Category: Covid-19

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What we know about Jayson Tatums positive COVID-19 diagnosis – Boston.com

January 10, 2021

Conor Roche, Weekend Sports Producer

updated on January 9, 2021

Celtics star forward Jayson Tatum tested positive for COVID-19, The Boston Globes Gary Washburn reported Saturday.

Tatum received the positive COVID-19 test Friday night and immediately went into quarantine, according to Washburn. He is still awaiting the results of a confirmation test and is asymptomatic, Mark Murphy of the Boston Herald reported.

With the positive COVID-19 test, Tatum will likely have to quarantine for the next 10-14 days. Saturdays news of Tatums positive test comes a day after center Robert Williams reportedly tested positive for the coronavirus.

Center Tristan Thompson and forward Grant Williams were also forced to quarantine for at least seven days starting on Friday due to the NBAs health and safety protocols. A league source told Washburn that Robert Williams, Grant Williams, Thompson, and guard Carsen Edwards all shared a car ride on the teams recent road trip, with Edwards being the only player wearing a mask during the ride. Edwards was cleared to play Friday night against the Wizards because he wasnt considered a close contact.

In the aftermath of Tatums positive test, the Celtics canceled Saturdays practice and closed the Auerbach Center for use on Saturday. The Celtics matchup against the Heat on Sunday is still scheduled to be played. Players and other members of the organization were tested twice on Friday, according to Washburn.

Tatums positive COVID-19 test also forced Wizards star Bradley Beal to miss their game against the Heat on Saturday. Beal and Tatum spoke in close proximity to each other following Fridays Celtics-Wizards game, causing the league to investigate Beals potential exposure, according to The Athletics Shams Charania.

The quarantine period will force Tatum to miss at least five games, and potentially seven games if he quarantines for 14 days. The Celtics will be without their leading scorer for their upcoming matchups against the Heat, Bulls, Magic (twice), and Knicks. A 14-day quarantine would cause Tatum to miss two games against the 76ers.

Tatum has had a strong start to the new season. His 26.9 points per game is eighth-highest in the league. He scored 32 points in the Celtics win Friday night.

With four players forced to miss games due to COVID-19 or health protocols, the Celtics have just 11 players (including two-way players Tacko Fall and Tremont Waters) available to play. The league requires teams to have eight players active in order for games to be played.

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What we know about Jayson Tatums positive COVID-19 diagnosis - Boston.com

Policy and institutional responses to COVID-19: Australia – Brookings Institution

January 7, 2021

Although it struggled to contain an outbreak around Melbourne in midyear and an outbreak at years end on Sydneys northern beaches, Australia is generally considered to have responded effectively to the COVID-19 pandemic and its economic consequences. With a total population of 25 million, Australia has experienced just over 28,000 cases and over 900 deaths as of December. The number of COVID-related fatalities per capita currently stands at 35.6 per million residents.

For a federal system of government in which subnational governments have primary responsibility for the delivery of both health and education services to their citizenry, the country moved quickly to limit inbound arrivals from overseas, quarantine arrivals, mobilize the health system, raise community awareness, and implement lockdown arrangements. The most significant lapse in Australias disciplined approach was the disembarkation of 2,700 passengers from a cruise ship in Sydney before COVID-19 test results had been returned, some of which came back positive. Despite this incident, public trust, and confidence in the governments handling of the crisis has remained high throughout, mainly due to strong working relationships established quickly and effectively at the outset of the crisis between state and federal government agencies and representatives.

Three key innovations stand out from the Australian experience as particularly effective and integral to the countrys success in flattening the curve:

Disclaimer: As is the case with all Brookings publications, the conclusions and recommendations presented in this article are solely those of its authors and do not reflect the views of the Brookings Institution, its management, or its scholars.

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Policy and institutional responses to COVID-19: Australia - Brookings Institution

Antibody Treatments For COVID-19 Are Worth The Effort, Doctors Say : Shots – Health News – NPR

January 7, 2021

Nurse Janet Gilleran prepares to treat COVID-19 patient Mike Mokler with bamlanivimab, a monoclonal antibody drug from Eli Lilly, at the Respiratory Infection Clinic of Tufts Medical Center in Boston on Dec. 31, 2020. Craig F. Walker/Boston Globe via Getty Images hide caption

Nurse Janet Gilleran prepares to treat COVID-19 patient Mike Mokler with bamlanivimab, a monoclonal antibody drug from Eli Lilly, at the Respiratory Infection Clinic of Tufts Medical Center in Boston on Dec. 31, 2020.

Many doses of the monoclonal antibody drugs that treat mild to moderate COVID-19 are sitting unused around the country. There are logistical problems with providing these drugs and skepticism over whether they work. But two major health systems have had good success in deploying these medications, and they're reporting hopeful results.

Monoclonal antibodies, manufactured by Regeneron and Eli Lilly, have been available since just before Thanksgiving. The Food and Drug Administration authorized them for emergency use after studies suggested that they reduced the risk of hospitalization among people at elevated risk. That includes people over 65 and those with underlying health conditions such as obesity.

The drugs are antibodies engineered to bind to the coronavirus so it can't enter human cells. President Trump received a dose of the Regeneron product before it had been authorized for emergency use and his administration bought more than a million doses to distribute to hospitals around the country.

But uptake has been spotty, partly because of the difficulties of administering it. People eligible for the drug have active infections, so it's important to treat them without exposing other patients. And each treatment, by infusion, takes an hour, followed by at least another hour of observation, and that process requires staff time in the midst of a pandemic surge.

"When you add all this up, it's really a logistical challenge to deliver this therapy to a lot of people, says Dr. Howard Huang, at Houston Methodist Hospital. Nominally the hospital's medical director of lung transplantation, he has been part of an effort to overcome those challenges. He says one strategy has been to open clinics around Houston. Doctors affiliated with the hospital are encouraged to identify and refer eligible patients for treatment.

"At this point we're doing about 50 to 70 infusions a day," he says. There has been a push to treat people as quickly as possible after infection. "From the time they call in to being infused, it's usually less than two days."

That timing is important, because even though patients are eligible for treatment within 10 days of their first COVID-19 symptoms, the drugs appear to be more effective early in the course of the disease.

And while medication sits unused in many locations across the country, Huang says that's not the case at his hospital.

"Right now, we're constrained more by the drug supply." The federal government has allocated 32,000 doses of the antibody medicine to the state of Texas to date, and it's up to state officials how to distribute them. Huang says Houston Methodist uses its allocation as fast as it gets it.

Many doctors nationwide aren't so enthusiastic about these drugs, though. Treatment guidelines issued by the National Institutes of Health say there's actually not good evidence to know whether they work. That's because the Food and Drug Administration relied on studies of just a few hundred patients to grant emergency authorization.

"These are very small numbers that, under normal conditions, nobody would ever publish in a journal like the New England Journal of Medicine," Huang says. "But yet this is headline news. Welcome to COVID time, right?"

But doctors are gaining experience. Houston Methodist has treated more than 1,100 patients as of Jan. 4, Huang says.

"We're seeing results that are comparable to the clinical trials by Eli Lilly and

Regeneron," he says. About 6% or 7% of patients who are treated end up in the hospital or emergency room. Based on the earlier studies, he suspects 15% of the most at-risk patients, if untreated, would have ended up in the emergency room or a hospital bed.

Doctors affiliated with the Mayo Clinic are also encouraged by their experience. As of Jan. 5, they had dosed more than 2,000 patients, in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Arizona and Florida.

Dr. Raymund Razonable at Mayo says the clinic, headquartered in Rochester, Minn., had been involved in clinical trials of these antibodies so was attuned to their potential benefit. The staff started planning how to administer it well before the drugs were available, he says. One strategy was to move some medical practices out of their spaces so they could be repurposed expressly as infusion centers for COVID-19 patients.

Razonable has done a preliminary analysis of the first 1,018 patients, and he also finds lower than expected hospitalization rates.

"More importantly there is some signal that it is also reducing death," he says, "But again, these are preliminary analyses. We have to make sure this is all vetted by peer review. But this is what we're seeing. That's why we're happy."

Unlike a clinical trial, this real-world experience doesn't have a randomized comparison group, so doctors can't say for sure that these patients are faring better. The NIH treatment advisory committee, which is currently ambivalent about the value of these drugs, will evaluate new data as it comes in, so it could revisit its recommendations when the Mayo results become available.

These encouraging findings may be swaying doctors who weren't sure they wanted to refer their patients for treatment. Razonable says patients are also becoming less skeptical.

"Initially there were more 'declines' than 'accepts,' but now we're actually seeing more 'accepts' than 'declines,' " he says.

And even though it takes a lot of person-power to provide this treatment, Razonable and Huang believe they're actually reducing the overall workload, by keeping patients out of the hospital.

You can contact NPR Science Correspondent Richard Harris at rharris@npr.org.

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Antibody Treatments For COVID-19 Are Worth The Effort, Doctors Say : Shots - Health News - NPR

City of Houston working to set up COVID-19 vaccination supersite – KHOU.com

January 7, 2021

City councilmembers are hoping the site is ready to go this weekend.

HOUSTON Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner said members of the citys health department, police department and special events office were working to set up another public COVID-19 vaccination site.

Its my hope that we can set up a supersite on this coming Saturday, Turner said.

Turner also told council members hes hoping to eventually use mobile clinics and even vaccinate some people at their homes. However, he said those ideas all depend on more vaccine doses arriving from the state.

The Texas Department of State Health Services COVID-19 vaccine map shows the hospitals, doctor's offices and pharmacies where vaccines have been delivered. As of Wednesday afternoon, it showed the east side of Houston mostly empty.

That area is largely home to African-Americans and Hispanics, two of the communities hardest hit by COVID-19.

Councilmember Robert Gallegos District I includes large sections of the east side.

During the testing for COVID-19, we ran into the same issue, Gallegos said.

Gallegos said his office is watching the issue closely. He said he understands its early in the process and finalizing plans takes time.

We need to make sure we get locations that are in our neighborhoods to provide these vaccines so that way those that dont have transportation, it would be easier to go to, for example, like a Krogers or a CVS or a Walgreens in the neighborhood, he said.

Councilmember Carolyn Evans-Shabazzs District D also includes many neighborhoods in southeast Houston.

I havent gotten a lot of pushback or concerns about the vaccine because I think (constituents) know that it takes time, Evans-Shabazz said. Access, basically, is based on the supply. We dont have a lot coming.

Evans-Shabazz has already received her first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

I wanted to be a leader because I know that there is a lot of apprehension that people have about taking a vaccine in view of some historical things, Evans-Shabazz said.

At The Luke Church in Humble, Senior Pastor Dr. Timothy W. Sloan is hoping to boost the African-American communitys confidence in the COVID-19 vaccine through a conversation with the nations top infectious disease expert.

Sloan recorded a virtual interview Wednesday afternoon with Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

Ive come to a point where I feel comfortable (with the vaccine), Sloan, whose wife is a physician, said. I admit that I struggled in the beginning based on the historical lens that Im looking at it through.

During the roughly 15-minute interview, Fauci acknowledged the African-American communitys concerns and hesitations over slights and past mistreatment by the government medical establishment.

We have to recognize that it occurred, and we have to emphasize that situations have been put in place, safeguards have been put in place that this could never happen again, he said.

Fauci also addressed concerns over the speed of vaccine development and methods of safety evaluation.

Were saying this vaccine is safe and that its highly efficacious, Fauci said. The entire process was transparent and independent.

The Luke Church will air the interview with Fauci on Sunday morning during virtual services and on Jan. 13 during a virtual town hall.

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City of Houston working to set up COVID-19 vaccination supersite - KHOU.com

The Medical Minute: How the body responds to the COVID-19 vaccine – Penn State News

January 7, 2021

By now, everyone has seen countless images of people receiving the COVID-19 vaccine. But once its injected into the upper arm, how does it actually interact with the body?

Dr. M. Fahad Khalid, chief of the Division of Hospital Medicine at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, and Dr. Mohammad Ali, an infectious diseases physician at Penn State Health Holy Spirit Medical Center, say while the vaccine doesnt contain any live COVID-19 virus, it teaches the human immune system to protect against it.

Both vaccines that received Emergency Use Authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines are mRNA (messenger RNA) vaccines. They are not live viruses. Instead, they work by giving your body a blueprint to create a piece of the virus that causes COVID-19, called a spike protein.

Once you receive the vaccine, your cells machinery uses the mRNA instructions to make the spike protein. This protein is then displayed on the cell surface, and the immune system sees it and responds to it. While mRNA is a type of genetic code, it never enters the center (nucleus) of your cells. That means it never converts into DNA, Khalid said. The mRNA itself is destroyed by the cells after they produce the spike protein.

The spike protein the vaccines create is the same one found on the surface of the virus that causes COVID-19. However, the vaccines do not contain any live virus. The spike protein itself cannot cause an infection, Ali said.

Khalid and Ali also addressed many common questions people have about both vaccines:

The vaccines were approved quickly. Are they safe? Advances in vaccinology and vaccine production allowed pharmaceutical companies to create vaccines in months. However, both vaccines followed rigorous FDA guidelines, including the normal regimen of clinical trials and Phase 1, 2 and 3 trials. Their effectiveness is tremendous, Ali said. The flu vaccine is typically 40% to 60% effective, and the COVID-19 vaccines are 94% to 95% effective.

Do people get severe allergic reactions to the vaccine? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reports a limited number of incidents where people experienced a severe allergic reaction (anaphylaxis) or reaction such as hives, swelling or wheezing. The CDC recommends against people taking the vaccine who had a prior severe allergic reaction to any ingredient in the COVID-19 vaccine. People who have had allergic reactions to other vaccines should ask their doctor about taking the COVID-19 vaccine. People with nonvaccine-related allergies food allergies, pet allergies, seasonal allergies are safe to get vaccinated, says the CDC.

Will the vaccine side effects be worse than getting COVID-19? Possible side effects, such as swelling or pain at the injection site, fever, headache or muscle pain, are temporary. Those side effects arent nearly as bad as severe cases of COVID-19, which can be fatal, Khalid said.

Do I need a vaccine if I already had COVID-19? Yes. Currently, the CDC recommends vaccination even in people who have had COVID-19 in the past. This is because we do not know how long immunity to the virus lasts after someone is infected.

Do I need to wear a mask after getting the COVID-19 vaccine? Yes, you must continue to wear a mask, practice social distancing and continue to wash your hands. The vaccine protects you from getting sick with COVID-19, but researchers still dont know if individuals can still get infected and transmit the virus to others.

Is there any kind of microchip tracking in the vaccines? No. The vaccine also will not cause infertility. Theres a lot of misinformation out there, Ali said. The most trustworthy resource for accurate information is the CDC website.

Alison Enimpah, a registered nurse who provided direct care for COVID-19 patients at the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, was among the earliest group of health care workers to get vaccinated. Shell receive her second dose later this month. The vaccine adds a layer of reassurance that were making forward progress in keeping ourselves and our community safe during the pandemic, she said.

TheMedical Minuteis a weekly health news feature produced by Penn State Health. Articles feature the expertise of faculty, physicians and staff, and are designed to offer timely, relevant health information of interest to a broad audience.

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The Medical Minute: How the body responds to the COVID-19 vaccine - Penn State News

How a COVID-19 antibody therapy being used in Austin may be expanded to help more people – KXAN.com

January 7, 2021

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How a COVID-19 antibody therapy being used in Austin may be expanded to help more people - KXAN.com

‘We’re all sitting on go’: As COVID-19 positivity rate rises, North Texas county judges ready for vaccinations – WFAA.com

January 7, 2021

Wise, Cooke, Johnson and Grayson counties have all hit record-highs in both positivity rate and the 7-day average positivity rate in the past two weeks.

The COVID-19 positivity rate in Wise, Johnson, Cooke and Grayson counties have all seen a significant uptick from the end of 2020 going into 2021.

All of these North Texas counties have hit record-highs in both positivity rate and the 7-day average positivity rate in the past two weeks.

A county's positivity rate takes into account both the number of positive COVID-19 results and people tested. The 7-day average prevents outliers from impacting the results.

Wise County's positivity rate saw a large drop, nearly reaching 5% in early November. That's changed the past month and a half, with the rate breaking the 10% mark right before Christmas.

Wise County's current 7-day average is right above 10% and a record for the county.

"There's no magic bullet with COVID-19 or else you'd see different places solving it," Wise County Judge J.D. Clark said.

Clark says he and other county leaders are asking people to continue making smart decisions even with vaccine distribution beginning.

"The message we keep taking to everybody is we all have to accept the personal responsibility to listen to the information that's being put out there," Clark said. "We want to keep ourselves healthy and keep our families healthy."

Cooke County didn't have as much of a decrease during the fall as Wise County but has more than doubled its positivity rate from late November to early January.

The county's positivity rate has remained at or just below 10% since Dec. 22.

Johnson County's positivity rate hovered right above 8% from late November into the beginning of December. That number has gone up past 11% to start 2021.

"The telephone calls to my office have picked up dramatically," Johnson County Judge Roger Harmon said.

Harmon says, like many areas, his county is likely seeing this increase because of major winter holidays and people's desire to gather indoors.

"They have cabin fever, and they're tired of being cooped up," Harmon said.

Harmon also says due to Johnson County's rise in cases, people are noticing things getting worse and are ready to get the vaccine.

"We're all sitting on go," Harmon said. "We're waiting to get the vaccine."

Grayson County's positivity rate didn't dip as low as these other three counties. However, recent record highs have put pressure on the county's hospitals.

The Grayson County Office of Emergency Management in Sherman issued a "plea from your Texoma area hospitals" on New Year's Eve. The letter said ICU beds in the county are full, with coronavirus patients taking up 40% of them.

"It's not just the inventory of beds, it's workers," Grayson County Judge Bill Magers said.

With the county having an older population and some long-term care facilities, Magers says there are a lot of people in Grayson County ready to get the vaccine during the ongoing Phase 1B.

"We're taking care of our 1A, we're putting 1Bs on a list," Magers said.

Judges from all Wise, Johnson and Grayson counties say they don't currently know when the next set of vaccines will get to their counties. They are asking people living there for patience while hoping to have more answers for them in the near future.

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'We're all sitting on go': As COVID-19 positivity rate rises, North Texas county judges ready for vaccinations - WFAA.com

COVID-19 treatment keeping hundreds from being hospitalized and very sick – WSFA

January 7, 2021

What it is, is the same antibody thats produced by the vaccination, except this is premade and then you infuse it, and you shut down the infection much earlier than it would be otherwise. And it also reduces the symptoms and reduces hospitalization and the degree of severe illness, he further explained.

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COVID-19 treatment keeping hundreds from being hospitalized and very sick - WSFA

Northridge mom hospitalized while pregnant with 6th son dies of COVID-19 before holding baby – KTLA Los Angeles

January 7, 2021

Loved ones are mourning the loss of 30-year-old Ashley Gornick-Gomez of Northridge, who was 37 weeks pregnant with her sixth son when she was hospitalized with COVID-19.

Gornick-Gomez, a mother of six and a nurse at a Van Nuys congregate care facility, was taken to Kaiser Permanente hospital in Woodland Hills after she had difficulty breathing, family members said.

She didnt want to go anywhere near the hospitals because she thought, Id rather save that extra bed for someone that really needs it,' her husband Wilber Gomez said. We had to force her.

Doctors performed an emergency cesarean section and delivered a healthy baby boy on Dec. 20. But the mom and son were separated immediately.

What kills me right now is that she didnt even have a chance to hold baby Corey, Gomez said.

The following day, her condition worsened as she developed infections, pneumonia and fever, ultimately losing her fight, her family said.

Fridaynight she had a fever of 109, organs were failing, her mom Veronica Gornick said. And so we got to spend all of Saturday with her.

The family says Ashley worked with COVID-19 patients but was careful to protect herself with personal protective equipment.

Im in shock because she was very protective, wearing the mask, all the PPEs, her mom said.

She leaves behind six boys, the eldest being 11-year-old Ryan, followed by Jacob, Zachary, Maverick, Jordan and Corey, who is just over two weeks old.

I really loved how she dealt with work and always found some time in her day to help us with either school or have some time to hang out with us. She always found a way in her day to make ours better, Ryan said. I would call her a hero and a savior to those she took care of.

When I have some trouble with some stuff, mama helped me, 8-year-old Zachary added.

Ashleys mother added, Her boys meant the world to her. She loved her boys so so much.

Family members have set up a GoFundMe page to help with the familys expenses.

She was our Wonder Woman basically, our superhero, Gomez said.

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Northridge mom hospitalized while pregnant with 6th son dies of COVID-19 before holding baby - KTLA Los Angeles

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