Category: Covid-19

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Thousands of Bivalent COVID-19 Booster Shots Delivered to Santa Barbara County – Noozhawk

September 14, 2022

COVID-19 booster vaccines that target Omicron variants are available from Santa Barbara County providers and approved for older children and adults, Deputy Public Health Director Paige Batson said Tuesday.

Essentially, if you are 12 years of age and over, you can get the bivalent vaccine, and the only requirement is you wait two months after your last vaccine dose, she told the county Board of Supervisors.

Federal and state regulators authorized Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna bivalent vaccines, which were developed to protect against the original novel coronavirus and the Omicron BA.4 and BA.5 variants.

Santa Barbara County has received about 9,000 doses of the bivalent booster doses, and they are available from pharmacies, healthcare centers, hospital vaccination clinics, and other providers, Batson said.

Public Health is not anticipating any shortages in the bivalent booster doses, she said.

The state is delaying additional deliveries of the Moderna bivalent booster, however, so county providers have been encouraged to use the Pfizer doses, according to Batson.

People can mix and match booster shot manufacturers with their primary vaccine series manufacturer for example, someone who received Moderna vaccines and a Moderna booster can receive a Pfizer bivalent booster, and vice versa, the Public Health Department says.

Search for vaccination providers and get more information on the Public Health Department website here and the federal search portal here. There are appointments available all over the county.

The monovalent vaccines are no longer authorized for booster doses, she noted, except in the case of younger children: 5-11-year-olds are recommended to receive the Pfizer pediatric monovalent booster dose.

Batson also said the county is seeing little demand for the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine, which was developed using protein-based technology (like hepatitis and shingles vaccines) rather than the mRNA technology used to develop the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.

The county has about 400 doses available by request and demand has been relatively low, she said.

We really anticipated we were going to see a huge uptick on this, since some people expressed concerns about the relatively new mRNA technology, Batson said. We have not seen that.

Public health departments across California are seeing low uptake on the Novavax vaccines, she said, and theyre not really sure why.

Santa Barbara County has a 69.2% COVID-19 vaccination rate, and while the numbers are increasing slowly, they are still rising.

About 670 people became fully vaccinated in the past month.

In the month ending Sept. 9, county providers administered about 5,000 COVID-19 vaccine doses, including about 1,380 booster shots.

The Board of Supervisors voted 4-1 to consider the state of emergency related to COVID-19 and continue holding remote hearings. Even though the supervisors and county staff meet in person, the move ensures members of the public can participate remotely via Zoom.

The county Planning Commission only recently started holding meetings in person again, after more than two years of virtual-only meetings.

Fourth District Supervisor Bob Nelson voted against the item. He said he wants to continue the remote hearing and public participation rules, but cant support using the COVID-19 state of emergency as justification for that.

First District Supervisor Das Williams said theres still a lot of lost productivity and a lot of infection due to the pandemic, and if meeting remotely can help address that, its a reason to support the policy.

Noozhawk managing editor Giana Magnoli can be reached at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). Follow Noozhawk on Twitter: @noozhawk, @NoozhawkNews and @NoozhawkBiz. Connect with Noozhawk on Facebook.

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Thousands of Bivalent COVID-19 Booster Shots Delivered to Santa Barbara County - Noozhawk

Boston infectious disease expert shares benefits of new COVID-19 booster shots – WCVB Boston

September 14, 2022

Boston infectious disease expert shares benefits of new COVID-19 booster shots

Updated: 6:39 PM EDT Sep 13, 2022

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>> YOURE WATCHING WCVB NEWSCENTER 5 AT 5:30. >> NOW THAT SCHOOLS ARE BACK IN SESSION, THERES A NATIONAL PUSH TO GET MORE AMERICANS BOOSTED WITH UPDATED COVID-19 SHOTS FROM PFIZER AND MODERNA. HERE TO ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS IS DR. HELEN BOUCHER, THE INTERIM DEAN OF TUFTS MEDICAL SCHOOL AND AN INFECTIOUS DISEASE SPECIALIST AT TUFTS MEDICAL CENTER. GREAT TO SEE YOU. >> GREAT TO SEE YOU, ERICA. >> ALRIGHT DR., WE KNOW THAT YOU ARE RECOVERING FROM A COVID INFECTION OF YOUR OWN. SO FIRST I WOULD LIKE TO ASK YOU HOW ARE YOU FEELING? >> I AM OVER IT AND BETTER AND BACK TO WORK TOMORROW. THANK YOU FOR ASKING. >> WE ARE GLAD TO HEAR YOU ARE FEELING BETTER WE ARE INTERESTED IN THESE NEW BOOSTERS. AND WHAT YOU KNOW -- THEYRE DESIGNED TO TARGET THE OMICRON VARIANT, WHICH IS CAUSING NEARLY ALL NEW INFECTIONS RIGHT NOW, INCLUDING, LIKELY, YOURS. DO YOU THINK YOU STILL NEED ONE? -- IF YOU JUST HAD THIS INFECTION? >> I STILL WANT ONE BECAUSE I DO NOT WANT ANYMORE COVID. WE SHOULD ALL GET BOOSTER. BUT ALL JOKING ASIDE, THE DATA ARE VERY CLEAR THAT THIS BOOSTER WILL PROTECT US AGAINST THE STRAIN THAT IS CIRCULATING NOW. THAT IS BIG HAVE NOT HAD THAT BEFORE. I ENCOURAGE EVERYBODY WHO IS 12 YEARS OF AGE AND OLDER TO GET THIS IT WILL BE GOOD FOR THEM. >> ALL RIGHT. TUFTS HOSTED ITS FIRST CLINIC FOR THESE NEW BOOSTERS YESTERDAY. I KNOW YOU WERE NOT THERE BUT -- BECAUSE YOU WERE HOME WITH COVID . ANY WORD YET ON HOW IT WENT? >> PEOPLE WHO GOT THERE BOOSTER IN THE LAST COUPLE OF DAYS -- WE OFFER WALK-IN COVID TESTING AND VACCINATIONS FIVE DAYS A WEEK FROM NOON UNTIL FIVE. >> THAT IS GREAT. NOW WE KNOW THAT NEARLY 80% OF AMERICANS ARE NOW FULLY VACCINATED AGAINST COVID, BUT THAT NUMBER DROPS DRAMATICALLY FOR EXTRA SHOTS. WHAT SHOULD HEALTH OFFICIALS DO TO INCREASE INTEREST IN THESE NEW BOOSTERS? OBVIOUSLY, YOU ARE SPEAKING WITH US ON TELEVISION BUT WHAT DO PEOPLE KNOW? >> I THINK PEOPLE NEED TO KNOW THAT THESE BOOSTERS ARE REALLY EFFECTIVE AND THEY ARE DIFFERENT WE COVERED THE STRAIN THAT IS CIRCULATING. THE BENEFIT IS ASSURED AND WE NEED TO MAKE IT EASY FOR PEOPLE TO GET THEIR BOOSTERS. YOU NEED TO GO OUT AND WHERE THEY ARE. -- CHURCHES MAKE IT EASY FOR FOLKS TO GET THIS LEVEL OF PROTECTION. NEXT ALL RIGHT DR., WE WISH YOU A SPEE

Boston infectious disease expert shares benefits of new COVID-19 booster shots

Updated: 6:39 PM EDT Sep 13, 2022

Dr. Helen Boucher, of Tufts Medical Center, said she wants the updated booster after she recently contracted the coronavirus.

Dr. Helen Boucher, of Tufts Medical Center, said she wants the updated booster after she recently contracted the coronavirus.

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Boston infectious disease expert shares benefits of new COVID-19 booster shots - WCVB Boston

Covid-19 booster shots may become as routine as the flu shot – MSNBC

September 14, 2022

Last month, the Food and Drug Administration approved an updated Covid vaccine that specifically targets the dominant BA.5 subvariant. A few days later, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) reviewed and recommended these vaccines as boosters (from Pfizer-BioNTech for people ages 12 years and older, and from Moderna for people ages 18 years and older). Federal health officials have expressed optimism that this booster could provide extended protection, transitioning us to an annual Covid vaccine updated for current variants, similar to, and administered alongside, yearly flu shots.

Although the U.S. has 4.25% of the worlds population, it has now borne approximately 16% of worldwide deaths from Covid-19.

But whether many will receive the updated vaccine remains in doubt, in no small part because it arrives at a time when much of the U.S. has decided it is simply done with the pandemic.

Few schools will maintain mask mandates or surveillance testing this fall. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has shortened the isolation period for Covid illness to five days, even though many studies suggest high rates of infectiousness beyond this window. The U.S. vaccination rate currently sits below the average for high-income countries. Successful administration rates have declined with each successive available booster. As school resumes, a minority of younger children have received Covid vaccines. And government sponsorship of Covid vaccines will fall off this autumn, a move that will decrease access, particularly among those without a regular source of care and without adequate insurance coverage.

With the current high cost of over-the-counter tests, the uncertain status of future Covid testing supply, the absence of test-to-return policies, the widespread removal of masking and distancing guidelines, the high transmissibility and the immune escape of more recent strains, conditions are ripe for ongoing surges in transmission.

Our done-ness a combination of mental fatigue, frustration, denial, apathy, unearned optimism and callousness across individuals, organizations and policymakers has little to do with clear metrics of success: The pandemic is marching along quite robustly. Although the U.S. has 4.25% of the worlds population, it has now borne approximately 16% of worldwide deaths from Covid-19. It is the primary cause of the sharp drop in U.S. life expectancy over the past two years. This summer, we reached a bleak plateau of around 40,000 hospitalizations each day and 500 daily Covid deaths, with more than 30,000 deaths between June and August.

Alongside the severe outcomes of acute illness, were seeing a steady emergence of disturbing data on the prolonged disability that can occur even if (and this is key) the initial illness is only mild. Thus, wildly rampant mild disease is difficult to celebrate. And metrics earlier believed to herald the end of the pandemic phase of Covid, such as its predictability, are not yet in sight.

Pandemics are curbed by caring and by persistent urgency. The lack of these may cost us as a nation in many ways.

First, dismissing the pandemic is callous dismissal of those most affected. Every time we peel back protections against Covid and other infectious diseases, we leave people performing essential in-person work along with racial and ethnic minority populations, the elderly, and those who are disabled, immunocompromised or poor to bear the largest burden of disease and death, while having the least amount of sick leave, access to health care and therapies, and financial reserve to buffer a period of illness.

Inequities, already drastically widened by the pandemic, will widen further. And heaping the burdens of the virus on groups that have been socially and economically marginalized has grave long-term consequences for the whole population.

Viruses just keep busting the myth that we're discreet beings, that we're not connected to each other, sociologist and journalist Steven Thrasher told me in a phone call earlier this summer. They keep reminding us that we're not alone in this. Therefore we can't act for our self-interest. We have to act in an interdependent way.

Pandemics are curbed by caring, and by persistent urgency. The lack of these may cost us as a nation in many ways.

The existence of long Covid also defies the national desire to dismiss Covid. Ignoring it has been feasible thus far because knowledge gaps, the recency of the disease and its protean manifestations have made it underdiagnosed, understudied and untreated. As Covid cases run rampant, long Covid which affects a steady, significant percentage of those who are infected will be increasingly visible: Already, prolonged post-Covid symptoms are currently keeping 2 to 4 million people out of work. Without appreciation of the gravity of this situation, we will remain in a scientific void that abandons some to despair and others to quackery.

Further, maintaining vigilance about managing Covid and its aftermath will determine our future with respect to other infectious diseases and future epidemics and pandemics. One spillover effect of the misinformation that proliferated around Covid vaccines was to reduce influenza vaccine uptake in some populations (ahead of an upcoming flu season that promises to be severe). Meanwhile, the emergence of polio in the U.S. this year was made possible by pockets of low vaccination rates, and disruptions in usual care and supply chain problems have led to a worldwide reduction in routine childhood vaccination rates. Regaining ground on all vaccines must occur alongside efforts to increase booster uptake, an additional challenge to a depleted public health and health care workforce, especially without the force of public and political will.

Our nation is facing dual realities: One, that we have prematurely declared the pandemic is over; and two, having done so threatens to exacerbate the ongoing suffering of the pandemic and other health threats.

In a country now numb to infection health risks and the sheer devastation of the pandemic, we must yet find a way to maintain a collective sensibility about measures that will blunt the impact of ongoing threats to our health, including the structural investments that relate to all epidemics and pandemics and are the foundational work of public health.

Whether we are heading toward the next surge or the beginning of a true post-Covid-pandemic era, we cannot afford to be this done.

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Covid-19 booster shots may become as routine as the flu shot - MSNBC

More COVID-19 fallout: Overcrowded animal shelters – Futurity: Research News

September 14, 2022

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There are almost three million missing neuter/spay surgeries in the US due to the COVID pandemic, researchers report.

Along with veterinarian and staff shortages, the missing surgeries are contributing to widespread overcrowding at pet shelters.

The findings come from a new study of over 200 clinics from 2019 to 2021.

Progress made over decades to control overpopulation of dogs and cats through high-volume spay-neuter surgeries is now at risk thanks to the ongoing pandemic, the researchers say.

The impactfelt both at community shelters and veterinary clinicsincludes sharp declines in spay-neuter surgeries after the initial pandemic-triggered lockdowns, followed by staffing shortages in clinics and shelters, overcrowding, and lagging pet adoption rates.

All of these problems are compounded by a nationwide shortage of veterinarians, which has been felt even more acutely in shelters and spay-neuter clinics, according to the study in Frontiers of Veterinary Science.

The study focused on the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the volume of surgical procedures performed by spay-neuter clinics, says lead author Simone Guerios, a clinical assistant professor of shelter medicine at the University of Florida.

The team drew its research from 212 clinics nationally, all of which make use of the cloud-based clinic management software program Clinic HQ, which is specifically designed for facilities that focus on spay-neuter and preventive health care services.

The high level of spay-neuter achieved over the past five decades is the single most important driver of reduced pet overpopulation and euthanasia in animal shelters, Guerios says. The rise in subsidized spay-neuter access helped drive the euthanasia of shelter pets in the United States from an estimated 13.5 million in 1973 to 1.5 million in 2019.

Using 2019 as a baseline, the researchers aimed to determine the impact of the pandemic on the volume of spay-neuter procedures performed in 2020-2021 at the 212 clinics, which collectively performed more than 1 million surgeries per year and were on track to increase surgeries by 5% over the previous year.

But in the 24 months from January 2020 through December 2021, 190,818 fewer surgeries were performed at the clinics studied than expected had 2019 levels been maintained, the researchers found.

If a similar pattern was experienced by other spay-neuter programs in the United States, it would suggest there is a deficit of more than 2.7 million spay-neuter surgeries that animal welfare organizations have yet to address, says coauthor Julie Levy, professor of shelter medicine education.

All the impacts of the pandemic combined have the potential to undermine progress made in controlling pet populations and euthanasia in shelters, Levy adds.

Currently, shelters are in crisis mode, with overcrowding and lagging adoptions, Guerios says. Pet overpopulation seems to be increasing, leading to increased shelter euthanasia for the first time in many years.

Source: University of Florida

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More COVID-19 fallout: Overcrowded animal shelters - Futurity: Research News

LA County Approves Plan To End COVID-19 Tenant Protections At End Of Year – LAist

September 14, 2022

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The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday to definitively end pandemic-era tenant protections at the end of the year.

The decision means that after Dec. 31, many renters in the nations largest county will no longer be protected from eviction if they cannot pay rent due to economic hardship related to COVID-19.

Given the resources we put into play the financial resources to help both tenants and landlords to collect back rent it's time for us to begin moving forward, said Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who presented the plan for a Dec. 31 phase-out.

That Dec. 31 date isnt new. Under the current rules passed by county leaders in January, COVID-19 tenant protections are only scheduled to last through Dec. 31. However, the county has repeatedly extended the protections as previous deadlines approached.

Tuesdays vote is the first to explicitly set Dec. 31 as the defined end date for the countys pandemic tenant protections. Supervisors Sheila Kuehl and Hilda Solis cast the two dissenting votes, saying it was too soon to commit to ending all pandemic tenant protections.

I think the headline will be: This board must love homeless people. They are going to make so many more of them, said Supervisor Kuehl.

Many homelessness policy experts credit local eviction protections and bans on rent increases with reducing the number of Angelenos falling into homelessness during the pandemic.

Last week, the regions latest homeless count found a 4.1% rise in homelessness in L.A. County over the last two years. That number was significantly lower than the 26% increase observed between 2018 and 2020, before COVID-19 tenant protections were enacted.

The countys tenant protection efforts during the pandemic dont just apply to evictions for those unable to pay due to COVID-19. In unincorporated parts of L.A. County, they also guard against rent hikes in rent-controlled housing. And they have allowed tenants to add additional people and pets to their households during the pandemic without fear of eviction. With Tuesdays vote, all of that is slated to end on Dec. 31.

Tenant advocates worry that thousands of low-income renters who suffered job loss or the death of a family breadwinner will be vulnerable to losing their housing at the start of the new year. Theyre calling for the county to enact permanent tenant protections before lifting the COVID-19 rules.

We can't go back to the way things were before the pandemic, said Carla De Paz, the director of organizational strategy for Community Power Collective, a nonprofit aligned with the Keep L.A. Housed coalition. Folks really need permanent protections to stay housed.

De Paz said moving forward, theyre seeking rights for tenants such as:

Without new permanent protections, De Paz said L.A. will soon see a return to previous spikes in homelessness.

We have a housing crisis. We have a homelessness crisis in L.A. We can't ignore that, she said. We need to have a systemic approach to it and a systemic response. Doing whatever we can to keep people housed right now is critical.

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For many months, landlords have called for the immediate cancellation of local tenant protections. They argue the economy has recovered, COVID-19 vaccines are available and most other pandemic restrictions have relaxed but rules against evictions and raising rents remain.

Californias rent relief program has compensated many landlords who lost rental income during the pandemic. A state program called Housing is Key has paid out more than $2.4 billion in rent relief throughout L.A. County, with most of that money going directly to landlords.

However, that program ended in April. Its not clear if landlords can receive compensation for more recent rent debt. And some small landlords in L.A. have not received relief for rental income lost during the pandemic.

Patty Leon rents out a single-family home she owns in La Puente, and supported the vote to end COVID-19 eviction protections. She said eviction restrictions ended up costing her tens of thousands of dollars, because she could not remove a non-paying tenant against whom she initiated eviction proceedings in Nov. 2019.

As a landlord, you do your best to take care of everything, pay your taxes, pay the property insurance and follow all the rules just to have your state turn your back on you, Leon said.

The tenants non-payment of rent predated the pandemic and had nothing to do with COVID-19, Leon said, but it took her until Oct. 2020 to get the L.A. County Sheriffs Department to carry out a formal eviction. She blames the pandemic eviction rules for the delay, and said she was barred from receiving rent relief due to the tenants ineligibility.

Where is my protection during this time? Leon asked. I have bills. I have a life that I have to live. I need food, shelter and medical attention just like tenants do. But if you remove my income, I can't do those things.

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Tuesdays vote will apply to unincorporated parts of L.A. County, as well as any cities within the county that do not have their own stronger tenant protections in place.

The vote will not apply to the city of Los Angeles, which has rules that continue to limit evictions and ban rent hikes due to COVID-19. The citys rules currently have no end date, but city leaders are also mulling proposals to begin phasing out protections starting on Dec. 31.

COVID-19 tenant protections have already gone away in many other parts of California. Statewide eviction protections lapsed in July.

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What questions do you have about housing in Southern California?

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LA County Approves Plan To End COVID-19 Tenant Protections At End Of Year - LAist

Australia and New Zealand end daily COVID-19 reporting: The let it rip conspiracy against the population – WSWS

September 14, 2022

Within days of one another, the Australian and New Zealand governments have announced the abrupt ending of daily COVID reporting, sharply curtailing their populations access to information about rates of infection, hospitalisations, vaccinations and deaths. Both countries will move to a stripped-back weekly report.

The change has been made as the fatality and case rates in both countries for 2022 dwarf those of the first two years of the pandemic, after their governments abolished successful public health measures and turned to a profit-driven let it rip program.

Under these conditions, the shift in reporting, declared without a hint of democratic discussion, much less a popular mandate, has the character of an internationally-coordinated conspiracy against working people.

It is of global significance, marking the overturn of the very last vestiges of a coordinated, public health response to the pandemic in any advanced capitalist country.

In Australia, the change to weekly reporting was quietly made last Friday, and was the subject of only a handful of cursory and uncritical reports in the domestic media. In New Zealand, Labour Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced the end of daily reporting yesterday, without any forewarning.

The decision has no scientific or medical basis. It has been sharply condemned by principled epidemiologists in both countries as an attack on the populations right to know about the still unfolding medical emergency and the ability of public health experts to track it.

The governments, however, are simply not interested. Instead, they are openly proclaiming that business interests are the supreme priority.

Ardern bluntly stated: This is the time when finally, rather than feeling that COVID dictates what happens to us, our lives and our future, we take control back, as we continue to drive economic activity and our recovery. In other words, all public health measures, however limited, must be dispensed with to ensure full workforce participation in a bid to drive up production and corporate profits.

In line with this program, Ardern announced the end of all previous mask mandates, except in health and aged care settings. People who live with a COVID-positive individual will no longer be required to isolate, in a blow to the most basic infection control, while the last vaccination mandates, including for health workers, have been abolished.

Australias Labor government has similarly slashed the isolation time for COVID-infected people from seven to five days. The move, which experts have warned will result in up to half of all COVID cases mingling in the community while infectious, is transparently aimed at keeping workers on the job, even if they are carrying a potentially deadly virus. Masks will also no longer be required on domestic flights.

The clear purpose of the suppression of information is to promote the fraud that the pandemic is over, or at least the worst is behind us, to justify these dangerous measures.

But nothing could be further from the truth. In Australia, September 9, the last day of daily reporting, was the sixth deadliest of the entire pandemic, with 133 fatalities confirmed across the country. August witnessed the most deaths of any month, with 2,056 people losing their lives to the virus.

In New Zealand, deaths have soared from fewer than 30 late last year to almost 2,000. That has repeatedly placed the nation of five million people near the top of the list of global per capita fatalities, while the coronavirus has become the countrys leading cause of death.

The Australian and New Zealand governments are following a blueprint laid out by the Biden administration in the US on behalf of the major US banks and corporations.

In February, the US Department of Health and Human Services ended its system for hospitals to report daily COVID-19 deaths to the federal government.

At the time, the World Socialist Web Site was the only publication to draw attention to the change and to highlight its far-reaching significance in the suppression of knowledge about the devastation wrought by the pandemic. Business Insider called the WSWSs coverage misleading but has never issued a correction, despite the end of daily COVID-19 reporting throughout almost the entire United States. All but four US states have ended their own daily reporting, making it impossible to chart fatalities on a day-by-day basis.

Britain announced the ending of its own daily reporting system the very same month as in the United States. Similar measures are underway in a host of countries and jurisdictions. In Canada, for instance, Ontario and several other provinces have already abolished their daily reporting.

The shift in Australia and New Zealand is particularly notable, because of the relative success of both countries in limiting deaths and infections earlier in the pandemic. They are thus a microcosm of the gulf between a scientifically-grounded response to the pandemic, even with limitations, and the naked herd immunity policy that both countries have since adopted.

The Australian state and federal governments always rejected a program to eliminate the virus, on the grounds that it would be too costly. They were nevertheless compelled under pressure from key sections of workers and health experts to institute safety measures, including lockdowns, which, notwithstanding a host of pro-business exemptions, repeatedly stamped out the virus. New Zealand was the only country in the world outside of China to consistently pursue elimination.

In the first two years of the pandemic, there were fewer than 400,000 infections in Australia and deaths stood at 2,239. For extended periods, safety measures ended all transmission of the virus.

As a consequence of the full reopening of the economy last December, those figures have skyrocketed to 10.1 million infections and 14,357 deaths. Because of the crashing of the testing system, a substantial majority of the countrys 25 million people have likely been affected this year. Long COVID, a set of serious conditions associated with even mild cases, has debilitated up to 10 percent of the workforce.

In New Zealand, there had been fewer than 5,000 total infections and 30 deaths before the Ardern government overturned its elimination program in October last year. Now, official infections are at 1.76 million and deaths almost 2,000.

The transformation is a warning of what would occur if China dispensed with its elimination strategy, as has been demanded by the major imperialist governments, corporations and media. Hundreds of thousands or millions would die in the country of 1.4 billion, joining the estimated 20 million who have perished around the world since the pandemic began.

The protracted assault on Chinas elimination program is not only because of its impact on the activities of global finance and big business, but also because it demonstrates that there is an alternative to the homicidal policies of herd immunity implemented everywhere else.

The developments in Australia and New Zealand are also of note because in both countries the untrammeled spread of the virus is being presided over by a social-democratic government.

In New Zealand, Ardern, presented in the media as a saint-like figure, brushes away the mass infection and death her government has unleashed, instead proclaiming the all-importance of economic activity. In Australia, Labor Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says nothing about the record daily fatalities, and pledges to business that there will never be a return to lockdowns.

This line goes hand in hand with the Labor governments presiding over Australia and New Zealands ever greater integration into the US confrontations with Russia and China, threatening world war, and the implementation of budget austerity and attacks on the wages, jobs and conditions of workers.

The let it rip program underscores not only that the social-democratic parties have completely abandoned any pretense of representing working people, and have become the most aggressive proponents of corporate interests, it also demonstrates that the fight to end the pandemic and eliminate the deadly virus will not be carried out by capitalist governments or in one country alone.

Instead, what is required is an international fight for the scientific measures required to progressively halt transmission and to finally end the pandemic. The international working class, whose interests are in health and life, not profit, is the only social force capable of carrying this out. The fight against the pandemic must be inscribed upon the banner of its resurgent strikes, protests and class battles.

Join the SEP campaign against anti-democratic electoral laws!

The working class must have a political voice, which the Australian ruling class is seeking to stifle with this legislation.

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Australia and New Zealand end daily COVID-19 reporting: The let it rip conspiracy against the population - WSWS

Success of COVID-19 vaccine could lead to better flu shots now being tested on humans – PennLive

September 14, 2022

Pfizer and Moderna are each testing flu shots made with the same mRNA technology used with their highly-safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines, Bloomberg news reported on Wednesday.

The trials will take place over the course of the upcoming flu season and the companies hope to have the new vaccines approved and available by late next year or early 2024. Trials taking place in multiple countries will involve more than 50,000 people.

The hope is that the mRNA technology, which allows vaccines to be produced at a faster pace, will lead to a more effective flu shot.

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Success of COVID-19 vaccine could lead to better flu shots now being tested on humans - PennLive

Nasal COVID-19 vaccines: What you need to know – Medical News Today

September 10, 2022

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, new vaccines to prevent infection with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19m are under constant development.

Up to now, all approved COVID-19 vaccines have been subcutaneous that is, administered under the skin, often by injection into the upper area of the arm.

Now, two companies are planning to change that through the development of COVID-19 vaccines inhaled through the nose.

CanSino Biologics, a Chinese pharmaceutical company, recently received approval from the National Medical Products Administration of China for Convidecia Air, their recombinant vaccine delivered via inhalation, as a nasal spray.

Bharat Biotech International, a biotechnology company headquartered in India, has been granted approval under Restricted Use in Emergency Situation in India for its iNCOVACC recombinant vaccine administered intranasally as nasal drops.

The most common way of administering a vaccine continues to be through an injection. However, this is not the first time scientists have developed an intranasal vaccine option. The most widely known nasal vaccines right now are for influenza, commonly known as the flu.

There have also been studies conducted on nasal vaccines for other diseases, including pertussis (whooping cough), hepatitis B, and the African swine fever virus.

Some researchers believe that delivering a vaccine nasally provides the benefit of administering the vaccine directly into the mucosa of the body. The mucosa, or mucus membrane, is the moist inner layer of body cavities, such as the nose and mouth, as well as some organs. The glands in the mucosa are what produce mucus.

The mucosa is an important part of the bodys immune system. When a person breathes, the mucosa helps keep bacteria and other potentially problematic particles from getting into their body.

The mucosa also absorbs certain pathogens. And because the nose connects to the bodys respiratory system, this makes it easy for a nasal vaccine to move through the body.

Additionally, nasal vaccines provide less stress for people who are afraid of needles. Experts estimate that 1 out of 4 adults and 2 out of 3 children are afraid of shots. And 1 out of every 10 people may put off having the COVID-19 vaccination due to their fear of needles.

Both Convidecia Air from CanSino Biologics, and iNCOVACC from Bharat Biotech International Limited are recombinant vaccines.

That means they use a protein from the SARS-CoV-2 virus in the vaccine. When the vaccine enters the body, the protein attaches to cells in the body, teaching them to trigger an immune response if they ever encounter that same protein again.

Both of these intranasal vaccines also use adenovirus vector technology. Adenoviral vectors are genetically engineered viruses previously used in gene therapy.

Researchers have also conducted studies on using adenovirus vectors as a vaccine platform for other diseases, including HIV-1, Ebola, and various other infectious diseases.

According to statements on CanSino Biologics website, Convidecia Air uses the same adenovirus vector technological platform as Convidecia, the companys injectable COVID-19 vaccine.

Convidecia recently received emergency use listing from the World Health Organization (WHO). The phase 3 clinical trial results for Convidecia showed a 57.5% efficacy rate against SARS-CoV-2 infection preventing symptomatic COVID-19 28 days or more after vaccination.

Bharat Biotechs iNCOVACC nasal vaccine was developed in partnership with Washington University St. Louis. The intranasal vaccine reportedly showed successful results following phase 1, 2, and 3 clinical trials.

Although these are the first two intranasal COVID-19 vaccines to receive approvals, there are others currently in development.

For example, a team of microbiologists at Mount Sinai is currently developing an intranasal COVID-19 vaccine candidate that is in or has completed phase 1 and 2 trials in Thailand, Brazil, Mexico, and Vietnam, with a phase 1 trial recently launched at Mount Sinai in the U.S.

According to Mount Sinai public communications, this novel intranasal vaccine is an egg-based vaccine that uses Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV).

In March, the University of Oxford reported the launch of phase 1 clinical trials investigating the delivery of a nasal COVID-19 vaccine it developed in partnership with AstraZeneca.

And in May, Codagenix, a vaccine development company based in the U.S., announced the start of phase 1 clinical trials for its CoviLiv intranasal COVID-19 vaccine candidate.

Medical News Today spoke with Dr. Fady Youssef, a board-certified pulmonologist, internist, and critical care specialist at MemorialCare Long Beach Medical Center in Long Beach, CA, about these new intranasal vaccines and what benefits they might offer.

I think its great to have different options for patients that they can choose from, whatever theyre most comfortable with, he stated.

Weve used nasal vaccines for other diseases. Some influenza vaccines are given intranasally and they work pretty well. So the mode of administration and of itself should not be held against or for the vaccine. Its going to be more of a data about the tolerability and how good of a response the host amounts to.

Dr. Fady Youssef

As intranasal COVID-19 vaccines become more readily available, Dr. Youssef suggested people talk to their doctor to make sure it is the right vaccine delivery system for them.

Some patients that may have had nasal surgeries, have sinus issues, or have nasal polyps, [so] this may not be the best option for them, he cautioned.

And Dr. Peter Palese, Horace W. Goldsmith professor and chair in the Department of Microbiology and professor in the Department of Medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, said that while mRNA vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 such as those from Pfizer and Moderna are effective in reducing infection rates and lessen the severity of disease, even multiple immunizations with the current vaccines do not prevent breakthroughs of infections and are less than perfect in eliminating transmission from person to person.

Thus, vaccines administered via the nose inducing mucosal immunity should show improvements in terms of breakthrough infections and the spread of the disease, he noted.

The approval of such vaccines in China and India produced by CanSino Biologics and Bharat Biotech, respectively, represent a major step forward towards effective mucosal COVID-19 vaccines, said Dr. Palese.

Link:

Nasal COVID-19 vaccines: What you need to know - Medical News Today

COVID-19 Daily Update 9-9-2022 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

September 10, 2022

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of September 9, 2022, there are currently 3,058 active COVID-19 cases statewide. There have been 21 deaths reported since the last report, with a total of 7,322 deaths attributed to COVID-19.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of an 81-year old female from Kanawha County, a 68-year old male from Marion County, a 49-year old male from Raleigh County, a 69-year old male from McDowell County, a 75-year old male from Logan County, an 81-year old male from Monroe County, a 53-year old male from Boone County, an 85-year old female from Raleigh County, a 55-year old female from Roane County, a 76-year old male from Greenbrier County, a 93-year old female from Marshall County, an 85-year old male from Cabell County, a 70-year old female from Mercer County, an 80-year old male from Cabell County, a 92-year old female from Putnam County, a 91-year old female from Kanawha County, a 65-year old female from Greenbrier County, an 87-year old male from Kanawha County, a 43-year old female from Mason County, an 85-year old male from Wetzel County, and an 88-year old male from Barbour County.

We join with the families in mourning the passing of these great West Virginians, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. We must continue to work together to prevent further loss of loved ones by getting vaccinated and boosted against COVID-19.

CURRENT ACTIVE CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (25), Berkeley (186), Boone (37), Braxton (15), Brooke (29), Cabell (140), Calhoun (7), Clay (9), Doddridge (11), Fayette (67), Gilmer (15), Grant (11), Greenbrier (96), Hampshire (19), Hancock (43), Hardy (32), Harrison (143), Jackson (25), Jefferson (69), Kanawha (198), Lewis (22), Lincoln (36), Logan (91), Marion (114), Marshall (57), Mason (51), McDowell (50), Mercer (204), Mineral (43), Mingo (56), Monongalia (144), Monroe (51), Morgan (20), Nicholas (61), Ohio (48), Pendleton (9), Pleasants (12), Pocahontas (5), Preston (38), Putnam (87), Raleigh (178), Randolph (48), Ritchie (10), Roane (55), Summers (33), Taylor (25), Tucker (11), Tyler (10), Upshur (69), Wayne (35), Webster (4), Wetzel (48), Wirt (1), Wood (93), Wyoming (62). To find the cumulative cases per county, please visit coronavirus.wv.gov and look on the Cumulative Summary tab which is sortable by county.

West Virginians ages 6 months and older are eligible for COVID-19 vaccination. All individuals ages 6 months and older should receive a primary series of vaccination, the initial set of shots that teaches the body to recognize and fight the virus that causes COVID-19. Those ages 5-11 years are recommended to get an original (monovalent) booster shot when due, and those ages 12 years and older are recommended to get an Omicron booster shot (bivalent) at least two months after completing their primary series.

Visit the WV COVID-19 Vaccination Due Date Calculator, a free, online tool that helps individuals figure out when they may be due for a COVID-19 shot, making it easier to stay up-to-date on COVID-19 vaccination. To learn more about COVID-19 vaccines, or to find a vaccine, visit vaccines.gov, vaccinate.wv.gov, or call 1-833-734-0965. Please visit the COVID-19 testing locations page to locate COVID-19 testing near you.

More here:

COVID-19 Daily Update 9-9-2022 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Chiefs’ Frank Clark dealing with dehydration after bout of COVID-19 – Chiefs Wire

September 10, 2022

Kansas City Chiefs DE Frank Clark was the lone player to miss a practice this week and we now know why.

According to reports from the KC Stars Jesse Newell and Nate Taylor of The Athletic, Clark is still recovering from a bout with COVID-19. He told reporters in the locker room that he felt symptoms come on after the teams final preseason game back on Aug. 25th. He tested positive for COVID and spent the following week-plus recovering before eventually testing negative.

Clark was back on the practice field this week. He dealt with dehydration following Wednesdays practice and missed practice on Thursday as a result. He was back on the practice field on Friday during the portion of practice open to media members.

Andy Reid said that barring a setback, Clark should be ready to play come Sunday.

At the same time, expect a healthy dose of Mike Danna, George Karlaftis and Carlos Dunlap against the Cardinals. Even if Clark is over the dehydration issues, missing a practice puts him a little behind the eight ball for the upcoming game.

Read the original post:

Chiefs' Frank Clark dealing with dehydration after bout of COVID-19 - Chiefs Wire

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