Category: Covid-19

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Governor Cuomo Announces 20 Straight Days with COVID-19 Infection Rate Below 1 Percent – ny.gov

August 29, 2020

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo todayannounced that New York State's rate of positive COVID-19 tests has been less than 1 percent for 20 straight days.The governor also updated New Yorkers on the state's progress during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The number of new cases, percentage of tests that were positive and many other helpful data points are always available atforward.ny.gov.

"We're closely monitoring the state's COVID-19 data every day, and the continued 20-day streak with an infection rate below 1 percent is good news. However, I urge New Yorkers not to get complacent, particularly as we move into the fall season,"Governor Cuomo said."COVID-19 is still a real threat, and it's the actions each of us takewearing masks, socially distancing and washing our handsthat make the difference in our ability to fight this virus. Congratulations to New Yorkersstay with it and stay New York Tough."

Yesterday, the State Liquor Authority and State Police Task Force visited 1,092establishments in New York City and Long Island and observed 2establishments that were not in compliance with state requirements. A county breakdown of yesterday's observed violations is below:

Today's data issummarized brieflybelow:

Of the 83,437testresults reported to New York State yesterday, 791, or0.95percent, were positive. Each region's percentage of positive testresults reported over the last three days is as follows:

REGION

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

Capital Region

1.4%

0.5%

1.1%

CentralNew York

0.8%

0.6%

1.4%

Finger Lakes

0.5%

0.5%

0.6%

Long Island

1.1%

0.9%

0.6%

Mid-Hudson

1.0%

0.9%

1.2%

Mohawk Valley

0.8%

0.2%

0.4%

New York City

0.8%

0.9%

0.9%

North Country

0.5%

0.6%

1.2%

Southern Tier

0.3%

0.3%

0.3%

WesternNew York

1.8%

1.4%

2.0%

The Governor also confirmed 791additional cases of novel coronavirus, bringing the statewide total to 432,131 confirmed cases in New York State. Of the 432,131total individuals who tested positive for the virus, the geographic breakdown is as follows:

County

Total Positive

New Positive

Albany

2,736

18

Allegany

87

1

Broome

1,274

6

Cattaraugus

188

3

Cayuga

176

1

Chautauqua

340

30

Chemung

194

0

Chenango

224

1

Clinton

148

1

Columbia

568

4

Cortland

98

0

Delaware

110

1

Dutchess

4,815

17

Erie

9,668

79

Essex

119

14

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Governor Cuomo Announces 20 Straight Days with COVID-19 Infection Rate Below 1 Percent - ny.gov

COVID-19 UPDATE: Gov. Justice announces all 55 county school systems have necessary PPE and cleaning supplies to safely begin academic year – West…

August 29, 2020

SCHOOL READINESS UPDATEDuring Fridays briefing, Gov. Justice explained that, over the past month, the West Virginia Department of Education surveyed all 55 county school systems to determine what PPE and cleaning supplies they had on-hand and what was still needed to begin the school year as safely as possible for students, teachers, service personnel, and local communities.

Working with the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources and the West Virginia National Guard, all counties have been contacted and supplies have now either been sent or are in the process of being distributed.

We can confidently, confidently say that all 55 counties will have what they requested in order to begin school, Gov. Justice said. As we go forward, we know were going to have more demand for equipment. But between the dollars that we have from a variety of grants, well be able to cover all of that demand.

As a reminder, Gov. Justice added that West Virginia county school districts have received more than $90 million from the federal and state government to use for school re-entry.

Additionally, the Governor announced that Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield is making a donation of more than $500,000-worth of PPE and cleaning supplies to the WVDE, which will further ensure that these supplies are available to every classroom teacher in West Virginia.

I am thrilled about this because these supplies will help us be able to do more and more to help ensure the safety and wellness of our schools and our people, Gov. Justice said. On behalf of the Department of Education, the State of West Virginia, and all of us, we surely recognize and thank Highmark. Its a wonderfully generous donation.

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COVID-19 UPDATE: Gov. Justice announces all 55 county school systems have necessary PPE and cleaning supplies to safely begin academic year - West...

UK to allow emergency use of any effective COVID-19 vaccine – ABC News

August 29, 2020

August 28, 2020, 1:43 PM

3 min read

LONDON -- Britain is preparing to revise its laws to allow the emergency use of any effective coronavirus vaccine before it is fully licensed but only if the shots meet required safety and quality standards.

In a statement Friday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservative government said it was adopting reinforced safeguards to allow the country's medicines regulatory agency to grant temporary authorization of a COVID-19 vaccine, provided it meets safety and quality standards.

The proposed regulations would allow coronavirus vaccines to receive an emergency approval allowing people to be immunized while the full licensing process is being finished. Typically, vaccines are only used after the licensing review has been completed, a process which can take several months.

"If we develop effective vaccines, its important we make them available to patients as quickly as possible, but only once strict safety standards have been met," Jonathan Van-Tam, Britain's deputy chief medical officer, said in a statement.

Britain said the move was a precautionary measure and would only be used as a last resort if there was a pressing public health justification.

Officials said they would also be expanding the number of health workers who can administer vaccines as well as clarifying the kind of protection from civil liability for this additional work force.

The government is beginning a three-week consultation period to seek advice from health experts and other stakeholders. It said the measures could be introduced as early as October.

Dr. Doug Brown, chief executive of the British Society for Immunology, said he was confident all the safety requirements for any potential COVID-19 vaccine would be met under any emergency approval.

These steps will help to ensure that the U.K. can benefit from a COVID-19 vaccine should one become available in the near future that is proven to be safe and effective, Brown said.

Britain has recorded more than 41,500 COVID-19 deaths, the worst toll of any European country and its daily case count has been slowly increasing in recent weeks. New infections have been averaging about 1,000 a day for the last week. At the peak of Britain's outbreak, it was about 5,000 cases a day, though experts suspect it could have been much higher due to inadequate testing.

The U.K. has signed multiple deals with pharmaceuticals for COVID-19 vaccines. It expects to receive the first shipments of an experimental vaccine developed by Oxford University and AstraZeneca this fall, while advanced trials testing the shot's effectiveness are still under way.

Follow APs pandemic coverage at http://apnews.com/VirusOutbreak and https://apnews.com/UnderstandingtheOutbreak

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UK to allow emergency use of any effective COVID-19 vaccine - ABC News

New WHO technical package to help countries improve health data for COVID-19 response and beyond – World Health Organization

August 29, 2020

Today, as part of its commitment to strengthening health information systems and improving health[1], especially in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO announced a new approach to improving access to life-saving data: the SCORE for Health Data Technical Package. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the urgent need for timely and reliable data to drive strategic health action. Too many countries still lack both the infrastructure to routinely gather health data and the analytical capacity to use these data for effective health actions and emergency response.

Countries must be able to measure progress to make progress, said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. Particularly during COVID-19, reliable data is the best way to coordinate response efforts and improve health in all areas.

Accurate health data are necessary to understand specific country needs in order to improve health and save lives. Data also helps direct scarce resources to where they are needed most.

The SCORE (Survey, Count, Optimize, Review, Enable) Technical Package aims to improve the availability of timely, reliable, validated, and comparable health data. For the first time in a single, harmonized package, it represents all the key elements for optimized health information system performance. Simply put, SCORE will help governments around the globe set benchmarks and improve standards in healthcare.

In response to the challenges of data availability highlighted in the WHO World Health Statistics 2020 report, SCORE includes more than 90 universally-accepted tools and standards for health information systems strengthening. Using data to inform public health priorities and strategies has never been more important, said Dr Kelly Henning, Director of Public Health Programs at Bloomberg Philanthropies[2]. The SCORE Technical Package provides country governments around the world with high-quality, essential technical guidance so that countries can strengthen their own data systems.WHO is proud to partner with the Bloomberg Philanthropies Data for Health Initiative to deliver this timely resource to countries.

Below are some examples of how SCORE can improve individual lives and communities:

The package's initial release includes two documents:

We must keep score to save lives. WHO is committed to working with countries and partners to rapidly scale up capacity for data collection and use in order to improve policy and performance, added Dr Samira Asma, Assistant Director-General for Data, Analytics and Delivery for Impact at WHO. We must act now to invest in statistical systems in countries, respond to this pandemic and meet the SDGs and the Triple Billion targets. Our window of opportunity is closing, and we cannot wait to address data gaps. Data use to address country needs has to be a priority today.

Country-owned, disaggregated data will be essential for more resilient and sustainable health systems going forward. COVID-19 is both a wake-up call and a stark reminder of the challenges we still have to address. But it is also an opportunity to build back better through solidarity, information-sharing and collaboration.

SCORE is one example of how a collaborative approach can benefit countries by providing a common set of tools based on shared standards. This package is designed to be practical, actionable and flexible. We will only be successful in combatting COVID-19 if we work together.

Future components of the SCORE Technical Package are due to be released later this year, including the SCORE Assessment Instrument and global, regional and country status reports. Together, these will provide a complete package of information to plan and monitor progress against national and subnational priorities as well as global targets.

[1] https://www.who.int/about/what-we-do/thirteenth-general-programme-of-work-2019---2023#:~:text=The%20Thirteenth%20General%20Programme%20of,health%20at%20the%20country%20leve

[2] Bloomberg Philanthropies Data for Health Initiative provided funding to support the SCORE for Health Data Technical Package

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New WHO technical package to help countries improve health data for COVID-19 response and beyond - World Health Organization

Republican convention in Charlotte tied to 4 cases of Covid-19 – CNN

August 29, 2020

A spokesman for the party said the individuals tested positive upon arriving at the convention and were immediately sent home. In all, 792 Covid-19 tests were given to people who attended or provided support to the convention in Charlotte, the county said.

"These individuals were immediately issued isolation instructions and any known close contacts were notified and issued quarantine instructions by Mecklenburg County Public Health," the county said.

Trump had long insisted on holding a full, in-person convention in Charlotte as planned before the pandemic, only to back down following objections from the state's Democratic governor, Roy Cooper, who expressed concerns about spreading the virus at such a large event.

Michael Ahrens, a spokesman for the Republican National Committee, said Friday the party had "diligent safety protocols in place" and tested all attendees both before and after they arrived in Charlotte.

"Out of roughly 1,000 tests administered, two RNC attendees, despite having negative tests prior to travel, and two Charlotte locals who planned to serve as event support staff tested positive upon arrival. All were sent home," Ahrens said.

North Carolina Democratic Party spokesman Austin Cook, referring to news of the positive tests, said the decision to hold even a pared-down convention in Charlotte was a "slap to the face to the Charlotte community and all North Carolinians."

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Republican convention in Charlotte tied to 4 cases of Covid-19 - CNN

As COVID-19 cases level in NHC, testing shifts to direct outreach – WECT

August 29, 2020

Earlier this summer we saw more widespread transmission of COVID-19 and a busy testing site, but as safety measures and the three Ws have been followed, were seeing a decrease in the prevalence of COVID-19 and the need for our drive-through testing site, said New Hanover County Assistant Health Director Carla Turner, RN, MSHCA.

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As COVID-19 cases level in NHC, testing shifts to direct outreach - WECT

The Latest: Wealthy nations applaud their leaders’ COVID-19 responses. The U.S. and Britain are exceptions. – Press Herald

August 29, 2020

The latest on the coronavirus pandemic from around the U.S. and the world.

Catholic churches in California have been resuming baptism, First Communion and Mass services outdoors after a series of COVID-19 closures shut down indoor church services in most of the state. California churches were allowed to reopen late May with attendance limitations, but along with businesses and other public indoor spaces, were once again shuttered mid-July as COVID-19 cases surged across the state.

Across the United States, parishes celebrations of sacraments and rites have been greatly impacted by the coronavirus, according to a survey of bishops conducted by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University.

More than half of dioceses reported their celebrations of the following were very much affected: confirmations (81 percent), First Communions (78 percent), other sacramental preparation (64 percent), marriages (59 percent), baptisms (57 percent) and funerals (54 percent).

The surveys findings, which were released in July, included responses from a total of 116 bishops and represent a 60 percent response rate. Dioceses responded during different periods of COVID-19 lockdown orders.

The report, Ministry in the Midst of Pandemic: A Survey of Bishops, also found, in response to the pandemic, bishops issued directives to address the celebration of sacraments, to suspend public Masses, and for parishes to comply with state and local government orders.

For the Rev. Arturo Corral, the early months of the pandemic caused a backlog of about 600 baptisms at Our Lady Queen of Angels. Known as La Placita church, the downtown Los Angeles parish is famous for celebrating baptisms, Corral said.

The people who normally come for baptisms, theyd come with the whole family, Corral said.

Now, only the parents and godparents are allowed for the outdoor baptism Masses. Corral said the outdoor celebrations have been happening since around late July.

The church baptizes an estimated 200 children during six or seven outdoor Saturday services every week. Their patio isnt big enough for larger socially distanced groups.

Virus lockdown brings new misery to long-suffering Gaza

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip Ahmed Eissa, a father of two living in the Gaza Strip, was already struggling to make ends meet on $7 a day, dealing with frequent electricity cuts and worried that another war might break out.

Then the coronavirus found its way into the impoverished Palestinian territory, just as Israel was tightening its blockade in a standoff with Gazas militant Hamas rulers, and a strict lockdown has confined everyone to their homes.

Now Eissa doesnt know how he will feed his family.

I dont have savings and I dont have a job, so no one would lend me money, he said. I wont beg from anyone.

The restrictions imposed by Hamas are aimed at averting what many fear would be an even bigger catastrophe: a wide-scale outbreak in a population of 2 million people confined to a territory where the health care system has been devastated by years of war and isolation.

The lockdown was triggered by the discovery this week of the first locally spread cases, after months in which infections were confined to quarantine facilities where all returning travelers were forced to isolate for three weeks. Authorities have not yet determined how the virus made its way into the general population.

Israel and Egypt imposed a crippling blockade on Gaza after Hamas seized power from rival Palestinian forces in 2007. Israel, which has fought three wars and countless smaller battles with Hamas since the takeover, says the closures are needed to prevent the militants from importing and manufacturing arms. Critics view it as a form of collective punishment.

The blockade, the periodic fighting and a longstanding feud between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority in the occupied West Bank have devastated the local economy, which suffers from roughly 50 percent unemployment.

In recent weeks, Hamas-linked groups have sent incendiary balloons and rockets into Israel in a campaign aimed at pressuring it to ease restrictions and allow large-scale development projects. In response, Israel launched airstrikes targeting Hamas military infrastructure, sealed off Gazas fishing zone and closed its sole commercial crossing. That forced Gazas only power plant to shut down for lack of fuel.

Most Gazans now get just four hours of electricity a day, leaving them without refrigeration, air conditioning or electric fans for hours on end as temperatures hover around 90 degrees Fahrenheit.

Eissas wife, Majda, says its unbearable. They struggle to sleep at night because of the heat and humidity. Her daughters sleep on the tile floor because its cooler. They change rooms, they open and close windows, trying to catch the occasional breeze.

The water pump in their building runs on electricity, so the taps run dry when the power goes out.

California officials brace for third wave, fueled by young people, essential workers

SAN FRANCISCO Even as California finally begins to see declines in both COVID-19 deaths and hospitalizations, health officials and experts are preparing for a potential third surge of coronavirus cases fueled by two groups that already have been hit hard: low-wage essential workers and young people.

The summer spike in COVID-19 has started to ease, and governments soon will need to consider how they might begin to reopen the economy further. Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to outline his plans Friday.

Californias first effort at reopening was disastrous, with the springs worst weekly death counts doubling to nearly 1,000 during the summer. Last weeks total fell to about 900.

There already are warning signs about what the fall may bring.

Even though most college campuses remain closed, there have been outbreaks recently, at USC and UC Berkeley for example, tied to fraternities. Large outbreaks persist at workplaces staffed by low-income employees, working in jobs like garment manufacturing and food processing that are largely staffed by Latinos.

A new surge in the pandemic is far from a certainty but experts said its essential that California learn from the mistakes of the last reopening. Of the more than 12,600 California COVID-19 deaths so far, more than 8,800 have been reported since Memorial Day, around the time the economy began to reopen and some people got back to old routines.

Where Im worried that were going to see a ton of transmission is in middle schools, high schools and colleges, said Dr. George Rutherford, UC San Francisco epidemiologist and infectious diseases expert. We all saw the disastrous openings at the University of North Carolina, Notre Dame, Michigan State and a couple weeks earlier in high schools in Georgia and other places. I think thats really where a lot of the action is going to go on.

Rutherford and others also have concerns about Latino workers and their families, who account for a disproportionate share of COVID-19 cases and deaths in California and will be placed at even greater risk when the economy reopens further. Businesses that employ low-income essential workers have come under scrutiny for their health and safety practices.

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Four people at RNC in Charlotte test positive for virus

CHARLOTTE, N.C. Four people who were at the Republican National Convention in Charlotte have tested positive for the coronavirus, health officials in North Carolinas Mecklenburg County said.

WBTV reported Friday that those who tested positive at the event were immediately isolated.

Nearly 800 people were tested who attended the event or who helped support it, the county said in a news release. Two attendees and two people supporting the convention tested positive.

County leaders said in a statement that those individuals were immediately issued isolation instructions and any known close contacts were notified and issued quarantine instructions by Mecklenburg County Public Health.

The Charlotte Observer reports that the disclosures come after county health officials raised concerned about a lack of social distancing and mask wearing at a Monday business meeting of the RNC in Charlotte. Strict coronavirus protocols were supposed to be followed.

The public may need to wait weeks for an after-action report detailing the true scope of convention-related infections. But Mecklenburg Public Health Director Gibbie Harris has said the convention posed no infection risk to the greater Charlotte area.

Read the full story here.

A university says it caught a dorms COVID-19 outbreak before it started. Its secret weapon: sewage.

As 5,000 students prepared for move-in day at the University of Arizona this week, the school warned they will periodically be tested for Covid-19. One test, though, doesnt involve a nose swab. The university is regularly screening the sewage from each dorm, searching for traces of the virus.

On Thursday, officials said the technique worked and possibly prevented a sizable outbreak on campus. When a wastewater sample from one dorm came back positive this week, the school quickly tested all 311 people who live and work there and found two asymptomatic students who tested positive. They were quickly quarantined.

With this early detection, we jumped on it right away, tested those youngsters, and got them the appropriate isolation where they needed to be, said Richard Carmona, a former U.S. Surgeon General who is directing the schools reentry task force, in a news conference.

Researchers around the world have been studying whether wastewater testing can effectively catch cases early to prevent Covid-19 clusters. There are programs in Singapore, China, Spain, Canada, and New Zealand, while in the U.S., more than 170 wastewater facilities across 37 states are being tested. Earlier this month, officials in the U.K. announced testing at 44 water treatment facilities. The Netherlands has been collecting samples at 300 sewage treatment plants.

With colleges battling large outbreaks around the country, the University of Arizona which is trying a mix of online and in-person courses elected to test sewage from all 20 residence halls. Other schools are doing the same, including the University of California, San Diego and Syracuse University.

Capital One cuts card limits amid U.S. jobless-aid impasse

Capital One Financial Corp. is cutting borrowing limits on credit cards, reining in its exposure as the U.S. reduces support for millions of unemployed Americans.

The adjustments, which the company said it makes from time to time, set off a swift outcry on social media. Some customers have complained in recent days their limits have been slashed by a third to two-thirds, eroding their ability to borrow in an emergency during a pandemic or potentially hurting their credit scores.

Capital One periodically reviews accounts based on a variety of factors and may make changes to existing credit lines, the company said in an emailed statement. A spokesman declined to specify how many people are affected.

Capital One Financial Corp. signage is displayed outside a bank branch in New York on July 13, 2019.Bloomberg photo by Mark Abramson

Capital One, the third-largest U.S. credit card lender, pioneered the business of offering cards to people with riskier profiles, putting it at the vanguard of the industrys response to downturns. Its management of credit is watched closely as a harbinger of whats to come at other major banks.

Suspense mounted in the credit card industry in recent weeks as Congress and President Donald Trumps administration deadlocked on extending $600 in additional weekly unemployment benefits. That assistance has helped millions of households keep up with debts as the pandemic sent unemployment soaring above 10 percent .

Democrats have sought to continue the payments into 2021 as well as other measures that go significantly beyond what Republicans favor. Trump signed an order Aug. 8 creating a temporary $300 weekly benefit using limited disaster relief funds. That drop means banks face a rising risk that some cardholders wont be able to make ends meet through the pandemic, maxing out credit limits as they spiral into bankruptcy.

Read the full story here.

Wealthy nations applaud their leaders COVID-19 responses. The U.S. and Britain are exceptions.

A poll of 14 developed nations found majorities in most countries were pleased with how their governments had handled the coronavirus pandemic. More than 9 out of 10 respondents in Australia and Denmark said their countries have done a good job.

But there were two countries where a majority thought otherwise: the United States and Britain.

In the United States, 52 percent said they thought their government had done poorly, and 54 percent in Britain said the same.

Among U.S. respondents, 77 percent, a far higher share than in the other countries surveyed, said the pandemic had heightened political divisions. Spain came in next, at 59 percent.

High levels of division are unexpected during a crisis and could affect the fight against the novel virus, experts say.

Typically, a tragic event like this would have the rally around the flag effect and increase social cohesiveness, said Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Read the full story.

Britain prepares ad campaign encouraging return to offices, but many workers want to stay home

After months of encouraging Britons to stay and work at home, the British government has a new message: Get back to your offices, if you dont mind.

A new ad campaign is set to encourage employers to facilitate a safe resumption of office work, even though the number of confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus in the country is rising.

The British government had gradually lifted its advice against working from offices in recent weeks, but to little avail many workers stayed home. Efforts to speed up workers return to offices recently gained new urgency amid warnings that thousands of jobs in the retail and hospitality sectors are at risk unless workers return to city centers and financial districts quickly, according to the Financial Times.

Britons have been more reluctant than their European neighbors to return to offices. A mid-July survey by Morgan Stanley found that only 34 percent of British office workers had returned at that point, compared to more than 80 percent in France.

Britains coronavirus lockdown was imposed and lifted later than in other European countries, explaining some of the differences.

But almost 9 in 10 Britons who worked from home during the coronavirus lockdown recently said they are eager to continue doing so either occasionally or on a permanent basis, a study by Cardiff University and the University of Southampton found, according to the Press Association news agency.

British Transport Secretary Grant Shapps acknowledged Friday that a return to offices at the same time as students head back to school may pose challenges to public transport.

Well be watching those very carefully and looking to, for example, in some cases, run additional services where we see those problems bubble up, Shapps told the BBC from his home.

Merkel warns of pandemic difficulties to come

BERLIN Chancellor Angela Merkel is cautioning that the coronavirus crisis will make life more difficult in the coming months than it has been over the summer and is calling on Germans to continue taking the threat seriously.

Germanys response to the virus is generally viewed as relatively successful, but the country has seen a pickup in new infections in recent weeks, as have many others in Europe.

Merkel said Friday: We have to expect that some things will be even more difficult in the coming months than in the summer.

She said it is important to keep infections down as people increasingly meet indoors.

She told reporters in Berlin that we will have to keep living with the virus.

The long-time German leader said she had three priorities, including ensuring that children can continue access education despite the pandemic, ensuring economic revival, and maintaining social cohesion at a time when many in society are suffering hardship.

In India, virus continues to rage

NEW DELHI India has recorded another high of 77,266 new coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, raising the countrys total to more than 3.38 million reported cases.

Nearly 47 percent of Indias virus cases were detected this month alone.

The Health Ministry on Friday also reported 1,057 deaths for a total of 61,529.

India has been recording more than 60,000 new infections per day for nearly three weeks. Indias previous highest daily count was 75,760 on Wednesday.

With up to 900,000 tests every day, Indias cumulative tests reached 39 million on Thursday, the ministry said.

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The Latest: Wealthy nations applaud their leaders' COVID-19 responses. The U.S. and Britain are exceptions. - Press Herald

San Diego-Based Phamatech Will Expand COVID-19 Testing To Weekdays – KPBS

August 29, 2020

Credit: Phamatech

Above: Drive-up COVID-19 testing at Phamatech global headquarters in this undated photo.

The San Diego-based medical technology company Phamatech Laboratory and Diagnostics Inc. announced Friday it is expanding its COVID-19 testing services to seven days a week for the general public in San Diego.

Phamatech launched weekend testing services in July and received such an overwhelmingly positive response that the decision was made to also provide testing on weekdays, according to a company statement, .

"There remains a huge shortage for testing sites and a major lag in test results in the region," said Thomas Aucoin, vice president of Phamatech. "By expanding our (polymerase chain reaction) testing services to include weekdays, we hope to continue to help the community's need for increased local testing and help families make informed decisions as they return to work and school."

The company's testing services are now available to the public by appointment weekdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. and weekends from 9 a.m. to noon. Same-day appointments and drive-up and park service, where individuals drive up to a secured area and stay in their vehicles throughout the testing process, are available during weekdays.

Individuals can register online for tests, which are given at Phamatech's global headquarters at 15175 Innovation Drive.

Enrollees are required to fill in an online registration form and pay in advance when scheduling. Medicare and Medicaid insurance holders may qualify for free testing.

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San Diego-Based Phamatech Will Expand COVID-19 Testing To Weekdays - KPBS

Rapid Covid-19 antigen tests that cost $1 exist. Why cant we get them? – Vox.com

August 29, 2020

To get the US pandemic under control, a growing number of health and medical experts are making a clarion call for an additional testing approach to Covid-19.

What we need, they argue, are at-home rapid tests that look for antigens, proteins the live virus makes. These kits would allow anyone to test themselves for the coronavirus any time (and anywhere) for between $1 and $5, and get results in about 15 minutes. No doctors, labs, expensive machines, or special chemicals required.

I see these [antigen] tests as a solution thats literally sitting in front of us, says Michael Mina, an epidemiologist at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, who has led an effort to get these rapid tests authorized by the Food and Drug Administration. We could be getting massive outbreaks down to nothing. ... Its a no-brainer to me.

Back in April, Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, actually called for just this sort of solution in an interview on Meet the Press. We have to have a breakthrough innovation in testing, she said. We have to be able to detect antigen.

Several small companies have been developing these simple tests, and the conglomerate 3M is working with MIT on another one. (The new BinaxNOW test from Abbott, authorized August 26, is different it requires a health professional to administer it, and the patient must have symptoms to get a prescription.)

And some of these at-home tests are ready to go. But they have been sitting on the shelf, unused, for months. Why?

The holdup is that rapid, over-the-counter antigen tests are not nearly as sensitive to the coronavirus as the molecular PCR (polymerase chain reaction) tests currently used for most Covid-19 testing. In fact, by PCR standards, some at-home antigen tests might catch only half or a third of people who test positive on a PCR test.

But thats because theyre looking for different things in different ways. A PCR test, designed to diagnose an individual with infection, can catch very low levels of viral material before or after a person spreads the virus. An over-the-counter antigen test, meanwhile, relies on high levels of the virus to be able to detect it. These high levels, though, also happen to coincide with when a person is most likely to transmit the virus to others.

The antigen test is maximally sensitive at the same time that you are maximally infectious, says David Paltiel, a professor of public health and health policy at the Yale School of Public Health. The antigen test is picking up the infections I want. Because I dont care about infections, I care about infectiousness.

Since at-home antigen tests would be fast and cheap, they could allow people to test themselves regularly. Currently, PCR testing is relatively expensive (about $100) and often experiences processing delays that hamstring efforts to stop transmission.

PCR tests sensitivity, however, is the current benchmark by which the FDA judges new tests for emergency authorization.

This pre-pandemic framework, Mina and others argue, is a problem as we look for the most effective tools to fight the coronavirus right now. So they are calling for a new way to evaluate these tests, one based in public health terms rather than individual diagnostic ones in other words, widely accessible tests that are well tuned to find those who are most likely to spread the virus.

Lets take a look at how and why this potential solution has gotten sidelined in the pandemic battle and what might be done to get these tests off companies shelves and out to the public.

To understand the stalemate around antigen tests, its helpful to first understand what they are, how they differ from classic PCR tests, and the trajectory of coronavirus infections.

First: An antigen test looks for a particular protein from a live virus. (Not to be confused with an antibody test, which finds immune cells your body has made after mounting a defense against the virus.) These tests need a lot of viral material to generate a positive result.

Second: A PCR test looks for the viruss genetic material its RNA making copies of itself until it reaches a detectable level. As a result, it has a fairly low (although not perfect) false-negative rate, or the proportion of time it would tell someone who has the virus that they dont.

Finally: One of this new coronaviruss superpowers is its ability to spread from people before they start to experience symptoms. In fact, people tend to carry the most live virus the day or so before they begin feeling sick, and the amount tends to quickly trail off in the several days after symptom onset.

So proponents of at-home antigen testing say that PCR tests, while useful in determining whether an individual is infected with Covid-19, are actually a poor tool in finding people who are most likely to spread the virus. Thats because PCR tests are so sensitive, they are excellent at picking up traces of the virus even after someone has beat it back and is no longer infectious.

Thomas Tsai, a health policy expert at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public health, compares the two types of testing this way: PCR tests are reactive tests, usually used for people who either have symptoms, a close contact with the virus, or other reason to think they are likely to have caught it. Rapid, widespread antigen tests are proactive tests, designed to find cases before they spread the virus more widely.

And as the Center for Evidence-Based Medicine noted earlier this month, while an infectious stage may last a week or so because inactivated RNA degrades slowly over time, it may still be detected many weeks after infectiousness has dissipated.

To look a little bit deeper at how this works, an August 7 preprint report which hasnt been peer reviewed proposes that people with 10,000 copies of the virus detected in their airways are unlikely to spread the virus to someone else, even with sustained contact (according to their models, it would happen about 0.002 percent of the time). Once that viral load climbs to 10 million copies (which happens quickly, potentially in about a day), they have about a 40 percent chance of transmitting it to a close contact and about 80 percent chance at 100 million viral copies (its worth noting that when they first reach this level they still might not have any symptoms).

By the time someone has had Covid-19 symptoms for several days (which might currently be about the time they receive results from a PCR test), however, the amount of virus in their system has likely waned to the point of actually being less transmissible. As the authors of the study note, transmission after the first week of infection is quite rare.

At that point, says Mina, its more likely that they just have residual [virus] RNA hanging about. So although many of these people would get a positive PCR test and a negative at-home antigen test they are much less likely to transmit the virus than someone who feels fine now but will develop symptoms in a day or two.

The PCR is being fooled all the time, Paltiel says. The PCR is just picking up strands of viral junk. If your goal is to slow an outbreak, he notes, this sort of data is not actually that useful. Outbreak control is all about figuring out whos actually spreading this stuff.

This could also help explain why so many people continue to get positive PCR test results weeks after getting over most of their symptoms. One small JAMA study, for example, found that one in six former Covid-19 patients with no symptoms tested positive for the virus via PCR test four to 24 days after being discharged from the hospital. As an author of a commentary about that paper noted about these long-tail positive test results, the clinical significance and infectivity are minimal. These PCR tests likely are responding to noninfective RNA fragments and do not represent detection of viable virus.

Antigen tests, however, need a much higher level of the virus to register a positive result because they dont rely on multiplying their target.

This, experts argue, make them well matched for finding people with Covid-19 at precisely their most infectious points rather than potentially long after symptoms have arrived and infectiousness has faded, as is more likely now with the long delays in PCR results and contact tracing. As Paltiel describes it, the concept is pretty simple: The more viruses around your airway, the more likely you are to be a risk to others.

According to an analysis from the June preprint (on which Mina was a co-author), this crucial time period is precisely where the antigen test is most sensitive: detecting viral load at around 10,000 copies, which is just before someones infectiousness skyrockets. PCR tests, on the other hand, can pick up about 1,000 copies of the virus, which gives them about a days head start at finding the virus. Although with a lag of more than a day in returning results, that benefit is lost.

To put it in other terms, these tests could be superspreading detectors, Mina says, locating many of those who would otherwise go on to unknowingly infect many other people before they know they have the virus.

Their whole goal is to capture the 90 percent of people who might be transmitting the virus, Mina says. So if they were to be evaluated in this population those with high levels of the virus he says, the sensitivity for these tests would soar from 30 or 50 percent (as measured against PCR) up to 95 percent. (They also have very low false-positive rates, in which they would tell someone they had the virus when they actually didnt.)

Another selling point to antigen tests, proponents argue, is that they would give people their results much faster than PCR tests. Since delays of more than a day or so in getting PCR results back make containment and tracing much less effective, being able to have results back in 15 minutes or so would be a vast improvement.

Because these tests would be fast and affordable, people could also test frequently, which could help overcome worry about the tests being less sensitive than PCR especially in the very small window early in an infection when a PCR test might catch the virus but an antigen test wouldnt.

And such frequent testing would be far superior to the still relatively rare PCR testing that were currently doing, Paltiel says. Of all the variables that we control, the frequency of screening is the most important, he says. Even if the antigen-based test only caught half of all cases (regardless of infectiousness level), he says, if its between a test that is missing 50 percent [but rapid and easy] and a test that is getting everyone that is so expensive or so cumbersome or has such a long turnaround time that it takes a week, Ill take whats behind door No. 1.

In the June preprint study, the researchers found the sensitivity of a test made little difference in the rate at which it could bring viral transmission down. For example, running either of these tests, PCR or at-home antigen testing, on a population weekly could lower the spread of the virus by about 60 percent, they posit.

So, Mina suggests, we shouldnt just be asking what level of sensitivity a test has, but rather, what its sensitive to. PCR tests are great at finding traces of the coronavirus but, he says, its going to have a 0 percent sensitivity to detect elephants. And if what we want is to start finding elephants or people who are most infectious we should look for new testing options, he argues.

One of the FDAs essential responsibilities is to make sure dangerous medications, ineffective vaccines, or misleading diagnostic tests dont make it to US consumers. So it applies rigorous standards to make sure new products are reliable before they are allowed on the market.

And the FDA has applied this same rubric when it has evaluated new tests for the coronavirus this year.

Tests are still being considered first and foremost as diagnostic tools, Mina says. This is evident in how the FDA has required antigen tests to perform at PCR-levels in detecting traces of the virus in peoples systems, he notes. For example, a new test might need to detect the virus in 80 or 90 percent of emergency room patients whove received a positive PCR test.

So when you compare the numbers and see a test that catches half or a third of the positive cases a PCR test does, it makes sense for the FDA to worry about a huge number of Covid-19-positive people thinking they are negative.

And Mina says he gets that. If Im a doctor, which I am, and I have a patient in front of me, I would want the absolute best and most sensitive molecular test to make sure I dont miss something, he says.

But he is also an epidemiologist. For public health, its totally different. It requires a really different type of thinking. One that targets minimizing spread of the virus among people.

Unfortunately, the FDA just doesnt have that, he says. They dont even have a lens with which to think about it.

And so, he says, theyre still evaluating at-home antigen tests as individual medical diagnostic tools rather than as a virus control tool at the population level.

The FDA has already authorized four antigen-based tests, including ones from Quidel (in May), BD Veritor (in July), LuminaDX (in August), and the new one from Abbott. To meet the FDAs current sensitivity standards, however, the first three of these use proprietary machines to read results. (Some of these machines are now being allocated by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to nursing homes around the country.)

But an over-the-counter antigen test, the sort that Mina and others are advocating for, simply cant be authorized under the current standards.

This gets at the essential tension between the FDAs individual-based medical diagnostic framework and the broader public health needs of the pandemic. And, says Tsai, We really need to shift gears.

Beyond the sensitivity question, the FDA and others also have hesitations about these sorts of tests being done outside of the health care setting.

Current Covid-19 tests require a health care professional to order them and provide the results, allowing for them to give patients medical advice. If people are taking these tests on their own at home or before entering a business, a nurse wont be on hand, for example, to advise them to isolate if necessary or take other steps to prevent spread.

Due to the lack of healthcare professional supervision, FDA believes it is important for over-the-counter non-lab diagnostic tests to have a low rate of false negative results, Emma Spaulding, a spokesperson for the FDA wrote to Vox in an email. For example, an individual with a false negative result from an OTC diagnostic test may be less likely to quarantine despite symptoms, putting others in the community at risk,

This is one reason they are recommending such tests catch 90 percent of the PCR-positive cases, she says. They would lower this to 80 percent if the tests required a prescription and were done under the supervision of a health care worker (such as via telemedicine).

Others worry about individual compliance. Rebecca Lee Smith, an epidemiologist at the University of Illinois, notes that this sort of testing would probably be most readily adopted by people who are already putting in the most effort to avoid catching and spreading Covid-19, such as those regularly wearing masks and practicing physical distancing.

But the people who arent concerned about the virus may not choose to do at-home testing theyre also the people who are not taking the precautions. So the same people we would absolutely want to be checking for the virus, then, would be the people less likely to do it at home.

She also has concerns about at-home tests being used to clear people for work, school, or other activities. If someone needed to produce a negative test result, they could theoretically get someone else to take the test for them but still gain entry to, say, their college classes for the day. That was a point of discussion at her university, where they eventually opted for supervised (rather than collected-at-home) saliva-based PCR testing. We decided that it was more important that we know, for sure, that the person who checked in for testing is the person giving the sample, she says.

Administering these tests out in the community as a way to enter a workplace or a restaurant, for example, could also help alleviate this issue as well as the concern about those with higher chances of contracting the virus not taking the test.

The newly approved Abbott test, BinaxNOW, is a step toward more accessible antigen testing. It doesnt require a machine to read the results and still, according to data presented to the FDA, has a 97 percent specificity level compared with PCR tests. It is also $5 for one test, and the company says they will be able to ship 50 million of them a month this fall.

The downside is it is only available with a prescription, and it needs to be given by a health care professional or other trained individual (such as a pharmacist or workplace health specialist). The test requires a nasal swab and a small amount of specialized chemicals known as reagents. And it is only to be used for people who developed Covid-19 symptoms within the past week, making it inapplicable for broader population-wide screening.

With an over-the-counter test, we might also lose a lot of important public health disease surveillance data. If people are testing positive at home or even in a public setting and not following up with a health care worker or public health department, their case might not get counted or their contacts traced. You would need to have a link back to public health, Smith says. They would also want to get information on the test that was performed so they could properly interpret the results.

This is where our existing PCR testing capacity could run backup. Smith explains that a positive antigen test result could be a trigger to get a PCR test to confirm the infection. It could also possibly reduce the number of PCR tests that are run, potentially speeding up delivery of those results as well.

In a perfect world, Smith says, we would have this cheap, at-home test that anybody could take, as frequently as they want, that would give them a quick result. If there is a reason if they have symptoms, if theyve been exposed, or the at-home test comes back positive then they report for PCR.

Tsai agrees PCR tests would still be important. Its really thinking about how we use the pros and cons of all the different tests in a more comprehensive strategy, he says. Lets put these pieces together.

With over-the-counter antigen tests at a regulatory stalemate in the FDAs current authorization system, experts are spitballing alternative routes to getting these tests to the public.

First and foremost, says Mina, government involvement in authorizing new tests is essential to make sure that those that do reach the market work in the way they are supposed to.

One route for this, he proposes, is a new standard by which the FDA could authorize tests, setting a different benchmark for test sensitivity at levels of the virus that are most likely to be transmissible rather than at very low detectable levels. In other words, he notes, the FDA could adjust their language from looking at sensitivity to the virus broadly to sensitivity during peak infection.

The FDA could also reframe the way it characterizes these tests, he says. Instead of being evaluated as an individual diagnostic test, he says, it would essentially be indicated as a transmission-detecting test ... [or] a public health diagnostic test, where the real reason of doing that diagnostic test is one of public health.

Another option would be to designate these tests as surveillance tools rather than diagnostic tests. Under that category, they fall outside the FDAs purview and would more likely be overseen by the CDC and local health departments.

This plan has a big hitch, though. Surveillance test results are aggregated and are not shared back with the individual taking the test. Diagnostic tests, on the other hand, are those which have results given back to the individual so that they might take a specific action. The latter is, of course, the goal here (to let people know, for example, if they need to start self-isolating).

Its this awful catch-22 that could easily be changed if there was a will, Mina says. There just doesnt seem to be much of a will. Or a regulatory framework for thinking about things differently even in the midst of a pandemic, he says.

The FDA has recently conceded that they would consider authorizing a less sensitive test if it were part of a high-frequency testing plan, with each person being tested multiple times (which they call serial testing), Spaulding says.

This, to Mina and others, seems like a step in the right direction, and he is hoping the FDA will provide more detailed guidance on what this would look like in practice.

But the FDA also notes that it would require an application for this sort of serial testing to include the capacity to manufacture a sufficient supply of tests with which to conduct multiple tests per person, Spaulding says.

Mina suggests that this is an arbitrary ask. For other authorized tests, like those using PCR or machine-based antigen detection, the agency has not required makers to show manufacturing capacity or even the supply chain to turn results around in a certain amount of time (which is a key aspect to slowing transmission of Covid-19). Theyre perfectly fine approving tests that might take a year to return results, but thats a 100 percent useless test, Mina says.

Mina also worries that as some of these companies with at-home antigen tests wait for the government to greenlight them, they will decide to make them more complex to meet the current (PCR-based) requirements for diagnostic viral detection.

He calls this going from the sort of instant coffee model of testing (where anyone can take a test, cheaply, pretty much anywhere) to the Nespresso model (where you need access to a specialized machine to get a result).

And slowdowns in rolling out these machine-based antigen tests are already happening. Both BD and Quidel, two companies making rapid antigen tests, are now facing supply chain issues as they try to fulfill orders for their machines and tests, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Tsai notes that public health officials in Florida have been advised to use the Quidel antigen tests only for symptomatic, older adults. Which, he says, makes sense in targeting those most at-risk for complications from the virus, but in some ways also defeats the purpose of the frequent testing strategy.

Mina has been challenging those who are still on the fence about rapid, at-home antigen testing to say whether, in hindsight, it would have been good to have five months ago.

Almost all of them say, yes, that would have been great. Compared to what has happened, of course it would have been great. Now, he says, were in an almost worse spot today, were hitting up against September and October, when coronaviruses can start spreading like crazy. We have to cut our losses and say, okay, we didnt do it five months ago, but we can do it today.

Like the old tree-planting aphorism: The best time to plant a tree may have been 20 years ago, but the second-best time is now. We could potentially save ourselves from ourselves in the fall. But I dont know if its going to happen, frankly, he says.

Part of that reason, he notes, has to do with our general national mindset. I think Americans, including policymakers, are having a hard time coming to terms with the idea that theres actually something bad happening to us.

Just adding this new type of testing on its own, however, wont be enough to get us out of the pandemic. We cant test our way out of it, Smith says. We also need masks, we need distancing.

But, she says, many presymptomatic and asymptomatic cases are not being detected with our current testing strategy. And those people are able to spread the infection further without knowing it. If we cant identify these cases, we are never going to get out of this.

Katherine Harmon Courage is a freelance science journalist and author of Cultured and Octopus! Find her on Twitter at @KHCourage.

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