Category: Covid-19

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COVID-19 Daily Update 8-1-2022 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

August 2, 2022

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of August 1, 2022, there are currently 3,335 active COVID-19 cases statewide. There have been 5 deaths reported since the last report, with a total of 7,161 deaths attributed to COVID-19.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of an 80-year old male from Harrison County, a 70-year old female from Kanawha County, a 67-year old male from Kanawha County, a 74-year old male from Wetzel County, and an 83-year old male from Cabell County.

Each loved one lost is forever remembered, and as a state we grieve with their families, friends and neighbors, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. COVID vaccines and booster shots are readily available statewide and I encourage all West Virginians to receive this life-saving vaccine.

CURRENT ACTIVE CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (35), Berkeley (199), Boone (59), Braxton (10), Brooke (28), Cabell (186), Calhoun (8), Clay (7), Doddridge (8), Fayette (94), Gilmer (10), Grant (20), Greenbrier (67), Hampshire (40), Hancock (34), Hardy (35), Harrison (131), Jackson (23), Jefferson (81), Kanawha (301), Lewis (27), Lincoln (44), Logan (71), Marion (114), Marshall (61), Mason (43), McDowell (39), Mercer (147), Mineral (35), Mingo (43), Monongalia (173), Monroe (48), Morgan (29), Nicholas (72), Ohio (66), Pendleton (5), Pleasants (13), Pocahontas (15), Preston (40), Putnam (97), Raleigh (217), Randolph (43), Ritchie (20), Roane (32), Summers (21), Taylor (30), Tucker (0), Tyler (10), Upshur (43), Wayne (47), Webster (23), Wetzel (13), Wirt (13), Wood (191), Wyoming (74). 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 recommended to get vaccinated against the virus that causes COVID-19. Those 5 years and older should receive a booster shot when due. Second booster shots for those age 50 and over who are 4 months or greater from their first booster are recommended, as well as for younger individuals over 12 years old with serious and chronic health conditions that lead to being considered moderately to severely immunocompromised.

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 site near you, visit vaccinate.wv.gov or call 1-833-734-0965.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 8-1-2022 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

‘Living with COVID’: Where the pandemic could go next – Reuters

August 2, 2022

LONDON/CHICAGO, Aug 1 (Reuters) - As the third winter of the coronavirus pandemic looms in the northern hemisphere, scientists are warning weary governments and populations alike to brace for more waves of COVID-19.

In the United States alone, there could be up to a million infections a day this winter, Chris Murray, head of the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), an independent modeling group at the University of Washington that has been tracking the pandemic, told Reuters. That would be around double the current daily tally.

Across the United Kingdom and Europe, scientists predict a series of COVID waves, as people spend more time indoors during the colder months, this time with nearly no masking or social distancing restrictions in place.

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However, while cases may surge again in the coming months, deaths and hospitalizations are unlikely to rise with the same intensity, the experts said, helped by vaccination and booster drives, previous infection, milder variants and the availability of highly effective COVID treatments.

"The people who are at greatest risk are those who have never seen the virus, and there's almost nobody left," said Murray.

These forecasts raise new questions about when countries will move out of the COVID emergency phase and into a state of endemic disease, where communities with high vaccination rates see smaller outbreaks, possibly on a seasonal basis.

Many experts had predicted that transition would begin in early 2022, but the arrival of the highly mutated Omicron variant of coronavirus disrupted those expectations.

"We need to set aside the idea of 'is the pandemic over?'" said Adam Kucharski, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. He and others see COVID morphing into an endemic threat that still causes a high burden of disease.

"Someone once told me the definition of endemicity is that life just gets a bit worse," he added.

The potential wild card remains whether a new variant will emerge that out-competes currently dominant Omicron subvariants.

If that variant also causes more severe disease and is better able to evade prior immunity, that would be the "worst-case scenario," according to a recent World Health Organization (WHO) Europe report.

"All scenarios (with new variants) indicate the potential for a large future wave at a level that is as bad or worse than the 2020/2021 epidemic waves," said the report, based on a model from Imperial College of London.

Many of the disease experts interviewed by Reuters said that making forecasts for COVID has become much harder, as many people rely on rapid at-home tests that are not reported to government health officials, obscuring infection rates.

BA.5, the Omicron subvariant that is currently causing infections to peak in many regions, is extremely transmissible, meaning that many patients hospitalized for other illnesses may test positive for it and be counted among severe cases, even if COVID-19 is not the source of their distress.

Scientists said other unknowns complicating their forecasts include whether a combination of vaccination and COVID infection so-called hybrid immunity is providing greater protection for people, as well as how effective booster campaigns may be.

"Anyone who says they can predict the future of this pandemic is either overconfident or lying," said David Dowdy, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Experts also are closely watching developments in Australia, where a resurgent flu season combined with COVID is overwhelming hospitals. They say it is possible that Western nations could see a similar pattern after several quiet flu seasons.

"If it happens there, it can happen here. Let's prepare for a proper flu season," said John McCauley, director of the Worldwide Influenza Centre at the Francis Crick Institute in London.

The WHO has said each country still needs to approach new waves with all the tools in the pandemic armory from vaccinations to interventions, such as testing and social distancing or masking.

Israel's government recently halted routine COVID testing of travelers at its international airport, but is ready to resume the practice "within days" if faced with a major surge, said Sharon Alroy-Preis, head of the country's public health service.

"When there is a wave of infections, we need to put masks on, we need to test ourselves," she said. "That's living with COVID."

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Reporting by Jennifer Rigby and Julie Steenhuysen; Additional reporting by Maayan Lubell; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Bill Berkrot

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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'Living with COVID': Where the pandemic could go next - Reuters

How ‘Never COVID’ Novids Have Avoided COVID-19 – Healthline

August 2, 2022

Two and a half years into the COVID-19 pandemic, it appears that a majority of people in the United States have tested positive for the novel coronavirus at least once.

Some have contracted COVID-19 multiple times.

Then there are the Never COVID or Novids the people who, despite sometimes living or working in high-exposure environments, have never tested positive for COVID-19.

Researchers are trying to find out why, in hopes of identifying protective factors that could prevent other people from getting sick.

Experts who spoke to Healthline pointed out several major factors that may be helping Novids avoid the illness. Among them include:

There are probably a lot of different explanations. One of the most important is vaccination, Dr. Erica Johnson, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland who chairs the Infectious Disease Board of the American Board of Internal Medicine, told Healthline. Age, timing, and type of immune response, whether you get exposed before or after vaccination, chronic diseases all of these go into an individuals immune response.

Some people have been more faithful to mitigation measures, including being vaccinated and boosted, masking, social distancing and avoiding crowds, working remotely, and avoiding travel and venues that increase risk, David Souleles, MPH, director of the COVID-19 Response at the University of California at Irvine and director of MPH Program & Practice at the UCI Program in Public Health, told Healthline. These measures all work to reduce the risk of becoming infected and, when layered together, can provide significant protection against COVID-19 infection.

Research from earlier this year suggests that people with a certain genetic makeup may be more susceptible to a COVID-19 infection or serious illness.

However, researchers note that certain types of gene expressions could also provide a protective effect something that already is known to be the case with other infectious diseases.

We seek to understand if the individual genetic makeup of people might explain why some do not contract COVID-19 despite intense exposure to the virus. To test this hypothesis, we use cutting-edge human genetic techniques to study those people who appear naturally resistant to SARS-CoV-2, Dr. Andrs N. Spaan, a clinical microbiologist at The Rockefeller University in New York and one of the co-founders of the international COVID Human Genetic Effort, told Healthline.

An individuals immune response to other health conditions and illnesses also may provide some protection against COVID-19, some studies suggest.

For example, researchers reported in a May 2022 study that people with food allergies seemed to have a lower COVID-19 risk.

There also has been some discussion around whether there is any protective effect from exposure to other coronaviruses, such as the common cold, said Johnson.

For some Novids, simply not being exposed to people with COVID-19 could be the simple answer to why they have never tested positive.

As a network security engineer and an entrepreneur, I have the luxury to work from home. I have managed to remain Novid even though I am not as careful as I used to be at the beginning of the pandemic, Andreas Grant, founder of Networks Hardware, told Healthline. I was super strict about following rules and had some of my own made-up rules as well. Even after I heard that you cant catch COVID-19 from food, I continued heating every takeaway order I received. For packaged foods, I either didnt touch them for a specific period of time or washed them. I continued wearing my mask even after everyone else stopped officially wearing them.

Other Novids, though, may simply have been unaware they had the illness.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that at least 70 percent of Americans have already had a COVID-19 infection with a number of them having contracted the disease without knowing it.

It is likely that some people have had COVID-19 and did not know it because they did not test, said Souleles. They may have been asymptomatic or had mild symptoms and attributed those symptoms to a cold, flu, or allergies.

I had COVID-19 early in the pandemic before vaccines were available, Erica Susky, a microbiologist and hospital infection-control expert at IPAC Canada, told Healthline. Even at that time, many people such as myself experienced very mild symptoms.

I would have never known, based on my symptoms alone, if I had COVID-19 unless I was PCR tested as part of an outbreak, Susky noted. In a regular situation, I would have attributed my symptoms to being overtired, it did not feel much like a cold or flu. If one had a mild illness and tested negative via a [less reliable] rapid antigen test, they may never know with certainty whether or not they had COVID-19.

A combination of reduced attention to preventive measures such as masking and physical distancing, combined with the rise of vaccine-resistant and immunity-resistant COVID-19 variants such as BA.5, could shrink the population of Novids.

Dr. David Culpepper, clinical director of the telehealth company LifeMD, told Healthline that while wearing a mask and avoiding large gatherings can help people avoid COVID-19, Most of us know at least one person who has taken all of the available precautions and has still gotten COVID-19.

I am not suggesting that you should not wear a mask and take other precautions. You should do everything in your power to reduce your risk of contracting the virus, said Culpepper. Im merely pointing out that some who have contracted COVID-19 have taken a lot of precautions and have just been unlucky. And there is likewise a certain amount of luck involved in those who have avoided it.

Now that we are living in an almost post-pandemic world where many of us are vaccinated, I am not as strict as I used to be, said Grant. I recently had to start wearing glasses, so I dont feel like wearing my mask while I have my glasses on. I make an effort to avoid crowded places, but as a movie buff, I cant help myself from frequently visiting indoor movie theaters. I am not following my made-up rules either, so at this point, I am probably just lucky.

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How 'Never COVID' Novids Have Avoided COVID-19 - Healthline

Reduced severity of COVID-19 in pregnant women during the Omicron wave – News-Medical.Net

August 2, 2022

In South Korea, the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), the virus responsible for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, has infected a considerable number of pregnant women, including those who have delivered by cesarean section. Pregnancy is considered a high-risk factor for severe COVID-19, particularly among infections due to the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant.

The clinical course of infection with the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant remains unknown in pregnant women. Furthermore, due to the low vaccination rate of less than 10% in South Korea, information regarding COVID-19 vaccine efficacy in pregnant women is also insufficient.

Study:Impact of vaccination and the omicron variant on COVID-19 severity in pregnant women. Image Credit: nerudol / Shutterstock.com

A new American Journal of Infection Control study assesses the clinical outcomes of COVID-19 in pregnant women to determine whether Omicron and vaccination status impacted disease severity.

The current study was conducted between November 1, 2020, and March 7. 2022, and included a total of 224 pregnant women and 82 quarantine deliveries. Study participants were divided into two groups based on whether their hospital admission was before or after the emergence of the Omicron variant, as well as according to their vaccination status.

The clinical severity of COVID-19 was defined as asymptomatic to mild or moderate to serious based on the oxygen demand of the patients, the requirement for intensive care, and chest radiograph pneumonia findings. Maternal morbidities, including pneumonia diagnosed during hospital admission, intensive care admission, preterm birth, and requirement for pulmonology expert transfer, were also analyzed.

About 42% of patients belonged to the Omicron group. Most women in both groups were in their third trimester of pregnancy and had an average age of 32 years.

The rates of maternal morbidity and moderate-to-severe disease decreased following the emergence of the Omicron variant. Oxygen demand was also higher in the before-Omicron group.

A total of 185 pregnant women were unvaccinated, while only 39 were vaccinated. Notably, the vaccination rate was higher in the Omicron group. The requirement for oxygen therapy and moderate-to-severe disease was lower in the vaccinated group as compared to the unvaccinated group.

The current study demonstrates that the clinical outcome of COVID-19 was more favorable among pregnant women after the emergence of the Omicron variant. Disease severity was also lower among pregnant women who had received at least one dose of the vaccine.

Importantly, the improvement in clinical outcomes can be due to either dominance of the Omicron variant or an increase in vaccination during that period. Further research is needed to confirm the accurate reason for improved clinical outcomes in pregnant women diagnosed with COVID-19.

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Reduced severity of COVID-19 in pregnant women during the Omicron wave - News-Medical.Net

COVID-19 vaccine verification assistance and testing site updates – University of California, Riverside

August 2, 2022

Dear Campus Community,

Beginning August 1, our on-campus COVID-19 testing sites have augmented their services and resources available to all UC Riverside faculty, staff, and students.

Employees who have not yet uploaded their COVID-19 vaccination/booster record into the MyChart system and would prefer to show proof of vaccination in person or virtually to the COVID-19 Management Team, can do so at either of our testing sites or by scheduling an appointment via Zoom.

In-Person VerificationNo appointment is necessary. You can walk-in and show proof of vaccination.

ZoomSchedule a time by either e-mailing covid19@ucr.edu or calling 844-827-6827 and selecting option no. 1. A Zoom link will be sent to you for your appointment time.

Please note that you will need to provide your photo ID or UCR ID and your COVID-19 vaccination card* for in person verification. We will not make a copy of the employees vaccine card.

*Acceptable Proof of COVID-19 Vaccination COVID-19 Vaccination Record Card (issued by the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention or WHO), which includes name of person vaccinated, type of vaccine provided, and date doses administered A photo of a vaccination card as a separate document A photo of a vaccine card stored on a phone or electronic device Documentation of vaccination from a healthcare provider Digital record that includes a QR code that when scanned by a SMART Health Card reader displays to the reader name, date of birth, vaccination dates, and vaccine type.

COVID-19 TestingFree PCR testing continues at both inside the Student Success Center and at Glen Mor. Hours have been slightly modified for the summer. No appointment is necessary.

Glen Mor Building C Room 001 Monday-Thursday: 6:30 a.m.-2:45 p.m. Friday: 6:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m.

Student Success Center Monday-Friday: 8 a.m.-2 p.m.

ResourcesAdditional items available for pick up include at the Glen Mor testing location include: Surgical and N95 masks Free antigen test kits (request form) Hand sanitizer bottles

You may also request free test kits to be mailed to your home address by visiting http://www.covid.gov/tests.

Face CoveringsAs a reminder, UCR strongly encourages the use of masks for everyone while indoors. Masks continue to be required in clinical settings including Student Health Services.

Individuals who have medical or religious exemptions to the vaccine policy must continue to mask while on campus, test weekly, and report their testing completion via the COVID Screening Check.

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COVID-19 vaccine verification assistance and testing site updates - University of California, Riverside

Reflecting on the Resiliency of Hospitals and Communities During COVID-19 | AHA News – American Hospital Association

August 2, 2022

Remaining resilient as new variants of COVID-19 spread. Launching mobile health services to help ensure equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines. Partnering with community organizations. Planting daffodils to remember patients who died of COVID-19. Saving countless lives during the most trying circumstances.

These are just a few stories of the pandemic shared by front-line teams and leaders at our nations hospitals and health systems, in rural and urban areas.

A new publication from the AHAs Living Learning Network, The Pandemic: Responding with Resilience and Service to Community, highlights images of and commentary from health care professionals on their experiences during the past two-plus years. This e-book brings to life the early days of COVID-19 testing and treatment, the struggles and perseverance of front-line workers taking care of patients and themselves during surges, and the more recent months when care teams collaborated with community partners on efforts to vaccinate Americans.

A partnership between the AHA and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the LLN is a virtual community of more than 400 members focused on transforming health care by sharing knowledge and concerns, expanding perspectives and problem-solving together. Visit AHA.org to learn more and join this group.

Reflecting on our pandemic experiences is important as we move forward, as individuals and organizations and as a field. In the words of one leader at Holton Community Hospital in Kansas: We cannot but feel hopeful that the agility and creativeness that we have seen over the last two years will lead to continued changes and innovations.

The people working at our nations hospitals and health systems have been pillars of strength during the pandemic. Thank you for your commitment and lets continue to collaborate and innovate as we address the challenges and opportunities ahead.

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Reflecting on the Resiliency of Hospitals and Communities During COVID-19 | AHA News - American Hospital Association

Rebound COVID-19 After Paxlovid: Why Are People Testing Positive Again? – Prevention Magazine

August 2, 2022

President Joe Biden announced over the weekend that he tested positive for COVID-19 after recovering from the virus in whats known as rebound COVID-19 after Paxlovid or Paxlovid rebound.

Folks, today I tested positive for COVID again. This happens with a small minority of folks, he wrote on Twitter Saturday. Ive got no symptoms but I am going to isolate for the safety of everyone around me. Im still at work, and will be back on the road soon.

Bidens Paxlovid reboundwhich was also experienced by his chief medical officer, Anthony Fauci, M.D.has raised a lot of questions about the anti-viral medication and why it can cause some people to have a rebound infection of COVID-19 after they get better. Heres what you need to know.

This is a little tricky. Clinical trial results for Paxlovid found that rebound happened in 1 to 2% of patients who took the drug. But it seems to be a little more common than that in the real world.

Its unclear how common this effect is, says Amesh A. Adalja, M.D., a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. It was not seen as an issue in the clinical trials but the real world experience with the drug seems to suggest that this is something that occurs with some level of frequency.

In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued an emergency health advisory in May to warn doctors about Paxlovid rebound, calling it the potential for recurrence of COVID-19 or Covid-19 rebound. In the advisory, the CDC called Paxlovid rebound a recurrence of symptoms or a new positive viral test after having tested negative when someone was diagnosed in the past two weeks.

Why this is occurring is still something that needs an answer. Its unclear how common this is with Omicron in general or in the high-risk population regardless of Paxlovid use, Dr. Adalja says. In general, though, "symptoms tend to be milder with rebound," Dr. Russo says.

Heres the thing: Its possible to have rebound COVID even if you dont take Paxlovidand thats something that happened to a few people in clinical trials for the drug, says Thomas Russo, M.D., professor and chief of infectious disease at the University at Buffalo in New York. How much of this is Paxlovid or how much of it is that certain individuals just rebound is unclear, he says. Its certainly not solely due to Paxlovid.

Paxlovid is an anti-viral medication thats designed to shorten the course of a COVID-19 infection in people who are high risk for serious disease and help lessen symptoms.

People that have taken Paxlovid tend to have a shorter duration of symptoms and feel better sooner, Dr. Russo says. But, he adds, some people develop so-called Paxlovid mouth which is a metallic taste in their mouth while taking the drug.

Paxlovid rebound isnt actually a reinfection, Dr. Adalja points out. It is the same virus that the initial infection was caused by, he says. And, Dr. Adalja says, you are contagious when you experience Paxlovid rebound. There are reports of transmission occurring from those experiencing rebound so it is infectious virus that is being shed during rebound, he says. Meaning, you have to isolate again when you experience the rebound, Dr. Russo says.

As for why this happens, thats still being investigated. It could be that the drug lowers viral load which then rebounds when the drug is not present because, perhaps, the immune response is blunted with the drug in the early stage, Dr. Adalja says.

Paxlovid is designed to be taken by adults and children age 12 and older, the CDC says. Its specifically authorized to treat mild to moderate COVID-19 in adults and children weighing at least 88 pounds who are at high risk to progress to severe COVID-19, be hospitalized, or die from the virus, per the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

While Paxlovid rebound is a potential side effect of taking the drug, Dr. Adalja stresses that its an important tool to have. The drug is working perfectly well at doing what it was designed to do: Prevent severe disease, he says. Reports about rebound should not dissuade high-risk individuals from taking this life-saving drug. Dr. Russo agrees. "This should not keep people from taking Paxlovid," he says.

Korin Miller is a freelance writer specializing in general wellness, sexual health and relationships, and lifestyle trends, with work appearing in Mens Health, Womens Health, Self, Glamour, and more. She has a masters degree from American University, lives by the beach, and hopes to own a teacup pig and taco truck one day.

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Rebound COVID-19 After Paxlovid: Why Are People Testing Positive Again? - Prevention Magazine

Mass. doctor on what ‘rebound’ COVID-19 cases are – WCVB Boston

August 2, 2022

Mass. doctor on what 'rebound' COVID-19 cases are

Updated: 6:15 PM EDT Aug 1, 2022

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ED: LET'S BE CLEAR, THE PRESIDENT IS NOT YOUR PATIENT RIGHT? I'M JUST CONFIRMING. HIS DOCTORS BELIEVE THAT THE PRESIDENT DOES NOT HAVE A NEW CASE OF COVID. IS THAT CORRECT? >> THAT'S RIGHT. KNOW THAT THE PRESIDENT TESTED POSITIVE FOR COVID ON JULY 21st. HE STARTED PAXLOVID AND TESTED NEGATIVE SIX DAYS LATER ON THE 27th. BUT THEN TESTED POSITIVE AGAIN ON THE 30th. WE'VE SEEN THIS IN SOME PATIENTS WHO TAKES PAXLOVID. SYMPTOMS RESOLVE AND THEY START NESTING NEGATIVE AND REBOUND WITH A TEST. ERIKA: PRESIDENT BIDEN SAYS HE'S FEELING WELL, BUT A REBOUND CASE OF COVID MUST BE FRUSTRATING. HE'S ISOLATING AGAIN. WHY IS THAT IMPORTANT? >> I CAN'T IMAGINE HOW FRUSTRATING A PATIENT IS. IT'S REALLY IMPORTANT TO ISOLATE. SINCE ANYONE SHEDDING ENOUGH VIRUS TO TEST POSITIVE ON A RAPID ANTIGEN. THEY DEVELOP ANY MORE SEVERE CASES. THEY GENERALLY DO FINE, THEY MIGHT HAVE SYMPTOMS AND NEED TO ISOLATE. ED: LET'S TALK ABOUT PAXLOVID. YOU'VE SAID MANY TIMES, THE DRUG IS VERY EFFECTIVE AT PREVENTING SEVERE ILLNESS AND DEATH, ESPECIALLY IN HIGH-RISK PATIENTS. PRESIDENT QUALIFIES IN ONE OF THOSE CATEGORIES. HE'S AN OLDER MAN. HAVE YOU SEEN ANY DATA YET THAT CHANGES YOUR MIND? >> I HAVEN'T. PAXLOVID STILL WORKS WELL FOR PATIENTS AT HIGH RISK OF DEVELOPING SEVERE COVID. THE PROBLEM IS, THERE ARE MANY PEOPLE WHO ARE YOUNG, VACCINATED AND TOTALLY HEALTHY WHO REALLY AREN'T AT RISK DEVELOPING SEVERE COVID WHO ARE TAKING PAXLOVID NOW. I WORRY ABOUT THAN REBOUND CASES IN THE POPULATION AND POTENTIAL RESIST TENSE ERIKA: YOU JUST SPOKE WHAT I WAS GOING TO ASK YOU. MASSACHUSETTS HAS ONE OF THE HIGHEST VACCINATION RATES IN THE COUNTRY. SOME PATIENTS WITH A NEW INFECTION MAY QUESTION WHETHER THEY REALLY NEED TO TAKE PAXLOVID TOO. WHAT DO YOU WANT THEM TO KNOW? >> I REALLY WANT TO EMPHASIZE IF YOU MEET THE CRITERIA FOR TAKING PAXLOVID. LIKE AGE, ASTHMA AND CANCER, IF YOU MEET THIS CRITERIA, TALK TO YOUR PRIMARY PHYSICIAN. IF YOU SHOULD TAKE IT, YOU SHOULD TAKE IT. IF YOU DON'T MEET THOSE CRITERIA, YOU THINKING ABOUT JUST TAKING. BECAUSE YOU WANT TO BE CAUTIOUS, PLEASE DON'T. WE SHOULD BE TAKING OR PRESCRIBING MEDICATIONS WHEN THEY ARE ONLY REALLY INDICATED. ED: THANK YOU FOR YOUR EXPERTISE AN

Mass. doctor on what 'rebound' COVID-19 cases are

Updated: 6:15 PM EDT Aug 1, 2022

Dr. Ali Raja is the deputy chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Mass General Hospital.

Dr. Ali Raja is the deputy chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Mass General Hospital.

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Mass. doctor on what 'rebound' COVID-19 cases are - WCVB Boston

Cornyn tests positive for COVID-19 – The Hill

August 2, 2022

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) announced on Monday that he had tested positive for COVID-19, which could further complicate the math of floor votes for Republicans and Democrats at the start of a busy week for the Senate.

After dodging it for 2+ years Ive tested positive for COVID-19, Cornyn wrote on Twitter.

Im fully vaccinated and boosted, and doing fine, he said. While quarantining Ill continue to fight Chuck Schumer and Joe Manchins massive tax increase on working families remotely, consistent with CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] guidelines.

Senate Democrats this week are hoping to pass their multibillion-dollar climate, tax and health care package, which was announced by Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) on Wednesday. Republicans are expected to unanimously oppose the measure, and the GOP has criticized the West Virginia Democrat for backing it.

The package, which the duo have framed as inflation-fighting legislation, invests $369 billion in energy and climate programs, allocates $64 billion to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies for two years and allows Medicare to negotiate drug prices.

The bill also raises new revenue by establishing a 15-percent minimum corporate tax for companies with profits exceeding $1 billion, providing funding for the Internal Revenue Service to enforce the nations tax law and closing the carried interest loophole for money managers.

Schumer and Manchin are aiming to pass the package under reconciliation, an arcane budget rule that avoids the Senates 60-vote threshold required for most bills.

After the parliamentarian reviews the package to ensure it can move forward under reconciliation rules, the bill would need a simple majority to pass in the 50-50 Senate, where Vice President Harris casts any tiebreaking votes.

Democrats are also closely watching moderate Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), who has not yet announced a position on the reconciliation package.

Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), the Senate majority whip, announced on Thursday that he had tested positive for the virus, and it is unclear when he will return to the Capitol.

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Cornyn tests positive for COVID-19 - The Hill

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