Category: Covid-19

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Sonoma County partners with private providers to expand COVID-19 testing opportunities | Press Releases | County Administrator’s Office | County -…

August 4, 2021

Santa Rosa, CA August 3, 2021 Due to increasing case rates and testing demand, the Sonoma County Department of Health Services ispartnering with four trusted providers - Curative, LHI, Molecular Matrix, and Fox Home Health - to offer expanded COVID-19 testing services for Sonoma County residents.

As case rates have risen in recent weeks, the demand for pop-up COVID-19 testing has significantly increased. In the two weeks from June 22 to July 5, the DHS Field Services team administered 572 tests. From July 6 to July 19, DHS testing more than doubled to 1150 tests. In the last single week for which the county has data, from July 20 to July 26, the team administered 1054 tests in just seven days. Expanding the testing services of LHI, Curative, Molecular Matrix, and Fox Home Health raises testing capacity from just over 1,000 tests per week to more than 10,000 tests per week.

The Field Services team also has been limited in where it could effectively operate, hosting sites only in Santa Rosa. Partnering with these proven vendors will enable COVID-19 testing to expand beyond Santa Rosa to confirmed sites in Boyes Hot Springs, Rohnert Park, Cotati, Guerneville, Cloverdale, Healdsburg, and Petaluma, said Sonoma County Health Officer Dr. Sundari Mase. There are even more sites in the final planning stages that will allow us to expand locations and capacity even further. We strongly encourage everyone in Sonoma County to get vaccinated as soon as possible to limit the significant impact of the Delta variant in our community.

This plan allows the Field Services team to instead focus on outbreak and surveillance testing. Though DHS will not administer COVID-19 tests at pop-up events, the department is overseeing the placement of sites and working with these providers to ensure that as many community members as possible have equitable access to testing. The County will also continue to provide help navigating the many options available to community members through the testing and vaccine hotline at (707) 565-4667.

Curative Testing

Appointments and walk-ins are accepted. Appointment openings appear on the Curative website three to four days before each event. Visit curative.com or call (888) 702-9042 to make an appointment. Beginning Aug. 2, Curative will host sites throughout Sonoma County:

LHI Testing

Appointments are highly recommended. Visit lhi.care/covidtestingor call LHI at (866) 284-8788 to make an appointment.Beginning Aug. 3, LHI will test from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. at:

Molecular Matrix

Appointments are required. Visit molecularmatrix.com/covidtesting to make an appointment. In addition to the location below, Molecular Matrix is in the process of securing another site in Petaluma as well as several sites in Santa Rosa:

Fox Home Health

Santa Rosa Community Health ceased operation of the Roseland Community Center clinic at 779 Sebastopol Road on July 31. Fox Home Health has agreed to take over and offer vaccines and testing in southwest Santa Rosa beginning Aug. 3:

In addition, Fox has added testing to their existing vaccine clinic at 1400 N. Dutton Ave., Suite 17, Santa Rosa:

For the most up-to-date information about COVID-19 testing in Sonoma County, please visit socoemergency.org/test.

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Sonoma County partners with private providers to expand COVID-19 testing opportunities | Press Releases | County Administrator's Office | County -...

Breakthrough cases aren’t the cause of the US Covid-19 surge – Vox.com

August 4, 2021

The last weeks headlines were not comforting for Americans vaccinated for Covid-19.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention changed its guidance to recommend everyone, regardless of vaccination status, wear masks in Covid-19 hot spots. A study of an outbreak in Provincetown, Massachusetts, found around three-quarters of people infected there were vaccinated. As cases increase nationwide, its understandable to think that breakthrough cases (infections in vaccinated people) are now a main driver of the ongoing Covid-19 surge.

But the evidence is clear: The problem is the unvaccinated population. If more people got the vaccines, the current surge wouldnt be as big; it certainly wouldnt lead to the levels of hospitalization and death now seen across the US. This was true months ago, and remains true today.

Unvaccinated people still make up the vast majority of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths. Theyve made up more than 94 percent of reported Covid-19 cases in states with available data, a report last week from the Kaiser Family Foundation found. Theyve also made up similar, or higher, shares of hospitalizations and deaths.

Then theres what really happened in the Provincetown outbreak. The headlines noted three-fourths of people infected by the virus were vaccinated. But among the more than 900 cases tracked as a result of the outbreak, just seven led to hospitalization and there were zero deaths. If this was 2020, when there were no vaccines, closer to 90 people would have been hospitalized and about nine would have died, based on hospitalization and death rates over the last year.

The vaccines are upholding their promise to massively prevent serious disease, hospitalizations, and death, Monica Gandhi, an infectious diseases doctor at the University of California San Francisco, told me. Thats the main message I get from that outbreak.

If every outbreak in the country today looked like the one in Provincetown, the coronavirus would be defanged. The virus would make a small number of people seriously ill, but, like the seasonal flu or a common cold, would mostly produce relatively mild symptoms or none at all.

Thats not to say that America can throw caution to the wind. For one, Massachusetts, where more than 72 percent of all people have received at least one dose of the vaccine, leads every other state but Vermont on vaccination. Some states, particularly in the South and parts of the Midwest and West, still have one-dose rates below 50, 45, or even 40 percent. So an outbreak in Provincetown looks very different from one in Jackson, Mississippi.

There are also genuine unknowns about breakthrough cases. We still dont know just how likely a vaccinated person is to get infected and transmit the virus to someone else. Nor do we know how many vaccinated people with breakthrough infections will suffer longer-term effects (colloquially known as long Covid) that arent unique to the coronavirus but can be detrimental or even life-changing.

Nor is there enough research and data to draw final conclusions about the role of the delta variant, which spreads more easily and may evade the bodys immune response better than past versions of the virus. Future variants could complicate matters even further.

Still, the vaccines are very effective. The evidence continues to show the vaccines reduce the viruss rate of spread, delta or not. Even when a vaccinated person is exposed to the coronavirus, the chances of hospitalization and death are near zero. In fact, experts said, the vast majority of breakthrough cases are likely to produce no symptoms whatsoever.

This was a hard week, Gandhi said. But my conclusions are relatively unchanged. She emphasized: We need to get a lot more people vaccinated.

The vaccines arent perfect. When the news broke last year that the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines reported more than 90 percent efficacy, that was certainly much better than the 50 percent or so efficacy rate that some experts and officials expected. But thats not 100 percent. In fact, theres no such thing as a perfect, 100-percent-effective vaccine for any illness.

Given that, some breakthrough cases were always expected, even before the delta variant.

Heres what we know about breakthrough cases: They do happen, but the majority produce no symptoms and the vast majority cause no serious symptoms, hospitalizations, or deaths. According to a review of the evidence by the CDC, data from the UK, Canada, and Israel shows the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine is more than 90 percent effective against hospitalization or death, even with the delta variant. The CDC estimated unvaccinated people are eight times as likely to get the virus and experience disease symptoms, 25 times as likely to be hospitalized, and 24 times as likely to die, compared to people who are vaccinated.

Although not every state, nor the CDC, is attempting to track all reported breakthrough cases, the data we do have from about 25 states suggests the vast majority of serious cases, hospitalizations, and deaths still involve the unvaccinated. In Virginia, for example, 99 percent of cases and 98 percent of hospitalizations and deaths this year, as of July 30, were among people who werent fully vaccinated. The total reported breakthrough case rate among vaccinated people was 0.034 percent. The hospitalization rate among reported breakthrough cases was 0.0032 percent. The breakthrough death rate was 0.0009 percent.

The report from the Kaiser Family Foundation found similar numbers for other states that reported Covid-19 breakthrough data for at least a month.

The overwhelming conclusion of all this evidence is that breakthrough events are extremely rare, Jen Kates, director of global health and HIV policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation, told me. Theyre not the driver.

Its also very likely that the vaccines reduce rates of spread, perhaps quite significantly. Brown University School of Public Health dean Ashish Jha succinctly summarized what I heard from experts time and again over the past week: Vaccinated people are far far far less likely to spread the virus than unvaccinated people. Since vaccinated people are less likely to get infected by the virus to begin with, theyre less likely to spread it to others, too.

But we dont know exactly how much the vaccines reduce the risk of spreading the coronavirus among the infected, including those without symptoms. Before the Provincetown study, experts widely believed that there was very little, perhaps even no, risk of spread by vaccinated people. Provincetowns outbreak indicated that isnt the case, in part due to the topline number: 74 percent of recorded cases were among fully vaccinated people. That high share suggested that there was at least some transmission among the vaccinated.

Still, its possible to make too much of that topline number. For one, Provincetown during the Fourth of July isnt representative of the country in typical times. The events that likely turned into a superspreading situation were a huge, citywide party, with bars packed and lots of close contact, physical intimacy, and sex. Its a far cry from the risk of exposure that most people face during occasional trips to the grocery store, bars and restaurants, or movie theaters.

But the more concerning finding in the Provincetown study is that, among those tested, the vaccinated people with breakthrough cases had the same level of virus in their noses as the unvaccinated people who were infected. Federal officials over the last week cited this to justify the changes in masking guidelines, arguing that its proof the delta variant could be potent enough that even the vaccinated are spreading it.

Yet there are still unanswered questions, and several reasons that this finding might not be as alarming as it seems. First, only a tiny minority of vaccinated people get breakthrough cases to begin with, especially compared to the rate of unvaccinated people getting sick in hot spots or superspreading events. That means a vaccinated persons chances of getting to the point measured in the CDC study are much lower than an unvaccinated persons.

Second, the metric in this case was virus detected in the nose. But its possible viral loads would be different in, say, the lungs, since a vaccine-induced immune response could cut off the virus before it spreads far. This could reduce a vaccinated persons capacity to infect others: If a person has less virus in her lungs, she could spread less of it when she exhales through her mouth, talks, or laughs.

Third, we dont know if the virus detected is an actual threat. Its possible the virus in noses of vaccinated people is severely weakened after a vaccine-induced immune response. If thats the case, then its not going to spread as easily or get people as sick. The presence of those viral particles does not necessarily mean infectious virus, Natalie Dean, a biostatistician at Emory University, told me. But the test used in the study only tried to estimate the amount of virus, not its potency.

For now, the best guess is that vaccinated people can spread the virus likely more so with delta than was possible before but nowhere to the extent the unvaccinated do. But this needs more research and data to confirm, which is why many experts are pushing on federal and state officials to do a better job tracking and studying breakthrough cases.

Another way to look at the data is even more favorable to the vaccines: If everyone was vaccinated, we wouldnt need to be so concerned about how much the virus still spreads among those who got the shot.

Imagine that, contrary to much of the current evidence, the vaccines dont slow the rate of transmission, but that every person in the country is vaccinated.

The US would essentially be a bunch of Provincetown outbreaks. There would be infections. A few people would still get sick, typically experiencing cold- or flu-like symptoms. But, due to the vaccines, almost no one would be sent to the hospital and even fewer would die.

A clear visual from Kristen Panthagani, a science blogger and doctor-in-training, shows that, as more people get vaccinated, a higher share of people who end up in the hospital will be vaccinated, since there would just be fewer unvaccinated people to get sick at all. But even as this occurs, the number of hospitalizations would drop.

This is now likely the best-case scenario for curbing the pandemic: The coronavirus becomes endemic, and the country moves on. The threat isnt totally vanquished, but its along the lines of seasonal flu a disease wed be better without, and one that still leads to occasional tragic outcomes, but a risk that we ultimately accept without changing much of American life.

That is actually why we did shut down, Gandhi said, pointing to the high rates of serious illness, hospitalizations, and deaths that Covid-19 produced in an unvaccinated world. But now, she added, the vaccines are defanging the virus.

In more highly vaccinated places around the world, Covid-19 spikes dont lead to soaring hospitalization or death rates. In the United Kingdom, for example, a huge surge of cases due to the delta variant has come and gone with only small increases in hospitalizations and deaths. (And even in the UK, just 69 percent of people have gotten at least one dose, which leaves plenty of room for improvement.)

There are major caveats to this hypothetical scenario. Not everyone particularly kids under 12 is eligible for the vaccines yet, making 100 percent vaccination impossible right now. Even once everyone is eligible, theres still a lot of apathy to outright resistance toward the vaccines. And there are some, especially people who are immunocompromised, who may not get full or much protection from the vaccines. Protecting these groups may require other precautions, like masking, until overall vaccination rates climb much higher and case rates drop, experts said.

There are also a lot of unknowns about the vaccines ability to reduce the incidence of long Covid, which could warrant continued concern about the virus even in a highly vaccinated world.

And the continued mutation of the virus, especially as it keeps spreading outside the US, could eventually lead to a variant that better evades vaccine-induced immunity, requiring further action once again.

Even with all those caveats, the hopeful hypothetical of a country that only sees Provincetown-like outbreaks provides a very clear message: Breakthrough cases are concerning, but the vaccines work, and they truly are the way out of the pandemic and back to normal.

Originally posted here:

Breakthrough cases aren't the cause of the US Covid-19 surge - Vox.com

Louisiana’s Current COVID-19 Surge Is Its Worst Yet – NPR

August 4, 2021

Mobile, Ala., paramedic Lisa Chestang recites the Pledge of Allegiance on Monday with nearly three dozen health care workers who arrived from around the country to help supplement the staff at Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge, La. Ted Jackson/AP hide caption

Mobile, Ala., paramedic Lisa Chestang recites the Pledge of Allegiance on Monday with nearly three dozen health care workers who arrived from around the country to help supplement the staff at Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rouge, La.

In Louisiana, which now has the country's highest number of COVID-19 cases per capita, Gov. John Bel Edwards ordered an indoor mask mandate and offered a stark warning:

"Nobody should be laboring under the misapprehension that this is just another surge," Edwards said Monday. "We've already had three of these. This is the worst one we've had thus far."

Dr. Joseph Kanter, an emergency room doctor and the top medical official of the Louisiana Department of Health, spoke with NPR's Morning Edition about the increasingly dire situation. Listen to the full interview.

Delta changed the game. Kanter says the state went from its lowest to highest number of cases and hospitalizations in just four weeks, and the surge doesn't show signs of slowing.

Hospitals have "never been busier." "We're on track today, short of a divine intervention, to exceed the peak, at any point prior in the pandemic, of the number of hospitalized COVID patients," Kanter says. Large hospital systems have had to cancel procedures and decline patient transfers, and he's heard stories of patients sitting in emergency rooms for four or five days while teams try, unsuccessfully, to find them a bed.

There's a staffing shortage. Many nurses have taken time off, pursued nonclinical jobs or gone back to school after a challenging year. Hospitals are struggling to recruit and retain new nurses and have had to call in federal disaster assistance medical teams what Kanter calls a "drastic move" that typically only follows natural disasters.

Vaccines have a new sense of urgency. About 37% of Louisiana residents are fully vaccinated. Up until now, Kanter says, there was a sense that a lot of people would get the jab at some point, just not yet. But it's a small state, and many people now know others who are getting sick and they're scared. The rate of vaccinations has increased fourfold over the past two weeks, and Monday saw 11,000 people opting to begin their vaccine series. He adds: "I guarantee each one of them would rather have done it five weeks ago."

This story originally appeared on the Morning Edition live blog.

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Louisiana's Current COVID-19 Surge Is Its Worst Yet - NPR

Nationwide Children’s Hospital requiring employees, providers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 – 10TV

August 4, 2021

The deadline to be fully vaccinated is Oct. 1. Nationwide Children's said 75% of their employees are fully vaccinated.

Nationwide Children's Hospital announced Tuesday that all employees, care providers, volunteers and vendors will be required to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

In a statement, Nationwide Children's said they are committed to leading by example as health care providers.

"The majority of our patients are under the age of 12 and unable at this time to receive the vaccine, making them among the most vulnerable. With the onset of the new, highly contagious Delta variant and recent surges in COVID-19 cases across many of our communities, we must ensure that all our team members are protected and do our part in creating the safest environment possible for all those we serve."

The deadline to be fully vaccinated is Oct. 1. Nationwide Children's said 75% of their employees are fully vaccinated.

Nationwide Children's is the third health system in central Ohio to require vaccines. Mount Carmel announced its requirement on July 8 and OhioHealth announced theirs Tuesday afternoon.

On Monday, the Ohio Hospital Association released a new policy statement, recommending hospitals independently adopt policies requiring COVID-19 vaccination for employees and staff.

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Nationwide Children's Hospital requiring employees, providers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 - 10TV

As Covid-19 Recedes in India, Bars Are Full and Masks Are Optional – The Wall Street Journal

August 4, 2021

A little over two months ago about 4,000 people were dying every day from Covid-19 in India. Yet, on a recent Friday, a rooftop bar in New Delhi was once again packed with crowds of young adults mingling without masks.

Among the hundreds at the Summer House Cafe, a popular nightspot in Indias capital city, was Srishtii Guptaa, a 29-year-old graduate student who said she lost several family members to Covid-19 in April and May.

Life goes on, said Ms. Guptaa, who resumed her busy social life as soon as lockdown restrictions were lifted. Nothing stops me from partying.

For some Indians, life has already returned to normal after a devastating spring surge. In New Delhi and other cities across the country, shoppers are once again crowding stores, diners are squeezing into restaurants, and bars are hosting crowds of revelers. Many have already abandoned safety precautions such as social distancing and wearing a mask.

Coronavirus infections have steadily fallendespite a sluggish vaccination rolloutafter hitting a peak of more than 400,000 cases a day in early May. For weeks, daily confirmed cases have plateaued around 40,000. Only about 7% of the countrys more than 1.3 billion people have received both shots of a Covid-19 vaccine.

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As Covid-19 Recedes in India, Bars Are Full and Masks Are Optional - The Wall Street Journal

Arwady: COVID-19 Cases Are on the Rise, But Not Because of Lollapalooza – WTTW News

August 4, 2021

Music fans line up to enter Lollapalooza on the first day of the festival, which returned to Grant Park from July 29 through Aug. 1, 2021. (WTTW News)

The number of COVID-19 cases is once again rising in Chicago following the massive Lollapalooza music festival, which drew hundreds of thousands of people to Grant Park last weekend. But Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady says the four-day event is not to blame.

Were clearly on the way up not as a result of Lolla just to be very clear about that, were on the way up because the surge that we were expecting is coming, she said, adding officials had been expecting a surge due to rising case counts elsewhere in the country. I do expect case to continue to rise, she said.

Chicago is now recording 234 cases per day based on a seven-day average, according toCDPH data. In the past week, the number of cases has increased 40%, according to city data.

The citys COVID-19 test positivity rate is now 3.3%, up from a low of 0.4% on June 27.

Prior to the music festival, Arwady said she washopeful that Lollapalooza wouldnt turn into a superspreader event.

In order to attend the event, people had to provide proof of vaccination or record a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of their arrival at the gate. Organizers said 90% of attendees were able to show proof of vaccination, a figure which Arwady said was consistent with checks performed at the event by the citys vaccine ambassadors.

On Tuesday, she said she expects to see some cases related to the festival and will provide updates as they become available.

With the surge in coronavirus infections, someChicago restaurants and bars are requiring people to show proof of vaccination to enter. While Arwady said shes pleased with that decision, the city isnt considering an industry-wide requirement at this time.

READ:NYC, Big Employers Taking Hard Line Against Vaccine Holdouts

Its a really big decision to try and impose something like that on an entire class of businesses, and my hope would be more that people who are taking COVID seriously would want to go to businesses who have made those decisions, she said. Were interested in this. Well be watching to see how this plays out but we dont have a current plan to do something like this at the city level.

Instead, the city is working with state public health officials to make it easier for people to show proof of vaccination and allow them to download their vaccination records in a way that protects their privacy, according to Arwady.

The goal, Arwady said, is to make showing or checking vaccination status as easy as possible.

City officials on Tuesday also announced the addition of five states and one territory to Chicago's travel advisory, which was reinstituted on July 13. In all, the advisory covers 19 states and two territories.

They are: Georgia, Hawaii, Kentucky, South Carolina, Utah and Puerto Rico, which on Tuesday joined Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Kansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Wyoming, Arkansas, Missouri, Florida, Louisiana, Nevada and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Unvaccinated visitors to Chicago from those states are urged to quarantine for 10 days or record a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours of their arrival, officials said.

Contact Kristen Thometz:@kristenthometz|(773) 509-5452|[emailprotected]

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Arwady: COVID-19 Cases Are on the Rise, But Not Because of Lollapalooza - WTTW News

Chilean study shows variations in success of COVID-19 vaccines – Reuters

August 4, 2021

A healthcare worker prepares a dose of China's Sinovac Biotech vaccine for the coronavirus disease in Jakarta, Indonesia, March 5, 2021. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan

SANTIAGO, Aug 3 (Reuters) - Sinovac's COVID-19 vaccine was 58.5% effective in preventing symptomatic illness among millions of Chileans who received it between February and July, the Chilean health authorities said on Tuesday, while Pfizer's COVID-19 shot was 87.7% effective and AstraZeneca's was 68.7% effective.

The data came in the latest "real world" data published by the Chilean authorities into the effectiveness among its population of a raft of COVID-19 vaccines.

Chile began one of the world's fastest inoculation campaigns against COVID-19 in December, having now fully vaccinated more than 60% of its population, predominantly with Sinovac's (SVA.O)CoronaVac.

That vaccine was 86% effective in preventing hospitalization, 89.7% effective in preventing admission to intensive care units and 86% effective in preventing deaths within the population between February and July, health official Dr Rafael Araos said in a press conference on Tuesday.

In April, the same study found that CoronaVac was 67% effective in preventing symptomatic illness, 85% effective in preventing hospitalizations and 80% effective in preventing deaths, suggesting its capacity to prevent the more serious impacts of the virus has strengthened, while its capacity to stop symptomatic illness diminished.

Araos said a reduction in protection from vaccines was inevitable over time, particularly with the arrival and growing prevalence of more virulent strains such as the Delta variant.

"If Delta becomes more prevalent and the vaccine has a weaker response, we could observe a faster fall (in effectiveness)," he said, adding his voice to calls for a third, booster dose to be issued.

The government also published data on the effectiveness of other vaccines administered in Chile, made by Pfizer BioNTech (PFE.N), (22UAy.DE) and AstraZeneca (AZN.L).

Pfizer's vaccine was 87.7% effective in preventing symptomatic COVID-19 in the same period, 98% effective in preventing intensive care admission and 100% effective in preventing death, Araos said.

AstraZeneca's was 68.7% effective in preventing symptomatic COVID-19 in the same period, 98% effective in preventing intensive care admissions and 100% effective in preventing death, Araos said.

Chile's study examined the vaccines' effectiveness among different cohorts of people who either received two doses of the specified vaccine, partial doses of the vaccine or no vaccine at all.

The CoronaVac part of the study examined a group of 8.6 million people, the Pfizer BioNTech part studied a group of 4.5 million people and the AstraZeneca part looked at a group of 2.3 million people.

Reporting by Aislinn Laing and Fabian CamberoEditing by Chris Reese and Marguerita Choy

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Chilean study shows variations in success of COVID-19 vaccines - Reuters

Hillsborough County reopening COVID-19 testing sites, will other Tampa Bay counties follow? – WFLA

August 4, 2021

TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) Those big county-run COVID-19 testing sites we saw earlier in the coronavirus pandemic could soon reopen in parts of the Tampa Bay area.

Hillsborough County announced Tuesday night it would temporarily reopen two walk-in testing sites starting Saturday, Aug. 7. The sites at Palm River Park Community Center at 725 South 58th Street in Tampa and at 1101 East 139th Avenue in Tampa will be open seven days a week from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. A total of 500 tests will be available per day at each site and will be offered on a first-come, first-serve basis.

The reopening announcement comes after some Tampa Bay area physicians called on state and county leaders to bring back the massive testing sites as more Floridians seek out tests due to the delta variant spiking.

We are seeing a record number of patients, said Dr. Nicole Frommann, a medical director at TGH Urgent Care Powered by Fast Track. Its a little out of control.

Last year, many of us were getting swabbed at government sites like Raymond James Stadium, Tropicana Field and University Mall. Now its a private affair with most COVID testing happening at doctors offices, clinics and pharmacies.

But is it time for the mass sites to reopen and bring back fast, free and no-appointment testing?

I think they should. I think its important because that way its easier, its faster, one Tampa Bay resident said.

8 On Your Sides Mahsa Saeidi asked Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday if he would reconsider opening mass COVID-19 sites.

So what we did, we transitioned all of this to the local governments. Theyve gotten huge amounts of money from CARES Act, the governor said. Our view is this is so available throughout society right now.

If youre having issues getting a COVID-19 test in a timely manner, please email 8 On Your Side Investigator Mahsa Saeidi at MSaeidi@WFLA.com.

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Hillsborough County reopening COVID-19 testing sites, will other Tampa Bay counties follow? - WFLA

COVID-19 cases, vaccination rates and hospital data for Clarke, Oconee as of Aug. 3 – Online Athens

August 4, 2021

COVID-19 cases are on the rise in Athens and surrounding areas as hospitals see a surge of patients.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates the Delta variant accounts for8% of new COVID cases in Georgia. While county-level data is not available from the Georgia Department of Public health, the state health agency does provide general COVID-19 case information.

In the last two weeks, Athens has seen a total of 254 reported cases of COVID-19, equivalent to196 cases per every 100,000 residents.From July17 to July30, there were 65 emergency department visits for COVID-19.

Since March 2020, there have been 143 confirmed COVID-19-related deaths in the county and six probable deaths, according to DPH.There have been 518 total Clarke Countyhospitalizations due to COVID.

As of Aug. 2, Clarke County is considered by the CDC to be a county of high transmission.

DPH reports that 43% of Clarke County residents have at least one dose of COVID-19 and39% of residents are fully vaccinated.

More: Athens to consider mask mandate, vaccines for ACC employees and cash incentive program

In the last two weeks, Oconee County has seen a total of 79 reported cases of COVID-19, equivalent of 189 cases per every 100,000 residents.

From July17 to July30, there were 13 emergency department visits due to COVID-19 among Oconee residents.

In total, there have been 67 confirmed deaths in the county and seven probable deaths, according to DPH. Therehave been 137 hospitalizations of Oconee County residents.

As of Aug. 2, Oconee County is considered to be a county of high transmission.

DPH reports that 55% of Oconee County residents have at least one dose of COVID-19 and51% of residents are fully vaccinated.

More: Masks will remain optional in Oconee County schools despite changes in CDC guidance

As of Monday morning, the number of COVID-19 patients in St. Mary's hospitals was in the upper 20s, which is an increase over the last few weeks, according to Montez Carter, CEO ofSt. Mary's Health Care System.

Due to this increase, the Athens hospital has at times had to go on diversion, and the hospital went on diversion Monday, according to Carter. This means that at this time, the hospital could not accept any EMS (emergency medical services) patients because its status was "total diversion."

Carter reported that due to the severity of symptoms, many patients have required extended hospital stays and as the number of cases in the area rises, the hospital faces a strain on their bed capacity.

A majority of patients currently hospitalized are those who have not been vaccinated, and unlike in previous surges, there are a higher number of COVID patients in their 30s, 40s and 50s.

Per CDC guidance, we urge everyone to get vaccinated and to return to masking and social distancing to control the spread of the dangerous and highly infectious delta variant, said Carter.

Officials at Piedmont Athens Regional Hospital declined to provide bed capacity data for its hospital, instead, reportedthat its COVID-19 hospitalization trend has followed the state's trend.

The Piedmont hospital is also currently listed as a facility with "total diversion", as of Aug. 2, meaning neither of the Athens area hospitals wereaccepting EMS patients as of Monday.

Information from the Georgia Geospatial Information Office, a government office, presents Georgia hospital data by region. Athens is located in Region E, which also includes other surrounding counties.

For the region, there were 90 COVID-19 patients in medical facilities, or approximately 16% of patients, on Aug. 2. This is the highest that number has been since February 2021.

Though not specifically COVID-related, as of Aug. 2 the region was at 80% capacity for inpatient beds. The region'sICU beds in use were at 94% capacity, and emergency department beds were at 37% capacity. There were 48 adult ventilators in use or 51% of ventilators in the region.

A school-aged data report was generated with data as recent as July 28. The report breaks down grouping by age: preschool and daycare-aged children, from ages 0to 4 years old; K-12 school-aged children, from ages 5to 17 years old; and college and professional school-aged adults, from ages 18 to 22 years old;and then adults who are 23 years or older.

In Clarke County, from the previous 14 days since the report was generated, there were:

In Oconee County from the previous 14 days since the report was generated, there were:

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COVID-19 cases, vaccination rates and hospital data for Clarke, Oconee as of Aug. 3 - Online Athens

Which countries have administered the fewest COVID-19 jabs? – World Economic Forum

August 4, 2021

Many countries have seen rapid vaccination programmes, with millions of people around the world now fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

However, much of this initial progress is concentrated in the world's wealthiest nations.

The latest data from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) shows that around half of people in high-income countries have been vaccinated. In low-income countries? Barely more than 1%.

Indeed, in some countries, the latest data shows almost no one is fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

Our World in Data reports that in Haiti and the Democratic Republic of Congo, 0% of the population has received full protection. And, the same data shows that in numerous countries this figure remains below 1%.

Share of people vaccinated against COVID-19 in selected countries.

Image: Our World in Data

As the UNDP data shows, the split between income groups is clear, with higher income groups surging ahead in vaccine delivery.

COVID-19 vaccine doses administered by country income group.

Image: Our World in Data

This inequality is also clear when you consider things on a continent-by-continent basis. Africa, Oceania and South America lag far behind Asia, Europe and North America.

COVID-19 vaccine doses administered by continent.

Image: Our World in Data

There are health, economic and moral implications for failing to vaccinate the world as evenly and fairly as possible.

Vaccine inequity is the worlds biggest obstacle to ending this pandemic and recovering from COVID-19, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), said last month.

Failure to vaccinate could see new vaccine-resistant variants emerge, threatening the health of the entire global population. As many have put it, 'nobody is safe until everybody is safe.'

There have also been warnings that an inequitable vaccine rollout will hit the socioeconomic recovery in low- and lower-middle-income countries. Data shows that low-income countries could have added $38 billion to their GDP forecast for 2021 if they had similar vaccine rates as high-income countries.

Numerous world leaders have also emphasized the moral obligation to ensuring the vaccine rollout is equitable.

COVAX, co-led by Gavi, the WHO and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), is the vaccines pillar of the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator.

Its aim is to accelerate the development and manufacture of COVID-19 vaccines and to ensure fair and equal access for every country around the world.

So far, it's delivered more than 150 million vaccine doses around the world, with a target of making 2 billion available by the end of 2021. However, in June it warned that short-term supply concerns remain - particularly throughout July and August.

In 2000, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance was launched at the World Economic Forum's Annual Meeting in Davos, with an initial pledge of $750 million from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

The aim of Gavi is to make vaccines more accessible and affordable for all - wherever people live in the world.

Along with saving an estimated 10 million lives worldwide in less than 20 years,through the vaccination of nearly 700 million children, - Gavi has most recently ensured a life-saving vaccine for Ebola.

At Davos 2016, we announced Gavi's partnership with Merck to make the life-saving Ebola vaccine a reality.

The Ebola vaccine is the result of years of energy and commitment from Merck; the generosity of Canadas federal government; leadership by WHO; strong support to test the vaccine from both NGOs such as MSF and the countries affected by the West Africa outbreak; and the rapid response and dedication of the DRC Minister of Health. Without these efforts, it is unlikely this vaccine would be available for several years, if at all.

Read more about the Vaccine Alliance, and how you can contribute to the improvement of access to vaccines globally - in our Impact Story.

Elsewhere, the Group of 7 countries met in June and committed to sharing at least 870 million vaccine doses, with the aim to deliver at least half of that by the end of 2021. At the same time, the G7 reaffirmed its commitment to COVAX as the "primary route for providing vaccines to the poorest countries".

The World Bank and African Union also announced plans in June to work together to fast-track vaccine acquisition across the continent. The programme aims to complement the work of COVAX and supports the African Union's target to vaccinate 60% of the continent's population by 2022.

Written by

Joe Myers, Writer, Formative Content

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

Read more here:

Which countries have administered the fewest COVID-19 jabs? - World Economic Forum

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