Category: Covid-19

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UNODC, WHO, UNAIDS and OHCHR joint statement on COVID-19 in prisons and other closed settings – World Health Organization

May 15, 2020

We, the leaders of global health, human rights and development institutions, come together to urgently draw the attention of political leaders to the heightened vulnerability of prisoners and other people deprived of liberty to the COVID-19 pandemic, and urge them to take all appropriate public health measures in respect of this vulnerable population that is part of our communities.

Acknowledging that the risk of introducing COVID-19 into prisons or other places of detention varies from country to country, we emphasize the need to minimize the occurrence of the disease in these settings and to guarantee that adequate preventive measures are in place to ensure a gender-responsive approach and preventing large outbreaks of COVID-19. We equally emphasize the need to establish an up-to-date coordination system that brings together health and justice sectors, keeps prison staff well-informed and guarantees that all human rights in these settings are respected.

In the light of overcrowding in many places of detention, which undermines hygiene, health, safety and human dignity, a health response to COVID-19 in closed settings alone is insufficient. Overcrowding constitutes an insurmountable obstacle for preventing, preparing for or responding to COVID-19.

We urge political leaders to consider limiting the deprivation of liberty, including pretrial detention, to a measure of last resort, particularly in the case of overcrowding, and to enhance efforts to resort to non-custodial measures. These efforts should encompass release mechanisms for people at particular risk of COVID-19, such as older people and people with pre-existing health conditions, as well as other people who could be released without compromising public safety, such as those sentenced for minor, non-violent offences, with specific consideration given to women and children.

A swift and firm response aimed at ensuring healthy and safe custody, and reducingovercrowding, is essential to mitigate the risk of COVID-19 entering and spreading in prisons and other places of deprivation of liberty. Increasing cleanliness and hygiene in places of deprivation of liberty is paramount in order to prevent the entry of, or to limit the spread of, the virus.

Compulsory detention and rehabilitation centres, where people suspected of using drugs or engaging in sex work are detained, without due process, in the name of treatment or rehabilitation should be closed. There is no evidence that such centres are effective in the treatment of drug dependence or rehabilitation of people and the detention of people in such facilities raises human rights issues and threatens the health of detainees, increasing the risks of COVID-19 outbreaks.

All states are required to ensure not only the security, but also the health, safety and human dignity, of people deprived of their liberty and of people working in places of detention at all times. This obligation applies irrespective of any state of emergency.

Decent living and working conditions as well as access to necessary health services free of charge form intrinsic elements of this obligation. There must be no discrimination on the basis of the legal or any other status of people deprived of their liberty. Health care in prisons, including preventive, supportive and curative care, should be of the highest quality possible, at least equivalent to that provided in the community. Priority responses to COVID-19 currently implemented in the community, such as hand hygiene and physical distancing, are often severely restricted or not possible in closed settings.

Prison populations have an overrepresentation of people with substance use disorders, HIV, tuberculosis (TB) and hepatitis B and C compared to the general population. The rate of infection of diseases in such a confined population is also higher than among the general population. Beyond the normal infectivity of the COVID-19 pandemic, people with substance use disorders, HIV, hepatitis and TB may be at increased risk of complications from COVID-19.

To ensure that the benefits of treatments started before or during imprisonment are not lost, provisions must be made, in close collaboration with public health authorities, to allow people to continue their treatments without interruption at all stages of detention and upon release. Countries should embrace a health systems approach, where prisons are not separated from the continuity-of-care pathway but integrated with community health services.

Enhancing prevention and control measures in closed settings as well as increasing access to quality health services, including uninterrupted access to the prevention and treatment of HIV, TB, hepatitis and opioid dependence, are therefore required. Authorities must ensure uninterrupted access and flow of quality health commodities to prisons and other places of detention. Staff, health-care professionals and service providers working in closed settings should be recognized as a crucial workforce for responding to the COVID-19 pandemic and receive appropriate personal protective equipment and support as necessary.

In their responses to COVID-19 in closed settings, states must respect the human rights of people deprived of their liberty. Restrictions that may be imposed must be necessary, evidence-informed, proportionate (i.e. the least restrictive option) and non-arbitrary. The disruptive impact of such measures should be actively mitigated, such as through enhanced access to telephones or digital communications if visits are limited. Certain fundamental rights of people deprived of their liberty and corresponding safeguards, including the right to legal representation, as well as the access of external inspection bodies to places of deprivation of liberty, must continue to be fully respected.

We urge political leaders to ensure that COVID-19 preparedness and responses in closed settings are identified and implemented in line with fundamental human rights, are guided by World Health Organization (WHO) guidance and recommendations and never amount to torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. In prisons, any intervention should comply with the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (the Nelson Mandela Rules).

People deprived of their liberty exhibiting symptoms of COVID-19 or who have tested positive should be monitored and treated in line with the most recent WHO guidelines and recommendations. Prisons and other places of detention must be part of national COVID-19 plans with dedicated participation of affected populations. All cases of COVID-19 in closed settings should be notified to responsible public health authorities, who will then report to national and international authorities.

In line with our mandates, we remain available to provide support in the rapid deployment of the recommendations outlined above.

Ghada Fathi Waly,Executive Director, UNODC

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus,Director-General, WHO

Winnie Byanyima,Director-General, Executive Director, UNAIDS

Michelle Bachelet,United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

We thank UNDP for their contributions to this statement.

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UNODC, WHO, UNAIDS and OHCHR joint statement on COVID-19 in prisons and other closed settings - World Health Organization

Impact of COVID-19 on academic mothers – Science Magazine

May 15, 2020

COVID-19 stay-at-home orders could exacerbate challenges faced by mothers in academia.

As daily life grinds to a halt worldwide in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, professionals are adjusting to a new reality of remote working. For many researchers, the release from teaching and administrative activities means more time for independent work. In contrast, parents of young children for whom school has been cancelled are facing uniquely challenging responsibilities. Although academic fathers are not immune to the impacts of confinement, it is traditionally women who carry the heaviest load (1, 2).

These women risk suffering yet another motherhood penalty. Instead of writing papers, they are likely to devote time to homeschooling children and doing household chores. For those who have not yet leaked from the pipeline (3) and are struggling to keep their careers on track, these months of heavier duties may increase the distance between them and their male and childless peers.

Gender inequality in science is an urgent issue, and motherhood plays a major role in it (4). Recent years have witnessed the emergence of many initiatives that ignited changes toward addressing this problem [e.g., (58)]. We cannot allow this pandemic to reverse advances and further deepen the gender gap in science.

Policies and actions to mitigate the motherhood penalty can benefit all scientists. Deadlines for grant proposals, reports, and renewal requests must be postponed. Funding agencies should consider creating granting programs designed around the reality of academics with families. By instituting more flexible policies, we can make science fairer for everyone affected by the pandemic.

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Impact of COVID-19 on academic mothers - Science Magazine

Hornell nursing home resident dies of COVID-19, 40th death in Steuben County – WETM – MyTwinTiers.com

May 15, 2020

HORNELL, N.Y. (WETM) The Steuben County Public Health Department has reported that a 90 year old female who lived in a nursing home in the Hornell area has died from COVID-19.

Steuben County has now reported 40 deaths due to COVID-19, about 30 in nursing homes in the Hornell and Bath area. This is the countys first reported COVID-19 death since May 1.

Steuben County had previously reported deaths at Hornell Gardens, Elderwood at Hornell, and the Taylor Health Center.

We were hopeful that we could reach phase one of reopening without any more COVID-19 deaths, said Public Health Director, Darlene Smith. Let this serve as a reminder to all of us that although we have reached a decline in cases, we are not in the clear yet. All of our actions going forward will determine how many more lives are impacted by this horrible disease.

All residents should continue to stay home and monitor themselves for COVID-19 symptoms of fever, cough, shortness of breath, chills or repeated shaking with chills, muscle pain, headache, sore throat, and new loss of taste or smell and contact their healthcare provider for instructions if feeling ill.

Steuben County is set to begin phase one of the Governors reopening plan on May 15. To date the county has reported 248 cases, 151 recoveries, 40 deaths, and nearly 3,400 tests.

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Hornell nursing home resident dies of COVID-19, 40th death in Steuben County - WETM - MyTwinTiers.com

See how easily COVID-19 might spread through a restaurant in this black light experiment – WANE

May 15, 2020

(NEXSTAR) An experiment using a fluorescent substance and black lights shows just how quickly a virus like COVID-19 might spread in a restaurant or cruise ship setting.

The study was performed by experts on contact infection and Japans NHK, the countrys national public broadcaster.

During the experiment, one of the ten participants played the infected person. The fluorescent paint was applied to that persons palms to replicate what might happen after a sneeze was covered with the hands.

All ten then enjoyed a buffet-style meal for 30 minutes before a black light was used to track the spread of the virus. Traces of the fluorescent paint had spread to numerous dishes, the faces of three people and the hands of all participants.

John Nicholls, a clinical professor in pathology at the University of Hong Kong, told CNN the video demonstrates the coronavirus efficiency at spreading on surfaces and to people. I think it really highlights the need of what people have been saying about hand hygiene to stop the spread of disease, Nicholls said.

Nicholls also noted, however, that the amount of fluorescent substance on the infected subject wasnt necessarily an accurate representation of the amount of germs on someones hand after a sneeze.

In a second experiment, all of the subjects washed their hands before and during eating, and workers disinfected commonly touched surfaces, according to CNN. When researchers turned on the black light, none of the virus had spread to the other diners.

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See how easily COVID-19 might spread through a restaurant in this black light experiment - WANE

COVID-19 shuts down Fry Foods processing plant in Weiser; cluster of cases discovered – Ontario Argus Observer

May 15, 2020

ONTARIO A food processing plant in Weiser voluntarily shut down on Sunday afternoon after receiving a phone call from an employee who had tested positive for the novel coronavirus COVID-19, according to a company official.

We brought in a separate sanitation crew and cleaned the plant, said Douglas Wold, human resources manager, for Fry Foods, Inc. during a phone interview today. I ended up getting ahold of the health department on Monday.

Since then, a cluster of COVID-19 cases has been discovered among employees. Eight have tested positive, but Wold says those cases have all been condensed to a party that took place with out-of-state guests, throughout the week prior to the first case being reported.

Those individuals are also close contacts outside of the workplace, reads a news release from Southwest District Health, which states it has been working closely with Fry Foods.

They were symptomatic first, so they brought it from out of the state, Wold says.

He clarified that the party was actual to a series of visits that lasted almost a whole week with a lot of coming and going.

At least 80 of the plants employees have been tested, he said, adding that he created a bubble chart to track cases. Those tests have all been by courtesy, he said, adding that there were no symptoms.

Right now, we dont have any confirmed in-plant transfer cases, it was all at this party, Wold says, adding fingers crossed.

Contact investigations are underway with those who have tested positive, and epidemiologists will notify people who may have been potentially exposed.

Individuals who do not receive a call from the health district have not been named as a close contact and do not have cause for elevated concern, reads the health authoritys news release.As with any cluster of illness in the community, SWDH will continue to work closely to monitor and respond to any changes.

As far as the length of time the plant will stay closed, Wold said it was premature to decide now, but that they were prepared to stay closed for fourteen days if it was the best decision for the community and the employees.

Fortunately, none of the food that was processed during the time-frame of the party has left the plant, he says.

We have contacted the people we supply out of courtesy, he said. But were taking precautions.

This has included putting food into storage that was packaged during that time. Wold says company officials are hopeful that if it sits in storage long enough and there was any virus exposure, that it would die.

Nothing went out, it went into a subzero freezer, he said.

According to federal and state health authorities, there is no evidence that COVID-19 is transmitted through food or food packaging. For this reason, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration does not anticipate that food products would need to be recalled or be withdrawn from the market if they were produced in a facility during a time period a worker was potentially shedding the virus.

Wold says the health department did not tell operators to shut down the plant, but that owners of the company opted to do so out of an abundance of caution.

As of today, 20% of the plants employees have been tested by courtesy Wold says, adding that those tested havent had any symptoms.

The company has been and continues to be very responsive and is taking appropriate precautions to ensure the health and safety of the staff, according to Southwest District Health.

Nikole Zogg, the health authoritys director, reminds citizens that it is still important to take precautions to protect both yourself and others around you.

Please avoid social gatherings with those not in your immediate household, continue to practice physical distancing, stay home when you are sick, wash your hands or use hand sanitizer often, and wear cloth face coverings when leaving your home, she says.

Citizens with COVID-19-like symptoms, such as respiratory illness with fever, cough or difficulty breathing should call their medical provider prior to going.

Southwest District Health serves a six-county region, which includes Washington and Payette counties. The cluster at the food plant, brings Washington Countys total cases to 10. There have been 14 cases in Payette, with two deaths reported.

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COVID-19 shuts down Fry Foods processing plant in Weiser; cluster of cases discovered - Ontario Argus Observer

He Was a Science Star. Then He Promoted a Questionable Cure for Covid-19. – The New York Times

May 13, 2020

When diagnosing the ills afflicting modern science, an entertainment that, along with the disparagement of his critics and fellow researchers, he counts among his great delights, the eminent French microbiologist Didier Raoult will lightly stroke his beard, lean back in his seat and, with a thin but unmistakable smile, declare the poor patient to be stricken with pride. Raoult, who has achieved international fame since his proposed treatment for Covid-19 was touted as a miracle cure by President Trump, believes that his colleagues fail to see that their ideas are the products of mere intellectual fashions that they are hypnotized by methodology into believing that they understand what they do not and that they lack the discipline of mind that would permit them to comprehend their error. Hubris, Raoult told me recently, at his institute in Marseille, is the most common thing in the world. It is a particularly dangerous malady in doctors like him, whose opinions are freighted with the responsibility of life and death. Someone who doesnt know is less stupid than someone who wrongly thinks he does, he said. Because it is a terrible thing to be wrong.

Raoult, who founded and directs the research hospital known as the Institut Hospitalo-Universitaire Mditerrane Infection, or IHU, has made a great career assailing orthodoxy, in both word and practice. Theres nothing I like more than blowing up a theory thats been so nicely established, he once said. He has a reputation for bluster but also for a certain creativity. He looks where no one else cares to, with methods no one else is using, and finds things. In just the past 10 years, he has helped identify nearly 500 novel species of human-borne bacteria, about one-fifth of all those named and described. Until recently, he was perhaps best known as the discoverer of the first giant virus, a microbe that, in his opinion, suggests that viruses ought to be considered a fourth and separate domain of living things. The discovery helped win him the Grand Prix Inserm, one of Frances top scientific prizes. It also led him to believe that the tree of life suggested by Darwinian evolution is entirely false, he told me, and that Darwin himself wrote nothing but inanities. He detests consensus and comity; he believes that science, and life, ought to be a fight.

It is in this spirit that, over the objections of his peers, and no doubt because of them, too, he has promoted a combination of hydroxychloroquine, an antimalarial drug, and azithromycin, a common antibiotic, as a remedy for Covid-19. He has taken to declaring, We know how to cure the disease. Trump was not the only one eager to embrace this possibility. By the time I arrived in Marseille, some version of Raoults treatment regimen had been authorized for testing or use in France, Italy, China, India and numerous other countries. One in every five registered drug trials in the world was testing hydroxychloroquine.

In March, Raoult announced that his hospital would test and treat anyone who cared to show up. Crowds gathered at the entrance to the IHU in winding single-file lines, like pilgrims shuffling toward their private audience with the oracle. On March 16, Raoult released the results of a small clinical trial that showed, he said, a 100 percent cure rate. The study has since been widely debated, and Raoults boosterism has been lamented by scientists and health officials around the world; in a comment more or less representative of the tenor of the controversy in France, where Raoults name and image have now been everywhere for weeks, one detractor, a generally thoughtful politician, suggested that Raoult shut his face and be a doctor and that he stop saying Im a genius all over the place.

His colleagues liken his psychology to that of Napoleon, though he is not physically small. When asked by one journalist about his tendency to swim against the current of scientific thought, Raoult responded: Im not an outsider. Im the one whos farthest out in front. Axel Kahn, a geneticist and physician who has known Raoult for nearly 40 years, told me that he has always been this way. One of Professor Raoults abiding characteristics is that he knows that hes very good, Kahn told me. But he considers everyone else to be worthless. And he always has. Its not a recent development. At his home, alongside a collection of Roman busts, he is said to keep a marble statue of himself.

Raoult, who is 68, is a sturdily built but fine-featured man, with high cheekbones and a tight, contemptuous mouth. In recent years, he has hidden these behind a straggly white mustache and goatee and has grown his flaxen hair down to his shoulders. On his right pinkie he now wears a silver skull. In internet memes, he has been depicted as the wizard Gandalf and as a druid; except for his white lab coat, he has the general aspect of a fortuneteller who rides a Harley to work. The French journalist Herv Vaudoit, who has written admiringly about Raoult over the years, once asked him why hed taken to dressing this way. Raoult replied, Because it pisses them off.

In the weeks since SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, spread throughout the world, his disdain for respectable opinion, and for the Parisian marquesses who are its representatives, has endeared him to a large segment of the French population. According to one survey, by late March, Raoult had become one of Frances most popular political personalities, with particular appeal on the populist extremes. Votives bearing his image were being sold in Marseille, and on some evenings, at 8 p.m., a battalion of municipal garbage trucks assembled on the roadway outside his hospital, where the drivers leaned on their horns in loud and furious tribute. A hundred-foot banner, painted by a club of local soccer fans and strung up near the entrance, read, Marseille and the world behind Prof. Raoult!!!

Raoult has been collecting the merchandise created by his fans, and he seems to be enjoying his fame, though he claims otherwise. He is certain the drugs will vindicate him in the end; everything else is a matter of appearances. I really do think were in a theater, he told me. In my play, the people who judge me as a doctor are my patients. As a scientist, its my colleagues. And time.

A few weeks ago, I spoke, from the recommended distance, to a man named Jacques Cohen. He was seated on the sidewalk outside the IHU, an angular monument of concrete and glass about a mile and a half from Marseilles old port. Cohen had his back against a pylon and his wrists on his knees, at the edge of a group of perhaps 60 people. By their unworried proximity to one another they were standing around in a loose group, as people used to, waiting to enter the hospital through a side door they were identifiable as the unfortunates who already knew they were positive. I had selected Cohen as my interlocutor under the guidance of a nearby nurse. He was not coughing or sneezing; he wore a mask. In any case, were all going to get it, the nurse said.

I crouched on the pavement and asked Cohen, who is 76, how he was feeling. For the past two days, he had been taking hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin. Its getting better, Cohen said through his mask. He looked ashen but optimistic. His fever had fallen, and he had begun to regain his sense of taste. I noted that there was some debate about the efficacy of the treatment. Theres no believing or not believing, Cohen replied. We know its effective!

Hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin are well characterized, well tolerated and widely prescribed medications. Azithromycin was developed 40 years ago in the former Yugoslavia and is today the second-most commonly prescribed antibiotic in the United States. Hydroxychloroquine, along with its more toxic analog chloroquine, was for several decades the most commonly prescribed antimalarial drug in the world. Today it is widely used to treat rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. All three molecules are included on the World Health Organizations Model List of Essential Medicines, a compilation of the most efficacious, safe and cost-effective medicines for priority conditions.

Raoult knows the drugs well. From the start of his career, he has experimented extensively with drug repositioning, in which medicines that have been approved for use against one disease are repurposed as treatments for others. Hundreds and hundreds of molecules have already been approved for human use by the Food and Drug Administration. Hidden among these, Raoult contends, are various unanticipated cures. You test everything, Raoult told me. You stop pondering; you just look and see if, by chance, something works. And what you find by chance, itll knock you on your derrire. Antidepressants and antihypertensives have been shown to have antiviral properties; lovastatin, which is prescribed to lower cholesterol levels, has been found to be effective, at least in mice, against plague. In a 2018 paper, Raoult and a team of researchers reported that azithromycin showed strong activity in cells infected with the Zika virus.

Raoult spent the first decade of his life in Dakar, in what was then French Senegal, where his father, a military doctor, was posted. To ward off malaria, he was given chloroquine. I took it all the time when I was a kid, he told me. In the 1990s, in an early repurposing experiment, he tested the effect of hydroxychloroquine on a frequently fatal condition known as Q fever, which is caused by an intracellular bacterium. Like viruses, intracellular bacteria multiply within the cells of their hosts; Raoult found that hydroxychloroquine, by reducing acidity within the host cells, slowed bacterial growth. He began treating Q fever with a combination of hydroxychloroquine and doxycycline and later used the same drugs for Whipples disease, another fatal condition caused by an intracellular bacterium. The combination is now considered to be a standard treatment for both diseases.

Given the similarities between intracellular bacteria and viruses, Raoult suspected that chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine might have antiviral effects. Following the SARS outbreak in 2002, researchers found that chloroquine slowed reproduction of the SARS coronavirus in cell cultures. Raoult reviewed that evidence in a 2007 paper, concluding that chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine might be an interesting weapon to face present and future infectious diseases worldwide. This winter, as the spread of SARS-CoV-2 began to take on the contours of a pandemic, he surveyed the data that had begun coming out of China. An early report on chloroquine showed good results in vitro. In mid-February, another Chinese team reported that, in more than 100 patients, it had been found to have potent activity against Covid-19. Raoult was elated.

At the time, health authorities around the world were warning that a viable treatment could be months away. The Chinese reports, however, appeared to confirm Raoults longstanding hopes for chloroquine. A deadly virus for which no treatment existed could evidently be stopped by an inexpensive, widely studied, pre-existing molecule, and one that Raoult knew well. A more heedful scientist might have surveyed the Chinese data and begun preparations for tests of his own. Raoult did this, but he also posted a brief, jubilant video on YouTube, under the title Coronavirus: Game Over! Chloroquine had produced what he called spectacular improvements in the Chinese patients. Its excellent news this is probably the easiest respiratory infection to treat of all, Raoult said. The only thing Ill tell you is, be careful: Soon the pharmacies wont have any chloroquine left!

Raoult has spent nearly his entire life in Marseille, a famously ragged and combative city, which he loves. He named a genus of bacteria, Massilia, for it and has given its name or the names of its neighborhoods to numerous other species of microbe. Marseille has been a major port for more than 2,000 years and has a correspondingly rich history of disease. It was the point of entry into France for all three of the great waves of bubonic plague, beginning in the sixth century. Between 1720 and 1722, the plague killed about half of Marseilles population; one of its central neighborhoods, on the old port, is today named for the bishop who tended to the ill while the citys doctors hid in fear.

Raoult wrote his first research paper, in 1979, on a tick-borne infection sometimes known as Marseille fever. The disease was also called benign summer fever, and more than 50 years of science said it was nonlethal. And yet one of the 41 patients in his data set had died. Before submitting the paper, Raoult, who was then a young resident, gave it to a supervising professor for review. And he takes it, Raoult told me, he doesnt show it to me again, and he publishes it and hed taken out the death. Because he didnt know how to make sense of the death. Raoult was disgusted, and the incident shaped his philosophy of scientific inquiry. I learned that the people who wanted to follow the familiar path were prepared to cheat in order to do it, he said. In subsequent work, he demonstrated that Marseille fever was indeed fatal in almost precisely one in every 41 cases. He was a follower, Raoult said of the professor. And these followers are all cheaters. Thats what I thought. And its still what I think.

He is, fundamentally, a contrarian. In Raoults view, little of consequence has been accomplished by researchers who endorse the habitual tools and theories of their age. Ive spent my life being against, he told me. I tell young scientists: You know, you dont need a brain to agree. All you need is a spinal cord. He is thrilled by conflict. It is a matter both of philosophy the influence, no doubt, of the thinker he refers to admiringly as master Nietzsche and of temperament. He loves to know that things are roiling around him, one of his lab technicians told me; he sets off storms and admires them as they roll out over the land. His peers shake their heads at this behavior but grant him a grudging respect. You cant knock him down, said Mark Pallen, a professor of microbial genomics at the University of East Anglia. In terms of his place in the canon, the sainthood of science, hes pretty secure there.

He is also interested in power and has been attentive to it from the start. In 1985 and 1986, Raoult worked at the Naval Medical Research Institute in Bethesda, Md., where he discovered the Science Citation Index. The index, a tool that can be used to measure a scientists influence on the basis of his or her publication history, was relatively unknown in France. Raoult looked up the researchers reputed to be the best in Marseille. It was really the emperor wears no clothes, he said. These people didnt publish. There was one who hadnt written a paper in 10 years. In Raoults view, French science was a duchy of appearances, connections and self-reverence. It was people saying he mimed the drone of an aristocrat Oh, him, yes, hes very good. And this reputation, you dont know what its based on, but its not the truth.

For decades, Raoult has boasted of his prodigious rates of publication and citation, which, as objective statistics, he considers to be the best measure of his worth as a researcher. Biomedical researchers in France write or contribute to perhaps 10 scientific papers every year and a few hundred in the course of a career. Raoults name sits atop several thousand; in each of the past eight years, he has produced more than 100. In 2020, he has already published at least 54.

Raoult is reputed to be an indefatigable worker, but he also achieves his extreme rate of publication by attaching his name to nearly every paper that comes out of his institute. Though the practice is not unheard-of, it is unusual. Even to just read those papers would take up a large percentage of anyones time, Pallen told me. For someone like me to actually go through them carefully, critique them, make a substantial intellectual contribution I think that would be practically impossible.

With few exceptions, the department heads at the IHU have worked under Raoult for their entire careers, some for more than 30 years. It is an ancestral system, familial and clanlike, said Michel Drancourt, a clinician who is Raoults longest-serving collaborator. Raoult is, without question, the patriarch, and he is in some respects reputed to be benevolent. The IHU spends a great deal of money on scholarships and research grants for students from the developing world, for instance, and Raoult is known to be accessible to young researchers in a way that distinguishes him from other high-powered scientists. He is also known for berating his subordinates. While visiting the IHU, I watched a young researcher emerge from Raoults office in tears and rush into the arms of her friends, who were evidently accustomed to this. When hes not happy about something, hell let you know, one of them told me. A 2017 employee letter of complaint, which was followed by an investigation of the IHU, described the screaming, insults and psychological bullying of a leadership of another era. Along the entryway to Raoults institute, theres a line from Horace: Exegi monumentum aere perennius, I have crafted a monument more lasting than bronze.

In recent years, Raoult has amused himself, it seems, by staking out tendentious scientific claims, sometimes in territories that are well beyond the scope of his expertise. He is skeptical, for instance, of the utility of mathematical modeling in the realm of epidemiology. The same logic has led him to conclude that climate modelers are no more than soothsayers for our scientistic era and that their dire predictions are mostly just an attempt to expiate our intense but irrational feelings of guilt.

He is also dismissive of the alarmism that is the default position among specialists of infectious disease. He doubted, initially, that SARS-CoV-2 would spread beyond China, or that it might be a terrible problem if it did. On Jan. 20, Chinese scientists confirmed that infections were being transmitted from patient to patient, and President Xi Jinping, in his first public comments about the coronavirus, declared that all possible measures would have to be taken to contain the outbreak. The World Health Organization announced an emergency meeting. The following day, in Marseille, Raoult posted a video to his institutes YouTube channel. He faced his offscreen interviewer with weary eyes, sighed and said, You know, the world has gone crazy. Every year, he said, there are probably 600 or 700 people who die from coronavirus infections in France and thousands more from other respiratory illnesses. The fact that people have died from a coronavirus in China, I dont feel like it means much of anything for me, he said. I dont know, maybe people dont have anything to do, so theyve gone looking in China for something to be scared about.

Raoults most recent book, Epidemics: Real Dangers and False Alerts, was published in late March, by which time the W.H.O. had reported more than 330,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19 worldwide and more than 14,500 deaths. This anguish over epidemics, he writes, is completely untethered from the reality of deaths from infectious diseases.

By the standards of molecular biology, real-time polymerase chain reaction, the technology most commonly used to test for SARS-CoV-2, is not extravagantly complex. But it depends upon collection swabs, thermocycling machines, chemical reagents and nucleotide probes and primers, and if any one of these components is in insufficient supply, the tests cannot be run. Beginning in January, when the SARS-CoV-2 genome was first published, the IHU bought or borrowed as much of all these as possible, spending a half million euros on new machines alone. Whatever Raoults reservations about the virus, he did not intend to miss the opportunity to study it, and perhaps to win the race to find a treatment. His institute receives most of its funding from public sources Raoult was given 130 million euros to build it but it effectively controls its own budget, and Raoult, as the founding director, has near-complete control of what goes on inside its walls. He can essentially say, Hold on, I want to turn the bedroom and the dining room into a kitchen, Drancourt said.

Nearly 800 people work at the institute. In early March, as coronavirus patients began arriving, almost all the staff members turned their efforts to SARS-CoV-2. Raoult obtained authorization to begin a small clinical trial of hydroxychloroquine. Because viral respiratory infections often lead to secondary bacterial infections, however, Raoult wanted to test a supplementary antibiotic in some patients; he chose azithromycin, which he had previously tested against Zika. If youre going to choose one, you might as well choose one thats been shown to be active against a virus, said Bernard La Scola, who runs the biosafety lab at the IHU.

Hydroxychloroquine is believed to inhibit viral reproduction in infected cells by raising their pH, as in Q fever and Whipples disease; the antiviral mechanism of azithromycin has not been explained. But what works works. If we relied only upon medications with precisely established mechanisms, a number of popular drugs acetaminophen, for instance, the active ingredient in Tylenol would not be in use. I asked Raoult if the idea to test the drugs together had emerged from discussions with his team. It was me, he told me. Dont kid yourself.

Testing had been scheduled to run for two weeks per patient, but after only six days, the results were so favorable that Raoult decided to end the trial and publish. Usually, wed take time to write, to make corrections, to consider, to go over things 50 times, said Philippe Gautret, the department head who was the first listed author on the paper. In this case, we were working with a sense of real urgency. Because we thought we had to get the word out, because, maybe, wed found a way to make things better.

Others might have proceeded with more caution or perhaps waited to confirm these results with a larger, more rigorous trial. Raoult likes to think of himself as a doctor first, however, with a moral obligation to treat his patients that supersedes any desire to produce reliable data. Were not going to tell someone, Listen, todays not your lucky day, youre getting the placebo, youre going to be dying, he told me. He believes it to be unnecessary, in addition to being unethical, to run randomized controlled trials, or R.C.T.s, of treatments for deadly infectious diseases. If these have become the accepted standard in biomedical research, Raoult contends, it is only because they appeal to statisticians who have never seen a patient. He refers to these scientists disdainfully as methodologists.

Raoults paper included results for 36 patients. Fourteen were treated with hydroxychloroquine sulfate; six were treated with a combination of hydroxychloroquine sulfate and azithromycin; and 16 served as controls. On Day 6 of the trial, 14 of the 16 control patients still tested positive for the virus. Patients receiving hydroxychloroquine fared markedly better, with only six of 14 testing positive on Day 6. Most encouraging, though, all six patients treated with a combination of hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin were found to be rid of the virus.

Several prominent French doctors cautioned that the results would have to be confirmed and warned of possible side effects. The French health minister deemed the trial promising but called for more testing. Raoult had already begun assembling data for a larger study, but he dismissed the need for anything particularly vast or lengthy. Like other critics of the R.C.T., he likes to point out that a number of self-evidently useful developments in the realm of human health have never been validated by such rigorous tests. This observation has come to be known as the parachute paradigm: We tend to accept the claim that parachutes reduce injury among people who leap from airplanes, but this effect has never been proved in a randomized study that compares an experimental parachute group to an unlucky parachuteless control. Its like Didier says, Drancourt told me. If you dont have something thats visible in 10 patients, or 30, its useless. Its not of any consequence. An effective treatment for a potentially lethal infectious disease will be visible to the naked eye.

On March 16, a Long Island attorney and blockchain enthusiast named Gregory Rigano appeared on Laura Ingrahams nightly show on Fox News, The Ingraham Angle. Ingraham introduced the segment by asking: What if theres already a cheap and widely available medication, thats on the market, to treat the virus? Well, according to a new study, there is such a drug. Its called chloroquine. Rigano, who at the time was falsely presenting himself as an adviser to Stanford Medical School, had recently self-published an acclamatory report on the potential of chloroquine, An Effective Treatment for Coronavirus (Covid-19), as a Google Doc formatted to resemble a scientific publication. It had begun to circulate in right-wing media and also in Silicon Valley; Elon Musk tweeted a link to it. Raoult saw it and noticed the attention it was receiving online. Another researcher might have found this sort of publication irresponsible and dangerous. Raoult began corresponding with Rigano and his co-author, James Todaro, an ophthalmologist and Bitcoin investor. Raoult authorized them to share his results before they had been published.

On air, Rigano announced that a researcher in the south of France, one of the most eminent infectious-disease specialists in the whole world, was about to publish the results of a major clinical study. Within a matter of six days, the patients taking hydroxychloroquine tested negative for coronavirus, for Covid-19, Rigano said. (He made no mention of azithromycin.) We have a strong reason to believe that a preventative dose of hydroxychloroquine is going to prevent the virus from attaching to the body, and just get rid of it completely, he added. Thats a game changer, Ingraham said.

In the coming days, Ingraham questioned both Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a member of President Trumps pandemic task force, and Alex M. Azar II, the secretary of health and human services, about the drug. Sean Hannity began promoting it as a cure for Covid-19. Lets put it this way, he said on his radio show. If I had it personally, I am speaking only for Sean Hannity I would be all over this. Rigano appeared on Tucker Carlsons show and claimed that Raoults study had shown hydroxychloroquine to have a 100 percent cure rate against coronavirus. According to Todaro, Raoult had sent him a copy of his study and allowed him to post it on Twitter that day, two days before the preprint release. I suspect he gave us permission because he knew it was the fastest way to disseminate the trial results, Todaro told me. (Rigano did not respond to requests for comment.) Later, Raoult himself appeared on Dr. Oz, the talk show hosted by the celebrity doctor Mehmet Oz, a frequent Fox News guest who has promoted hydroxychloroquine. I believe that ideas and theories are epidemic, Raoult once wrote. When theyre good, they take root.

Trump began hyping hydroxychloroquine on March 19, at a White House news conference with his coronavirus task force. I think its going to be very exciting, Trump said. I think it could be a game changer and maybe not. And maybe not. But I think it could be, based on what I see, it could be a game changer. Very powerful. He suggested, inaccurately, that the F.D.A. had approved the drug for use against Covid-19. He made no mention of azithromycin. Commissioner Stephen M. Hahn of the F.D.A. gently corrected him later and said that a large clinical trial would be the appropriate way to evaluate the therapeutic value of the drug.

Still, because chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine are available for use in other conditions, doctors were able to provide Covid-19 patients with off-label treatment if they believed it would provide a benefit. Shortages of the drugs were reported beginning in mid-March. The F.D.A., under what appears to have been strong pressure from the Trump administration, issued an emergency-use authorization for chloroquine phosphate and hydroxychloroquine sulfate, giving doctors access to tens of millions of doses of the drugs from the Strategic National Stockpile. Unusually, the C.D.C., at what was reportedly Trumps direct urging, issued Covid-19 prescription guidelines for the drugs based upon unattributed clinical anecdotes. (The guidelines were later withdrawn.) A top government biomedical official was removed from his post, he has claimed, for having resisted political pressure to fund potentially dangerous drugs, including hydroxychloroquine.

There is much about Raoult that might make him, and by extension his proposed treatment, appealing to a man like Trump. He is an iconoclast with funny hair; he thinks almost everyone else is stupid, especially those who are typically regarded as smart; he is beloved by the angry and conspiracy-minded; his self-congratulation is more or less unceasing. Raoult and I spoke several days after the emergency-use authorization was signed. He said he hadnt heard about it and seemed surprised, but he also said that Trump had impressed him with his intuition on hydroxychloroquine. Hes not so dumb, he said, laughing. Raoult classified Trumps psychology as that of an entrepreneur, by way of contrast with that of a politician. Entrepreneurs are people who know how to decide, who know how to take risks, he said. And at a certain point, to decide is to take a risk. Every decision is a risk.

The French waited far too long, in his estimation, to approve the use of hydroxychloroquine in Covid-19 patients. The authorization came only after Raoult announced in the press that he would continue, in accordance with the Hippocratic oath and effectively in defiance of the government, to treat patients with his combination therapy. Im convinced that in the end, everyone will be using this treatment, Raoult told Le Parisien. Its just a matter of time before people agree to eat their hats.

The dynamics of a crisis are not especially conducive to reliable science. In October 1985, in the terrible early years of the AIDS epidemic, a group of French doctors, joined by the French minister of social affairs, held a news conference to announce to the world that they had discovered what looked like a cure. The drug was cyclosporine, an inexpensive immunosuppressant that had until then been used in organ transplants to prevent the rejection of new tissue. In AIDS patients, cyclosporine had the paradoxical effect of increasing white-blood-cell counts; patients underwent a spectacular improvement, one researcher said. The announcement was based upon results from only two patients, however, and these patients had begun treatment only one week earlier. The scientists were widely criticized at the time for flouting the norms of biomedical research to report such limited data. Given the strength of our hypotheses, they responded, we believe that, ethically, we could not continue to keep our results a secret just to respect the usual laws of scientific conduct.

Like Raoult, they felt very strongly about what they said, said Jean-Michel Molina, who directs the infectious-disease departments at two public hospitals in Paris. They felt that they had found a cure. Shortly after the announcement, one of the two patients died, and it was revealed that a third patient had died before the news conference; he had been excluded from the reported results because his case was considered too grave to reverse. Within weeks, the remaining patients white-blood-cell count had fallen to its previous level. Experimentation with cyclosporine soon stopped.

Like many doctors, Molina viewed Raoults study with skepticism, but he was also curious to see if his proposed treatment regimen might in fact work. He tested hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin in 11 of his own patients. We had severe patients, and we wanted to try something, Molina told me. Within five days, one had died, and two others had been transferred out of his service to intensive care. In another patient, the treatment was suspended after the onset of cardiac issues, a known side effect of the drugs. Eight of the 10 surviving patients still tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 at the conclusion of the study period. Raoults data had come from patients with mild or early cases of the disease, when viral loads are lower, and I asked Molina if his patients had not been too sick to benefit from the treatment. If there is antiviral activity, you should be able to see it, he said. You know, you may say, Its too late, youre not going to see the clinical benefit. But at least you should see the antiviral activity. If its an antiviral.

Raoults study had measured only viral load. It offered no data on clinical outcomes, and it was not clear if the patients actual symptoms had improved or indeed whether the patients lived or died. At the outset, 26 patients were assigned to receive hydroxychloroquine, six more than the 20 who appeared in the final results. The six additional patients had been lost in follow-up, the authors wrote, because of early cessation of treatment. The reasons given were concerning. One patient stopped taking the drug after developing nausea. Three patients had to be transferred out of the institute to intensive care. One patient died. (Another patient elected to leave the hospital before the end of the treatment cycle.) So four of the 26 treated patients were actually not recovering at all, noted Elisabeth Bik, a scientific consultant who wrote a widely circulated blog post on Raoults study. She paraphrased the sarcasm circulating on Twitter: My results always look amazing if I leave out the patients who died.

The report was also riddled with discrepancies and apparent errors. Its selection criteria called for participants above the age of 12, but three of the control subjects were younger than this. The control patients were drawn not only from the IHU but also from hospitals in two other cities, where the standard of care and the testing protocols may have differed. Fourteen of 16 control patients were reported to have tested positive for the virus at the conclusion of the study on Day 6. In fact, according to the initial report, for five of those 14, no data was collected that day. One of the six patients who received hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin and was recorded as virologically cured at Day 6 was found, in the end, to be carrying the virus two days later.

This apparent sloppiness was unsurprising to many of those who have tracked Raoults work in the past. A prominent French microbiologist told me that, in terms of publication, Raoults reputation among scientists has been long gone for some time. In private, the researcher wrote to me, everybody agrees on the low reliability/reproducibility of most of the papers coming out of his lab. (He asked to speak anonymously so as not to anger Raoult, whom he knows.) In 2018, after damning evaluations, Raoults principal laboratory groups were stripped of their association with two of Frances top public research institutions. Raoult was found to have produced an extraordinary number of publications but few of great quality. Its very easy to publish [expletive] when you know how publishing works, said Karine Lacombe, a professor of medicine in Paris who has recently been among Raoults more outspoken critics.

Beyond its apparent errors and omissions, the studys design its small size, its flawed control, the unrandomized assignment of patients to the treatment and control groups was widely viewed to render its results meaningless. Fauci repeatedly called its results anecdotal; the biostatistician who analyzed the paper on behalf of the French governments coronavirus advisory committee wrote that it was impossible to interpret the effect described therein as being attributable to treatment with hydroxychloroquine.

Large, well-controlled randomized trials are by no means the only way to arrive at useful scientific insights. Their utility is that they enhance statistical signals such that, amid the noise of human variability and random chance, even the faint effect of some new treatment can be detected. The prime statistical hurdle that any proposed treatment for Covid-19 will have to overcome one that is delicate for even Raoults critics to make note of, amid the sorrow and fear of this pandemic is that the signal is likely to be very faint, because the disease is, in the end, rarely fatal. Nearly everyone survives; an effective treatment will save the life of the one or so patients in every hundred who would not have lived without it. You know, people sometimes say, If the patient gets better, thats because of the drug, and if they get worse, its because of the virus, Molina told me. And of course thats not true. And thats why you need to do a well-conducted, randomized, placebo-controlled study if you want to show anything. It is possible that hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin are an effective treatment for Covid-19. But Raoults study showed, at best, that 20 people who would almost certainly have survived without any treatment at all also survived for six days while taking the drugs Raoult prescribed.

If you havent done this stuff, you can look at a report of people responding to such a treatment and gure that the answer is here right here, and anyone who doesnt see it must have some ulterior motives, Derek Lowe, a longtime pharmaceutical researcher, wrote for Science Translational Medicine last month. But thats not how it works. He went on: Alzheimers drugs, obesity drugs, cardiovascular drugs, osteoporosis drugs: Over and over, there have been what looked like positive results that evaporated on closer inspection. After youve experienced this a few times, you take the lesson to heart that the only way to be sure about these things is to run sufciently powered controlled trials. No shortcuts, no gut feelings just data.

Ive invented 10 or so treatments in my life, Raoult told me. Half of them are prescribed all over the world. Ive never done a double-blind study in my life, never. Never! Never done anything randomized, either. He noted, with some satisfaction, that the criticism was more intense than he had anticipated. Honestly, I couldnt have imagined that it would set off a frenzy like this, he said, leaning back in his office chair and gesturing at the storm he had created in the world outside. When you tell the story, its extremely straightforward, no? Its subject, verb, complement: You detect a disease; theres a drug thats cheap, whose safety we know all about because theres two billion people who take it; we prescribe it, and it changes what it changes. It might not be a miracle product, but its better than doing nothing, no?

His subordinates defended the study as the best work they could do under the circumstances and the fastest way to alert the world to the possibility of a treatment. The use of off-site controls was not ideal, for example, but it was the only option if they wanted to move fast. Of course its a methodological weakness, Gautret, the first author, told me. But we made do with what we had. As for the six patients lost in follow-up, even if it had been possible to collect data from them, it would have been nonsensical to include most of them in their report. Their aim was to treat people in the early stages of the disease, when its not yet serious, Gautret said. We know that in acute viral diseases, the earlier you treat, the better your chances of success. It makes no sense to include people who are at the edge of death in the study. Were not claiming to be able to treat people who are nearly dead. Another small study, in 80 patients, likewise showed better results for patients with mild forms of the disease.

In Marseille, Raoult told me he would be releasing a third study, this one of 1,000 patients, the following week. Initial results were published in mid-April. Raoult had treated 1,061 patients with a combination of hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin. The study was neither controlled nor randomized; at the time of the preprint release, eight patients had died, and five remained hospitalized, while 46 in total experienced a poor clinical outcome. The findings were summarized as 98.7 percent of patients cured so far. The therapy constituted a safe and efficient treatment for Covid-19, the authors wrote.

Other scientists disagreed with this characterization of the results. The cure rate is almost identical to whats been described about the natural course of the disease, the virologist Christine Rouzioux told French radio. Lacombe called Raoults conclusions magical thinking, adding: I very honestly think he hasnt shown anything at all. It was soon discovered, too, that the second and third studies had been conducted without approval from a state ethics board. In an initial version of the third paper, Raoult wrote that he had conducted a retrospective study on a cohort of patients receiving standard treatment following a research protocol previously registered. He provided a reference to the protocol that had been approved for the first trial. But that protocol included hydroxychloroquine alone and not azithromycin; Raoult never received approval to systematically test a combination of the drugs.

The French medical regulatory agency, the A.N.S.M., sent Raoult a request for evidence of the second studys legal status in mid-April. Later in the month, the French Medical Council issued a statement, widely assumed to be directed at Raoult, reminding its members that the endangerment of patients by exposure to treatments that have not been scientifically validated could be cause for immediate suspension. Raoult responded on Twitter, where he now has a half million followers, that the councils threat was obviously not applicable to his case. In a statement on the A.N.S.M.s inquiry, the IHU insisted that the study did not involve experimentation because no procedure beyond the standard of care which, at the IHU, was hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin had been employed.

Raoult had by then begun to lose his composure. He accused Lacombe of being a shill for the pharmaceutical industry; his fans sent her death threats. On Twitter, he called Bik, the consultant who wrote critically about the first study, a witch hunter and called a study that she tweeted one of several published in April and May that seemed to suggest that Raoults treatment regimen was ineffectual or even harmful fake news. The authors of another such study were accused of scientific fraud. My detractors are children! Raoult told an interviewer. The worlds attention has drifted to new studies of other drugs; Raoult has taken to attacking those studies for their methodological weaknesses.

The results of his initial trial have yet to be replicated. I think what he secretly hopes is that no one will ever be able to show anything, Molina told me. That all the trials conducted on hydroxychloroquine will not be able to even reach a conclusion of no efficacy. In recent weeks, Raoult has in fact tempered his claims about the virtues of his treatment regimen. The published, peer-reviewed version of the final study noted that another two patients had died, bringing the total to 10. Where the earlier version called the drugs safe and efficient, they were now described merely as safe.

He has shown flickers of what appears to be doubt. In one interview, Raoult quoted Camus, from the fatalistic coda of The Stranger, hoping that on the day of my execution there should be a huge crowd of spectators, and that they should greet me with howls of hatred.

I dont trust popularity, he told the interviewer. When too many people think youre wonderful, you should start to wonder. His initial YouTube video, Coronavirus: Game Over! has also been renamed. The new language is more measured, and in place of the exclamation point there now stands a question mark.

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He Was a Science Star. Then He Promoted a Questionable Cure for Covid-19. - The New York Times

Why a positive Covid-19 antibody test doesn’t mean much of anything yet – CNN

May 13, 2020

You're hoping it will tell you that you have, right? That your blood is full of beautiful antibodies, the body's soldiers called to fight when a known enemy invades our systems again.

You may dare to hope the discovery of antibodies in your blood means you will be immune to the virus in the future you won't ever get it again or give it to anyone else.

That's the holy grail, of course the ticket to freely visiting your parents, friends and loved ones again, to going back to work in the office again basically, to getting your life back.

Not so fast.

In today's reality, testing positive for antibodies to Covid-19 means nothing of the sort. In fact, it may not mean much at all at least right now.

There are still too many unknowns, both about the accuracy of the antibody tests that are available and about the nature of the virus itself.

"And this is exactly why I keep advising people to behave like you have the virus," Gupta said.

What is an antibody test?

An antibody test can only be administered by gathering blood, either through a finger prick or from a vein. It's designed to detect antibodies, the Y-shaped proteins called immunoglobulins that circulate in our blood to help fight off infections in our bodies.

Produced by white blood cells, the two "arms" of the antibody are designed to recognize and fight bacteria and viruses that have been encountered in the past, thus hopefully stopping these germs from taking hold again.

Even if you've never had any symptoms of Covid-19, the presence of antibodies in your blood would show your body has encountered the virus.

To be clear, antibody tests are not the "swab" tests that are meant to find out if you are currently carrying the virus. Called rt-PCR tests, or molecular diagnostic tests, those typically gather mucus from way up the nose or back of the throat. They take a few days to report results.

In addition, both antigen and rt-PCR tests can only give a "snapshot" of your status at that specific point in time. If you were exposed to Covid-19 the next day, you could easily become sick and not know it.

How accurate is the antibody test?

First, let's look at timing. Antibodies just don't appear overnight. It can take weeks to build up enough of a level in the blood to be picked up by even the most sensitive test. So if you have the test before your body has fully responded, it may give you a false negative.

That's if you develop antibodies at all.

To understand that, consider the entire concept behind vaccines. Vaccinations are supposed to give just enough of a live or dead virus to get the body to mount an immune response but not enough to make you sick from the illness.

But everyone is different. Some people don't react to the vaccine at all, or their immune response is not quick or adequate enough to protect them.

Antibody tests are also plagued by error. Just like the diagnostic tests, "antibody tests haven't been as accurate as they need to be," Gupta said. By their very nature, such tests can easily produce both false negatives and positives.

"With the antibody test, what you're really hoping to avoid is a false positive," Gupta said. "Then, someone might feel that they have the antibodies, thus feel that they are protected, go out into the community, to a hospital, to a nursing home and spread the virus."

The tests also need to be able to differentiate between past infections from SARS-CoV-2 and the other known set of six human coronaviruses, four of which cause the common cold and circulate widely.

Then there's the lack of oversight. The need for testing has created a market free-for-all in which companies are creating tests without any scientific oversight.

"There are plenty of antibody tests floating around that haven't been reviewed or validated by the US Food and Drug Administration. It's been a big problem," Gupta said.

If I have antibodies to Covid-19, will I be immune?

Of course, the big question is: If your blood does show antibodies against Covid-19, are you immune to the virus if exposed in the future? Scientists hope that will be the case since it has historically been true for other viruses such as chicken pox and polio.

But so far, there's no evidence of that with SARS-CoV-2.

"It's unclear if those antibodies can provide protection," the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says on its website. "This means that we do not know at this time if antibodies make you immune to the virus."

While studies of blood samples taken from people who have recovered from Covid-19 do show an immune response to the virus, some have "very low levels of neutralizing antibodies in their blood," WHO said.

It's possible that immunity may need to occur on a cellular level as well as via antibodies circulating in the blood, the agency warned.

"The body also makes T-cells that recognize and eliminate other cells infected with the virus. This is called cellular immunity," WHO explained.

Along with antibodies, the "combined adaptive response may clear the virus from the body, and if the response is strong enough, may prevent progression to severe illness or reinfection by the same virus," WHO said.

But consider this: Even if we are lucky enough to have that happen, we still don't know how long that immunity will last.

No 'immunity passport' yet

What's the takeaway from the results of your antibody test? Simply put, it really doesn't matter if you test positive or negative, because until testing improves and we understand more about the virus, you (and everyone else) are still at risk.

"At this point in the pandemic, there is not enough evidence about the effectiveness of antibody-mediated immunity to guarantee the accuracy of an 'immunity passport' or 'risk-free certificate,'" WHO stated.

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Why a positive Covid-19 antibody test doesn't mean much of anything yet - CNN

U.S. Officials: Beware Of China And Others Trying To Steal COVID-19 Research – NPR

May 13, 2020

A pharmacist gives Jennifer Haller a shot in the first-stage safety clinical trial of a potential vaccine for COVID-19 on March 16 at the Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute in Seattle. U.S. officials say they are already seeing efforts by foreign actors to steal information from U.S. firms working on a vaccine and treatments for the virus. Ted S. Warren/AP hide caption

A pharmacist gives Jennifer Haller a shot in the first-stage safety clinical trial of a potential vaccine for COVID-19 on March 16 at the Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute in Seattle. U.S. officials say they are already seeing efforts by foreign actors to steal information from U.S. firms working on a vaccine and treatments for the virus.

As researchers around the globe race to develop a coronavirus vaccine, U.S. authorities are warning American firms to exercise extreme caution in safeguarding their research against China and others with a track record of stealing cutting-edge medical technology.

"We are imploring all those research facilities and hospitals and pharmaceutical companies that are doing really great research to do everything in their power to protect it," Bill Evanina, the director of the National Counterintelligence and Security Center, said in an interview with NPR.

"We don't want that company or the research hospital to be the one a year from now, two years from now, identified as having it all stolen before they finished it," said Evanina, whose center falls under the director of national intelligence.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Britain's National Cyber Security Center recently issued a statement saying hackers are "actively targeting organisations ... that include healthcare bodies, pharmaceutical companies, academia, medical research organisations, and local government."

The statement did not name China or any other country. Reuters reported that hackers linked to Iran tried to break into email accounts at the U.S. drugmaker Gilead Sciences, which has a potentially promising drug to treat the COVID-19 virus. Iran denied the report.

China's record

Meanwhile, Evanina says China, far more than any other country, has been aggressively stealing valuable medical technology for years. Information on a possible vaccine would be a huge prize.

"We have full expectation that China will do everything in their power to obtain any viable research that we are conducting here in the U.S.," Evanina said. "That will be in line with their capabilities and intent the last decade plus, and we are expecting them to continue to do so."

A number of drug makers, research labs and government health bodies have announced efforts to seek a vaccine or treatment for COVID-19. That's made them a target, FBI Deputy Assistant Director Tonya Ugoretz said recently.

"We certainly have seen reconnaissance activity, and some intrusions, into some of those institutions," she said. "It kind of makes them a mark for other nation-states that are interested in gleaning details about what exactly they're doing and maybe even stealing proprietary information."

China has long denied involvement in corporate espionage and has called for international cooperation to accelerate progress on COVID-19 vaccines and therapies. Beijing points to its sharing of the coronavirus' gene sequence as evidence of its sincerity. Meanwhile, Chinese labs say they are racing ahead to find a homegrown vaccine.

President Trump and his administration have frequently criticized China for its handling of the coronavirus. Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have said the virus may have escaped from a lab in the central city of Wuhan. But they have not provided evidence, and this has led to skepticism about some administration claims regarding what has happened inside China in recent months.

'Made in China 2025'

However, the U.S. national security community has shared a broad consensus for years about what they say is a sustained Chinese government effort to acquire, lawfully or not, a wide range of intellectual property, including medical research.

U.S. officials often point to China's President Xi Jinping and his "Made in China 2025" plan, which calls for the country to be a world leader in the most important technologies of the 21st century artificial intelligence, renewable energy, quantum computing, driverless cars and wide range of medical technologies.

In the past couple years, the Justice Department has filed charges in multiple cases involving Chinese nationals or people suspected of working for China to steal medical technology, often involving cancer research.

U.S. officials describe these efforts as taking several different forms.

One is widespread and persistent hacking attempts directed at tech companies or research labs working on technology China has identified as important.

A second method is sending students or researchers to work in the U.S., often for extended periods. In a case last year, the Justice Department filed charges against a Chinese couple that worked for 10 years at an Ohio lab that researches pediatric diseases, including childhood cancers. U.S. authorities accuse the couple of stealing research at the Ohio lab for use in a company the husband-and-wife team had established back in China.

U.S. officials say a third path is China's Thousand Talents Program. China identifies promising research, often at a U.S. university, then offers funding through its Thousand Talents Program with the expectation it will get access to the research as well. U.S. academics are required to tell the U.S. government if they receive such foreign funding.

Security briefings

To combat the theft of U.S. technology, Evanina works with law enforcement and other government partners to brief company CEOs, university presidents and other leaders of organizations that are being targeted.

This began several years ago, and includes senior leaders in the medical community. Sometimes they are called to Washington for a briefing where the organizations may also hear from Sen. Richard Burr, the North Carolina Republican who heads the Senate Intelligence Committee, and Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, the ranking Democrat.

"We provide (the organizations) a one-day classified briefing. We make sure they understand the complexity of the threat. We've done that for multiple sectors that include hospitals, medical centers and research institutions and the pharmaceutical community as well," said Evanina.

Greg Myre is an NPR national security correspondent. Follow him @gregmyre1.

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WHO statement: Tobacco use and COVID-19 – World Health Organization

May 13, 2020

Tobacco kills more than 8 million people globally every year. More than 7 million of these deaths are from direct tobacco use and around 1.2 million are due to non-smokers being exposed to second-hand smoke.

Tobacco smoking is a known risk factor for many respiratory infections and increases the severity of respiratory diseases. A review of studies by public health experts convened by WHO on 29 April 2020 found that smokers are more likely to develop severe disease with COVID-19, compared to non-smokers.

COVID-19 is an infectious disease that primarily attacks the lungs. Smoking impairs lung function making it harder for the body to fight off coronaviruses and other diseases. Tobacco is also a major risk factor for noncommunicable diseases like cardiovascular disease, cancer, respiratory disease and diabetes which put people with these conditions at higher risk for developing severe illness when affected by COVID-19. Available research suggests that smokers are at higher risk of developing severe disease and death.

WHO is constantly evaluating new research, including research that examines the link between tobacco use, nicotine use, and COVID-19. WHO urges researchers, scientists and the media to be cautious about amplifying unproven claims that tobacco or nicotine could reduce the risk of COVID-19. There is currently insufficient information to confirm any link between tobacco or nicotine in the prevention or treatment of COVID-19.

Nicotine replacement therapies, such as gum and patches are designed to help smokers quit tobacco. WHO recommends that smokers take immediate steps to quit by using proven methods such as toll-free quit lines, mobile text-messaging programmes, and nicotine replacement therapies.

Within 20 minutes of quitting, elevated heart rate and blood pressure drop. After 12 hours, the carbon monoxide level in the bloodstream drops to normal. Within 2-12 weeks, circulation improves and lung function increases. After 1-9 months, coughing and shortness of breath decrease.

WHO stresses the importance of ethically approved, high-quality, systematic research that will contribute to advancing individual and public health, emphasizing that promotion of unproven interventions could have a negative effect on health.

Originally posted here:

WHO statement: Tobacco use and COVID-19 - World Health Organization

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