Category: Covid-19

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Tracking COVID-19 in Alaska: 1 death and 271 new cases reported over weekend – Anchorage Daily News

May 4, 2021

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Alaska reported 271 coronavirus infections and one death linked to COVID-19 between Saturday and Monday, according to data from the Department of Health and Social Services. The state no longer updates its coronavirus dashboard over the weekend, and instead includes those numbers in Mondays report.

The individual who died was a Wasilla man in his 50s, health officials said.

Alaskas average daily case counts have begun to decline again statewide. However, most 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.

Alaska in March became the first state in the country to open vaccine eligibility to anyone 16 and older who lives or works in the state. 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.

By Monday, 308,957 people about 50% of Alaskans eligible for a shot had received at least their first dose. At 263,324 about 43.8% 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 23rd place among the 50 states and Washington, D.C., according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Of the 264 cases reported among Alaska residents over the last three days, there were 70 in Anchorage, six in Eagle River and two in Chugiak; 64 in Fairbanks; 29 in Wasilla; 21 in North Pole; 11 in Palmer; eight in Ketchikan; five in Kenai; four in Kodiak; two in Anchor Point; two in Big Lake; two in Delta Junction; two in Sutton-Alpine; two in Willow; and one case each in Homer, Houston, Kotzebue, Seward, Sitka, Yakutat, Soldotna, Sterling, Valdez and Wrangell.

Among communities smaller than 1,000 people that arent named to protect residents privacy, there were three in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough; three in the Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area; two in the Northwest Arctic Borough; and one case each in the Copper River Census Area, the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area and the Hoonah-Angoon Census Area.

There were also seven new cases among nonresidents: two in Anchorage; one in Fairbanks; one in Kodiak; one in the North Slope Borough; one in Prudhoe Bay; and one in a location under investigation.

By Monday, there were 66 people with confirmed or suspected cases of COVID-19 in hospitals throughout the state.

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.

Of all the tests conducted over the past week, 2.19% came back positive.

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Tracking COVID-19 in Alaska: 1 death and 271 new cases reported over weekend - Anchorage Daily News

COVID-19 in South Dakota: 85 total new cases; Death toll at 1,970; Active cases at 1,512 – KELOLAND.com

May 4, 2021

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) Eighty-five new total COVID-19 cases and three additional deaths were announced by theSouth Dakota Department of Healthon Monday.

The DOH has stopped reporting new COVID-19 information over the weekend.

According to the latest update, there are 105 current hospitalizations, compared to Friday (112). Total hospitalizations are at 7,376.

Active cases are now at 1,512, down from Friday (1,624).

The states total case count is now at 122,745, up from Friday (122,660).

While the difference in the total case count reported today and yesterday equals 85, when you add the PCR, or newly confirmed, cases (69) and antigen, or new probable, cases (17), there were 86 new cases.

Total recovered cases are now at 119,263 compared to 119,069 on Friday.

Three new deaths were reported by the Department of Health on Monday. The new deaths were two men and one woman in the following age ranges: 40 49 (1); 70 79 (2). New deaths were reported in Dewey, Lake and Yankton counties.

The death toll due to COVID-19 in South Dakota is now at 1,970.

Total persons who tested negative is now at 344,208, up from Friday (343,713).

There were 580 new persons tested in the data reported Monday for a new persons-tested positivity rate of 14.65%.

The latest seven-day PCR test positivity rate reported by the DOH is 6.8%. The latest one-day PCR test positivity rate is 4.8%.

According to the DOH, 314,658 doses of the Pfizer vaccine have been administered with 16,816 doses of the Janssen vaccine and 265,386 of the Moderna vaccine given out to a total number of 329,491 persons.

There have been 121,258 persons who have completed two doses of Moderna and 146,091 who have received two doses of Pfizer, according to the DOH.

As of Monday, 54.79% of the population eligible for the vaccine in South Dakota has received at least one dose while 46.88% have completed the vaccination series.

Vaccines are currently being given to anyone 16-year-old and above in South Dakota.

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COVID-19 in South Dakota: 85 total new cases; Death toll at 1,970; Active cases at 1,512 - KELOLAND.com

Photos Show The Distressing Severity Of Indias Covid-19 Crisis – Forbes

May 2, 2021

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Photos Show The Distressing Severity Of Indias Covid-19 Crisis - Forbes

Timberwolves relieved to get second dose of COVID-19 vaccine – PostBulletin.com

May 2, 2021

His arm was a signal of his second COVID-19 vaccination, and that he was soon to be protected from the virus thatd so severely hit so many of his family members, even taking the life of his mother last year.

You get the second dose, probably feel (bad), but guess what, we got it done. So I love it, Towns said. Im excited to be fully vaccinated finally. Ive said it before and will say it again, I think its important for all of us to get vaccinated if we want to see life come back to normal. We all gotta make the sacrifice and make the effort to go get the vaccine.

Towns, his teammates and many other members of the Timberwolves organization took such measures this week.

Its kind of a relief. Little bit of excitement at the same time, it allows you to get back to normal as we move towards our threshold here, Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said. We can start operating with less constraints. Offseason scheduling and all that kind of stuff will be a little easier to manage. Thats whats most important, so were all looking forward to that.

Timberwolves forward Jarred Vanderbilt admitted he was a little skeptical about the vaccine at first, but ultimately decided to get the shot.

Once I got it, I felt good about it, not only for me, but for the people around me, Vanderbilt said. I was trying to make a safer environment for all of us. I feel good about it. It was a little bit of a sigh of relief.

Finch said it was a mixed bag of side effects between those who got the second dose.

Some guys felt it, some guys were OK, Finch said. Nobody was reporting anything untoward (Saturday) at shootaround.

Everyone was good to go for Saturdays contest against New Orleans.

Me personally, Im good right now, Vanderbilt said. I felt it a little bit (Friday). A little headache and a little body ache.

The Timberwolves winning streak has intoxicated its most loyal fans, but sports books are yet to buy into the teams success.

Minnesota was a hefty underdog in both of its games against Utah, was a narrow favorite against Houston the worst team in the league and was an underdog again at home Thursday against Golden State.

But the Wolves won all of those games. And theyd beaten New Orleans in each of their prior two meetings this season. So logic would suggest Minnesota would be a favorite Saturday at Target Center against the Pelicans, a fringe playoff team.

Nope, Minnesota was a four-point underdog.

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Timberwolves relieved to get second dose of COVID-19 vaccine - PostBulletin.com

Coronavirus by the Numbers: COVID-19 Metrics in Each of Illinois’ 11 Health Care Regions – NBC Chicago

May 2, 2021

After an uptick in cases of coronavirus in late March and early April, numbers have steadied considerably across the state of Illinois.

Some areas are still seeing upticks in hospitalizations, including Region 3, located in western Illinois, and Region 8, comprised of Kane and DuPage counties, but for the most part, those metrics have either steadied or began to decrease in the state.

Here is where things stand in each of Illinois 11 health care regions.

Positivity Rate: 5.3% (increasing)

ICU Bed Availability: 15% (steady)

Hospitalization Trends: 8/10 days decreasing or steady

Positivity Rate: 5.2% (steady)

ICU Bed Availability: 16% (steady)

Hospitalization Trends: 9/10 days decreasing or steady

Positivity Rate: 2.7% (decreasing)

ICU Bed Availability: 24% (increasing)

Hospitalization Trends: 8/10 days increasing

Positivity Rate: 2.6% (steady)

ICU Bed Availability: 34% (increasing)

Hospitalization Trends: 9/10 days decreasing or steady

Positivity Rate: 2% (increasing)

ICU Bed Availability: 20% (increasing)

Hospitalization Trends: 9/10 days decreasing or steady

Positivity Rate: 3% (increasing)

ICU Bed Availability: 40% (increasing)

Hospitalization Trends: 7/10 days decreasing or steady

Positivity Rate: 5.6% (steady)

ICU Bed Availability: 23% (steady)

Hospitalization Trends: 8/10 days decreasing or steady

Positivity Rate: 5.4% (decreasing)

ICU Bed Availability: 23% (steady)

Hospitalization Trends: 6/10 days decreasing or steady

Positivity Rate: 3.8% (decreasing)

ICU Bed Availability: 27% (steady)

Hospitalization Trends: 5/10 days increasing

Positivity Rate: 4.8% (steady)

ICU Bed Availability: 18% (decreasing)

Hospitalization Trends: 10/10 days decreasing or steady

Positivity Rate: 4.6% (steady)

ICU Bed Availability: 21% (steady)

Hospitalization Trends: 5/10 days increasing

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Coronavirus by the Numbers: COVID-19 Metrics in Each of Illinois' 11 Health Care Regions - NBC Chicago

N.J. reports 36 COVID deaths, 1,455 cases. More than 7 million doses administered and 3 million fully vaccina – NJ.com

May 2, 2021

New Jersey on Saturday reported another 1,455 coronavirus cases and an additional 36 deaths, as the state surpassed crucial benchmarks of more than 7 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine administered and more than 3 million people fully vaccinated.

As of Saturday afternoon, 7,056,881 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine had been administered across the Garden State, according to state data.

There were 3,054,030 people fully vaccinated in New Jersey as of Saturday afternoon roughly 44% of the states 6.9 million adults. The states goal is to have 70% of the states eligible population about 4.7 million people vaccinated by the end of June.

Slightly more than 4.2 million people about 61% of adults have received at least one vaccine dose. State officials have expressed confidence about reaching the 70% goal but have said they will need to be proactive about encouraging people to get their shots because demand has started to subside.

The day after the statewide rate of transmission plummeted to its lowest point in nearly a year, Gov. Phil Murphy posted the latest update on Twitter. On Saturday, the statewide rate of transmission dropped even further to 0.54, the lowest statewide rate of transmission in a year, when it was at 0.60 last May.

Statewide hospitalizations stayed below 1,600, after dropping below the mark for the first time since November on Thursday night.

As the numbers continue to trend positively, Murphy previously hinted he will have more information Monday on further easing restrictions and ramping up vaccinations. Murphy made the comments hours before he received the second dose of the Pfizer vaccine in Atlantic City.

The statewide transmission rate fell to 0.54, down from 0.63 a day earlier. Thats the lowest point since the state was still in lockdown mode during the pandemics first wave. The rate hit a low of 0.60 last May, according to the state Department of Health.

Any number under 1 indicates the outbreak is slowing and each new case is leading to less than one additional case.

New Jersey announced Thursday that all six of its coronavirus vaccine mega-sites will offer walk-in vaccinations without an appointment from now on.

There were 1,582 coronavirus patients hospitalized across New Jerseys 71 hospitals as of Friday night. Thats the lowest number since Nov. 8.

The latest statewide positivity rate for tests conducted on Tuesday, the most recent day available, was 5.07%.

New Jersey has now reported 874,256 confirmed coronavirus cases out of more than 13.5 million PCR tests in the nearly 14 months since the state reported its first case March 4, 2020.

There have also been 124,556 positive antigen tests during the outbreak. Those cases are considered probable, and health officials have warned that positive antigen tests could overlap with the confirmed PCR tests because they are sometimes given in tandem.

The state of 9.2 million people has reported 25,588 residents have died from complications related to COVID-19 including 22,963 confirmed deaths and 2,625 fatalities considered probable.

New Jersey has the most coronavirus deaths per capita among American states.

On Thursday, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that all of the city will fully reopen from COVID-19 restrictions by July 1. And on Friday, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said dining in the city can increase to 75% on May 7, the same level as the rest of the state.

Murphy has so far resisted releasing a broad timeline for New Jersey and has announced incremental steps instead. He announced Monday that outdoor gathering limits in the state will increase from 200 to 500 people starting on May 10, in time for college and high school graduations. Plus, private catered events such as weddings and proms will go from 35% to 50% of a venues capacity with a maximum of 250 people, up from 150.

CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES: Live map tracker | Newsletter | Homepage

HOSPITALIZATIONS

There were 1,582 patients hospitalized with confirmed or suspected COVID-19 cases as of Friday night 16 more than the previous night, according to state data.

That included 326 in critical or intensive care (22 fewer), with 207 on ventilators (17 fewer).

There were 218 COVID-19 patients discharged Friday

By comparison, hospitalizations peaked at more than 8,300 patients during the first wave of the pandemic in April and more than 3,800 during the second wave in December.

SCHOOL CASES

New Jersey has reported 263 in-school coronavirus outbreaks, which have resulted in 1,157 cases among students, teachers and school staff this academic year, according to state data.

The state defines school outbreaks as cases where contact tracers determined two or more students or school staff caught or transmitted COVID-19 in the classroom or during academic activities at school. Those numbers do not include students or staff believed to have been infected outside school or cases that cant be confirmed as in-school outbreaks.

There are about 1.4 million public school students and teachers across the state, though teaching methods amid the outbreak have varied, with some schools teaching in-person, some using a hybrid format and others remaining all-remote.

Murphy has said New Jerseys schools are expected to return to full in-person classes for the next school year.

AGE BREAKDOWN

Broken down by age, those 30 to 49 years old make up the largest percentage of New Jersey residents who have caught the virus (30.9%), followed by those 50-64 (22.5%), 18-29 (19.9%), 65-79 (10.1%), 5-17 (9.9%), 80 and older (4.4%) and 0-4 (2%).

On average, the virus has been more deadly for older residents, especially those with preexisting conditions. Nearly half the states COVID-19 deaths have been among residents 80 and older (45.9%), followed by those 65-79 (33.6%), 50-64 (16.1%), 30-49 (4%), 18-29 (0.4%), 5-17 (0%) and 0-4 (0%).

At least 8,027 of the states COVID-19 deaths have been among residents and staff members at nursing homes and other long-term care facilities, according to state data.

There are active outbreaks at 220 facilities, resulting in 2,436 active cases among residents and 3,275 among staffers. Those numbers have slowed as vaccinations continue at the facilities.

GLOBAL NUMBERS

As of early Saturday afternoon, there have been more than 151 million positive COVID-19 tests across the globe, according to a running tally by Johns Hopkins University. More than 3.18 million people have died from coronavirus-related complications.

The U.S. has reported the most cases, at more than 32.3 million, and the most deaths, at more than 576,400.

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Rodrigo Torrejon may be reached at rtorrejon@njadvancemedia.com.

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N.J. reports 36 COVID deaths, 1,455 cases. More than 7 million doses administered and 3 million fully vaccina - NJ.com

CDC finds some COVID-19 vaccine reactions actually due to anxiety – ABC News

May 2, 2021

A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that some COVID-19 vaccine reactions, including fainting, dizziness and nausea, were due to anxiety -- and not the shots themselves.

The report, published Friday, looked at clusters of events reported to the CDC in dozens of people who received the Johnson & Johnson single-dose vaccine at five mass vaccination sites in early April, before federal health agencies called for a temporary pause on the shot after six people in the U.S. developed a rare blood clot disorder.

Out of 8,624 people who received the J&J dose from April 7 to 9 at the five sites, 64 experienced anxiety-related reactions, none of which were considered serious, the CDC said. Slightly more than half reported light-headedness or dizziness. Excessive sweating was the next most common symptom, followed by fainting, nausea or vomiting, and hypotension.

The majority -- 61% -- were women, the median age was 36 years and 20% of the patients told vaccination site staff they had a history of fainting associated with receiving injections or an aversion to needles.

Most of the symptoms resolved within 15 minutes with care, such as food and hydration or lying down, while 20% of patients were hospitalized for further evaluation. Four of the sites temporarily suspended vaccination to investigate the reactions.

"Increased awareness of anxiety-related events after vaccination will enable vaccination providers to make an informed decision about continuing vaccination," the authors of the report said.

The report only looked at anxiety-related reactions after getting the J&J vaccine, though noted that "anxiety-related events can occur after any vaccination."

"I think there's a lot of misunderstanding about vaccines and, quite frankly, medicines as well, and the way that they're going to impact our bodies," Dr. Joy Gero, the program director of the general adult and behavioral health Intensive Care Unit at UPMC Western Psychiatric Hospital, told ABC News.

A woman receives a vaccine at a new mass vaccination site in Orange County, the Providence Vaccine Clinic at Edwards Lifescience in Santa Ana, Calif., April 22, 2021.

When reviewing fainting events after receiving the J&J vaccine reported to the database Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System from March 2 to April 12, the CDC found that there were 8.2 episodes per 100,000 doses. By comparison, the reported rate of fainting after getting the flu vaccine during the 2019-2020 flu season was only 0.05 episodes per 100,000 doses, it found.

For Dr. Tara Sell, a senior associate at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health who studies vaccine risk communication, that could mean that the COVID-19 vaccine may be bringing out more injection-adverse people than the flu vaccine.

"You have a population of people who might already be inclined to have some anxiety about vaccines showing up here where they just would skip it for a flu vaccine," Sell told ABC News.

People may also be nervous about getting a COVID-19 vaccine because it's new or feeling overwhelmed due to the impact of the pandemic, she said.

"The flu vaccine is very normal, people are very familiar with it, so it doesn't seem like this big, momentous thing," she said.

Sell said the report shows how closely the COVID-19 vaccinations are being monitored for safety.

"This happened early in April, and we're not into May and we have a pretty clear answer on what was happening here," she said. "I think that's good."

For people who may be prone to anxiety when getting shots, practicing deep breathing and relaxation exercises before you get the vaccination can be "extremely helpful," Dr. Jeffrey Geller, president of the American Psychiatric Association, told ABC News.

Limiting caffeine intake, staying hydrated, eating well and "being intentional about engaging in self-care" also can help people who are struggling with anxiety, Gero said.

Once you've arrived at the location, especially a mass vaccination site, it may be helpful to distract yourself, Gero said, such as listening to music while waiting in line.

People also may want to let the medical team know if they're anxious, Geller said.

"You shouldn't keep it to yourself," he added. "They can be very accommodating."

A 21-year-old receives a shot of COVID-19 vaccine during a vaccination drive organized by St. John's Well Child and Family at the Abraham Lincoln High School in Los Angeles, April 23, 2021.

While an injection is happening, don't look, close your eyes and "use imagery to imagine yourself being someplace else," Geller said.

If those practices won't suffice, there are treatments that may help people cope with their anxiety or if they have a fear of vaccinations, such as cognitive behavioral therapy or exposure therapy, Geller said.

"As many people as possible should get the COVID injection, and in this situation with COVID, there is no alternative," he said. "It's not like the flu where you have a nasal alternative. For COVID, you either get the shot or you don't get the shot."

Olivia Davies, a fourth-year student at the Medical College of Wisconsin who will be starting her residency at Massachusetts General Hospital this summer, is a contributor to the ABC News Medical Unit.

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CDC finds some COVID-19 vaccine reactions actually due to anxiety - ABC News

12 shocking images that show how bad the COVID-19 crisis is in India – USA TODAY

May 2, 2021

Editor's note: Images used in this story depict mass cremations and may be difficult for readers to look through.

COVID-19 cases are growing exponentially in India. As thisnew wave sweeps the nation of more than 1 billion, hospitals are running out of oxygen tanks and room to house patients.

And the COVID-19 death count keeps climbing, to the point where authorities are holding mass cremations.

India recorded 379,308 new coronavirus cases on Wednesday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. That same day, 3,645 COVID-related deaths were also recorded.

India now holds the second-highest COVID-19 case count in the world more than 18 million since the pandemic started, with the U.S. in the top spot with more than 32 million confirmed cases since last year.

Family members and ambulance workers in PPE gear carry the body of a victim who died from COVID-19 complications to a cremation site in New Delhi, India on Tuesday.PRAKASH SINGH, AFP via Getty Images

Multiple funeral pyres of victims of COVID-19 burn in an area that has been converted for mass cremation in New Delhi, India, Saturday, April 24, 2021.Altaf Qadri, AP

Relatives and municipal workers in protective gear bury the body of a person who died due to COVID-19 in Gauhati, India, Sunday, April 25, 2021.Anupam Nath, AP

People stand near bodies of COVID-19 victims lined up before cremation at a mass cremation site in New Delhi, India on Wednesday.MONEY SHARMA, AFP via Getty Images

Exhausted workers, who bring dead bodies for cremation, sit on the rear step of an ambulance inside a crematorium, in New Delhi, India, Saturday, April 24, 2021.Altaf Qadri, AP

Published5:46 pm UTC Apr. 29, 2021Updated5:57 pm UTC Apr. 29, 2021

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12 shocking images that show how bad the COVID-19 crisis is in India - USA TODAY

COVID-19 deaths, hospitalisations slowing in Brazil, WHO says – Reuters

April 30, 2021

A crematorium employee moves a coffin before the cremation of a person who died of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Porto Alegre, Brazil April 29, 2021. REUTERS/Diego Vara

Hospitalisations and deaths from COVID-19 have started declining after four weeks of slowing infections in Brazil, the World Health Organization said on Friday.

"Cases have now declined for four weeks in a row, and hospitalisations and deaths are also declining. This is good news and we hope this trend continues," WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a briefing.

Still, he described a severe situation in the country, which this week became the second to pass 400,000 COVID-19 deaths after the United States. read more

"Since the beginning of November, Brazil has experienced an acute crisis, with increasing COVID-19 cases, hospitalisations and deaths, including among younger people. During April, intensive care units have been at almost full capacity across the country," he said.

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COVID-19 deaths, hospitalisations slowing in Brazil, WHO says - Reuters

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