns and then the Lombardy region in the north and then the entire peninsula and its islands, despite the near absence of the virus in much of central and southern Italy. That not only prevented workers in the industrial north from returning home in the much more vulnerable south, but it also fostered and forced a unified national response.

During the lockdown, movement was strictly limited, between regions and towns and even city blocks, and people had to fill in auto-certification forms to prove that they needed to go outside for work, health or other necessities. Masks and social distancing regulations were enforced by some regional authorities with steep fines. Generally, if grudgingly, the rules were followed.

As searing scenes of human suffering, empty streets and the heavy toll on an elderly generation of northern Italians spread, the transmission rate of the virus quickly decreased, and the curve flattened, as opposed to other European countries, such as Sweden, which pursued an alternative to locking down.

That the initial outbreak was localized in the overwhelmed hospitals created enormous stress, but it also enabled doctors and nurses to expedite contact tracing.

Then the country reopened, gradually, expanding liberties at two-week intervals to respond to the viruss incubation period.

The lockdown eventually had a secondary effect of decreasing the volume of virus circulating in society, and thus reducing the probability of coming in contact with someone who had it. At the end of the lockdown, the virus circulation had steeply fallen off and in some central and southern regions, there were hardly any chains of transmission at all.

Its always a matter of probability with these pathogens, said Mr. Guerra, adding that new early alarm systems such as the monitoring of wastewater for traces of virus had lowered the probability of infection even more.

Some Italian doctors say they believe that the virus is now behaving differently in Italy. Matteo Bassetti, an infectious-disease doctor in the northwestern city of Genoa, said that during the height of the crisis, his hospital was inundated with 500 Covid-19 cases at one time. Now, he said, his intensive care unit, with 50 beds, has no coronavirus patients, and the 60-bed Covid-19 unit built specially for the crisis is empty.

He said he thought that the virus had weakened an unproven view, he acknowledged, that has nonetheless found an eager audience in Mr. Salvini and other politicians opposed to extending the state of emergency.

Most health experts said that the virus still loomed, and as the government considers a new decree to reopen night clubs, festivals and cruise ship travel, many of them have implored the country not to let down its guard.

Even if the situation is better than in other countries, we should continue to be very prudent, said Dr. Rezza of the National Institute of Health, adding that he thought the question of what Italy had done right was better posed at the end of the epidemic.

We cannot exclude that we will have outbreaks in Italy in the next few days, he said. Maybe its just a matter of time.

Emma Bubola contributed reporting from Milan.

Read the original:

How Italy Turned Around Its Coronavirus Calamity - The New York Times

Coronavirus reunites long-lost sisters who haven’t seen each other in over 50 years – CNN

August 3, 2020

Doris Crippen, 73, said she had come down with what she thought was the flu in May. Due to how weak it made her, she ended up falling and breaking her arm, sending her to the emergency room and eventually down memory lane.

It turned out she had coronavirus and had to spend almost 30 days in the hospital recovering, Crippen said. After she was released, Crippen went to Fremont Methodist Health's Dunklau Gardens to get rehab on her arm.

It was there that she encountered a wonderful surprise.

Bev Boro, 53, has been a medication aide at Dunklau Gardens in Fremont for 22 years and when she came across Crippen's name on a patient board she immediately recognized it.

"I couldn't believe it," Boro said at a July 22 news conference. "I thought, 'Oh my God, I think this is my sister.'"

The two women have the same father but different mothers, and they have not seem each other in 53 years, when Boro was a baby. Crippen lived with her mother, but Boro and four of their 14 siblings were separated by the state and put up for adoption when she was 6 months old.

On June 27, Boro decided to take a chance and confirm that Crippen was who she thought she was. Since, Crippen is hard of hearing, Boro went into her room with a white board and wrote their father's name. Crippen confirmed that was her dad.

"I pointed at myself... and said, "That's mine too!"... I have our dad's eyes," Boro said.

"I about fell out of my chair and I just burst into tears," Crippen said. "It was just a happy feeling to find my sister. It's been 53 years since she was a baby and I held her."

Crippen had tried to find her siblings several times over the years, but d failed.

"It's amazing ... really overwhelming, after so many years," Crippen said. "I never thought I'd find her again."

Boro on the other hand had tracked down most of their siblings, and now she gets to reunite Crippen with the family members Crippen thought she had lost. They are now trying to plan a family reunion.

"It was the Lord's blessing that I got sent here," to the rehab center, "because if I hadn't been sent here, I wouldn't have found her," Crippen said.

Link:

Coronavirus reunites long-lost sisters who haven't seen each other in over 50 years - CNN

Page 679«..1020..678679680681..690700..»