Category: Covid-19

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Shawnee Mission School District to begin in-school COVID-19 vaccinations Tuesday – fox4kc.com

April 19, 2021

OLATHE, Kan. The Johnson County Health Department has been working with school districts in the county to come up with a plan to vaccinate students.

The health department said Monday afternoon that since school staff have been vaccinated, its time to take the next step and vaccinate as many students age 16 and older as possible.

The vaccination process will look very different depending on which school district your students attend, according to the Johnson County Health Department.

Shawnee Mission schools will be vaccinating students during school hours starting Tuesday.

The district said it had more than 800 students express interest in receiving the vaccine. In a statement, the district said it has clinics scheduled at nine locations across the district through Friday.

This is completely voluntary, Elizabeth Holzschuh, epidemiologist with the health department, said. Families were asked last week if they would be interested in this. And then on Friday, they received an email with a consent form for that to be done during school hours.

Other school districts wont take that same approach.

Other school districts have opted not to run clinics on their own, Holzschuh said. With the number of vaccine appointments that are available in the community both at our sites at Childrens Mercy as well as our hospital partners and pharmacies, we opted to just move forward with providing information to families throughout Johnson County about the various vaccine opportunities.

If you did not receive information from your childs school about vaccines, that information can be found on the Johnson County Health Departments site. Information is also available in Spanish. Childrens Mercy Hospital also has vaccination clinics coming up in the next few weeks.

Keep in mind that each teenager will receive a Pfizer vaccine because thats the only vaccine that has Emergency Use Authorization from the FDA to be given to children as young as 16.

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Shawnee Mission School District to begin in-school COVID-19 vaccinations Tuesday - fox4kc.com

COVID-19 is still spreading, plus what we know about who is likely to be vaccinated: Beat Check podcast – OregonLive

April 19, 2021

All Oregonians 16 and older are now eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine but the virus continues to spread, and the state so far hasnt lived up to its promises to ensure people of color and those most at risk of the virus get their shots first.

On the latest episode of Beat Check with The Oregonian, well get an update on the pandemic and the vaccine rollout.

In the second half of the show, well hear from The Oregonian and OregonLives Rob Davis about how a public records request filed by our newspaper laid bare the full scale of the inequities and why where you live may be the best indicator of whether youve been vaccinated yet.

But first, The Oregonian and OregonLives Aimee Green, who talked about the worrisome public health models that indicate the pandemic is not yet over, what it all means and whether the state is ready to vaccinate millions more Oregonians.

Heres the full episode.

Subscribe to Beat Check on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher or wherever you listen to podcasts.

-- Andrew Theen; atheen@oregonian.com; 503-294-4026; @andrewtheen

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COVID-19 is still spreading, plus what we know about who is likely to be vaccinated: Beat Check podcast - OregonLive

UK Biobank Study Finds Elevated Risk of Death From COVID-19 in Those With RA – AJMC.com Managed Markets Network

April 18, 2021

Researchers did not find an association in people who had gout.

Information on the risk of death from COVID-19 in individuals with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) or gout is limited; a recent study from the United Kingdom sought to examine whether gout and RA are risk factors for COVID-19 diagnosis or death.

Researchers used data from for UK Biobank, which contains the records of about half a million participants; recruitment began in 2006 with planned follow-up for at least 30 years. The analysis included those who had a positive SARS-CoV2 test result and/or an International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision code for confirmed COVID-19 or probable COVID-19 as well as a variety of methods to determine RA or gout: self-reported gout, hospital codes for gout, self-reported RA, hospital codes for RA, and hospital records of either illness.

They created and analyzed 3 case-controlled datasets:

Multivariable-adjusted analysis showed that RA, but not gout, was associated with COVID19 diagnosis in analysis A.

Neither RA nor gout was associated with risk of death in the group diagnosed with COVID19 in analysis B.

However, in analysis C, RA was associated with risk of death related to COVID19, independent of comorbidities and other measured risk factors (OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.23.0). Gout was not associated with death related to COVID19 in the same UK Biobank analysis (OR 1.2; 95% CI, 0.81.7).

The study had a number of limitations, which the researchers hope could be overcome in future, larger studies. For one thing, the influence of RA therapies was not known. In addition UK Biobank registrants are middle-aged, white Europeans and so can't be generalized to other ethnic groups or in individuals younger than 50. There is also no information on recovery status, so it is possible that the cohort in analysis B may have had unidentified COVID-19 deaths later.

Reference

Topless RK, Phipps-Green A, Leask M, et al. Gout, rheumatoid arthritis, and the risk of death related to coronavirus disease 2019: An analysis of the UK Biobank. ACR Open Rheumatol. Published online April 15, 2021. doi: 10.1002/acr2.11252.

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UK Biobank Study Finds Elevated Risk of Death From COVID-19 in Those With RA - AJMC.com Managed Markets Network

COVID-19 Daily Update 4-17-2021 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

April 18, 2021

The WestVirginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of April 17, 2021, there have been2,602,762 totalconfirmatory laboratory results received for COVID-19, with 148,517 total casesand 2,780 total deaths.

DHHR hasconfirmed the deaths of a 91-year old male from RaleighCounty, an 81-year old male from Wood County, and an 87-year old female fromHampshire County.

We must use all of the tools in our toolboxto stop the spread of COVID-19, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary. Thisincludes vaccination, testing, mask wearing, social distancing, and good hygiene.Our deepest sympathy is extended to these families for their profound loss.

CASES PERCOUNTY: Barbour (1,344), Berkeley(11,541), Boone (1,867), Braxton (861), Brooke (2,118), Cabell (8,606), Calhoun(271), Clay (453), Doddridge (545), Fayette (3,253), Gilmer (734), Grant(1,240), Greenbrier (2,607), Hampshire (1,702), Hancock (2,705), Hardy (1,434),Harrison (5,391), Jackson (1,906), Jefferson (4,327), Kanawha (14,027), Lewis(1,137), Lincoln (1,396), Logan (3,001), Marion (4,135), Marshall (3,269),Mason (1,932), McDowell (1,478), Mercer (4,557), Mineral (2,760), Mingo(2,416), Monongalia (8,940), Monroe (1,067), Morgan (1,086), Nicholas (1,499),Ohio (4,030), Pendleton (686), Pleasants (830), Pocahontas (640), Preston(2,805), Putnam (4,806), Raleigh (6,105), Randolph (2,493), Ritchie (658),Roane (579), Summers (756), Taylor (1,197), Tucker (523), Tyler (670), Upshur(1,816), Wayne (2,815), Webster (455), Wetzel (1,188), Wirt (380), Wood(7,573), Wyoming (1,907).

Delays may be experienced with the reportingof information from the local health department to DHHR. As case surveillancecontinues at the local health department level, it may reveal that those testedin a certain county may not be a resident of that county, or even the state asan individual in question may have crossed the state border to be tested. Such is the case ofPleasants and Tucker counties in this report.

West Virginians may pre-register for their COVID-19vaccination at vaccinate.wv.gov. The COVID-19 dashboard located at http://www.coronavirus.wv.gov shows the total number of vaccines administered.Please see the vaccine summary tab for more detailed information.

Free pop-up COVID-19 testing is available today in Boone, Clay, Jefferson,Lewis, Nicholas, and Putnam counties and tomorrow in Boone, Doddridge, andNicholas counties:

Boone County

1:00PM 4:00 PM, Boone County Health Department, 213 Kenmore Dr., Danville, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Clay County

8:00 AM 10:30 AM, Maysel Park, CountyRoute 13/4, Maysel, WV

Jefferson County10:00AM 2:00 PM, Hollywood Casino, 750 Hollywood Drive, Charles Town, WV

10:00 AM 2:00 PM, Shepherd UniversityWellness Center Parking Lot, 164 University Drive, Shepherdstown, WV

Lewis County

12:00 PM 5:00 PM, Stonewall Jackson Home Oxygen Therapy, 456 MarketPlace, Suite A, Weston, WV

Nicholas County

10:00AM 2:00 PM, St. Lukes United Methodist Church, 18001 West Webster Road,Craigsville, WV (pre-registration:https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Putnam County

9:00 AM 4:00 PM, Liberty Square, 613 Putnam Village, Hurricane, WV (pre-registration: bit.ly/pchd-covid)

April 18

Boone County

1:00PM 4:00 PM, Boone County Health Department, 213 Kenmore Dr., Danville, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

Doddridge County

10:00 AM 5:00 PM, Doddridge County Park, 1252 Snowbird Road, West Union,WV

Nicholas County

11:00 AM 3:00 PM, Richwood City Hall, 6 White Avenue, Richwood, WV (pre-registration: https://wv.getmycovidresult.com/)

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

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COVID-19 Daily Update 4-17-2021 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

The Covid-19 Plasma Boom Is Over. What Did We Learn From It? – The New York Times

April 18, 2021

Scott Cohen was on a ventilator struggling for his life with Covid-19 last April when his brothers pleaded with Plainview Hospital on Long Island to infuse him with the blood plasma of a recovered patient.

The experimental treatment was hard to get but was gaining attention at a time when doctors had little else. After an online petition drew 18,000 signatures, the hospital gave Mr. Cohen, a retired Nassau County medic, an infusion of the pale yellow stuff that some called liquid gold.

In those terrifying early months of the pandemic, the idea that antibody-rich plasma could save lives took on a life of its own before there was evidence that it worked. The Trump administration, buoyed by proponents at elite medical institutions, seized on plasma as a good-news story at a time when there werent many others. It awarded more than $800 million to entities involved in its collection and administration, and put Dr. Anthony S. Faucis face on billboards promoting the treatment.

A coalition of companies and nonprofit groups, including the Mayo Clinic, Red Cross and Microsoft, mobilized to urge donations from people who had recovered from Covid-19, enlisting celebrities like Samuel L. Jackson and Dwayne Johnson, the actor known as the Rock. Volunteers, some dressed in superhero capes, showed up to blood banks in droves.

Mr. Cohen, who later recovered, was one of them. He went on to donate his own plasma 11 times.

But by the end of the year, good evidence for convalescent plasma had not materialized, prompting many prestigious medical centers to quietly abandon it. By February, with cases and hospitalizations dropping, demand dipped below what blood banks had stockpiled. In March, the New York Blood Center called Mr. Cohen to cancel his 12th appointment. It didnt need any more plasma.

A year ago, when Americans were dying of Covid at an alarming rate, the federal government made a big bet on plasma. No one knew if the treatment would work, but it seemed biologically plausible and safe, and there wasnt much else to try. All told, more than 722,000 units of plasma were distributed to hospitals thanks to the federal program, which ends this month.

The governments bet did not result in a blockbuster treatment for Covid-19, or even a decent one. But it did give the country a real-time education in the pitfalls of testing a medical treatment in the middle of an emergency. Medical science is messy and slow. And when a treatment fails, which is often, it can be difficult for its strongest proponents to let it go.

Because the government gave plasma to so many patients outside of a controlled clinical trial, it took a long time to measure its effectiveness. Eventually, studies did emerge to suggest that under the right conditions, plasma might help. But enough evidence has now accumulated to show that the countrys broad, costly plasma campaign had little effect, especially in people whose disease was advanced enough to land them in the hospital.

In interviews, three federal health officials Dr. Stephen M. Hahn, the former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration; Dr. Peter Marks, a top F.D.A. regulator; and Dr. H. Clifford Lane, a clinical director at the National Institutes of Health acknowledged that the evidence for plasma was limited.

The data are just not that strong, and it makes it makes it hard, I think, to be enthusiastic about seeing it continue to be used, Dr. Lane said. The N.I.H. recently halted an outpatient trial of plasma because of a lack of benefit.

Doctors have used the antibodies of recovered patients as treatments for more than a century, for diseases including diphtheria, the 1918 flu and Ebola.

So when patients began falling ill with the new coronavirus last year, doctors around the world turned to the old standby.

In the United States, two hospitals Mount Sinai in New York City and Houston Methodist in Texas administered the first plasma units to Covid-19 patients within hours of each other on March 28.

Dr. Nicole M. Bouvier, an infectious-disease doctor who helped set up Mount Sinais plasma program, said the hospital had tried the experimental treatment because blood transfusions carry a relatively low risk of harm. With a new virus spreading quickly, and no approved treatments, nature is a much better manufacturer than we are, she said.

As Mount Sinai prepared to infuse patients with plasma, Diana Berrent, a photographer, was recovering from Covid-19 at her home in Port Washington, N.Y. Friends began sending her Mount Sinais call for donors.

I had no idea what plasma was I havent taken a science class since high school, Ms. Berrent recalled. But as she researched its history in previous disease outbreaks, she became fixated on how she could help.

She formed a Facebook group of Covid-19 survivors that grew to more than 160,000 members and eventually became a health advocacy organization, Survivor Corps. She livestreamed her own donation sessions to the Facebook group, which in turn prompted more donations.

People were flying places to go donate plasma to each other, she said. It was really a beautiful thing to see.

Around the same time, Chaim Lebovits, a shoe wholesaler from Monsey, N.Y., in hard-hit Rockland County, was spreading the word about plasma within his Orthodox Jewish community. Mr. Lebovits called several rabbis he knew, and before long, thousands of Orthodox Jewish people were getting tested for coronavirus antibodies and showing up to donate. Coordinating it all was exhausting.

April, Mr. Lebovits recalled with a laugh, was like 20 decades.

Two developments that month further accelerated plasmas use. With the help of $66 million in federal funding, the F.D.A. tapped the Mayo Clinic to run an expanded access program for hospitals across the country. And the government agreed to cover the administrative costs of collecting plasma, signing deals with the American Red Cross and Americas Blood Centers.

The news releases announcing those deals got none of the flashy media attention that the billion-dollar contracts for Covid-19 vaccines did when they arrived later in the summer. And the government did not disclose how much it would be investing.

That investment turned out to be significant. According to contract records, the U.S. government has paid $647 million to the American Red Cross and Americas Blood Centers since last April.

The convalescent plasma program was intended to meet an urgent need for a potential therapy early in the pandemic, a health department spokeswoman said in a statement. When these contracts began, treatments werent available for hospitalized Covid-19 patients.

April 17, 2021, 6:20 p.m. ET

As spring turned to summer, the Trump administration seized on plasma as it had with the unproven drug hydroxychloroquine as a promising solution. In July, the administration announced an $8 million advertising campaign imploring Americans to donate their plasma and help save lives. The blitz included promotional radio spots and billboards featuring Dr. Fauci and Dr. Hahn, the F.D.A. commissioner.

A coalition to organize the collection of plasma was beginning to take shape, connecting researchers, federal officials, activists like Ms. Berrent and Mr. Lebovits, and major corporations like Microsoft and Anthem on regular calls that have continued to this day. Nonprofit blood banks and for-profit plasma collection companies also joined the collaboration, named the Fight Is In Us.

The group also included the Mitre Corporation, a little-known nonprofit organization that had received a $37 million government grant to promote plasma donation around the country.

The participants sometimes had conflicting interests. While the blood banks were collecting plasma to be immediately infused in hospitalized patients, the for-profit companies needed plasma donations to develop their own blood-based treatment for Covid-19. Donations at those companies own centers had also dropped off after national lockdowns.

They dont all exactly get along, Peter Lee, the corporate vice president of research and incubations at Microsoft, said at a virtual scientific forum in March organized by Scripps Research.

Microsoft was recruited to develop a locator tool, embedded on the groups website, for potential donors. But the company took on a broader role as a neutral intermediary, Dr. Lee said.

The company also provided access to its advertising agency, which created the look and feel for the Fight Is In Us campaign, which included video testimonials from celebrities.

In August, the F.D.A. authorized plasma for emergency use under pressure from President Donald J. Trump, who had chastised federal scientists for moving too slowly.

At a news conference, Dr. Hahn, the agencys commissioner, substantially exaggerated the data, although he later corrected his remarks following criticism from the scientific community.

In a recent interview, he said that Mr. Trumps involvement in the plasma authorization had made the topic polarizing.

Any discussion one could have about the science and medicine behind it didnt happen, because it became a political issue as opposed to a medical and scientific one, Dr. Hahn said.

The authorization did away with the Mayo Clinic system and opened access to even more hospitals. As Covid-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths skyrocketed in the fall and winter, use of plasma did, too, according to national usage data provided by the Blood Centers of America. By January of this year, when the United States was averaging more than 130,000 hospitalizations a day, hospitals were administering 25,000 units of plasma per week.

Many community hospitals serving lower-income patients, with few other options and plasma readily available, embraced the treatment. At the Integris Health system in Oklahoma, giving patients two units of plasma became standard practice between November and January.

Dr. David Chansolme, the systems medical director of infection prevention, acknowledged that studies of plasma had showed it was more miss than hit, but he said his hospitals last year lacked the resources of bigger institutions, including access to the antiviral drug remdesivir. Doctors with a flood of patients many of them Hispanic and from rural communities were desperate to treat them with anything they could that was safe, Dr. Chansolme said.

By the fall, accumulating evidence was showing that plasma was not the miracle that some early boosters had believed it to be. In September, the Infectious Diseases Society of America recommended that plasma not be used in hospitalized patients outside of a clinical trial. (On Wednesday, the society restricted its advice further, saying plasma should not be used at all in hospitalized patients.) In January, a highly anticipated trial in Britain was halted early because there was not strong evidence of a benefit in hospitalized patients.

In February, the F.D.A. narrowed the authorization for plasma so that it applied only to people who were early in the course of their disease or who couldnt make their own antibodies.

Dr. Marks, the F.D.A. regulator, said that in retrospect, scientists had been too slow to adapt to those recommendations. They had known from previous disease outbreaks that plasma treatment is likely to work best when given early, and when it contained high levels of antibodies, he said.

Somehow we didnt really take that as seriously as perhaps we should have, he said. If there was a lesson in this, its that history actually can teach you something.

Today, several medical centers have largely stopped giving plasma to patients. At Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, researchers found that many hospitalized patients were already producing their own antibodies, so plasma treatments would be superfluous. The Cleveland Clinic no longer routinely administers plasma because of a lack of convincing evidence of efficacy, according to Dr. Simon Mucha, a critical care physician.

And earlier this year, Mount Sinai stopped giving plasma to patients outside of a clinical trial. Dr. Bouvier said that she had tracked the scientific literature and that there had been a sort of piling on of studies that showed no benefit.

Thats what science is its a process of abandoning your old hypotheses in favor of a better hypothesis, she said. Many initially promising drugs fail in clinical trials. Thats just the way the cookie crumbles.

Some scientists are calling on the F.D.A. to rescind plasmas emergency authorization. Dr. Luciana Borio, the acting chief scientist at the agency under President Barack Obama, said that disregarding the usual scientific standards in an emergency what she called pandemic exceptionalism had drained valuable time and attention from discovering other treatments.

Pandemic exceptionalism is something we learned from prior emergencies that leads to serious unintended consequences, she said, referring to the ways countries leaned on inadequate studies during the Ebola outbreak. With plasma, she said, the agency forgot lessons from past emergencies.

While scant evidence shows that plasma will help curb the pandemic, a dedicated clutch of researchers at prominent medical institutions continue to focus on the narrow circumstances in which it might work.

Dr. Arturo Casadevall, an immunologist at Johns Hopkins University, said many of the trials had not succeeded because they tested plasma on very sick patients. If theyre treated early, the results of the trials are all consistent, he said.

A clinical trial in Argentina found that giving plasma early to older people reduced the progression of Covid-19. And an analysis of the Mayo Clinic program found that patients who were given plasma with a high concentration of antibodies fared better than those who did not receive the treatment. Still, in March, the N.I.H. halted a trial of plasma in people who were not yet severely ill with Covid-19 because the agency said it was unlikely to help.

With most of the medical community acknowledging plasmas limited benefit, even the Fight Is In Us has begun to shift its focus. For months, a clinical research page about convalescent plasma was dominated by favorable studies and news releases, omitting major articles concluding that plasma showed little benefit.

Now, the website has been redesigned to more broadly promote not only plasma, but also testing, vaccines and other treatments like monoclonal antibodies, which are synthesized in a lab and thought to be a more potent version of plasma. Its clinical research page also includes more negative studies about plasma.

Nevertheless, the Fight Is In Us is still running Facebook ads, paid for by the federal government, telling Covid-19 survivors that Theres a hero inside you and Keep up the fight. The ads urge them to donate their plasma, even though most blood banks have stopped collecting it.

Two of plasmas early boosters, Mr. Lebovits and Ms. Berrent, have also turned their attention to monoclonal antibodies. As he had done with plasma last spring, Mr. Lebovits helped increase acceptance of monoclonals in the Orthodox Jewish community, setting up an informational hotline, running ads in Orthodox newspapers, and creating rapid testing sites that doubled as infusion centers. Coordinating with federal officials, Mr. Lebovits has since shared his strategies with leaders in the Hispanic community in El Paso and San Diego.

And Ms. Berrent has been working with a division of the insurer UnitedHealth to match the right patients people with underlying health conditions or who are over 65 to that treatment.

Im a believer in plasma for a lot of substantive reasons, but if word came back tomorrow that jelly beans worked better, wed be promoting jelly beans, she said. We are here to save lives.

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The Covid-19 Plasma Boom Is Over. What Did We Learn From It? - The New York Times

White House turns its attention to COVID-19 variants – CIDRAP

April 18, 2021

Today, the US government announced a new initiative in the next phase of fighting the pandemic: investing $1.7 billion in genomic sequencing efforts that will help identify COVID-19 variants.

"Our ability to spot variants as they emerge and spread is vital, particularly as we aim to get aheadof dangerous variants before they emerge, as they are in the Midwest right now," Andy Slavitt, a senior White House pandemic adviser, said today during a COVID-19 briefing.

Slavitt said vaccination is still the main tool to end the pandemic, and he encouraged all Americans to get the vaccine beginning Monday, when more states will make those 16 and older eligible.

But genetic sequencing will enable the country to quickly identify new variants of the virus, more accurately locate hot spots of variant activity, and aid in the development of booster vaccines, which will target circulating variants.

"Despite having world-class researchers and dedicated state and local public health leaders, when we arrived, the US was sequencing only a small fragment of what other countries were," Slavitt said. "This hampered our ability to find and react to these new variants.

Laboratories will receive $1 billion to strengthen sequencing programs, $400 million will go to the Centers of Excellence in Genomic Epidemiology, and $300 million will go to developing a national bioinformatics infrastructure.

All of the money is coming from the American Rescue Plan, Slavitt said.

Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Rochelle Walensky, MD, MPH, said during the briefing that the new 7-day average of daily cases is 69,000. Just 4 weeks ago, that number was 53,000.

More troubling, she said, was that today marked the third day in a row of increasing death counts.

The country reported 74,289 new COVID-19 cases yesterdayand 887 deaths, according to the Johns Hopkins COVID-19 tracker. In total, the nation has confirmed 31,556,889 cases, including 565,096 fatalities.

According to the Washington Post, 38 states have reported an increase in COVID-19 hospitalizations in the past week, with a national total of more than 47,000.

The Upper Midwest, from Minnesota to Pennsylvania, is seeing the most dramatic spike in virus activity.

Michigan remains the biggest hot spot in the country, as it has been for the last 4 weeks. Michigan's largest hospital system said it has more than 800 patients being treated for COVID-19, up from 500 2 weeks ago. Beaumont Health's medical director of infection prevention told the Associated Press it's "just like a runaway train right now."

Beaumont Health said its eight hospitals had just 128 COVID-19 patients at the end of February. Only 25% of Michigan's population is vaccinated, and state officials warn that the benefits of vaccination won't be seen for weeks.

Albert Bourla, chief executive officer of Pfizer, said yesterday a third dose of the company's mRNA vaccine, the first approved for use in the United States, will likely be needed within a year. Bourla also said that COVID-19 vaccines may become an annual event, similar to the seasonal flu vaccine.

So far, Moderna, Pfizer, and Johnson & Johnson have data showing 6 months of protection against the virus.

Today, Walensky said the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), the independent group of vaccine experts that advises the CDC, will meet next Apr 23 to discuss how to move forward with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which is on pause after being tied to six cases of blood clots, one deadly.

Johnson & Johnson privately reached out to other COVID-19 vaccine makers to ask them to join an effort to study the risks of blood clots and speak with one voice about safety, but Pfizer and Moderna declined, the Wall Street Journal reports.Astra Zeneca, whose coronavirus vaccine has also been tied to rare clotting events in Europe, agreed to study the phenomenon.

Both Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca are adenovirus-based vaccines. The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are mRNA-based and have not been connected to an increased risk of blood clots.

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White House turns its attention to COVID-19 variants - CIDRAP

Tribes And COVID-19: Hundreds Of Federally Unrecognized Groups Struggle – NPR

April 18, 2021

Tony Johnson is chair of the Chinook Indian Nation, a federally unrecognized tribe. He stands on a Willapa Bay, Wash., beach, where he got married and not far from where his ancestors lived. Eilis O'Neill/KUOW hide caption

Tony Johnson is chair of the Chinook Indian Nation, a federally unrecognized tribe. He stands on a Willapa Bay, Wash., beach, where he got married and not far from where his ancestors lived.

The Chinook Indian Nation has about 3,000 members who mostly live near the mouth of the Columbia River in southwest Washington. But they're not on the list of federally recognized tribes so they get nothing from the Indian Health Service.

"We have all the problems of Indian Country, but no means of dealing with it," Chinook chair Tony Johnson says. Without recognition, they get no reservation, no housing allowance, no clinics.

And, during the pandemic, no federal recognition has meant no testing supplies or vaccine allocations.

"So we rely on our neighboring tribes," Johnson says, "which means that people are traveling an hour or two or three to be able to access vaccinations, testing and other resources."

The nearby Shoalwater Bay Tribe, for example, gave Johnson his COVID-19 vaccine.

The Indian Health Service has been lauded for the success of its vaccination campaign. But not every Native American got to be part of that. Tribes that aren't recognized by the U.S. government have received none of the resources directed to Indian Country to help them survive the pandemic.

More than 200 tribes do not have federal recognition, affecting tens of thousands of tribal members. The U.S. government officially recognizes 574 tribes.

Over the past year, unemployment spiked in southwest Washington, and, with it, addiction problems, Johnson says. But the Chinook receive no federal funds for drug and alcohol programs.

And, without their own clinic, many Chinook members forego medical care rather than travel hours to see a doctor, Johnson says.

As a result, he says, though no local tribal members died of COVID-19, several died because of COVID-19 some of addiction, and others of untreated chronic conditions like diabetes and heart disease.

"We have lost folks in the community over the last year that would not have been lost were Chinook to have been a federally recognized community," he says. "And that is unbearable."

Recognized v. unrecognized

Many tribes are federally recognized because, at some point, they signed a treaty agreeing to give up their land. For complicated reasons, the Chinook Nation isn't recognized even though they did, at one point, sign a treaty.

"It was an accident of history that left some off the list and included others," says John Norwood, of the National Congress of American Indians. He works on federal recognition issues.

He says gaining federal recognition now can be nearly impossible, regardless of a tribe's history. On paper, it's one thing.

"The regulations as they stood appeared to be just fine," he says.

But how they're used is a different story.

"The problem was their interpretation and application became more stringent, less transparent, very inconsistent, oftentimes punitive," he explains.

Another Western Washington tribe the U.S. government refuses to recognize is the Snohomish. They're the namesake of the county north of Seattle.

"We will continue to be here as long as the mountains still exist and the rivers run through the forest out into the sea," says the Snohomish Tribe's chair, Mike Evans.

He says, today, the tribe has about 1,500 enrolled members, but "we don't have a clinic, we don't have the vaccines to distribute, and there's no money to deal with that."

And, without federal recognition, there won't be any money in the future either.

The most recent COVID-19 relief package included more than $31 billion for the tribes on the federal government's list. It's the largest financial aid to Indian Country ever. And that's in addition to funds earmarked for tribes in the prior two relief bills.

Tony Johnson, chair of the Chinook Nation, says officially recognized tribes used those funds for unemployment relief, food programs, and infrastructure projects.

"The once-in-a-lifetime, once-in-a-generation infusions of funds will be having impact on those communities generations to come," Johnson says. "It's heartbreaking that my own Chinook Indian Nation doesn't have access to some portion of those resources."

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Tribes And COVID-19: Hundreds Of Federally Unrecognized Groups Struggle - NPR

Nearly 300 new cases of COVID-19 confirmed in Monroe County, no new deaths – RochesterFirst

April 18, 2021

Posted: Apr 17, 2021 / 06:20 PM EDT / Updated: Apr 17, 2021 / 06:20 PM EDT

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WROC) The Monroe County Department of Health reported 298 new COVID-19 cases in the county Saturday, and no new deaths.

The 7-day rolling average positivity rate for Monroe County is 3.4%, and the 7-day rolling average of new cases is 249 per day. 207 people in the Finger Lakes region are hospitalized with the virus 55 of them are in the ICU.

Heres a breakdown of the new cases by age:

You can see more details from the Monroe County COVID-19 dashboard here. Information about the vaccine can be found here.

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Nearly 300 new cases of COVID-19 confirmed in Monroe County, no new deaths - RochesterFirst

COVID-19 in South Dakota: 200 total new cases; Death toll rises to 1,953; Active cases at 2,210 – KELOLAND.com

April 18, 2021

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) 200 new total COVID-19 cases were reported by theState Department of Healthon Saturday while one new death was reported.

According to the latest update, there are 96 current hospitalizations, down from Friday (106). Total hospitalizations are at 7,204.

One new death was reported by the Department of Health on Saturday. The death was one woman in the 40-49 age range in Dewey county.

Active cases are now at 2,210, up from Friday (2,201).

The states total case count is now at 121,056, up from Friday (120,856).

Total recovered cases are now at 116,893, up from Friday (116,703).

Total persons who tested negative is now at 336,856, from Friday (335,339).

There were 1,717 new persons tested in the data reported Saturday for a new persons-tested positivity rate of 11.64%.

The latest seven-day all test positivity rate reported by the DOH is 8.7%. The latest one-day PCR test positivity rate is 8.1%.

According to the DOH, 273,516 doses of the Pfizer vaccine have been administered with 16,288 doses of the Janssen vaccine and 238,251 of the Moderna vaccine given out to a total number of 314,649 persons.

There have been 100,162 persons who have completed two doses of Moderna and 113,204 who have received two doses of Pfizer, according to the DOH.

As of Saturday, 52% of the population in South Dakota has received at least one dose while 38.44% have completed the vaccination series.

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COVID-19 in South Dakota: 200 total new cases; Death toll rises to 1,953; Active cases at 2,210 - KELOLAND.com

146 more people test positive for COVID-19 in the Northland – Duluth News Tribune

April 18, 2021

Minnesota and Wisconsin health officials reported that another 146 people have tested positive for COVID-19 in the Northland.

The region recorded no new deaths from the illness on Saturday.

New cases and seven-day averages in Northland counties:

Another 640 Northeastern Minnesota residents have received their first dose of the vaccine. Nearly 56% of people age 16 and older in the seven-county region have at least one dose. For the entire region's population, including those under age 16, that number is nearly 51%.

Wisconsin's Ashland, Bayfield and Douglas counties collectively logged 960 new vaccinations on Saturday. The Wisconsin Department of Health Services did not report new data on Friday.

Now 44% of the region's entire population has at least one dose.

Percentage of people with at least one vaccine dose in each county:

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146 more people test positive for COVID-19 in the Northland - Duluth News Tribune

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