Category: Covid-19

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Blackhawks hope to avoid COVID-19 outbreak with DeBrincat, Boqvist out 2+ weeks – Chicago Sun-Times

January 27, 2021

Alex DeBrincat and Adam Boqvist will miss certainly two weeks, potentially more, after being put on the NHLs COVID-19 protocol list Monday.

Coach Jeremy Colliton implied but didnt state that one or both tested positive.

Theres an NHL protocol [that is] very clear as far as how things are going to go and making sure anyone who is high-risk is dealt with, Colliton said. Thats where were at. Well continue to test every day.

The Hawks will look to compensate in the coming weeks with a next-man-up mentality.

Forward Matthew Highmore replaced DeBrincat and defenseman Lucas Carlsson replaced Boqvist in the lineup against the Predators.

We have enough guys and enough depth to step up, forward Ryan Carpenter said. Those are two big, important pieces for us, but right now were just focusing on whoevers coming in.

From a broader health sense, though, the Hawks are hoping the virus wont turn out to have spread beyond DeBrincat and Boqvist.

Per NHL rules, everyone else must have tested negative in order to travel Monday and play Tuesday. And the Hawks arent the only team dealing with this: 21 players on seven teams are on the COVID-19 list.

But the uncertainty remains scary for the group.

Across the league, were understanding that things are delicate, Colliton said.

We have to do everything we can to try to limit the spread, keep it out to begin with. And if it does get inside your walls, do everything you can to stop it from spreading. But were not going to know.

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Blackhawks hope to avoid COVID-19 outbreak with DeBrincat, Boqvist out 2+ weeks - Chicago Sun-Times

Six more dead from COVID-19 in Wisconsin; 67 newly hospitalized – WKOW

January 25, 2021

MADISON (WKOW) -- Six more people were added to the total of those who have died in Wisconsin because of COVID-19, according to the latest numbers from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

Deaths for each day arereported by DHS HERE.

DHS also reported 67 people were newly-hospitalized.

As of Saturday afternoon, 771COVID-19 patientswere being treated in Wisconsin hospitals, down 14 from the day prior.

Of those, 172 are in the ICU, down 6 from the day before,according to the Wisconsin Hospital Association.

There have been 1,119 positive COVID-19 tests since yesterday in Wisconsin and 5,212 negative results.

(CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL DHS DASHBOARD)

The Department of Health Servicesdashboardshows the seven-day average of both positive tests by day and test by person.(CHART)

(App users, see the daily reports and charts HERE.)

Of all positive cases reported since the pandemic began, 504,238 or 94.6 percent, are considered recovered.

As of Friday a total of 310,256 vaccines have been administered throughout Wisconsin.

A total of 56,680 Wisconsin residents have gotten both doses of the vaccine, on Friday.

DHS now has a county-level dashboard to assess the COVID-19 activity levelin counties and Healthcare Emergency Readiness Coalition regions that measure what DHS calls the burden in each county.View the dashboard HERE.

The Wisconsin Department of Health Services updates the statistics each dayon its website around 2 p.m.

(Our entire coronavirus coverage is available here.)

The new strain of the coronavirus causes the disease COVID-19. Symptoms include cough, fever and shortness of breath. A full list of symptoms is available onthe Centers for Disease Control website.

In severe cases, pneumonia can develop. Those most at risk include the elderly, people with heart or lung disease as well as anyone at greater risk of infection.

For most, the virus is mild, presenting similarly to a common cold or the flu.

Anyone who thinks they may have the disease should call ahead to a hospital or clinic before going in for a diagnosis. Doing so gives the staff time to take the proper precautions so the virus does not spread.

Those needing emergency medical services should continue to use 911.

(County by county results are available here).

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Six more dead from COVID-19 in Wisconsin; 67 newly hospitalized - WKOW

COVID-19 in Tennessee: 2,841 new cases, 40 deaths reported on January 24 – WKRN News 2

January 25, 2021

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) The Tennessee Department of Health hasconfirmed additional cases and deaths related to COVID-19 across the state for Sunday, January 24.

The total COVID-19 case count for Tennessee is 708,717 as of January 24, 2021 including 8,859 deaths, 2,128 current hospitalizations and 654,335 are inactive/recovered. Percent positive today is 9.78%. For the full report with additional data: https://t.co/jlAz8a6Upp. pic.twitter.com/K3dDTOQSVc

The health department reported 2,841 new cases, bringing the state to 708,717 total cases. Of those cases, 603,856 are confirmed and104,861 are probable.

TDH also confirmed 40 additional deaths, bringing Tennessee up to8,859 total deaths.

Out of the confirmed positive cases, 654,335 are listed as inactive/recovered, an increase of 3,052 in the last 24 hours.

There are 2,128 people currently hospitalized in the state.

Tennessee has processed6,184,590 tests. The latest update added 25,830 tests to the states total.

Vaccine Tracker

TDH updated TennesseesCOVID-19 Vaccination Planon Friday.

Protecting Medically Fragile Children and Adults

Tennessee has added people living in households with medically fragile children to Phase 1c of the states COVID-19 Vaccination Plan. Vaccination of their parents, caregivers and other household residents will help protect these children, as at this time no COVID-19 vaccine has been approved for use in children under age 16. Phase 1c also includes people age 16 and older who have medical conditions that put them at high risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19. This group is further defined in the updated plan, and occurs earlier in Tennessees plan than in federal vaccination recommendations.

Correctional Officers and Jailers in Phase 1a1

Tennessee correctional officers and jailers have been added to Phase 1a1 of Tennessees COVID-19 Vaccination Plan. These Tennesseans work in settings and roles that require frequent direct public exposure through close contact in confined spaces, placing them at high risk of contracting and spreading COVID-19.

Prioritizing Age-Based Risk

Age-based criteria run concurrently to the phases in age brackets beginning with those aged 75 and above.

Appointments for Tennesseans eligible under the Phase 1 rollout of the vaccine can sign up for anappointment online.

And to see what the vaccine availability is in your county, click here.

During Thursdays Metro Coronavirus Task Force update, local officials deemed vaccines as the No. 1 tool to getting back to some sort of normal life. However, the vaccine is in short supply, leaving many wondering if they will ever receive one at all.

Mass COVID-19 vaccination sites are popping up across the country but not here in Tennessee.Places like Nissan Stadium in Nashville will not be used as a mass vaccination super site, at least for now. The Tennessee Department of Health said mass vaccination centers are not on its radar at this time. The Metro Nashville Public Health Department told News 2 large venues could cause huge crowds and become super spreader events if not managed properly.

COVID-19 in Tennessee

On Tuesday, Governor Bill Lee extended an executive order, which added additional restrictions on who may attend sporting events in the state.

A more contagious strain of COVID-19 could sweep through the country and become the dominant variant of the virus by March, according to a new report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

TDH announced two confirmed cases of the new strain in the state on Thursday, making Tennessee one of more than 20 states in the country reporting COVID-19 cases caused by variants.

COVID-19 in Nashville

Metro Schools will continue to hold all classes in the virtual environment stating the decision to continue online classes is due to the uncontrolled spread of COVID-19 throughout Nashville and the state of Tennessee.

While MNPS say their COVID-19 Risk Score remains too high to go back, some parents believe the numbers the district should be focusing on are their childrens grades. As of January 7, 18.4 percent of the district was marked as failing.

A Nashville-based company has launched new technology to ease problems with the COVID-19 vaccine distribution.

Overcoming COVID

With vaccinations now underway, what will life in Nashville be like six months from now? News 2 looked at what it might take for Middle Tennessee to return to some form of normalcy in a special report Overcoming COVID: A Peek Into the Future.

Stay with News 2 for continuing coverage of the COVID-19 Pandemic.

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COVID-19 in Tennessee: 2,841 new cases, 40 deaths reported on January 24 - WKRN News 2

South Bay hospital won’t receive more COVID-19 vaccines after it allowed affluent school district to skip the line – San Jos Spotlight – San Jos…

January 25, 2021

Santa Clara County will not provide Good Samaritan any more doses of COVID-19 vaccine unless it follows the rules, a sanction issued by health officials after this news organization reported hospital leaders allowed an affluent school district to skip the line and get vaccinated ahead of seniors and other vulnerable populations.

Good Samaritans actions are inconsistent with both the letter and spirit of the States direction on vaccine eligibility, Santa Clara County COVID-19 testing officer Dr. Marty Fenstersheib wrote in a letter to the hospitals leadership on Jan. 22.

Fenstersheib said the county will provide enough vaccine to cover second doses for people already vaccinated at Good Samaritan, but will withhold additional vaccine doses unless and until Good Samaritan provides sufficient assurances it will follow state and county rules for vaccine distribution.

As first reported by San Jos Spotlight on Friday, Los Gatos Union School District Superintendent Paul Johnson emailed teachers and staff telling them they can sign up to get a vaccine at Good Samaritan at the behest of the hospitals chief operating officer.

Educators are not yet allowed to receive vaccines in Santa Clara County. The county follows state guidelines for vaccine distribution and barely has enough doses to vaccinate health care workers and people 75 and older. Good Samaritan itself reported to the county it is only vaccinating health care workers due to the shortage in vaccine supply.

Yet the staff at the Los Gatos school district, one of the most affluent in the county, was allowed to skip the line and sign up for vaccines as a reward for helping raise money for meals for hospital workers. Johnson encouraged teachers and staff to pretend to be health care workers when they sign up for a vaccine appointment at the behest of the hospitals top leadership.

As a result, Good Samaritan has not begun to broadly vaccinate persons 65 years of age and older, much less made focused and appropriate efforts to reach that group, Fenstersheib wrote in his letter Friday. Nonetheless, Good Samaritan offered to LGUSD that its staff, who are not health care workers, could make appointments and obtain vaccinations through Good Samaritan.

Fenstersheibadded thatGood Samaritans actions are problematic for multiple reasons, including not adhering to state and county guidelines,and putting Los Gatos teachers and staff ahead of those in areas hit much harder by COVID-19.

Good Samaritans decision to offer vaccination only to LGUSD staff also rewarded employees of a school district that had provided fundraising that assisted Good Samaritan employees, rather than prioritizing older educators or those from areas of the County with high prevalence of COVID-19, Fenstersheib wrote.

The move left some teachers outraged.

R.J. Fisher Middle School teacher Jim Fredette asked board members during a Jan. 21 meeting to demand Johnson rescind the offer because its unethical. He pointed to the fact that staff had to lie and attest under penalty of perjury that they were health care workers when signing up for the shots.

So this tumultuous episode in LGUSD history has reached its climax, Fredette said. While my 75-year-old Vietnam veteran father and 71-year old mother with metastatic breast cancer wait at home for appointments, district leadership has found a back door for Los Gatos teachers to receive vaccinations.

The drive to reopen Los Gatos schools and please the loudest parents, Fredette said, have broken our district leadership.

Some board members, however, said they didnt see anything unethical about the arrangement.

Lets be clear, the district did not reach out to Good Samaritan, Board President Daniel Snyder said. Good Samaritan reached out to the district to offer this to educators.

Los Gatos schools have not resumed in-person classes. The district has plans to open once cases in Santa Clara County fall below 25 cases per 100,000 residents.According to the states COVID-19 dashboard, the county averaged 67 cases per 100,000 this week.

Despite speculation from sources that Johnson sends his own kids to Los Gatos Union School District schools potentially raising questions about whether he could personally gain from the move the superintendent told San Jos Spotlight his children are adults.

But after the news broke Friday, Johnson sent a follow-up email to Los Gatos Union School District staff and teachers denying that the vaccinations had been part of a quid pro quo. Johnsons original email cited the fundraiser as a reason school staff can get a vaccine now because the hospital remembers their kindness in raising money for meals.

In my email to you, I mentioned the service opportunity last year. (Feed Our Heroes) We did that out of the sincerity of our hearts for the medical frontline workers as part of a Los Gatos community-wide effort, Johnson wrote. We did not give to get. The Good Sam vaccination efforts are not tied to our service, and Im sorry if this was miscommunicated.

By only offering vaccines to a certain school district, Fenstersheib continued in his letter, the hospital created additional confusion over who is eligible for a vaccine right now. As a result, other educators now incorrectly expect that they will be able to get a vaccine through Good Samaritan or other hospitals in the county.

The state earlier this month began vaccinating residents 65 and older, but health care providers in Santa Clara County, including Kaiser, are onlyvaccinating people 75 and updue to a vaccine shortage.

Fenstersheib finally laid out an ultimatum for Good Samaritan Hospital in his letter.

The County will provide Good Samaritan with sufficient vaccine doses to complete vaccination of those people who Good Samaritan has already administered a first vaccine dose for, Fenstersheib wrote, but the County will not provide Good Samaritan with any additional vaccine doses unless and until Good Samaritan provides sufficient assurances it will follow State and County direction on vaccine eligibility and provides the County with a concrete plan through with Good Samaritan will do so.

Contact Madelyn Reese at [emailprotected] and follow her @MadelynGReese on Twitter.

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South Bay hospital won't receive more COVID-19 vaccines after it allowed affluent school district to skip the line - San Jos Spotlight - San Jos...

TDH: 112 new COVID-19 cases in Northeast Tennessee; decrease in active cases continues – WJHL-TV News Channel 11

January 25, 2021

by: News Channel 11 Staff

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WJHL) The Tennessee Department of Health reported 112 new COVID-19 cases and five new deaths in Northeast Tennessee on Sunday.

New cases by county: Washington 36, Sullivan 29, Hawkins 20, Greene 17, Carter 8, Johnson 2, Unicoi 0.

There are currently 2,429 active cases in Northeast Tennessee, down from 2,505 yesterday. This marks the eighth consecutive day of declining active cases.

To date, there have been 45,468 cases and 813 deaths in Northeast Tennessee since the pandemic began.

The total COVID-19 case count for Tennessee is 708,717 as of January 24, 2021 including 8,859 deaths, 2,128 current hospitalizations and 654,335 are inactive/recovered. Percent positive today is 9.78%. For the full report with additional data: https://t.co/jlAz8a6Upp. pic.twitter.com/K3dDTOQSVc

The following data was reported in local counties: (number in parenthesis is change since yesterday)

Carter CountyTotal cases: 5,199Inactive/recovered: 4,874 (+7)Deaths: 119 (+3)Active cases: 206 (-2)New cases: 8

Greene CountyTotal cases: 6,766Inactive/recovered: 6,265 (+31)Deaths: 116 (+1)Active cases: 385 (-15)New cases: 17

Hawkins CountyTotal cases: 4,606Inactive/recovered: 4,228 (+31)Deaths: 72Active cases: 306 (-11)New cases: 20

Johnson CountyTotal cases: 2,052Inactive/recovered: 1,906 (+9)Deaths: 34Active cases: 112 (-7)New cases: 2

Sullivan CountyTotal cases: 12,961Inactive/recovered: 12,037 (+51)Deaths: 220Active cases: 704 (-22)New cases: 29

Unicoi CountyTotal cases: 1,700Inactive/recovered: 1,557 (+5)Deaths: 45Active cases: 98 (-5)New cases: 0

Washington CountyTotal cases: 12,184Inactive/recovered: 11,361 (+49)Deaths: 205 (+1)Active cases: 618 (-14)New cases: 36

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TDH: 112 new COVID-19 cases in Northeast Tennessee; decrease in active cases continues - WJHL-TV News Channel 11

COVID-19 Daily Update 1-23-2021 – West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

January 25, 2021

The West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources (DHHR) reports as of January 23, 2021, there have been1,831,351 total confirmatory laboratory results received for COVID-19, with 114,752 total cases and 1,872 total deaths.

A death reported on January 12, 2021 of a 72-year old female from Upshur County was reported in error and has been removed from the total death count.

DHHR has confirmed the deaths of an 80-year old male from Summers County, an 88-year old male from Summers County, a 65-year old female from Cabell County, an 87-year old male from Hampshire County, an 83-year old male from Wood County, an 84-year old male from Wood County, a 69-year old male from Pleasants County, a 64-year old female from Wood County, a 76-year old male from Harrison County, a 69-year old female from Preston County, a 65-year old male from Nicholas County, a 95-year old male from Lewis County, a 68-year old male from Preston County, a 62-year old male from Wood County, an 89-year old female from Wood County, an 81-year old female from Wyoming County, and a 70-year old female from Logan County.

We mourn the tragic loss of these West Virginians and send our deepest sympathies to their loved ones, said Bill J. Crouch, DHHR Cabinet Secretary.

CASES PER COUNTY: Barbour (1,057), Berkeley (8,469), Boone (1,372), Braxton (721), Brooke (1,837), Cabell (6,728), Calhoun (202), Clay (324), Doddridge (393), Fayette (2,274), Gilmer (549), Grant (946), Greenbrier (2,137), Hampshire (1,302), Hancock (2,380), Hardy (1,136), Harrison (4,215), Jackson (1,545), Jefferson (3,139), Kanawha (10,628), Lewis (782), Lincoln (1,093), Logan (2,218), Marion (3,122), Marshall (2,640), Mason (1,470), McDowell (1,183), Mercer (3,795), Mineral (2,403), Mingo (1,847), Monongalia (6,741), Monroe (849), Morgan (848), Nicholas (990), Ohio (3,218), Pendleton (518), Pleasants (749), Pocahontas (545), Preston (2,336), Putnam (3,647), Raleigh (3,883), Randolph (2,085), Ritchie (527), Roane (437), Summers (645), Taylor (955), Tucker (430), Tyler (540), Upshur (1,406), Wayne (2,220), Webster (236), Wetzel (952), Wirt (310), Wood (6,302), Wyoming (1,477).

Delays may be experienced with the reporting of information from the local health department to DHHR. As case surveillance continues at the local health department level, it may reveal that those tested in a certain county may not be a resident of that county, or even the state as an individual in question may have crossed the state border to be tested.

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COVID-19 Daily Update 1-23-2021 - West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources

LIST: Here are the Houston-area hospitals receiving COVID-19 vaccine – KPRC Click2Houston

January 25, 2021

HOUSTON The Texas Department of State Health Services announced its COVID-19 vaccination allocation for the week of Jan. 25. The list includes only the first doses of the vaccine.

Here are the Houston-area locations to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, not necessarily where vaccinations are occurring:

Chambers County Health Department Anahuac, 102 Airport Road, Anahuac: 1,200 doses

Fort Bend County Health Department, 4520 Reading Road, Rosenberg: 6,825 doses

University Of Texas Medical Branch Hospital, 301 University Blvd., Galveston: 4,875 doses

Galveston County Health District, 9850 B Emmett F Lowry Expy., Texas City: 1,000 doses

Chi St Lukes Health, 6720 Bertner Ave, Houston: 1,950 doses

HCPH Main Office, 2223 West Loop South, Houston: 9,000 doses

Houston Health Department Immunization Bureau 8000 N Stadium Drive, Houston:9,000 doses

Houston Methodist Hospital, 6565 Fannin Street, Houston: 12,675 doses

Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Center, 6411 Fannin Street, Houston: 3,900 doses

School Of Nursing, Main Building, 1851 Crosspoint Ave., Houston: 3,900 doses

Emergency Hospital Systems, 300 East Crockett, Cleveland: 975 doses

CHI St. Lukes Health Woodlands Hospital, 17200 St. Lukes Way, Conroe, 1,950 doses

Lone Star Family Health Center, 605 South Conroe Medical Drive, Conroe, 2,000 doses

Washington County EMS, 1875 Highway, Brenham, 2,000 doses

Continued here:

LIST: Here are the Houston-area hospitals receiving COVID-19 vaccine - KPRC Click2Houston

Moderna And Pfizer Behind On Supplying COVID-19 Vaccine : Shots – Health News – NPR

January 23, 2021

A COVID-19 vaccine hub taking appointments only stands in Brooklyn as New York City begins to run low on doses Friday. Spencer Platt/Getty Images hide caption

A COVID-19 vaccine hub taking appointments only stands in Brooklyn as New York City begins to run low on doses Friday.

With a spotlight on COVID-19 vaccine distribution shortcomings, there's another bottleneck that could prevent inoculations from significantly speeding up in the near future: Pfizer's and Moderna's ability to scale up manufacturing and deliver doses to the U.S. government.

The companies promised to deliver 100 million doses apiece to the United States by the end of March. But they'll need to make huge leaps in a short time to meet that goal.

In the last few weeks, they've each been steadily delivering about 4.3 million doses a week, according to an NPR examination of vaccine allocation data. But to hit their targets of 100 million doses on time, they each need to deliver 7.5 million doses a week for the next nine weeks.

"I think it is going to be a real challenge for them to hit that contracted target. There's just no question about that," said consultant John Avellanet, who's advised pharmaceutical companies since the 1990s on manufacturing and compliance issues.

The companies would need everything to go right.

And a lot can go wrong. Equipment breaks and needs repair. Doses need to pass quality tests before they can be shipped. And the production process depends on companies maintaining a steady supply of chemical ingredients, glass vials and skilled labor.

"In some ways, it's almost a miracle that they've been able to produce what they've been able to produce," Avellanet said.

Pfizer and Moderna vaccines both rely on messenger RNA, or mRNA, to protect against the virus. Although mRNA vaccines have been studied for a decade, it's the first time they've been used on a massive scale.

"It's one thing to make 300 vials or let's say even for a clinical trial, 3,000 vials. It's a whole other game to make 4 million, 7 million," Avellanet said. "And all of a sudden, the demands are huge. And so you're going to end up with machinery that gets out of calibration, that breaks down ... and so forth and so on. And so that can slow the process dramatically."

What's more, RNA is fragile, said David Gortler, who until Wednesday afternoon was the senior adviser to the now-former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn.

"Going back to my Yale days when I was a lowly fellow inside of a molecular biology lab, I had to work with RNA myself," he told NPR. "And RNA is something which is very, very delicate and it can be inactivated, just like we used to joke just by looking at it the wrong way."

Gortler is a pharmacist and pharmacologist who specializes in drug quality and supply chain issues. He said he understands that Pfizer and Moderna are already working at "maximal capacity" with existing facilities. Building new facilities would require FDA inspections and "take a very long time."

When it comes to COVID-19 vaccines, he said quality is even more important than speed.

"I'd rather hear the companies have fallen short of their production goal, but managed to maintain their quality control because all of this really depends on the quality control," he said. "It's really the case for all drugs. So like I said before, but in this case, just because of the particular nature of this drug and the specific fragility of dealing with anything RNA-related, it's important to take a step back."

Asked about why vaccine delivery appeared to be behind and what's being done to speed it up, Operation Warp Speed spokesperson Michael Pratt in the Trump administration sent NPR the following statement just before the Biden administration took over:

Both companies continue to scale up production, and current forecasts indicate we are on track to allocate 200 million doses by the end of March across the vaccine portfolio. Operation Warp Speed continues to assess all available avenues to assist manufacturers to optimize and maximize their production processes as requested/required.

The new administration has said it plans to use the Defense Production Act to increase production. The Trump administration used the Defense Production Act 18 times as part of Operation Warp Speed, according to a Dec. 29 statement from the White House press secretary.

Moderna said it hasn't been releasing weekly or monthly production estimates, so it couldn't provide more details about how it will deliver significantly more doses to the United States in the coming weeks to meet its first-quarter goal.

"We continue to be on track with our expectations of delivering 100 million doses of vaccine by the end of Q1, and 200 million doses by the end of Q2," Moderna spokesperson Ray Jordan wrote in an email to NPR. "Production and releases are not linear and we have explained that we have been successfully scaling up our production yields over time."

On Dec. 15, Vice President Pence visited the Catalent contract manufacturing facility making finished vaccine doses for Moderna, where leadership told him they were completing 500,000 doses a day and hoped to double production to meet delivery goals. They described employees working "tirelessly" and volunteering to work Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Pfizer didn't respond to NPR's request for comment. But it slashed vaccine deliveries for some European Union countries this week, according to Reuters.

Gortler said he worked at Pfizer for several years, and if it's running behind, it's probably because of its attention to quality. "I'm sure that if they're rejecting things, that's actually what you want to hear," he said. "So in my mind, it's a good thing."

To hit their goals, Moderna and Pfizer each need to increase shipments to 7.5 million doses from 4.3 million per week in a hurry.

The task is difficult but not impossible.

John McShane, a managing partner at the health care product consulting firm Validant, said he's "guardedly optimistic" that the companies will be able to scale up manufacturing drastically and deliver 100 million doses each by March 31.

He said there are three main "levers" the companies can pull to increase production: add equipment, increase the yield per batch and find ways to shorten the time it takes to go from raw materials to finished, internally approved product.

"Those are three pretty big levers," McShane said. And outsourcing could help, too. "One CMO [contract manufacturing organization] with the right capacity could double your throughput overnight," he added.

What's more, he said, it's likely that the doses Moderna and Pfizer plan to deliver on March 31 are already somewhere in the production process.

Read more:

Moderna And Pfizer Behind On Supplying COVID-19 Vaccine : Shots - Health News - NPR

‘The Separate and Unequal Health System’ Highlighted By COVID-19 – NPR

January 23, 2021

Maria Arechiga, an ICU charge nurse, monitors the progress of two COVID-19 patients in the intensive care unit of Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital in Los Angeles. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

Maria Arechiga, an ICU charge nurse, monitors the progress of two COVID-19 patients in the intensive care unit of Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital in Los Angeles.

On a recent Friday afternoon, the critical care charge nurse at a South Los Angeles hospital tries to send another nurse off to grab lunch. Maria Arechiga is interrupted by the beeping of an alarm, the vitals of a patient declining, organs failing.

She dons a surgical gown and unzips a plastic tarp that hangs from the doorway of a hospital room a makeshift isolation room on this floor temporarily transformed into a larger intensive care unit to make space for the patients that just keep coming. She slips inside.

Dr. Stefan Richter follows her in, both telling the other nurse to get lunch now, because later may never come.

There are two patients in the room. Within an hour, both patients' organs are failing. Arechiga yells for someone to call a Code Blue, a medical emergency.

"May I have your attention please. Code Blue, Code Blue," booms from the PA system.

Reinforcements arrive. In the urgency, there is practiced calm. A team helps each nurse, doctor and respiratory therapist put on protective gear before they go in to try to resuscitate the patients.

They lose one patient, get the pulse back on another. And then another Code Blue is called. They begin again. Every single person in the critical care unit on this floor is COVID-19 positive.

Arechiga checks on an intubated COVID-19 patient. The floor was converted to an ICU unit the week before to help with the surplus of COVID-19 patients. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

Arechiga checks on an intubated COVID-19 patient. The floor was converted to an ICU unit the week before to help with the surplus of COVID-19 patients.

A deadly, predictable disaster

The intensive care unit at Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital is at the epicenter of the coronavirus surge that is ripping through Los Angeles County, the country's most populous.

One in three people in the county have been infected with COVID-19.

But at this hospital in Willowbrook, an unincorporated part of South L.A. neighboring Compton and Watts, the pandemic is preying on the inequities that disproportionately hurt Latino and Black communities. The neighborhoods are densely populated and multiple generations of families live together, making it hard to isolate.

It's a place where most people are on public health insurance and where chronic illnesses are much more prevalent because there is a systemic lack of access to quality health care. Add COVID-19 to that mix and it's a deadly but predictable disaster.

"This is a community that is largely low-income, people of color," says Dr. Elaine Batchlor, the CEO of MLK hospital. "This is where the essential workers live. These are the people that are stocking the grocery stores, driving our buses, cleaning up after the rest of us. And they are continuing to be exposed to COVID on the job."

The former gift shop at Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital had been converted into a meeting room and is now an overflow patient care area. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

The former gift shop at Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital had been converted into a meeting room and is now an overflow patient care area.

She speaks in her office where she has been managing the crisis.

"Our small hospital now has more COVID patients than hospitals that are three to four times larger in L.A. County," Batchlor says. "We have added beds to the hospital. We've doubled up single rooms. We've added five tents outside of the emergency department. The staff converted an entire medical floor into a critical care unit. So we've been doing everything we can to create enough capacity to care for all of the patients that have been coming in to see us."

"This is a community that is largely low-income, people of color," Dr. Elaine Batchlor, CEO of Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital, says. "This is where the essential workers live." Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

"This is a community that is largely low-income, people of color," Dr. Elaine Batchlor, CEO of Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital, says. "This is where the essential workers live."

"We are in a crisis situation"

On Christmas Eve, Elaine Batchlor sent an urgent letter to California Gov. Gavin Newsom.

"I'm writing with a critical update on how the COVID-19 coronavirus is impacting our black and brown community in South Los Angeles," Batchlor wrote.

The data she cites in her letter is sobering. Sixty-six percent of patients in the hospital are COVID-19 patients, triple if not quadruple what other hospitals in the county are seeing. She describes a recent day when 70 patients were in the emergency department with just 29 beds. She writes about the meditation room below her office now filled with gurneys, a gift shop turned hospital room.

"We are in a crisis situation, with devastation wrought on caregivers and community alike," she wrote.

She pleaded not just for short-term solutions but also for fundamental change to the health care system that brought the community to this point.

She ends the letter: "It is time to address the separate and unequal health system that has been heartbreakingly exposed by COVID-19."

The state sent temporary help. Three National Guard Medical Strike Teams, some 90 nurses and respiratory therapists. This week, COVID-19 hospitalizations are finally going down but the number remains high.

Since the day MLK hospital opened in 2015, it has always served more people than it was built to help. The facility replaced a hospital that shuttered in 2007 over deadly conditions. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

Since the day MLK hospital opened in 2015, it has always served more people than it was built to help. The facility replaced a hospital that shuttered in 2007 over deadly conditions.

"We need to fix it"

Even as Batchlor works to get her hospital through this catastrophe, her focus remains on long-term reforms. Because when this pandemic is over, the systemic problems in health care that are visibly failing this community and communities like it across the country will still be here.

"Our goal is to create the health care structure that's missing here," she says. "We're advocating for the system to be adequately funded so that people in communities like South L.A. can access the same continuum of care that we see in other communities and the same quality."

This hospital has always served more than it was built to, since the day the luminous facility opened in 2015 to replace the hospital that shuttered in 2007 over deadly conditions.

"We've been seeing a bit of a public health crisis in this community for the past five years," Batchlor says.

An ICU nurse helps a COVID-19 patient speak to their family through an iPad. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

An ICU nurse helps a COVID-19 patient speak to their family through an iPad.

The year before the pandemic ripped through these neighborhoods and the world, the emergency department saw 110,000 people. It's only set up for some 40,000. The community the hospital serves has the fewest number of hospital beds per 100,000 people in Los Angeles County.

The most common procedures are diabetic amputations and treatment of diabetic wounds. Both are completely preventable with the proper care.

So this moment, this crisis, it's not a surprise, she says.

"We've created a tiered financing system for health care with commercial at the top and Medicaid and uninsured at the bottom," Batchlor says. "And we need to change that, because that's where many of our Black and brown communities are. And that's why they're being harder hit by something like COVID. We need to fix it."

The problem is glaringly obvious, she says. The majority of patients in this community are on public health insurance. And while a hospital gets supplemental funding if a patient is so sick they have to be admitted, it is a fraction of what private insurance pays for outpatient care. That includes the emergency department triaging below her office and the preventative medical care that keeps people healthy.

A COVID-19 testing site is set up near Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital. The hospital is in Willowbrook, an unincorporated part of South Los Angeles sandwiched between Compton and Watts. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

A COVID-19 testing site is set up near Martin Luther King Jr. Community Hospital. The hospital is in Willowbrook, an unincorporated part of South Los Angeles sandwiched between Compton and Watts.

"We're getting paid adequately to amputate someone's leg," she says. "But we're not getting paid adequately to prevent that leg from being amputated."

The hospital loses some $10 million a year operating the emergency department. It loses money for the specialty care and primary care programs it offers for things like behavioral health care or nutrition programs to prevent diabetes.

"You can't send these patients to other places, no other places will take them ... Why? Because we lose money on these patients," Batchlor says. "Our goal is to create the health care infrastructure in the community that's missing here."

To bridge the gap, the hospital relies on millions of dollars in philanthropic donations to subsidize doctors' and nurses' salaries, bring in cutting-edge technology and create disease management and prevention programs.

"This is not a sustainable model," she says. "This will not work forever. It works for a limited period of time when you have that philanthropic funding."

In the hospital's tented treatment areas, doctors find themselves having to make devastating decisions: Who should be moved inside next? Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

In the hospital's tented treatment areas, doctors find themselves having to make devastating decisions: Who should be moved inside next?

Nowhere else for patients to go

Outside the hospital grounds, it's a health care desert. Doctors won't set up in communities where they can't make money.

"Physicians can't sustain a practice in a community like this. So that's why they aren't here," Batchlor says. "That's why we're missing 1,200 physicians."

So there's nowhere else for patients to go.

The lack of options is on display in the emergency department. The halls are lined with beds. An older woman yells out in Spanish "please, no." She's scared and alone. Nurses calm her as medical staff move quickly to tend to dozens of people.

Dr. Ryan McGarry compares this moment to battlefield medicine.

"We're surrounded here by multiple tents and tubes and lines and, effectively, temporary structures to handle overflow on overflow," he says. "Unfortunately, we're having to make sometimes decisions about who we can move inside or who's sickest between 10 sick patients. That's not an easy decision to make for anybody, let alone when you're trying to help everyone get through this."

Doctors and nurses treat patients in triage tents, makeshift ICUs and anywhere else they can make room. About a third of the population of Los Angeles County has been infected with the coronavirus. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

Doctors and nurses treat patients in triage tents, makeshift ICUs and anywhere else they can make room. About a third of the population of Los Angeles County has been infected with the coronavirus.

Despite the overflow, the hospital has found a system to expand what they have to accommodate what McGarry calls "a surge, on a surge, on a surge."

"If you need the ICU here, you're going to get it. It just means that maybe that ICU will be here in the emergency department," he says.

"It's been horrible"

Back in the ICU, Arechiga's shift has gotten progressively busier, progressively deadlier.

And this day is not the worst that she has seen.

"Tough is an understatement. It's been ..." Arechiga pauses. "It's been horrible."

Most of the patients who end up here, she says, look like her.

"I grew up in Compton," she says. "I know the community. So potentially, you know, this could be any of my family."

In addition to supervising nursing staff, tending to patients and recording vitals, Arechiga also finds herself translating.

"Some of our doctors don't speak Spanish and I feel like 90% of the population is Hispanic," she says. "I have to sit there or one of the nurses that speak English and Spanish with a straight face and tell them: 'Your family member is going to die.' It's just really hard."

Maria Arechiga (center) helps move an intubated COVID-19 patient to a private room. The patient died later that day. Multiple COVID-19 deaths in one day are not rare at the hospital. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

Maria Arechiga (center) helps move an intubated COVID-19 patient to a private room. The patient died later that day. Multiple COVID-19 deaths in one day are not rare at the hospital.

That bears out in the numbers. Take this Wednesday for example: More than half of the deaths reported that day in Los Angeles County were Latino.

In the tragedy, the nurses and doctors have found the bond that comes with getting through hardship together hardship the rest of the world may never understand. They console one another, some dealing with their own losses due to COVID-19, and then they keep going.

"I feel like this time around, people are coming in sicker and dying quicker," Arechiga says. She's comparing what she's seeing now to the smaller surges of patients that came before. This time, the deluge is unparalleled.

Trying to prevent things from getting worse

Nearby Dr. Stefan Richter goes back and forth to one room. He's monitoring a patient whom he expects will soon pass away.

"When her heart stops, we will be doing chest compressions, even though the understanding is that probably they aren't going to help," he says.

Most of the patients on this floor are on ventilators and many are on dialysis.

"We've been taking the brunt of a kind of medical epidemic for years," Richter says. "A lot of the diseases that we see here during nonpandemic times are preventable, but they've gone untreated for years and years and years. And so the fact that we're continuing to see the brunt of this pandemic doesn't really surprise me that much in a really unfortunate way."

The vaccine is a providing a sliver of hope, but the county rollout has been slow. Health care workers have gotten it here, but no one knows how long it will be before this community has access.

Exacerbating the COVID-19 crisis at the MLK facility is that it is essentially the only medical game in town as doctors are reluctant to set up a practice where they cannot be paid. Gabriella Angotti-Jones for NPR hide caption

Exacerbating the COVID-19 crisis at the MLK facility is that it is essentially the only medical game in town as doctors are reluctant to set up a practice where they cannot be paid.

By the end of the shift on this day, five people are dead. Four are Latino, one is African American. The hospital gives the families a one-time exception to visit when end of life is near.

Jason Prasso, an ICU doctor, is often the one that makes the call and breaks the news.

It's time to come in. Time to say goodbye.

"Modern medicine has a lot of a lot of interventions and a lot of therapies that we can offer, but this virus has proven resistant and extremely difficult to manage," he says. "Realistically speaking, there isn't a whole lot that I can offer besides supportive care as an ICU doctor and trying to prevent things from getting worse. It hurts as a doctor to say that."

Prasso is cut off by the sound of another Code Blue call.

"Excuse me," he says. It's a bad day, a familiar day.

More:

'The Separate and Unequal Health System' Highlighted By COVID-19 - NPR

The Covid-19 Origin Investigation – The Wall Street Journal

January 23, 2021

President Biden stopped Americas withdrawal from the World Health Organization on his first day in office. The premise of his decision is that reforming international institutions from inside is more effective than leaving or withholding funds, and this theory will be tested quickly.

China has total control over the World Health Organization, Donald Trump said last year when announcing the U.S. would leave. That was typical hyperbole, but he had a point. WHO director-general Tedros Ghebreyesus fawned over Chinas response to the virusvery impressive, and beyond wordsas Beijing destroyed virus samples, neutralized whistleblowers, and spread conspiracy theories.

WHO officials privately considered speaking out but calculated that the Chinese Communist Party would be even less cooperative if criticized publicly. The agencys reticence didnt do much. A team of WHO experts went to Beijing to study the origins of the virus in February 2020when their chances of discovering how it transferred to humans from animals were significantly better than todaybut the Chinese government impeded them.

Negotiations with Beijing dragged on through 2020. This month Dr. Tedros finally mustered the spiritless complaint that he was very disappointed with the delays. The Chinese foreign ministry said it welcomed the investigators presence shortly before they began arriving in recent days. Take this as seriously as O.J. Simpsons vow to make finding the killer of his ex-wife my primary goal in life.

Media reports say Beijing pushed WHO to delegate critical initial investigatory work to Chinese scientists. The WHO team at best will get incomplete data, because research on Covid-19s origins cant be published in China without the Communist Partys approval. The Chinese government also approved the WHO missions members and agenda.

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The Covid-19 Origin Investigation - The Wall Street Journal

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