Category: Covid-19

Page 547«..1020..546547548549..560570..»

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-9-2021 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

July 9, 2021

The West Virginia Department of Health andHuman Resources (DHHR) reports as of July 9, 2021, there have been 3,039,147 totalconfirmatory laboratory results received for COVID-19, with 164,465 totalcases and 2,908 deaths.

DHHR hasconfirmed the deaths of a 57-year old male from MonroeCounty, an 83-year old female from Kanawha County, a 74-year old male fromRaleigh County, and an 82-year old female from Berkeley County.

As we send our condolences to these grievingfamilies, we remind West Virginians that a COVID-19 vaccine is the bestprotection from getting very sick with COVID, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHRCabinet Secretary. "I urge all state residentswho have not yet received their vaccine to schedule an appointment.

CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (1,516), Berkeley(12,883), Boone (2,179), Braxton (1,022), Brooke (2,249), Cabell (8,901),Calhoun (397), Clay (543), Doddridge (647), Fayette (3,561), Gilmer (888),Grant (1,316), Greenbrier (2,906), Hampshire (1,929), Hancock (2,846), Hardy(1,587), Harrison (6,217), Jackson (2,268), Jefferson (4,808), Kanawha(15,516), Lewis (1,304), Lincoln (1,606), Logan (3,305), Marion (4,665),Marshall (3,541), Mason (2,067), McDowell (1,619), Mercer (5,205), Mineral(2,991), Mingo (2,773), Monongalia (9,399), Monroe (1,227), Morgan (1,237),Nicholas (1,909), Ohio (4,316), Pendleton (726), Pleasants (961), Pocahontas(683), Preston (2,964), Putnam (5,346), Raleigh (7,104), Randolph (2,863),Ritchie (762), Roane (667), Summers (865), Taylor (1,287), Tucker (548), Tyler(751), Upshur (1,980), Wayne (3,184), Webster (554), Wetzel (1,396), Wirt(458), Wood (7,957), Wyoming (2,066).

Delays maybe experienced with the reporting of information from the local healthdepartment to DHHR. As case surveillance continues at the local healthdepartment level, it may reveal that those tested in a certain county may notbe a resident of that county, or even the state as an individual in questionmay have crossed the state border to be tested. Such is the case of Lincoln, Mingo,Monongalia, and Ohio counties in this report. Please visit http://www.coronavirus.wv.govfor more detailed information.

West Virginians 12years and older are eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine.Tolearn more about the vaccine, or to find a vaccine site near you, visit vaccinate.wv.gov or call 1-833-734-0965. WestVirginians ages 12 and older who have had at least one dose of the COVID-19vaccine can register for the Do it for Babydog: Save a life, Change your lifevaccine sweepstakes by visitingdoitforbabydog.wv.gov.

Free pop-up COVID-19 testing is available today in Barbour, Berkeley,Grant, Jefferson, Lincoln, Logan, Marshall, Mineral, Monongalia, and Wayne counties.

Barbour County

9:00 AM 11:00 AM, Barbour County Health Department, 109 Wabash Avenue,Philippi, WV

Berkeley County10:00 AM 5:00 PM, 891 Auto Parts Place,Martinsburg, WVGrant County

11:00 AM 3:00 PM, Viking Memorial Field Parking Lot, 157-109 Rig Street, Petersburg, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Jefferson County

12:00 PM 5:00 PM, Shepherd University Wellness Center Parking Lot, 164University Drive, Shepherdstown, WV

Lincoln County

9:00 AM 3:00 PM, Lincoln County HealthDepartment, 8008 Court Avenue, Hamlin, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Logan County

12:00 PM 5:00 PM, Old 84 Lumber Building,100 Recovery Road, Peach Creek, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Marshall County

11:00 AM 5:00 PM, Cameron City Building, 44 Main Street, Cameron, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Mineral County

10:00 AM 4:00 PM, Mineral County HealthDepartment, 541 Harley O. Staggers Drive, Keyser, WV (optional pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Monongalia County

9:00 AM 12:00 PM, WVU Recreation Center, Lower Level, 2001 Rec CenterDrive, Morgantown, WV

Wayne County

10:00 AM 2:00 PM, Wayne Community Center,11580 Rt. 152, Wayne, WV

For additional free COVID-19 testingopportunities across the state, please visit https://dhhr.wv.gov/COVID-19/pages/testing.aspx.

Go here to read the rest:

COVID-19 Daily Update 7-9-2021 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

Southern Baptist Convention sparks small COVID-19 cluster in Nashville – Tennessean

July 9, 2021

A small but worrisome coronavirus cluster has been linked to the Southern Baptist Conventions annual meeting in Nashville, the first large-scale conference held in the city after it lifted restrictions on gatherings, according to the Metro Public Health Department.

About eight to 10 infections have been detected among attendees since the event in mid-June, which is enough to be classified as an COVID-19 cluster, said Metro Health epidemiologist Leslie Waller.

The cluster is almost certainly larger but difficult to measure because most attendees live outside of Tennessee, Waller said. The Centers of Disease Control and Prevention have issued an alert asking health officials in other states to contact Metro Health if they discover more infections that trace back to the Baptist event.

We have eight to 10 cases confirmed, Waller said. Do we assume there are more? Yes. Can we give you any idea as to how many more? No, we cant.

The Southern Baptist Conventions annual meeting, a two-day event at which Baptist churchgoers elected leaders and debated controversial topics, drew more than 15,000 attendees to Music City Center starting on June 15. Tensions ran high as attendeestackled critical race theory, sexual abusein the church, and staved off an effort to push the conservative denomination even further to the right.

COVID-19 PANDEMIC in TENNESSEE: Tennessees COVID-19 deaths now almost all among the unvaccinated

VACCINE EVENTS FOR TEENS HALTED: Health officials halt vaccine events for teens amid conservative pressure

Waller said the cluster is large enough to justify notifying the thousands of people who attended the event. Jonathan Howe, a spokesman for the Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee, said the organization hadn'talerted attendees and was working with city and state health officials to identify its next steps.

It is not yet known if any of the cluster involves the delta variant, a more transmissible version of the coronavirus, Waller said. Variant strains can only be identified if virus samples are subjected to a secondary level of testing known as genomic sequencing, which is performed only sparingly.

The Baptist event was a long-awaited revival of Nashvilles lucrative convention industry, which normally brings a steady stream of tourists to the city for work and play. Before the pandemic, conferences like this accounted for 40% of Nashvilles tourism businesses, said Butch Spyridon, CEO of the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp., while speaking in May in anticipation of the gathering.

But the event also poised a clear infection risk amid a smoldering pandemic, particularly because Nashville lifted its mask mandate and gathering restrictions one month prior.Few attendees wore masks at the event and social distancing was all but non-existent inside Music City Center.

The gathering is also likely to have attracted a less-vaccinated crowd. The Southern Baptist Convention is a network of conservative evangelical churches, and public polling has found the highest levels of vaccine hesitancy among evangelical conservatives, particularlyin Southern states.

INVESTIGATION: Where Trump got more votes, fewer get COVID-19 vaccines

Howe said the event followed virus protocols put forth by health departments and provided special seating for attendees who preferred to wear masks and remain distanced.

The Nashville meeting was the largest gathering of the Southern Baptist Convention since 1995, drawing more than 15,700 voting attendees, plus guests, from all 50 states, according to The Baptist Press, a publication run by the convention. The pandemic forced the convention to cancel its meeting in 2020, so the Nashville event was the first such gathering since a meeting in Birmingham, Alabama in 2019.

Brett Kelman is the health care reporter for The Tennessean. He can be reached at 615-259-8287 or at brett.kelman@tennessean.com. Follow him on Twitter at @brettkelman.

Read the original:

Southern Baptist Convention sparks small COVID-19 cluster in Nashville - Tennessean

‘Too good to be true’: Doubts swirl around trial that saw 77% reduction in COVID-19 mortality – Science Magazine

July 9, 2021

COVID-19 patients are treated using a noninvasive ventilation system at a field hospital in Manaus, Brazil.

By Robert F. ServiceJul. 7, 2021 , 2:15 PM

Sciences COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Heising-Simons Foundation.

It would be the best news by far in COVID-19 treatment: According to a preprint published on 22 June, an experimental prostate cancer drug named proxalutamide reduced deaths in hospitalized COVID-19 patients by 77% in a clinical trial in Brazil. The preprint also claims the drug, which blocks the activity of androgensmale hormones such as testosteronecut patients average hospital stay by 5 days, far more than any other treatment yet tested. Interim results of the study, announced at a press conference in March, led President Jair Bolsonaro to tout proxalutamide as a wonder cure and spurred Brazilian doctors to dose patients with similar drugs.

But many scientists are wary. Alleged irregularities in the clinical trial have reportedly triggered an investigation by a national research ethics commission in Brazil. Top medical journals have rejected a paper about the study, and its main author, Flavio Cadegiani, an endocrinologist at the biotech company Applied Biology, has previously touted unproven COVID-19 medications, such as ivermectin, azithromycin, and antiworm compounds. And to many, the claims simply seem implausible.

These results are too good to be true, says Eric Topol, executive vice president of Scripps Research Translational Institute. There are almost no medical interventions in the history of medicine that have this magnitude of benefit, no less with COVID-19.

But the idea behind the study makes sense, some scientists say. Men are more susceptible to hospitalization and death from COVID-19, and androgens may play a role. Although other studies with antiandrogens have come up empty, some researchers are keeping an open mind about the Brazilian trial. It seems pretty convincing, says Christina Jamieson, a prostate cancer researcher at the University of California (UC), San Diego. If they did what they say they did, it looks really good. Matthew Rettig, a prostate cancer oncologist at UC Los Angeles who is leading a similar trial with another drug, says the oversize impact gives him pause, but If this can be confirmed it would be a home run for sure, he says.

Proxalutamide is not approved in any country for any condition, but its manufacturer, Kintor Pharmaceuticals in China, is recruiting patients to test it for prostate cancer at multiple centers in the United States. For the COVID-19 study, Kintor teamed up with Applied Biology, a hair loss treatment company based in California where Cadegiani is a clinical director. In February, Cadegiani's team reported an encouraging early finding: Proxalutamide helped nonhospitalized patients with mild to moderate symptoms clear the virus much faster than those given a placebo.

The new study tested the drug in hospitalized patients in COVID-19s later stages. Doctors at eight hospitals in Brazil's Amazonas state enrolled 645 patients, according to the preprint. None initially required mechanical ventilation, and all were receiving usual care, which included approved anti-inflammatory drugs such as dexamethasone but sometimes also unproven compounds such as ivermectin. Roughly half also got proxalutamide; the other half got a placebo for 14 days.

In March, little more than a month after the trial began, Cadegiani and his colleagues announced their stunning interim results at a press conference. A doctor has to see their patients with proxalutamide to truly understand what we have seen. It is unfeasible to describe through words or translation into scientific language the dramatic response, Cadegiani tweeted around that time. The final analysis is in the new preprint, which reports that almost half of patients in the placebo group died, versus only 11% in the treatment arm, a 77% reduction in mortality. Patients on proxalutamide also had shorter hospital stays and less need for mechanical ventilators throughout the course of their treatment, and nearly 81% recovered after 2 weeks, compared with 36% of those not on the drug.

But on 8 June, the Brazilian newspaper O Globo reported that the Brazilian National Research Ethics Commission was investigating the study because the authors failed to report trial deaths as quickly as required by clinical trial rules in Brazil, and at different times reported a total of 170 and more than 200 deaths during the trial. The agency would not confirm the investigation, noting that all data from the research protocols under analysis are confidential, but Cadegiani confirms to Science that the commission is expected to issue a report on the trial.

Numerous researchers, including Topol and Jason Pogue, an infectious diseases clinical pharmacist at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, caution that the number of deaths in the trial is startling. In the placebo group the fatality rate was 49.4%, which made the drug look better but is far larger than the less than 10% of hospitalized COVID-19 patients who die in the United States. The speed of the trial, which only began in early February yet reported interim results in March, is suspicious as well, says Ana Carolina Peanha, an intensive care physician at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul. To [recruit] and monitor about 600 patients in a study in less than 30 days is unbelievable, she says.

Cadegiani says it isnt surprising so many people died in the trial because the Gamma variant (also known as P.1) was widespread in northern Brazil at the time and overwhelming hospitals. According to official data, about 43% of hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Amazonas state were dying when the study started in February. And as for the rapid recruitment, Cadegiani says as word got out in hospitals that patients in the proxalutamide trial were recovering within days and being released, others clamored to get into the trial.

Cadegiani believes the criticism stems from the fact that Bolsonaro and other officials have praised the drug. That "made it quite political," he says. He says it also explains why he has had trouble getting the data published, he says. Bolsonaro made [journal] editors afraid to publish positive results, Cadegiani says. He submitted the full results to The New England Journal of Medicine in the spring but says the paper was rejected despite what he calls "extremely constructive" reviews. When Cadegiani asked for the reason, Eric Rubin, the journals editor-in-chief, responded in an email, Its simplethe results are unexpectedly good. Given how good they are, the reviewers felt the data needed a primary review, meaning they needed to see not just the analysis, but also the original data. We simply dont have the capacity to do that, Rubin wrote in his email, which Cadegiani shared with Science. The Lancet rejected the paper as well.

The study is already having an impact in Brazil, however. Because proxalutamide is not yet approved or sold in Brazil, some doctors have begun to treat COVID-19 with other antiandrogens and prostate cancer drugs, such as dutasteride and bicalutamide. They are adding to a tide of unproven drugs being used to treat COVID-19 in Brazil, alarming infectious disease experts. "We cannot put the health of the Brazilian population at risk with guidelines without scientific evidence," Clvis Arns da Cunha, who heads the Brazilian Society for Infectious Dieases, wrote in a statement last year.

There are almost no medical interventions in the history of medicine that have this magnitude of benefit, no less with COVID-19.

Yet there is good reason to hope antiandrogens could combat COVID-19, some scientists say. According to the latest monthly statistics compiled by Global Health 50/50, which tracks gender disparities in COVID-19 patients, men account for 56% of COVID deaths worldwide. That disparity has prompted speculation that androgens may promote COVID-19 and encouraged studies of whether anti-androgen drugs can curb the disease.

Antiandrogens have been studied for decades as a treatment for prostate cancer, a disease fueled by androgens. In the prostate, when male hormones bind to receptor molecules, cells boost their production of a membrane protein called TMPRSS2 and divide more rapidly. Androgens also increase production of another protein, the angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptor. Both molecules play key roles in coronavirus infections: TMPRSS2 cuts the virus outer spike protein, which enables it to bind to ACE2 receptors and slip into cells interiors.

With the exception of the Brazilian trial, tests of antiandrogens in COVID-19 patients so far have not been encouraging. A February study in the Journal of Urology, led by prostate cancer researcher Nima Sharifi of the Cleveland Clinic, found that in 1779 men with prostate cancer, androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) had no effect on their risk of being infected with SARS-CoV-2. Another study, led by researchers from Vanderbilt University and presented at a recent meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology, found ADT treatment in nearly 600 prostate cancer patients had no effect on the number who died from COVID-19.

Im not saying [the proxalutamide results] are not true, Sharifi says. But its hard to make complete sense of them. It's also not clear why a drug that acts on SARS-CoV-2's receptors and should be best at preventing early stage viral infection would be effective at late stages of disease, when the surge of infection is largely over and a hyperactive immune system causes the problems. Cadegiani and co-authors believe proxalutamide tamps down cytokines that stimulate immune responses and encourage the production of estrogen, which lowers them further.

Other clinical trials may soon provide additional data. Kintor is currently recruiting male, nonhospitalized patients in California for a U.S. phase 3 trial of proxalutamide. Cadegiani says his colleagues in Brazil hope to soon test bicalutamide, a similar U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved androgen receptor blocker to see whether it produces comparable results.

Separate clinical trials of bicalutamide are ongoing at the University of Florida and Johns Hopkins University. Swedish researchers are testing a similar drug called enzalutamide. And Rettig says his team is now conducting an interim analysis of trial results on degarelix, another antiandrogen. For now, most researchers are waiting to see what, if anything, is real in the seemingly improbable results from the heart of the Amazon.

With reporting by Sofia Moutinho in Brazil.

Correction, 9 July 2021, 8:00 a.m.: A previous version of this story identified Ana Carolina Peanha as a pulmonologist. She is an intensive care physician.

Continue reading here:

'Too good to be true': Doubts swirl around trial that saw 77% reduction in COVID-19 mortality - Science Magazine

The Worst Charlatans of the Covid-19 Pandemic – Gizmodo

July 9, 2021

Photo: Photo by Rich Polk/Getty Images for Waterkeeper Alliance (Getty Images)

For decades, the Kennedy family was one of the most powerful political dynasties in the country, the most famous of which need no introduction: President John F. Kennedy, his brothers Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy and Senator Ted Kennedy, and his son, JFK Jr.

Then theres Robert Kennedy Jr., JFKs nephew, who has spent his career both as an environmental activist and as one of the nations most prominent anti-vax conspiracy theorists via his role as the chair of Childrens Health Defense. For years, that group has launched scientifically baseless accusations that vaccines, fluoridated drinking water, acetaminophen, aluminum, wireless technology, and other chemicals and technologies are responsible for autism, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, cancer, allergies, autoimmune conditions, and basically any other condition that pops up in children. Other members of the Kennedy clan famously wrote a letter in 2019 saying that while RFK Jr. was one of the great champions of the environment, he has helped to spread dangerous misinformation over social media and is complicit in sowing distrust of the science behind vaccines.

The coronavirus pandemic presented a golden opportunity for RFK Jr. to continue promoting anti-vax causes, which he did with relish. In May 2021, a report by the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) and Anti-Vax Watch named Kennedy as one of the 12 individuals with massive online followings who were disproportionately responsible for the spread of anti-vax conspiracy theories on Facebook and Twitter. According to Vanity Fair, groups like Anti-Vax Watch say that Kennedy is particularly dangerous among the Disinformation Dozen because he is the only one with widespread name recognition outside of preexisting anti-vax circles.

As Vanity Fair noted, RFK Jr. is, surprisingly, spectacularly educated, with an undergrad degree from Harvard, London School of Economics classes, a University of Virginia law degree, and a masters in environmental law from Pace University. Yet he has no scientific background whatsoever.

Via The Defender, Childrens Health Defenses blog, RFK Jr. has misinterpreted Centers for Disease Control (CDC) statistics to insist that coronavirus vaccines have resulted in mass injury and death, rattled off debunked claims that the CDC wildly inflated coronavirus death counts, and speculated that baseball legend Hank Aarons death was caused by the Moderna MRNA vaccine. (RFK Jr. claims that his remarks on Aaron were misinterpreted as asserting a conclusive link and that he merely meant to suggest that his death was part of a wave of suspicious deaths among elderly closely following administration of COVID vaccines.) His group also released a documentary in March 2021 called Medical Racism: The New Apartheid, which splices the sordid history of racist medical atrocities like the Tuskegee syphilis experiment with interviews of Black Americans about coronavirus vaccines.

NPR reported that the film is laden with misinformation, expounding on the non-existent link between vaccines and autism, misinterpreting scientific studies (at least one of which was retracted) to claim Black individuals are particularly at risk for vaccine injury, and asserting that covid-19 pandemic is propaganda. Two credible experts, Yale medical historian Naomi Rogers and past National Medical Association president Dr. Oliver Brooks, told NPR they regretted appearing in the film. (CHD denies the film contains misinformation, telling NPR it contains peer reviewed sources and historical data.)

Rogers told the news agency she felt misled and used, had enormous problems with the films narrative, and that it had taken many of the ideas she feels for passionately, like health disparities, fighting racism in health, working against discrimination, and its been twisted for the purposes of this anti-vax movement. The overall intent of the film, according to the McGill Office for Science and Society, is to convince Black people they are being used as guinea pigs for coronavirus vaccines, despite the fact they have experienced disproportionately low access to vaccines for much of the pandemic.

According to Vanity Fair, RFK Jr. has held lavish fundraisers for anti-vax causes, such as a $150-a-head event at Californias Malibu Fig Ranch in September 2020, and later this year he is scheduled to release a book titled The Real Anthony Fauci: Big Pharmas Global War on Democracy, Humanity, and Public Health. Seemingly the only real pushback hes received from social media firms was his February 2021 ban on Instagram. RFK Jr. still has nearly 235,000 followers on Facebook and nearly 270,000 on Twitter. Childrens Health Defense has nearly 149,000 followers on Facebook, nearly 70,000 on Twitter, and over 45,000 on YouTube, with over 2.7 million video views.

Read more from the original source:

The Worst Charlatans of the Covid-19 Pandemic - Gizmodo

There have been almost 2,000 new cases of COVID-19 in Utah in the past three days – Salt Lake Tribune

July 9, 2021

(Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune) A vial of saline and the Pfizer COVID19 vaccine at the Woods Cross High School pop-up clinic by Nomi Health, April 27, 2021. County and regional health districts are setting up vaccination clinics in high schools, to get the COVID-19 vaccine to 16- and 17-year-olds.

| July 9, 2021, 7:30 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 weekday morning. To support journalism like this, please donate or become a subscriber.

For the third day in a row, the number of new cases of the coronavirus in Utah easily exceeded 600. There were 655 reported on Friday, 695 on Thursday and 673 on Wednesday.

A total of 1,996 have tested positive for the virus in the last three days. The last time the count was above 600 three days in a row was Feb. 24-26, about four-and-half months ago.

UDOH reported five more deaths due to coronavirus, and, after further review by the medical examiner, removed one reported on May 21.

Vaccine doses administered in past day/total doses administered 6,320 / 2,902,020.

Utahns fully vaccinated 1,426,782.

Cases reported in past day 655.

Deaths reported in past day Five a woman in Carbon County over the age of 85; a woman 65-84 in Tooele County; two men in Utah County, one 25-44 and one 45-64; and a woman 65-84 in Tooele County..

Tests reported in past day 4,426 people were tested for the first time. A total of 7,624 people were tested.

Hospitalizations reported in the past day 237. Thats seven more than on Thursday. Of those currently hospitalized, 100 are in intensive care, eight more than on Thursday.

Percentage of positive tests Under the states original method, the rate is 14.8%. Thats higher than the seven-day average of 11.6%.

The states new method counts all test results, including repeated tests of the same individual. Fridays rate was 8.6%, higher than the seven-day average of 7.8%.

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

Totals to date 418,976 cases; 2,393 deaths; 17,757 hospitalizations; 2,825,596 people tested.

This story is developing and will be updated.

Original post:

There have been almost 2,000 new cases of COVID-19 in Utah in the past three days - Salt Lake Tribune

Experts fear the next Covid-19 variant might evade the vaccines that are restoring the developed world – CNN

July 9, 2021

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, basking in his role of host after a year of sterile Zoom diplomacy, implored his fellow leaders to vaccinate the whole world against Covid-19 by the end of 2022. But when the spin about the Cornwall huddle supposedly being one of the most vital global summits ever had faded, it became clear that the rich nations club had fallen disastrously short in globalizing the miracle of vaccines.

The group promised 1 billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines to poorer nations. US President Joe Biden, who backed lifting patents on Covid vaccines, pledged to buy 500 million doses alone. The UK offered 100 million. This sounds a lot. But around 11 billion shots are needed to protect the global population. It's not surprising that world leaders took care of their own nations first. Politicians in democracies obsess about keeping power. But the rich nations failed to use their fortunes and unique assets to build the kind of infrastructure that might speed global vaccinations and end the pandemic.

The failure to do so is becoming clear even as nations like the US and the UK benefit from their own high vaccination rates and reopen. Their progress is being threatened by the more infectious Delta variant of the coronavirus, which first emerged in India -- an area of low vaccine penetration. Experts fear the next variant that evolves in vast pools of unvaccinated humanity might evade the vaccines that are restoring the developed world.

G20, it's over to you.

'The Haitian diaspora is upset and in search of answers'

The assassination of Haiti's President sent shock waves through his compatriots living in the United States, and sparked concern that a country already scarred by its violent history, political tumult and natural disasters is in for even more pain.

"The Haitian diaspora is upset and in search of answers," Vania Andrew, publisher of The Haitian Times, an influential newspaper for the Haitian diaspora in the US, told Meanwhile.

"Although Jovenel Moise was wildly unpopular, with several calls for him to step down, there's still a feeling of disappointment given what this indicates for the state of the country. Folks are scared about what's to come next and there are very real fears about whether or not violence in the streets will ensue.

"This generation of Haitians in the diaspora is living in two worlds, where they are confronted with the challenges of being Black in America, championing Black Lives Matter, fighting against gun violence and impacted by what they see happening with George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and the countless other Black Americans that have died at the hands of police, while also dealing with the persistent political and social problems in Haiti that also have racial and class undertones.

"For a while Haitians in the diaspora were hopeful about Haiti's future, especially given the outpouring of support for the country in the wake of the 2010 earthquake. There was a sense that Haiti was going to build back bigger and better. Folks left their corporate jobs and stability in the US to be a part of that reawakening for Haiti, and sadly the reality has been the complete opposite, and Moise's assassination is the final nail in the coffin for them.

"This is a generation of change. Anyone who had a nonprofit, a business, an idea for initiatives that support sustainability in the country, will now think twice on whether Haiti is worth it."

View post:

Experts fear the next Covid-19 variant might evade the vaccines that are restoring the developed world - CNN

After the disease The long goodbye to covid-19 – The Economist

July 9, 2021

Jul 3rd 2021

WHEN WILL it end? For a year and a half, covid-19 has gripped one country after another. Just when you think the virus is beaten, a new variant comes storming back, more infectious than the last. And yet, as the number of vaccinations passes 3bn, glimpses of post-covid life are emerging. Already, two things are clear: that the last phase of the pandemic will be drawn-out and painful; and that covid-19 will leave behind a different world.

Your browser does not support the

Enjoy more audio and podcasts on iOS or Android.

This week The Economist publishes a normalcy index, which reflects both these realities. Taking the pre-pandemic average as 100, it tracks such things as flights, traffic and retailing across 50 countries comprising 76% of Earths population. Today it stands at 66, almost double the level in April 2020.

Yet the ravages of covid-19 are still apparent in many countries. Consider our indexs worst performer, Malaysia, which is suffering a wave of infections six times more deadly than the surge in January and scores just 27. The main reason for this is that vaccination remains incomplete.

In sub-Saharan Africa, suffering a lethal outbreak, just 2.4% of the population aged over 12 has had a single dose. Even in America, where vaccines are plentiful, only around 30% of Mississippians and Alabamans are fully protected. Although the world is set to produce around 11bn doses of vaccine this year, it will be months before all those jabs find arms, and longer if rich countries hog doses on the off-chance that they may need them.

The lack of vaccination is aggravated by new variants. Delta, first spotted in India, is two to three times more infectious than the virus that came out of Wuhan. Cases spread so fast that hospitals can rapidly run out of beds and medical staff (and sometimes oxygen), even in places where 30% of people have had jabs. Todays variants are spreading even among the vaccinated. No mutation has yet put a dent in the vaccines ability to prevent almost all severe disease and death. But the next one might.

None of this alters the fact that the pandemic will eventually abate, even though the virus itself is likely to survive. For those fortunate enough to have been fully vaccinated and to have access to new treatments, covid-19 is already fast becoming a non-lethal disease. In Britain, where Delta is dominant, the fatality rate if you become infected is now about 0.1%, similar to seasonal flu: a danger, but a manageable one. If a variant required a reformulated vaccine, it would not take long to create.

However, as vaccines and treatments become more plentiful in rich countries, so will anger at seeing people in poor ones die for want of supplies. That will cause friction between rich countries and the rest. Travel bans will keep the two worlds apart.

Eventually flights will resume, but other changes in behaviour will last. Some will be profound. Take America, where the booming economy surged past its pre-pandemic level back in March, but which still scores only 73 on our indexpartly because big cities are quieter, and more people work from home.

So far it looks as if the legacy of covid-19 will follow the pattern set by past pandemics. Nicholas Christakis of Yale University identifies three shifts: the collective threat prompts a growth in state power; the overturning of everyday life leads to a search for meaning; and the closeness of death which brings caution while the disease rages, spurs audacity when it has passed. Each will mark society in its own way.

When people in rich countries retreated into their houses during lockdowns, the state barricaded itself in with them. During the pandemic governments have been the main channel for information, the setters of rules, a source of cash and, ultimately, providers of vaccines. Very roughly, rich-country governments paid out 90 cents for every dollar of lost output. Slightly to their own amazement, politicians who restricted civil liberties found that most of their citizens applauded.

There is a vigorous academic debate about whether lockdowns were worth it. But the big-government legacy of the pandemic is already on display. Just look at the spending plans of the Biden administration. Whatever the probleminequality, sluggish economic growth, the security of supply chainsa bigger, more activist government seems to be the preferred solution.

There is also evidence of a renewed search for meaning. This is reinforcing the shift towards identity politics on both the right and the left, but it goes deeper than that. Roughly one in five people in Italy and the Netherlands told Pew, a pollster, that the pandemic had made their countries more religious. In Spain and Canada about two in five said family ties had become stronger.

Leisure has been affected, too. People say they have had 15% more time on their hands. In Britain young women spent 50% longer with their nose in a book. Literary agents have been swamped with first novels. Some of this will fade: media firms fear an attention recession. But some changes will stick.

For example, people may decide they want to escape pre-pandemic drudgery at work, and tight labour markets may help them. In Britain applications to medical school were up by 21% in 2020. In America business creation has been its highest since records began in 2004. One in three Americans who can work from home wants to do so five days a week, according to surveys. Some bosses are ordering people into the office; others are trying to entice them in.

It is still unclear whether the appetite for risk is about to rebound. In principle, if you survive a life-threatening disease, you may count yourself as one of the lucky ones and the devil may care. In the years after the Spanish flu a century ago, a hunger for excitement burst onto the scene in every sphere, from sexual licence to the arts to the craze for speed. This time the new frontiers could range from space travel to genetic engineering, artificial intelligence and enhanced reality.

Even before the coronavirus came along, the digital revolution, climate change and Chinas rise seemed to be bringing the post-second-world-war, Western-led order to an end. The pandemic will hasten the transformation.

Dig deeper

All our stories relating to the pandemic and the vaccines can be found on our coronavirus hub. You can also listen to The Jab, our podcast on the race between injections and infections, and find trackers showing the global roll-out of vaccines, excess deaths by country and the viruss spread across Europe and America.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline "The long goodbye"

Read the rest here:

After the disease The long goodbye to covid-19 - The Economist

COVID-19 | Family Resource Centers – Massachusetts

July 7, 2021

Dial 2-1-1

Mass 2-1-1 is an information and referral line that provides free, confidential information to individuals and families seeking child and elder care, emergency food and shelter, substance abuse treatment, and educational and vocational assistance. If you need help with any if these services, just dial 2-1-1 from any phone in Massachusetts to speak with a friendly information and referral specialist 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Translation services are available in more than 140 languages.

More:

COVID-19 | Family Resource Centers - Massachusetts

COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative

July 7, 2021

April 9, 2021 April 15, 2021

Webinar 10: April 9th, 2021 9:00am EDT / 2:00pm BST / 3:00pm CEST Agenda: 1. Welcome (5 min) Speaker: Andrea Ganna, FIMM 2. Manuscript revisions & resubmission update (25 min) Speakers: Mari Niemi, FIMM; Shea Andrews, Icahn School of Medicine; Gita Pathak, Yale; Masa Kanai, Broad Institute [Slides] 3. New work (20 min) Topics & speakers: a. Plans to study the genetics of Post-Acute Sequelae of

More here:

COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative

COVID-19 Information | An Open Access Initiative

July 7, 2021

Item request has been placed! Item request cannot be made. Trending Topics COVID-19 Vaccine: Is It the Right Choice for Me? Maps and Data Visualizations Covid-19 Explained (SCMP) Coronavirus Outbreak (Worldometer) Coronavirus Tracker (KFF) Geographical Distribution (ECDC) Global Cases (Johns Hopkins) Mapping Wuhan (StoryMaps) Outbreak Timeline Map (HealthMap) Situation Dashboard (WHO) Surveillance Dashboard (UVA) US spread of COVID-19 (SharedGeo)

More here:

COVID-19 Information | An Open Access Initiative

Page 547«..1020..546547548549..560570..»