Category: Covid-19

Page 893«..1020..892893894895..»

Microsoft Bing launches interactive COVID-19 map to provide pandemic news – The Verge

March 17, 2020

Microsoft has launched a new interactive Bing map to provide information on the spread of COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus. The map shows the amount of cases on a per country basis, broken down by the number of currently active cases, recovered cases, and fatal cases. In the US, meanwhile, you can view information state-by-state. Selecting individual countries or states will provide links to relevant news stories and videos. Unfortunately, the stories being promoted arent always the most timely or useful to understand the current state of the evolving pandemic.

Microsoft says the tool is pulling data from a collection of sources including the World Health Organization (WHO), the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), and Wikipedia. The tool itself doesnt say how frequently its numbers are being updated, but at the time of publication we found the data to have been updated in the last hour.

Although the case numbers the tool is pulling are consistent with those published by the WHO, Microsofts COVID-19 tracker appears to be having trouble surfacing relevant news stories. When we tried to check news stories that were relevant to the outbreak in the UK, for example, one of the reports it surfaced was about a series of home improvement stores closing in France and Spain. Even more strangely, the lead video was an old news segment from January 24th with the title No confirmed cases of coronavirus yet in the United Kingdom, despite the tracker listing 1,391 cases in the country.

Meanwhile, in the Netherlands, the most recent article on the Dutch map (when viewed from The Netherlands) is two weeks old, despite the fact that the countrys government took the major decision to shut down public places including restaurants and schools just yesterday.

Microsoft isnt the only tech giant which is looking to provide information resources amidst the pandemic. Google has said it will launch a website late Monday with information about the outbreak, including how to prevent its spread and links to local resources. It is also providing information on the novel coronavirus on its homepage, and via YouTube and Maps. The company is also launching a limited coronavirus screening website, which is currently only available to people in the Bay Area of California, in contrast to the nationwide service that the US government suggested it was building on Friday.

Follow this link:

Microsoft Bing launches interactive COVID-19 map to provide pandemic news - The Verge

Coronavirus tips: How to slow the spread of COVID-19 with hand-washing, social distance – USA TODAY

March 17, 2020

Social distancing matters. Here is how to do it and how it can help curb the COVID-19 pandemic. USA TODAY

With the outbreakof the new coronavirus spreading and news of how Americans are responding changing every day, it can be hard to keep track of the latest information.

According to a Johns Hopkins University tracker, there have been at least3,813 known cases of the virus that causes COVID-19, causing at least 69 known deaths, in the United States as of Monday morning.

Correctly washing your hands and maintaining social distance by avoiding large gatherings andclose contact with people who are sick are two of the easiest ways to prevent the spread of COVID-19, health officials say.

Here are more tips to help protect you and your loved ones, according to the World Health Organizationand U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:

Latest coronavirus updates: Govs close bars as strict virus control measures sweep nation; stocks crash, schools close

Wet your hands, scrub everywhere (under those fingernails, too)with soap for at least 20 seconds, then rinse and dry well with a clean towel.

How to wash your hands: You're probably doing wrong and don't even know it, experts say

If you don't have access to soap and water, hand sanitizer works, but the CDC and WHO both recommended the former.

When people ask how to protect themselves against the spread of COVID-19, one of the first suggestions from doctors is washing your hands. Here are the do's and don'ts. USA TODAY

Stay at least 3 feet away from someone who is sick. The virus can spread through respiratory droplets, which are easy to breathe in if you are close to someone who has theCOVID-19 virus and is coughing.

Social distancing: Its not about you, its about us

If COVID-19 is spreading in your community, put distance between yourself and others. The CDC is recommending that large gatherings of 50 or more people be postponed for canceled for the next eight weeks.

It's easy to touch a surface that may be contaminated with the virus and then unknowingly touch your face. The virus can transfer from your hands to your nose and mouth and then enter your body and make you sick.

How to stop touching your face: It's harder than it sounds even for health officials

Use a tissue to cover your mouth and nose as you cough and sneeze and then throw it out. Wash your hands immediately after. You can also cough or sneeze into your elbow. This helps prevent respiratory droplets from spreading to those in close contact with you.

While the CDC says people who are healthy do not need to wear a face mask, people who are sick and around others should. A face mask can help stop respiratory droplets from spreading. If you are sick and a face mask makes it hard to breathe, the CDC says that's when a healthy person around you should wear a mask instead.

Think you have coronavirus?: Call first! Here's what to expect at the doctor's office

If your illness is mild, restrict when and where you leave your home. If you need to see your doctor, call ahead. If you have other people living with you, try to stay in one room. Don't share common household items, either.

Stuck inside?: Here are 100 things to do during this pandemic

If you do have to leave your house for any reason, wear a face mask. Avoid crowds, especially in poorly ventilated areas, and any nonessential travel.

Monitor your symptoms and stay home until you're instructed by a medical professional that you can leave.

Autoplay

Show Thumbnails

Show Captions

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/03/16/coronavirus-tips-slow-covid-19-spread-wash-hands-stay-home/5058412002/

Read more:

Coronavirus tips: How to slow the spread of COVID-19 with hand-washing, social distance - USA TODAY

See Which Countries are Flattening their COVID-19 Curve – Visual Capitalist

March 17, 2020

Pandemic /pandemik/ (of a disease) prevalent over a whole country or the world.

As humans have spread across the world, so have infectious diseases. Even in this modern era, outbreaks are nearly constant, though not every outbreak reaches pandemic level as the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) has.

Todays visualization outlines some of historys most deadly pandemics, from the Antonine Plague to the current COVID-19 event.

Disease and illnesses have plagued humanity since the earliest days, our mortal flaw. However, it was not until the marked shift to agrarian communities that the scale and spread of these diseases increased dramatically.

Widespread trade created new opportunities for human and animal interactions that sped up such epidemics. Malaria, tuberculosis, leprosy, influenza, smallpox, and others first appeared during these early years.

The more civilized humans became with larger cities, more exotic trade routes, and increased contact with different populations of people, animals, and ecosystems the more likely pandemics would occur.

Here are some of the major pandemics that have occurred over time:

Note: Many of the death toll numbers listed above are best estimates based on available research. Some, such as the Plague of Justinian, are subject to debate based on new evidence.

Despite the persistence of disease and pandemics throughout history, theres one consistent trend over time a gradual reduction in the death rate. Healthcare improvements and understanding the factors that incubate pandemics have been powerful tools in mitigating their impact.

In many ancient societies, people believed that spirits and gods inflicted disease and destruction upon those that deserved their wrath. This unscientific perception often led to disastrous responses that resulted in the deaths of thousands, if not millions.

In the case of Justinians plague, the Byzantine historian Procopius of Caesarea traced the origins of the plague (the Yersinia pestis bacteria) to China and northeast India, via land and sea trade routes to Egypt where it entered the Byzantine Empire through Mediterranean ports.

Despite his apparent knowledge of the role geography and trade played in this spread, Procopius laid blame for the outbreak on the Emperor Justinian, declaring him to be either a devil, or invoking Gods punishment for his evil ways. Some historians found that this event could have dashed Emperor Justinians efforts to reunite the Western and Eastern remnants of the Roman Empire, and marked the beginning of the Dark Ages.

Luckily, humanitys understanding of the causes of disease has improved, and this is resulting in a drastic improvement in the response to modern pandemics, albeit slow and incomplete.

The practice of quarantine began during the 14th century, in an effort to protect coastal cities from plague epidemics. Cautious port authorities required ships arriving in Venice from infected ports to sit at anchor for 40 days before landing the origin of the word quarantine from the Italian quaranta giorni, or 40 days.

One of the first instances of relying on geography and statistical analysis was in mid-19th century London, during a cholera outbreak. In 1854, Dr. John Snow came to the conclusion that cholera was spreading via tainted water and decided to display neighborhood mortality data directly on a map. This method revealed a cluster of cases around a specific pump from which people were drawing their water from.

While the interactions created through trade and urban life play a pivotal role, it is also the virulent nature of particular diseases that indicate the trajectory of a pandemic.

Scientists use a basic measure to track the infectiousness of a disease called the reproduction number also known as R0 or R naught. This number tells us how many susceptible people, on average, each sick person will in turn infect.

Measles tops the list, being the most contagious with a R0 range of 12-18. This means a single person can infect, on average, 12 to 18 people in an unvaccinated population.

While measles may be the most virulent, vaccination efforts and herd immunity can curb its spread. The more people are immune to a disease, the less likely it is to proliferate, making vaccinations critical to prevent the resurgence of known and treatable diseases.

Its hard to calculate and forecast the true impact of COVID-19, as the outbreak is still ongoing and researchers are still learning about this new form of coronavirus.

We arrive at where we began, with rising global connections and interactions as a driving force behind pandemics. From small hunting and gathering tribes to the metropolis, humanitys reliance on one another has also sparked opportunities for disease to spread.

Urbanization in the developing world is bringing more and more rural residents into denser neighborhoods, while population increases are putting greater pressure on the environment. At the same time, passenger air traffic nearly doubled in the past decade. These macro trends are having a profound impact on the spread of infectious disease.

As organizations and governments around the world ask for citizens to practice social distancing to help reduce the rate of infection, the digital world is allowing people to maintain connections and commerce like never before.

Editors Note: The COVID-19 pandemic is in its early stages and it is obviously impossible to predict its future impact. This post and infographic are meant to provide historical context, and we will continue to update it as time goes on to maintain its accuracy.

Update (March 15, 2020): Weve adjusted the death toll for COVID-19, and will continue to update on a regular basis.

Thank you!

Given email address is already subscribed, thank you!

Please provide a valid email address.

Please complete the CAPTCHA.

Oops. Something went wrong. Please try again later.

View original post here:

See Which Countries are Flattening their COVID-19 Curve - Visual Capitalist

With launch of COVID-19 data hub, the White House issues a call to action for AI researchers – TechCrunch

March 17, 2020

In a briefing on Monday, research leaders across tech, academia and the government joined the White House to announce an open data set full of scientific literature on the novel coronavirus. The COVID-19 Open Research Dataset, known as CORD-19, will also add relevant new research moving forward, compiling it into one centralized hub. The new data set is machine readable, making it easily parsed for machine learning purposes a key advantage according to researchers involved in the ambitious project.

In a press conference, U.S. CTO Michael Kratsios called the new data set the most extensive collection of machine readable coronavirus literature to date. Kratsios characterized the project as a call to action for the AI community, which can employ machine learning techniques to surface unique insights in the body of data. To come up with guidance for researchers combing through the data, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine collaborated with the World Health Organization to come up with high priority questions about the coronavirus related to genetics, incubation, treatment, symptoms and prevention.

The partnership, announced today by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, brings together the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Microsoft Research, the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence, the National Institutes of Healths National Library of Medicine, Georgetown Universitys Center for Security and Emerging Technology, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and the Kaggle AI platform, owned by Google.

The database brings together nearly 30,000 scientific articles about the virus known as SARS-CoV-2. as well as related viruses in the broader coronavirus group. Around half of those articles make the full text available. Critically, the database will include pre-publication research from resources like medRxiv and bioRxiv, open access archives for pre-print health sciences and biology research.

Sharing vital information across scientific and medical communities is key to accelerating our ability to respond to the coronavirus pandemic, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Head of Science Cori Bargmann said of the project.

The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative hopes that the global machine learning community will be able to help the science community connect the dots on some of the enduring mysteries about the novel coronavirus as scientists pursue knowledge around prevention, treatment and a vaccine.

For updates to the CORD-19 data set, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative will track new research on a dedicated page on Meta, the research search engine the organization acquired in 2017.

The CORD-19 data set announcement is certain to roll out more smoothly than the White Houses last attempt at a coronavirus-related partnership with the tech industry. The White House came under criticism last week for President Trumps announcement that Google would build a dedicated website for COVID-19 screening. In fact, the site was in development by Verily, Alphabets life science research group, and intended to serve California residents, beginning with San Mateo and Santa Clara County. (Alphabet is the parent company of Google.)

The site, now live, offers risk screening through an online questionnaire to direct high-risk individuals toward local mobile testing sites. At this time, the project has no plans for a nationwide rollout.

Google later clarified that the company is undertaking its own efforts to bring crucial COVID-19 information to users across its products, but that may have become conflated with Verilys much more limited screening site rollout. On Twitter, Googles comms team noted that Google is indeed working with the government on a website, but not one intended to screen potential COVID-19 patients or refer them to local testing sites.

In a partial clarification over the weekend, Vice President Pence, one of the Trump administrations designated point people on the pandemic, indicated that the White House is working with Google but also working with many other tech companies. Its not clear if that means a central site will indeed launch soon out of a White House collaboration with Silicon Valley, but Pence hinted that might be the case. If that centralized site will handle screening and testing location referral is not clear.

Our best estimate is that some point early in the week we will have a website that goes up, Pence said.

Read the original here:

With launch of COVID-19 data hub, the White House issues a call to action for AI researchers - TechCrunch

NIH clinical trial of investigational vaccine for COVID-19 begins – National Institutes of Health

March 17, 2020

News Release

Monday, March 16, 2020

Study enrolling Seattle-based healthy adult volunteers.

A Phase 1 clinical trial evaluating an investigational vaccine designed to protect against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has begun at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute (KPWHRI) in Seattle. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, is funding the trial. KPWHRI is part of NIAIDs Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Consortium. The open-label trial will enroll 45 healthy adult volunteers ages 18 to 55 years over approximately 6 weeks. The first participant received the investigational vaccine today.

The study is evaluating different doses of the experimental vaccine for safety and its ability to induce an immune response in participants. This is the first of multiple steps in the clinical trial process for evaluating the potential benefit of the vaccine.

The vaccine is called mRNA-1273 and was developed by NIAID scientists and their collaborators at the biotechnology company Moderna, Inc., based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) supported the manufacturing of the vaccine candidate for the Phase 1 clinical trial.

Finding a safe and effective vaccine to prevent infection with SARS-CoV-2 is an urgent public health priority, said NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. This Phase 1 study, launched in record speed, is an important first step toward achieving that goal.

Infection with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, can cause a mild to severe respiratory illness and include symptoms of fever, cough and shortness of breath. COVID-19 cases were first identified in December 2019 in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China. As of March 15, 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) has reported 153,517 cases of COVID-19 and 5,735 deaths worldwide. More than 2,800 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 58 deaths have been reported in the United States as of March 15, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Currently, no approved vaccines exist to prevent infection with SARS-CoV-2.

The investigational vaccine was developed using a genetic platform called mRNA (messenger RNA). The investigational vaccine directs the bodys cells to express a virus protein that it is hoped will elicit a robust immune response. The mRNA-1273 vaccine has shown promise in animal models, and this is the first trial to examine it in humans.

Scientists at NIAIDs Vaccine Research Center (VRC) and Moderna were able to quickly develop mRNA-1273 because of prior studies of related coronaviruses that cause severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). Coronaviruses are spherical and have spikes protruding from their surface, giving the particles a crown-like appearance. The spike binds to human cells, allowing the virus to gain entry. VRC and Moderna scientists already were working on an investigational MERS vaccine targeting the spike, which provided a head start for developing a vaccine candidate to protect against COVID-19. Once the genetic information of SARS-CoV-2 became available, the scientists quickly selected a sequence to express the stabilized spike protein of the virus in the existing mRNA platform.

The Phase 1 trial is led by Lisa A. Jackson, M.D., senior investigator at KPWHRI. Study participants will receive two doses of the vaccine via intramuscular injection in the upper arm approximately 28 days apart. Each participant will be assigned to receive a 25 microgram (mcg), 100 mcg or 250 mcg dose at both vaccinations, with 15 people in each dose cohort. The first four participants will receive one injection with the low dose, and the next four participants will receive the 100 mcg dose. Investigators will review safety data before vaccinating the remaining participants in the 25 and 100 mcg dose groups and before participants receive their second vaccinations. Another safety review will be done before participants are enrolled in the 250 mcg cohort.

Participants will be asked to return to the clinic for follow-up visits between vaccinations and for additional visits across the span of a year after the second shot. Clinicians will monitor participants for common vaccination symptoms, such as soreness at the injection site or fever as well as any other medical issues. A protocol team will meet regularly to review safety data, and a safety monitoring committee will also periodically review trial data and advise NIAID. Participants also will be asked to provide blood samples at specified time points, which investigators will test in the laboratory to detect and measure the immune response to the experimental vaccine.

This work is critical to national efforts to respond to the threat of this emerging virus, Dr. Jackson said. We are prepared to conduct this important trial because of our experience as an NIH clinical trials center since 2007.

Adults in the Seattle area who are interested in joining this study should visit https://corona.kpwashingtonresearch.org. For more information about the study, visit ClinicalTrials.gov and search identifier NCT04283461.

NIAID conducts and supports research at NIH, throughout the United States, and worldwide to study the causes of infectious and immune-mediated diseases, and to develop better means of preventing, diagnosing and treating these illnesses. News releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related materials are available on the NIAID website.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

Adults in the Seattle area who are interested in joining this study should visit https://corona.kpwashingtonresearch.org/. People who live outside of this region will not be eligible to participate in this trial.

###

Read the original:

NIH clinical trial of investigational vaccine for COVID-19 begins - National Institutes of Health

COVID-19: Who Is Infectious? – Forbes

March 17, 2020

The current approach in this country is to screen people who are sick. At a time of limited testing capacity, we are doling out the tests to a chosen few, with a focus on those with symptoms. We are focusing a lot on identifying, testing, and sequestering those who are sick.

For example, many health systems are surveilling their health care workers and want to know who has symptoms? Who has a fever? The emphasis is on telling people to stay home if they are sick because they may spread the virus. Many others are doing the same - those that have not yet closed down. But I think this approach to focus on those with symptoms is folly if we think it will break the chain of virus transmission.

Its not that we should stop encouraging people who are sick to stay home to stay away from crowded places and, for goodness sakes, to stay off planes and trains. We should. They should stay home for their own benefit to rest and recover. They should also stay home not to infect others whether they have COVID-19 or not.

But we should not delude ourselves to think that is an effective strategy to stop the chain of virus transmission. What is clear is that people can be infected without symptoms. For example, the NBA player, Christian Wood of the Detroit Pistons, tested positive and had no symptoms. In fact, in the days before testing, he had a career high 32 points. He presumably was infected several days before that in contact with Rudy Gobert of the Utah Jazz, who was the first NBA player to test positive.

Evidence from South Korea and Italy is reinforcing how our testing strategy can lead us astray. Italy, like the United States, has focused on testing people who are ill. South Korea has taken a more national surveillance approach, making testing widely available. In Italy the distribution of people testing positive is skewed toward older age. This distribution makes us think that mostly the older population is infected. But in South Korea, the distribution is quite different, with a skew toward younger people and a peak around 20-29-year olds, the groups that may be socializing the most. Even many children were testing positive at much higher rates than Italy. The implication is that there are a lot of people out and about who are positive, but not overtly sick and are vectors for spread.

In an article published in medRxiv, a preprint server that posts studies before peer review, scientists from Europe using public data, estimated that about half the cases or more in Singapore and Tianjin, China are from transmission from people without symptoms.

The fact that many people without symptoms are walking around has important implications not because of their contact with others, but because of indirect spread. Indirect spread occurs, in part by contamination of common objects. The CDC reported about indirect COVID-19 transmission in a shopping mall in Wenzhou, China. Experts from the US, again in medRxiv, reported that the virus causing COVID-19, can survive on many common surfaces for many hours or even days.

So what does this mean? We should all consider ourselves infectious. We may carry the virus and can be a threat to others even if we feel well.

This is the strong justification for the social distancing. We should particularly not be visiting elderly people. We should be avoiding crowds. We should be washing our hands and wiping surfaces with disinfectants.

We should also know that we cannot be sure who might infect us or what surfaces might transmit the virus. COVID-19 spreads quickly through a population and this asymptomatic spread is likely a reason. And with scarce testing in this country, we have no real idea where it is and who has it.

This information is not meant to scare you or cause anxiety. It is intended to convey why the social distancing is so important. It is also to make clear why we cannot just focus on how people feel as a barometer of whether they might be infected. We are not containing the virus by just sequestering the people with symptoms. We all need to practice good habits in keeping a distance. We need to test more. And we need to all act as if we could be infectious of those around us could be.

If we are to slow the spread, flatten the curve and protect the most vulnerable we must consider ourselves infectious - as well as those around us. We might be. They might be. We must do this, as part of our citizenship in the world as part of our responsibility to each other to protect each other and break the chain of transmission. We can make a difference.

See original here:

COVID-19: Who Is Infectious? - Forbes

The Guardian view on the latest Covid-19 steps: a recipe for isolation – The Guardian

March 17, 2020

The new week that is now under way will be like no other. Europe is officially the centre of the global coronavirus pandemic. Last weekend saw the imposition of drastic new measures by governments across the continent, with schools, museums, businesses and national borders closed. Gatherings, including major sporting fixtures, have been cancelled and states of emergency declared. In the UK, local elections that were due to take place in May have been postponed. In Italy it was announced that 368 people had died in 24 hours the worst single-day death toll for any country including China, where the Covid-19 outbreak began in November. Markets around the world have fallen sharply, with the FTSE 100 closing on Monday at an eight-year low.

Boris Johnsons late afternoon press conference on Monday, and the promise of daily televised briefings, went some way to calm justified fears about his governments approach to the coronavirus crisis. In a dramatic ratcheting up of official guidance, described by the prime minister as very draconian, entire households are now asked to quarantine themselves for 14 days if any member has either of the two key symptoms of a high temperature or continuous cough. Everyone should minimise non-essential contact, work from home if possible and avoid unnecessary travel. Vulnerable groups, including over-70s and pregnant women, should stay indoors for 12 weeks.

Nothing about these instructions could be described as reassuring. A large number of businesses are likely to go bust. But the manner of their delivery, in a public forum, was at least an improvement on the events of last weekend, when the proposal to quarantine over-70s first emerged via an off-the-record briefing with a single journalist. Direct communication by ministers and their officials is the least that the country should expect.

Messaging aside, questions about the governments strategy will not go away. The idea of building herd immunity, rather than preventing infections, has provoked strong criticism from experts as well as alarm among members of the public. And while the government has now announced much stronger steps aimed at preventing infections, its approach is still out of step with much of the rest of the world. Schools in the UK remain open unlike in many other European states.

The World Health Organization reiterated on Monday its view that tests should be at the heart of the official response. Testing, combined with isolation and contact tracing in order to identify and contain as many clusters as possible was the strategy pursued in South Korea and other Asian countries where outbreaks appear to have peaked. But the UK is sticking to an approach that requires only people needing hospital treatment to be tested. The twin aims of the plan set out by Mr Johnson and his advisers on Monday are to suppress the curve of the Covid-19 outbreak, in order to give the NHS the best chance of coping with those needing treatment, and to shield from infection those groups who are known to be at risk.

This strategy will now be put to the test, as the UK enters what officials described as the diseases fast-growth period. As well as the virus itself there are all its knock-on effects: on employment, education, travel plans, other health issues, social life and income. Panic buying last weekend, as supermarket shelves in many places were emptied, along with closures of theatres and workplaces, have brought the reality of a pandemic sharply home. And while it is tempting to mock as overblown health secretary Matt Hancocks comparison to the blitz, it is true that the situation we now find ourselves in more closely resembles dystopian fiction than anything most people have experienced.

An exceptionally difficult period lies ahead, one which will be far harder to manage for those already struggling with health or family difficulties, or to make ends meet. With official instructions to avoid social contact, most individuals will turn inward. But as a society, we must do everything in our power including through public policy to reach beyond our family circles, and ensure the poorest and loneliest do not bear the brunt.

Read more:

The Guardian view on the latest Covid-19 steps: a recipe for isolation - The Guardian

Government publishes updated COVID-19 industry guidance – GOV.UK

March 17, 2020

The government has today published new and updated guidance to provide affected sectors with the latest advice on managing the threat from COVID-19. The Public Health England (PHE) guidance provides important information for specific sectors, including schools and transport, on what precautions to take, what to do if someone develops symptoms and how to limit the spread of the virus.

The guidance will assist staff, employers and members of the public after the government last week shifted into the delay phase of its action plan to slow the spread of the virus, reduce pressures on the NHS and protect the most vulnerable.

New and updated COVID-19 industry guidance:

Guidance has also been published on how to clean non-healthcare settings such as offices or hotel rooms where a person with possible or confirmed COVID-19 has spent time while experiencing symptoms.

The guidance recommends a range of measures for different industries, including:

The advice for these settings continues to be not to close unless advised to do so by the local Public Health England Health Protection Team or the government.

It comes after the Health and Social Care Secretary announced an expanded public awareness campaign asking people to self-isolate for 7 days if they develop a high temperature or a new continuous cough, however mild.

The most important thing individuals can do to protect themselves remains washing hands more often, for at least 20 seconds, with soap and water.

The next phase of the awareness campaign reiterates the importance of seeking help online by visiting NHS.UK/coronavirus to check symptoms and follow the medical advice, rather than visiting a GP.

Last week, the government published advice for the social care sector to protect older people and those with underlying conditions.

Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock said:

Our goal is to protect life by protecting the vulnerable and the NHS.

We are in the midst of the biggest public health emergency in a generation, and everyone has a part to play. As the government works round the clock as part of our action plan to tackle the virus, its vital that different industries know exactly what they need to do to limit the spread of COVID-19 and ultimately protect life.

This updated guidance provides clear information on what to do if someone is experiencing symptoms, how to keep people informed and the precautions that we should all be taking including continuing to regularly wash our hands.

PHEs National Infections Service Deputy Director Nick Phin said:

The most important actions people can all take are to wash their hands regularly, stay at home when they have symptoms however mild and to regularly clean and disinfect surfaces.

We will keep our guidance under constant review and update it as the situation unfolds.

Continued here:

Government publishes updated COVID-19 industry guidance - GOV.UK

Working from home because of COVID-19? Here are 10 ways to spend your time – Science Magazine

March 17, 2020

By Karin BodewitsMar. 16, 2020 , 12:40 PM

Classes are cancelled, exams are being re-scheduled, university buildings are staying shut, meetings are being postponed indefinitely, a Ph.D. student who is based in Austria tweeted last week. Now what am I supposed to do?

As the COVID-19 pandemic sweeps the world, many academics are of course dealing with greater concerns, such as the health of family, friends, or themselves. (See Sciences coronavirus coverage here.) But for those free of illness and related burdens, and stuck at home, what do you do with your time? Here are some ideas for scientists who suddenly find themselves working from home.

1. Take care of yourself.

As a first step, dont neglect your physical and mental health. Meditate. Do jumping jacks in your living room. Practice yoga. Whatever it is that works for you, do what it takes to care for your body and mind.

2. Learn a new skill.

Lets face it. If youre stuck at home, youre probably not going to become an expert on how to run a mass spectrometer. But you could beef up your computer programming skillsfor instance, by learning how to create a fancy new graph in R or how to produce documents in LaTeX. You could also read a book about a new topic or circle back to that online course that you never finished.

3. Revisit that long forgotten project.

Somewhere in the deep, dark depths of your computers file system, do you have an unfinished manuscript or unpublished data? If so, then you might want to use this time to dust off the files and figure out whether what you have is, in fact, publishable.

4. Promote your work online.

Consider devoting time to a bit of marketing. Does your personal website need updating? Have you been meaning to set up a Twitter profile and learn what hashtags are? Would you like to write a popular science article? Or create a YouTube video about your research? If so, this might be the perfect time to wiggle your way out from underneath the rock youve been living under and find new avenues for connecting with other researchers and sharing your work. If youre struggling with social isolation at home, then social media might also help with thatgiving you a way to interact and commiserate with other scientists, such as those on #AcademicTwitter.

5. Create a graphical abstract of your research.

Graphical abstractsself-explanatory visual summaries of the main findings of your researchare an increasingly popular way to communicate science. They take time to make, but they are a perfect eye-catcher and are recyclable. Once youve made one, you can place it on posters, presentation slides, papers, and social media platforms. It could even help you build your personal brand.

6. Apply for funding.

You might benefit from spending time scouring the internet for fellowships, grants, and awards. Dont just look in the most obvious places, such as federal grant agency websites. Take a look around for industry awards, lower profile fellowships, and little pots of research funding that you might be able to apply for. Even if you dont receive an award, the process of applying will help you master the skill of grant writing.

7. Think about your career plans.

When youre in the lab, its easy to focus on your next experiment and neglect long-term career planning. So, consider using some of your homebound time to learn more about yourself and your career options. You could read a book about career planning, test out career options with online job simulations, or use free introspection tools, such as myIDP. These things will help you reflect on the skills you have, brainstorm skills youd like to develop, and think about where you see yourself headed in the future.

8. Conduct informational interviews.

If you have a few ideas about jobs that might interest you, then take this time to reach out to professionals who currently hold those jobs. In the midst of a pandemic, its not appropriate to ask them to meet up for coffee. But you can ask them for a quick phone call or Skype chat. The reality is that the people whom youd like to speak with may be working from home too. Whats more, they might be itching for more social contact. So, informational interviews could be a good way to break isolation, learn about someones career, and build a network, while still keeping a distance.

9. Be nice to your fellow humans.

If you live with others, being cooped up with them fulltime might be less fun than you imagined it to be. Channel your frustrations into something harmlessfor instance, by punching a pillow, exhausting yourself with pushups, or placing a tea towel between your teeth and screaming as loud as you can. Whatever you do, dont punch anyone.

10. Do fun stuff.

Close your eyes and think back to the time before you went to grad school. What was giving you joy? Is there an old hobby you can pick up again? One upside of your home confinement is that you no longer need to spend time commuting back and forth to work. Can you reallocate that time to doing something that will bring you joyor, at the very least, alleviate some stress?

Its an incredibly turbulent time for most of us. Take care of yourself and others, and remember to wash your hands!

Read the original:

Working from home because of COVID-19? Here are 10 ways to spend your time - Science Magazine

Two positive COVID-19 cases announced in Fairbanks, bringing Alaska’s confirmed total to 3 – Anchorage Daily News

March 17, 2020

Were making coronavirus coverage available without a subscription as a public service. We depend on the support of readers to produce journalism like this every day. Help us do this work - subscribe now. You can find the rest of our coverage of the novel coronavirus here.

Two older men in the Fairbanks area have tested positive for COVID-19 after traveling in the Lower 48, Alaskas chief medical officer said Monday night.

The two positive test results came in Monday evening, Dr. Anne Zink said. She described these as travel associated cases. Both men had been traveling to places in the Lower 48 where community transmission was happening, and had been out in the Fairbanks community for a period of time, Zink told news media in a briefing.

Both individuals are currently stable and isolating at home, Zink said, adding that their families and close contacts will be asked to be quarantined. Officials do not have any reason to believe they were traveling together or traveling in the same place, Zink said.

The states epidemiology team is still investigating all their contacts with other people, which Zink described as an ongoing process. When asked whether the two individuals had traveled through other Alaska communities since traveling Outside, she said that was part of their ongoing investigation.

Zink said that these cases highlight the importance of people staying home if theyre feeling sick, and said that anyone who had traveled to the Lower 48 in the last 14 days should socially distance themselves from other people.

Fairbanks Mayor Jim Matherly said there were no plans to enact restaurant or other business closures like those announced for Anchorage on Monday, though he said decisions may be flexible because we dont know what to expect over the coming days. Part of the issue is also that the city (of Fairbanks) has the authority to close bars and restaurants, but the Fairbanks North Star Borough doesnt, Matherly said.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

See original here:

Two positive COVID-19 cases announced in Fairbanks, bringing Alaska's confirmed total to 3 - Anchorage Daily News

Page 893«..1020..892893894895..»