Category: Covid-19

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Covid-19 Live Updates: China, Omicron and Vaccine News – The New York Times

April 14, 2022

Samantha Castaned, 10, receiving her first dose of the Pfizer vaccine in San Francisco last year.Credit...Mike Kai Chen for The New York Times

A booster shot of the Covid vaccine made by Pfizer-BioNTech increased the level of neutralizing antibodies against both the original version of the virus and the Omicron variant in a small trial of children age 5 to 11, the companies announced on Thursday.

If the companies claims of a strong immune response pass muster with federal regulators, the government could broaden eligibility for booster doses to include 28 million more children.

The study by Pfizer and BioNTech, which the companies described in a brief news release, included 140 children who received a booster dose six months after their second shot.

The children showed a sixfold increase in antibody levels against the original version of the virus one month after receiving the booster shot, compared with one month after receiving a second dose. Laboratory tests of 30 blood samples also showed 36 times the level of neutralizing antibodies against the Omicron variant compared with levels after only two doses, according to the news release and a Pfizer spokeswoman.

The companies said they would ask the Food and Drug Administration for emergency authorization of a booster dose for 5- to 11-year-olds in the coming days. The agency has typically acted within a month of receiving such requests.

Currently, everyone 12 and over in the United States is eligible for at least one booster dose, and about 30 million people age 50 or older are eligible for a second one. Studies suggest that 5- to 11-year-olds may be particularly in need of a booster dose.

Researchers in New York State recently found that while two shots of Pfizers vaccine protected children in that age group from serious illness, they provided virtually no protection against symptomatic infection, even just a month after full immunization.

The companies announcement comes as cases are again ticking up slightly after two months of sustained declines. The upswing has been particularly noticeable in the Northeast, where the BA.2 subvariant, now the dominant version of the virus in the United States, first took hold.

Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, President Bidens chief medical adviser, warned in recent days that the nation could see a significant increase in infections over the next several weeks. But he has said the rates of hospitalizations are unlikely to rise in tandem because so many Americans have a degree of immunity, either from vaccines or prior infections.

Several hundred children age 5 to 11 have died of Covid since the pandemic began, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but pediatric shots have been a hard sell for many parents. Only about 28 percent of children in that age group have received two doses and would be eligible for a booster shot. Roughly 7 percent have received just one dose, the agencys data shows.

There was an initial rush for shots after they were first offered for that age group in November, but the increase in the vaccination rate then slowed to a crawl. In the past month, for example, it rose by a single percentage point.

The share of children age 5 to 11 with at least one dose varies starkly by region, according to a study by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Five of the top 10 states with the highest vaccination rates were in New England, while eight out of the 10 states with the lowest rates were in the South.

Even though more than 250 million Americans have been safely vaccinated since the pandemic began, pediatric experts say many parents fear unknown consequences for their children. Compared with shots to protect against measles, mumps and other diseases, which have been around for decades, the Covid vaccines are brand-new.

The study done by New York researchers, posted online in late February, found that for children age 5 to 11, the Pfizer vaccines effectiveness against infection fell to 12 percent from 68 percent within 28 to 34 days after the second dose.

That was a steeper decline than for older adolescents and teens who received a much stronger dose. Some experts suggested that the difference in dosage explained the gap in protection, while others blamed the Omicron variant that was prevalent during the study.

Another study by the C.D.C. stated that two doses of Pfizers vaccine reduced the risk of Omicron infection by 31 percent among those age 5 to 11, compared with a 59 percent reduction in risk among those age 12 to 15.

Pfizers vaccine is so far the only one authorized for those under the age of 18.

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Covid-19 Live Updates: China, Omicron and Vaccine News - The New York Times

Statement on the eleventh meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)…

April 14, 2022

Theeleventh meeting of the Emergency Committee convened by the WHO Director-General under the International Health Regulations (2005) (IHR) regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic took place on Monday 11 April 2022 from 12:00to16:30 Geneva time (CEST).

Members and Advisors of the Emergency Committeewere convened by videoconference.

The Director-General welcomed the Committee members and advisers. The Director-General explained that the world has tools to limit transmission, save lives, and protect health systems. He expressed hope in the current epidemiological situation, noting that the world is currently experiencing the lowest number of reported deaths in two years. However, the unpredictable behavior of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and insufficient national responses are contributing to the continued global pandemic context. The Director-General emphasized the importance of States Parties using available medical countermeasures and public health and social measures (PHSM). He highlighted the publication of the updated Strategic Preparedness, Readiness, and Response Plan which provides a roadmap for how the world can end the COVID-19 emergency in 2022 and prepare for future events.

Representatives of the Office of Legal Counsel (LEG) and the Department of Compliance, Risk Management, and Ethics (CRE) briefed the members on their roles and responsibilities. The Ethics Officer from CRE provided the members and advisers with an overview of the WHO Declaration of Interests process. The members and advisers were made aware of their individual responsibility to disclose to WHO, in a timely manner, any interests of a personal, professional, financial, intellectual or commercial nature that may give rise to a perceived or direct conflict of interest. They were additionally reminded of their duty to maintain the confidentiality of the meeting discussions and the work of the Committee. Each member who was present was surveyed. No conflicts of interest were identified.

The Secretariat turned the meeting over to the Chair, Professor Didier Houssin, who reviewed the objectives and agenda of the meeting.

The Secretariat presented on the current status of the COVID-19 pandemic and a vision for how to optimize the ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic for 2022. The presentation focused on:

The Committee discussed key issues including SARS-CoV-2 variants; use and equitable access to antivirals; vaccine protection and global shifts in the supply and demand for COVID-19 vaccines; hybrid immunity; potential future scenarios for SARS-CoV-2 transmission and challenges posed by concurrent health emergencies; and how Member States are responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Committee also noted with concern the growing fatigue among communities worldwide in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and challenges posed by the lack of trust in scientific guidance and governments.

The Committee recognized that SARS-CoV-2 is a novel respiratory pathogen that has not yet established its ecological niche. SARS-CoV-2 continues to have unpredictable viral evolution, which is compounded by its wide-spread circulation and intense transmission in humans, as well as widespread introduction of infection to a range of animal species with potential for animal reservoirs to be established. SARS-COV-2 is continuing to cause high levels of morbidity and mortality, particularly among vulnerable human populations. In this context, the Committee raised concerns that the inappropriate use of antivirals may lead to the emergence of drug-resistant variants. In addition, Committee members acknowledged national, regional, and global capacities to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic context, but noted with concern that some States Parties have relaxed PHSM and reduced testing, impacting thus the global ability to monitor evolution of the virus. The Committee also noted with concern the inconsistency of global COVID-19 requirements for international travel and the negative impact that inappropriate measures may have on all forms of international travel. In this context, the Committee noted that offering vaccination to high-risk groups of international travelers on arrival could be considered a means to mitigate the risk of severe disease or death due to COVID-19 among these individuals.

The Committee stressed the importance of maintaining PHSM to protect vulnerable populations, and maintaining the capacity to scale up PHSM if the epidemiological situation changes. States Parties are advised to regularly adjust their response strategies by monitoring their epidemiological situation (including through use of rapid tests), assessing their health system capacity, and considering the adherence to and attributable impact of individual and combined PHSM.

In addition, the Committee reinforced the continued need for international cooperation and coordination for surveillance, as well as for robust and timely reporting to global systems (such as the Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System) to inform national, regional, and global response efforts. Surveillance activities require coordination between the human and animal sectors and more global attention on the detection of animal infections and possible reservoirs among domestic and wild animals. Timely and systematic monitoring and data sharing on SARS-CoV-2 infection, transmission and evolution in humans and animals will assist global understanding of the virus epidemiology and ecology, the emergence of new variants, their timely identification, and assessment of their public health risks. Continued provision of technical support and guidance from all three levels of the WHO can enable States Parties adjustment of COVID-19 surveillance and its integration into respiratory pathogen surveillance systems.

The Committee acknowledged that COVID-19 vaccination is a key tool to reduce morbidity and mortality and reinforced the importance of vaccination (primary series and booster doses, including through heterologous vaccine schedules). The Committee expressed appreciation for WHO and partners work to enhance global vaccine supply and distribution. Committee members highlighted the challenges posed by limited vaccination protection, particularly in low-income countries, as well as by waning population-level immunity. As outlined in the SAGE roadmap, vaccination should be prioritized for high-risk groups such as health workers, older adults, and immune-compromised populations, refugees, and migrants. To enhance vaccine uptake, States Parties are encouraged to address national and sub-national barriers for vaccine deployment and to ensure COVID-19 response measures align with and strengthen immunization activities and primary health services.

In addition, the Committee noted the continued importance of WHOs provision of guidance, training, and tools to support States Parties recovery planning process from the COVID-19 pandemic and future respiratory pathogen pandemic preparedness planning.

The Committee unanimously agreed that the COVID-19 pandemic still constitutes an extraordinary event that continues to adversely affect the health of populations around the world, poses an ongoing risk of international spread and interference with international traffic, and requires a coordinated international response. The Committee stressed the importance for States Parties to prepare for future scenarios with the assistance of WHO and to continue robust use of the essential tools (e.g. vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics). The Committee concurred that the COVID-19 pandemic remains a PHEIC and offered its advice to the Director-General.

The Director-General determined that the COVID-19 pandemic continues to constitute a PHEIC. He accepted the advice of the Committee and issued the Committees advice to States Parties as Temporary Recommendations under the IHR.

The Emergency Committee will be reconvened within three months or earlier,at the discretion of the Director-General.The Director-General thanked the Committee for its work.

Temporary Recommendations to States Parties

The Committee identified the following actions as critical for all countries:

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Statement on the eleventh meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)...

Hong Kong to ease COVID-19 restrictions as infections fall – ABC News

April 14, 2022

Hong Kong will ease some social distancing measures later this month, allowing people to dine in at restaurants in the evening and lifting restrictions on private gatherings, as the number of COVID-19 infections declined in recent weeks

ByThe Associated Press

April 14, 2022, 7:34 AM

2 min read

HONG KONG -- Hong Kong will ease some social distancing measures later this month, allowing people to dine in at restaurants in the evening and lifting restrictions on private gatherings, as the number of COVID-19 infections declined in recent weeks.

From April 21, restaurants will be able to operate until 10 p.m. with a maximum of four people per table, officials said Thursday.

Other businesses that were ordered to temporarily close due to Hong Kongs fifth wave of infections, such as beauty parlors, gyms, theme parks and cinemas, will also be allowed to re-open, although capacity will be limited to 50%. Bars and pubs will remain closed.

Restrictions that currently only allow two households to gather will also be lifted.

To relax these measures, to allow some degree of normal activities in society, with more interactions among citizens, inevitably they will come with some transmission risks, Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said during a news conference Thursday.

Lam appealed to the public to comply with the social distancing measures that remain in place and to get vaccinated.

While the number of positive cases reported every day has dropped to a relatively low level, in absolute terms they are still rather high, she said.

The city reported 1,260 cases in the community on Wednesday, down more than 95% from the peak of the outbreak in March, when over 30,000 daily infections were reported.

Lam said the city is now much, much better prepared to handle another wave if it hits, due to increased levels of vaccination and more facilities to handle patients, such as community isolation and treatment centers.

Lam also said the government has not given up on mass testing for the city, but that timing was important.

Other restrictions will be also lifted later this month. Local tours will be allowed to resume and public gatherings of four people instead of two will also be permitted.

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Hong Kong to ease COVID-19 restrictions as infections fall - ABC News

Gwen Moore has tested positive for COVID-19. Earlier in the day, she attended Cavalier Johnson’s inauguration. – Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

April 14, 2022

U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore announced late Wednesdaythat she has tested positive for COVID-19.

Earlier in the day, Moore attended and spoke at Mayor Cavalier Johnson's inauguration.

"Today, I was experiencing very mild symptoms associated with COVID-19. I got tested as a precaution and tested positive for COVID-19,"Moore said in a statement.

Johnson's swearing-in at the Harley-Davidson Museum was attended by manyof the state's highest-ranking Democrats, including Gov. Tony Evers, U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes and Milwaukee County Executive David Crowley.

Moore previously tested positive in December 2020.In January 2021, she announced she was cleared to return to work after six days.

Her positive test joins agrowing list of Washington officials who are testing positive for COVID-19.The House was in session last week but house membersare under a home district work schedulethis week, according to itsschedule.

Moore is vaccinated and said she is quarantining.

"I am following guidance from my doctors and quarantining. Please remain vigilant against COVID-19 by wearing a mask, getting vaccinated, and practicing social distancing when possible," she said.

Contact Drake Bentley at (414) 391-5647 orDBentley1@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DrakeBentleyMJS.

Our subscribers make this reporting possible. Please consider supporting local journalism by subscribing to the Journal Sentinel at jsonline.com/deal.

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Gwen Moore has tested positive for COVID-19. Earlier in the day, she attended Cavalier Johnson's inauguration. - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Covid-19 Related Inflation Surpasses 40 Year Record: How Long Will It Persist? – Forbes

April 14, 2022

Burning US five and one dollar bills, London, 8th August 2011. (Photo by Tom Stoddart/Getty Images)

The Bureau of Labor Statistics released its monthly inflation report this week showing a jump in year-over-year CPI at 8.56%. You must go back over 40 years to December 1981 to find a higher reading. Whats the cause? Whos to blame? Is it President Biden? Is it the Federal Reserve? Is it government spending? Is it Covid? More importantly, how can we get inflation down to a more normal level? Some expect inflation will normalize in the coming months. I believe inflation will persist for a while. Heres why.

Inflation is caused when demand exceeds supply. In other words, when there is too much money chasing too few goods and services, prices rise. Its really that simple. Lets go a bit deeper.

Supply: The pandemic caused the greatest supply-chain disruption of the modern era. Businesses rely on its workers to produce. When workers are in short supply, production falls, reducing supply. Thats precisely what happened. From acquiring the needed materials to processing them for production, to shipping them to distribution centers to transporting goods to the retail outlet, to staffing the retail outlet, the pandemic has caused a major disruption. Thus, supply has declined substantially due to Covid-19. Moreover, some locations are experiencing yet another wave of Covid cases. Remember, supply is not just a U.S. issue, its a world-wide issue.

Demand: At the onset of the pandemic, the U.S. government, in an effort to prop up the economy, passed several pieces of legislation, resulting in a great deal of money in the hands of consumers and businesses. Generous unemployment benefits paid low-wage workers more money than they earned when working. Congress also sent direct payments to families. For example, the child tax credit paid $300 per month for each child under age 6, and $250 per month for each child 6-17 years old. This expired at the end of 2021. Government support led to the shortest recession in U.S. history, lasting only two months.

Politicians learned a great lesson during this period. I noticed republicans adopted part of the democrats play book. Democrats are largely perceived as the party of the worker. In the past, democrats sought to put money in the hands of citizens through social programs. Republicans have been more focused on businesses. Why? If business is strong, theyll hire workers. This time, however, republicans put a great deal of money directly in the hands of consumers. Its likely politicians will continue to spend excessively, and record budget deficits will become the new normal.

As mentioned, inflation rose by 8.56% on a year-over-year basis. Energy prices rose a whopping 32% during the period with gasoline surging 48%. Prices for used cars and trucks rose 35.3% but showed signs of slowing in March. Food inflation was only slightly higher, rising 8.8%. Beef prices rose 16.0% and dairy products increased 7.0% over the previous 12 months.

Inflation in the Southern region of the U.S. rose 9.1%; compared to the West (8.7%); Midwest (8.6%); and the Northeast (7.3%). The Mountain region experienced the worst rise at 10.4%.

How do we get inflation back to 2.0% or less? This problem will not be fixed by a single entity. It will need coordination between the Federal Reserve and the federal government. Heres why.

The Federal Reserve is responsible for monetary policy. Its tools include changing short-term interest rates, the money supply, and bank reserve requirements. Thus, the Fed can reduce demand by raising its fed funds rate, reducing the money supply, and increasing bank reserve requirements. While these will reduce demand, the fed has often started too late and gone too far. In fact, the fed is considered a primary cause of many U.S. recessions. Some believe the fed is behind the curve today. The fed is only now beginning a series of rate hikes and will begin removing billions each month from the economy. Thus, the fed is changing its stance from an easy monetary policy to a tightening policy. While this will certainly reduce demand, will it reduce it too much? What about the federal governments role in this mission?

The U.S. government is responsible for fiscal policy, which includes spending, taxation, and transfer payments such as Social Security. Government spending is at an all-time high topping $6.8 trillion during fiscal year ending September 30, 2021. Federal receipts are also at an all-time high exceeding $4.0 trillion during the same period. Unfortunately, that leaves the second largest deficit in U.S. history at more than $2.7 trillion (the worst was a year earlier at over $3.1 trillion) and a public debt exceeding $29 trillion. Excessive spending is inflationary while raising taxes will slow demand. Yes, these conflict with each other as one serves to increase demand while the other reduces it. This is why I suggest coordination between the federal government and the Federal Reserve is needed, but I dont expect it. Why? Because the fed seeks to remove itself from politics and the federal government leads with politics. Therefore, the two opposing forces will not work together, and politicians will continue to spend as much as they can to secure their place in government.

So, whos to blame for the surge in inflation? While the federal government and the fed are culpable, Covid-19 is the unknown variable. We do not know when the pandemic will subside to the point where workers are no longer concerned with contracting the virus. In the meantime, the government will expand spending and raise taxes (at some point) while the fed will tighten. Both will have an effect on demand. Hence, it depends on Covid-19. And this unknown variable plus the lack of coordination between the Federal Reserve and the federal government makes it impossible to accurately predict when inflation will normalize.

Stay tuned.

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Covid-19 Related Inflation Surpasses 40 Year Record: How Long Will It Persist? - Forbes

The next Covid-19 wave will test the CDCs latest guidelines – Vox.com

April 14, 2022

In late February, the CDC made big changes to its recommendations for monitoring and responding to Covid-19 surges. Now, as US cases are once more on the rise, these recommendations face their first test. But how will we know if they are working?

The CDC used to prioritize cases and positive tests to determine the Covid-19 threat level. Starting in February, the agency placed more weight on hospitalizations. The move invited a lot of scrutiny, and it reflected changes in the CDCs pandemic response goals: The agency is moving away from trying to eliminate transmission of the virus and toward reducing deaths and health care system strain.

The hard truth, several public health experts tell Vox, is that determining whether they are effective will be difficult.

Even in the best-case scenario, where institutions follow the guidelines and the latest wave recedes, it would be hard to prove that the CDCs framework deserves the credit.

Well certainly know if it fails, said Jeremy Faust, an emergency doctor and health policy expert in Boston. The guidelines face the same challenges many public health initiatives do: Failures are easier to spot than successes.

As a new wave begins, its worth setting some expectations about what these guidelines can reasonably do, and how easy or hard it will be to measure their success. Ultimately, we might never know how well the guidelines work and even if they do work, the CDC might not get any credit.

For the first two years of the pandemic, there were two main metrics for determining the pandemics severity: case counts and test positivity.

Case counts were determined by summing up the positive results of PCR tests conducted in a given time period. And test positivity was determined by calculating the percentage of positive PCR tests. Together, these provided a rough, real-time picture of the Covid-19 threat, which public health agencies and institutions used to guide rollouts of testing programs, mask and vaccine requirements, and other public health measures.

For as long as PCR testing remained vastly more accessible than home-based testing, this approach made sense. However, at-home tests became more widely available over the latter half of 2021; because reporting those tests results is not mandatory the way reporting PCR test results is, PCR results have become increasingly unrepresentative of the actual state of play.

The proliferation of home tests rendered the CDCs key metrics almost functionally meaningless, said Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist and pandemic preparedness expert at Brown Universitys public health school. And so, Nuzzo explained, the CDC needed to find a new method for taking the temperature of the pandemic in real time.

The February guidelines did just that, introducing a new way of estimating each countys Covid-19 burden. The calculation is still partially based on the rate of new cases over the past week, but now it is based largely on the number of new hospital admissions due to Covid-19 and the percent of hospital beds occupied by Covid-19 patients. From this, the CDC assigns each county a low, medium, or high level of burden.

For each level, the guidelines offer a set of recommendations for institutions and public health departments, and a separate one for individuals. The specifics of the recommendations range from ensuring testing and vaccine access on the low end to calling in backup health care staff on the high end.

Some people balked at the change, in part because hospitalizations are a lagging indicator of transmission intensity, rising one to two weeks after cases increase. However, the model used to create the guidelines accounted for that lag and deliberately set hospitalization thresholds at a level to allow institutions a few weeks to prepare for a rise in deaths.

The new framework also reflected a change in the CDCs pandemic goals. No longer would the agency focus on eliminating transmission; instead, it would aim to prevent severe illness and death, minimize the burden on the health care system, and protect vulnerable people by using vaccines, therapeutics, and prevention strategies. The new estimates would help accomplish this by focusing on metrics that actually quantified the main indicators of health care system strain and setting the alarms to go off early enough to let public health authorities act.

Many public health experts felt the shifts were necessary, and organizations representing state, local, and county health officials reported broad support for the changes among their membership.

A focus on hospitalizations makes a lot of sense right now, said Justin Lessler, an epidemiology professor at the University of North Carolinas public health school. He expects that with increasing population immunity, each waves severity will likely decrease, making case numbers less relevant. As case numbers do an increasingly bad job of predicting hospitalizations and deaths, theres just less incentive to focus on them.

Wed love to prevent infections, but thats the hardest game of whack-a-mole, said Nuzzo. However, she said, we can prevent severe illness and death, and we can prevent our hospitals from becoming overwhelmed, and that is absolutely critical.

At the moment, the CDCs US outbreak severity map shows most counties in green, indicating they have a low community burden of infections.

But within the last month, a handful of counties have changed color to yellow or orange, indicating medium or high Covid-19 levels. Those color changes are intended to provoke public health authorities to make changes, like ramping up testing programs for asymptomatic people and restricting visitation in high-risk settings like nursing homes and prisons. Mask requirements are also on the menu, Nuzzo said.

The timing here is key: The color change is intended to happen early enough to provoke policy changes in time to prevent hospital bed shortages.

Here, we could see clear signs if the guidelines were failing.

If a county goes from green to orange, there should be time to flatten the curve before theres a big strain on resources. If we see hospitals overflowing and the CDCs mask thresholds had not been met, that would be straightforward, incontrovertible proof that [the guidelines] failed to achieve the objective, said Faust.

Other red flags would include signs that state and local public health authorities and policymakers are not using the metrics to make decisions. That could suggest a number of problems, including a lack of health department resources, burnout among key personnel, a lack of trust in the CDCs methods, or insufficient political will to follow the metrics and implement the changes the guidelines suggest.

After all, while the CDCs guidelines are authoritative, they are not requirements; ultimately, state and local governments can do what they want.

Its not the metrics, necessarily, that I think are the thing to test, but its how we choose to respond to a change in the metrics, said Nuzzo. Thats the wild card.

To determine whether the guidelines are doing their job, we first need to define what it would mean for them to be successful and thats currently an open question, said Lessler.

For the CDCs recommendations to be successful, state and local public health authorities need to use them as the basis for their policy recommendations; policymakers need to act on those recommendations; people and institutions need to follow those recommendations; and the recommendations need to have the desired effect of reducing transmission and increasing access to vaccination and treatment.

But just knowing where the guidelines are being implemented and where they are not is a challenge due to the decentralization of our public health system. Although Covid-19 policy trackers exist, differences in the particulars and the enforcement of different policies impede connecting the dots between mitigation efforts and outcomes. There are 3,006 counties in the US, and its hard to keep track of the policies in place in all of them.

One of the arguments for a diverse public health system is it becomes a laboratory, said Lessler, but thats only true if theres some sort of central tracking and good reporting of whats actually being trialed. In a sense, the CDCs new guidelines are an experiment in which results cannot be compiled in one place.

Another complication in evaluating the success of the guidelines is that individuals nationwide do what they think makes the most sense for themselves, regardless of local policy. Thats not necessarily a sign of anarchy. The CDCs guidelines actually recommend that people use the agencys suggested metrics to guide individual choices.

However, individual action tends to happen late in a surge, only when things are obviously really bad, said Joshua Salomon, a health policy professor at Stanford University. For example, people in a county where hospitals are overflowing might choose to wear masks even if their governor has forbidden mask mandates. Individual actions like this happening at a large scale change the outcomes, making it even more challenging to link those outcomes with policies.

Theres another major challenge to evaluating the new guidelines: If the burgeoning BA.2 omicron subvariant wave of Covid-19 is small, the guidelines may not face a big test at all.

Cases have been rising in the US, and hospitalizations are now rising in several northeastern states, albeit far more slowly than during the explosive wintertime omicron BA.1 wave. The sluggishness of BA.2s spread (so far) may be attributable to the large number of people who have retained some immunity following infection during that earlier wave.

If BA.2 does not end up producing a large surge of infections in the US, that will be a welcome surprise, said Salomon, but it wont necessarily be validation of the new community guidance. Our health care system cant be threatened and the CDC guidelines cant be tested by a surge that doesnt happen.

Of course, a big test might be just over the horizon if a variant worse than BA.2 comes into play.

Even if the CDCs guidelines help prevent disastrous outcomes, people may see the absence of catastrophe as evidence that the guidelines were unnecessary, not as evidence that they worked. Those situations are just as confusing as when people credit public health policies for good outcomes that wouldve happened anyway.

If the CDC throws a mask mandate on and if things appear to get better, even then that will be correlation, not causation, said Faust. Itll be really hard to tease out.

Originally posted here:

The next Covid-19 wave will test the CDCs latest guidelines - Vox.com

Students React to Changing 2022-23 COVID-19 Policy – Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

April 14, 2022

On April 7, Provost Michael Kotlikoff, Vice President for Student and Campus Life Ryan Lombardi and Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer Mary Opperman addressed the Cornell community in an email providing updates regarding the new COVID-19 booster shot, surveillance testing policies and vaccination requirements for the 2022-2023 academic year.

According to the email, the University will continue to require that all Cornell students and employees be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 unless they have received a valid exemption.

The decision has received support from students like Shannon Brewi 24, who sees vaccination as a public health necessity

All students should be vaccinated against COVID-19 because it is a group effort to protect each other from getting sick. I feel safer being at school knowing that my peers and the faculty are all vaccinated, Brewi said.

Ariana Ishkanian 24 felt similarly, arguing that the vaccine mandate would return campus to a state of post-pandemic normalcy faster.

With everyone doing their part, classes, clubs and in-person events can get back to normal [pre-covid conditions] faster, allowing for us to have the best and most normal college experience possible, Ishkanian said.

However, the April 7 emails announcement that booster shots will no longer be required for University students and employees has left some students feeling that the University is relaxing its anti-COVID-19 measures too quickly.

Cornell is getting lazy on their policies, Alex Taylor 24 said. This shortcut they are taking is unfortunate because it seems they are ignoring their own science that getting a booster will help people not catch COVID-19 or [not] get severe symptoms if they do catch it.

Alejandro Cuellar 24 said he believes the decision to not require a booster shot in the fall is a temporary measure to avoid backlash as boosters come under attack in the U.S.

I think Cornell not requiring the booster allows them to avoid backlash. However, as time passes, I believe they will require students to have the booster, said Cuellar.

Because some students have increased natural immunity for 90 days after being infected with COVID-19, Talia Dror 25 said she supports booster shots not being required so that students can use up their 90 days of immunity before getting the booster shot in order to have the greatest amount of time with increased immunity.

Since Feb. 21, fully vaccinated students have not been required to undergo weekly COVID-19 testing. Cornell administrators said in their April 7 email that the University will continue to offer COVID-19 tests for those who want them, and will allow students to opt into weekly surveillance testing.

The April 7 email also explained that the University will be making significant changes to surveillance testing procedures. As of April 11, unvaccinated students and employees working or taking classes on campus will only have to participate in surveillance testing once per week, and fully vaccinated individuals who did not get a booster shot will no longer be required to undergo weekly testing.

Jing Su 24 said she supports this policy as a way to reduce stress on students.

Having students test more than once a week could disrupt their education and remove focus from school, Su said.

While Sagal Mohamud 23 said she enjoys not having to get tested since the requirements were lifted for fully vaccinated and boosted students, she feels that the lack of testing is a bad policy.

Cornell is giving up on its students health and safety, Mohamud said. I know we have been in a pandemic for the past 2 years and learned to live with this virus but as you can see before spring break we still have flare-ups and outbreaks so implementing the booster or testing once a week can maybe stabilize cases.

But as restrictions fall and Cornell begins to once again resemble what it did before the pandemic, Alexandra Yiachos 24 said she is happy.

I think its great that Cornell is beginning to resemble a normal college experience and that students can interact in meaningful ways, said Yiachos.

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Students React to Changing 2022-23 COVID-19 Policy - Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

New COVID-19 cases climb as Maine moves to end routine testing in schools – Press Herald

April 14, 2022

The number of new COVID-19 cases in Maine jumped Wednesday to the highest level in nearly six weeks as the latest version of coronavirus, omicron BA.2, raises infection rates across the Northeast.

Meanwhile, the Mills administration announced Wednesday that Maine schools will stop conducting pooled testing for the virus on May 13, in part because the BA.2 is so contagious that weekly tests are no longer as effective at keeping the virus out of schools. The administration said free at-home test kits, which it is providing to schools, are a better tool to prevent the virus from spreading among students and staff.

Maine reported 605 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, the highest one-day total since March 4. The spike pushed up the seven-day average from about 200 cases a day to 255. The state also reported seven additional deaths.

The jump in new cases follows a slow rise in Maines case counts over the past two weeks.

Dr. Nirav Shah, Maine director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, noted the overall upward trends in COVID-19 cases in a series of tweets Tuesday, although he also pointed out that hospitalizations have not increased by as much. Shah said the increases are being driven by the more contagious BA.2 omicron subvariant.

What does all this mean? COVID is not over, though, as of now, it is not coming back with the same force as, say, BA.1 did in January, Shah said.

The number of patients hospitalized in Maine with COVID-19 dropped to 94 on Wednesday from 103 on Tuesday. There were 20 patients in critical care and four on ventilators.

Maine hospitalizations hovered below 100 for most of the past three weeks after a steep drop from a peak of 436 patients on Jan. 13. Hospitalization counts also have remained stable in other Northeast states despite the rise in daily case counts.

New cases have begun rising nationwide, with the Northeast recording the most significant spike.

Maine has the fifth highest infection rate in the United States, with 142 cases per 100,000 residents over the past seven days, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The national infection rate is 64.3 cases per 100,000 people.

Infection rates in Maine range from 261 cases per 100,000 people in Aroostook County to 77.5 in Piscataquis County. Cumberland Countys infection rate is 123.73 cases per 100,000 and York County has a rate of 114.6 cases per 100,000, according to the federal data.

The U.S. CDC data was last updated Tuesday and does not account for the jump in cases Maine recorded Wednesday. Washington, D.C., Rhode Island, New York and Massachusetts had the four highest infection rates.

On Tuesday, Philadelphia became the first major city in the United States to reinstate a mask mandate amid rising case numbers. Starting Monday, masks will again be required in indoor spaces in the city.

A number of institutes of higher education including Columbia University in New York and American University and Georgetown University in Washington D.C. have also reinstated mask mandates.

But in Maine, the state is dropping one of its key strategies for reducing the spread of COVID in schools. The state plans to end pooled testing on May 13, the state Department of Health and Human Services announced Wednesday.

The department said pooled testing is significantly less effective with the extremely contagious BA.2 variantthan it was with previous variants

Since May 2021 the state has funneled money to schools to test groups of students and staff for Covid. The federally funded program has cost an average of almost $2.5 million per month. A positive result in the group tests is followed by tests of individuals to find out who is infected. The surveillance testing has been used to identify infected individuals who dont have symptoms before they can pass it along to others.

But the time between contracting BA.2 and showing symptoms is estimated to be much shorter than it was with previous variants only 1.2 to 1.4 days, according to DHHS. And it usually takes longer than that around two days according to DHHS to get results from the PCR tests used for pool testing, defeating the purpose of the surveillance testing. Incubation periods for earlier strains of COVID have ranged between two to 14 days.

Because the BA.2 variant is significantly more contagious than previous strains of the virus and given the longer time period to receive PCR results, the likelihood of detecting, identifying, and isolating an individual with COVID-19 through pooled testing before that individual has spread the virus to others is now significantly lower, said DHHS.

To replace pooled testing, DHHS and the Department of Education will make 1.1 million at-home rapid test kits available to all K-12 schools in the state, enough to provide every student and school staff member one test kit with five to six tests. Rapid test results can come back in a matter of minutes. The department announced its plan to offer these free COVID tests to schools last week.

Schools can place orders for at-home tests up until Friday. DHHS said it will start shipping the kits to schools the week of April 25, and they may take a few weeks to arrive.

Xavier Botana, superintendent for Portland Public Schools, said he wants to learn more about why pooled testing is no longer an effective COVID mitigation strategy before calling off the program. However, at a Tuesday night school board meeting Botana noted that the school district has always followed the science when making decisions about COVID protocols and will continue to do so.

The Maine CDC also announced Wednesday it had overstated the number of Maine residents who were fully vaccinated by nearly 33,000.

The agency said some clinics misreported doses that had been used for second booster shots as the final doses of initial vaccinations. As a result, the number of people fully vaccinated was reduced from more than 1 million back to 996,919, or 74 percent of the Maine population.

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New COVID-19 cases climb as Maine moves to end routine testing in schools - Press Herald

COVID-19 vaccines will not be required for entry in Washington schools – wenatcheeworld.com

April 14, 2022

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COVID-19 update: Considerations and recommendations as we move into spring – Public Health Insider

April 14, 2022

With cases slowly but steadily rising over the past month in our region, were taking a closer look at what we know about the state of the pandemic locally. The bottom line is that although ongoing ups and downs in COVID-19 activity are likely, its best not to become infected and there are effective ways to reduce our risk.

Heres a brief look at the current COVID-19 situation in King County and recommended strategies for anyone who wants to reduce their risk for COVID-19 and long COVID, especially people at higher risk for severe infection.

Cases

Cases are rising slowly but steadily over the past month. In our region, the Omicron surge rose rapidly in December and peaked in early January. A steep decline followed, hitting a low point in mid-March. Since that time, cases have started to rise again more slowly, but are much lower than the peak we saw in January.

To put our current number of cases in perspective, at the peak of the Omicron surge, we were seeing an average of 6,500 new cases reported daily.

Currently, were seeing an average of 484 new cases each day. Thats about three times the number of cases reported at the low point we experienced a month ago, but 7% of the number at the Omicron peak.

Our current case rate is very likely an undercount of the actual level of infection in our community right now. While reported case numbers have always represented a fraction of cases in the community, the current data may be more of an underestimate at this stage in the pandemic as more rapid at-home tests are used and not often reported.

Hospitalizations and deaths

Deaths and hospitalizations currently are comparable to the lowest levels weve seen during the pandemic.

Since the low point of mid-March, hospitalizations remain low and comparable to pre-Delta surge in June 2021. When there are small numbers, percentage increases may look large, so its important to look at the actual numbers of hospitalizations, which have been stable over the past month at 4-6 hospitalizations daily.

Although our current case and hospitalization numbers put King County in the LOW COVID Community level, its important to be aware of increasing COVID-19 trends locally and take steps now to prevent further increases and reduce cases as much as possible, without adding any new mandates or restrictions on our activities. (Note that there may be differences at any given time in how CDC reports the COVID-19 Communtiy Level compared to our local data.)

A key reason there are currently fewer hospitalizations and deaths than previously in the pandemic is because so many King County residents have been vaccinated and boosted.

There is also some additional protection from immunity after recent infections that happened during the Omicron surge.

People who remain at highest risk are those who are unvaccinated or not boosted, people who have weakened immune systems or other underlying high-risk health conditions, and older adults. Learn about the best vaccine schedule for you if you are high risk or underlying health conditions.

People who are eligible for a booster but have not received it are at higher risk for infection, hospitalization and death when cases rise. And booster dose uptake in King County differs by race and ethnicity, age, and neighborhood.

We could see a rise in cases that could last for several weeks, and although I dont expect the extent of the rise or the number of associated hospitalizations and deaths to be as severe as our recent wintertime Omicron surge, if cases do surge, we could see a rise in hospitalizations and deaths among the vulnerable. We are especially concerned about low booster rates and disparities in booster coverage by race/ethnicity. Low booster coverage could lead to perpetuating the disproportionate impact the COVID-19 pandemic has already had on some communities of color. We continue to work with our teams to conduct outreach to communities that have not yet been boosted.

Systemic and structural inequities shape who first has access to vaccines and who has more barriers to getting vaccinated. To address these inequities, Public Health Seattle & King County set goals to provide equitable access to vaccine by focusing on communities that are at highest risk for COVID, live in areas that have had the most cases and face the most barriers to vaccination. Partnerships with community and outreach have been instrumental in increasing vaccination.

Long COVID (also called post-COVID conditions) is a complication of COVID-19 infection that has been reported to occur in 10-30% of cases, more often in severe cases, but also can occur in less severe and even mild cases. Vaccination decreases the risk for developing long COVID.

There is much we dont know about long COVID, including how best to diagnose and treat it. Many people recover after several weeks to months. However, even among young, healthy people, long COVID can be serious and longer lasting, affecting the brain and nervous system, heart, lungs, and other organs; COVID-19 can also increase the risk for developing diabetes. Difficulty thinking, weakness and other symptoms can make it difficult or impossible to work or do other activities of daily living.

To decrease your risk for COVID-19, including long COVID, proven prevention strategies can make a big difference.

The following strategies are recommended. These strategies should be used in combination and are especially important for people at high risk for severe COVID-19, people who are in contact with people at high risk, and anyone who wants to reduce their risk for COVID-19.

While we cant predict the future course of the pandemic, including whether or how much cases will continue to rise or when they may fall, we know preventing cases through layered prevention strategies can help individuals stay safe and healthy and decrease the risk for surges.

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Originally published April 12, 2022.

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COVID-19 update: Considerations and recommendations as we move into spring - Public Health Insider

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