Category: Covid-19

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Six Washington Wizards players test positive for COVID-19; three more in protocols – ESPN

January 16, 2021

The Washington Wizards have six players who have tested positive for COVID-19, making it a total of nine Wizards players who are in the NBA's health and safety protocols.

The Wizards had their next two games against the Cleveland Cavaliers -- originally scheduled for Sunday and Monday -- postponed on Friday. Washington has had four consecutive games postponed since it last played Monday at Phoenix.

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"It is just an unfortunate set of circumstances," Wizards general manager Tommy Sheppard said in a video call with reporters. "If you follow our track really going back to when we played Chicago [Dec. 29 and 31], almost every team we've played, a player tested positive. The next day [and] the next day, multiple players at some places. It was inevitable.

"The NBA has been pointing to this period for quite some time that this was going to be very difficult. And they weren't kidding. Every city that we went to, it just seemed to be more and more. You never want to say, 'Well, we escaped,' or, 'Nothing has gone wrong for us yet,' because you just know inevitably something is going to be your turn and this was our turn, unfortunately."

The Wizards canceled practice Tuesday before the league's decision to postpone Wednesday's game against the Utah Jazz. The Wizards then listed forward Rui Hachimura and center Moe Wagner as questionable because of health and safety protocols on the injury report.

Sheppard said the team learned it had reached six positive player cases on Friday. The team is hoping that if there are no new positive cases Saturday, the players who are not in quarantine and the safety protocols will be able to return to the facility for individual workouts.

Even if the Wizards were allowed to return to the court and practice, they don't have enough players to field a practice with so many players either injured, such as Russell Westbrook (quad), or in quarantine or safety protocol.

Westbrook will be reevaluated early next week.

"In terms of activity, we have been very limited, to zero, in terms of coming back to the facility," Sheppard said. "Certainly the players that are in quarantine, the players with COVID, can't even work out. If there is no positive test [Saturday], we can get guys back in the gym one-on-zero.

"I think four teams have missed multiple games," Sheppard said. "And so far I would think that is a small victory considering what is going out there, and what could become."

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Six Washington Wizards players test positive for COVID-19; three more in protocols - ESPN

Timberwolves’ Karl-Anthony Towns announces he tested positive for COVID-19 – CBS Sports

January 16, 2021

Karl-Anthony Towns has faced the impact of COVID-19 more than perhaps any player in the NBA. His mother, Jacqueline Cruz, died of complications stemming from the virus in April. His father had the virus and recovered, but in December, Towns revealed that six other family members of his died after battles with COVID, including an uncle.

Now, Towns is facing the virus himself. On Friday, the Minnesota Timberwolves star announced that he was diagnosed, but promised his family that he will recover.

"Prior to tonight's game, I received yet another awful call that I tested positive for COVID. I will immediately isolate and follow every protocol.

I pray every day that this nightmare of a virus will subside and I beg everyone to continue to take it seriously by taking all of the necessary precautions.

We cannot stop the spread of this virus alone, it must be a group effort by all of us.

It breaks my heart that my family, and particularly my father and sister continue to suffer from the anxiety that comes along with this diagnosis as we know all to well what the end result could be.

To my niece and nephew, Jolani and Max, I promise you I will not end up in a box next to grandma and I will beat this."

To this point, nothing is known about what symptoms Towns may be dealing with. His Minnesota Timberwolves, 3-8 and at the bottom of the Western Conference standings, will now likely be without him for some time as he recovers. Their game scheduled for Friday night against the Memphis Grizzlies has been postponed.

The NBA is attempting to move forward with playing games despite positive tests continuing to come in for players throughout the league. It has updated its COVID protocols on multiple occasions, but so far, nothing has prevented NBA players from catching the disease. Now the league, the Timberwolves and the Towns family will have to hope for what so many others are hoping for around the nation: a speedy recovery.

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Timberwolves' Karl-Anthony Towns announces he tested positive for COVID-19 - CBS Sports

COVID-19 survivor beats the odds and returns home after 6-month hospital stay – Wink News

January 16, 2021

LEE COUNTY

A man was back home in his own bed Thursday night after winning the battle against the coronavirus, a six-month-long quest. His doctors told him he had a 10% chance of survival, but he beat the odds.

Ed Knutt and his family reached the moment they waited half a year for.

It was the moment hed get out of his wheelchair, walk out of Lee Memorial Hospital COVID-19-free and hug the people who saved his life and go home.

I didnt envision getting this far, so being able to walk out here was a big deal, Knutt said.

I never thought it was going to happen, said Marti Gillen, Knutts wife.

COVID-19 knocked Knutt off his feet in July, and he fought a long and hard battle ever since.

I was in two comas and cardiac arrest, Knutt explained. When I came out of the second coma, I barely had use of my limbs. I couldnt talk, and it was, it was miserable.

I actually already found in the middle of all of this what I was going to say at his eulogy, Gillen said.

But with prayers, time and care from hospital staff, things started to turn around. Knutt started to take steps toward recovery, and even when he lost hope, he says his doctors and nurses never did.

They all believed in me when I didnt think it was possible, Knutt said.

Even though hes still recovering, Ed and Marti are grateful for the moment he could return home.

Im very overwhelmed with the whole matter, thinking about where I was not even two months ago, Knutt said. I came over here using a walker and I walked out today.

Ed Knutts lungs are still badly damaged. Doctors say it will take a year and a half for him to fully recover, but he is confident he will continue to get better each day.

We and I have been through so much these past six months, Gillen said. All the unknown that whole time that what I went through these past six months. Anything else, we can get through that together.

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COVID-19 survivor beats the odds and returns home after 6-month hospital stay - Wink News

Where Teachers Are Eligible for the COVID-19 Vaccine – Education Week

January 16, 2021

Coronavirus vaccines are now rolling out across the country, and health-care workers and older people have been among the first to get their shots. Teachers and other school staff members are also on many priority lists, and efforts are well underway in some places to get them vaccinated quickly, too.

But thats not true everywhere. Exactly where educators as a group fall within phased vaccination plansand the speed with which those phases are happeningvaries greatly from state to state.

While the Centers for Disease Control has put out guidance on how to prioritize different groups of people for the vaccine, states can ultimately make their own decisions on rollout.

To keep readers updated on where things stand, Education Week is tracking plans for vaccinating K-12 educators across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

The data below were collected from official government communications and websites, rather than from local news outlets or other sources. In some cases, that means the local landscape may look a little different than what the data show. For instance, as of Jan. 15, vaccines were not available to teachers under Indianas state plan, and yet we know that in some smaller communities there teachers were offered vaccines at the end of December because there were extra doses.

As of Jan. 15, at least 12 states have made some teachers eligible to receive the coronavirus vaccine.

Since this information is changing rapidly, please note the date at which the information was last verified for each state. We will do our best to update on a rolling basis.

For more information on vaccines and schools, see these frequently asked questions.

Data Notes/Methodology:

Contact InformationFor media or research inquiries about this data, contact library@educationweek.org.

How to Cite This PageWhere Teachers Are Eligible for the COVID-19 Vaccine (2021, January 15). Education Week. Retrieved Month Day, Year from http://www.edweek.org/policy-politics/where-teachers-are-eligible-for-the-covid-19-vaccine/2021/01

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Where Teachers Are Eligible for the COVID-19 Vaccine - Education Week

Tracking COVID-19 in Alaska: 1 death and 305 new infections reported Friday – Anchorage Daily News

January 16, 2021

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In total, 228 Alaskans and one nonresident with COVID-19 have died since the pandemic reached the state in March, including 23 deaths that were reported since Jan. 1. Alaskas death rate per capita is among the lowest in the country, though the states size and vulnerable health care system complicate national comparisons.

By Friday, 72 people with COVID-19 were hospitalized around Alaska and another five patients were suspected of having the virus, according to the state health department. Hospitalizations have declined to less than half the numbers reported during a peak in November and early December.

The states daily case counts have also fallen significantly during recent weeks, but the statewide alert level is still high.

Vaccines reached Alaska in mid-December. By the most recent update Friday, 43,992 people had received their first dose of vaccine and 10,954 had received both doses required for the vaccine to be fully effective, according to the states vaccine monitoring dashboard.

State officials this week said the state has allocated the vaccine received for December and January, but there are still appointments and large clinics occurring in the coming days and weeks.

For more information, the public can visit covidvax.alaska.gov or call 907-646-3322 and leave a message. A recording says calls will be returned in the order theyre received within 48 hours but users report longer delays.

Of the 296 new cases reported Friday among Alaska residents, there were 63 new cases in Anchorage, plus three in Chugiak and 20 in Eagle River; 36 in Wasilla; 30 in Fairbanks; 13 in Palmer; 11 in North Pole; 11 in Bethel; six in Cordova; four in Sterling; four in Kodiak; four in Juneau; four in Sitka; three in Unalaska; two in Valdez; two in Kenai; two in Soldotna; two in Utqiagvik; two in Hooper Bay; one in Anchor Point; one in Sutton-Alpine; and one in Ketchikan.

Among communities smaller than 1,000 people not named to protect privacy, there were 16 in the Bethel Census Area; 15 in the Nome Census Area; 13 in the Northwest Arctic Borough; 11 in the Kusilvak Census Area; four in the Kodiak Island Borough; four in the Fairbanks North Star Borough; two in the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area; one in the northern Kenai Peninsula Borough; one in the Valdez-Cordova Census Area; one in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough; one in the Aleutians East Borough; one in the Bristol Bay plus Lake and Peninsula boroughs; and one in the Dillingham Census Area.

Nine cases were reported Friday among nonresidents, including three in Anchorage, one in Cordova, one in Wasilla and four in unidentified regions of 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.

The statewide test positivity rate as of Friday was 3.68% over a seven-day average. Health officials say anything above 5% can indicate inadequate testing and widespread community transmission. The state peaked at over 9% positivity in November.

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Tracking COVID-19 in Alaska: 1 death and 305 new infections reported Friday - Anchorage Daily News

Louisiana Department of Health announces COVID-19 testing for week of January 18-21, 2021 | Department of Health | State of Louisiana – Louisiana…

January 16, 2021

The COVID-19 testing schedule for sites operated by the Louisiana Army National Guard (LANG) for the week of January 18 to January 23 is listed below. Sites are closed during state holidays and inclement weather.

All Louisianans need to take precautions to protect themselves and their loved ones from this dangerous surge of COVID-19: avoid gatherings of individuals not part of your households, work from home remotely when possible, wear a mask, practice social distancing and good hand hygiene, and stay home if sick. If you have been exposed or have symptoms of COVID-19, get tested.

Pre-registration for COVID-19 testing is encouraged by going toHealth.QuestDiagnostics.com/STLOU. Testing is for ages 3 and older. There is no cost, and no identification is needed. Test results are available by calling1-866-MYQUEST (1-866-697-8378), but note that wait times can be lengthy. Test results are also available through the Quest online portal or app.

If you are unable to make it to a LANG testing location, no-cost testing is available by appointment atselect Walgreens locationsthrough a partnership between Walgreens and the Department of Health. These locations offer testing 7 days a week to people ages 3 and older. Appointments are required; make yours atwalgreens.com/covid19testing.

Symptoms of COVID-19 include:

Test site details

Save the number 877-766-2130 in your phone

Anyone who receives a call from 877-766-2130 is urged to answer, as the call is from a contact tracer who will keep an individual's information private. Personal information is used to quickly identify anyone a COVID-positive individual may have been in close contact with to help contain the spread of the coronavirus. Everyone called by a contact tracer is advised to monitor themselves for signs of illness for 14 days from when they first came in contact with the COVID-19 person.

If a resource need is identified through the contact tracing interview, the case is flagged for follow-up from a resource coordinator social worker who can connect individuals with resources including medication, masks, food assistance and even help locating alternative housing.

If someone calls from a number other than 877-766-2130, claims to be a contact tracer and asks for personal information, hang up immediately.If you have a positive lab result and have not yet heard from a contact tracer, you can call our team directly at 877-766-2130.

For information from the Louisiana Department of Health on COVID-19, click here.

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Louisiana Department of Health announces COVID-19 testing for week of January 18-21, 2021 | Department of Health | State of Louisiana - Louisiana...

New UK COVID-19 variant detected in Utah; CDC projects strain will be dominant in US by March – KSL.com

January 16, 2021

SALT LAKE CITY A new, more transmissible variant of COVID-19 that originated in the U.K. has been detected in Utah, state health officials announced Friday.

The variant, also known as B.1.1.7, was detected in a man from Salt Lake County who tested positive last month and was between the ages of 25 and 44, according to a news release from the Utah Department of Health. The man had no known travel history outside Utah and had only mild symptoms, the release said.

The U.K. variant of the SARS-CoV-2 virus is thought to spread more quickly and easily than other mutations, but there is no evidence it is any more deadly, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The variant was first detected in the U.S. in Colorado.

"This is a hard time to have a more contagious strain, given that it's winter, people are inside more," said Utah Department of Health state epidemiologist Dr. Angela Dunn. "The holiday season just passed, and the people are frankly fatigued with all the public health recommendations we're making. So that, in combination with not enough vaccines to go around, is concerning."

Dr. Kelly Oakeson, chief scientist for bioinformatics and next-generation sequencing at The Utah Public Health Laboratory, explained that the case was discovered through a genetic profile test of a positive case. He said there are 17 mutations distinct to the U.K. variant, which they found during the test that led to the confirmation.

Both he and Dunn said they believed that the variant has been in Utah for some time and there are likely more cases.

"I believe it's more widespread," Oakeson said. "We're not sequencing every single positive sample, so we're only sequencing about 10% in some months a little fewer than that. So if we detected this quickly since we were looking for it, it indicates to us that it's probably more widespread than just this one individual."

Salt Lake County health officials conducted a routine case investigation after the Utah case was detected, including contact tracing, for the variant case.

The Utah discovery was announced about the same time the CDC published a research paper that acknowledged the new variant was detected in 10 states between Dec. 29, 2020, and Tuesday. Researchers said that current models project that the strain will become the dominant strain in the U.S. by March.

While not known to be deadlier, the researchers warned that it could create more issues if it leads to a spike in COVID-19 transmission. COVID-19 vaccines currently approved for use are also believed to be effective against the U.K. variant of the virus; however, the new variant poses a problem to vaccination efforts if it spreads faster than people can be vaccinated.

They advised individuals to continue to take measures to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus.

"Increased SARS-CoV-2 transmission might threaten strained health care resources, require extended and more rigorous implementation of public health strategies and increase the percentage of population immunity required for pandemic control," researchers wrote in the paper.

Dunn echoed those concerns Friday afternoon. She pointed out that herd immunity through vaccinations likely won't be reached until summer or fall, and that a positive case is believed to provide only about 90 days of immunity. In addition, the new variant could lead to an uptick in cases in a short amount of time, which would potentially lead to a continued or worsening strain of hospitals around the state much like the CDC paper warned.

"I think this puts another spin on how we're responding to this pandemic, knowing that our hospital ICUs are already over capacity and we're at the beginning of a potential surge in cases due to this new variant," she said.

The U.K. responded to the new strain with new shutdowns across the country. Utah has no firm recommendations or plans in place tied to the new variant, Dunn added.

Utah's current COVID-19 case totals and positivity rate remain high but are once again slowly declining, yet it's possible that another surge could come with K-12 and higher education classes returning this month and a more contagious variant documented in the state. As experts pointed out Friday, the variant spread faster among younger individuals in the U.K. because those groups were more likely to be where spread occurs.

Dunn is optimistic that testing protocols like surge testing on college campuses to begin the semester can pick up new cases before it leads to widespread growth in new cases. That said, she is also aware that the timing of the new strain reaching Utah isn't ideal.

"It is more transmissible, it's more contagious than the other variants of COVID, and so now more than ever we need to be practicing good public health practice by wearing a face mask, staying home when we're sick, avoiding large gatherings and physically distancing as much as we can," she said. "We really need to be extra cautious moving forward until we get more people vaccinated to not overwhelm our health care systems."

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New UK COVID-19 variant detected in Utah; CDC projects strain will be dominant in US by March - KSL.com

A Simple Breakdown of the Ingredients in the COVID Vaccines – COVID-19, Health Topics – Hackensack Meridian Health

January 12, 2021

January 11, 2021Clinical Contributors to this Story

Juan C. Ravell, M.D. contributes to topics such as Allergy and Immunology.

The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines were given Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in mid-December 2020. Prior to authorization by the FDA, these vaccines underwent the same rigorous safety and effectiveness standards as all other vaccines. Quickly, vaccine distribution began, starting with health care professionals on the frontlines of patient care.

Once available to the broader public, its critical that a high percentage of the population receive the vaccine in order to achieve herd immunity against COVID-19. Herd immunity occurs when most of a population is immune to an infectious disease (either from previous infection and/or vaccination) and provides indirect protection to those who are not immune to the disease.

There have been many rumors flying around on the internet about whats in the vaccine. Some rumors even suggested that the vaccines contain gluten, wheat, eggs and even bee venom! All of that is simply, untrue.

If youre among the many wondering whats actually in it? and, is it safe to receive the injection?, keep reading.

There are two COVID-19 messenger-ribonucleic acid (mRNA) vaccines currently authorized for emergent use in the United States: the Pfizer-BioNTech and the Moderna vaccines. Conventional vaccines rely on weakened and inactivated pathogens or a fragment of the pathogen to trigger an immune response. In contrast, the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines use a novel approach by which mRNA is delivered into our cells to provide the genetic instructions for our own cells to temporarily make a specific viral protein that triggers an immune response.

There are rumors that mRNA vaccines will alter our DNA because the RNA molecule can convert information stored in DNA into proteins. Thats simply, not true. Its critical to note that the mRNA vaccines never enter the nucleus of the cell, where our DNA is stored. After injection, the mRNA from the vaccine is released into the cytoplasm of the cells. Once the viral protein is made and on the surface of the cell, mRNA is broken down and the body permanently gets rid of it, therefore making it impossible to change our DNA.

The remaining ingredients (below), including acids, acid stabilizers, salt and sugar all work together to maintain the stability of the vaccine after its produced.

Thats it!

Overall, the main ingredients in the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines are very similar, both vaccines were found to be safe and efficacious in preventing symptomatic COVID-19 disease in rigorously conducted clinical trials. These COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are safe and went through the same rigorous testing process as other vaccines before being approved for emergent use in the United States. Although local and systemic side effects have been reported, as is the case for many other medical interventions, the risk of lacking protection against COVID-19 and developing severe disease far exceeds those posed by the vaccine itself. says Juan Ravell, M.D., division chief of allergy and immunology at Hackensack University Medical Center. These ingredients are safe and the development of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines marks a huge step towards acquiring heard immunity and the end of this pandemic.

Sources:

The material provided through HealthU is intended to be used as general information only and should not replace the advice of your physician. Always consult your physician for individual care.

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A Simple Breakdown of the Ingredients in the COVID Vaccines - COVID-19, Health Topics - Hackensack Meridian Health

Locating Antibody Treatments For COVID-19 Can Be A Treasure Hunt : Shots – Health News – NPR

January 12, 2021

Nurse Salina Padilla prepares an infusion of a COVID-19 antibody treatment at Desert Valley Hospital in Victorville, Calif., in December. Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images hide caption

Nurse Salina Padilla prepares an infusion of a COVID-19 antibody treatment at Desert Valley Hospital in Victorville, Calif., in December.

Monoclonal antibody drugs are supposed to help people with mild to moderate COVID-19 avoid the hospital, but it can be a challenge to find out where the treatment is offered. NPR has heard from people across the country who have been frustrated by this.

They include Shirley Wagoner, an 80-year-old who still hits the ski slopes and helps run the family plumbing business in Spokane Valley, Wash.

First, her sons fell ill and were diagnosed with COVID-19. Then on the Monday after Christmas she came down with the symptoms of a bad cold, including a sore throat and laryngitis.

She went to her doctor's office for a coronavirus test and learned on New Year's Eve that she was also sick.

Her son-in-law, Myron Lee, who lives near Chicago, had been tracking the disease closely and knew his mother-in-law would be a candidate for treatment with monoclonal antibodies.

These are drugs available nationwide through an emergency authorization. They're designed to bind to the coronavirus to prevent it from invading cells. The government allocates the drug to states, which in turn decide how the drugs are distributed. Uptake has been irregular, in part because the medicines are cumbersome to deliver they're given by infusion. A committee convened by the National Institutes of Health is also not confident that the drugs actually work.

Even so, the Food and Drug Administration granted their emergency use, judging that the potential benefits outweigh the potential risks. So, Lee set about looking for somewhere in Spokane where his mother-in-law could get treated. He contacted the two companies that make the drug, Eli Lilly and Regeneron, to find it in Spokane. Information from them was discouraging.

"The weird thing is Spokane's a pretty major city in the Inland Northwest," Lee says. "It's kind of a medical center for the whole Inland Northwest, but there's not one place in Spokane that has the Eli Lilly drug."

A representative from the Eli Lilly hotline (855-LillyC19) gave him phone numbers of facilities within a few hours' drive. (Regeneron's hotline is 844-734-6643.)

Wagoner started calling around, including to her own doctor's office, which falsely informed her she would need to be hospitalized to be eligible for the drug. In fact, hospitalized patients aren't eligible for this treatment because clinical tests indicated they were only effective early in the disease.

"Then I called the Washington state public health [department], and they'd never heard of either therapeutic," Wagoner said.

State health officials eventually told Lee to call the big hospital in Spokane, but he simply got the runaround there and never learned whether it provides the treatment. Wagoner finally found a clinic about an hour and a half's drive away that would see her, but only if she could find a doctor in that town who would prescribe it.

"And then I got to thinking, by the time I had my husband drive me there, have the doctor appointment, get the infusion, which takes an hour, and then they keep you two hours to make sure you don't have a reaction, and drive home, it would almost be too much for me," Wagoner said. "It was overwhelming."

By then more than a week had elapsed since her first symptoms. The drugs are thought to work best within a few days of symptoms. Fortunately, she was starting to feel better on her own, so she simply gave up the search. She remembered President Trump promising that everyone could get this drug after he himself took it.

"That was my frustration," she said. "Trump said we could have them, but you can't get the dang things!"

The treasure-hunt aspect for patients is slowly improving. The National Infusion Center Association built a website that now lists clinics known to offer it. (It shows that the Regeneron drug has been shipped to a clinic in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, which is not far from Spokane.)

Janelle Sabo, who manages COVID-19 drugs at Eli Lilly, said her company has fielded a couple of thousand calls asking for help locating the monoclonal antibody, and she's happy to see that the federal government has launched a locator website, too.

As of Monday, the federal website only had information for 22 states. (Washington was not among them.) "But hopefully that will change very soon," Sabo says. "I know the government is as motivated as we are to make sure people know how to access this medication and to try to avoid hospitalizations."

Because the drug has not been granted full FDA approval, Lilly is restricted in how it can promote the drug, Sabo says. It's also a challenge that many people learn they have COVID-19 from a testing center, not from their physician. People may in fact not have a regular physician, and doctors may not know where to refer patients for treatment in any event.

Sabo says some coronavirus testing sites are starting to hand out information about the antibody drugs, including information about where they are available locally. "Those are proving to be quite successful," she says, "because very early on the patient knows what to do with their results."

Still despite these gradual steps forward, "right now there are hundreds of thousands of doses that have been distributed and not yet used," Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said last week.

You can contact NPR science correspondent Richard Harris at rharris@npr.org.

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Locating Antibody Treatments For COVID-19 Can Be A Treasure Hunt : Shots - Health News - NPR

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