Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Dunkin’ Donuts Park to Be Used as COVID-19 Vaccination Site – NBC Connecticut

January 21, 2021

Dunkin' Donuts Park in Hartford will soon be used as a COVID-19 vaccination site, according to Mayor Luke Bronin's Office.

The mayor was joined by Yard Goats president Tim Restall to make the announcement.

"The coronavirus continues to be at levels that are far too high," Bronin said.

He said the city saw the highest levels of virus transmission after Thanksgiving and the last week had some of the lowest rates they've seen in a while. There were around 500 new cases, which is still far too many, he said.

Bronin said the small city of Hartford has lost 242 lives to the pandemic.

He urged people to continue to wear masks, wash hands, to socially distance and to avoid social gatherings.

Bronin is urging anyone who is eligible to get a vaccine to make an appointment to get one.

Residents who are 75 and older are now eligible to get a COVID-19 vaccine and Bronin said the city has partnered with senior centers so people looking for a vaccine can contact them by phone or email.

Residents can also reach out to the state online or by phone at 877-918-2224 to schedule a vaccine, Bronin said. Learn more here.

Beginning as soon as February 6, the venue will likely be used for specific, by-appointment testing events and those events will depend on the availability of vaccines on a weekly basis, according to the mayor's office.

Bronin said the city is also offering a mobile vaccination site at a senior living facility.

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Dunkin' Donuts Park to Be Used as COVID-19 Vaccination Site - NBC Connecticut

VERIFY: If you get your second COVID-19 shot, but not in the recommended timeframe, are you still ‘fully vaccinated?’ – WCNC.com

January 21, 2021

Pfizer and Moderna vaccines recommend the second dose within 21 and 28 days of the first dose, respectively. Are you still fully vaccinated if you miss that window?

CHARLOTTE, N.C. With both COVID-19 vaccines currently on the market, two doses are needed before health officials consider a person to have completed the vaccine series and be fully vaccinated.

Each vaccine also recommends a specific window of time to get that second dose.

Are you still fully vaccinated if you get that second COVID-19 vaccine shot but miss the recommended timeframe for it?

Yes. Health officials considered you to be fully vaccinated if you've had both doses, regardless of the timeframe in which you got the doses.

According to the Centers for Disease Control, for the Pfizer vaccine, a second dose should be administered 21 days after the first. For the Moderna vaccine, that window is 28 days after the first dose.

There's even a little wiggle room for how soon you can have your second dose, according to Dr. Brannon Traxler, Interim Public Health Director for South Carolina's Department of Health and Environmental Control.

"You can get the second dose anywhere from four days before that recommended interval," Traxler said. "So, 17 days would be the minimum days that have passed since your Pfizer first dose. It would be 24 days for your Moderna first dose."

As for how late you can get your second dose, the CDC states: "There is no maximum interval between the first and second doses for either vaccine."

The agency reports, if you go longer than the recommended timeframe, "there is no need to restart the series."

So you don't need to start again, but are you still immunized?

"Yes, you would be fully vaccinated, as long as you got that second dose," Traxler said.

However, Traxler reminds us that vaccine supply is limited. So, it is still important to get that second dose when it is available to you. That way, you can guarantee a complete vaccine series.

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VERIFY: If you get your second COVID-19 shot, but not in the recommended timeframe, are you still 'fully vaccinated?' - WCNC.com

Live Updates on the Covid-19 Vaccine, Cases and More – The New York Times

January 19, 2021

Heres what you need to know:Students waited outside Sleepy Hollow Middle and High School before they took the SAT in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y., in September.Credit...Hilary Swift for The New York Times

The College Board, which administers the SAT college entrance examination and has seen its business battered by the coronavirus pandemic, said Tuesday that it will drop the optional essay section from the SAT and stop administering subject-matter tests in the United States.

The pandemic accelerated a process already underway at the College Board to simplify our work and reduce demands on students, the organization said in a statement, adding that it would also continue to develop a version of the SAT test that could be administered digitally something it tried and failed to do quickly with an at-home version last year after the pandemic shut down testing centers.

The board gave no time frame for when a digital version of the SAT, which would be administered at testing centers by live proctors, might be introduced, but said it would provide more information in April.

The changes to the SAT come as more and more colleges are dropping the requirement that students take the test, as well as its competitor the ACT, a trend driven in part by concerns about equity that received a boost during the pandemic.

Critics of the College Board said the decision was almost certainly driven by financial considerations. The SAT has in the past represented a substantial portion of the College Boards more than $1 billion in annual revenue.

The SAT and the subject exams are dying products on their last breaths, and Im sure the costs of administering them are substantial, Jon Boeckenstedt, the vice provost of enrollment management at Oregon State University, said in an email.

At the same, he said, the College Board was likely to try to use the elimination of the subject tests to try to convince elite high schools to offer more Advanced Placement courses, whose tests the College Board also administers, as a way to burnish their students transcripts. But because A.P. tests have to be taken at the end of a students junior year or earlier for their scores to be considered in admissions decisions, more focus on A.P. scores in the admissions process would likely only increase pressure on students.

Overall, its good for College Board, and probably not so good for students, Mr. Boeckenstedt said. In other words, par for the course.

Indeed, in its announcement, the board said that A.P. courses provided students rich and varied opportunities to showcase their knowledge and skills and that the expanded reach of A.P. and its widespread availability for low-income students and students of color made the subject tests no longer necessary.

David Coleman, the chief executive officer of the College Board, said the organizations goal was not to get more students to take A.P. courses and tests, but to eliminate redundant exams, thereby reducing the burden on high school students applying to college.

Anything that can reduce unnecessary anxiety and get out of the way is of huge value to us, he said.

With the United States approaching a once-unthinkable coronavirus pandemic death toll of 400,000 people, Joseph R. Biden Jr., on the eve of his inauguration as president, is assuming the role of mourner in chief and projecting an air of command of the issue that has vexed the Trump administration for the past year.

The president-elect will arrive in the nations capital Tuesday evening for a somber inauguration-eve ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial, where 400 lights will be illuminated along the perimeter of the reflecting pool. Each is meant to represent approximately 1,000 Americans who have died during the pandemic.

On Monday night, as President Trump ordered an end to the ban on travelers from Europe and Brazil that had been aimed at stopping the spread of the coronavirus to the United States, Mr. Bidens aides said he would rescind the move when he takes office on Wednesday, before it was scheduled to go into effect.

Mr. Trumps order was issued at a time of heightened anxiety over the coronavirus and what Mr. Biden has warned will be a dark winter. The country has experienced a post-holidays surge in cases that has overwhelmed some hospitals and led to record numbers of deaths. The national vaccination rollout has been slow and chaotic. And a more contagious virus variant is spreading, while others are being discovered.

Mr. Biden has declared getting control of the pandemic the central issue of his administration, and has been highly critical of how his predecessor handled the worst public health crisis in more than 100 years.

Mr. Trump, in a proclamation, said that the travel restrictions, which apply to noncitizens trying to come to the United States, would no longer be needed on Jan. 26, once the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention start requiring proof of a negative virus test before boarding for all passengers from abroad.

The proclamation appeared to be an effort to help the airline and hospitality industries.

Mr. Trump wrote that Alex M. Azar II, the secretary of health and human services, had recommended ending the restrictions for most parts of Europe and Brazil, while maintaining them for Iran and China, which Mr. Trump said had not been cooperative.

Jennifer Psaki, who will be Mr. Bidens White House press secretary, said the new administration would not allow the directives to take effect.

With the pandemic worsening, and more contagious variants emerging around the world, this is not the time to be lifting restrictions on international travel, she tweeted.

In Washington, the Tuesday night event at the Lincoln Memorial will kick off a national moment of unity at 5:30 p.m. Eastern that will include similar commemorations at the Empire State Building in New York, the Space Needle in Seattle and other landmarks, with events also planned for Mr. Bidens hometowns, Scranton, Pa., and Wilmington, Del.

The inaugural committees chief executive, Tony Allen, the president of Delaware State University, said in a statement that the inauguration represents the beginning of a new national journey one that renews its commitment to honor its fallen and rise toward greater heights in their honor.

Michael D. Shear and Glenn Thrush contributed reporting.

Across the United States, state education and district officials say the pandemic has intensified a longstanding teacher shortage to crisis levels.

As spikes in cases and exposures have forced more teachers to stay home, the shortage is among the main reasons that schools or whole districts have had to halt in-person instruction, often for weeks.

Its just such a ripple effect, said Laura Penman, the superintendent of Eminence Community Schools, a tiny district in rural Indiana. The district had to briefly close its only elementary school in November because an infected educator had come into contact with several colleagues.

Desperate to stanch staffing shortfalls, districts are increasing pay for substitutes and even advertising for temporary positions on local billboards. Some states and districts have suspended college course requirements, or permitted abbreviated online training, for emergency substitute teachers.

Although stopgap solutions may be necessary during the pandemic, education experts say they could diminish the quality of in-person learning, further disrupting education for a generation of children.

Public school systems in the United States have been grappling with a shortage of full-time teachers for years. There is reduced education funding in many states, and one study before the pandemic reported that schools nationwide needed more than 100,000 additional full-time licensed teachers, particularly in science and special education. The coronavirus is vastly exacerbating that shortfall, experts say, by prompting many teachers to quit or retire early.

Education researchers said the pandemic teaching shortage was likely to intensify learning disparities, especially in high-poverty schools where experienced substitutes often chose not to work.

Its a disaster. Those kids who have already got the worst of Covid and its consequences are the ones who are going to face a larger lack of sufficient, and sufficiently qualified, teachers, said Emma Garcia, an education economist at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington. Its going to have negative consequences immediately and its going to take them longer to be able to catch up.

The number of nursing home workers in New York State who have declined the coronavirus vaccine rivals the number who have been inoculated, raising concerns about vaccine hesitancy among those who are in contact with some of the individuals at highest risk of a severe infection.

As of Monday, about 37 percent of the more than 130,000 people working in skilled nursing facilities in the state have been vaccinated, according to the governors office.

But 32 percent of the workers have declined to be vaccinated.

In some parts of the state, staff members who have declined outnumber those who have been vaccinated. On Long Island, 46 percent declined while 34 percent have been vaccinated.

Officials cautioned that the vaccination process for long-term-care facilities was still in its early stages the first of three inoculation phases concluded on Sunday, and many workers have not had the chance to get vaccinated. They said they hoped the proportion of staff members declining would decrease as they saw their colleagues getting vaccinated safely.

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said at a news conference on Monday that the state had earmarked 225,000 doses for residents and workers in long-term care facilities and that 105,000 had been used. Of the 120,000 unused doses, 15,000 will be reserved for residents and 40,000 for staff members; the remainder will be reallocated to the main vaccination program, Gareth Rhodes, a top aide to Mr. Cuomo, said Tuesday.

The vaccination rate among residents was higher: 67 percent have been inoculated, while 16 percent have declined. Workers and residents who are medically able to get the vaccine but had previously declined will still be able to get a shot if they decide to.

The state health department has done online events and other educational outreach with nursing homes, largely to address vaccine hesitancy.

Many of the workers are lower-income and people of color, communities that tend to have higher rates of vaccine hesitancy. In a speech on Monday marking Martin Luther Kings Birthday, Mr. Cuomo said he understood their distrust, citing the decades-long Tuskegee experiment in which government researchers withheld treatment from Black men infected with syphilis.

No one can ameliorate or justify the victimization and discrimination the Black community has endured, Mr. Cuomo said.

But, he said, We have had New Yorks doctors, the best on the planet, review the vaccine, and they vouch for it. I will take it as soon as I am eligible.

As the national death toll from the virus nears 400,000, people in the United States have been dying of Covid-19 at the highest rate of the pandemic. The new tally is the equivalent of wiping out a city the size of Oakland, Calif. It is on the order of Sept. 11 deaths more than a hundred times over. At that scale, the human brain compensates with a defense that political psychologists call psychic numbing.

On one single day in a monthlong period during which the United States lost more people to Covid-19 than in any other during the pandemic, Stacey Williams, a beloved youth football coach and father of five in Florida, was among more than 2,000 Americans with the virus to die.

Along with Mr. Williams, Jose H. Garcia, 59, the longtime chief of the Roma Police Department in the South Texas border region who was known to friends and family as Beto, died of Covid-19 complications. So did Nelson Prentice Bowsher II of Washington, D.C., 80, an affordable-housing advocate whose familys feed mill business was a fixture of South Bend, Ind., through the 1960s.

Combing through hundreds of local obituaries, county records and interviews with families, New York Times reporters were able to piece together a tapestry of some of the lives lost on that day, Jan. 4.

Sherri Rasmussen, 51, of Lancaster, Ohio, was one. She is survived by a daughter who said she will always remember the day her mother gave her purse to a woman who complimented it in a CVS store, saying, I want to pay it forward.

And then there was Pedro Ramirez, 47, who loved his Puerto Rican homeland, salsa dancing and restoring Volkswagen bugs. Days before, he told his wife, Shawna Rodriguez, about the vaccine and how people like him, with chronic medical issues, would be getting it soon.

I told him I loved him and how sorry I was that he had to be in the hospital by himself, said Ms. Ramirez, 52, who works in a bridal salon in Macon, Ga.

The surge in deaths reflects how much faster Americans have spread the virus to one another since late September, when the number of cases identified daily had fallen to below 40,000. Since early in the pandemic, deaths have closely tracked cases, with about 1.5 percent of cases ending in death three to four weeks later.

Janet L. Yellen won the endorsement on Tuesday of eight former Treasury secretaries, who called for her speedy Senate confirmation so that she can assume the job under President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.

The letter of support was released shortly ahead of Ms. Yellens testimony at her confirmation hearing before the Senate Finance Committee. The group said that any delay would pose an unnecessary risk to the economy at a critical time.

With millions of Americans out of work, long-term unemployment rising, and activity stalled in large sectors of the economy, daunting challenges will face the incoming administration. Addressing these pressing issues will require thoughtful engagement by the Department of the Treasury, they wrote. Any gap in its leadership would risk setting back recovery efforts.

They added that a delay in confirming Ms. Yellen would also sow confusion among American allies, who traditionally rely on the United States for global economic leadership in times of crisis.

The letter was signed by George P. Shultz, James A. Baker III, Robert E. Rubin, Lawrence H. Summers, John W. Snow, Henry M. Paulson, Jr., Timothy F. Geithner and Jacob J. Lew. That all-male crew reflects the significance of Ms. Yellens nomination if confirmed, she would be the first woman to lead the Treasury in its 231-year history.

The former secretaries said that Ms. Yellen, a former Federal Reserve chair, was uniquely qualified for the job because of her experience and knowledge.

Ms. Yellen is expected to have a smooth path to confirmation. An acting Treasury secretary is expected to fill the void at the Department between when Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin departs on Wednesday at noon and when Ms. Yellen is confirmed.

Global roundup

As German authorities prepare stricter lockdown measures, some German states are planning guarded mandatory quarantine centers for the very few who repeatedly disobey quarantine rules, according to an investigation by Die Welt am Sonntag, a national Sunday paper.

States like Schleswig-Holstein in the north, Brandenburg around Berlin and BadenWrttemberg in the southwest are preparing such mandatory quarantine sites in hospitals, refugee centers and a youth detention center.

Pandemic control lives or dies with public acceptance, Snke Schulz, a regional leader in Schleswig-Holstein, told Kieler Nachrichten, a local daily. This would suffer if noncompliance remained without consequence.

However, since there are very few known cases of people who repeatedly flout quarantine and isolation rules and fines which are imposed because someone either has Covid, has had close and prolonged contact with an infected person or has come back from a high-risk foreign country the states are only planning for a few sites.

On Tuesday Chancellor Angela Merkel and governors are meeting to agree on new and extended lockdown rules. As of Monday, the seven-day average number of cases was 16,886, according to a New York Times database, slightly higher than when the national lockdown began at the beginning of November. Starting in mid-December, politicians strengthened the lockdown, closing most nonessential shops and most schools.

But even as numbers start to decline slowly, the German authorities are worried about a more transmissible variant of the virus that is thought to be responsible for a spike in infections in Britain.

Among the other developments around the world:

Rwanda announced restrictions on movement and businesses in the capital, Kigali, on Monday, as coronavirus cases continued to surge across the country. The authorities closed all places of worship, shut down public transportation, banned travel between the capital and other parts of the country, and ordered all workers other than those providing essential services to work from home. Farming can continue, and businesses selling food, medicine, fuel or cleaning products may operate but must close by 6 p.m. Funeral gatherings are permitted but cannot exceed 15 people. Foreign tourists will continue to be allowed to enter and travel around the country during the two-week lockdown, but they must present a negative P.C.R. test on arrival and departure. Rwanda has reported 11,259 coronavirus cases and 146 deaths so far, and the rate of positive test results has risen sharply since mid-November, reaching 7.7 percent on Tuesday.

A survey about coronavirus infections in Britain from the Office for National Statistics estimates that one in eight people in England about 5.4 million people over the age of 16 had antibodies against the virus in December, suggesting they were infected in the past. The report suggests about one in 10 people across Britain had such antibodies. Excess deaths were at the highest level since last May, the analysis found, and in England the Covid-19 mortality rate in the most deprived areas last month was more than twice that in the least deprived.

Officials in Hong Kong said on Tuesday that current social distancing measures, which include a ban on dine-in service after 6 p.m., would be extended for at least another week, a day after the number of new coronavirus cases returned to the triple digits for the first time this year. They also said they would bar entry to travelers who had spent more than two hours in Ireland or Brazil in the past 21 days the same rule as applied to Britain and South Africa, where two more transmissible variants of the virus were first detected.

Starting Jan. 26, everyone flying to New Zealand will have to show proof before departure that they have tested negative for the virus, the government said on Tuesday, unless they are coming from Australia, Antarctica or most Pacific islands. Two weeks of quarantine continues to be mandatory for all travelers to New Zealand, which last recorded a locally transmitted case in November. Last week, the country began requiring predeparture tests for passengers from the United States and Britain.

Japans southernmost prefecture, Okinawa, declared a state of emergency after a spike in cases, Reuters reported. Okinawa Governor Denny Tamaki said emergency measures include asking restaurants and bars to close by 8 p.m. and residents to refrain from non-urgent outings after 8 p.m. The emergency is scheduled to last until Feb. 7. The prefecture confirmed 113 cases on Tuesday, its third-highest daily tally on record, the public broadcaster NHK reported. Shizuoka prefecture, home to Mount Fuji, also declared an emergency alert of its own on Tuesday after it found cases of a more contagious coronavirus variant, Kyodo News reported.

Britains health secretary, Matt Hancock, said on Tuesday that he would isolate at home for the next six days after a notification from the National Health Service coronavirus app told him he had been in close contact with someone who tested positive. Mr. Hancock, a key figure in countrys virus response, appeared in a televised coronavirus briefing Monday evening and tested positive himself in March.

Scotlands lockdown will be extended to mid-February and its schools and kindergartens will remain closed until then, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said on Tuesday. Early in January, people were asked to stay at home for all but essential purposes, and most students returned to remote learning, as the country tried to clamp down on the more transmissible British variant of the coronavirus. The restrictions were originally set to expire at the end of the month, but Ms. Sturgeon said on Tuesday that the countrys case numbers were still high and that staying locked down was vital to protect the National Health Service from becoming overwhelmed.

Britains theaters have been in financial crisis since the coronavirus pandemic forced them to shut last March. Although a few have hosted performances for socially distanced audiences, most have only survived through a combination of crisis grants and layoffs.

The largest playhouse in Birmingham, Britains second-largest city and one of its most diverse, is leasing space to the courts service. But the move has angered theatermakers in the city who claim the courts and the police have historically targeted communities of color, and that theaters should be kept as spaces for creativity.

Jay Crutchley, a Black director, said in a telephone interview that the Rep as the Birmingham Repertory Theater is known there had just endorsed probably the biggest systematic oppressor of Black people in this country. Young Black men were disproportionately represented in Britains prisons, he added, and many people growing up in Birmingham white and Black had bad experiences with the police.

Ive had close friends go through the court system, he said, and I cant tell you how many times Ive been stopped and searched.

The Reps decision to host a court was turning the theater into a potential site of trauma, Mr. Crutchley added. Theres a line for me where ethics gets in the way of money, he said.

The theater, whose spokesman declined an interview request, said in a blog post that the deal with the courts was needed to secure its financial future, and on Monday, the theater announced two online meetings to listen to the feedback of anyone concerned about its decision.

As makeshift courts spring up in some theaters, Britain is scrambling to prevent long delays in its criminal justice system. Four top inspectors for policing, prisons, probation and prosecutions warned in a report on Tuesday that the court case backlog in England and Wales posed the greatest risk to criminal justice.

The pandemic has exacerbated delays in the criminal justice system, prompting the inspectors to express grave concerns about the situation. The backlog in crown courts, where the most serious criminal cases are heard, has reached more than 53,000 cases and it is believed that some crimes from last year will not go before a jury before 2022.

The coronavirus pandemic has pushed millions of Americans into poverty and stripped more than 5.4 million of them of their health insurance, according to a study by Families USA, a nonpartisan consumer advocacy group.

Many people have put off medical procedures, and seen their health deteriorate significantly. The fear of large medical bills has outweighed fear of contagion for some, giving rise to an increased number of patients seeking medical treatment in a foreign country.

We are seeing a pent-up demand for medical tourism during the pandemic, particularly in the U.S. where a fast-growing number of Americans are traveling across the land border with Mexico for health purposes, said David G. Vequist IV, the founder of the Center for Medical Tourism Research and a professor at the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio.

Even before the pandemic, millions of Americans traveled to other countries for savings of 40 to 80 percent on medical treatments, according to the global medical tourism guide Patients Beyond Borders. Mexico and Costa Rica have become the most popular destinations for dental care, cosmetic surgery and prescription medicines, while Thailand, India and South Korea draw patients for more complex procedures involving orthopedics, cardiovascular issues, cancer and fertility treatment.

In 2019, 1.1 percent of Americans traveling internationally did so for health treatments, according to the National Travel and Tourism Office, although that figure accounts only for those who went by air.

Medical tourism has been decimated by coronavirus restrictions, but, even so, the twin crises of the economy and the enormous strain that Covid-19 has placed on the already faulty American health care system are pushing many patients to travel. Demand for nonessential surgeries has also been building up after more than 177,000 scheduled surgeries were postponed in the United States between March and June last year, according to the Center for Medical Tourism Research.

The Russian government is considering issuing coronavirus health certificates that could ease travel and commerce for people who have been vaccinated or who have antibodies from surviving the disease, while sharply limiting the liberties of others an idea that has also been floated in the European Union and by private companies.

Proponents say that such documents, often called Covid passports, could ease airline travel and hasten the reopening of theaters, cruise lines and other settings where people congregate.

Opponents fear a dystopic system that would limit the rights of people who have been careful to avoid infection and are unable or unwilling to be vaccinated. Russia has a grim history rooted in the Soviet era of controlling citizens movements, through a residency permit system that was never fully abolished.

Internationally, airlines have already tested electronic certificates showing negative test results for passengers. Those systems could be expanded to show the status of those with some immunity.

The head of the Russian Parliaments committee on public health, Dmitri Morozov, said on Tuesday that a Covid passport was very important and needed.

Collecting peoples Covid health status in a government system, he said, could also provide important data for public health officials. This is great, this is the new world, he said. Mr. Morozov did not specify what kinds of information a Covid passport would display.

A regional governor in Russia, Radi Khabirov, proposed on Monday that Covid passport holders receive discounts at stores, as an incentive for people to obtain the certificate.

President Vladimir V. Putins spokesman, Dmitri S. Peskov, said on Tuesday that the government is considering issuing Covid passports, perhaps in digital form, but that Russia wanted to coordinate with other countries to agree on standards for them.

Skylar Mack, the American college student who was released from a prison in the Cayman Islands last week for violating coronavirus restrictions, said in an interview that she deserved it.

In a segment that aired on ABCs Good Morning America on Tuesday, Ms. Mack, 18, apologized for breaking the rules and said that any anger toward her was justified, adding that if she had gotten someone sick, she would not have been able to live with herself.

She was released on Friday after spending more than a month behind bars.

I deserved it, she said. I was like, You know what, I made this mistake, and it sucks, you know, but you did it to yourself.

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Live Updates on the Covid-19 Vaccine, Cases and More - The New York Times

Publix books all COVID-19 vaccine appointments in SC within hours – WIS10

January 19, 2021

Publix is partnering with the State of South Carolina to distribute the COVID-19 vaccine to individuals ages 70 and up, health care workers, residents and staff members of long-term health care facilities, state and local government officials, and contractors who are critical to administering the COVID-19 vaccine.

Originally posted here:

Publix books all COVID-19 vaccine appointments in SC within hours - WIS10

How to make an appointment to get the COVID-19 vaccine in Minnesota – Minneapolis Star Tribune

January 19, 2021

A limited number of appointments can be made starting at noon Tuesday to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in Minnesota.

The shots are limited to people 65 and older, educators and child-care workers and will be administered at nine sites starting Thursday. (If you are an educator or child care worker, you should not attempt to make an appointment unless you have been notified by your employer that you've been selected to receive a vaccine.)

The nine Minnesota locations are: Anoka, Brooklyn Center, Fergus Falls, Marshall, Mountain Iron, North Mankato, Rochester, St. Cloud, and Thief River Falls

Appointments for pilot sites will be made available every Tuesday at noon.

Phone: 612-426-7230 or toll free, 833-431-2053

Online registration: mn.gov/covid19/vaccine

The vaccine is available by appointment only. Walk-ins will not be accepted. The state asks that people not visit a health care provider or pilot site unless they have a scheduled appointment.

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How to make an appointment to get the COVID-19 vaccine in Minnesota - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Microsoft campus near Seattle will be used to administer COVID-19 vaccine – GeekWire

January 19, 2021

The empty Microsoft Commons last month at the companys campus in Redmond, Wash. (GeekWire Photo / Todd Bishop)

Microsoft is turning its empty campus into a COVID-19 vaccination site.

The Redmond, Wash.-based tech giant is working with the state of Washington and local hospitals to open up buildings at its headquarters for vaccine administration.

Microsoft President Brad Smith made the announcement Monday as part of Gov. Jay Inslees news conference detailing the states new COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan.

The company will provide both space and support staff to help administer vaccines for Washington residents. Smith said the goal by next month is to have its campus be one of the mass vaccination sites across the state.

This is not going to be a site for Microsoft employees; this is going to be a site for people in the community, Smith said.

Smith added that Microsoft is helping reduce the cost of administering vaccines and helping uninsured people get vaccinated.

Microsofts sprawling campus in Redmond is currently the high-tech equivalent of a ghost town as employees work from home amid the pandemic.

Microsoft is among a group of Washington-based businesses including Starbucks and Costco that are part of the new Washington State Vaccine Command and Coordination Center. The company is also providing technology expertise and support. Microsoft didnt have further details when contacted by GeekWire.

Technology plays a role in the distribution of vaccines, as it does in the distribution of everything in the world today, Smith said. He noted the Phase Finder app that helps people figure out when they are eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine, and the back-end systems that support scheduling appointments and site locators.

Starbucks is helping with operational efficiency, scalable modeling and human-centered design expertise and support, while Costco is helping with vaccine delivery by pharmacies.

Other stakeholders in the public-private partnership include Kaiser Permanente; local unions; and the National Guard.

Microsoft is working with Salesforce and Oracle as part of a separate deal for digital vaccination records.

Inslee announced Monday that the state aims to reach 45,000 daily vaccinations. The governor also lowered the age threshold from 70 to 65, which provides access to nearly 400,000 more people, and announced plans for other mass vaccination sites.

The focus on setting a bold goal and building distribution capacity ahead of supply is precisely what the people of Washington need, Smith said.

Microsofts role as a vaccination site also sparked some jokes on Twitter:

Excerpt from:

Microsoft campus near Seattle will be used to administer COVID-19 vaccine - GeekWire

Washington starts COVID-19 vaccine Phase 1B with lower age threshold and adds more mass vaccine sites – KING5.com

January 19, 2021

People age 65 and older are now eligible to get the COVID-19 vaccine under Phase 1B. Previously it was people over 70.

OLYMPIA, Wash. Washington Gov. Jay Inslee announced changes Monday to COVID-19 vaccine administration, a new statewide public-private partnership for vaccine distribution, and an expansion of the state's Phase 1B vaccination criteria.

The governor announced that effective immediately, the state is moving to Phase 1B of its COVID-19 vaccination plan.

He changed who qualifies for vaccines under the first tier of Phase 1B to include people 65 and older, previously it was people over 70. This tier will also include people over 50 years old who live in multigenerational households.

Tier 2 of Phase 1B includes high-risk critical workers 50 years and older who work in certain congregate settings.

The state will allow providers flexibility for Phase 1B tier 2 through tier 4 eligible individuals to allow for easier administration of the vaccine in congregate settings and workplaces to help increase the output of the vaccine.

The governor also said Monday that starting now, 95% of future vaccine allocations are required to be given in the first week after receipt, and every dose allocated prior to this week must be administered by this Sunday, Jan. 24.

"There are simply too many people who need access to COVID vaccines for this process to lag any further," Inslee said during the press conference Monday.

Inslee also announced a new private-public partnership with Microsoft and Starbucks to form the Washington State Vaccine Command and Coordination Center. It will be led by the Washington State Department of Health (DOH), business partners and local health care and labor leaders, including Kaiser Permanente and Costco.

According to the governor's Medium page, some stakeholder responsibilities include:

The governor said that no public dollars are being given to the private companies to participate in this effort.

"This team will coordinate all available resources to administer more vaccines in the state of Washington in the fastest and most efficient way possible," said Inslee during the news conference. "This is a talented group with a lot of expertise that can help us administer vaccines."

Inslee said it is part of a goal to get to 45,000 COVID-19 vaccinations every day in Washington state.

"This goal is higher than our current vaccine allocation by the federal government by several fold, but trying to meet this goal now will help us get the infrastructure in place as doses increase," said Inslee.

The governor said the state will work with the National Guard and local health officials to set up four mass COVID-19 vaccination sites to begin vaccine administration starting next week. The sites will be the Spokane Arena in Spokane, the Benton County Fairgrounds in Kennewick, Town Toyota Center in Wenatchee, and the Clark County Fairgrounds in Ridgefield.

These four sites are in addition to vaccination centers already established in King, Snohomish, and Pierce counties. The state said under this new plan, those sites in western Washington will be getting extra support as well.

The states vaccine allocation next week will be split between these sites, pharmacies, and local clinics to help with Phase 1B vaccinations, Inslee said.

Visit the state Department of Health COVID-19 vaccine webpage to learn more about when and where you can get vaccinated.

As of Jan. 16, Washington has given out 294,386 doses of the vaccine since the first phase of the vaccine rollout -- Phase 1A -- began, according to Secretary of Health Dr. Umair Shah with the state DOH. That phase includes high-risk health care workers and long-term care residents.

Shah said the state has received a total of 696,075 doses of the vaccine so far. That means at least 42% of the state's vaccines have been administered to people, which is an improvement from previous weeks when the state was only at 19%, Shah said.

The state will continue to get at least 100,000 doses of the vaccine each week, health officials said.

The state also rolled out a more robust version of the PhaseFinder Tool on Monday. The online program allows people to input personal details like age, health conditions and if they are an essential worker, as well as contact information. Using this information, DOH will determine vaccine eligibility and notify residents by email or text message when its their turn.

The rest is here:

Washington starts COVID-19 vaccine Phase 1B with lower age threshold and adds more mass vaccine sites - KING5.com

Where To Check For Covid-19 Vaccine Appointments In Coral Springs and Broward County – TAPinto.net

January 19, 2021

CORAL SPRINGS, FL For weeks, those trying to get Covid-19 vaccine appointments in Broward County have dealt with busy phone lines, inoperable websites, and a deluge of often confusing and inconsistent information.

But health officials urge residents 65 and older to continue calling, refreshing the sites, and following news updates as new supplies of the vaccines arrive and more appointments open up.

Weve compiled a list of places where vaccines are offered and where you should check regularly for updates and new appointments.

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Florida Department of Health in Broward

Drive-thru sites:

- Markham Park, 16001 W. State Road 84.

- Tradewinds Park, 3600 W. Sample Road, Coconut Creek.

- Vista View Park, 4001 SW 142 Ave.

- Central Broward Park & Broward County Stadium, 3700 NW 11th Place, Lauderhill.

- Holiday Park, 1150 G. Harold Martin Drive, Fort Lauderdale.

Walk-up site:

- Coral Square Mall in Coral Springs.

Check browardcovidvaccine.com for new appointments.

Broward Health

Inter Miami CF Stadium at Lockhart Park, at 1350 NW 55 St. in Fort Lauderdale.

CheckBrowardHealth.orgfor updates.

Holy Cross Health

Checkwww.holy-cross.com/covidvaccinefor updates and new openings or call 954-267-7600.

Cleveland Clinic Florida

Checkwww.clevelandclinicflorida.orgfor updates and new openings.

Memorial Healthcare System

Check https://www.mhs.net/patients-visitors/coronavirus-disease/covid-19-vaccinationfor updates and new openings.

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Where To Check For Covid-19 Vaccine Appointments In Coral Springs and Broward County - TAPinto.net

California urges halt to batch of COVID-19 vaccine doses after reports of reactions – PBS NewsHour

January 19, 2021

LOS ANGELES (AP) Californias state epidemiologist is urging a halt to more than 300,000 coronavirus vaccinations using a Moderna vaccine version because some people received medical treatment for possible severe allergic reactions.

Dr. Erica S. Pan on Sunday recommended providers stop using lot 41L20A of the Moderna vaccine pending completion of an investigation by state officials, Moderna, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and the federal Food and Drug Administration.

Out of an extreme abundance of caution and also recognizing the extremely limited supply of vaccine, we are recommending that providers use other available vaccine inventory, Pan said in a statement.

She said more than 330,000 doses from the lot arrived in California between Jan. 5 and Jan. 12 and were distributed to 287 providers.

Fewer than 10 people, who all received the vaccine at the same community site, needed medical attention over a 24-hour period, Pan said. No other similar clusters were found.

Pan did not specify the number of cases involved or where they occurred.

However, six San Diego health care workers had allergic reactions to vaccines they received at a mass vaccination center on Jan. 14. The site was temporarily closed and is now using other vaccines, KTGV-TV reported.

Moderna in a statement said the company is unaware of comparable adverse events from other vaccination centers which may have administered vaccines from the same lot.

The CDC has said COVID-19 vaccines can cause side effects for a few days that include fever, chills, headache, swelling or tiredness, which are normal signs that your body is building protection.

However, severe reactions are extremely rare. Pan said in a vaccine similar to Moderna, the rate of anaphylaxis in which an immune system reaction can block breathing and cause blood pressure to drop was about 1 in 100,000.

The announcement came as California counties continue to plead for more COVID-19 vaccine as the state tries to reduce its rate of infection, which has led to record numbers of hospitalizations and deaths.

California, with a population of 40 million, has received about 3.5 million vaccine doses and has only administered about a third of them, according to the CDC.

So far. the state has vaccinated just 2,468 people per 100,000 residents, a rate that falls well below the national average, according to the federal data.

Although Gov. Gavin Newsom announced last week said anyone age 65 and older would be eligible to start receiving the vaccine, Los Angeles County and some others have said they do not have enough doses to vaccinate so many people and are concentrating on inoculating health care workers and the most vulnerable elderly living in care homes first.

READ MORE: CDC says people with history of severe allergic reactions can get COVID-19 vaccine

On Monday, the superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District sent a letter to state and county public health officials asking for authorization to provide COVID-19 vaccinations at schools for staff, local community members and for students once a vaccine for children has been approved.

Doing so will help reopen schools as soon as possible, and in the safest way possible, Superintendent Austin Beutner wrote.

California is nearing 3 million coronavirus cases and more than 33,600 people have died since the start of the pandemic last year, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.

The death rate from COVID-19 in Los Angeles County the nations most populous and an epicenter of the state pandemic works out to about one person every six minutes.

On Sunday, the South Coast Air Quality Management District suspended some pollution-control limits on the number of cremations for at least 10 days in order to deal with a backlog of bodies at hospitals and funeral homes.

The current rate of death is more than double that of pre-pandemic years, the agency said.

California has had about 500 deaths and 40,000 new cases daily for the past two weeks. Although hospitalizations and intensive care unit admissions remained on a slight downward trend, officials have warned that could reverse when the full impact from transmissions during Christmas and New Years Eve gatherings is felt.

As case numbers continue to rise in California, the total number of individuals who will have serious outcomes will also increase, the state Department of Public Health said in a statement Sunday.

Adding to concerns, California is experiencing new, possibly more transmissible forms of COVID-19.

The state health department announced Sunday that an L452R variant of the virus is increasingly showing up in genetic sequencing of COVID-19 test samples from several counties.

The variant was first identified last year in California and in other states and countries but has been identified more frequently since November and in several large outbreaks in Northern Californias Santa Clara County, the department said.

Overall, the variant has been found in at least a dozen counties. In some places. testing has found the variant in a quarter of the samples sequenced, said Dr. Charles Chiu, a virologist and professor of laboratory medicine at the University of California San Francisco.

However, not all test samples receive genetic sequencing to identify variants so its frequency wasnt immediately clear.

However, health officials said it was linked to a Christmas-time outbreak at Kaiser Permanente San Jose that infected at least 89 staff members and patients, killing a receptionist. The outbreak has been blamed on an employee who visited the hospital emergency room wearing an air-powered inflatable Christmas tree costume.

The variant is different from another mutation, B117, that was first reported in the United Kingdom and appears to spread much more easily, although it doesnt appear to make people sicker.

That variant has already shown up in San Diego County and Los Angeles County announced over the weekend that it had detected its first case.

See more here:

California urges halt to batch of COVID-19 vaccine doses after reports of reactions - PBS NewsHour

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