Category: Covid-19

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Poland eyes mandatory jabs for some ahead of fourth COVID wave – Reuters

June 29, 2021

WARSAW, June 29 (Reuters) - Poland could make vaccinations obligatory for some people at high risk from COVID-19 to help fend off a potential new surge of infections from August, the health minister said on Tuesday.

The country of around 38 million has fully vaccinated 12.8 million people, but authorities have warned of problems with convincing those not yet vaccinated to get a jab.

"Unfortunately we have the impression that we have reached a certain ceiling - it is hard to convince those who are unconvinced because all the arguments and other types of actions have already been taken," Adam Niedzielski told Catholic radio station Radio Plus.

"We are talking about such scenarios as making vaccination obligatory for those most exposed to the serious consequence of COVID - we are talking here about senior citizens, but first of all doctors," he said.

Niedzielski noted infections driven by the highly infectious Delta variant had been increasing in Britain.

"What happens in Britain happens here about two months later... in our case, there is a possibility of a fourth wave appearing in the second half of August," he said.

Niedzielski said later that vaccination rates in various regions would be a factor in deciding about further restrictions if case numbers increase.

"So far, the map of restrictions has been based on the number of new infections... now a parameter that we will consider additionally will be the level of vaccination," he told a news conference.

Poland reported 123 new COVID-19 cases on Tuesday, a fraction of the number at the peak of the third wave in spring, when daily cases exceeded 35,000.

In total, Poland has reported 2,879,811 COVID-19 infections and 75,005 deaths.

Reporting by Alan Charlish and Pawel Florkiewicz; editing by Philippa Fletcher

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Poland eyes mandatory jabs for some ahead of fourth COVID wave - Reuters

Coronavirus tally: Global cases of COVID-19 top 181.4 million and WHO says vaccinated should keep wearing face masks – MarketWatch

June 29, 2021

The global tally for the coronavirus-borne illness headed above 181.4 million on Tuesday, according to data aggregated by Johns Hopkins University, while deaths climbed above 3.93 million. The U.S. continues to lead the world in total cases at 33.6 million, and by deaths that total 604,115. The number of fully vaccinated Americans rose to 153.8 million, or 46.3% of the total population, according to the latest data from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), up rom 46.1% a day ago. The number of adults 18-years-and-older that are fully vaccinated rose to 57%, while the number of U.S. adults receiving at least one dose increased to 66.1%. The World Health Organization is recommending that fully vaccinated people continue to wear face masks in public, breaking with the guidance offered by the CDC. The WHO is concerned about the rapid spread of the highly infectious delta variant of the virus that is racing across the world. On a global basis, India is second in total cases at 30.3 million and third by fatalities at 397,637, although those numbers are expected to be undercounted given a shortage of tests. Brazil has the third-highest caseload at 18.4 million, according to JHU data, and is second in deaths at 514,092. Mexico has fourth-highest death toll at 232,608 and 2.5 million cases. In Europe, Russia has overtaken the U.K. by deaths. Russia has 132,314 fatalities, while the U.K. has 128,367, making Russia the country with the fifth-highest death toll in the world and highest in Europe.

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Coronavirus tally: Global cases of COVID-19 top 181.4 million and WHO says vaccinated should keep wearing face masks - MarketWatch

University of Michigan gets $5.3M from state to expand COVID-19 wastewater monitoring – MLive.com

June 29, 2021

ANN ARBOR, MI Researchers surveying wastewater systems for COVID-19 at the University of Michigan can increase testing sites and continue monitoring until 2023 after receiving $5.3 million from the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.

The funding is part of MDHHSs $49 million to support 19 projects to continue COVID-19 wastewater surveillance and implement COVID-19 variant strain testing of wastewater, according to university officials.

Testing wastewater for coronavirus will continue into 2023 thanks to $49M grant

Grants include $2.5 million for Krista Wigginton, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, and Kevin Bakker, an assistant researcher scientist at UMs School of Public Health; and $2.7 million for Chuanwu Xi, a professor of environmental sciences at the School of Public Health, officials said.

This new grant will allow us to monitor more frequently and for an extended period of time the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2, including a few variant strains, in sewage from several buildings off campus in addition to sites on campus that we have been monitoring, Xi said. Data collected will allow us to evaluate the situation of COVID-19 spread in the community and the effectiveness of vaccination and other public health interventions.

That data will be shared in real-time fashion with Washtenaw County, state health departments and UMs COVID-19 response committees to assist the development of data-driven public health policies, Xi said.

The funds will allow Wigginton to add three new members to her team, she said, and expand their work with wastewater treatment systems in Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti to Jackson and Flint. The team will be able to analyze influent and solid samples nearly daily to monitor for the prevalence of COVID-19 in those communities, and data from those sample analyses will be shared to a statewide dashboard, officials said.

Wiggintons team will also be partnering with Washtenaw, Genesee and Jackson counties to inform their local responses to COVID-19.

Were excited to participate in this important project for the state of Michigan to continue fighting COVID-19, Wigginton said. Wastewater-based epidemiology has shown to be a valuable tool to inform public health officials of case levels and infection trends in a community.

Wigginton has also worked with Stanford University, which has informed the methodology for the solid sampling procedure and analysis they will conduct in the four Michigan communities, officials said.

Other colleges in the state have used wastewater testing to monitor COVID-19, including Eastern Michigan University, which began testing wastewater in September 2020, and Grand Valley State University, where SARS-CoV-2 was detected in more than 50% of all samples collected.

Previously, the state received $10 million in grant funding for its three-month pilot program from September through December 2020. The program testing samples from 280 sites across 41 counties and the city of Detroit.

The average positivity rate of all samples was 66.3% between Oct. 1 and Dec. 30, 2020. During that time, Michigan was experiencing its second significant wave, which peaked at 7,270 new cases reported per day on Nov. 21. A few sites didnt include any positive detections, while many sites had 100% of their samples test positive.

Funding will continue through July 31, 2023.

READ MORE:

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University of Michigan gets $5.3M from state to expand COVID-19 wastewater monitoring - MLive.com

Moderna’s stock gains as it announces authorization for its COVID-19 shot in India – MarketWatch

June 29, 2021

Shares of Moderna Inc. MRNA, +5.27% gained 6.3% in trading on Tuesday after the company said its COVID-19 vaccine has been authorized for adults in India. Moderna's shot has already been authorized in more than 50 countries, including the U.S. Moderna's stock is up 118.5% this year, while the broader S&P 500 SPX, +0.12% has gained 14.2%.

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Moderna's stock gains as it announces authorization for its COVID-19 shot in India - MarketWatch

Shingles and COVID-19: Is There A Connection? – Healthline

June 29, 2021

Shingles, also called herpes zoster, is an infection caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox. Almost 1 in 3 people will have shingles at some point in their lives.

Some people believe that there is a direct connection between the appearance of shingles symptoms and the COVID-19 coronavirus as well as its vaccines. Some have even suggested that COVID-19 causes shingles and that vaccines given to protect against the virus can cause shingles, too.

Current scientific research indicates that neither COVID-19 itself nor any vaccine given to protect against it causes shingles. But that does not mean that there is not a link between the two.

In some cases, the COVID-19 coronavirus does seem to reactivate the herpes zoster virus if a person already has had shingles or chickenpox. This can cause symptoms of shingles.

Lets take a look at what we know and do not know about COVID-19 and the shingles virus.

Theres currently no evidence to clear up the question of whether having COVID-19 or getting vaccinated against the coronavirus that causes it increases your risk for developing shingles in any statistically significant way.

But it seems clear that neither the virus nor the vaccines can cause a shingles outbreak since shingles is caused by a different virus entirely.

To better understand the relationship between the two, lets look at some details about the herpes zoster virus and SARS-CoV-2, responsible for shingles and COVID-19, respectively, as well as what the research currently suggests about the link between the two conditions.

Herpes zoster is a virus that first takes the form of chickenpox. Many people contract this virus during childhood. You can also be vaccinated against the virus.

Whether you have acquired varicella or been vaccinated against it, the virus lies dormant in certain nerve cells after your exposure.

Years after your first encounter with chickenpox, the virus can be reactivated in the form of shingles. Symptoms of shingles will typically include a rash on your trunk or your buttocks. The rash can be itchy and painful. Even after the rash fades, you may notice pain in the area where the rash appeared.

Most people only get shingles once in their lifetime, but the virus can be reactivated multiple times.

People over age 60 years old or who have a compromised immune system are at a higher risk for reactivation of herpes zoster and developing symptoms of shingles. In fact, people who are at a higher risk for shingles are also at a higher risk for severe symptoms of COVID-19.

COVID-19 is a highly transmissible respiratory disease caused by SARS-CoV-2. Its primarily transmitted through the air when people who have contracted the coronavirus breathe out respiratory particles that contain viral material.

COVID-19 has a wide range of symptoms. Some people who have contracted SARS-COV-2 may not present any symptoms at all (asymptomatic), while others may experience severe symptoms and require hospitalization. Symptoms may include:

While COVID-19 symptoms can be flu-like, the coronavirus that causes it is much different than the virus that causes the annual flu. Researchers are still working to understand COVID-19s short- and long-term effects on the body.

What we do know is that when your immune system is compromised or distracted fighting off another virus, it tends to give the herpes zoster virus a chance to reactivate.

Past research has established that immune-suppressing medications like chemotherapy and corticosteroids as well as health conditions that attack your immune system like Crohns disease, HIV, and lupus increase your risk for a shingles outbreak.

Researchers are currently trying to understand whether COVID-19 may do the same thing.

Preliminary data suggests that this could be the case, but we do not know yet.

A small 2021 study involving 491 vaccinated people in Israel showed that six participants experienced shingles for the first time after getting their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine. All six individuals had pre-existing conditions that lowered their natural immune response, and all six fully recovered after developing shingles.

This study prompted researchers to advocate for more studies on COVID-19 vaccines as possible triggers for (not cause of) the shingles virus.

Data gathered in Brazil also showed an increase of 10.7 cases of shingles per million inhabitants during the time of the pandemic.

Its impossible to know exactly how and to what extent the effect of increased stress of the pandemic and other factors played into these numbers increasing during that span of time. Stress has long been suspected to be a possible factor in developing shingles.

A small study published in October 2020 by the University of California showed that there was no statistical evidence to support claims of a link between the herpes zoster virus and COVID-19.

This conclusion was based on 608 cases of herpes zoster in which only 2.1 percent of people (13) with shingles tested positive for COVID-19 between March 2020 and August 2020.

If you are currently experiencing a shingles outbreak, its natural to question and want to know what caused it.

Besides the herpes zoster virus being reactivated in your system, other more complicated, less well-known triggers for the virus include:

Whether you suspect that you have shingles, COVID-19, or both, seek medical attention immediately if you notice one or more of the following:

If you have a compromised immune system, are pregnant, or are over age 65 years, see a doctor right away if you suspect you have COVID-19 orshingles regardless of your specific symptoms.

Shingles is typically treated with antiviral medication. The earlier you get a confirmed diagnosis, the more effective the medication will be at managing your symptoms.

Acyclovir, valacyclovir, and famciclovir are antiviral medications that may be prescribed to treat a shingles outbreak.

Acyclovir is currently seen as promising for the treatment of COVID-19 as well. But how well it works is still being established.

Remdesivir, another antiviral, is currently the only drug that is FDA approved for treating COVID-19.

Other treatments for shingles include:

COVID-19 does not cause shingles neither do any of the currently available vaccines designed to protect you against COVID-19.

We know this because shingles is caused by a different virus entirely. What we do not yet know is whether getting a COVID-19 vaccine or contracting SARS-CoV-2 might increase your risk for reactivating the virus that causes shingles.

Speak with a doctor if you have any concerns about getting vaccinated.

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Shingles and COVID-19: Is There A Connection? - Healthline

CDC says roughly 4,100 people have been hospitalized or died with Covid breakthrough infections after vaccination – CNBC

June 27, 2021

U.S. Air Force 1st Lt. Allyson Black (R), a registered nurse, cares for COVID-19 patients in a makeshift ICU (Intensive Care Unit) at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center on January 21, 2021 in Torrance, California.

Mario Tama | Getty Images

More than 4,100 people have been hospitalized or died with Covid-19 in the U.S. even though they've been fully vaccinated, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

So far, at least 750 fully vaccinated people have died after contracting Covid, but the CDC noted that 142 of those fatalities were asymptomatic or unrelated to Covid-19, according to data as of Monday that was released Friday.

The CDC received 3,907 reports of people who have been hospitalized with breakthrough Covid infections, despite being fully vaccinated. Of those, more than 1,000 of those patients were asymptomatic or their hospitalizations weren't related to Covid-19, the CDC said.

"To be expected," Dr. Paul Offit, a top advisor to the Food and Drug Administration on children's vaccines told CNBC. "The vaccines aren't 100% effective, even against severe disease. Very small percentage of the 600,000 deaths."

Breakthrough cases are Covid-19 infections that bypass vaccine protection. They are very rare and many are asymptomatic. The vaccines are highly effective but don't block every infection. Pfizer and Moderna's phase three clinical studies found that their two-dose regimens were 95% and 94% effective at blocking Covid-19, respectively, while Johnson & Johnson's one-shot vaccine was found to be 66% effective in its studies. All three, however, have been found to be extremely effective in preventing people from getting severely sick from Covid.

The CDC doesn't count every breakthrough case. It stopped counting all breakthrough cases May 1 and now only tallies those that lead to hospitalization or death, a move the agency was criticized for by health experts.

Most Americans have received at least one shot of the two currently authorized mRNA vaccines. The U.S. has administered 178.3 million shots and fully vaccinated 46% of its population.

"You are just as likely to be killed by a meteorite as die from Covid after a vaccine," Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious disease expert at the University of California San Francisco, told CNBC. "In the big scheme of things, the vaccines are tremendously powerful."

Efficacy rates decrease slightly for variants like alpha and delta, with studies indicating 88% efficacy against the delta strain after two doses of the Pfizer vaccine. It was unclear if any of the reported breakthrough cases were caused by variants.

In Israel and the United Kingdom, concerns about the delta variant are rising after growing reports of breakthrough infections.

Even with 80% of adults vaccinated, Chezy Levy, director-general of Israel's Health Ministry, said the delta variant is responsible for 70% of new infections in the country. Levy also said that one-third of those new infections were in vaccinated individuals.

In the U.K., Public Health England released a report that found 26 out of 73 deaths caused by the delta variant occurred in fully vaccinated people from June 8 to June 14. Most of the deaths occurred in unvaccinated individuals.

"Determination of whether hospitalizations and deaths are more represented in immunocompromised patients and the type of vaccine received will be important for future guidance," Chin-Hong said.

On June 7, the CDC received reports of 3,459 breakthrough cases that led to hospitalization or death. On June 18, that number was updated to 3,729, an increase of 270 cases. Today, the number stands at 4,115.

An overwhelming majority, 76%, of the hospitalizations and deaths from breakthrough cases occurred in people over the age of 65.

"We do not have the years and years of data we have for vaccines against other airborne pathogens and therefore it is really essential that the CDC provides up to date reporting on breakthrough cases," David Edwards, aerosol scientist and Harvard University professor, told CNBC.

The CDC says its numbers are "likely an undercount" of all Covid infections in vaccinated people because the data relies on passive and voluntary reporting.

-- CNBC's Berkeley Lovelace Jr. contributed to this report.

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CDC says roughly 4,100 people have been hospitalized or died with Covid breakthrough infections after vaccination - CNBC

Mallorca probes COVID-19 outbreak among hundreds of partying students – Reuters

June 27, 2021

MADRID, June 26 (Reuters) - Authorities in Mallorca are investigating a coronavirus outbreak involving more than 600 students celebrating the end of term in the Spanish island, just as it prepares for British tourists to return following the easing of travel curbs.

Students visiting from the mainland went to a music concert at a bullring in the capital, Palma, as well as parties on boats and in hotels, and officials said on Saturday they wanted to find out if venues had adhered to virus-control measures.

The outbreak comes as the Balearic Islands gear up for an expected influx of tourists after the British government put the islands on its "green travel list" from June 30.

That means holidaymakers will not have to quarantine on return from the islands, long a popular destination for sun-seeking Britons. read more

All of the students who tested positive for coronavirus were Spanish and had travelled from different parts of the country to celebrate the end of university qualification examinations.

At least 1,000 students have had to go into isolation, the Balearic Islands' health authorities said, and some of the teenagers showed mild symptoms of COVID-19.

Spaniards were allowed to stop wearing face masks outdoors on Saturday after more than a year as coronavirus cases fell, but they must continue to wear them inside or when social distancing is impossible. read more

Reporting by Graham KeeleyEditing by Helen Popper

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Mallorca probes COVID-19 outbreak among hundreds of partying students - Reuters

Covid-19 exposed the devastating consequences of staff shortages in nursing homes. But the problem isn’t new – CNN

June 27, 2021

As the virus spread throughout the facility last year, emergency responders came and went regularly, taking yet another resident running low on oxygen to the hospital. Staff members were infected and some died, leaving a facility already running low on employees struggling to keep up with residents' needs.

"It was so few of us in the building that we were just literally running from floor to floor seeing who needed help," Moore, who works as a certified nursing assistant, said. "It was an absolute nightmare."

But experts say this has been a decades-old problem.

"Seventy-five percent of the nursing homes had inadequate staffing before the pandemic started," said Charlene Harrington, a professor emerita at the University of California, San Francisco. "It's not surprising that they weren't able to cope with it."

"It's a very hard job and no one wants to come to do that job specifically for the amount that we're paid now," said Chaunte Jones, a certified nursing assistant in Michigan.

"What you're telling nursing home assistants, nursing home staff, is that they need to work for probably the same amount of pay -- or maybe a small raise, who knows -- and they need to put their lives and their family's lives at risk by going into a nursing home where Covid-19 could creep in at any time," said Michael Barnett, a Harvard assistant professor of Health Policy and Management.

Now, nursing home staff across the country are demanding change and better pay and providers are calling on the government for more funding to tackle the staffing crisis.

Patients suffer from the shortages

The long-standing shortage in these positions and high turnover rates left staff members across long-term care facilities scrambling for years to tend to every resident, and they're often unable to finish their tasks each day, Harrington said.

"Nursing homes are perpetually understaffed and the reason for that is because there are no federal minimum staff-to-patient ratio standards," said Richard Mollot, executive director of the non-profit Long Term Care Community Coalition.

A 2001 study by CMS, responsible for regulating nursing homes, found staff should spend at least 4.1 hours per resident daily. But there are no federal requirements for daily nursing hours per resident.

The report found that missed care -- often a symptom of staff shortages -- was associated with patients' "adverse events including pressure ulcers, medication errors, new infections and IVs running dry or leaking." It also found facilities with higher nurse staffing levels tended to have reduced emergency room use and rehospitalizations.

"We've documented for over 20 years the terrible care in some of these nursing homes," Harrington said. "And staffing is the fundamental service."

But the problem isn't just getting more staff in the door -- it's keeping them. Moore says that even when her Philadelphia facility recruits new staff members, the low wages and heavy workload mean they often don't stick around too long.

"I walk around the facility now and I barely know the people that are working in there because it's like a revolving door now," she said.

"One thing is clear," Barnett, from Harvard, said. "Nursing homes were not helped by the extremely volatile and tenuous nature of nursing home staffing that we went into the pandemic with, and things got worse."

What's driving the shortages

Experts say several factors are driving the shortages and high turnover numbers, and principal among them is low wages.

"It's historically been a sector that has not been valued," said Dr. Robyn Stone, the senior vice president for research at LeadingAge, an association of non-profit providers of aging services. "And I think that that creates a lot of challenges for both thinking about adequate compensation, the attractiveness of the sectors for people to work in. And so, it all sort of has fed on itself."

The ongoing staff shortages are "emblematic of the systemic neglect of the nursing home system," said Barnett.

"The most important aspect of that neglect is how little nursing home workers make, especially certified nursing assistants," Barnett said. "They are the ones who are predominantly immigrants, people of color. It's a huge workforce and they're really -- they're critical for nursing home care because they're the people who are turning people, cleaning them, helping them get up, helping feeding them, those kinds of tasks."

"If we continue working with what we're working with now, it's going to be a continuing shortage and it's going to get worse," Jones, who said she gets paid minimum wage to work in her Michigan facility, said.

But nursing homes point to their own sources of funding as a big reason behind their workers' pay -- in particular, Medicaid reimbursements.

While some Americans do pay for nursing homes on their own, most of the facilities' income comes from Medicaid and Medicare. Medicaid reimbursements, determined by each state, pay for long-stay residents, who make up the majority of the nursing home population, while Medicare reimburses facilities -- at generally higher rates -- for short-stay patients who are usually there for rehabilitation services.

"Everyone knows that Medicaid underpays," said David Gifford, chief medical officer for the American Health Care Association (AHCA), which represents assisted living and long-term care facilities. "Salaries are about 70% of our revenue overall and so we just can't offer competitive salaries compared to hospitals and other settings."

And with many surgeries canceled this year because of the pandemic, nursing homes across the United States saw resident numbers drop, while costs -- including new ones, associated with Covid-19 protocols and protective equipment -- climbed.

"Our occupancy levels are down 15% and those are typically your short-term rehab Medicare patients, and that would traditionally help offset the losses you had in Medicaid, and that's just not happening right now," said Kristen Knapp, a spokesperson for the Florida Health Care Association, which represents some homes that had to freeze admissions because of staff shortages.

"For-profit companies are not likely to increase staffing on their own unless they are required to by government," Harrington said.

Gifford said for-profit facilities tend to have lower staffing levels but take care of a slightly higher number of Medicaid patients -- which he said makes a difference "between being able to afford higher staffing levels and not."

"We're all for hiring more staff. I hear every day from our members that they would like to hire more staff, but they don't have the reimbursement from Medicaid," he said.

A historically undervalued -- but vital -- job

The AHCA/NCAL has been pushing for more funding for nursing homes -- particularly better Medicaid reimbursements -- from Congress and state governments. The group is also calling for Congress to help offer better incentives for staff members in the industry, including loan forgiveness and tax incentives.

"These investments will help hundreds of thousands of Americans finally obtain the long-term services and support they need, while creating new jobs and offering caregiving workers a long-overdue raise, stronger benefits, and an opportunity to organize or join a union and collectively bargain," a White House statement said.

In Philadelphia, Moore was among hundreds of nursing home workers who protested last month across Pennsylvania for stronger staffing requirements and higher wages. And nearly 1,000 nursing home staff members across the state voted this month to go on strikes that a local worker's union says come in response to a crisis of "unsafe staffing."

"Nursing is not just about changing somebody or giving somebody some medication," Moore said. "It's also about companionship when you're working in these facilities. And we don't have the time to do it."

"One thing we learned from the pandemic is that when you don't make nursing homes a priority, bad things happen," Gifford, with the AHCA, said. "We take care of very old people who are very sick and very old people who got infections did not do well with Covid. And it was made worse because we didn't have enough staff, we didn't have enough PPE, we didn't have testing, we were not a priority."

"We've been saying we need more staffing and we've been trying to get more staffing. We need help."

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Covid-19 exposed the devastating consequences of staff shortages in nursing homes. But the problem isn't new - CNN

Experts share concern over climbing COVID-19 cases, urge others to remember pandemic isnt over – KLAS – 8 News Now

June 27, 2021

Posted: Jun 25, 2021 / 11:10 PM PDT / Updated: Jun 25, 2021 / 11:10 PM PDT

LAS VEGAS (KLAS) Its easy to see Las Vegas is bouncing back, but many are concerned as COVID-19 cases start to climb for the first time in recent weeks.

Good and I think bad,Leo Basit said of our citys recent reopening excitement.Because we are not really out of it yet.

Dr. Marc J. Kahn, Dean of the Kirk Kerkorian School of Medicine at UNLV, said while our state has made great strides, there are warning signs.

In the summer in Las Vegas, people are going to congregate together, Dr. Kahn told 8 News Now Friday. As this city opens, which is great to see, but again, if youre not vaccinated, you are at risk of getting sick.

Nevadas positivity rate surged to 4.5% on Thursday, while our case count hit 804. These are the highest numbers weve seen in recent weeks, according to state and local agencies.

Dr. Kahn said getting immunized is everyones best bet at protection, especially with the highly contagious Delta variant making its way across America.

Nearly all the covid deaths in the country in the past couple weeks have been from unvaccinated people, Dr. Kahn explained. So again, get vaccinated.

The concern with Delta, is that the mutation makes it more transmissible and more infectious, Dr. Kahn added. That is a concern, and we do have the Delta variant in our population.

Many who spoke with 8 News Now Friday said its important to remember the COVID-19 pandemic isnt over. They encourage others to keep safety top of mind for themselves and everyone around them.

I did get vaccinated, Tania PozoBut I still want to just be careful.

Get the shot,John Tawney concluded.Get the shot to be safe.

Dr. Kahn said its important to remember that even the best vaccines arent 100% effective, so anyone fully inoculated still has about a five percent chance of contracting COVID-19, but the virus would most likely be a mild case.

For a look at Nevadas latest COVID-19 numbers, CLICK HERE.

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Experts share concern over climbing COVID-19 cases, urge others to remember pandemic isnt over - KLAS - 8 News Now

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