Category: Covid-19

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3 members of K-pop sensation BTS diagnosed with Covid-19 – CNBC

December 26, 2021

Boy band BTS is seen at Incheon International Airport on November 17, 2021 in South Korea.

Han Myung-Gu | GC Images | Getty Images

Three members of the K-pop superstar group BTS have been infected with the coronavirus after returning from abroad, their management agency said.

RM and Jin were diagnosed with Covid-19 on Saturday evening, the Big Hit Music agency said in a statement. It earlier said another member, Suga, tested positive for the virus on Friday.

All three took their second jabs in August, the agency said.

BTS is a seven-member boyband. The four other members are J-Hope, Jungkook, V and Jimin.

According to the agency, RM has exhibited no particular symptoms while Jin is showing mild symptoms including light fever and is undergoing self-treatment at home. The agency said Friday that Suga wasn't exhibiting symptoms and was administering self-care at home in accordance with the guidelines of the health authorities.

RM had tested negative after returning from the United States earlier this month following his personal schedule there. But he was later diagnosed with the virus ahead of his scheduled release from self-quarantine, the agency said.

After returning to South Korea this month, Jin underwent PCR tests twice upon arrival and later before his release from self-quarantine and tested negative both times. But he had flu-like symptoms on Saturday afternoon before he took another PCR test that came back positive, the agency said. Media reports said he also had traveled to the U.S.

Suga, who has had a number of personal engagements in the United States during the band's official time off, was diagnosed with Covid-19 during quarantine after returning from the U.S., the agency said.

The agency said it'll continue to provide support for the three members for their speedy recovery. It said it will cooperate with the requests and guidelines of the South Korean health authorities.

Since their debut in 2013, BTS has garnered global recognition for their self-produced music and activism, which includes giving a speech at the United Nations and publicly calling out anti-Asian racism.

BTS was named artist of the year and favorite pop duo or group, and also won the favorite pop song award for "Butter" at the American Music Awards in November. In October, the group's collaboration with British rock band Coldplay, "My Universe," hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. It was BTS' sixth Hot 100 No. 1.

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3 members of K-pop sensation BTS diagnosed with Covid-19 - CNBC

France reports more than 100000 COVID-19 infections for first time – Reuters

December 26, 2021

People wearing face masks walk in Nantes amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in France, December 9, 2021. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe

PARIS, Dec 25 (Reuters) - France recorded a record high of 104,611 COVID-19 infections on Saturday, breaking the 100,000 threshold for the first time since the pandemic began as the omicron variant continued its rapid spread.

Health authorities said the number of COVID patients in intensive care went up by 28 to 3,282.

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Reporting by Jean-Michel Belot; Editing by Richard Lough

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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France reports more than 100000 COVID-19 infections for first time - Reuters

Frank Reich on Colts’ COVID-19 outbreak: ‘It can be any minute for anybody’ – IndyStar

December 26, 2021

GLENDALE, Ariz. The first text message that hit Frank Reichs phone on Christmas morning seemed like good news.

A Colts team that had been losing starters for three consecutive days due to positive COVID-19 tests initially had a clear report on game day.

And then all of a sudden, we werent good, Reich said.

The second text message hit hard. Indianapolis was forced to put All-Pro linebacker Darius Leonard, wide receiver Zach Pascal and strong safety Khari Willis on the reserve/COVID-19 list, the same place the Colts put All-Pro guard Quenton Nelson, guard Mark Glowinski, cornerback Rock Ya-Sin, defensive end Kemoko Turay and practice squad tight end Farrod Green earlier this week.

An Indianapolis franchise that had avoided a major COVID-19 outbreak for the better part of two seasons suddenly has one on its hands.

It can be any minute for anybody, Reich said. Well be ready for whatever we have to do, and well hope for the best, but every teams going through it. Every team has the same thing. Thats why nobody was making a big deal about it. Just look around the league. Its going all over the place. Were just going to have to play the hand were dealt and find ways to go win games.

Reich is right that the virus is wreaking havoc on the NFL during the stretch run to the playoffs.

The Colts are now the 15th team, out of 32, to put at least seven players on the reserve/COVID-19 list since Dec. 8, in large part, the NFL believes, because of the presence of the omicron variant. Three games were postponed last week because of roster issues stemming from spread within a team building. In that sense, Indianapolis is facing something the rest of the NFL is facing right now.

Its tough, especially with both sides, the NFC and the AFC, the playoff race is close, Colts defensive tackle DeForest Buckner said. I just feel like the teams that can handle the COVID-19 situation are going to be the ones that are going to be able to pull out and get into the playoffs. … You saw us today. We had key players out. Its all about your depth.

An outbreak could be more costly to the Colts because the team is one of the least vaccinated teams in the NFL. Under the leagues modified rules, an unvaccinated player who tests positive must sit out 10 days before returning to the team; vaccinated players may return to the team if they post two negative tests 24 hours apart, or if the viral load in their system gets below a certain threshold. Colts linebacker Zaire Franklin tested positive on Monday last week, then was cleared in time to play against the Patriots without missing a game.

Depending on the date of the positive test, unvaccinated players can miss up to two games. Leonard, for example, missed Saturday nights 22-16 win over Arizona and will reportedly miss next weeks game against the Raiders because of his positive test, regardless of symptoms.

When the news came down that the Colts had lost three more starters, Indianapolis had to scramble at all levels, from coaching staffs editing their playing rotations and packages to players trying to get their teammates ready to play a completely different role.

We had seven, eight hours to get guys ready, wide receiver T.Y. Hilton said.

Indianapolis, like all teams, had to make adjustments on the fly, and likely will have to make adjustments on the fly the rest of the way. The three Colts placed on the Reserve/COVID-19 list Saturday morning were already in Arizona; Indianapolis must make separate arrangements for them to get home, away from the team.

As many players as the Colts were missing Saturday night, Indianapolis has avoided the toughest task teams have been forced to navigate in recent weeks: An outbreak in the quarterback room.

A handful of teams have already been forced to start their third option or an emergency option, the ultimate task to overcome. Colts starting quarterback Carson Wentz is unvaccinated, and although Indianapolis currently has four quarterbacks in the building, the three backups rookie Sam Ehlinger, veteran journeyman Brett Hundley and practice squad quarterback James Morgan are not established quarterbacks in the NFL.

Whatever happens, the Colts are resolved to deal with absences in one way.

Everyone going out there today has practiced every one of those plays a million times, Reich told his team on Saturday. Theres no excuses, theres no explanations. … Lets just go perform.

The Indianapolis depth held on Christmas night against Arizona, and the Colts now find themselves likely needing to win just one of their two remaining games to lock up a playoff spot. If the teams COVID-19 outbreak continues and depletes the Colts again, Indianapolis will have to lean on its depth to finish what the Colts have started.

Obviously, a special shout-out to Chris Ballard, Reich said. We gave him a game ball in there, because when you get on a day like this, and you need everybody on the roster, you thank the man who put it together.

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Frank Reich on Colts' COVID-19 outbreak: 'It can be any minute for anybody' - IndyStar

Cruises are once again facing disruption because of Covid-19 – CNN

December 26, 2021

(CNN) At least four ocean cruise ships were turned away from ports of call or were prohibited from letting passengers disembark in the Americas this week because of Covid-19 cases aboard.

The recent cruise-ship disruptions include:

A "small number of fully vaccinated crew" tested positive and all showed either mild or no symptoms, Holland America Line told CNN.

The Koningsdam.

Alfredo Martinez/Getty Images

Jalisco health authorities initially were going to allow people testing negative to disembark. However, they changed their mind, citing an "exponential growth of confirmed cases in the crew" by Thursday, the department said. Only one crew member had tested positive less than a week earlier, the department said.

The ship, which departed San Diego on December 19 with more than 1,000 passengers and more than 870 crew members, visited Cabo San Lucas and Mazatln before it arrived in Puerto Vallarta. It is due to return to San Diego as scheduled on Sunday.

Holland America Line, like the other cruise companies in this story, requires passengers and crew to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19, with some exceptions for children.

However, the company lined up a replacement stop Friday in the Dominican Republic.

The ship will return to Miami as planned on Sunday, the cruise line said.

The Royal Caribbean Odyssey of The Seas.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Curacao health officials decided the percentage of people aboard who tested positive was too high for the nation to allow the ship to dock, the Curacao Chronicle reported.

The ship is due to return to Florida's Fort Lauderdale as planned on Sunday.

According to Royal Caribbean, the ship can accommodate up to 5,550 guests plus 1,600 crew members. It wasn't clear whether the ship was fully occupied.

The Seven Seas Mariner.

Manfred Segerer/ullstein bild/Getty Images

The disruptions so far have affected a small fraction of operating cruise ships

Positive Covid-19 tests aboard cruise ships aren't unique to this month -- they have happened other times since cruises resumed departures from US shores this summer.

In August, for instance, 27 people tested positive aboard a Carnival cruise ship before it called on a port in Belize City.

Now, the spread of the Omicron variant "may shape how some destination authorities view even a small number of cases, even when they are being managed with our vigorous protocols," Carnival spokesperson AnneMarie Mathews told CNN Friday in a prepared statement.

"Some destinations have limited medical resources and are focused on managing their own local response to the variant," Mathews added.

"Should it be necessary to cancel a port, we will do our best to find an alternative destination," Mathews said.

Health and safety protocols

The companies recommend booster shots for their passengers. Holland America Line says its crew members receive boosters as soon as they are eligible.

Cruise companies generally require their passengers to test negative for Covid-19 before starting the trip, and require frequent testing of their crews.

Passengers testing positive during the trip generally are required to isolate

CNN's Francesca Street, Melissa Alonso, Aya Elamroussi, Carma Hassan, Hira Humayun, Stefano Pozzebon, Valentina DiDonato and Sharif Paget contributed to this report.

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Cruises are once again facing disruption because of Covid-19 - CNN

US Navy warship sidelined with COVID-19 outbreak – Portland Press Herald – pressherald.com

December 26, 2021

WASHINGTON A U.S. Navy warship has paused its deployment to South America because of a coronavirus outbreak, the Navy said Friday.

The USS Milwaukee, a litorral combat ship, is staying in port at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, where it had stopped for a scheduled port visit. It began its deployment from Mayport, Fla., on December 14 and was heading into the U.S. Southern Command region.

The Navy said in a statement that the ships crew is 100% immunized and that all of those who tested positive for COVID-19 have been isolated on the ship away from other crew members. The number of crew testing positive was not disclosed. The ship has a crew of a little more than 100.

The Navy said that a portion of those infected are having mild symptoms, and that the specific variant is not yet known. COVID-19 cases have surged across the country as a result of the highly contagious omicron variant.

The ship is following an aggressive mitigation strategy in accordance with Navy and CDC guidelines, the Navy said.

The first major military outbreak of the virus was early last year on a Navy warship, the USS Theodore Roosevelt, an aircraft carrier that was operating in the Pacific. The Roosevelt was sidelined in Guam for nearly two months, and more than 1,000 of the 4,800 crew members tested positive. One sailor died, and the entire crew went through weeks of quarantine in a rotation that kept enough sailors on the ship to keep it safe and running.

According to the latest data released by the Navy, more than 98 percent of all active duty sailors have been fully vaccinated.

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US Navy warship sidelined with COVID-19 outbreak - Portland Press Herald - pressherald.com

Bills activate LT Dion Dawkins off the Reserve/COVID-19 list – WKBW-TV

December 26, 2021

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) The Buffalo Bills announced on Saturday that left tackle Dion Dawkins had been activated from the Reserve/COVID-19 list. He had been on the list since last Friday, and previously battled the virus prior to the start of the season.

The Bills also announced two other moves along the defensive line. Star Lotulelei will not travel with the Bills to Foxboro due to personal reasons. An additional practice squad elevation will be used on Eli Ankou.

Several other players, including fellow offensive linemen Jon Feliciano and Cody Ford, along with wide receivers Cole Beasley and Gabriel Davis, remain on the Reserve/COVID-19 list.

The Bills' upcoming game will be a fight to keep their division title hopes alive. They visit the New England Patriots at 1:00 on Sunday.

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Bills activate LT Dion Dawkins off the Reserve/COVID-19 list - WKBW-TV

India to give COVID-19 booster shots to healthcare workers from Jan. 10 – Reuters India

December 26, 2021

A staff member cleans medical equipment inside a ward that is set up to treat people infected with the Omicron coronavirus variant at the Civil Hospital in Ahmedabad, India, December 6, 2021. REUTERS/Amit Dave

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NEW DELHI, Dec 25 (Reuters) - India will start administering COVID-19 booster shots as a precautionary measure to healthcare and frontline workers from Jan. 10, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Saturday, as cases of the Omicron coronavirus variant rose across the country.

In a national address, Modi also said those aged 15-18 would start receiving COVID-19 vaccinations from Jan. 3 and those above 60 with comorbidities would be offered booster shots after recommendation from doctors.

"From the point of view of precaution, the government has decided that healthcare and frontline workers should start getting a precaution dose," Modi said in the speech.

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India has reported a swift rise in Omicron cases, with the number reaching 415 overall across 17 Indian states.

Modi's government has been accelerating its vaccination campaign, administering at least one dose to 88% of the eligible 944 million population, while 61% have taken both doses.

As millions still await second shots, the authorities will now start offering booster shots to healthcare and frontline workers, who suffered from an overwhelming second-wave of the virus in the summer that killed tens of thousands.

Medical experts have said India needs to double down on its vaccination campaign and expand coverage to avert another possible surge in new infections particularly in the vast hinterlands where healthcare facilities are sparse.

Modi urged citizens to continue to wear facemasks and follow other COVID-19 protocols.

The federal government has urged states to impose curbs on overcrowding in the festive season until the new year and a few states have partially banned public celebrations. read more

COVID-19 infections in the nation of 1.3 billion people has fallen by almost half from a month ago. In the past 24 hours, India reported 7,189 new infections, with an overall tally of 34.78 million, the second-highest globally behind only the United States.

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Reporting by Neha Arora, Rupam Jain and Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing by Edmund Blair

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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India to give COVID-19 booster shots to healthcare workers from Jan. 10 - Reuters India

Flying home after the holidays? Getting vaccinated or boosted is the first step toward safe travel, expert says – CNN

December 26, 2021

Amid a surge of cases nationwide fueled by the Omicron coronavirus variant before the holiday season, parts of the country are reporting increased hospitalizations and deaths. And people need to be prepared for a heightened risk of infection during travel by taking preventative measures, according to Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the school of tropical medicine at Baylor College of Medicine.

"If you've only gotten two doses of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, even though that officially counts as fully vaccinated, we know that its impact on breakthrough symptomatic illness is close to zero," Hotez told CNN's Amara Walker Saturday.

The initial two-dose regiment will still protect "better for serious illness," he said, "but you still need to get boosted, I think, if you want to travel safely."

Millions of Americans who are immunocompromised should delay future travel plans for a few weeks if possible in the hope that the current surge won't span as long as previous ones, Hotez said.

And due to the infectiousness of Omicron, "even if you're boosted, you have to face the possibility that you could get symptomatic breakthrough illness going through airports and going on Ubers," he said.

Dr. Jeremy Faust, an emergency physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, said while there's always a risk to contract the virus while traveling, there are mitigation efforts available.

"So if someone has been exposed in your orbit or in your circle, or has been infected, you don't have to assume everybody has it. Do continue to do things like wearing masks around people or testing," Faust told CNN's Boris Sanchez Saturday.

And for those traveling, Faust advises to look for "the weak links in the chain."

"It's not necessarily the actual airplane itself. It might be the airport line in the bathroom where you need to be extra careful with masks and other mitigation measures," he said. "And I think depending on your threshold, you have to adjust accordingly."

Treatment options narrow for Omicron

And as for fighting Omicron, currently there is one monoclonal antibody treatment that is still expected to be effective against the strain, the US Food and Drug Administration said Thursday in a statement.

It is "unlikely" that the treatment known as REGEN-COV or the combined use of bamlanivimab and etesevimab "will retain activity" against Omicron, according to the statement. That means sotrovimab is the sole monoclonal antibody treatment currently available to fight the Omicron variant.

The Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response has moved to halt allocations of the other monoclonal antibody therapies and that 300,000 additional doses of sotrovimab will be available in January, the agency said.

Minorities are still at higher risk for Covid-19's most severe outcomes

From the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, racial and ethnic minority communities have been bearing the brunt of Covid-19 -- whether through illness, deaths or economic struggles.

Nearly two years on, some of those disparities remain.

The study, which tracked data from more than 14 million hospitalizations in Medicare beneficiaries between January 2019 and February 2021, found a decline in non-Covid-19-related hospitalizations and an increase in Covid-19-related hospitalizations across the board.

But "the average rate of Black and Hispanic Covid-19 hospitalizations exceeded that of White beneficiaries through February 2021," researchers wrote.

"Beneficiaries hospitalized with Covid-19 were more likely to be from racial and ethnic minority groups relative to hospitalized beneficiaries prepandemic," they also noted.

The "persistently widened disparity" in non-Covid-19 mortality may be connected to factors including differences in access to Covid-19 testing, access to care and changes in case mix and care quality related to pandemic factors, the authors wrote.

For Covid-19 hospitalizations, mortality was not "significantly different" for Black patients when compared to White patients, but mortality rose 3.5 percentage points in Hispanic patients.

The researchers suggested that a "spillover effect," which increased Covid-19 hospitalizations, may have shifted the distribution of hospital resources "potentially widening racial and ethnic disparities in outcomes."

For non-Covid-19-related hospitalizations, mortality in Black patients rose nearly 0.5 percentage points more than in White patients, "a 17.5% increase over the prepandemic mortality rate among Black inpatients."

CNN's Virginia Langmaid and Elizabeth Cohen contributed to this report.

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Flying home after the holidays? Getting vaccinated or boosted is the first step toward safe travel, expert says - CNN

How to recognize Covid-19 symptoms with the omicron variant – Vox.com

December 26, 2021

The list of symptoms of Covid-19 has grown longer and stranger throughout the pandemic. With so many people now vaccinated, the warning signs of an infection have grown more subtle and vague. Thats becoming especially evident as the omicron variant gallops around the world, squeezing through the nooks and crannies in the wall of immunity thats been built over the past two years.

An international team of researchers has been tracking signs of infection throughout the pandemic with the Covid Symptom Study using a mobile app where users could self-report their symptoms. Data on the omicron variant is still preliminary, but a group of 171 app users in the United Kingdom, most of whom are vaccinated, recently reported that their top symptoms for omicron were a runny nose, headache, fatigue, sneezing, and a sore throat. These were also the top symptoms for people infected with the delta variant.

Thats a departure from the classic three Covid-19 symptoms of fever, cough, and loss of sense of smell or taste associated with earlier variants, researchers say.

For most people, an omicron positive case will feel much more like the common cold, starting with a sore throat, runny nose, and a headache, Tim Spector, a professor of epidemiology at Kings College London and the lead scientist for the symptom study, told the BBC this week. We need to change public messaging urgently to save lives.

Among the 171 people in the recent symptom data analysis who were suspected or confirmed to be infected with omicron by Britains National Health Service, the symptom study team found only half reported fever, cough, or a loss of taste or smell.

Researchers in Norway recently reported similar findings from an omicron outbreak among fully vaccinated guests of a Christmas party. In 87 confirmed or probable cases, the most common symptoms were cough, runny or stuffy nose, fatigue, sore throat, and headache. Just over half reported a fever, while 23 percent experienced a loss of taste and 12 had a decline in smell.

These cases are further evidence that the omicron variant is the most transmissible version of the virus so far, and it seems to be better able to evade prior immunity. Vaccines in the US still offer strong protection against severe illness, however, especially with a booster shot.

We know we will continue to hear more about people who get infected who are vaccinated, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said at a White House press conference this week. These people may get mild or asymptomatic infections and could unknowingly spread those infections to others.

In South Africa, one of the first places where the omicron variant was detected, widespread vaccinations against the disease combined with some immunity from prior infection may explain why omicron seems to present with milder symptoms.

We believe that it might not necessarily just be that omicron is less virulent, but we believe that this coverage of vaccination, also in addition to natural immunity of people who have already had contact with the virus, is also adding to the protection, South Africas Health Minister Joe Phaahla told reporters last week. Thats why we are seeing mild illness.

In the US, 73 percent of the population has had at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine and more than 50 million people have been infected previously, so a significant portion of the population has some degree of protection against the disease.

Even so, some people with omicron will fall severely ill. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Covid-19 symptoms that demand emergency medical care include sudden confusion; inability to stay awake; persistent chest pain or pressure; trouble breathing; and lips, fingernail beds, and skin turning blue, pale, or gray.

While a smaller percentage of the infected get sick enough to go to the hospital, the overall increase in cases from omicron could result in enough illness to overwhelm the US health care system in the coming months.

In addition, severe illnesses often start out with mild symptoms, and many Covid-19 treatments are most effective in the early stages of the disease. The Food and Drug Administration recently granted emergency authorization to the drug Paxlovid from Pfizer, the first oral antiviral to get a green light from the agency. Its recommended for mild-to-moderate Covid-19 cases in people with risk factors for severe disease.

The emergence of the cold-like symptoms with the omicron variant means that getting tested to confirm whether someone is infected with Covid-19 is more critical than ever to slow the spread of the virus. For people with preexisting health conditions, identifying infections early is key to deploying effective treatments in time.

Frequent rapid testing for Covid-19 can catch omicron cases, though they tend to have lower accuracy compared to more expensive and time-consuming PCR tests. Many local health departments are scaling up their public testing systems, and the FDA has increased the number of rapid rests authorized for use. But in some areas, rapid tests remain scarce and too costly to use regularly.

So its crucial to take mild Covid-19 symptoms seriously and just as important to prevent infections in the first place. That requires getting vaccinated against Covid-19, getting a booster dose if eligible, wearing an effective face mask in public settings, and social distancing. Despite the latest twists in the pandemic, these measures remain the best bets for keeping the virus in check.

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How to recognize Covid-19 symptoms with the omicron variant - Vox.com

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