Category: Covid-19

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Why experts are focused on reducing Covid-19 risk instead of ending the pandemic – Vox.com

September 8, 2021

More than a year and a half into the Covid-19 pandemic, America still doesnt agree on what its trying to accomplish.

Is the goal to completely eradicate Covid-19? Is it to prevent hospitals from getting overwhelmed? Is it hitting a certain vaccine threshold that mitigates the worst Covid-19 outcomes but doesnt prevent all infections? Or is it something else entirely?

At the root of this confusion is a big question the US, including policymakers, experts, and the general public, has never been able to answer: How many Covid-19 deaths are too many?

The lack of a clear end goal has hindered Americas anti-pandemic efforts from the start. At first, the goal of restrictions was to flatten the curve: to keep the number of cases low enough that hospitals could treat those that did arise. But that consensus crumbled against the reality of the coronavirus leaving the country with patchwork restrictions and no clear idea of what it meant to beat Covid-19, let alone a strategy to achieve a victory.

The vaccines were supposed to be a way out. But between breakthrough infections, the risks of long Covid, and new variants, its becoming clear the vaccines didnt get rid of the need to answer the underlying question of what the Covid-19 endgame is.

America is now stuck between those two extremes: The country wants to reduce the risk of Covid-19, but it also wants to limit the remnants of social distancing and other Covid-related restrictions on day-to-day life.

Were not trying to go for zero Covid, Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, told me. The question becomes: When do, in most communities, people feel comfortable going about their daily business and not worrying, excessively, about doing things that are important and meaningful to them?

Will Americans accept the deaths of tens of thousands of people, as they do with the flu, if it means life returning to normal? Can the public tolerate an even higher death toll akin to the drug overdose crisis, which killed an estimated 94,000 people in 2020 if thats what it takes to truly end social distancing and other precautions?

Does it make a difference if the vast majority of deaths are among those who are willingly unvaccinated, who, in effect, accepted a greater risk from the coronavirus? Are further reductions in deaths worth postponing a return to normal or changing what normal means if continued precautions are mild, like prolonged masking or widespread testing?

There are no easy answers here. Even among the experts Ive spoken to over the past few weeks, theres wide disagreement on how much risk is tolerable, when milder precautions like masking are warranted, and at what point harsher measures, like lockdowns and school closures, are needed. Theres not even agreement on what the endgame is; some say that, from a policy standpoint, the goal should be to keep caseloads manageable for hospitals, while others call for doing much more to drive down Covid-19.

One big problem identified by experts: I dont think were having those conversations enough, Saskia Popescu, an infectious disease epidemiologist at George Mason University, told me. Instead of the public and officials openly discussing how much risk is acceptable, the public dialogue often feels like two extremes the very risk-averse and those downplaying any risk of the coronavirus whatsoever talking past each other.

But the path to an endgame should begin with a frank discussion about just how much risk is tolerable as the coronavirus goes from pandemic to endemic.

If there is one point of agreement among most experts, its that Covid-19 is here to stay. Until very recently, I was hopeful that there was a possibility of getting to a point where we had no more Covid, Eleanor Murray, an epidemiologist at Boston University, told me. Now she believes that it is infeasible, in the short term, to aim for an eradication goal.

Particularly with the rise of the delta variant, a consensus has formed that the coronavirus likely cant be eliminated. Like the flu, a rapidly shapeshifting coronavirus will continue to stick around in some version for years to come, with new variants leading to new spikes in infections. Especially as it becomes unlikely that 100 percent of the population will get vaccinated, and as it becomes clear that the vaccines provide great but not perfect protection, the virus is probably always going to be with us in some form, both in America and abroad.

That doesnt mean the US has to accept hundreds of thousands of deaths annually in the coming years. While the vaccines have struggled at least somewhat in preventing any kind of infection (including asymptomatic infection), they have held up in preventing severe illness, hospitalization, and death reducing the risk of each by roughly 90 percent, compared to no vaccine. Research has also found stricter restrictions reduce Covid-19 spread and death, and that masks work.

But its also become clear most Americans arent willing to tolerate drastic deviations from the pre-pandemic normal lockdowns, staying at home, and broadly avoiding interactions with other people for long. While social distancing staved off the virus in the pre-vaccine pandemic days, it also wrought economic, educational, and social devastation around the world. Its the intervention that, above all, most people want to avoid going forward.

Thats the goal, in my mind: to eliminate or reduce social distancing, Jha said.

What policymakers can aim for is not a total end to Covid-19 but a balancing act. On one side of that scale is containing Covid-19 with restrictions and precautions. On the other is resuming normal, pre-pandemic life. Vaccines have changed the balance by giving us the ability to contain Covid-19s worst outcomes hospitalization and death with less weight on the side of restrictions. But vaccines alone cant drive hospitalizations and deaths to zero if all the weight on the restriction side is removed.

That suggests a choice: Either Americans accept some level of Covid-19 risk, including hospitalization and death, or they accept some level of restrictions and precautions in the long term.

Depending on how that choice is made, the US could be looking at very different futures. Americans could decide some milder precautions, like masking, are fine. Or they could conclude that even masking is too much to ask, even if that means a greater death toll. It hinges on how much weight on the restrictions side remains acceptable for the bulk of the population how high the threshold is for embracing continued deviations from what day-to-day life was like before.

Regardless, experts say the balance, as the coronavirus becomes endemic, will require accepting some level of Covid-19 risk both to individuals and to society. America already does that with the flu: In some years, a flu season kills as many as 60,000 people in the US, most of whom are elderly and/or people with preexisting health conditions, but also some kids and previously healthy individuals. As a cause of death, the flu can surpass gun violence or car crashes, but its a tolerated cost to continuing life as normal.

You want to get Covid to a place where its more comparable in terms of disease burden and in terms of economic impact to the flu, Cline Gounder, an epidemiologist at New York University, told me.

With about half the country vaccinated, the Covid-19 death rate is still much higher than that of the flu the more than 120,000 deaths over the past six months is still more than double the number of people even the worst flu seasons have recently killed. But as more people get vaccinated and others develop natural immunity after an infection, the death rate will likely come down.

A glimpse of what this could look like in the future came from a study in Provincetown, Massachusetts. The study was at first widely reported as evidence that the virus can still spread among the vaccinated because the outbreak happened in a highly vaccinated population, and three-fourths of those who were infected had gotten their shots.

But experts now argue for another interpretation of the study: Its what a post-pandemic world could look like. Yes, the coronavirus still circulated among vaccinated people. But in an outbreak that eventually infected more than 1,000, only seven hospitalizations and zero deaths have been recorded. If this was 2020, given overall hospitalization and death rates, the outbreak would have likely produced around 100 hospitalizations and 10 deaths.

We should cheer, Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, told me. The Provincetown outbreak, contrary to what the press reported, was evidence not of the vaccines failure but of their smashing success.

That doesnt mean the vaccine is perfect. A 90 percent reduction in death, relative to the unvaccinated, is not 100 percent. But it is a much lower risk. If this holds up despite future variants and potentially waning vaccine efficacy, its great news.

But that isnt how the Provincetown study has been widely interpreted, especially after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cited it to reinstitute masking recommendations for the vaccinated in public indoor spaces in areas with substantial or high caseloads.

And the national Covid-19 disease burden may never resemble Provincetowns anyway, since the city resides in the second most vaccinated state. In that context, Americans may have to come to accept even higher levels of sickness and death if the goal is to return to normal and vaccination rates dont go up quickly enough.

That leaves the country with a blunt question: How many deaths are Americans willing to tolerate?

The problem is theres no agreement, including among experts, on Covid-19 risk. Some have accepted merely reducing the coronaviruss strain on hospitals as the major policy goal. Theres next to no confidence that anything like Covid zero can be achieved now, but other experts still prefer harsher restrictions if it means preventing more deaths. And many people fall in between.

Its this debate, between flatten the curve and Covid zero, thats long divided the USs Covid-19 response. Red states hewed at least for a while to flatten the curve, moving to lift Covid-related restrictions and reopen their economies as soon as hospitals stabilized. Blue states never truly pushed for Covid zero, but they were generally much less willing to tolerate high levels of cases and deaths and, as a result, shut down more quickly in response to even hints of major surges. (Although there were some outliers on both sides.)

Even with the vaccines, this division, among both policymakers and the public they serve, has kept America in limbo.

Part of the divide is on a philosophical question about the role of government. But its about individuals decisions, too: Are they willing to forgo social activities, government mandate or not, to reduce deaths? Are they willing to keep wearing masks? Submit to continued testing in all sorts of settings?

Are 30,000 to 40,000 deaths a year too many? Thats generally what the country sees with gun violence and car crashes and American policymakers, at least, havent been driven to major actions on these fronts.

Are as many as 60,000 deaths a year too many? Thats what Americans have tolerated for the flu.

Are 90,000 deaths a year too many? Thats the death toll of the ongoing drug overdose crisis and while policymakers have taken some steps to combat that, experts argue the actions so far have fallen short, and the issue doesnt draw that much national attention.

Is the current death toll of more than 1,500 a day, or equivalent to more than 500,000 deaths a year too much? Many people would say, of course, it is. But in the middle of a delta variant surge, Americans may be revealing their preferences as restaurant reservations are now around the pre-pandemic normal a sign the country is moving on. The loudest voices on social media and in public are way more cautious than the average American, Jha said.

Part of the calculus may be influenced by who is getting infected and dying. Once everyone (including children) is eligible for the vaccines, is a high death toll among those who remain unvaccinated simply part of the risk they decided to take by not getting the shot?

This is not something most experts I spoke to are comfortable saying, but its a sentiment Ive repeatedly heard from vaccinated people and even some who are unvaccinated a very dire version of actions have consequences.

Another consideration is whether some Covid-related precautions become permanent. Social distancing in any of its forms doesnt seem like a candidate. But what about masking in indoor spaces? More frequent testing? Vastly improving indoor ventilation? Doing more things outdoors? Depending on whether Americans embrace these other interventions, the level of Covid-19 risk people have to tolerate may end up being lower but what normal looks like would also be redefined to some degree.

Other countries are talking about these trade-offs more explicitly. Australian leaders, for example, have said that they will shift from a long-heralded Covid zero strategy once vaccination rates hit certain thresholds even though this means continued cases and deaths, particularly among the unvaccinated. In the US, the end goal has never been so clear.

Experts argue that these kinds of questions need to be out in the open, so Americans and their leaders can openly discuss them and decide on a plan forward.

Those conversations were important to have in the beginning, Murray said. But theyre even more important now, as we move into this control phase rather than a phase where elimination or eradication [of Covid-19] seems possible.

The country may just continue muddling along. Vaccination rates and natural immunity will slowly increase. Deaths and hospitalizations will similarly decline. Eventually, the virus will hit a level that most Americans find tolerable (if that hasnt happened already). Politicians and the media will talk less about the coronavirus. And, perhaps before we know it, the pandemic will be a thing of the past in the US.

Thats what was happening in June before the delta surge. But over the past 18 months, weve seen that, with no agreement on the endgame, its often impossible to say if the end is really near.

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Why experts are focused on reducing Covid-19 risk instead of ending the pandemic - Vox.com

List: Utah schools with the most active COVID-19 cases after Labor Day weekend – ABC 4

September 8, 2021

SALT LAKE CITY (ABC4) Students are back to school across Utah. Already, hundreds of these students have tested positive for COVID-19.

On Tuesday, in the first update since the Labor Day weekend, the Utah Department of Health reported 1,151 new cases of COVID-19 among school-aged children. For the entire school year, UDOH reports over 2,600 cases have been confirmed in Utahs schools. Just over 2,030 of those cases have been reported in the last two weeks.

For the 2020-21 school year, Utah saw over 39,900 COVID-19 cases in schools, including over 33,000 in students.

Here are five Utah schools with the current highest numbers of active COVID-19 cases among students:

Cedar Valley and Willowcreek are both in the Alpine School District while Green Canyon and Sky View are in the Cache School District. Cedar Valley and Willowcreek were also among the top five schools with the most active cases to end August.

The five schools above also have the highest count of currently active cases, which includes students, teachers, and others involved with the school.

According to UDOH, here are the five schools that have seen the most cases of COVID-19 so far:

Of these, three are in the Alpine School District and two are in the Cache District. To see the full dashboard, click here. UDOH says reporting of these cases may be delayed.

Over 70% of Utahns 12-years-old and older have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. The youngest in the state those between the ages of 12 and 18 are the least-vaccinated, according to UDOH. As of Sept. 6, 54.3% of this age group has received at least one dose of the vaccine while 42.6% are fully vaccinated.

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List: Utah schools with the most active COVID-19 cases after Labor Day weekend - ABC 4

COVID-19 In Maryland: Over 200 In ICU Beds, 21 Deaths In Last 24 Hours – CBS Baltimore

September 8, 2021

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (WJZ) Maryland reported 701 new COVID-19 cases and 21 deaths, according to state health department data released Wednesday morning.

The percentage of people testing positive increased by 0.03, currently sitting at 4.68%.

Doctors say the new cases are fueled by dangerous strains targeting the unvaccinated. During an August press conference, Gov. Larry Hogan said the Delta variant, a strain that is reportedly two to four times more contagious than the original virus strain, accounts for nearly every new confirmed case in Maryland.

The vaccines are without a doubt our single most effective tool to mitigate the threat of COVID-19 and the surging Delta variant, and Marylands vaccination rate continues to outpace the nation, Hogan said.

More than 3.7 million Maryland adults are fully vaccinated.

Hospitalizations remained at 817. Of those hospitalized, 606 remain in acute care and 211 remain in the ICU.

Since the pandemic began, there were 505,557 total confirmed cases and 9,891 deaths.

There are 3,771,972 Marylanders fully vaccinated. The state has administered 7,623,715 doses. Of those, 3,851,743 are first doses with 2,987 administered in the past 24 hours. They have given out 3,481,808 second doses, 3,908 in the last day.

The state began to administer the Johnson & Johnson vaccine again in April after the CDC and FDA lifted their pause on the vaccine due to a rare blood clot found in some women.

A total of 290,164 Marylanders have received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, 252 in the last day.

The state reported 81.5% of all adults in Maryland have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

In August, the state launched a post-vaccination infections dashboard that is updated every Wednesday. There have been 11,454 total cases among fully vaccinated Marylanders as of last Wednesday, September 1.

Of those cases, 883 vaccinated Marylanders were hospitalized, representing 6.5% of all Covid cases hospitalized in the state. 82 fully vaccinated Marylanders have died, representing 5.3% of lab-confirmed Covid deaths in the state.

CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES:

Heres a breakdown of the numbers:

By County

By Age Range and Gender

By Race and Ethnicity

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COVID-19 In Maryland: Over 200 In ICU Beds, 21 Deaths In Last 24 Hours - CBS Baltimore

Drew Lock, other Broncos QBs tried to skirt COVID-19 protocol last season – Broncos Wire

September 8, 2021

After Jeff Driskel tested positive for COVID-19 leading up to Week 12 last season, all three of the Denver Broncos other quarterbacks were also ruled ineligible to play against the New Orleans Saints because the NFL said they were close contacts.

With all four quarterbacks deemed ineligible to play, the Broncos were forced to call up practice squad wide receiver Kendall Hinton as an emergency quarterback. At the time, it seemed like a harsh decision from the NFL, especially when other games had been moved because of COVID outbreaks.

With new details now known, the NFLs decision makes more sense.

In a recent interview with Sam Farmer of the Los Angeles Times, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell revealed that Lock and Denvers three other QBs tried to skirt COVID protocol and manipulate the tracers.

Heres part of Farmers story with the details:

John Elway, Denvers president of football operations, made several frustrated pleas to Goodell to postpone the Sunday game until Tuesday, when the quarterbacks would be available. The league denied those requests because surveillance video from Denvers facility showed the quarterbacks had tried to fool the system. They had removed their contact-tracing devices and put them in the four corners of the meeting room, then they sat together to watch film. That close contact automatically made them ineligible to play.

Heres part of what Lock said in a statement after he was ruled out for the game last fall:

In a controlled and socially distanced area, we let our masking slip for a limited amount of time. An honest mistake, but one I will own.

Given the context we now know, thats an interesting comment from Lock. Driskel and Blake Bortles are no longer with the team. Lock is back as the teams No. 2 and Brett Rypien is back on the practice squad. Teddy Bridgewater will start for Denver this fall.

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Drew Lock, other Broncos QBs tried to skirt COVID-19 protocol last season - Broncos Wire

S.Korea planning to live ‘more normally’ with COVID-19 after October – Reuters

September 8, 2021

SEOUL, Sept 8 (Reuters) - South Korea is drawing up a plan on how to live more normally with COVID-19, expecting 80% of adults to be fully vaccinated by late October, health authorities said on Wednesday.

The country is in the middle of its worst wave of infections, but it has kept the number of severely ill cases under control through steadily rising vaccination rates.

"We'll review measures that will allow us to live more normally, but any such switch will be implemented only when we achieve high vaccination rates and overall (COVID-19) situations stabilise," Son Young-rae, a senior health ministry official, told a briefing.

The strategy will be implemented in phases to gradually ease restrictions, authorities said. Masks will still be required at least in the initial stage.

The government expects to implement the plan sometime after late October, when 80% of its adult population likely will have been vaccinated. As of Tuesday, South Korea had given at least one vaccine dose to 70.9% of its adult population, while 42.6% are fully vaccinated.

It reported 2,050 new COVID-19 cases for Tuesday, with 2,014 of those locally acquired.

South Korea extended national social distancing curbs to Oct. 3 this week as the country boosts its vaccination campaign ahead of a thanksgiving holiday that falls later this month.

Restrictions in place include limited operating hours for cafes and restaurants and on the number of people allowed at social gatherings.

South Korea has registered 265,423 infections since the pandemic started, with 2,334 deaths.

The country has not seen a significant increase in coronavirus deaths, with a mortality rate of 0.88%, largely due to high vaccination rates among the elderly and vulnerable.

Severe or critical cases stood at 387 as of Tuesday.

Reporting by Sangmi Cha; Editing by Miyoung Kim and Tom Hogue

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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S.Korea planning to live 'more normally' with COVID-19 after October - Reuters

Medical experts look ahead to fighting COVID-19 this fall – WPTV.com

September 7, 2021

WELLINGTON, Fla. After a difficult and deadly summer with COVID-19, medical experts are looking ahead to fighting the virus this fall.

"My feeling as an infectious disease person is that we will be dealing with boosters and perhaps even new variants," said Dr. Larry Bush of Wellington.

Booster shots, Dr. Bush said, could likely be necessary as new variants of COVID emerge.

The new variants are a particular concern as health experts try to increase vaccination rates.

"Hopefully this wont happen toward the end of the year with the holiday season with travel and families getting together," Dr. Bush said. "Im hopeful particularly if we start to see boosters come on line."

Dr. Bush said he also expects emergency approval for children under 12 before the end of the year, which can help ease cases in schools.

"We will reach herd immunity one way or another, hopefully by vaccine but if not then by natural infection," he said.

Dr. Bush said anti body treatments and more vaccinations are now contributing to lowering hospitalization rates.

"Keep in mind this is not the first pandemic weve overcome," he said. "We have much more science now much more ability to do things now we should be able to overcome this one more easily we have to get away from speculation and cynicism."

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Medical experts look ahead to fighting COVID-19 this fall - WPTV.com

Covid-19 Resurgence Clouds Business Travel Rebound – The Wall Street Journal

September 7, 2021

Companies are delaying sending employees back on the road this fall amid another surge in coronavirus cases.

Airlines and hotels had hoped that business travelone of the most lucrative pillars of their businesswould start to bounce back in the coming months. Those hopes are fading as the busy summer travel season peters out, and the spread of the Delta variant of Covid-19 postpones some companies plans to return to offices and resume in-person meetings and events.

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Covid-19 Resurgence Clouds Business Travel Rebound - The Wall Street Journal

COVID-19 UPDATE: With solid-red map and hospitalizations surging, Gov. Justice urges more vaccinations to stop the terrible carnage – Governor Jim…

September 7, 2021

CHARLESTON, WV Gov. Jim Justice and members of the West Virginia COVID-19 pandemic response leadership team held another news briefing today to update the public onthe States latest pandemic response efforts. GOV. JUSTICE CONTINUES PLEADING FOR MORE WEST VIRGINIANS TO GET VACCINATEDWith the number of COVID-related hospitalizations and ICU patients in West Virginia at their highest points since the pandemics biggest wave in January and still climbing Gov. Justice continued pleading for more West Virginians to get vaccinated.

Weve got to someway realize that weve got to get vaccinated for all not just for you, but for everybody weve got to do this, Gov. Justice said. We can stop a lot of this terrible, terrible carnage.

Of the patients currently hospitalized, 112 are on ventilators; a new record high for the entire pandemic. A total of 216 patients are in the ICU; the highest such mark in eight months and just three away from the all-time record high in this category as well.

COVID-19 Dashboard | Coronavirus.wv.gov

The total number of active COVID-19 cases in West Virginia has now surpassed 20,000 for the first time since Feb. 1. The active case count of 21,500 is an increase of more than 2,000 new cases since Friday last week.Meanwhile, the County Alert System map now shows that 53 of the states 55 counties are either in the Red or Orange categories. A total of 41 counties are currently Red and 12 are Orange.

The only way were going to get through this with an outcome that is halfway good is weve got to get more and more people vaccinated, Gov. Justice continued. Thats the only ticket weve got. I wish to goodness I could tell you something else. But the bottom line is were going to have a bunch more people die if we don't kick it in gear like nobodys business.

All West Virginians interested in being vaccinated are encouraged to visitVaccinate.wv.govor call theWest Virginia Vaccine Info Line: 1-833-734-0965. The info line is open Monday-Friday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

The programwill provide a $150 voucher for back-to-school supplies to all vaccinated grandfamilies in West Virginia; families where grandparents are the primary caregivers for their grandchildren.

To qualify, all vaccine-eligible members of the grandfamily including grandparents and grandchildren ages 12 and older must have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. The family must also be enrolled in West Virginia State Universitys Healthy Grandfamilies program.

Healthy Grandfamilies which provides information and resources to grandparents who are raising one or more grandchildren will assist in the administration of the school voucher incentive. According to the organization, about 19,000 West Virginia children live in households with a grandparent or grandparents as their primary caregiver.

For more information, visithealthygrandfamilies.com.

All West Virginians who have had at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine can register atDoitforBabydog.wv.govfor an opportunity to join the list of winners.Over 173,000 West Virginians have already registered for Round 2 of the sweepstakes.

*Those who previously registered for Round 1 of the vaccination sweepstakes are required to register again to be eligible for Round 2*

Additional weekly prizes for vaccinated West Virginians ages 18+ include:

While the registration deadline to be eligible for this week's giveaway has passed, vaccinated West Virginiansare still able to register for future drawings.

Prize drawings will be held weekly, with winners being announced each Thursday through Oct. 7.

Click to view:COVID-19 Outbreaks in State Public Schools (WVDE)

There are fouractive outbreaks associated with churches throughout West Virginia. The churches are located inBarbour, Doddridge, Monroe, and Wayne counties.

Additionally, there are now 58active outbreaks in long-term care facilities across the state.

Meanwhile, there are now 88active inmate cases and 57 active staff cases across the West Virginia Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation system. To view the latest DCR case update, click here.

On this wonderful holiday, we recognize the labor and the strength that has built this nation. But this year, we especially need to recognize the labor of all those who have run to the fire to protect us all through this terrible pandemic, Gov. Justice said. Whether they were our first responders, our health departments and our hospitals, or even our grocery workers and others who stayed open through the pandemic, knowing that every day, when they climbed out of bed and strapped on their boots, they were running right to the fire for all of us.

I was able to do the coin toss, Gov. Justice said. Bluefield State is on the move. It was a good day. Im really proud of that school and their contributions to southern West Virginia. Keep up the great work.

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COVID-19 UPDATE: With solid-red map and hospitalizations surging, Gov. Justice urges more vaccinations to stop the terrible carnage - Governor Jim...

COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 6 September – World Economic Forum

September 7, 2021

Confirmed cases of COVID-19 have passed 220.6 million globally, according to Johns Hopkins University. The number of confirmed deaths stands at more than 4.56 million. More than 5.46 billion vaccination doses have been administered globally, according to Our World in Data.

Authorities in New South Wales say they expect daily COVID-19 cases to peak next week.

Israel is set to present data from its COVID-19 booster shot programme to the US Food and Drug Administration, which is weighing up White House plans to begin the US's own booster drive.

The Vietnamese ministry of health has said all adult residents in Ho Chi Minh City and capital Hanoi must have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine by 15 September.

India reported 42,766 new COVID-19 infections yesterday, taking its tally to nearly 33 million confirmed cases.

Moderna said on Friday that it's seeking approval from the EU drugs regulator for a booster shot of its COVID-19 vaccine.

New Zealand has reported its first death from the Delta COVID-19 variant. The woman was in her 90s and had a number of underlying health conditions, officials said in a statement.

Spain's two-week COVID-19 contagion rate fell below 200 cases per 100,000 inhabitants for the first time in over two months, according to official data last week.

New modelling shows an 'urgent need' to vaccinate more young adults in Canada, the public health agency announced on Friday.

Each of our Top 50 social enterprise last mile responders and multi-stakeholder initiatives is working across four priority areas of need: Prevention and protection; COVID-19 treatment and relief; inclusive vaccine access; and securing livelihoods. The list was curated jointly with regional hosts Catalyst 2030s NASE and Aavishkaar Group. Their profiles can be found on http://www.wef.ch/lastmiletop50india.

Top Last Mile Partnership Initiatives to collaborate with:

Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has accused rich countries of committing a 'moral outrage' by stockpiling supplies of COVID-19 vaccines, while poor countries continue to go without.

Brown, who is a United Nations special envoy, called on US President Joe Biden and other Group of Seven leaders to urgently ship vaccines from warehouses in America and Europe to Africa.

"We are in a new 'arms' race to get vaccines into people as quickly as possible but this is an arms race where the West have a stranglehold on the vaccine supplies," Brown said.

By Christmas, the West is set to have 1 billion surplus doses even if every European and American adult has received a booster shot and all children over 12 are injected, he said.

COVID-19 vaccine doses administered by country income group.

Image: Our World in Data

Britain has begun delivering COVID-19 vaccines to delegates attending the COP26 conference who cannot access a vaccine at home.

The COP26 conference, which was delayed last year, takes place from 31 October to 12 November. Typically delegates from more than 190 countries attend the talks, but with many countries still grappling with the novel coronavirus, climate and health experts have said poorer nations struggling to access COVID-19 vaccines could find sending delegates difficult.

"Vaccines are shipping and vaccination will begin next week and through mid-September before second jabs in October well ahead of COP26," British COP26 Envoy John Murton said on Twitter on Friday.

Written by

Joe Myers, Writer, Formative Content

The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

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COVID-19: What you need to know about the coronavirus pandemic on 6 September - World Economic Forum

‘Surprised and disappointed.’ Doctors in Covid-19 hotspots last year are dealing with new record hospitalizations – CNN

September 7, 2021

In the Southeast, Georgia is now seeing its highest number of hospitalizations since the start of the pandemic, matching peaks experienced in January, according to US Health and Human Services Department (HHS) data.

Dr. James Black, director of emergency services at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany, Georgia, told CNN's Amara Walker Saturday that his hospital nearly doubled its ICU capacity yet is still faced with an overflow of patients.

"The emergency department is full and the hospital is full," Black said. "Anytime a patient is discharged, we have patients waiting on those beds."

"We were frustrated, a little bit bewildered, especially given what we've been through at the onset of the pandemic," Black said, also noting that Georgia trails the national average in vaccination rates.

"We were a little bit kind of surprised and disappointed at the lack of turnout. So, you know, we've had to redouble our efforts and pick each other up and certainly, we had hoped to not be having the same discussion 18 months into it. But here we are, seemingly in worse shape overall than we were initially."

"We are perilously close...of having, in certain areas of the country getting so close to having full occupancy, that you're going to be in a situation where you're going to be in a situation where you're going to have to make some very tough choice," Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNN's Jim Acosta on Sunday.

"What we really should be doing, and I hope we are doing, is to do everything we can to mitigate the number of people who are getting infected and requiring hospitalization and ICU beds," said Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

In Hawaii, the state's health department reported 13 new deaths from Covid-19 on Wednesday, its highest single-day death figure of the entire pandemic. A number of restrictions on public businesses were reinstated in August, and Gov. David Ige urged out-of-state visitors to not travel to the islands unless they had urgent business.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has called for a special session of the state general assembly to meet Tuesday regarding Covid-19, with the aim to extend the state's declared state of emergency to January 15 and to review executive, agency and cabinet orders.

"The Commonwealth is in a state of emergency. The Delta variant is spreading at a rate never seen before -- impacting businesses, shuttering schools and worse, causing severe illness and death," Beshear said Saturday.

Officials concerned about Labor Day weekend

Given the recent surge, public health officials are also worried about Labor Day weekend and whether it could exacerbate an already dire situation.

On Tuesday, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky asked unvaccinated Americans to not travel for the holiday weekend. Those who are fully vaccinated can travel with precautions, but the current transmission rates mean they, too, should take the risk of traveling into consideration.

"I know we're all looking forward to the long weekend," Mayor Derek Kawakami of Kauai County, Hawaii, said in a news conference Friday. But health care workers will not be able to celebrate, he noted, "because they're busy taking care of our sick people."

"Now what we choose to do over the next 72 to 96 hours is going to determine a lot of within the next two to three months, on whether we start to continue to burn our hospital systems, burn out our health care workers, keep our kids in school, keep our businesses running, and moving on with moving forward and coexisting with Covid-19."

"And while we want everybody to have a great time and I hope to see people surfing, enjoying time with their family ... we want to remind people, the steps to take are simple," he said. "Wear your mask indoors, avoid large gatherings, and if you do, do it outside."

Less-vaccinated parts of California face ICU capacity issues

California's San Joaquin Valley region has met the threshold to enter "surge protocols," with less than 10% of staffed ICU beds remaining for three consecutive days, the state Department of Public Health (CDPH) announced Friday.

All general acute care hospitals in the San Joaquin Valley region with ICU bed capacity must accept transfer patients when "clinically appropriate" and directed by state health officials or the California Emergency Medical Services Authority, in an effort to find open beds for patients in the area where available.

The protocol is set to be reevaluated Thursday, according to the department.

Less than 50% of eligible residents have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19 across much of the agriculture-rich San Joaquin Valley, CDC data shows, with fewer than one-third of all residents fully inoculated in Kings County.

"While the state works to further increase the number of eligible Californians vaccinated, we must take steps to protect the unvaccinated who are more at risk of severe illness, hospitalization and death from Covid-19," CDPH said in a statement. "This action will ensure the state's health care delivery system is prepared and can respond appropriately."

Vaccinations for those in schools are critical, some states say

"Washington schools have the structure, protocol and people to have successful in-person education," Shah said.

In Illinois, Gov. JB Pritzker is extending the deadline for teachers, college students and health care workers to receive a Covid-19 vaccination.

The state mandate for those individuals to have at least one vaccination dose, originally set to go into effect September 5, is being pushed back to September 19 at the request of representatives of the health care industry and education organizations.

"While hospitals and schools move forward in good faith, this extension ensures they are prepared to meet this requirement to better protect our most vulnerable residents and children who are not yet eligible to get vaccinated," Pritzker said in a written statement Friday.

Employees will only be required to have one shot by September 19 -- with a second shot within 30 days, if necessary -- but those who are not fully vaccinated must be tested for Covid-19 at least once a week. Workers must provide proof of the vaccination to their employers.

Exemptions are allowed for people with a medical or religious objection to the vaccine, but those employees also must get a weekly Covid-19 test.

CNN's Sarah Moon, Andy Rose, Hannah Sarisohn, Elizabeth Joseph and Jen Christensen contributed to this report.

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'Surprised and disappointed.' Doctors in Covid-19 hotspots last year are dealing with new record hospitalizations - CNN

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