Category: Covid-19

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What is a COVID-19 vaccine passport, and do I need to get one? – KXAN.com

August 27, 2021

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What is a COVID-19 vaccine passport, and do I need to get one? - KXAN.com

How the antidepressant fluvoxamine emerged as a promising Covid-19 treatment – Vox.com

August 27, 2021

Since Covid-19 patients started showing up at clinics and hospitals a year and a half ago, doctors and researchers have been hard at work trying to figure out how to treat them. Most drugs and treatments havent panned out, producing either no results or small ones in large-scale clinical trials. Many of the few that work are expensive and difficult to administer.

Hydroxychloroquine, enthusiastically endorsed by President Trump last year, has been shown to have no measurable benefits. New drugs like monoclonal antibodies proteins meant to imitate the immune systems response to the disease have been approved by regulators but must be administered by a doctor through an IV or series of injections.

But scientists havent stopped searching, and the results of a new massive clinical trial suggest theyre getting somewhere. In a large, randomized clinical trial conducted with thousands of patients over the past six months, researchers at McMaster University tested eight different Covid-19 treatments against a control group to figure out what works.

One drug stood out: fluvoxamine, an antidepressant that the Food and Drug Administration has already found to be safe and thats cheap to produce as a generic drug.

These new results follow some promising findings in small-scale trials last year. In those smaller studies, researchers found that fluvoxamine was strikingly good at reducing hospitalization for Covid-19 patients but small-scale trials can sometimes turn up spurious good results, so those findings were obviously tempered by a lot of caveats.

This study, called the TOGETHER study, is a lot bigger more than 3,000 patients across the whole study, with 800 in the fluvoxamine group and supports the promising results from those previous studies. The authors released it this week as a preprint, meaning that it is still under peer review.

Patients given fluvoxamine within a few days after testing positive for Covid-19 were 31 percent less likely to end up hospitalized and similarly less likely to end up on a ventilator. (Death from Covid-19 is rare enough that the study has wide error bars when it comes to how much fluvoxamine reduces death, meaning its much harder to draw conclusions.) Its a much larger effect than any that has been found for an outpatient Covid-19 treatment so far.

This is a huge finding, study co-author Ed Mills, a professor of health sciences at McMaster University, told me. The game changers are things we already had in the cupboards.

What makes this result potentially such a big deal is that fluvoxamine is inexpensive and has already been FDA approved for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), so any doctor can prescribe it for Covid-19 using their clinical judgment (whats called off-label prescribing). Its a pill, which means it doesnt need to be administered in a hospital or by a medical professional.

To be clear, these results have just been released, and clinicians around the world will want to take a close look at them as they decide whether or not to prescribe fluvoxamine. Future research could also moderate this exciting result.

Heres what we know: This is a large and well-designed study that affirms previous studies that pointed in the same direction. More research is needed, but the results from this trial might already start changing how we treat Covid-19. And the way researchers stumbled upon the drug as a potential treatment is a worthwhile story in itself about the scientific process and the unseen and often unheralded work thats helping humanity fight the pandemic.

Covid-19 treatments fall into two categories: treatment for severe illness, generally administered in the hospital to reduce the risk of death; and treatment for the onset of illness, which hopefully reduces the odds that a patient will need to be hospitalized at all.

The FDA has granted emergency authorization to a variety of Covid-19 treatments, but the evidence base for many is limited and the effect sizes have tended to be small. Hopes were high for repurposed antiviral drugs, for instance. Many of them are routinely administered and at least one was shown to reduce the length of hospital stays, but some studies have found no effect on mortality.

The same is true of convalescent plasma, transfusions of blood proteins from people who recovered from Covid-19. After more than a year of research, it mostly looks like these treatments arent effective, though theres still lots we dont know.

The FDA has issued emergency use authorization for monoclonal antibody treatments proteins that mimic the ones the immune system would produce to fight off the virus for those at severe risk from Covid-19. Monoclonal antibodies are also infused intravenously or as a series of four injections. They cost $2,100 a dose, which in the US is paid by the federal government so they are free to patients. They seem to work best when given early, pre-hospitalization, and while under those conditions they appear to be highly effective. However, getting people who recently tested positive for Covid-19 and still have mild symptoms to a medical setting for an intravenous infusion or four injections is a logistical challenge and the cost and the difficulty of delivery mean monoclonal antibodies will never be an option in much of the world.

Corticosteroids, which are powerful anti-inflammatory medicines, have a solid track record. Studies have found that administering the cheap steroid dexamethasone, which can be given as a pill or an infusion, to patients hospitalized with Covid-19 reduces their risk of death. But because it can constrain the immune system, it isnt recommended early in the course of the disease, when the main concern is the direct damage from the virus.

That leaves a glaring hole: Where are cheap, outpatient treatments that can reduce the risk of hospitalization in the first place and dont require a medical professional to administer in a medical setting? Fluvoxamine could hopefully fill that gap.

Fluvoxamine is an antidepressant, and in the US, its mostly prescribed for treating OCD. It is what is known as an SSRI, short for selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor the same class of drugs as popular antidepressants like Zoloft, Prozac, and Lexapro.

Through an unusual journey, it ended up on scientists radars as a potential Covid-19 treatment and subsequent research seems to bear that out.

Years ago, before the novel coronavirus had infected its first patient, Angela Reiersen, a psychiatrist at Washington University in St. Louis, was studying patients with a rare genetic disorder called Wolfram syndrome, which affects cellular stress responses. She noticed that they seemed to tolerate some SSRIs well and others poorly and dove into the differences in SSRI chemistry to figure out why.

It turned out that one of the SSRIs that worked well, fluvoxamine, binds to a receptor in cells that regulates cellular stress response and the production of cytokines, proteins that tell the body something is wrong and cause inflammation. Researchers at the University of Virginia found that fluvoxamine reduced inflammation in animals. Reiersen wondered if that was why it worked well for her patients.

Then the pandemic hit. One leading theory of what happens when patients suffer through Covid-19 is that cells damaged by the disease release tons of cytokines, which then causes inflammation in the lungs that can make it hard to breathe and cause lasting tissue damage. Early in the pandemic, Reiersen went to her colleagues at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis with a wild idea: Fluvoxamine might help Covid-19 patients.

Eric Lenze, a leading clinical researcher, agreed they should test it with a randomized controlled trial. I emailed him on March 25, 2020. We got the trial started by April 10, Reiersen told me.

They spent the spring and summer recruiting and treating Covid-19 patients. By the fall, they had results: Of the 152 participants, half in the placebo group (receiving a sugar pill rather than active medication) and half in the fluvoxamine group, six patients in the placebo group had met their studys threshold for respiratory difficulties. None in the fluvoxamine group had.

The results were published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. What I think is the most supported mechanism is an anti-inflammatory effect, Reiersen told me. Fluvoxamine can reduce the level of these chemicals called cytokines, which are involved in inflammation, so youd get less damage in the lungs.

The results were promising, but 152 patients isnt that many. Reiersen and Lenze started recruiting for a larger-scale trial, looking for more evidence that fluvoxamine could be a first-line Covid-19 treatment.

In the meantime, evidence was coming in from other angles, too. After a mass outbreak in California, researchers gave affected people the option to take fluvoxamine; 65 people opted to take it and 48 declined. None of those who took it required hospitalization, while six did among those who declined it.

In France, Nicolas Hoertel, a psychiatry researcher at the University of Paris who is not affiliated with the TOGETHER study, had conducted and published an observational study finding that patients on certain antidepressants were less likely to have severe Covid-19. This effect is not just fluvoxamine, but its not all antidepressants, he told me.

Observational studies dont assign patients a specific treatment but just record what treatment they receive and how well they do. They dont involve randomization, so they can be misleading if, say, people on antidepressants are systemically different from people not on antidepressants or if people who agree to try an experimental medication are healthier than people who refuse. So the results from these studies couldnt be taken as definitive but it was additional data.

The limited, promising literature around fluvoxamine prompted its inclusion in the large-scale study of treatments for Covid-19 run by Ed Mills at McMaster University and primarily conducted in Brazil. Dubbed the TOGETHER study after other prominent mega-clinical trials like RECOVERY and SOLIDARITY by other organizations, it randomized patients across eight prospective treatments, including metformin (a diabetes medication), hydroxychloroquine (an antimalarial), and ivermectin (an antiparasite).

The team announced their results at an August 6 symposium that was sponsored by the National Institutes of Health. Most of the treatments failed: Their study couldnt detect an effect. A lot of drugs against Covid just dont work very well, Mills told me. Two other treatments were still in progress, and it was too early to rule out the chance that theyll work.

But fluvoxamine was a different story. In the trial, it improved patient outcomes substantially and while its not the first drug to do that, ease of delivery and price give it the potential to have an outsized impact on patient care, especially outside the rich world.

In the research conducted so far, fluvoxamine was prescribed to patients who started experiencing Covid-19 symptoms.

In the TOGETHER study, they typically visited a doctor to enroll in the trial and start taking medication or a placebo three days after their symptoms began.

The results of the study are strong enough that researchers are suggesting changing clinical practice to recommend fluvoxamine to people with symptomatic Covid-19.

We have now growing evidence from different kinds of research technical, clinical indicating that [treatment with certain antidepressants] is very likely to be effective in Covid, Hoertel said. The likelihood of benefits is very high.

Critical to changing clinical recommendations is having enough information about the risks and benefits of a treatment. Since fluvoxamine is decades old, its risks are already well understood.

We know a great deal about the safety and tolerability of fluvoxamine, Lenze told me. It can cause in about one-quarter of people some nausea, which is usually mild. Its not fatal even in overdose, its been around for over a quarter of a century so theres not going to be any unpleasant surprises about safety issues, and its really easy to use its just a pill. I dont see anything that should stop people from taking it.

There are still things scientists want to know about fluvoxamine, including exactly how it works within the body. And pinning down precisely how much the drug reduces hospitalization and death will definitely take more evidence though from the 31 percent reduction in hospitalizations in the McMaster study, the researchers who spoke to Vox think its likely that the effect is real and sizable.

The TOGETHER trial hasnt yet been peer-reviewed, though I spoke with numerous unaffiliated researchers whod seen the results and found them convincing.

Bottom line, in my opinion at least, Ed [Mills]s finding proves that the drug works, Lenze told me.

Weve all been burned by promising studies of these repurposed drugs, and its quite reasonable to reserve final judgment until we see the complete data, and even other studies. ... But this already feels different from hydroxychloroquine and company given the high quality of the research, Paul Sax argued in NEJM Journal Watch Infectious Diseases. We might finally be onto something.

Another possibility to account for when looking at clinical trial data is publication bias studies that find results get published, while those that find null results often dont. Lenze is attempting a large-scale replication of his small-scale fluvoxamine study from last year, and so far hasnt been able to validate the huge reduction in hospitalizations he found the first time around mainly because recruiting for Covid-19 clinical trials in the US has gotten increasingly difficult as most high-risk people are vaccinated and not at risk of hospitalization, and unvaccinated people are less likely to enroll in clinical trials or adhere to a recommended course of medication. (The TOGETHER study got around this problem by recruiting in Brazil.)

Another worry is that variants will make our understanding of Covid-19 treatments obsolete as soon as we develop one. The TOGETHER study was mostly conducted before the delta variant predominated in Brazil. Theres no strong reason to think fluvoxamine wouldnt work against delta, but well need additional research to see if the effect size remains the same.

But crucially, we dont have to answer every unanswered question for doctors to prescribe fluvoxamine to patients. Researchers do have answers to the questions of Is the drug safe? and Does the balance of evidence suggest significant improvement in patient outcomes? The evidence on those two points looks convincing, so even though theres lots more to learn, the researchers and clinicians studying fluvoxamine feel ready to say that the drug is a good idea.

One question lots of doctors and patients have about a Covid-19 treatment, of course, is: Is it FDA-approved? Fluvoxamine is FDA-approved but for OCD, not for Covid-19. In fact, Lenze told me, I dont think the FDA ever will approve it for Covid. The reason the FDA will never approve it for Covid is exactly the reason its so useful for Covid, namely its cheap and its widely available. No one can make any money off it, so no one is going to spend the money to appeal to the FDA to approve it.

Doctors can prescribe drugs the FDA has approved as a treatment for one condition to treat another condition off-label, using their clinical judgment. Doctors may vary in how comfortable they feel with it, but it is common and fully permitted by US regulations.

One other thing about the emergence of fluvoxamine worth discussing is the process by which it happened: a new approach to clinical trials that is changing how we find new treatments.

Conducting clinical trials takes a long time. Most people will not be eligible to join a given trial. Finding the eligible ones and recruiting and enrolling them is time- and labor-intensive.

In order to find moderate-effect sizes and be confident in the results, a clinical trial needs to enlist thousands of patients, but that also means it will take much longer to recruit for and conduct and with Covid-19, delays have costs in human lives. Clinical trials on this scale are expensive, too. TOGETHER is funded by private philanthropists, including Fast Grants, an initiative by Silicon Valley billionaire Patrick Collison and economist Tyler Cowen to speed pandemic response by getting grant money out rapidly.

For the past year, Mills has been using a new approach to clinical trials in order to test potential Covid-19 treatments faster. The key thing was to conduct them in parallel using whats called an adaptive platform trial. Theyre multi-armed, so youre testing lots of substances at a time, which allows you to only have one control group, Mills told me. What all of the useful trials in Covid have in common is that theyre an adaptive platform trial.

Running, say, eight clinical trials, with eight control groups, requires many thousands of patients to get an informative sample, which can take a long time. Having eight experimental groups sharing a single control group cuts the number of patients required nearly in half.

This study model reallocates patients among treatment groups once a given treatment has been demonstrated not to work. That leads them to have larger, more convincing sample sizes for the most promising treatments. You make decisions based on the data that emerges early, Mills said. After you have randomized 200 patients to the drug, if you cant tell that its working, its probably not a very good drug. Every drug thats not showing effects is a waste of patients.

Fluvoxamine was one of eight treatments Mills and colleagues tested. Over time, as other treatments showed no effect, more patients got randomized to the fluvoxamine arm of the trial letting the researchers learn more about the drug that seemed the most promising.

Mills says that played a huge role in their ability to quickly figure out what worked and what didnt. Prior to Covid, it was really just MD Anderson [the cancer hospital in Houston] doing this design. I think its going to be how almost all clinical trials happen going forward.

Now that there are Covid-19 vaccines, the race for a treatment might seem less urgent than it was last year. But researchers say that mindset would be a mistake.

Vaccine uptake has stalled in most rich countries around 60 to 70 percent, and the delta variant means that the virus is still spreading. Effective treatments could mean dramatically fewer people hospitalized in places where hospitals are overwhelmed.

In poor countries, the situation is starker. Vaccines are not yet widely available, and the prospects for mass vaccinations are grim. And many existing treatments for Covid-19 are unaffordable for the global poor. Thats where fluvoxamines promise really comes in.

Its $2,000 for a dose for a monoclonal antibody, Mills told me. Our drug costs $4. The supply chain, too, is simpler. Fluvoxamine doesnt need to be kept in a freezer, doesnt expire quickly, and can be mass-manufactured cheaply. If it continues to show health benefits for Covid-19 patients, making it widely available in poor countries could help them weather delta.

The fight to discover new treatments isnt over, either. When I talked with Mills, he was excited about research in the UK finding that steroid inhalers another cheap, widely available medication reduced Covid-19 hospitalizations. Mills is also in the process of enrolling patients for a study of both steroids and fluvoxamine, to see whether the benefits are greater when patients take both drugs. We go from having no drugs for early treatment that are cheap and widely available to having two, he told me. What does it look like if we use them together?

The world is still months of research away from an answer to that question. But even the partial answers available today might make all the difference for some patients.

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How the antidepressant fluvoxamine emerged as a promising Covid-19 treatment - Vox.com

Respiratory infections other than Covid-19 are filling up pediatric wards – CNN

August 27, 2021

On top of it, many are infected with a second virus at the same time -- usually respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV.

A fresh surge of Covid-19 is colliding with an unseasonable epidemic of RSV, and it's landing kids in hospitals across the country.

"The past few days, the past week, we've been seeing high numbers of children coming in," said Dr. Sarah Combs, a pediatric emergency medicine physician at Children's National Hospital in Washington, DC.

"You name it -- anything from the common cold to pneumonia to having respiratory distress, meaning we need to get some support breathing, and they're just coming in in higher and higher numbers," Combs told CNN. "In the summer, typically RSV is a non-issue. It's just not there."

It's the same in Texas.

"This Delta surge has been coupled with the re-emergence of other respiratory viruses," said Dr. Jim Versalovic, interim pediatrician in chief at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston.

And in Ohio.

"We are definitely seeing more RSV," Dr. Joshua Schaffzin, director of infection prevention and control at Cincinnati Children's Hospital, told CNN.

'Christmas in July' -- without the joy

"It's not seasonal. I have been calling it Christmas in July, because we usually see it around Christmas," he added.

"It's not exactly a gift. We are just seeing it at a time we typically don't."

The three hospitals, among others, are also seeing high numbers of other respiratory viruses such as parainfluenza 3, rhinoviruses and enteroviruses that cause hand, foot and mouth disease and other conditions.

"The interesting thing with rhinovirus is that normally it would cause just the common cold," Combs said.

"It's normally a very mild virus. It's the most common cause of the common cold, so it is unusual that we're seeing children get sicker than we'd expect. And really what we see is that children are just getting that much sicker, you know, they may be requiring things like BiPap to breathe." Bilevel positive airway pressure devices are a non-invasive type of ventilator that help ensure the lungs keep filling up with oxygenated air.

It's all new for 2021.

In 2020, Versalovic told CNN, "it was really mainly about Covid."

Now, hospitals are not only seeing more kids with Covid-19, and sicker than they were with Covid-19, but they're sicker with viruses that normally do not land most children in the hospital.

"We are working with other children's hospitals and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Children's Hospital Association to share data to explore this further," Versalovic said.

"The cases are there. The cases are rising. The children are getting sick. And so we need to be prepared to take care of them," Combs said.

The pediatricians see some clear reasons for what's causing the surges, and equally clear ways forward for preventing them.

Back to school for kids, and germs, too

"I think it's clear over the summer months we had children mingling playing out and about," Versalovic said. "Many children are now congregating in preschool and obviously grade school environments -- high schools too. So we also know they're involved in extracurricular activities and getting together socially and playing," he added.

"And we want children to develop and to be in class in person, but we have to continue to emphasize the importance of masking. Because masking doesn't just protect one from Covid but could also prevent these co-infections."

There's another factor. Kids have not been exposed to seasonal viruses for more than a year.

"I think one thing is that we essentially sheltered a lot of these children during Covid," Combs said.

"So there's a theory that their immune systems didn't have the normal low-lying, routine level of exposure to the normal routine viruses like rhinovirus, so they weren't able to mount those kind of micro-responses to viruses and keep themselves ticking over," she added.

"Essentially it was like a bubble child, right? You've had them contained. You've had them quarantined ... and then all of a sudden we released these children. They're often in summer camps and we're even looking at going back to school. So all of a sudden these relatively naive immune systems that have kind of been resting on their laurels for the past 18 months are forced to confront the normal load of viruses and it's just that much harder to fight them."

On top of that, said Schaffzin, people got tired of wearing masks, of washing hands, of keeping apart. The heat of summer drove many people back indoors.

"We can't say for sure whether the unmasking and people wanting to spend time with each other is causing more of an increase, but we're certainly seeing a lot more infections and for RSV, not at the typical time of year," he said.

The benefits of all that masking and social distancing earlier in the pandemic was made clear by the lack of a flu season in 2020-2021, Schaffzin said.

"On average, 125 children die of flu in the United States every year, but the range is between 40 to closer to 200," he said.

"Last year, there was one. And that's why masking, again, seems to be the answer."

The CDC did indeed report just a single pediatric flu death last season.

"I think this statistic of a single flu death last season in the United States was really striking, and there were many, many school systems that were open and functioning, many daycares that were open and functioning," Schaffzin said.

"And I think that really proves, the real-world data shows us, that masking is an inexpensive and effective intervention," he added.

Masks won't hurt you. Really

People don't like masks, but the pediatricians agreed that parents and governors making a fuss over mask mandates are wrongheaded.

"I'm not going to lie -- you're outside and there's 100% humidity, a high heat index, it doesn't feel great," Combs said.

But it's not dangerous to anyone to wear a mask.

"When people are uncomfortable from the mask it's because they feel overheated and they're either getting a little anxious, or the mask is uncomfortable. It's close up against their mouth. Sometimes they breathe in and they can feel it against their lips and it's not something they're accustomed to. And it makes people feel out of breath," Schaffzin said.

"It is a sensation. It is not an increase of carbon dioxide. It is not anything internal that's dangerous."

And children don't mind masks unless their parents tell them they should.

"Kids tolerate masks really well. Kids tolerate masks a lot more than adults give them credit for," Schaffzin said.

"Especially if you make it fun, if you make it colorful or something that they enjoy, kids will not only have no problem but they'll want to wear the masks," he added.

"If you normalize masking, which is normal in many countries around the world, the controversy goes away."

The same goes for hand hygiene.

"You know there are lots of things that we do that we do for our own health that may not impact others' health. We brush our teeth. Some of us floss, exercise and whatnot, and what we do is we build those methods and those events into our daily routine, so that it feels weird if we don't do them," Schaffzin said.

"We're more likely to notice that we haven't brushed our teeth than we are to remember brushing our teeth on a given day. And what I would like to see is Covid prevention methods to be similar to that."

The pediatricians note that it's true masks can interfere with communication, especially in classrooms, where seeing someone's mouth or expression might be important.

"We need more data in terms of the social effects of masks and we can't dismiss that outright," Schaffzin said.

There are work-arounds. For instance, clear masks, sometimes used at children's hospitals, can help, he said.

"There's always a way around it. Humans innovate. It's what they do," he added.

'We can control a pandemic'

"We have not found a way to prevent every respiratory disease, but we do have mechanisms, including hand hygiene and including masking and including avoiding people who are sick, that when we do them together, reliably, we actually can prevent transmission," Schaffzin said. "We can control a pandemic."

Combs echoed this.

"What we know, numbers wise, is that we were successful when we put all the measures in place," she said. But people have started letting down their guard.

"There's a lot of fatigue around with doing the same things over and over, especially with seeing these peaks come and go and come and go. But what we do know is that when we mask appropriately, especially if you have a well-fitting mask or even a double mask technique, if everyone in a certain area is wearing that appropriate masking, that's going to be about 95% effective at preventing transmission or spread," she said.

And that will be the same whether the virus being kept at bay is Covid-19, or RSV, or rhinovirus or parainfluenza virus.

Read more:

Respiratory infections other than Covid-19 are filling up pediatric wards - CNN

Buffalo Bills receivers Isaiah McKenzie, Cole Beasley fined for COVID-19 protocol violations – ESPN

August 27, 2021

10:03 AM ET

Marcel Louis-JacquesESPN

BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Buffalo Bills wide receivers Isaiah McKenzie and Cole Beasley on Thursday disclosed they were fined for violating the NFL's COVID-19 protocol.

McKenzie tweeted out a picture of the letter he was sent by the NFL detailing multiple documented violations of the protocol. He said in a subsequent tweet that he was fined $14,650.

"They got me!" McKenzie wrote. "@NFL you win!"

Beasley did not disclose how much he was fined, only saying on Twitter that he was disciplined for not wearing a mask for "literally 5 steps" from the entry door to the locker room after wearing it "that whole day."

"It's unfortunate when players get fined," Bills coach Sean McDermott said Thursday. "That being said, these rules have been agreed upon and in place and well-communicated for some time. And so it's important for us that we focus on being safe and healthy -- that's No. 1 and that's always been No. 1 -- and then No. 2 is doing our best to stay focused on the goal and the purpose of why we're here -- which is to win football games."

2 Related

According to the league's letter, McKenzie's discipline comes after he failed to wear a mask in the team facility on multiple occasions on Wednesday -- once while walking through the indoor fieldhouse into the training room and again in the meeting area of the weight room "while gathered near other players after the offensive meeting."

In addition to those violations, the league said it sent a written warning to him on July 27 saying that future violations would result in "increased discipline, including for conduct detrimental."

Under the NFL's COVID-19 policy, unvaccinated players are required to wear a mask throughout the team facility, which the league reminded McKenzie of in its letter Thursday.

"Your conduct is expressly prohibited by the Protocols," the NFL told McKenzie. "Again, your conduct potentially compromised not only your safety, but also the safety of others, as well as the league's ability to ensure that your club's training camp is conducted in a safe manner."

The violations come after the Bills sent six players home Tuesday who were deemed close contacts to a vaccinated staff member who tested positive for COVID-19. Beasley, Gabriel Davis, Star Lotulelei and Vernon Butler were all designated close contacts by the NFL and must remain away from the facility for five days, per NFL policy. The Bills also sent Matt Milano and A.J. Klein home for precautionary reasons, but neither were designated close contacts by the NFL and were allowed to return to practice Wednesday.

Beasley has been vocally opposed to the NFL's protocols for vaccinated and unvaccinated players and responded in support of McKenzie on Thursday.

"Don't worry they got me too," Beasley tweeted. "But I was wearing a mask when I was in close contact with fully vaxxed trainer who tested positive and still got sent home. So what's the point of the mask anyways?

"Meanwhile I'm here still testing negative and can't come back. Make it make sense."

McDermott said around 81% of the team is fully vaccinated. Buffalo has placed three players on the reserve/COVID-19 list due to positive tests this preseason, including starting left tackle Dion Dawkins -- who was hospitalized for four days as a result of the virus.

"I go back to the personal decision on this thing. I respect our players' positions," McDermott said Thursday. "In my personal opinion, it's right to get vaccinated."

McDermott said there's a fine line between the personal and competitive reasons surrounding players' choices to be vaccinated or not, but he stressed that final roster cuts will not based on players' decisions regarding the matter.

"That [choice of being vaccinated or not vaccinated] will not be a factor in deciding who stays and who goes," McDermott said.

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Buffalo Bills receivers Isaiah McKenzie, Cole Beasley fined for COVID-19 protocol violations - ESPN

Where the Delta Wave Has Driven Up Covid-19 Vaccinations – The New York Times

August 27, 2021

After weeks of stagnation, the United States vaccination campaign has had a relatively successful month, with vaccine uptake rising from early-summer lows in every state in the country.

The upswing in vaccinations has come alongside an extended, and much more pronounced, increase in coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths in the United States over the past two months. Public health officials say that in their communities, residents have been driven to get the vaccine by worries that the more-transmissible Delta variant might make them, or their loved ones, sick.

The reason why weve seen the marked increase in demand is fear, its the Delta variant, said Robert Ator, the retired National Guard colonel who runs Arkansas vaccination effort.

The increase in vaccinations has been especially pronounced in states where immunization levels were (and remain) below the national average of 61 percent. Many of those states have felt the effects of the Delta-led fourth wave most acutely.

Percent of total population vaccinated by Aug. 21

Pct. point increase in people vaccinated

+4+5+6+7+8+9+10+11+12

Public health officials said that some areas with lower vaccine coverage, especially rural ones, just hadnt been severely affected by the virus until the Delta surge.

Some communities are seeing Covid close up now, said Dr. Mandy Cohen, the secretary of the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. Theyve seen it on the news, but thats not the same as seeing it close up.

That proximity is driving behavior change across the country.

The virus is coming to visit these communities and they are starting to feel the pinch, said Colonel Ator. When they start seeing their friends and families being affected by this, then it becomes a reality.

States that have seen larger increases in new cases since their early-summer nadirs, such as Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi, tend to be those with bigger increases in new vaccinations.

0 +1,000% +2,000% +3,000% Increase in weekly new cases50%0+100%+200%Decrease in vaccinationsIncrease in vaccinations

Wash.Ill.Calif.Ariz.Mass.Wis.TexasNeb.UtahOre.Fla.N.Y.R.I.Ga.N.H.N.C.N.J.Colo.Md.Nev.Tenn.HawaiiInd.Ky.Minn.Okla.Pa.S.C.D.C.Kan.Mo.Vt.Va.Conn.IowaLa.OhioMich.S.D.Ark.Del.Miss.N.M.N.D.Wyo.AlaskaMaineAla.IdahoMont.W.Va.

Note: Not all states had hit their lowest weekly vaccinations in early June, when Delta was on the verge of becoming dominant, and some only had mild growth in late July and August. As a result, these states may show a decrease in vaccinations in this analysis.

Some of the recent rise in immunizations is due to teens and tweens who are heading back to school, but the bulk of the increase is from working-age Americans, public health officials say and data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirms.

And while new vaccinations may be flattening now overall in the U.S., health officials do not expect them to return to previous lows any time soon, especially after the Food and Drug Administration granted full approval to the Pfizer vaccine on Monday. That move is likely to spur new vaccinations, in ways both direct 31 percent of unvaccinated people surveyed in a June poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation indicated they would be more open to getting the jab once a vaccine was fully approved and indirect, as it sets the stage for new vaccine requirements by organizations including corporations, hospitals and colleges.

While the uptick in new vaccinations first doses has been the subject of particular interest, total vaccine doses, comprising first and second jabs, have been on the rise as well. They will likely continue to increase as third doses complicate the picture.

The F.D.A. this month opened eligibility for third shots for some people with weakened immune systems. And last week, the Biden administration strongly recommended that Americans who received the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna coronavirus vaccines get a booster shot eight months after their second vaccine dose. If the F.D.A. approves that recommendation, boosters will be available starting in late September.

However, there is evidence that about 1.2 million people in the U.S. may have already received unauthorized additional doses before these announcements were made, according to the C.D.C.

MississippiMiss.

+2,611%926 25,102

+227%16,453 53,746

+1134 45

LouisianaLa.

+1,381%2,373 35,139

+183%26,277 74,337

+1236 48

ArkansasArk.

+930%1,528 15,737

+159%15,174 39,324

+1240 52

AlabamaAla.

+1,732%1,738 31,845

+142%33,241 80,455

+1236 48

TennesseeTenn.

+1,163%2,765 34,921

+139%31,593 75,428

+840 48

GeorgiaGa.

+1,780%2,829 53,172

+139%79,530 189,795

+941 50

OklahomaOkla.

+1,746%842 15,542

+130%19,578 45,000

+1042 52

UtahUtah

+274%1,946 7,273

+129%20,193 46,297

+946 55

North CarolinaN.C.

+1,103%3,128 37,621

+128%45,733 104,335

+1044 54

WyomingWyo.

+388%492 2,399

+86%3,584 6,661

+638 44

South CarolinaS.C.

+2,858%857 25,346

+85%32,157 59,397

+941 50

IdahoIdaho

+576%723 4,887

+57%8,760 13,783

+538 43

KentuckyKy.

+1,326%1,582 22,554

+44%39,784 57,269

+947 56

North DakotaN.D.

+491%248 1,465

+39%3,449 4,797

+443 47

Rhode IslandR.I.

+860%221 2,121

+33%8,689 11,552

+862 70

New MexicoN.M.

+814%572 5,227

+32%17,500 23,072

+1058 68

IowaIowa

+945%569 5,944

+25%16,726 20,951

+550 55

KansasKan.

+970%761 8,141

+20%20,677 24,888

+947 56

FloridaFla.

+1,325%11,454 163,197

+19%242,288 287,284

+1250 62

MinnesotaMinn.

+634%1,186 8,705

+10%36,416 39,900

+655 61

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Where the Delta Wave Has Driven Up Covid-19 Vaccinations - The New York Times

Between flu and Covid-19, winter ‘could be complicated’ – CNN

August 25, 2021

Typically, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests people get a flu shot by the end of October.

But the coming flu season may be a bad one. With Covid-19 still complicating things, the experts say you may want to do it even earlier.

"Years ago, we would say you should wait as long as you can to get a shot, but if you get it in the fall, that really should cover you through the season," said Dr. Claudia Hoyen, director of pediatric infection control at UH Rainbow Babies and Children's Hospital in Cleveland. "If people get the chance to go ahead and get their flu shot, whenever they can do it is probably good."

Based on the number of viruses she's seen hitting people early this year, she thinks it doesn't bode well for the flu season. Hoyen's children's hospital has been much busier this summer compared to last, treating children for a bigger mix of viruses.

"Once we all took our masks off, the viruses did what they do best and found lots of people to give runny noses to," Hoyen said.

What the flu season will look like this year

To predict what kind of flu numbers the US should expect, experts often look to the Southern hemisphere, where flu season usually starts in June and peaks in August.

"The story is mixed so far," said Dr. William Schaffner, a professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Australia, with its tight pandemic restrictions on travelers coming into the country, has had very low flu activity, Schaffner said.

"But China, which has more interactions with the outer world, has had a moderate flu season," Schaffner said.

"So we think we'll have at least a moderate season this year."

Children the 'distribution franchise' for flu

Typically what kicks off the flu season is the start of the school year. With more kids going back to the classroom than last year, unless kids are wearing masks, and everyone else for that matter, there will likely be more cases, he said.

"Children are the 'distribution franchise' for the influenza virus. They're on top of each other and they are not the most hygienic little lovelies, so they spread the flu virus amongst themselves," said Schaffner.

"When kids get infected, they shed the virus for a longer period of time than adults do, so they're really the people who bring the virus into the family and spread it about to the neighbors and, well, everybody," Schaffner said.

Flu by the numbers

In an average season, the US sees between 9 and 45 million cases of the flu each year, according to the CDC.

Last year was no average season. Flu was practically non-existent in the US with only a few thousand cases for the entire year. One child died. For comparison, in 2019-2020, there were 199 flu-related deaths in children and 144 the season before that.

What's different this year

What may have helped are the extra precautions people took to stop the spread of Covid-19.

Masks, good hand hygiene, limited in-person school, restricted travel and less interaction with others can help prevent Covid-19 and the spread of the flu.

A person can get a flu shot and a Covid-19 vaccine at the same time, so if they haven't been vaccinated against Covid-19 yet, or they need a booster, there are no real medical reasons to space them apart from a flu shot, Schaffner said

"If it's your opportunity to get both, I would say get both," Schaffner said. Of course, children 11 and younger cannot be vaccinated against Covid-19 yet.

Flu shots are already available at pharmacies like CVS and Walgreen's.

An added motivation to get a flu shot

Getting vaccinated could certainly keep those numbers to a minimum and with Covid-19 in circulation, Hoyen said people have an added incentive to get a flu shot this year.

Kids under 12 still can't get a Covid-19 vaccine, and while the disease can be milder in the little ones, Hoyen said hospitals are seeing more children with Covid-19 and another virus.

"Even if we don't think these things are important for ourselves, we should really do them for a child in our lives so that they can get back to a little more normal," Hoyen said.

Originally posted here:

Between flu and Covid-19, winter 'could be complicated' - CNN

Text with The Texas Tribune for COVID-19 news – The Texas Tribune

August 25, 2021

Sign up for The Brief, our daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news.

At least 89 Texas hospitals were out of ICU beds last week. The state is close to breaking its record number of COVID-19 hospitalizations. And just 46% of Texans are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, while about 8 million eligible Texans havent gotten a single dose.

By some measures, this wave of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations could be the worst yet in Texas. Which is why The Texas Tribune is using its texting service to help keep Texas residents informed of the latest COVID-19 news and trends. To sign up, text hello to 512-967-6919, visit this page or enter your details below.

Heres what you can expect: crucial news about mask mandates, vaccine boosters and more to keep you informed and safe as hospitalizations surge across the state.

We are using a service called Subtext to help us make this happen for our audiences. You can read more about Subtext here. It does not sell user data or phone numbers to advertisers or other third parties.

This is the same service we used in February when a winter storm knocked out much of the states power grid and left millions without heat and water. Our readers told us they appreciated our updates over text then, and weve received positive feedback so far about our COVID-19 updates. We dont know right now what this service will always look like moving forward but we would love our audiences input. You can email us your feedback at community@texastribune.org. Or you can just text it to us now.

Join us Sept. 20-25 at the 2021 Texas Tribune Festival. Tickets are on sale now for this multi-day celebration of big, bold ideas about politics, public policy and the days news, curated by The Texas Tribunes award-winning journalists. Learn more.

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Text with The Texas Tribune for COVID-19 news - The Texas Tribune

Covid-19 vaccines flirted with perfection. Reality is more complicated – STAT

August 25, 2021

When Covid-19 vaccines were reported last fall to be roughly 95% effective at preventing symptomatic Covid-19 infections, the world rejoiced and even veteran scientists were blown away. Very few vaccines are that protective. Those made to fend off viruses like SARS-CoV-2 viruses that invade the nose and throat, like flu typically arent at the high end of the efficacy scale.

That was the good news. Now, however, our soaring expectations for Covid-19 vaccines are in the process of sinking back to earth.

With the more transmissible Delta variant of SARS-2 circulating, it is increasingly apparent that, even if mRNA vaccines like Pfizers and Modernas offer impressive protection against severe Covid infections, they arent going to prevent infections in the upper respiratory tract of some proportion of vaccinated people.

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The vaccines are wondrous weapons, but they arent impenetrable armor.

We all wish that that this would be gone. That we would get a vaccine and we would control it, Kathryn Edwards, a vaccine expert at Vanderbilt University, told STAT. But I think that looking back, probably that wasnt always realistic.

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There are still open questions about exactly how much less protection mRNA vaccines may be providing. Evidence of the downward creep of their efficacy is based in part on as-yet-unpublished data from Israel, one of the first countries to vaccinate a high percentage of its elderly.

Ran Balicer, director of Israels Clalit Research Institute and one of the scientists involved in this research, said the group has seen a decline in vaccine effectiveness since the Delta variant started to take off in the country. But figuring out what is behind that waning immunity? Deltas increased transmissibility? The advanced age of the Israelis who were first vaccinated? A combination of those factors? is very challenging, he said.

Balicer said he and his team were acutely aware of various types of confounding [factors] and the difficulty of finding a good way to compare data on the vaccinated and unvaccinated in a way that allows for a methodologically sound study to be run. It is, he said, why it is taking us more time than usual to release our assessments and publications.

Theres another factor that complicates researchers ability to figure out whats behind the data in Israel and how much it can tell other countries about the mRNA vaccines as a class. Israel used Pfizer vaccine exclusively; its findings may not apply to the Moderna jab.

Israeli data can only give hints regarding Pfizer vaccines. Everything else needs to be inferences from other countries, Balicer said.

For Michael Osterholm, the jury is still out on what is behind the increase in cases among vaccinated people, and how big a threat it poses.

It all comes down to: Is it waning immunity against severe illness, hospitalization, and deaths, or is it waning against mild illness? And I dont think weve answered that yet, said Osterholm, who is director of the University of Minnesotas Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy. Now I think its the right question to pose. The challenge is we just dont have an answer to that yet.

Though the Israeli data havent yet been published, top-line findings have been made available. Based on them and on some preliminary U.S. data, the Biden administrations public health leaders announced last week that Americans would be offered a third dose of the mRNA vaccines starting the week of Sept. 20, because the breakthrough infections may presage a decline in efficacy against severe disease. A third shot of mRNA vaccine should follow eight months after the second, they said.

We are concerned that the current strong protection against severe infection, hospitalization, and death could decrease in the months ahead, especially among those who are at higher risk, or who were vaccinated earlier during the phases of our vaccination rollout, Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in explaining the decision.

A critic of the booster decision, Anna Durbin, believes the high bar set by the results of the Phase 3 clinical trials of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines is now negatively impacting U.S. vaccination policy.

I think these vaccines are a victim of their own success, said Durbin, a vaccine researcher in Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Now we expect perfection. And if its less than perfect, we want a booster.

Some scientists have noted that a year ago when the Phase 3 trials for these vaccines were first underway, the world would have been ecstatic at the prospect of vaccines that prevented severe Covid infections in most vaccinated people. But vaccine efficacy estimates in the 90% range against even mild infections reset what we thought these vaccines would be able to do for us.

Vincent Munster, chief of the virus ecology section at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Rocky Mountain Laboratories in Montana, also thinks our expectations may be unrealistic.

He and his team tested some Covid vaccines in the early stages of development, before human trials were conducted. In animals, the vaccines did not block infection in the upper airways, but did protect the lungs. If the animal work is predictive of what happens in humans, it would mean vaccinated people could catch colds or experience flu-like symptoms if they contract SARS-2, but would not in most cases develop severe or life-threatening illness.

We were making a vaccine against the severe Covid and, all of a sudden, all these expectations of transmission-blocking were piled up on these vaccines, he said.

Case in point: In announcing the decision to offer third shots, Walensky cited a study from New York state that showed the mRNA vaccines efficacy against any infection had declined to 79.8%. But that same study showed protection against serious illness was still above 90%. For many experts, it was evidence not of a problem, but of a success.

There were also questions about drawing too many conclusions based on the study. Even the authors cautioned that waning protection might not be the whole story. People were more afraid of Covid in the summer and fall of 2020, and many were more rigid about following social distancing measures.

Variations from clinical trial findings could be because the trials were conducted during a period before the emergence of new variants and when non-pharmaceutical intervention strategies (e.g., wearing masks and physically distancing) were more stringently implemented, potentially lessening the amount of virus to which persons were exposed, they wrote.

Munster, Durbin, and many other experts insist that the vaccines are still standing up as well as they can in the face of a daunting challenge. With vaccination rates in a number of states still far too low, the amount of SARS-2 circulating is dismayingly high at this point, more than a year-and-a-half into the pandemic in the United States. The way to make progress in the fight is to get more people vaccinated both here and abroad to cut transmission and the risk of new variants emerging, they insist.

Giving a booster to vaccinated people is not going to control Delta. Whats going to control Delta is vaccinating unvaccinated people, Durbin said. That is the bottom line.

Edwards, from Vanderbilt, thinks were going to have to curb our expectations, warning that as time goes on, there will likely be vaccinated people who arent immunocompromised who will get severely ill and some will die.

I dont think its going to be a lot, but I think it will be there and I think that will make us all very uncomfortable, she said. I think that we have to be realistic about what we can expect.

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Covid-19 vaccines flirted with perfection. Reality is more complicated - STAT

Bringing In More Nurses And Other COVID-19 News (Aug. 25, 2021) – Houston Public Media

August 25, 2021

Houston Matters begins at 9 a.m. CT on 88.7FM or listen online. Join the discussion at 713-440-8870, talk@houstonmatters.org or @HoustonMatters.

On Wednesdays Houston Matters: Harris County plans to spend $30 million to bring in hundreds of additional nurses to the Houston area to help the region's strained hospital system. We discuss that and other news related to COVID-19 with Doug Lawson, the CEO of St. Luke's Health.

Also this hour: We discuss the latest news in our weekly political roundup.

Then, we revisit a conversation from 2018 about how Southern Blacks fared here in Texas during Reconstruction and under Jim Crow.

And we learn how local concert venues and musicians are dealing with the COVID-19 surge while still performing.

Audio from todays show will be available after 11 a.m. CT. We also offer a free podcast here, on iTunes, Stitcher and other apps.

Fill out the form below to subscribe our new daily editorial newsletter from the HPM Newsroom.

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Bringing In More Nurses And Other COVID-19 News (Aug. 25, 2021) - Houston Public Media

COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are surging: It is time for our community to step up and do the right thing – polkcountyiowa.gov

August 25, 2021

August 24, 2021

(Des Moines, IA) Polk County is back in a situation we hoped to never be in again. COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths are on the rise.

In late March of 2020, patients began to die of COVID-19 infections. The number of deaths continued to increase so drastically that by the winter of 2020 and into 2021 over 30 individuals were dying each week from COVID complications. Through the vaccine administration and COVID-19 prevention strategies, the number of deaths were driven down such that, beginning in March, there were zero weeks with above 10 COVID related fatalities. The numbers continued to fall as people continued to get vaccinated and by June through July less than five deaths were seen every week (many weeks with only one or two COVID-19 deaths).

Our months of incredibly hard work are quickly being undone, said Joshua Akers, Polk County Medical Examiner. The first full week of August we saw seven COVID-19 related deaths and the numbers are continuing to rise. What is also concerning is that we are beginning to see the average age of decedents getting younger.

Over the past three weeks, we have seen 175% increase in COVID-19 hospitalizations. Today, our hospitals have 109 COVID-19 patients. We have not seen a trend in COVID-19 hospitalizations like this since the last COVID-19 surge, which took place in October of 2020. Of the 109 COVID-19 patients, four of those are under the age of 18. While four may seem like a small number to most, this is the highest number of under 18 COVID-19 hospitalized patients we have ever seen throughout the pandemic. Polk County hospitals are operating at limited capacity. Currently, Blank Childrens Hospital has canceled elective surgeries and other metro hospitals are monitoring daily cases and canceling some elective surgeries.

Finally, our COVID-19 cases from the past weekend has increased 87% since the first weekend in August. During the month of July 2021, Polk County was averaging 31 COVID-19 cases a day. As of August 22, 2021, we are averaging 120 COVID-19 cases a day. We expect our COVID-19 cases in Polk County will continue to surge since school has started and individuals are not following COVID-19 prevention strategies, including wearing masks in public indoor settings.

Our hospitals are full. Our healthcare workers are tired. Parents and guardians are scared to send their children to schools, said Helen Eddy, Director of Polk County Health Department. We implore everyone to step up, once again, and do the right thing for the people you love and care about, for our community and for the 82,000 kids in Polk County who cannot be vaccinated.

The Health Department strongly encourages you to follow these tips:

For more information or to schedule a COVID-19 vaccine appointment, please visit http://www.polkcountyiowa.gov/health.

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COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are surging: It is time for our community to step up and do the right thing - polkcountyiowa.gov

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