Category: Covid-19

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A Third Dose of the COVID-19 Vaccine Recommended for Some Cancer Patients With Weakened Immune Systems – On Cancer – Memorial Sloan Kettering

August 16, 2021

As you may have heard, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)has recommended a third dose of the COVID-19 vaccine for people who are immunocompromised. This includes some but not all people with cancer.

Mini Kamboj

Mini Kamboj, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer CentersChief Medical Epidemiologist, has answers to your questions about who is eligible and how you can schedule an appointment to receive your third shot.

For a vaccine to protect you, it must activate your immune system. In some immunocompromised patients, this ability is impaired, so a third dose can boost the immune response.

According to the CDC, among severely immunocompromised people who had undergone solid organ transplant and had virtually no protection after receiving two doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccine, 30 to 50% developed antibodies protecting them from COVID-19 after getting an additional dose.

People who have moderate to severe immunosuppression qualify to receive an additional dose, usually because of an organ or stem cell transplant, HIV infection, steroid therapy, or certain cancer treatments that impair the bodys ability to fight infections.

Its important to know that not all cancer patients have a weakened immune system. Those cancer patients who are considered immunocompromised include:

These eligibility criteria cover the most common indications. Your provider will be able to order the third vaccine dose for other immunosuppressive treatments or conditions if they decide that the extra dose will benefit you.

If you meet the criteria, you can receive a third dose 28 days or later after completing your first vaccine series.

Only patients who completed their primary immunization with either Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines can receive the third dose. MSK will offer the same vaccine brand to patients as they previously received. Mixing vaccines is not permitted at this time.

The CDC has not made any recommendations yet for people who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. We are closely following their guidance and will communicate any changes.

To find out if you should get a third dose, call your MSK doctors office or send a message through the MyMSK patient portal. If you are eligible for an additional vaccine, your doctor will schedule an appointment for you.

On Wednesday, August 18, MSK will begin offering the additional vaccines at the David H. Koch Center for Cancer Care at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, located at 530 East 74th Street.

Starting Monday, August 23, we will be scheduling appointments at:

These clinics will be open 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday.

Additional dates and locations, including our New Jersey locations, will be added shortly.

If you think you meet the criteria for getting a thirdvaccine dose, you should call your providers office to confirm your eligibility, and a vaccine appointment will be scheduled for you. You should be prepared to share your vaccination card or a photo of it. Please present information from your card, rather than the Excelsior pass, which does not have the details about what vaccine brand you received and on what dates.

Yes, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) hasgranted emergency use authorization for patients 12 and older to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and 18 and older to receive the Moderna vaccine.

The side effects from a third COVID-19 vaccine are similar to those experienced after receiving the original vaccines. Scientists in Israel recently began giving a third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to people with compromised immune systems. Side effects were reported by 31% of people, the most common being soreness at the injection site. Other side effects included fatigue, headache, body aches, and fever. These symptoms dont last long about one to three days.

The safety of a third dose in people whove had COVID-19 breakthrough infections is not known, therefore an additional dose for those patients is not recommended at this time. Some patients in whom initial vaccine responses are expected to be severely blunted, such as stem cell transplant orCAR-T recipients or those treated with B-cell depleting therapies, may benefit from a third dose after breakthrough infection. Discuss your situation with your clinical care team.

Even after the third dose, people with weakened immune system must take precautions to protect themselves from COVID-19. You should:

If you develop symptoms of COVID-19, contact your clinical care team and get tested.

Not at this time.The vaccines remain very effective against severe disease for those who do not have compromised immune systems. In the future, third doses may be recommended for more people because immune protection tends to weaken over time. In addition, as new variants of COVID-19 emerge, it may be necessary to design new vaccines to protect against them.

August 16, 2021

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A Third Dose of the COVID-19 Vaccine Recommended for Some Cancer Patients With Weakened Immune Systems - On Cancer - Memorial Sloan Kettering

Henry County bridge teaching staff to fill COVID-19 gaps – Atlanta Journal Constitution

August 16, 2021

The south metro Atlanta school system said the program, which began Monday, assigns teachers to students working remotely because of the coronavirus to free classroom educators from trying to teach in-school and online simultaneously. It comes as school districts throughout metro Atlanta are struggling with surging COVID-19 cases because of the highly infectious delta variant.

In order to ensure that students have access to uninterrupted learning during a quarantine period, Bridge teachers will provide instruction and/or support while a child is quarantined, said Melissa Morse, Henry Schools chief learning and performance officer. Students being able to maintain learning is critical to their development, course success, and for our high school students, graduation and beyond.

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Henry County bridge teaching staff to fill COVID-19 gaps - Atlanta Journal Constitution

Detroit to offer third dose of COVID-19 vaccine to immunocompromised residents – Detroit Free Press

August 16, 2021

Detroiters who have been fully vaccinated for at least six months and have compromised immune systems canget a third dose of either the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccine at the TCF Center starting Tuesday, officials announced Monday.

Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan and Chief Public Health Officer Denise Fair also urged residents who are unvaccinated to get inoculated now so that they can have protection before a possible fourth surge of COVID-19 hits the city and state in the fall and hospitals start to fill up with patients.

Replay: Mayor Duggan update on 3rd COVID-19 vaccine shot distribution in Detroit

Public health officials say the unvaccinated are the majority of people getting seriously ill, being hospitalized and dying of the virus across the country, particularly in hot spots in the South. Duggan said there is an "enormous river of COVID transmission among the unvaccinated."

Duggan said that based on past patterns, this could be the case in Michigan "in a matter of weeks or months" and is preventable by getting vaccinated now.

"There is a good degree of likelihood that Florida's July could be Michigan's November," Duggan said. "That's what we all have to prepare for."

More: Another grim milestone: Michigan's COVID-19 death toll surpasses 20,000

More: COVID-19 vaccine clinics to be in Dollar General stores in 9 Michigan counties

The city's first-dose vaccination rate for those 12 and older is 42%, officials said. Thirty-four percent of city residents age 12 and older are fully vaccinated, according to the state's dashboard, last updated Friday.

More than 5.2million Michiganders age 16 and older (64.5% of that population) have at least one dose of vaccine. Fifty-nine percent of residents age 12 and older have at least one dose and 54.7% are fully vaccinated, according to the state's dashboard.

On Friday, a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention panel recommended a third dose of mRNA vaccines, Pfizer or Moderna,for those who are immunocompromised.

The immunocompromised could be people who have had anorgan transplant or have diseases that affect their immune systems, Duggan said.

Distribution of vaccine through the city health department will work like the first- and second-dose shots, with residents calling 313-230-0505 to schedule an appointment.

The TCF Center will reopen Tuesday for those who received the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines and residents will receive the third shot of whatever vaccine they received before at the drive-through vaccination clinic, Duggan said.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine was not approved for a supplemental shot.

More: COVID-19 delta variant leaving cascade of events in its wake

More: Michigan won't mandate masks in schools right now, but hopes local districts do

Duggan said the city has 30,000 Pfizer and Moderna doses on hand, and residents do not need a prescription or letter from their doctor to get a third dose.

The $50 Good Neighbor gift card card offer will be in place for those who drive someone to their vaccine appointment.

Duggan urged residents to get their first or second doses of vaccine and to not wait until the virus and its delta variant spreads further. The city has at leastseven locations where residents can get a first- or second-dose shot without an appointment.

More: Detroiters don't have to leave home, city will bring COVID-19 vaccine to them

More: Henry Ford Health System COO: Required employee COVID-19 vaccines is 'right thing to do'

He also said the city will be adding more sites where residents can get their third dose, as well as doing home visits, in the next week or so.

Fair said the city, like the state, is seeing an increase inhospitalizations and cases.She said she is "really concerned" for those who are not vaccinated.

"They remain unprotected. They are unsafe," she said.

City officials urged the use of masks in indoor, public spaces, but whenasked about a mask mandate or proof of vaccination, Duggan said that is up to the state.

More: Genesee County mandates masks for children ages 5-11 in schools, camps

City officials said callers for their third dose of vaccine will be asked four questions before scheduling their appointment:

They should bringtheir vaccination card so it can updated to reflect the third dose.

A list of locationsto receive a COVID-19 vaccine can be found at http://www.detroitmi.gov.

The city also offers free, drive-through testing at the Joseph Walker Williams Community Center, 8431 Rosa Parks Blvd., from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. for city residents as well as those living in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties. No appointment is necessary.

Dr. Adnan Munkarah, executive vice president and chief clinical officer for Henry Ford Health System, said Monday that the health system's infection and vaccination experts are finalizing their decision regarding third-dose shots.

He said week after week, patients increasingly have been testing positive for COVID-19 and a number are being admitted to the hospital. The health system's positivity rate was 1% to 1.5% weeks ago and now is 7% to 10%, he said.

As of Monday, 82 patients were hospitalized with confirmed COVID-19, and another 20 with suspected COVID-19 werein the emergency room being admitted and awaiting results of a test. Fifteen of the 102 patients with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 are vaccinated while 87 are not, he said.

Munkarah was not aware of pediatric admissions in the Henry Ford Health System hospitals, but said there are young children testing positive for the virus.

He said two counties where Henry Ford Health System has hospitals -- Oakland and Jackson -- have high levels of community transmission for the virus, per the CDC's COVID tracker. Wayne and Macomb counties have substantial levels of community transmission.

The state, overall, is only one of six states in the country with a substantial level transmission. The rest are in high levels of transmission, per the CDC COVID tracker.

Munkarah said people should not wait to get vaccinated, as some immunity is acquired within the first two weeks of the first dose, "a start to give people a little bit of protection."

More: Henry Ford Health System COO: Required employee COVID-19 vaccines is 'right thing to do'

More: Detroit Public Schools mandates masks for students, faculty

He said more than 77% of the health system'semployees are vaccinated, with more going through the process and medical and religious exemptions being worked through. Henry Ford Health System was the first known health system in Michigan to require its workers to be vaccinated by Sept. 10 or they face losing their jobs.

Contact Christina Hall: chall@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter: @challreporter.

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Detroit to offer third dose of COVID-19 vaccine to immunocompromised residents - Detroit Free Press

More than 2,400 more Utahns tested positive for COVID-19 over the weekend – Salt Lake Tribune

August 16, 2021

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bailey Weems prepares doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine during a free COVID-19 clinic at Red Iguana 2 in Salt Lake City on Friday, Aug. 13, 2021.

| Aug. 16, 2021, 7:24 p.m.

Editors note: The Salt Lake Tribune is providing free access to critical stories about the coronavirus. Sign up for our Top Stories newsletter, sent to your inbox every morning. To support journalism like this, please donate or become a subscriber.

Another 2,441 Utahns tested positive for COVID-19 over the weekend, and 12 more people died.

The Utah Department of Health also removed 18 earlier cases from the overall total after further testing.

The rolling seven-day average of new cases stands at 903. (UDOH no longer reports coronavirus numbers on weekends.)

In the past four weeks, unvaccinated Utahns were 5.4 times more likely to die of COVID-19 than vaccinated people, according to an analysis from the Utah Department of Health. The unvaccinated were also 6.5 times more likely to be hospitalized, and five times more likely to test positive from the coronavirus.

An additional 7,659 Utahns were fully vaccinated over the weekend, bring the total to 1,524,222 46.6% of Utahs total population.

Vaccine doses administered in past three days/total doses administered 21,633 / 3,137,913.

Utahns fully vaccinated 1,524,222.

Cases reported in past three days 2,441.

Deaths reported in past three days 12.

There were four deaths in Salt Lake County two men and one woman between the ages of 45-64, and a man 65-84.

Davis County reported three deaths two men and a woman 65-84. And three Utah County residents died two men 65-84 and a man 85-plus.

Also, a man 65-84 in Cache County and another man 65-84 in Weber County.

Tests reported in past three days 17,060 people were tested for the first time. A total of 26,747 people were tested.

Hospitalizations reported in the past day 379. Thats 25 more than on Friday. Of those currently hospitalized, 150 are in intensive care, 14 more than on Friday.

Percentage of positive tests Under the states original method, the rate is 14.3%. Thats higher than the seven-day average of 13.4%.

The states new method counts all test results, including repeated tests of the same individual. Mondays rate was 9.1%, lower than the seven-day average of 9.5%

[Read more: Utah is changing how it measures the rate of positive COVID-19 tests. Heres what that means.]

Totals to date 3,019,780 cases; 2,537 deaths; 19,360 hospitalizations; 3,019,780 people tested.

This story is developing and will be updated.

Original post:

More than 2,400 more Utahns tested positive for COVID-19 over the weekend - Salt Lake Tribune

Indonesia has thousands of empty hospital beds. So why are Covid-19 patients dying at home? – CNN

August 16, 2021

"It's really tough and hot for us because we are always in full hazmat suit while trying to navigate small alleys and high floors with a body in tow," said Taufiq.

So far this month, almost 50 people have died at home from Covid-19, according to LaporCovid-19, an online citizen reporting platform that receives information from families and local officials.

The number surged during July to around 2,400 -- a sixfold increase from June, according to Fariz Iban, the site's data analyst, who called the number "the tip of the iceberg."

According to LaporCovid-19, most of the deaths were in Jakarta, because that's the only local government sharing figures on deaths at home from Covid-19.

Indonesia's Health Ministry doesn't keep records on the number of people who die at home, said ministry spokesperson Siti Nadia Tarmizi. She said people should only isolate at home when asymptomatic or experiencing mild symptoms.

But the Indonesian Medical Association is urging the government to change its policy, saying home isolation has deprived some patients of medical care and the lack of supervision is helping the virus to spread.

An impossible choice

Last month, as the highly contagious Delta variant swept through Indonesia, its hospital system were quickly overwhelmed.

Positive patients were told to isolate at home if they were asymptomatic, but some were unable to find a hospital bed when their condition worsened.

Warsa Tirta returned a positive Covid test in late June and followed instructions to stay at home, said his son-in-law Fakhri Yusuf.

The 62-year-old driver wasn't feeling ill, but he had taken a test because his boss had caught the virus and there was risk he'd passed it on.

But within days of Warsa's home isolation, Fakhri's mother and two sisters also became ill. Warsa tried to care for them, but before long all three needed professional medical help, Fakhri said.

"I tried to register them all to Covid Emergency Hospital, but they only can accept one person," said Fakhri. "All beds in the hospital were fully occupied. So we decided to send my sister (to hospital)."

Warsa died on the morning of July 6.

"I tried to register them all with a Covid Emergency Hospital, but they only could accept one person."Fakhri Yusuf

Fakhri said he called the local health center, but no one was available to take the body as hundreds of other people had also died that day.

"Their response was very slow. I was told that all of undertakers are busy with other death victims all around Jakarta," he said.

So Fakhri called the National Board of Zakat (Baznas), a government-run group that distributes zakats, or alms in the Muslim faith, where Taufiq works as a volunteer.

"They do all the process at home smoothly," Fakhri said. "Around 4 p.m. we depart to the cemetery, and the whole funeral procession was finished before dark."

Hospitals overwhelmed

As Covid cases mounted, the government raced to build new field hospitals and isolation facilities.

They included Pasar Rumput, a low-cost apartment block that would offer almost 6,000 new beds, according to a spokesman from the Ministry of Public Works and Public Housing.

The facility opened as planned. But as of this week, local media reports suggested fewer than 300 people were using it.

Siti, the government spokeswoman, says there are more than enough beds for the 30,000 or so new cases being reported each day.

"Now we really don't see any difficulties for the patient to access treatment, either in the isolation centers or in the hospitals," she said.

But despite the availability of beds, asymptomatic people and those with mild symptoms are still being given the option to stay at home.

Daily reported Covid-19 cases

"The ones who have more moderate symptoms, they need to go to the isolation center," said Siti. "The ones who have very severe symptoms, including difficulties in breathing, they should go to the hospital."

Siti said positive cases are being monitored at home through a private telemedicine company, where they can access help if needed.

But Dr. Daeng M. Faqih, chairman of the Indonesian Medical Association, says the government's health advice needs to change.

"We are now advocating government change the policy of home isolations. Isolations should be centralized in special isolation shelters," he said.

Daeng said home isolation aids the spread of the virus because many people live in crowded conditions, where it's impossible to protect family members.

"Isolations should be centralized in special isolation shelters."Dr. Daeng M. Faqih Chairman, Indonesian Medical Association

"Culturally in Indonesia, it is very common to have more than one family sharing one house, even three families in one house is not uncommon so, this will create family cluster," he said.

He also said it's difficult to stop asymptomatic people from leaving their homes.

"They can easily be moving around and infecting others," he said.

Death toll rising

Indonesia's daily number of cases may have halved since July, but it's still reporting the world's highest death toll each day -- about 1,500 people compared to 490 in India and 342 in the United States.

The crisis has delayed the country's vaccination rollout, and now officials are racing to double the number of daily doses to at least two million.

The country is aiming to vaccinate 208 million of its population of 270 million people, though that is some way off.

As of August 13, less than 10% of Indonesians had received at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine, according to a CNN count.

In the meantime, Taufiq and his team of undertakers stand ready to help, if and when they're required.

Taufiq says his day starts with a prayer for his and his team's safety -- and ends with one for those who succumb to the virus.

He says his faith has kept him going through several difficult weeks.

"My family are afraid and scared that I will get infected and bring the virus (home) to them. But I convinced them (it was safe), and they also pray for me," he added.

Read the rest here:

Indonesia has thousands of empty hospital beds. So why are Covid-19 patients dying at home? - CNN

Dozens of Texas hospitals are out of ICU beds as COVID-19 cases again overwhelm the state’s capacity – The Texas Tribune

August 16, 2021

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Dozens of Texas hospitals have run out of intensive care unit beds as COVID-19 surges faster than any other time during the pandemic, propelled by the new delta variant.

The state is divided into 22 trauma service areas, and half of them reported 10 or fewer available ICU beds on Sunday. As more than 9,400 COVID-19 patients fill the states ICUs, which are reserved for the patients who are the sickest or most injured, the trauma service area that includes Laredo reported no available ICU beds, while the area that includes Abilene reported having one.

At least 53 Texas hospitals have no available ICU capacity, according to numbers reported to the federal government during the week ending Aug. 5. In Austin, five hospitals were at or above 90% of their ICU capacity during the same period, with two reporting no available ICU beds.

This surge is by far the fastest and most aggressive that we've seen. Almost all of our hospitalizations are due to unvaccinated patients developing severe illness, Dr. Desmar Walkes, Austin-Travis Countys health authority, told reporters last week. ICU staff are seeing a younger population in our hospitals. Patients in the ICU are sicker and stay in the hospital longer than with prior surges, putting more strain on hospital resources.

Around 87.1% of all hospital beds in Texas are in use the highest level since the start of the pandemic with 14.1% of those beds occupied by COVID-19 patients. When Gov. Greg Abbott began to relax some COVID-19 restrictions on businesses in October, his order maintained reduced restaurant capacity and kept bars closed in regions in which 15% or more of hospital beds were filled with COVID-19 patients.

This week, COVID-19 hospitalizations reached higher levels across the state than when Abbott imposed a statewide mask mandate in July 2020. Abbott has maintained that he will not be reviving the mask mandate and has barred local authorities from issuing their own.

Governor Abbott has been clear that we must rely on personal responsibility, not government mandates, Abbott press secretary Renae Eze said in a statement on Monday. Every Texan has a right to choose for themselves and their children whether they will wear masks, open their businesses, or get vaccinated.

Medical professionals are afraid that hospitals will become so overwhelmed by COVID-19 patients that they wont have space for new patients a situation that many hospitals faced during previous COVID surges.

We need to make sure that there's beds and hospitals and staff in hospitals available to take care of people who don't just have COVID-19, but all of those other conditions, said Dr. Jennifer Shuford, chief state epidemiologist for the Texas Department of State Health Services. As we see hospitalizations increasing at this rapid rate, we are afraid that we're going to stress hospitals to the point that they can't take care of some of those other people who are coming in to the hospital for a stroke or a heart attack or any number of other things.

Already, Shuford said shes heard of hospitals that cant accept patient transfers from other hospitals because they have no beds open.

Dr. David Callender, president and CEO of Memorial Hermann Health System, a 17-hospital system spanning southeast Texas, said the onslaught of people hospitalized with COVID-19 during the recent surge could overwhelm its capacity if the current trend continues.

The system now has more than 800 people hospitalized with COVID-19, with nearly a third of its ICU beds occupied by COVID-19 patients, he said. At times, he said hospitals have had no pediatric ICU beds available and had to transport young patients across the state or even out of the state.

Everybody who's unvaccinated needs to get a vaccine, he said. That's what will keep us out of those terrible situations where people need care in a hospital and they can't get it.

As of Saturday, 44.4% of Texans have been fully vaccinated. According to Beckers Hospital Review, Texas ranks 37th nationally for the percentage of the eligible population vaccinated.

Walkes said vaccination is still the best hope for blunting the current COVID-19 surge.

We don't want you to be that person that has to choose a ventilator instead of a vaccine, she said.

Carla Astudillo contributed to this report.

Disclosure: Memorial Hermann Health System has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.

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Dozens of Texas hospitals are out of ICU beds as COVID-19 cases again overwhelm the state's capacity - The Texas Tribune

Governor Abbott Takes Action To Mitigate Rise In COVID-19 Cases In Texas – Office of the Texas Governor

August 16, 2021

August 9, 2021 | Austin, Texas | Press Release

Governor Greg Abbott today announced a series of actions the State of Texas is taking to mitigate the recent rise in COVID-19 cases in Texas.The Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) will be utilizingstaffing agencies to provide medical personnel from out-of-state to Texas health care facilities to assist in COVID-19 operations.The Governor has alsosent a letter to the Texas Hospital Associationasking hospitals to voluntarily postpone elective medical procedures, for which a delay will not result in loss of life or the deterioration of a patient's condition, in order to increase hospital capacity for COVID-19 patients.

Governor Abbott isdirecting the Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) and DSHSto open additional COVID-19antibody infusion centersin communities across the state. These infusion centers will treat COVID-19 patients who do not need hospitalization with therapeutic drugs that can prevent their condition from worsening and requiring hospital care. These centers also help increase bed capacity in hospitals so that resources are available for the most ill patients.The existing infusion center in Lubbock will expand capacity this week, and DSHS will launch five new centers throughout Texas beginning with a facility in San Antonio tomorrow.The State deployedsimilar measures in early 2021 to communities across Texas. Patients must meet certain criteria and have a referral from a doctor.

The Governor is also directing TDEM and DSHS to increase vaccination availability across the state and encourages all Texans to get the COVID-19 vaccine.Texans can visitcovidvaccine.texas.govto find a provider near them. Texans can also utilizeTDEM's State Mobile Vaccine Programby calling844-90-TEXAS and selecting Option 3 to schedule a mobile vaccine clinic to vaccinate groups of of friends, families, employees, volunteers, and more.Homebound Texans can also call 844-90-TEXAS and choose Option 1 to request a mobile vaccine team to come to their home.

"The State of Texas is taking action to combat the recent rise in COVID-19 cases and ensure that our hospitals and communities have the resources and support they need to mitigate the virus," said Governor Abbott. "Texans can help bolster our efforts by getting vaccinated against COVID-19. The COVID-19 vaccine is safe and effective, and it is our best defense against this virus. Texans can visitcovidvaccine.texas.govto find a COVID-19 vaccine provider near them."

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Governor Abbott Takes Action To Mitigate Rise In COVID-19 Cases In Texas - Office of the Texas Governor

Why COVID-19 Might Be Here to StayAnd How We’ll Learn to Live With It – TIME

August 16, 2021

Experts have long predicted that the pandemic will end with a whimper, not a bang. That is, COVID-19 wont so much disappear as fade into the background, becoming like the many other common pathogens that sicken people, but also can be controlled with vaccines and drugs.

This can become a livable pathogen where its there, it circulates, youre going to hear on the evening news about outbreaks in a dorm or a movie theater, but people go about their normal lives, former U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb predicted in an April 2020 interview with TIME. For a while, it felt like the U.S. was closing in on that point. Highly effective vaccines arrived and made their way into millions of arms. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) relaxed its guidance on wearing face masks. By mid-June, the U.S. was recording an average of about 11,500 new cases each day, with deaths and hospitalizations falling commensurately. Many bars and restaurants opened to full capacity, schools and offices made plans to reopen their doors and travel was rebounding. People were, by and large, returning to normal life.

And then the highly transmissible Delta variant hit, threatening to unravel everything. The U.S. is now clocking around 100,000 new infections per day. Thanks to those highly effective vaccines, fewer people are dying or ending up in the hospital than they did at similar points during previous wavesbut with only about half the country fully vaccinated, millions of people in the U.S. remain as vulnerable as ever. The situation has grown bad enough that the CDC on July 27 advised vaccinated people in areas of the country where the virus is spiking to resume wearing masks in public indoor settings, and many schools and offices are walking back just-finalized reopening plans.

Is this really what it feels like to live with COVID-19?

There is only one human virus that the World Health Organization officially considers eradicated: the one that causes smallpox. Wiping out an infectious illness is incredibly difficult. Its far more common for a pathogen to instead become endemicthat is, part of life in a particular place. Endemic viruses circulate consistently, and not without some disease and death, but they dont bring society to a screeching halt.

Thats the fate many experts see for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Theres no plausible way I can imagine us getting to zero COVID-19, and I think its a distraction to aim for that unlikely goal, says Dr. Sandro Galea, an epidemiologist and dean of the Boston University School of Public Health. A more realistic endpoint, he says, is for widespread immunity to make it so most people who get COVID-19 suffer no more than they would from a severe cold.

In that reality, lots of infections wouldnt necessarily mean mass deaths and hospitalizations. The flu, for example, infects anywhere from 9 to 45 million people in the U.S. each year, according to CDC estimates, but lands far fewer in the hospital (between 140,000 and 810,000) and kills fewer still (between 12,000 and 61,000).

Thanks to vaccines, Galea says, the U.S. isnt so far from a similar situation with COVID-19. While death and hospitalization rates are dangerously high in states with low vaccine coverage, like Florida and Louisiana, the national picture is changing. About 125,000 people in the U.S. were diagnosed with COVID-19 on August 6 and less than 600 people died from it that day. On the same day last summer, there were about 60,000 new cases diagnosed and more than 1,200 new deaths.

People receive COVID-19 shots at a mass-vaccination site in Seattle on March 13, 2021

Lindsey WassonReuters

No vaccine is perfect, and that includes the ones authorized for COVID-19. As was always expected, some immunized people are experiencing breakthrough infections, which can (but rarely do) lead to serious illness. CDC analysis also suggests vaccinated people who get infected with the Delta variant are capable of infecting othersperhaps even as capable as unvaccinated peoplewhich was a major motivator for the CDC once again recommending indoor masking in many areas.

But that doesnt mean the vaccines arent doing their jobs. They were, after all, designed to protect against severe disease and death, not infections. On that front, theyre still doing exceptionally well. Just 0.01% of fully vaccinated people in the U.S. have reported a breakthrough infection that led to severe disease, according to recent CDC data. And during a recent, high-profile outbreak on Cape Cod, almost three-quarters of the 469 Massachusetts residents who got infected were vaccinated, but just four of them landed in the hospital.

Vaccines are a huge piece of learning to live with COVID-19, but the availability of effective treatments play an important role too. When the pandemic began last year, doctors were learning as they went. In March 2020, a staggering 25% of people hospitalized for COVID-19 in one New York City health system died from it, according to one study. By August 2020, that number had fallen to under 8%, in large part because doctors knew what they were dealing with and had more research on effective drugs and therapies. Now, multiple treatments have received FDA authorization, helping to make the disease more manageable, and even more are in development.

Nevertheless, an obvious problem remains: about half the U.S. population still hasnt been vaccinated. That leaves millions of lives at stake, and allows the virus to keep tearing through regions, like the South and Midwest, where vaccine coverage is low. Right now, the rough equivalent of an entire stadium full of Ohio State football fans is diagnosed with COVID-19 every day in the U.S. Thats not sustainable, says Dr. Vineet Arora, dean for medical education at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine. She finds the conversation about endemic COVID-19 both premature and concerning, because she fears some people take it as license to give up. There are still tools in our toolbox that we need to use before waving the white flag, Arora says.

For example, vaccines havent yet been authorized for kids younger than 12, leaving millions of children vulnerable and potentially able to serve as tiny viral vectors. (Authorization for younger children may come this year, potentially as soon as autumn.) The three vaccines available in the U.S. right now have also only received emergency-use authorization rather than full FDA approval, a higher standard that involves a longer review process. If and when the FDA grants that full approval, Arora says it could both boost confidence in the shots and make schools and workplaces feel more comfortable about requiring them.

And though vaccine hesitancy has been discussed ad nauseam, the truth is that many of the roughly 30% of U.S. adults who remain unvaccinated are not anti-vaxxers. Surveys consistently show that roughly 15% of U.S. adults say they will not get the vaccine under any circumstances. But that leaves another 15% or so in the gray area. Some still want to wait and see what happens to people who have already been vaccinated. A small percentage have allergies or other medical conditions that prevent them from getting vaccinated. Others may struggle to access vaccines because theyve been overlooked by the health care system, cant take time off from work or child care or havent gotten trustworthy answers to their questions, Arora says. Reaching those people can take lots of time and individual attention, but she says it can and must be done with targeted, culturally sensitive community outreach.

If the U.S. accepts COVID-19 as an unchangeable fact of life before taking those steps, Were giving up on our children, as well as people who already are living with structural inequities, Arora saysnot to mention the burned-out health care workers who will have to keep treating a never-ending queue of coronavirus patients.

Further, letting our guards down early could open the door to new variants even worse than the Delta strain. The longer a virus spreads in a community, the more chances it has to mutatepotentially to the point that currently available vaccines no longer offer strong protection. Were not there yet, but variants may already be challenging the natural antibodies hard-won by people who previously survived COVID-19 infections, says Katherine Xue, a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University who studies viral evolution and the microbiome.

Consider the seasonal flu. The flu virus changes constantly, year to year, Xue says. Its that change that allows it to evade the buildup of immunity that we acquire through our own previous infectionshence why flu shots are given annually. Similarly, as COVID-19 mutates, it will also likely get better at outsmarting the bodys defenses. The immune system doesnt forget completelyas with other viruses, youd likely experience subsequently milder illness with each exposurebut the more different the virus is, the more pressure it may place on those immune defenses, Xue says.

That underscores the importance of vaccinating as many people, as fast as possible, to cut off the virus ability to mutate. Doing so at a global scale is even more important, since many countries have vaccinated less than 20% of their populations. As long as we have very large numbers of unvaccinated people around the globe, that still gives the virus many opportunities to transmit, and transmission gives it opportunities to evolve, Xue says.

In Aroras mind, thats another argument for staying vigilant about COVID-19 prevention. As long as the virus is evolving, we have to evolve with it, she says. That means being willing to resume certain safety precautionslike wearing masks in public indoor spaces, as the CDC again recommendswhen conditions call for it.

The work isnt over, but Boston Universitys Galea says hes optimistic all the same. He believes vaccination rates will continue to inch upward as more people trust in the shots benefits, and as community leaders and health workers find ways to traverse the last mile and bring vaccines to the people who need them. He seems to be right, particularly as people see the impact of the Delta variant close to home: On average, more than 400,000 people are now getting their first dose each day, nearly double the daily average a month ago.

Theres also the bittersweet reality that people who get infected with the virus develop some immunity to it (though less than they would get from vaccination), meaning population-level susceptibility goes down each day, Galea says.

As long as COVID-19 continues to circulate and mutate globally, there will be periodic spikes in infections. Butassuming SARS-CoV-2 behaves like other, similar virusesthese spikes should grow progressively milder, since a larger and larger chunk of the population will have immunity, either through vaccination or prior infection, each time it flares up. Eventually, it could become a disease that primarily affects young children, since everyone else would have had a brush with it before, says Jennie Lavine, a computational biologist who models infectious diseases at Atlantas Emory University.

If everyone 50 years from now is getting a first [COVID-19] infection between the ages of 0 and 5, that would actually be lower disease burden than flu, Lavine notes, because kids, at least so far, have been less likely than adults to die from or develop serious cases of COVID-19.

Of course, there are always exceptions to rules. Future variants could hit kids harder than initial strains, as already seems to be happening to some degree with Delta. Elderly adults and the immunocompromised will likely remain more vulnerable to COVID-19 than the general population, meaning health officials will have to find ways to keep them safe and healthy. And, as with other viruses, there will likely continue to be people who develop long-lasting and sometimes debilitating symptoms after even mild cases of COVID-19a serious problem that demands more research and better treatments.

None of those exceptions should be discounted. But in terms of learning to live with COVID-19 at a population level, turning it into a disease that kills and hospitalizes far fewer people than it infects is perhaps more important than getting case counts down to zero. Were more concerned, really, with how mild or severe it will be when it is at its steady state, Lavine says.

Reaching that steady state isnt like turning a page on a calendar. Theres never going to be a mission accomplished banner. Theres not going to be a moment when we switch from pandemic to endemic, Xue says. Its going to be a very gradated move back toward normal life.

That might mean mitigation tools, like masks and limits on large-capacity events, are periodically recommended during disease flare-ups. It may mean booster shots will be required at some point, to keep pace with the ever-changing virus. And, yes, it will likely mean dealing with some (hopefully small) amount of death and disease as more of the population builds up immunity.

But, as Xue wrote in a recent piece for the New Yorker, humanity has done this before. Influenza strains that routinely circulate today caused pandemics in the past. Some scientists even believe coronavirus OC43, which now causes little more than the common cold, seeded a pandemic in the 1800s. The point is not to minimize the suffering that occurred during those pandemics, but to recognize that the world eventually came out on the other sideand that the same is possible for SARS-CoV-2.

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Write to Jamie Ducharme at jamie.ducharme@time.com.

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Why COVID-19 Might Be Here to StayAnd How We'll Learn to Live With It - TIME

Live COVID-19 updates: Attorney General Ken Paxton takes the state’s mask mandate ban to the Texas Supreme Court – The Texas Tribune

August 15, 2021

The Texas Supreme Court will decide whether the mask mandates school districts have imposed, in defiance of Gov. Greg Abbott, can move forward.

Late Friday night, Attorney General Ken Paxton said in a tweet that he has taken the mask mandate fight to the state Supreme Court, and Harris County Attorney Christian D. Menefee tweeted Saturday that the court will decide the case "on an expedited basis."

This comes after Abbott suffered several defeats Friday afternoon in his bid to overturn local mask mandates after he banned such precautions earlier in the pandemic.

The 4th Court of Appeals in San Antonio tossed out Abbotts appeal to nix an order by the local health authority in Bexar County mandating mask-wearing in local public schools. Abbott sought to overturn a lower court ruling that allowed the local mandate.

Minutes later, the 5th Court of Appeals in Dallas made an identical ruling in Abbotts challenge to Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins order mandating masks in public schools, universities and businesses upholding the mandate there.

Over the past few days, a patchwork of mandates around masks in schools, government buildings and businesses have popped up across the state. Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton have vowed to fight local governments that defy the governor's ban. Abbott has adopted a playbook of personal responsibility over government intervention in dealing with the pandemic.

Earlier, Friday a state district judge granted Harris County and several Texas school districts temporary permission Friday afternoon to implement mask requirements and other safety measures against COVID-19. But a Tarrant County District judge granted a temporary restraining order blocking Fort Worth Independent School Districts mask mandate after determining it was improper for an unelected school superintendent to determine the policy.

The legal battles over Abbotts executive order come as school has started or will soon begin in districts across the state at the same time that COVID-19 infections are surging and hospitals are filling up with patients.

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Live COVID-19 updates: Attorney General Ken Paxton takes the state's mask mandate ban to the Texas Supreme Court - The Texas Tribune

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