Category: Covid-19

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Why treating Covid-19 with drugs is harder than you think – BBC News

May 9, 2021

Unlike broad-spectrum antibiotics, which can be used to treat a wide range of bacterial infections, drugs that work against one type of virus rarely work at treatingother viruses. For example, remdesivir, originally developed for treating hepatitis C, was at one point suggested as a treatment for Covid-19, but clinical trials have shown that it hasonly a limited effectagainst this coronavirus.

The reason there are few effective broad-spectrum antivirals is that viruses are much more diverse than bacteria, including in how they store their genetic information (some in the form of DNA and some as RNA). Unlike bacteria, viruses have fewer of their own protein building blocks that can be targeted with drugs.

For a drug to work, it has to reach its target. This is particularly difficult with viruses because they replicate inside human cells by hijacking our cellular machinery. The drug needs to get inside these infected cells and act on processes that are essential for the normal functioning of the human body. Unsurprisingly, this often results incollateral damageto human cells, experienced as side-effects.

Targeting viruses outside cells to stop them from gaining a foothold before they can replicate is possible, but is also difficult because of the nature of thevirus shell. The shell is extraordinarily robust, resisting the negative effects of the environment on the way to its host. Only when the virus reaches its target does its shell decompose or eject its contents, which contain its genetic information.

This process may be a weak spot in the virus lifecycle, but the conditions that control the release are very specific. While drugs targeting the virus shell sounds appealing, some may still betoxic to humans.

Despite these difficulties, drugs that treat viruses such as influenza and HIVhave been developed. Some of these drugs target the processes of viral replication and the viral shell assembly. Promising drug targets of coronaviruses have beenidentified as well. But developing new drugs takes a long time, and viruses mutate quickly. So even when a drug is developed, the ever-evolving virus might soon developresistance towards it.

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Why treating Covid-19 with drugs is harder than you think - BBC News

Department of Health Announces Free COVID-19 Testing Site in Pike County – Pennsylvania Pressroom

May 8, 2021

Harrisburg, PA - The Department of Health today announced that a long-term outdoor drive-thru COVID-19 testing site will open to the public in Pike County at the Pike County Pennsylvania Welcome Center. The site is available through a partnership with AMI Expeditionary Healthcare (AMI).

The virus is still present in our communities, which is evident from the daily count of COVID-19 cases statewide, Acting Secretary of Health Alison Beam said. This reinforces the need for continued testing across the state. We encourage anyone who feels they need or want a test to take advantage of all COVID-19 testing clinics, if they think they have been exposed to COVID-19. Much of the news and attention has shifted to COVID-19 vaccines, but testing is still a critical part of our response to ultimately stop the spread of COVID-19.

Beginning Tuesday, May 11 through Saturday, June 5, testing will be available daily, Tuesdays through Saturdays from 9 AM to 6 PM at the Pike County Pennsylvania Welcome Center, 1042 Pennsylvania Avenue, Matamoras, PA, 18336.

Please note, the site will be closed on Friday, May 28 and Saturday, May 29 before Memorial Day.

Up to 450 people can be tested per day. Mid-nasal passage swab PCR tests will be performed. Testing is on a first-come, first-serve basis and is completely free. No appointment is necessary. Testing is open to individuals who are not county residents. Patients must be ages 3 and older and are not required to show symptoms of COVID-19 in order to be tested. Patients are encouraged to bring a photo-ID. Registration will also be completed on-site. The turnaround time for testing results is one to three days after testing.

The AMI testing site will be open to anyone who feels they need a test. It is important that even people with no symptoms who have tested positive isolate in order to stop the spread of COVID-19.

There are three other AMI COVID-19 testing site currently operating across the commonwealth in Centre, Delaware and Luzerne counties.

In addition, Pennsylvanians can find testing sites in their area on the locator map here.

Individuals who are tested should self-quarantine while they await their test results. Individuals who live with other people should self-quarantine in a private room and use a private bathroom, if possible. Others living in the home with the individual awaiting test results should also stay at home. The department has additional instructions for individuals waiting for a COVID-19 test result. Individuals who test positive will receive a phone call from AMI while individuals who test negative will receive a secured-PDF emailed to them from AMI.

The department believes that increased testing in counties will help determine the prevalence of the virus and assist the county in moving forward. There are currently 55 counties in the commonwealth where the percent of positive cases is above 5 percent on the Early Warning Monitoring Dashboard. Each county is being monitored as the state continues to examine all available data.

The department has contracted with AMI to perform pop-up COVID-19 testing in counties across the state since September 2020. The contracts were funded by the federal Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity (ELC) Enhancing Detection grant. Counties under the initial contract, as well as the total number of patients tested, can be found here. Counties served under the first contract extension, as well as the total number of patients tested, can be found here.

From March 2020 through May 6, 2021, the department has received 13,330,991 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test results. From May 2020 through May 6, 2021, the department has received 3,081,953 antigen test results. The total combined number of tests reported to the department is 16,412,944 since COVID-19 testing began in the commonwealth. The number of Pennsylvanians who have been tested by PCR or antigen tests is 5,951,782, which roughly equates to 46.5 percent of the Pennsylvania population. Some people have been tested more than once.

Counties in need of a long-term COVID-19 testing site should contact the Pennsylvania Department of Health to discuss the possibility of setting up a pop-up site through AMI.

For the latest information for individuals, families, businesses and schools, visit Responding to COVID-19 on pa.gov.

The Department of Health is working to ensure the vaccine is provided in a way that is ethical, equitable and efficient to all Pennsylvanians:

The Wolf Administration stresses the role Pennsylvanians play in helping to reduce the spread of COVID-19:

Updated Coronavirus Links: Press Releases, State Lab Photos, Graphics

MEDIA CONTACT: Barry Ciccocioppo - RA-DHpressoffice@pa.gov

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Department of Health Announces Free COVID-19 Testing Site in Pike County - Pennsylvania Pressroom

Pfizer Seeks Full FDA Approval For COVID-19 Vaccine – NPR

May 8, 2021

Pfizer-BioNTech is seeking the Food and Drug Administration's approval for its COVID-19 vaccine, with the goal of getting the agency's green light "in the coming months." Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images hide caption

Pfizer-BioNTech is seeking the Food and Drug Administration's approval for its COVID-19 vaccine, with the goal of getting the agency's green light "in the coming months."

Pfizer and its vaccine partner BioNTech have started an application to request the Food and Drug Administration's approval for its COVID-19 vaccine.

Pfizer is the first coronavirus vaccine maker in the U.S. to request full approval. Like Pfizer, the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines had been previously cleared for use under the agency's emergency use authorization a less rigorous approval method to aid a swifter response to the pandemic.

An FDA approval for a vaccine means the agency has decided that its benefits outweigh the known risks following a review of the manufacturer's testing results.

If granted, Pfizer's full stamp of approval would only apply to the vaccine for people who are 16 and older. Meanwhile, the vaccine maker is seeking emergency use authorization for its COVID-19 vaccine to include children between 12 and 15.

"We look forward to working with the FDA to complete this rolling submission and support their review, with the goal of securing full regulatory approval of the vaccine in the coming months," Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in a press release Friday.

BioNTech's CEO, Dr. Ugur Sahin, called the submission of the application for FDA approval "an important cornerstone of achieving long-term herd immunity and containing COVID-19 in the future."

"We are pleased to work with U.S. regulators to seek approval of our COVID-19 vaccine based on our pivotal Phase 3 trial and follow-up data."

In that final phase of clinical trials, Pfizer found that its vaccine was 95% effective against COVID-19, the highest efficacy among vaccines authorized for emergency use in the United States.

For the FDA to grant approval, Pfizer-BioNTech will have to comply with a key requirement: providing follow-up data six months after vaccinations.

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Pfizer Seeks Full FDA Approval For COVID-19 Vaccine - NPR

COVID Vaccines May Not Be Protective For Organ Transplant Recipients : Shots – Health News – NPR

May 8, 2021

Even after full vaccination against COVID-19, people who have had organ transplants are urged by their doctors to keep wearing masks and taking extra precautions. Research shows the strong drugs they must take to prevent organ rejection can significantly blunt their body's response to the vaccine. DigiPub/Getty Images hide caption

Even after full vaccination against COVID-19, people who have had organ transplants are urged by their doctors to keep wearing masks and taking extra precautions. Research shows the strong drugs they must take to prevent organ rejection can significantly blunt their body's response to the vaccine.

Laura Burns was thrilled when she got her second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine three months ago. The 71-year-old thought that with vaccination, she might finally be closer to being able to see her family in Europe again.

"I have not seen them now for two years, and that's including my stepdaughter. It's very, very ... that's hard," says Burns, who lives in Austin, Texas.

But when researchers at Johns Hopkins analyzed her blood, they couldn't detect any antibodies to the coronavirus. "I had no response whatsoever," she says. So she asked the doctors, " 'Does this mean I have no protection?' And the answer I got was, 'It means you may have no protection. You should operate on that assumption.' "

And she's not the only one.

For most people, COVID-19 vaccines promise a return to something akin to normal life. But for the hundreds of thousands of people in the U.S. who have a transplanted organ, it's a different story. That includes Burns, who got a double lung transplant nearly five years ago. New research published this week in the medical journal JAMA suggests many transplant recipients may not get protection from vaccination, even after two doses.

"Forty-six percent of transplant patients have had no evidence whatsoever that they had an antibody response to the vaccine" after two doses, Dr. Dorry Segev says. He's a transplant surgeon at Johns Hopkins and one of the authors of the study, which looked at the antibody response after full vaccination with the Moderna and Pfizer shots in more than 650 transplant recipients, including Burns.

"One of the things that we're really trying to emphasize to the transplant population is, vaccination does not mean immunity," Segev says.

And even in transplant patients who did generate an antibody response from the vaccine, he says, "it is less robust than in people with competent immune systems."

Avoiding organ rejection requires lifelong immune suppression

Valen Keefer has shown at least some antibody response and considers herself lucky. At 38, she's received not one but two organ transplants a kidney transplant at 19, and a second transplant three years ago, when her liver started failing. As is almost always the case with transplants, Keefer is on a lifelong regimen of strong daily doses of immunosuppressive drugs to keep her body from rejecting those organs.

Just this week, Keefer received test results that showed her body has produced antibodies in response to both the first and second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine though her response was weaker than that seen in people with normal immune systems.

"I'm grateful," she says. "I almost felt proud of my body. If I had two different transplants and my body could still produce antibodies, there is hope for others."

But Keefer is also confused about what the results mean in terms of her ability to navigate the world safely. "I think it's really hard to integrate back into some kind of normalcy," she says. "Transplant recipients like me, we're not sure what to do."

What about other immunocompromised patients?

The vaccine development trials did not include transplant recipients, so researchers are now trying to fill in the blanks and not just for those patients. Millions of people in the U.S. are immunocompromised. Some have medical conditions that suppress their immune systems. Others have conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis or inflammatory bowel disease that require them to be on medications that may mute their immune response to COVID-19 vaccines in varying ways, too.

For instance, Segev's study found transplant recipients will have a reduced response to vaccination if they take a class of drugs called antimetabolites. (That drug class includes mycophenolate, azathioprine and methotrexate, a medication also prescribed to some patients who have rheumatoid arthritis or lupus.) These drugs block activity in B cells the immune system's antibody factories.

Other studies have shown a reduced antibody response in patients who take Rituximab, a monoclonal antibody treatment that also targets B cells and is used to treat some cancers and autoimmune disorders.

"We know for a fact that drugs like this wipe out your B cells. ... And so it's not going to be surprising that these groups of patients aren't going to respond to the vaccines," says Ghady Haidar, a transplant infectious disease doctor at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

However, he says, there are so many immunosuppressive drugs in use that, without more research, it's too soon to know which doses of which drugs in what combination might seriously blunt the benefits of COVID-19 vaccination.

The medical condition makes a difference, too. For example, Segev's research has found that the COVID-19 vaccine was more likely to work in patients with rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases than in organ transplant recipients. And while Haidar's team failed to detect antibodies in 46% of patients with blood cancers after two doses of either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, researchers in the U.K. have found that patients with solid tumor cancers respond well after the second dose.

All this may leave immunocompromised individuals desperate to know whether they responded to the COVID-19 jabs they recently received, but Haidar and other experts NPR spoke with don't recommend that they seek out antibody tests on their own in part because the commercial tests available may not measure the right thing, and also because scientists have still not established what level of antibodies are required for full protection.

Booster shots down the road?

Right now, Haidar says, the best advice he can give his patients is to get vaccinated but keep living cautiously, adhering to the same masking and physical distancing precautions they've been following throughout the pandemic.

And just assume you're not protected, he advises. "I know it sounds lame, but this is all that can be offered now."

He hopes and expects that advice eventually to change as research now underway explores which factors influence the way vaccines work in immunocompromised patients. For instance, scientists are starting to explore whether the COVID-19 vaccine may be generating a response in other parts of the immune system such as among T cells that they just haven't detected yet.

"It's certainly possible that even if you have no antibodies, that your immune system is ready and waiting to respond whenever the SARS-CoV-2 virus comes, or that there might actually be an active immune response that's sort of hidden in the background," says Dr. Elad Sharon, an immunotherapy researcher at the National Cancer Institute.

It's also possible that giving immunocompromised patients a third dose of a vaccine essentially a booster shot will elicit a better antibody response. Last month, health officials in France recommended that severely immunocompromised patients receive a third dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines. The vaccines aren't currently authorized for that use in the U.S., but Sharon says he eventually hopes to test that. In the meantime, some immunocompromised patients are already seeking out third shots on their own. That includes Burns.

"I just called up and explained the situation and the pharmacist gave me the Johnson & Johnson" vaccine," Burns says. She'd been vaccinated earlier with the Moderna vaccine but switched to J&J for the third dose in hopes of eliciting an antibody response by mixing and matching vaccines, a strategy embraced by some health agencies in Europe. "Knock on wood that it's going to work," Burns says. As part of the Johns Hopkins study, she'll get her levels of antibodies against the coronavirus tested again next week.

For now, though, she is still extra careful to keep from getting exposed to the coronavirus she remains mostly homebound these days. Aside from members of her household, Burns only visits with people over Zoom. When she does venture out for a quick trip to the grocery store, she'll double-mask. Masking is a familiar habit from the early months after her transplant in 2016, when the risk of organ rejection was highest, so she was on higher doses of immunosuppressive drugs. In more recent years, until the pandemic struck, she'd been able to live a much more active life, full of dinners out, indoor exercise classes and travel.

For now, scientists say the best chance that Burns and others have to be protected from getting COVID-19 is for everyone else around them to get vaccinated.

"It's yet another reason for everybody in the United States to go and get vaccinated," Segev says, "because your body can produce an immune response to protect you and all of those around you so that people whose bodies cannot produce an immune response can somehow be protected."

Keefer calls that responsibility to the community "the burden of good health."

"If you're lucky to be completely healthy," she says, "the burden of that is to step up and help protect yourself and others and get the vaccine. And that's all you have to do."

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COVID Vaccines May Not Be Protective For Organ Transplant Recipients : Shots - Health News - NPR

How to avoid COVID-19-related funeral charges that families in North Texas and elsewhere have received – The Dallas Morning News

May 8, 2021

As countless Dallas-Fort Worth residents prepare funerals for loved ones who died of COVID-19, many are seeing extra charges related to COVID-19 sanitation and safety.

But few are aware that these fees are illegal, according to the Texas Funeral Service Commission.

Sherry Tutt of Dallas, whose mother and sister died of COVID-19 within hours of each other last year, said she plans to file a complaint with the commission over the fee she was charged.

Heres what you might see on your bill and what you should know when making funeral arrangements to avoid paying extraneous charges.

Glenn Bower, executive director of the state commission, said funeral homes cant charge customers extra for items they use to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Funeral home directors must take universal precautions for every deceased person despite their cause of death, he said.

Were supposed to ... treat every deceased person as if they were contagious, which means we use the highest level of caution as possible, Bower said. And if we put it on a price list that says, Well, we can go ahead and charge extra, that means were not taking the necessary precautions to protect ourselves, our families [and] our employees.

Bower said safety measures should be incorporated into a funeral homes basic service fee. Funeral homes can raise a service or overhead fee to accommodate COVID-19 sanitation, but its suggested that consumers file a complaint if these spikes seem unusual, he said.

Some examples of illegal charges include the use of plastic garments to contain contagious fluids or the hiring of outside services to curb community spread. It might appear as COVID-19 fee on an itemized bill.

Texas doesnt set or restrict how much funeral homes can charge for services.

Consumers in Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and Arkansas spent an average of $8,319 for a funeral with a viewing, casket and vault in 2019, according to the most recent data from the National Funeral Directors Association. Basic services accounted for an average of $2,000.

The state requires funeral directors to provide a general price list before funeral arrangements are made. This list should include prices for body preparation, the moving of remains and other services. Funeral homes must include contact information for the business, the date the rates and fees went into effect and a notice explaining the consumers right to refuse any services.

Cecil Dalton, owner of Dalton & Son Funeral Home in Lewisville and Flower Mound, said funeral directors must go through the itemized list with consumers line-by-line.

Depending on what type of services they choose, they can either say, Yes, we want this item, or no, we dont want this item, he said.

Under federal law, funeral homes are only required to disclose fees over the phone or when requested by a consumer.

Families have the right to decline any services funeral homes perform except a nondeclinable basic services fee.

Consumers have up to two years from the date of the alleged incident to report extraneous fees to the commission, but Bower suggests that families file complaints as soon as possible.

I would rather families file a complaint and us investigate it, as opposed to families thinking to themselves Its really not a big deal. Bower said. It is a big deal.

To make a complaint, families can send a copy of the form from the commissions official website and any supporting documents to the agencys Austin mailing address. Funeral home directors found in violation of state law may face suspension or revocation of their license.

So far, Bower said the commission hasnt received any complaints involving COVID-19 fees.

Dalton said funeral homes send insurance companies bills with the total price of services provided. Because insurers rarely ask for general price lists, except in the case of unusual deaths, he said its harder for consumers and agencies to catch wrongdoing.

If the commission rules in favor of a consumer who used insurance, the refund goes to the beneficiary listed on the plan.

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How to avoid COVID-19-related funeral charges that families in North Texas and elsewhere have received - The Dallas Morning News

Tracking COVID-19 in Alaska: 116 new infections, no deaths reported Friday – Anchorage Daily News

May 8, 2021

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Alaskas average daily case counts are trending down statewide, with some pockets of rising case levels. A surge of coronavirus-related hospitalizations in the Fairbanks region is straining hospital capacity there; one COVID-positive patient in their 20s recently died, officials said this week. At least 23 people have tested positive in an outbreak linked to a Ketchikan wrestling tournament.

Additionally, many regions in the state are still in the highest alert category based on their current per capita rate of infection, and health officials continue to encourage Alaskans to wear face coverings in public, avoid large gatherings, wash their hands frequently and get vaccinated against COVID-19 to prevent further spread.

By Friday, there were 45 people with confirmed or suspected cases of COVID-19 in hospitals throughout the state, far below a peak in late 2020 but up compared to recent weeks.

Also by Friday, 337,630 people about 55% of all Alaskans eligible for a shot had received at least their first dose. At least 288,320 people about 48% of Alaskans 16 and older were considered fully vaccinated, according to the states vaccine monitoring dashboard.

Alaska in January led the country in per capita vaccinations, but has now fallen to 26th place among all 50 states, territories, and Washington, D.C., according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

You can visit covidvax.alaska.gov or call 907-646-3322 to sign up for a vaccine appointment; new appointments are added regularly. The phone line is staffed 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on weekdays and 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on weekends.

Of the 114 cases reported among Alaska residents on Friday, there were 34 in Anchorage, plus one in Chugiak; one in Anchor Point, one in Homer, and four in Soldotna; 13 in Fairbanks and four in North Pole; two in Delta Junction and one in Tok; one in Big Lake, two in Palmer, 13 in Wasilla, and one in Willow; three in Nome; one in Utqiagvik; five in Juneau; 17 in Ketchikan; one in Petersburg; and one in Craig.

In communities with fewer than 1,000 people not named to protect privacy, there was one in a community on the southern Kenai Peninsula, one in the Fairbanks North Star Borough, one in Southeast Fairbanks Census Area, one in Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area, one in Northwest Arctic Borough, one in Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area, one in Yakutat plus Hoonah-Angoon, and one in Bristol Bay plus Lake and Peninsula boroughs.

There were two cases reported in nonresidents: one in Fairbanks and one in Sitka.

While people might get tested more than once, each case reported by the state health department represents only one person.

The states data doesnt specify whether people testing positive for COVID-19 have symptoms. More than half of the nations infections are transmitted from asymptomatic people, according to CDC estimates.

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Tracking COVID-19 in Alaska: 116 new infections, no deaths reported Friday - Anchorage Daily News

Gandhi warns ‘explosive’ COVID wave threatens India and the world – Reuters

May 8, 2021

Indias main opposition leader Rahul Gandhi warned on Friday that unless the deadly second COVID-19 wave sweeping the country was brought under control it would devastate India as well as threaten the rest of the world.

In a letter, Gandhi implored Prime Minister Narendra Modi to prepare for another national lockdown, accelerate a countrywide vaccination programme and scientifically track the virus and its mutations.

Gandhi said the world's second-most populous nation had a responsibility in "a globalised and interconnected world" to stop the "explosive" growth of COVID-19 within its borders.

"India is home to one out of every six human beings on the planet. The pandemic has demonstrated that our size, genetic diversity and complexity make India fertile ground for the virus to rapidly mutate, transforming itself into a more contagious and more dangerous form," wrote Gandhi.

"Allowing the uncontrollable spread of the virus in our country will be devastating not only for our people but also for the rest of the world."

India's highly infectious COVID-19 variant B.1.617 has already spread to other countries, and many nations have moved to cut or restrict movements from India.

British Prime Minister Boris said on Friday the government needed to handle very carefully the emergence of new coronavirus strains in India that have since started to spread in the United Kingdom.

Meanwhile tonnes of medical equipment from abroad has starting to arrive in Delhi hospitals, in what could ease the pressure on an overburdened system.

VACCINATION RATES

In the past week, India has reported an extra 1.5 million new infections and record daily death tolls. Since the start of the pandemic, it has reported 21.49 million cases and 234,083 deaths. It currently has 3.6 million active cases.

Modi has been widely criticised for not acting sooner to suppress the second wave, after religious festivals and political rallies drew tens of thousands of people in recent weeks and became "super spreader" events.

His government - which imposed a strict lockdown in March 2020 - has also been criticised for lifting social restrictions too soon following the first wave and for delays in the country's vaccination programme.

The government has been reluctant to impose a second lockdown for fear of the damage to the economy, though many states have announced their own restrictions.

Goa, a tourism hotspot on the west coast where up to one in two people tested in recent weeks for coronavirus have been positive, on Friday announced strict curbs from Sunday, restricting timings for grocery shops, forbidding unnecessary travel and urging citizens to cancel all gatherings.

While India is the world's biggest vaccine maker, it is also struggling to produce and distribute enough doses to stem the wave of COVID-19.

Although the country has administered at least 157 million vaccine doses, its rate of inoculation has fallen sharply in recent days.

India vaccinated 2.3 million people on Thursday, the most this month but still far short of what is required to curb the spread of the virus.

RECORD INFECTIONS

India reported another record daily rise in coronavirus cases, 414,188, on Friday, bringing total new cases for the week to 1.57 million. Deaths from COVID-19 rose by 3,915 to 234,083.

Medical experts say the real extent of COVID-19 is likely to be far higher than official tallies.

India's healthcare system is crumbling under the weight of patients, with hospitals running out of beds and medical oxygen. Morgues and crematoriums cannot handle the number of dead and makeshift funeral pyres burn in parks and car parks.

Infections are now spreading from overcrowded cities to remote rural villages that are home to nearly 70% of the 1.3 billion population.

Although northern and western areas of India bear the brunt of the disease, the south now seems to be turning into the new epicentre.

In the southern city of Chennai, only one in a hundred oxygen-supported beds and two in a hundred beds in intensive care units (ICUs) were vacant on Thursday, from a vacancy rate of more than 20% each two weeks ago, government data showed.

In India's tech capital Bengaluru, also in the south, only 23 of the 590 beds in ICUs were vacant.

The test-positivity rate the percentage of people tested who are found to have the disease in the city of 12.5 million has tripled to almost 39% as of Wednesday, from about 13% two weeks ago, data showed.

Syed Tousif Masood, a volunteer with a COVID-19 resource group in Bengaluru called the Project Smile Trust, said the group's helpline was receiving an average 5,000 requests a day for hospital beds and oxygen, compared with 50-100 such calls just one month ago.

"The experts say we have not yet hit the peak," he said. "If this is not the peak, then I don't know what will happen at the real peak."

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Gandhi warns 'explosive' COVID wave threatens India and the world - Reuters

Watch the Archived Broadcast of NJCU’s COVID-19 Vaccine Q&A Town Hall – Life at NJCU

May 8, 2021

On May 6, NJCU hosted a COVID-19 Town Hall, focusing on a question and answer session to help the NJCU and Jersey City community better understand the COVID-19 vaccines available and the nation's vaccination efforts.

A panel of eight with expertise in biological sciences, biotechnology, cell biology, clinical microbiology, contact tracing, COVID-19 response, epidemiology, health science, mimunology, microbiology, molecular virology, nursing, public health, and vaccine manufacturing participated and imparted knowledge that will help individuals with questions learn more.

Watch the archived broadcast on the NJCU YouTube Channel.

Expert Panelists

Dr. Parisa Assassi, Assistant Professor/Health and Physical Education Queensborough Community College (CUNY)/Former Faculty at NJCUExpertise: Epidemiology

Dr. Meriem Bendaoud, Assistant Professor/Biology New Jersey City University Expertise: Microbiology

Dr. Gloria Boseman, Professor/NursingNew Jersey City UniversityExpertise: Nursing/Public Health

Dr. Anthony Esposito, Associate Professor/Biology New Jersey City UniversityExpertise:Molecular Virology

Stacey L. Flanagan, Director, Department of Health & Human ServicesCity of Jersey City/Adjunct Faculty Member at NJCU Expertise: Health Science/COVID Response and Contact Tracing

Dr. John Grew, Professor/BiologyNew Jersey City University Expertise: Biological Sciences, Immunology and Cell Biology

Dr.Sanjay Koul, Assistant Professor Queensborough Community College (CUNY)/Former Adjunct Faculty at NJCU Expertise: Biotechnology and Vaccine Manufacturing

Dr. Scott Mittman, Associate Dean, College of Arts and Sciences New Jersey City UniversityExpertise: Clinical Microbiology

Event ModeratorLuie Perez, 2021 Graduating SeniorNew Jersey City UniversityBachelor of Science in Public Health Education

Read the full bios of each panelist.

Contact: Ira Thor, Senior Director of University Communications and Media Relations | ithor@njcu.edu | 201-200-3301

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Watch the Archived Broadcast of NJCU's COVID-19 Vaccine Q&A Town Hall - Life at NJCU

Experts Say COVID-19 Herd Immunity Is Becoming Increasingly Unlikely in the US – Pharmacy Times

May 8, 2021

Although COVID-19 vaccination efforts are continuing across the country, experts say herd immunity is becoming less likely due to uneven vaccine roll-out, distribution disparities, and continuous virus mutation.

Herd immunity can be achieved through both vaccination rates and immunity gained from surviving COVID-19. Earlier in the pandemic, experts believed that once large parts of the population started being vaccinated, herd immunity would usher in the end of the pandemic, according to an article published by Nature. Most scientists estimated that between 60% and 70% of the population would need to be immune to reach that threshold, either through vaccination or past exposure to the virus.

According to the article, however, experts believe achieving herd immunity in the United States is becoming unlikely due to high levels of vaccine hesitancy, the emergence of new variants, and the delayed arrival of vaccinations for children. Because of these issues, experts now say COVID-19 could become a long-term endemic threat, similar to influenza.

Despite the encouraging progress made over the past few months of the vaccine roll-out, experts say they still lack clarity over whether the vaccines prevent transmission. The key to herd immunity, according to the article, is having too few susceptible hosts to maintain transmission, even if a person becomes infected. If vaccines do not prevent transmission, however, this could make herd immunity nearly impossible.

Herd immunity is only relevant if we have a transmission-blocking vaccine, said Shweta Bansal, MS, PhD, in the article. If we dont, then the only way to get herd immunity in the population is to give everyone the vaccine.

Despite these concerns, the article noted that a vaccine doesnt need to block 100% of transmission in order to be effective. Even 70% efficacy could be a gamechanger, although there would still be a significant amount of transmission that would make it more difficult to break transmission chains.

Disparities in vaccine roll-out also present significant barriers to herd immunity, both globally and within the United States. Some states, such as Georgia and Utah, are lagging far behind others in the percentage of the population that is vaccinated. Furthermore, although all adults are not eligible across the country, a vaccine approval for children is still in the works, leaving children vulnerable.

Although Pfizer and BioNTech have applied for an FDA emergency use authorization to vaccinate children aged 12 years and older, this still leaves a large group unvaccinated. According to the article, approximately 24% of people in the United States are under 18 years of age. If most of this group cannot be vaccinated, then 100% of adults would need to be vaccinated in order to achieve 76% immunity in the population.

Finally, the emergence of new variants is a major concern for experts looking toward herd immunity. Current vaccine roll-out plans are racing against the variants, attempting to vaccinate enough people before the virus can mutate and spread.

Even as the number of vaccinated people grows, experts say higher rates of immunity can put pressure on the variants, leading to mutations that are able to infect even immunized people. Vaccinating quickly can prevent new variants from spreading widely, although the uneven rollout could also give variants more time to develop.

Despite these concerning obstacles to achieving herd immunity, experts say it is important not to forget the improvements that have been made thus far. Preventing severe disease and death is vital, and the currently available vaccines have shown significant efficacy. Although transmission may never stop completely, the prominence of COVID-19 is likely to decrease, allowing a return to some form of normalcy.

REFERENCE

Aschwanden C. Five reasons why COVID herd immunity is probably impossible. Nature; March 18, 2021. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-00728-2. Accessed May 7, 2021.

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Experts Say COVID-19 Herd Immunity Is Becoming Increasingly Unlikely in the US - Pharmacy Times

Two-thirds of UK adults have had first COVID-19 jab -government data – Reuters UK

May 8, 2021

A man receives an injection with a dose of AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine, at a vaccination centre in Baitul Futuh Mosque, amid the outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in London, Britain, March 28, 2021. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

Two-thirds of adults in the United Kingdom have been vaccinated with a first dose of a COVID-19 shot, official data showed on Friday.

In total 35,069,641 people have received a first dose and 16,764,720 have received a second.

Britain also recorded a further 2,490 cases of COVID-19 in the last 24 hours, and 15 more deaths.

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Two-thirds of UK adults have had first COVID-19 jab -government data - Reuters UK

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