Category: Covid-19

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Office furniture sales see spike in Portland in time of COVID-19 – KPTV.com

August 18, 2020

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Office furniture sales see spike in Portland in time of COVID-19 - KPTV.com

Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA Issues Emergency Use Authorization to Yale School of Public Health for SalivaDirect, Which Uses a New Method of…

August 16, 2020

For Immediate Release: August 15, 2020

Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued an emergency use authorization (EUA) to Yale School of Public Health for its SalivaDirect COVID-19 diagnostic test, which uses a new method of processing saliva samples when testing for COVID-19 infection.

The SalivaDirect test for rapid detection of SARS-CoV-2 is yet another testing innovation game changer that will reduce the demand for scarce testing resources, said Assistant Secretary for Health and COVID-19 Testing Coordinator Admiral Brett P. Giroir, M.D. Our current national expansion of COVID-19 testing is only possible because of FDAs technical expertise and reduction of regulatory barriers, coupled with the private sectors ability to innovate and their high motivation to answer complex challenges posed by this pandemic.

Providing this type of flexibility for processing saliva samples to test for COVID-19 infection is groundbreaking in terms of efficiency and avoiding shortages of crucial test components like reagents, said FDA Commissioner Stephen M. Hahn, M.D. Todays authorization is another example of the FDA working with test developers to bring the most innovative technology to market in an effort to ensure access to testing for all people in America. The FDA encourages test developers to work with the agency to create innovative, effective products to help address the COVID-19 pandemic and to increase capacity and efficiency in testing.

SalivaDirect does not require any special type of swab or collection device; a saliva sample can be collected in any sterile container. This test is also unique because it does not require a separate nucleic acid extraction step. This is significant because the extraction kits used for this step in other tests have been prone to shortages in the past. Being able to perform a test without these kits enhances the capacity for increased testing, while reducing the strain on available resources. Additionally, the SalivaDirect methodology has been validated and authorized for use with different combinations of commonly used reagents and instruments, meaning the test could be used broadly in most high-complexity labs.

Yale intends to provide the SalivaDirect protocol to interested laboratories as an open source protocol, meaning that designated laboratories could follow the protocol to obtain the required components and perform the test in their lab according to Yales instructions for use. Because this test does not rely on any proprietary equipment from Yale and can use a variety of commercially available testing components, it can be assembled and used in high-complexity labs throughout the country, provided they comply with the conditions of authorization in the EUA.

This is the fifth test that the FDA has authorized that uses saliva as a sample for testing. Testing saliva eliminates the need for nasopharyngeal swabs, which have also been prone to shortages, and alleviates the patient discomfort associated with these swabs. Since the saliva sample is self-collected under the observation of a healthcare professional, it could also potentially lower the risk posed to healthcare workers responsible for sample collection. While FDA has seen variable performance in tests using saliva, Yale School of Public Health submitted data with its EUA request from which the FDA determined that Yales test meets the criteria for emergency authorization when used to test saliva samples for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19 infection.

The FDA, an agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, protects the public health by assuring the safety, effectiveness, and security of human and veterinary drugs, vaccines and other biological products for human use, and medical devices. The agency also is responsible for the safety and security of our nations food supply, cosmetics, dietary supplements, products that give off electronic radiation, and for regulating tobacco products.

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08/15/2020

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Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: FDA Issues Emergency Use Authorization to Yale School of Public Health for SalivaDirect, Which Uses a New Method of...

How will COVID-19 affect the coming flu season? Scientists struggle for clues – Science Magazine

August 16, 2020

Fearing that a combination of seasonal influenza and COVID-19 will overwhelm hospitals, many countries are stepping up campaigns to increase flu vaccination.

By Kelly ServickAug. 14, 2020 , 4:30 PM

Sciences COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center and the Heising-Simons Foundation.

In March, as the Southern Hemisphere braced for winter flu season while fighting COVID-19, epidemiologist Cheryl Cohen and colleagues at South Africas National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) set up a plan to learn from the double whammy. They hoped to study interactions between seasonal respiratory viruses and SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19. Does infection with one change a persons risk of catching the other? How do people fare when they have both?

But the flu seasonand the answersnever came. NICDs Centre for Respiratory Disease and Meningitis, which Cohen leads, has logged only a single flu case since the end of March. In previous years, the countrys surveillance platforms have documented, on average, about 700 cases during that period, Cohen says. Weve been doing flu surveillance since 1984, and its unprecedented.

Some cases probably got overlooked as clinics temporary closed and people with mild symptoms avoided medical offices and clinics, Cohen says. But I dont believe it possible that weve entirely missed the flu season with all of our [surveillance] programs. Apparently, travel restrictions, school closures, social distancing, and mask wearing have all but stopped flu from spreading in South Africa. Similar stories have emerged from Australia, New Zealand, and parts of South America.

The Northern Hemisphere hopes to be so lucky. Few cases in the south might mean little infection spreading north, says Pasi Penttinen, head of the influenza and respiratory illness program at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). But if lockdowns and social distancing measures arent in place in October, November, and December, flu will spread much more readily than it has in the south, warns virologist John McCauley, director of the Worldwide Influenza Centre at the Francis Crick Institute.

The prospect of a flu season during the coronavirus pandemic is chilling to health experts. Hospitals and clinics already under strain dread a pileup of new respiratory infections, including influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), another seasonal pathogen that can cause serious illness in young children and the elderly. In the United States, where some areas already face long waits for COVID-19 test results, the delays could grow as flu symptoms boost demand. The need to try to rule out SARS-CoV-2 will be intense, says Marc Lipsitch of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Because the Southern Hemisphere has largely been spared, researchers have little evidence about how COVID-19 might influence the course of a flu outbreak. One big concern is coinfectionpeople getting COVID-19 and flu at once, says Ian Barr, deputy director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Reference and Research on Influenza in Melbourne, Australia. Two or three viruses infecting you are normally worse than one, he says.

But the consequences of coinfections with SARS-CoV-2 havent been thoroughly studied. In April, a team at Stanford University found that among 116 people in Northern California who tested positive for the coronavirus in March, 24 also tested positive for at least one other respiratory pathogen, most often rhinoviruses and enteroviruses that cause cold symptoms, as well as RSV. Only one of the patients had influenza, although there likely wasnt much flu circulating so late in the U.S. season, says Stanford pathologist Benjamin Pinsky, a co-author. The study didnt find a difference in outcomes between COVID-19 patients with and without other infections. But it was too small to draw broad conclusions.

COVID-19 control measures dramatically reduced transmission of flu in many Southern Hemisphere countries this season.

FluNet; Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System

To make things more complicated, having one virus can change a persons chance of getting infected with another. Epidemiologist Sema Nickbakhsh and her team at the University of Glasgow have found both positive and negative relationships between different pairs of respiratory viruses, even after adjusting for confounding factors that would cause two viruses to show up concurrently or at separate times, such as theirtendencies to wax and wane with the seasons.Coinfections with flu and other respiratory viruses are relatively rare, Nickbakhsh says, and the interactions her group has documented between flu and other viruses have suggested protective effects. For example, being infected with one type of flu virus, influenza A, seemed to reduce the chance of also having a rhinovirus, the researchers reported in 2019. (The mechanism behind this effect isnt yet clear.)

Nickbakhsh is more concerned about RSV, which her team found to have positive interactions with CoV-OC43, a coronavirus species of the same genus as SARS-CoV-2. Its possible, she says, that having COVID-19 could increase a persons susceptibility to RSV, or vice versa. Pinning down possible interactions between COVID-19 and other infections requires a large number of patient samples tested for SARS-CoV-2 and other respiratory viruses. Rapid, dual diagnostic tests will be important for both research and treatment decisions, says Benjamin Singer, a pulmonary and critical care physician at Northwestern University. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has issued emergency use authorizations for fluCOVID-19 combination tests developed by Qiagen, BioFire Diagnostics, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The impending winter in the Northern Hemisphere has also brought new attention to flu vaccines, which may keep hospital admissions down as health systems grapple with the pandemic. Flu vaccine manufacturers including GlaxoSmithKline and AstraZeneca have announced production increases for the 202021 season. CDCexpects to have a record-setting 194 million to 198 milliondosesa 20 milliondose increase from last year. Last month, the United Kingdoms National Health Service announced it would expand the age groups eligible for a free flu shot among both children and adults.

But what if the flu season is minor? Pouring resources into an immunization campaign necessarily subtracts from COVID-19 responses, says Penttinen, whose team provides guidance to European member states on flu vaccination. Still, rates of vaccination have long been suboptimal in Europe, he adds. (Rates among older adultsthe target population for the flu vaccine in many countriesrange from 2% to 72.8%, depending on the country, according tothe most recent ECDC data, released in 2018.) I think the tendency is to say, We should err on the side of cautionputting efforts into at least maintaining if not increasing the influenza vaccine coverage, Penttinen says.

The Southern Hemisphere dodging the flu bullet might create even one more blind spot: Less circulating influenza virus means fewer clues about which genetic variants are most prevalent and likely to contribute to the next flu season. The current record-low season creates a genetic bottleneck, McCauley says, and the flu variants that survive will be presumably the fittest ones, he says. Its not clear what variants will dominate when flu, inevitably, rears its head again.

Barr and McCauley, whose institutions are two of the six that collect and analyze flu samples to decide the composition of the next years vaccine, say theyve received fewer patient samples than in previous years.

Insufficient data could lead to a less effective vaccine for the Southern Hemisphere in 2021. The contents of that cocktail must be decided by the end of September. Its a little unsettling, Barr says, but well do the best we can with the viruses that we have.

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Overcrowded, overpriced and overwhelmed. The UK’s Covid-19 staycation nightmare – CNN

August 16, 2020

(CNN) Beaches strewn with waste, wild campers destroying fragile habitats, warnings from an increasingly overstretched Coastguard, unaffordable accommodations. What was supposed to have been a Great British summer has, for many, become a staycation nightmare.

Brits have also been permitted to venture abroad, with those traveling to countries identified on a coronavirus "safe" list exempted from quarantine on their return.

But with Spain, which usually attracts 18 million British tourists each year, hastily withdrawn from the list because of a virus resurgence and France, another popular destination, being dropped from the list this weekend, the demand for UK holidays has skyrocketed.

Johnson, who himself is said to be planning a two-week stay in Scotland, has advised people to visit "peerless, wonderful, superlative places in the UK," rather than heading abroad.

The result has been clogged roads, emergency incidents on the most popular stretches of coastline, a rise in travel scams and soaring prices for accommodation.

Leave no trace

A fire engine struggles through the crowds on the promenade at Bournemouth in June.

Finnbarr Webster/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images

Even before peak summer was underway, there were signs of trouble.

When the last weekend of June saw the UK swelter in a 30 C (86 F) heatwave, an estimated half a million people headed to Dorset, a coastal region in southern England, as lockdown restrictions frayed.

Emergency services in the Dorset resort town of Bournemouth declared a major incident. The local council issued a record 558 parking fines. A massive 33 tons of waste were collected along the Dorset coastline, including human excrement and soiled diapers.

Further east, in the popular coastal city of Brighton, a place similarly blighted by alarmingly sized crowds leaving behind piles of trash, concerned residents began taking matters into their own hands.

"I finally snapped watching the rubbish and bins overflow," says Coral Evans. She's founded a group, Leave No Trace Brighton, that engages with locals on Instagram to coordinate near-daily beach cleanup operations.

"Brighton has always had an issue with beach visitors leaving rubbish, but at the end of June, the seafront became a destination for people coming out of lockdown," she says. "As the masses descended, the rubbish being discarded on the beach increased exponentially."

Trash left on the beach at Bournemouth after a busy day.

Finnbarr Webster/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images

On June 27, the council's beach cleaners collected 11 tons of waste between the waterfront's two piers, a stretch of around half a mile.

Whenever there's a sunny day, waste on the beach is a "perpetual problem," says Evans.

Because of its proximity to London, Brighton has around 12 million people just one hour away from its famous beach.

But on weekends throughout July and August, the city's council was forced to issue warnings telling anyone who wasn't already in the city not to travel there.

Trains were so busy that social distancing wasn't possible and crowd control measures had to be introduced at the train station. New spot fines of 150 (nearly $200) for leaving waste have been introduced, but Evans says it's hard for the council to enforce.

"With thousands of beach visitors everyday, and only a handful of environment enforcement officers, they really are up against it."

High prices

People throng the streets of St Ives, a seaside tourist town in the UK region of Cornwall.

Hugh Hastings/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images

As staycation demand rose, scammers also swooped in to try to take advantage of those looking for a break close to home.

UK Finance, the country's banking industry body, warned in June that fake listings for motorhomes and caravans were being used to try to target unsuspecting holidaymakers. Fake PayPal accounts were reportedly used to dupe consumers out of cash.

More common complaints, however, have focused on a lack of availability of accommodation, as well as hefty price increases.

Business consultant Lizzie Benton said she had planned to take her family on vacation to Norfolk, a rural region in eastern England that typically offers uncrowded coastlines.

"When we tried looking for Airbnb places to stay, many of them were completely booked up until October," she says.

"When we looked at hotels, we found again that either they were fully booked or had driven up their prices. One place where we stayed last year had gone up by more than 50 per person."

It's not just those looking to book this year that have been affected by price rises.

Jason Parker and his family were all shielding up until early August, meaning they could not leave home until then.

"Due to mistrust and what we have seen on the news, we canceled all our holidays this year, but we have seen the cottage we were going to stay in this year has increased their price from 480 to 950 for the same week next year!"

There's also widespread concern about people traveling last minute in the hope of finding a cheap deal and lots of vacancies.

"We're saying very strongly, 'book accommodation before you come'," says Malcolm Bell, CEO of Visit Cornwall. "We're not saying we're full, but you've got to book."

'Wild camping'

Scotland has seen an influx of camper vans and tourists since lifting restrictions.

Paul Campbell/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images

While demand for self-catering accommodation and hotels has risen, there has been even greater interest in camping.

In the Lake District, a national park in northwestern England, authorities spoke to 200 people wild camping on one night in late June, including 20 people having a party on the summit of Catbells, one of its most popular mountains.

One park ranger even revealed he'd had to move on campers who had pitched tents in a dry reservoir on the evening a storm was forecast. As on beaches, campers were found to have left behind litter, with some even smashing up wooden fences for firewood.

"It is tolerated in high areas in national parks and by coasts and rivers, as long as you do it 'properly.' That means arriving late, leaving early, taking everything with you including your rubbish and being respectful of others."

Smith says the scenes from throughout the summer in the Lake District and parts of Cornwall are not, in fact, wild camping, which involves taking minimal kit and going to remote places. Rather, it's people camping on roadsides with large tents, stoves and environmentally damaging disposable barbecues, with some leaving everything behind.

An abandoned face mask on Brighton's beach.

Dan Kitwood/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images

"What we've seen is basically fly tipping (illegal waste dumping) with camping equipment," she says.

Stuart Burgess from government woodland management body Forestry England has dealt with illegal camping in Kielder Forest in northern England. He outlined a series of similar problems that his organization has encountered this summer.

"There's been damage to the forests and individual trees, including digging for campfires and toilets to uncontrolled fires from campfires or barbecues.

"Pollution and harm to wildlife can come from litter, including discarded equipment, as well as people openly going to the toilet. Irresponsible use of alcohol and drugs can make matters worse, including driving vehicles in the forest. It's also important to remember the worry and disturbance it can cause to rural communities."

For all these issues, Smith says at the heart of the problem is a lack of clear communication from politicians.

"People are told by the government to go to these places and spend money, that it's their duty to help save the economy, but they're traveling with no guidance," she says.

"Rather than barrack people, we should empower them and explain why that kind of camping is bad, why we should look after places, and why it's better to take minimal kit and go really far away. There are so many mixed messages, people are stir crazy and want to get out, but the government needs to say how to do it and do it responsibly."

Dealing with huge crowds

Crowds descend to Durdle Door beach in Dorset.

Finnbarr Webster/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images

The communities that Burgess mentions, especially in popular tourist areas, are also understandably wary about the influx of visitors causing a rise in Covid-19 cases.

This is particularly true in Cornwall, which has seen thousands of visitors since lockdown rules were relaxed.

"We're the third lowest place for Covid in the country," says Malcolm Bell of Visit Cornwall. "That actually makes people more nervous," he adds, referring to locals concerned about infection rates rising.

While Bell says visitor numbers are down about 30,000 compared with an average year, there are still around 150,000 visitors in Cornwall on any one day. That's on top of a local population of 530,000, many of whom have not gone away on holiday.

"Because it was so quiet during lockdown, it's been a bit of a shock," he says. "Normally you'd build up numbers slowly from March through to April and May. Whereas what happened was we went from 0-90 in three seconds."

Bell adds that with social distancing measures in place, places can seem busier as visitors and locals try to maintain physical distancing.

The places where it's still possible to escape

Pembrokeshire's coastline is among less crowded destinations.

Courtesy Robert Haandrikman/Creative Commons/Flickr

Despite this, there are pockets of the UK where it's possible to have a quiet and uncrowded break. Even in Cornwall.

"We've got about 400 beaches, but there are about 10 famous ones," says Bell. "Now's not the time, certainly at the weekends, to be heading to them. Save your Instagram shots for next year. We keep wanting to get across about the sheer number of beaches. If you're able to walk 15 minutes downhill, you can find plenty of space."

Bell is also trying to push Cornwall as a winter destination. He says he's concerned that many people are trying to cram a break in before a potential second national lockdown, a prospect the UK government has downplayed despite new cases hovering around 1,000 a day.

Cornwall will be quiet in the colder months, Bell adds, meaning plenty of room to spread out and good prices too.

Tour operators are also trying to push far-off destinations within the UK as an alternative to more exotic climes. Much Better Adventures, which usually offers trips to the Carpathian Mountains in Romania and epic hikes in the Moroccan Atlas, has refocused its attention on small, socially distant trips within the UK.

"We're seeing that of all of our remote UK adventure holidays, the most popular at the moment are those in Wales and the Scottish Highlands and Islands," says founder Sam Bruce.

"The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park in Wales is fantastic for hiking, kayaking and wild camping, as are the many lochs and glens in Scotland, and if you really want to get away from it all, you can't get much more off-grid than a castaway weekend on an uninhabited Scottish Island."

There's also been a push toward more local, low carbon breaks, using innovative travel such as bike-packing. This involves strapping a small tent and camping equipment to a bike and heading off into the countryside close to home, perfect for younger and fitter types not too keen on sitting in the car on a sweltering motorway or braving the crowds on trains to the south coast.

"Bike-packing enables people to find hidden spots and get away from the crowds, while keeping fit and traveling with everything they need," says Luke Green from Red Original, an outdoor equipment company. Green says that they've seen a surge in interest following a growth in bike sales during lockdown, with reports of epic trips around the quiet lanes of the Isle of Wight.

"It's becoming such an accessible means of travel as much of the kit is so much smaller -- meaning a tent packs down neatly into a small backpack and other kit has multiple uses, so you don't need masses of stuff.

"People don't necessarily have the space or the money to buy loads of different products so they want half a dozen things that are fit for many different purposes, like a bike pouch that doubles up as a waterproof storage unit for keeping mobiles, keys and wallets completely safe and watertight even when submerged in a meter of water."

While such activities are certainly niche, they do show that escaping the crowds without having to board a flight and risk 14 days of self-isolation when getting back to the UK is possible.

One thing's for certain though -- heading to the UK's south coast or its busier national parks is unlikely to afford the sense of escape that so many crave after months of sitting at home growing bored.

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Overcrowded, overpriced and overwhelmed. The UK's Covid-19 staycation nightmare - CNN

What does the COVID-19 summer surge mean for your cats and dogs? – Science Magazine

August 16, 2020

An employee takes a cats temperature at a cat caf in Bangkok.

By David GrimmAug. 14, 2020 , 4:00 PM

Sciences COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center and the Heising-Simons Foundation.

Last month, the first U.S. dog to definitively test positive for COVID-19 died in New York City. The caninea German shepherd named Buddylikely had lymphoma, but the case served as a reminder that pets, too, are at risk.

Now, COVID-19 cases are surging in some areas of the United States, including in places that had largely escaped the virus in the spring, and some countries around the world are grappling with renewed outbreaks. People are also wondering and worrying about their pets.

Scientists are, too. It remains unclear, for example, how often cats and dogs become infected with the virus, what their symptoms are, and how likely they are to pass it along to other animals, including us. Yet veterinarians are hard on the case, and a handful of studies are starting to provide some answers. Experts have some concrete advice based on what we know so far.

Federal health agencies and veterinary experts have said since the beginning of the pandemic that pets are unlikely to pose a significant risk to people. Hard evidence from controlled studies for this assertion was lackingand still isbut everything scientists have seen so far suggests cats and dogs are highly unlikely to pass SARS-CoV-2 to humans. Theres a lot greater risk of going to the grocery store than hanging out with your own animal, says Scott Weese, a veterinarian at the University of Guelphs Ontario Veterinary College who specializes in emerging infectious diseases and who has dissected nearly every study on COVID-19 and pets on his blog.

Indeed, pets are much more likely to get the virus from humans than the other way around. Almost all pets that have tested positive have been in contact with infected humans, says Jane Sykes, chief veterinary medical officer at the University of California, Davis, and a founder of the International Society for Companion Animal Infectious Diseases, which is providing COVID-19 information to both pet owners and veterinarians. A genetic study of the viral sequences in the first two dogs known to have COVID-19 indicates they caught it from their owners. Even tigers and lions infected at New York Citys Bronx Zoo in April appear to have contracted the virus from humans.

But some researchers caution that this finding may be due in part to limited testing: Most of the pets that have been evaluated got the tests because they lived with humans who had already tested positive. Its a stacked deck, says Shelley Rankin, a microbiologist at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, whose lab is part of the U.S. Food and Drug Administrations Veterinary Laboratory Investigation and Response Network.

Still, most researchers think pets pose little risk to peopleand to other pets as well. A few studies have shown that cats can transmit SARS-CoV-2 to other cats, but all were conducted in an artificial laboratory setting. And, like many COVID-19 studies in humans, most studies are preprints that have yet to be published in peer-reviewed journals. Whats more, Sykes notes there have been multiple reports of households where one pet tested positive and others didnt. Everything weve learned so far suggests that its unlikely that pets are a significant source of transmission, she says.

Because pet testing remains rare, its unclear how many cats and dogs have been infected with SARS-CoV-2. A serological preprint published last month indicated that 3% to 4% of cats and dogs in Italy had been exposed to the virus at the height of the pandemic therecomparable to the rate among people.

A girl and her dog don masks in Regensburg, Germany.

But even if the numbers are really that high, there hasnt been a concomitant uptick in symptoms. The Seattle-based Trupanion, which provides health insurance for more than half a million dogs and cats in North America and Australia, says it has not seen an increase in respiratory claimsor any other type of health claimsince the pandemic began. No big trends are jumping out, says Mary Rothlisberger, the companys vice president of analytics, even when she looked at pandemic hot spots. Two recent studies have also shown that cats, at least, areunlikely toexhibit symptoms. My gut sense is that [the disease is] much more minor than were seeing in people, Sykes says.

That could meanpets are silent transmitters of the virus, as some scientists have suggested, but so far theres no direct evidence for this.

Several pet tests are available, but they arent widely used because the priority has been on human testing. Agencies like the United States Department of Agriculture havecautioned against routine testingof cats and dogs.

Even if your pet does test positive, Weese says, What are you going to do with the results? If your dog or cat has COVID-19, its probably because you do too, he says. It doesnt change anything for the pet or the family. And because there arent any drugs for the disease, he says, We wouldnt prescribe anything for the pet.

Whether it comes to taking your dog to a dog park or petting an outdoor cat, thestandard advice still holds: Wear a mask, wash your hands, and social distance. If you are not taking precautions you are putting both yourself and your animal at risk, Rankin says. But, she says, If you are a responsible pet owner, then it is probably safe to say that your animals risk [of infection] is lower than yours.

Weese agrees that people should be more concerned about other humans than about pets. The risk from people present at dog parks or vet clinics is much higher than the risk from dogs at those locations, he says.

Researchers are just beginning to understand how companion animals play into the pandemic. The pet studies so far are all part of a puzzle were still trying to put together, Sykes says.

And theyre preliminary. Almost every preprint I have seen is flawed in some way, says Rankin, who dings small sample sizes, incomplete data, and a lack of vigorous testing. That doesnt necessarily invalidate the results, but she and others would like to see more robust studies.

Sykes and Weese, for example, want more research done in the home. That could give scientists a better sense of how likely pets are to transmit the virus to other pets, how long pets remain contagious, and whatif anyclinical signs of COVID-19 show up.

Rankin is part of a project to do what she calls full-on epidemiology of the complete medical backgrounds, including any COVID-19 cases, of 2000 pets that have been seen at her vet school for various reasons, or just for routine checkups. The hope is that such an approach will weed out some of the biases of previous studiessuch as those that only looked at pets in COVID-19positive homesand get a better sense of the true risk factors for the disease.

Sykes and Weese are involved in similar endeavors. Weese also hopes to investigate whether pets, especially feral and outdoor cats, pose a risk to wildlife. If we want to eradicate this virus, he says, we need to know everywhere it might be.

Other researchers are exploring whether drugs that treat other coronaviruses in catscould also combat COVID-19in both pets and people. Answering these questions isnt just important for companion animal health, Sykes says. It could help us, too.

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What does the COVID-19 summer surge mean for your cats and dogs? - Science Magazine

COVID-19 in SD: 94 new positive cases; Death toll rises to 152; Active cases at 1,082 – KELOLAND.com

August 16, 2020

PIERRE, S.D. (KELO) The death toll from COVID-19 in South Dakota rose by two to 152, according to the latest report from the South Dakota Department of Health.

One of the two deaths occurred in the 60-69 year old age range, while the second death occurred in the 80+ age range. Both victims were men, one from Lake County and the other from Pennington County.

There were 94 new positive coronavirus cases announced on Saturday, which brought the states total to 10,118, up from Friday (10,024).

In South Dakota, there have been 8,884 recoveries, 111 more than Friday (8,773). A recovered person is someone who has been released from isolation after 10 days have passed since symptoms began.

Active cases are now at 1,082, down from Friday (1,101).

There are 63 current South Dakotans in the hospital, down two from Friday (65). Total hospitalizations are at 913, up from Friday (903).

Total persons testing negative are at 117,331, up from Friday (115,990).

There were 1,435 tests reported on Saturday.

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Your Guide To Coronavirus

KELOLAND News is covering the COVID-19 pandemic. This is your guide to everything you need to know to prepare. We also have the latest stories from across the globe feeding into this page.

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COVID-19 in SD: 94 new positive cases; Death toll rises to 152; Active cases at 1,082 - KELOLAND.com

To Talk About Racial Disparity and COVID-19, We Need to Talk About Class – Jacobin magazine

August 16, 2020

As a great deal of recent public discourse makes clear, black Americans have been disproportionately impacted by the fallout from the coronavirus pandemic. Though hampered by limited and fragmented data, recent public health reports suggest that in eight states, blacks are at least three times more likely to be infected by coronavirus than their white counterparts, and nationally, blacks are twice as likely to die from such infections. County-level and city-level data have typically suggested similarly troubling trends. These realities largely mirror patterns of racial disparity that exist on a wide range of adverse social indicators.

As someone who studies gun violence, the recent discourse on coronavirus disparities has called to my mind long-standing narratives around gun violence and black men. While typically well intended, these disparity discourses share a number of problems that have often done more to obscure than to advance our understanding of these issues, as well as how we might effectively confront them. Such problems include: (1) the tendency to treat race as a biological category and to presume that racial identity is a discrete risk factor for coronavirus or gun violence, (2) the promotion of public health interpretations that focus on behavioral norms and lend themselves to austerity-minded interventions, and (3) the treatment of racial disparities as distinct from broader patterns of structural inequality. At the intersection of these discourses, moreover, epidemiological metaphors of racism and gun violence as diseases akin to coronavirus are often invoked in lieu of more nuanced and historically grounded analyses of these issues.

In the end, these accounts are largely devoid of class analysis and have little to offer in terms of meaningfully tackling these issues. We need an alternative lens for understanding and addressing the common roots of these issues.

In the early weeks of the emerging coronavirus pandemic in the United States, a rumor that black people were somehow immune to the virus was going viral on social media and beyond. Atlanta rapper Waka Flocka, for example, asserted in a radio interview in early March that minorities cant catch coronavirus. Name one. It doesnt touch them soul food folks. While the very public March 11 diagnosis of NBA player Rudy Gobert, a Frenchman whose father is of Afro-Caribbean descent, and the subsequent diagnoses of other high-profile black celebrities, put a swift end to this ridiculous rumor, its racialist premise of biological determinism regarding the coronavirus has unfortunately persisted including in some perhaps surprising corners.

Citing early data on racial disparities in pandemic-related hospital admissions, for example, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) identified race as a potentially discrete risk factor for infection, although they cautioned that its potential impact as such need[s] to be confirmed with additional data. In mid-April, the head of the British Medical Association called for an urgent investigation into the possible greater vulnerability of black, Asian and minority ethnic people to COVID-19 following the pandemic-related deaths of ten doctors from these demographic groups, the first such deaths in the United Kingdom. An April letter to pharmaceutical companies working on coronavirus treatments from a group of US senators, including Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren, similarly emphasized the critical need for comprehensive demographic and racial data to ensure that new treatments work for all Americans with the obvious premise being that a persons racial identity may play some role in their physiological response to medical treatment.

Similar narratives around racial genetics and biological determinism emerged forcefully during the 1980s and 1990s, when dramatic increases in gun violence, much of it involving young people associated with the burgeoning urban crack cocaine trade, gave rise to a moral panic that found its ultimate expression in the term superpredator. John DiIulio, a political scientist at Princeton University, coined the phrase in 1995 to describe a young juvenile criminal who is so impulsive, so remorseless, that he can kill, rape, maim, without giving it a second thought. The term became part of the popular lexicon, with law enforcement and elected officials on both sides of the aisle deploying it in service of promoting tough-on-crime policies. While peddlers of the superpredator theory never explicitly tied the phenomenon to genetics, the convergent discourse around crack babies children born to crack cocaine users certainly did. These children were unabashedly categorized as a bio-underclass, a generation of physically damaged cocaine babies whose biological inferiority is stamped at birth. In the case of both superpredators and crack babies, these youngsters were cast, both explicitly and implicitly, as urban African Americans.

Such talk of race science and biological determinism, whether clearly reactionary, as in the case of gun violence, or seemingly well-intentioned, as in the case of coronavirus, is troubling and wrongheaded. It is rooted in a long and sordid history in which black Americans have been labeled as inherently disease and violence-prone, among various other vicious and dehumanizing stereotypes. But as a purely historical social construction without genetic or scientific basis, race can be neither an explanation for violent behavior nor a risk factor for coronavirus infection or mortality. As sociologist Karen Fields and historian Barbara Fields note, however, belief in the biological reality of race outranks even astrology, the superstition closest to it in the competition for dupes among the ostensibly educated, a dynamic that permit[s] the consequence under investigation in this case, disparities in coronavirus and gun violence victimization among those defined as African American to masquerade among the causes. As historian and public health scholar Merlin Chowkwanyun warns, moreover, the belief in biological race can not only lead to claims of racial superiority or inferiority, but, less conspicuously, can also obfuscate a complex litany of explanations for . . . observable population differences.

Such is the case with the coronavirus, as it was with gun violence. Though dangerous biological theories of violence persist in some corners, the superpredator and crack-baby theories have long been exposed as the junk they always were. We should be mindful of these lessons as we think about the current coronavirus pandemic.

In comparison to the pernicious race science described above, other public health explanations offer a step in the right direction in accounting for high rates of coronavirus infection and death among African Americans. For example, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has published a web page on COVID-19 entitled Health Equity Considerations and Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups that identifies economic and social conditions that are more common among some racial and ethnic minorities than whites that may be contributing to observed disparities. These include living conditions such as neighborhood population density and multigenerational households that make social distancing and quarantining more difficult, work factors such as employment in essential industries and lack of sick leave that heighten chances of exposure, lack of health insurance and access to affordable care that decreases the likelihood of early detection and treatment, and chronic health conditions such as heart and lung disease that increase the likelihood of severe symptomatology and death.

Similarly, public health has recently emerged as a nearly ubiquitous framework for understanding gun violence, promoted by everyone from the World Health Organization and the American Medical Association to Barack Obama and Donald Trump. While the 1996 passage of the National Rifle Associationbacked Dickey Amendment effectively banned the CDC from studying gun violence, the agencys information on youth violence though a much more widely construed phenomenon offers a generally useful proxy for gun violence, especially given the dearth of comprehensive data elsewhere.

Specifically, the risk factors for youth violence identified by the CDC include individual factors such as violence exposure and victimization, emotional distress, substance abuse, various types of problematic parenting and familial dynamics, association with delinquent peers, and residence in high-poverty neighborhoods. Though the CDC does not comment specifically on racial disparities in violence, the conclusion one is inevitably left with is that racial disparities in violence involvement are simply the result of a higher prevalence of these risk factors among African Americans.

One issue typical of the public health approach, however, is that there is little to no exploration of how these risk factors themselves come to be. Accordingly, there are few insights into the genesis of the racial disparities they purport to explain. Cure Violence, for example, the widely celebrated gun violence prevention model that likens violence directly to a pandemic disease, reduces violence to a learned behavior rooted in acute and chronic exposure to violence and broader community norms that promote such behavior.

While equating a pattern of social behavior the use of firearms to settle disputes and grievances to the workings of a submicroscopic infectious agent operating at the cellular level may benefit from a patina of medical credibility, such an account fails to provide any meaningful insight into the etiology of the behavior in question: Why does the disease of violence infect some communities but not others? Or, stated differently, why do some communities in a given city experience no homicides in a typical year, while nearby communities in the same city experience dozens of homicides?

Lacking any historically grounded explanation for such divergences, the public health model is susceptible to reframing these issues in cultural terms communities with healthy cultures, and therefore healthy norms, have low levels of coronavirus infection and gun violence, while those with pathological cultures and norms have high levels. At worst, these explanations simply reflect a reframing of biological race in polite language.

In any case, as historian Thomas Adams and political scientist Cedric Johnson argue, such accounts obscure issues that are firmly political and structural in nature by reinventing them as cultural phenomena, an approach that betrays a deep unwillingness to grapple with political and social causation. And if these phenomena are observed across groups with different cultural proclivities certainly, blacks are not the only victims of coronavirus or gun violence, nor do all blacks share a monolithic culture, for that matter then what we are witnessing is not race or culture, as such.

Yet this type of narrow and misplaced emphasis is evident in public healths proposed strategies for addressing these issues. The CDC promotes the view that the primary way to combat the coronavirus disparity among African Americans and other communities of color is by harnessing the strengths of these groups via shared faith, family, and cultural institutions that can empower and encourage individuals and communities to take actions to prevent the spread of COVID-19, care for those who become sick, and help community members cope with stress.

The role of the federal government, meanwhile, is limited to collecting data to monitor and track disparities, and the various recommendations for public health professionals, community organizations, and health care providers amount to little more than disseminating information on healthy practices and trying to connect people with resources. A similarly limited approach has been a selling point for Cure Violence, which proudly touts that the public health model is able to reduce violence in places with awful economies, without healing the economy, just as it has done with malaria, HIV, and other diseases throughout the world. (That the organization has often failed to actually reduce violence according to its model is an important aside.)

In short, in much of the public health discourse, structural inequality is reified, recast in terms of behavioral deficits to be rectified by information campaigns. While specific material circumstances that contribute to racial disparities may be acknowledged to varying degrees, the ultimate causes of these circumstances remain unaccounted for and are as likely as not to be explained as products of the alleged cultural pathologies of these populations themselves. This is not a helpful perspective for understanding these issues, nor for addressing them.

While the public health framework tends to present disparities in health outcomes as natural social facts devoid and undeserving of meaningful explanation, others espouse a ready and seemingly obvious explanation: racism (typically modified as structural, institutional, or systemic). For example, David Williams of Harvard Universitys TH Chan School of Public Health stated, We are looking at societal policies, driven by institutional racism, that are producing the results that they were intended to produce. Its been hard for Americans to understand that there are racial structural disparities in this country, that racism exists, offered Camara Phyllis Jones, an epidemiologist, family physician, and senior fellow at the Morehouse School of Medicine, adding, But COVID-19 and the statistics about black excess deaths are pulling away that deniability. Officials in Franklin County, Ohio, meanwhile, declared racism a public health crisis due to racial disparities in coronavirus deaths and other health outcomes. Other cities and counties have followed suit.

Racial disparities in gun violence have long been discussed in similar terms. In the 1980s and 1990s, this discourse coalesced around narratives that political scientists Willie Legette and Nikol Alexander-Floyd, respectively, refer to as the crisis of the black male and the Endangered Black Male. Though this specific language has largely disappeared from popular discourse on gun violence, its underlying premises have been widely internalized as cultural common sense, distilled in tropes about black-on-black violence and black urban neighborhoods as war zones. In recent years, however, the discourse of black male peril has reemerged forcefully in relation to a different kind of (typically) gun violence: police violence. Indeed, although acknowledgment of black female and LGBT victimization has been an explicit dimension of Black Lives Matter from its inception, the predominant understanding of police violence in the United States is one of black male crisis.

What has been almost entirely absent from the dominant public discourse on police violence is any meaningful class analysis. Yet even a cursory examination of the long and tragic list of high-profile police killings of black men reveals an unmistakable pattern: nearly all of these victims were poor or, at best, members of the working class. Indeed, their class status often directly precipitated their contact with police and/or shaped its trajectory: the use of an allegedly counterfeit $20 bill, the unlicensed selling of cigarettes or bootleg CDs, fleeing a police stop because of a suspected warrant for unpaid child support, vehicle violations caused and compounded by an inability to pay tickets or make needed repairs.

These dynamics, in turn, should be understood within a broader context of an approach to policing that emerges from an imperative to contain and suppress the pockets of economically marginal and sub-employed working class populations produced by revanchist capitalism. The now seemingly ubiquitous notion that racism or white supremacy is the lone factor driving police killings of black men obscures the complexity of these dynamics while also failing to explain police killings of whites, who comprise roughly half of all such victims.

To be clear, there is no doubt that black people and other people of color face racist discrimination in a wide variety of settings and situations that deleteriously affect their lives. There is also no doubt that such discrimination contributes to persistent racial disparities on nearly every adverse social indicator. But racism does not explain the existence of those adverse social indicators or the fundamental realities of inequality, which are produced by a political economy that concentrates incredible amounts of power and wealth in the hands of a small minority on one hand and fails to ensure a stable and dignified material existence for the majority of people, whatever their racial identities, on the other.

Patterns of inequality, then, are reproduced not only via racist discrimination, but via the logic of capitalist social reproduction the former of which, as historian Tour Reed points out, operates within the confines of the latter, not outside of it. A narrow focus on racial disparities and an understanding of them as solely by-products of an ostensibly all-encompassing, transhistorical racism, then, risks reifying broader patterns of inequality and the mechanisms by which they are (re)produced. After all, issues like coronavirus, gun violence, and police violence do not exclusively nor, in sheer numerical terms, even primarily affect African Americans. As political scientist Adolph Reed Jr and Merlin Chowkwanyun argue, disparity discourse thus fails to provide a holistic causal account of these phenomena and obscures the fact that inequalities that appear statistically as racial disparities are in fact embedded in multiple social relations.

As with gun violence, the routine appropriation of medical metaphors likening racism to a disease, an epidemic, or a public health problem further clouds the historical nature of racism and leaves unquestioned the political-economic processes that produce inequality, of which racial disparities constitute one abhorrent manifestation. Yet such a perspective dovetails well with the view that a transcendental racism is alone responsible for racial disparities if not the totality of suffering experienced by black people and, on the flip side, that racial disparities themselves are proof of that fact. This type of circular reasoning means that the discourse on racial disparities has the tendency to borrow from Barbara Fieldss appraisal of historical studies of whiteness to produce no conclusions that it does not begin with as assumptions.

In the end, racial disparities in coronavirus infections and deaths, as in rates of victimization by gun violence or police violence, for that matter cannot be explained by racialist biological determinism, simplistic references to behavioral or cultural norms, or an understanding of racism as operating outside of political economy and of disparities as distinct from broader patterns of inequality.

In the case of coronavirus, racial disparities cannot be divorced from an analysis of our fragmented, profit-oriented health insurance industry; the hollowing out of the public health care sector; a woefully inadequate residual-model welfare state; and eroding unionism, diminishing protections, and increasing precarity for working people. Similarly, racial disparities in gun violence must be understood as a by-product of the deplorable conditions in urban working-class black communities, including low levels of human and economic development, high levels of inequality, a weak and illegitimate state, and large populations of desperate young men involved in collective violence in other words, the same exact conditions associated with elevated levels of violence throughout the world. For their part, working-class white communities that have been similarly devastated by deindustrialization, job loss, and increasing despair in recent decades are facing a gun violence crisis of their own.

Rhetorical maneuvers likening gun violence and racism to pandemic diseases ultimately fail to illuminate the roots of these issues or their effects on variously raced populations. Indeed, even a meaningful appraisal of the societal and demographic impact of coronavirus an actual pandemic disease must be placed within the broader context of the political-economic factors described above. In the end, then, efforts to address racial disparities in pressing issues such as coronavirus, gun violence, and police violence should be understood as an indispensable dimension of a broader assault on the intensifying inequality and precarity facing working people, and as a part of political struggles to create a dignified material existence for all.

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To Talk About Racial Disparity and COVID-19, We Need to Talk About Class - Jacobin magazine

Virtual Concert unites Pacific with the world in battling COVID-19 – UN News

August 16, 2020

From across the region, the UN in the Pacific brought together artists UN leaders, heads of State and international celebrities in the worlds first regional COVID-19 concert.

Im very proud to be part of this historic event, said Tofiga Fepuleai, who hosted the concert in character as the popular television persona Aunty Tala. Now is the time for us to come together, to celebrate the strength and solutions that are possible when the Pacific unites.

The two-and-a-half-hour show featured contributions from 12 Pacific island nations, including musical performances from Jahboy of the Solomon Islands, Mia Kami of Tonga, Juny B of Kiribati, Te Vaka of New Zealand and many more.

This is the first ever virtual concert to comprise primarily of artists from across the region and be accessible to audiences not only in the Pacific but around the world, Ms. Fepuleai added.

Moreover, videos messages of solidarity were delivered from international guests, such as the United Kingdoms Prince Charles, Oscar-winning actor and Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) advocate Forest Whitaker, and New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.

The virtual concert provided a platform for the geographically remote Pacific region to connect. Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohamed reinforced the message that working together is the only way to overcome COVID-19.

Much remains to be done, and no one person, island or country can do it alone, she said in her video remarks.

The UN deputy chief highlighted the responsibility of the global community to come together to help our small island neighbours respond to the pandemic by ensuring equitable access to vital medical equipment, supplies and when they become available vaccines.She noted that the global community must also help the hard-hit economies of small island developing States through debt relief and rapid support that stimulates inclusive and resilient growth.

Let us keep standing together to fight the virus. Lets say no to violence, no to discrimination, no to stigma, no to vicious misinformation, she urged. And lets say yes to solidarity, yes to compassion, caring for each other in the Pacific way.

Already among the most remote countries on earth, Pacific island states saw their vital economic links weakened with the evaporation of tourism, severe disruptions to international trade, and a reduction in remittances.

The virtual concert brought attention to the multidimensional impacts of the pandemic, including a rise in domestic violence, unemployment, food insecurity, and mental health issues.

Speakers reinforced the need to build back better by creating a sustainable Pacific that is resilient to the impacts of climate change.

This new normal should not be the same old story, but with face masks, said President of Palau, Tommy E. Remengesau Jr, in his video message. The Pacific has been pushing for big changes in travel, in tourism, in fishing, in plastic use and in energy production. In a strange way, COVID-19 has cleared paths to those objectives. If we manage this challenge the right way, we can build a stronger system than we had before.

UN Web TV broadcast the virtual concert on radio and television networks in 12 Pacific island countries, as well as in Australia and New Zealand, throughout Asia, and globally. And it was captioned for people who are deaf or have hearing impairments.

In the Pacific, we love our music, and to hear from our leaders across the region, and our friends, on how to cope and be safe, and how to ensure that we are living in the new normal, I think it is timely, said Pacific Disability Forum CEO Setareki Macanawai.

Watching on Facebook, law student at the University of the South Pacifics Emalus Campus in Vanuatu Louisa Movick, believes in the healing powers of music.In these difficult times with so many mixed emotions in the air, it is good to take a moment, breathe and listen to the music of our Pacific region through these artists, she said.

The concert closed with a moving performance of a song called We Will Rise, written about the coronavirus pandemic in the Pacific and performed by Pasifika Voices and the International School Suva.

Sung primarily by children and youth, the heart-warming lyrics concluded on a note of hope.

Around the world were closing borders, COVID-19 on the riseA new world order behind closed doors, the storm will pass, we will surviveWe will rise, we will rise again, our isles will rise againWe will rise, we will rise again, our world will rise again

UNDP/Luke McPake

The South Pacific archipelago of Tuvalu is highly susceptible to rises in sea level brought about by climate change.

The rest is here:

Virtual Concert unites Pacific with the world in battling COVID-19 - UN News

TDH: 1,289 new COVID-19 cases, 19 new deaths in Tennessee – WKRN News 2

August 16, 2020

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) The Tennessee Department of Health hasconfirmed additional cases and deaths related to COVID-19 across the state on Saturday, August 15.

The total COVID-19 case count for Tennessee is now 131, 747 as of August 15, 2020 including 1,345 deaths, 5,813 hospitalizations and 92,100 recovered. [Percent positive for today is 7.76%.] pic.twitter.com/z1JEI3JgTc

Earlier Saturday, Metro Public Health Department officialsreported24,036 cases of COVID-19 in Davidson County.

During his bi-weekly news conference Thursday, Mayor John Cooper announced bars and limited-service restaurants in Nashville and Davidson County can reopen Monday with a maximum of 25 customers.

East Nashville House Party Investigation

Two men have been charged for their alleged roles in hosting an East Nashville house party attended by hundreds of people earlier this month. Videos circulated on social media showing the party on Fern Avenue held the night of Aug. 1, billed as The Fashion House, where hundreds of attendees appeared crammed together, with no masks in sight.

On Friday, the dentist arrested for his role in the party has entered a guilty plea, his attorney said.

On July 28, Governor Bill Leeannounced the State of Tennessees recommendations to reopen schools for the 2020-2021 school year.The governors plan for re-opening schoolsis getting criticized by some state leaders.

Last week, the Williamson County School district started the year with one of its campuses closed when it was scheduled to have students learning in-person.

Putnam County Schools released an update on August 7 regarding the first week of school during the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Director of Schools Corby King, one student at Cookeville High School this week tested positive for COVID-19 and was in close contact with other students. Those students have been reportedly contacted and have been placed on a 14-day quarantine.

Coffee County Schools has moved to a hybrid schedule due to anincreasein active COVID-19 cases. The school board also announced mask requirements for all employees, students, and visitors starting on August 12.

On Monday, Rutherford County Schools announced two employees at Christiana Middle School tested positive for COVID-19, and the school would transition to all distance-learning starting the first day of school, August 13 through August 21.

In Davidson County, Metro Nashville Public School leaders discussed the challenges of making the safest plans for students and teachers during a board meeting on August 11. Metro will have virtual-learning through at least Labor Day.

Also on Tuesday, the Department of Education released anew online dashboardto help track a schools status on offering in-person learning, virtual learning, or a hybrid.

High School Sports

Gov. Lee announced Executive Order No. 55 would include Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association member schools in an exception to contact sports restrictions.He officially signed the order on July 31.

A day after Lees announcement, school leaders in Davidson sent out a letter to all schools in the countyasking to cancel all sports and extracurricular activities until after Labor Day.

On August 10, Cheatham County Central High School announced the football team had two confirmed COVID-19 cases. CCCHS has stopped football practices for now, and are scheduled to resume August 19.

College Sports

On Tuesday, the Big 10 and the Pac-12 became the first two Power Five conferences to postpone fall sports.

Later on Tuesday, both the SEC and ACC released statements announcing, as of now, their plans to stay on course with their current plans for the season.

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

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TDH: 1,289 new COVID-19 cases, 19 new deaths in Tennessee - WKRN News 2

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