26
   

Coronavirus

 
 
Olivier5
 
  2  
Fri 5 Jun, 2020 03:07 pm
@farmerman,
Indeed, the UK study was released today and found no positive effect of the compound.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Fri 5 Jun, 2020 05:23 pm
U.S. Cases Are Still Rising by More Than 20,000 Daily
Source: New York Times..


The uptick, mainly in the South and West, appears to be driven in part by increased testing and the virus taking hold in new regions. Here's the latest. Story on Front page...See link above...


Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  -1  
Sat 6 Jun, 2020 07:52 pm
Malaria Drug Promoted by Trump Did Not Prevent Covid Infections, Study Finds

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/03/health/hydroxychloroquine-coronavirus-trump.html?campaign_id=60&emc=edit_na_20200603&instance_id=0&nl=breaking-news&ref=headline&regi_id=50521885&segment_id=30002&user_id=0f74ba6d31393b994c7e633fbde7c9cb

The first carefully controlled trial of hydroxychloroquine given to people exposed to the coronavirus did not show any benefit.

By Denise Grady

June 3, 2020

The malaria drug hydroxychloroquine did not prevent Covid-19 in a rigorous study of 821 people who had been exposed to patients infected with the virus, researchers from the University of Minnesota and Canada are reporting on Wednesday.

The study was the first large controlled clinical trial of hydroxychloroquine, a drug that President Trump has repeatedly promoted and recently taken himself. Conducted in the United States and Canada, this trial was also the first to test whether the drug could prevent illness in people who have been exposed to the coronavirus.

This type of study, in which patients are picked at random to receive either an experimental treatment or a placebo, is considered the most reliable way to measure the safety and effectiveness of a drug. The participants were health care workers and people who had been exposed at home to ill spouses, partners or parents.

“The take-home message for the general public is that if you’re exposed to someone with Covid-19, hydroxychloroquine is not an effective post-exposure preventive therapy,” the lead author of the study, Dr. David R. Boulware, from the University of Minnesota, said in an interview.


The results were published in The New England Journal of Medicine.

“If we could find something that would ameliorate infection, block it or make it milder after a solid exposure, that would be quite wonderful,” said Dr. Judith Feinberg, the vice chairwoman for research in medicine at West Virginia University. “What we want to do is limit the number of cases. There was great hope riding on this.”

The president’s promotion of the drug, and the backlash against it, have politicized medical questions that would normally have been left to researchers to answer objectively. Trump supporters and opponents have accused one another of twisting facts about the drug to make the president look either right or wrong.

Regardless, Mr. Trump has not stopped touting the drug’s potential benefits. On Sunday, his administration announced that it was sending 2 million doses of the drug to Brazil, to treat patients and help prevent infection in health care workers. A White House official said the two countries would collaborate on research into its use.

Early in the pandemic, the drug's use was spurred by anecdotal reports from China and France of patients who seemed to improve and laboratory findings of a possible antiviral effect. With no proven treatment for Covid-19, doctors have been desperate to give severely ill patients some kind of therapy.

But several studies on sick patients, without control groups, have found no benefit and even possible harm from the drug. A recent Lancet study reported increased risks of heart problems and death. Shortly after it was published, the World Health Organization suspended trials of the drug.

But the Lancet data has been called into question. On Wednesday, the World Health Organization said it would resume the trials it had suspended.

Dr. Soumya Swaminathan, the deputy director of the W.H.O., said, “As of now, there is no evidence that any drug actually reduces the mortality in patients who have Covid-19, and in fact it is an urgent priority for all of us to do the needed studies, to do the randomized clinical trials in order to get that evidence as quickly as possible.”

Interest in the drug surged after Mr. Trump began advocating it. It is approved to treat rheumatoid arthritis and lupus, as well as malaria, and is considered safe for those patients as long as they do not have underlying abnormalities in their heart rhythm.

Studies in very ill coronavirus patients have linked the drug — especially when combined with the antibiotic azithromycin — to dangerous heart-rhythm disorders, and both the Food and Drug Administration and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases have warned that it should not be used outside of clinical trials or carefully monitored conditions in a hospital.

Some researchers say that safety concerns about the drug have been overblown, alarming the public and making it difficult to recruit participants for the studies needed to determine whether the drug has any value for treatment or prevention.

The new study included 821 people from across the United States and parts of Canada who had a either a high-risk or moderate-risk exposure to a person who had tested positive and was ill from the coronavirus. None of the participants had symptoms themselves. High-risk exposure meant they were less than six feet from a patient for more than ten minutes, with neither a mask nor a face shield. Moderate risk meant they wore a mask, but no face shield.

About 88 percent had high-risk exposures.

The participants, recruited online, ranged in age from 33 to 50, with a median age of 40. About half were women, and 66 percent of the total were health care workers. They were healthy and had no underlying health problems that would have made hydroxychloroquine dangerous for them. Most of the rest had been exposed at home, to an infected spouse, partner or parent.

Within four days of exposure, the participants were picked at random to receive either hydroxychloroquine or a placebo, and then followed to determine whether they had either laboratory-confirmed Covid-19, or an illness consistent with the virus, during the next 14 days.

The drug or placebos were mailed to them, and they then reported their symptoms online to the researchers, who did not examine them.

Not all the participants could be tested for the virus, because when the study was being conducted, there was still a shortage of test kits. (thanks a lot Trump, another unfulfilled promise.)

There was no meaningful difference between the placebo group and those who took the drug. Among those taking hydroxychloroquine, 49 of 414, or 11.8 percent, became ill. In the placebo group, 58 or 407, or 14.3 percent, became ill. Analyzed statistically, the difference between those rates was not significant.

The drug also did not make the illness any less severe.


Side effects like nausea from hydroxychloroquine were more common than from placebos, 40.1 percent compared with 16.8 percent, but there were no problems with heart rhythm or any other serious adverse effects.
The Coronavirus Outbreak

Infectious disease experts who were not part of the study said it was well done and answered an important question, though the results were disappointing.

Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University, said: “This was a large, randomized controlled trial done by very good people. Hydroxychloroquine did not provide a notable advantage.”

Noting that the drug had shown some ability to prevent the virus from infecting cells in laboratory studies, Dr. Schaffner said, “Unfortunately that did not translate into a beneficial effect in preventing the development of illness.”

An editorial accompanying the study pointed out some limitations: the lack of testing made it impossible to know for sure how many participants actually had Covid-19, and only 75 percent in the hydroxychloroquine group took the full course (some quit because of side effects). In addition, waiting four days after exposure to begin taking the drug may not have given it a chance to work, and starting it earlier might have had a different result.

The editorialist, Dr. Myron S. Cohen from the University of North Carolina, called the results more provocative than definitive, and wrote, “the potential prevention benefits of hydroxychloroquine remain to be determined.”

The study did not address the question of whether hydroxychloroquine can prevent coronavirus infection if people take it before they are exposed to sick patients. That possibility is being studied in other clinical trials involving health care workers and emergency medical technicians and other emergency medical workers.
0 Replies
 
Olivier5
 
  4  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 02:36 am
America Is Giving Up on the Pandemic

Businesses are reopening. Protests are erupting nationwide. But the virus isn’t done with us.

ALEXIS C. MADRIGAL & ROBINSON MEYER / JUNE 7, 2020 / THE ATLANTIC

After months of deserted public spaces and empty roads, Americans have returned to the streets. But they have come not for a joyous reopening to celebrate the country’s victory over the coronavirus. Instead, tens of thousands of people have ventured out to protest the killing of George Floyd by police.

Demonstrators have closely gathered all over the country, and in blocks-long crowds in large cities, singing and chanting and demanding justice. Police officers have dealt with them roughly, crowding protesters together, blasting them with lung and eye irritants, and cramming them into paddy wagons and jails.

There’s no point in denying the obvious: Standing in a crowd for long periods raises the risk of increased transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. This particular form of mass, in-person protest—and the corresponding police response—is a “perfect set-up” for transmission of the virus, Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in a radio interview on Friday. Some police-brutality activists (such as Black Lives Matter Seattle) have issued statements about the risk involved in the protests. Others have organized less risky forms of protests, such as Oakland’s Anti Police-Terror Project’s massive “caravan for justice.”

The risk of transmission is complicated by, and intertwined with, the urgent moral stakes: Systemic racism suffuses the United States. The mortality gap between black and white people persists. People born in zip codes mere miles from one another might have life-expectancy gaps of 10 or even 20 years. Two racial inequities meet in this week’s protests: one, a pandemic in which black people are dying at nearly twice their proportion of the population, according to racial data compiled by the COVID Tracking Project at The Atlantic; and two, antiblack police brutality, with its long American history and intensifying militarization. Floyd, 46, survived COVID-19 in April, but was killed under the knee of a police officer in May.
bobsal u1553115
 
  -1  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 06:34 am
@Olivier5,
Unfortunately, the Pandemic will probably not be giving up on the US. This week and next will tell the story.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 01:51 pm
Asymptomatic spread of coronavirus is 'very rare,' WHO says
Source: CNBC


Coronavirus patients without symptoms aren't driving the spread of the virus, World Health Organization officials said Monday, casting doubt on concerns by some researchers that the disease could be difficult to contain due to asymptomatic infections.

Some people, particularly young and otherwise healthy individuals, who are infected by the coronavirus never develop symptoms or only develop mild symptoms. Others might not develop symptoms until days after they were actually infected.

Preliminary evidence from the earliest outbreaks indicated that the virus could spread from person-to-person contact, even if the carrier didn't have symptoms. But WHO officials now say that while asymptomatic spread can occur, it is not the main way it's being transmitted.

"From the data we have, it still seems to be rare that an asymptomatic person actually transmits onward to a secondary individual," Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, head of WHO's emerging diseases and zoonosis unit, said at a news briefing from the United Nations agency's Geneva headquarters. "It's very rare."

Read more: https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2020/06/08/asymptomatic-coronavirus-patients-arent-spreading-new-infections-who-says.html
livinglava
 
  2  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 05:35 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
bobsal u1553115 wrote:

Asymptomatic spread of coronavirus is 'very rare,' WHO says
Source: CNBC


Coronavirus patients without symptoms aren't driving the spread of the virus, World Health Organization officials said Monday, casting doubt on concerns by some researchers that the disease could be difficult to contain due to asymptomatic infections.

Some people, particularly young and otherwise healthy individuals, who are infected by the coronavirus never develop symptoms or only develop mild symptoms. Others might not develop symptoms until days after they were actually infected.

Preliminary evidence from the earliest outbreaks indicated that the virus could spread from person-to-person contact, even if the carrier didn't have symptoms. But WHO officials now say that while asymptomatic spread can occur, it is not the main way it's being transmitted.

"From the data we have, it still seems to be rare that an asymptomatic person actually transmits onward to a secondary individual," Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, head of WHO's emerging diseases and zoonosis unit, said at a news briefing from the United Nations agency's Geneva headquarters. "It's very rare."

Read more: https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2020/06/08/asymptomatic-coronavirus-patients-arent-spreading-new-infections-who-says.html

They originally said that people should quarantine for two weeks to ensure they weren't gestating and spreading the disease. They are probably just changing the story now because they're under pressure to support economic interests that want to re-open.

If it only spread among people with symptoms, and if people get sick so quickly after contracting it, how would it have spread as much as it did before the lockdown was enacted?
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 05:39 pm
@livinglava,
May its a function of not knowing what to expect or what the disease was while at the same time trying to deal with thousands and millions of people getting it all around the world, while at the same time governments were hiding the extent of the infection in their own countries.
livinglava
 
  0  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 05:47 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
bobsal u1553115 wrote:

May its a function of not knowing what to expect or what the disease was while at the same time trying to deal with thousands and millions of people getting it all around the world, while at the same time governments were hiding the extent of the infection in their own countries.

People thought it was a hoax from the beginning; i.e. that it was a real virus but not as severe as they were making it out to be. Now you're telling me that those hoax/conspiracy people were right and the WHO was hyping up the risk for some political-economic reason, e.g. to generate an economic recession shortly before Trump was up for re-election?
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 05:55 pm
@livinglava,
I do not think this is a hoax. I do not think this thing is over. I believe it well may be back with a vengeance in the next few weeks. The number of cases is growing very quickly in here in rural Texas and in the rural parts of this nation. I've been self quarantining for almost four months. I've suspended my art classes for the last three. Its no hoax and nothing I've posted should make you believe it is.

It is insulting and stupid to say anyone wants someone else to die just to boot the orange shitgibbon.

Whats about to happen to him is on him. No Pandemic plan, nothing but nasty tweets and whining. No leadership whatsoever in response to nationwide protest over police violence and continuing police violence, no effort to defuse or calm, no program to end the abuse. Nothing nut threats and whining.

He's going to get what he deserves. His dithering has cost thousands of lives.
livinglava
 
  -3  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 06:03 pm
@bobsal u1553115,
bobsal u1553115 wrote:

I do not think this is a hoax. I do not think this thing is over. I believe it well may be back with a vengeance in the next few weeks. The number of cases is growing very quickly in here in rural Texas and in the rural parts of this nation. I've been self quarantining for almost four months. I've suspended my art classes for the last three. Its no hoax and nothing I've posted should make you believe it is.

The CNBC article you posted made it sound like the two-week quarantine is unnecessary. It said people are contagious before they have symptoms and that symptoms only take a couple days to occur after infection begins.

I don't know why rural or urban areas would be more or less likely areas for a virus to spread. People in rural areas go to stores and otherwise interact, the same as people in urban areas. I know that NY has been the US epicenter, but that supposedly has something to do with traffic with Europe, esp. Italy, and I'm not sure why Italy got it so badly.

There are supposedly still new cases happening everywhere (except New Zealand, which now supposedly has zero cases), and you can't assume that the people testing positive for it are only contracting it from others who have been statistically counted, since some people don't get very sick and don't seek care and/or get tested.

So the bottom line is that if it's spreading still, why should the 2-week gestation/quarantine recommendation change? By that logic, everyone who has been demonstrating in the streets should be coming down with COVID19 in the next two weeks or so.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Mon 8 Jun, 2020 09:26 pm
Coronavirus Live Updates: Global Caseload Passes 7 Million

As new daily cases worldwide hit a new high, the W.H.O. warned that the pandemic appeared to be worsening. New York City began a tentative reopening.


‘The Pandemic Remains a Public Health Emergency,’ W.H.O. Says
The World Health Organization extended its declaration of a global health emergency as the coronavirus pandemic continues to grow.

The Covid-19 crisis has illustrated that even the most sophisticated health systems have struggled to cope with a pandemic. W.H.O. has grave concerns about the potential impact the virus could have as it starts to accelerate in countries with weaker health systems. Of course, the pandemic remains a public health emergency of international concern. We will continue working with countries and partners to enable essential travel needed for pandemic response, humanitarian relief and cargo operations, and for countries to gradually resume normal passenger travel.

0:44‘The Pandemic Remains a Public Health Emergency,’ W.H.O. Says
The World Health Organization extended its declaration of a global health emergency as the coronavirus pandemic continues to grow.CreditCredit...Sarah Blesener for The New York Times
New daily cases hit a record high on Sunday, the W.H.O. says.

The number of new daily cases worldwide hit a new high on Sunday, the World Health Organization reported on Monday, warning that the pandemic appeared to be worsening and urging countries that had seen improvement to remain vigilant.

“More than 100,000 cases have been reported on nine of the past 10 days,” Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the organization’s director general, said at a briefing on Monday. “Yesterday, more than 136,000 cases were reported — the most in a single day so far.”

He said that three-quarters of the new cases reported on Sunday came from just 10 countries, mostly in the Americas and South Asia. While the situation in Europe has improved, Dr. Tedros issued an appeal to countries that had been seeing positive signs, warning them that “the biggest threat now is complacency.”

The pandemic has sickened more than 7,033,100 people worldwide, according to a New York Times database, and as of Monday afternoon, at least 403,300 people had died. More than a quarter of the deaths have been in the United States.

Dr. Tedros urged people to take care as protests against racism drew crowds around the world, calling for demonstrators to practice social distancing, wear masks, wash their hands, cover their coughs and stay home if they were sick.

“We continue to urge active surveillance to ensure the virus does not rebound, especially as mass gatherings of all kinds are starting to resume in some countries,” Dr. Tedros said. “W.H.O. fully supports equality and the global movement against racism. We reject discrimination of all kinds. We encourage all those protesting around the world to do so safely.”

Here are other developments from around the world:

A 14-day quarantine period for all travelers arriving in Britain took effect on Monday, to the anger of the country’s travel industry and doubts over the practicality of the new rules. Those entering Britain by air, ferry or train will have to provide an address at which they will isolate, with a fine of up to £1,000, or about $1,200, for violations.

With cases rising sharply in Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced on Monday that the country would “put the brakes” on plans to relax more restrictions in the days to come. He urged Israelis, many of whom have stopped wearing masks, to follow the Health Ministry’s guidelines. “For the sake of our economy, health and lives, I ask you to heed the rules,” he said.

Canada reopened its border on Monday to immediate family members of Canadian citizens and permanent residents. Anyone showing symptoms will remain barred, and everyone will be required to quarantine for 14 days. A border agreement between Canada and the United States is set to expire June 21.

The Polish Health Ministry reported 1,151 new cases over the weekend, a record for the country. More than half came from the Silesia region in southwest Poland, an area famous for its coal mines.

Prime Minister Imran Khan of Pakistan said he expected the virus to peak in the country by the end of July or August and urged residents to take precautions. Pakistan has seen a sharp rise in cases over the last week, surpassing 100,000 confirmed infections and more than 2,000 deaths.

New Zealand has no active cases and no new cases, officials announced on Monday, declaring that life could now return to a form of pre-pandemic normal.
0 Replies
 
Olivier5
 
  3  
Tue 9 Jun, 2020 12:02 am
@livinglava,
Quote:
WHO was hyping up the risk for some political-economic reason, e.g. to generate an economic recession

Paranoid trumpophonics. You guys are really losing it....

Also, I thought you among all people would welcome an economic slowdown, given your insistence on frugality as a way to address climate change. what gives?
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Tue 9 Jun, 2020 06:03 am
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Tue 9 Jun, 2020 06:07 am
@Olivier5,
Quote:
what gives?


Hidden agendas, cognitive dissonance, hypocrisy, holding positions for the purpose of justifying insulting others, intellectual dishonesty, sophistry, mendacity .... the list goes on.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Tue 9 Jun, 2020 10:21 am
The First Wave of COVID-19 Is Not Over. But How Might a Second Look?
The pandemic’s future will be decided by human action and several unanswered questions about the nature of the virus.
The Guardian

Michael Safi

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-first-wave-of-covid-19-is-not-over-but-how-might-a-second-look?utm_source=pocket-newtab

Restaurants are opening, parks are full and people are getting back to work: parts of Europe, Asia and much of the Middle East are enjoying the benefits of flattened coronavirus curves. Meanwhile, parts of the US, India and Latin America are still recording thousands of new cases every day.

The first wave of the coronavirus is not over. The future shape of the pandemic will be decided both by human action, in the form of social distancing, testing and other traditional methods of disease control, but also several unanswered questions about the nature of the virus itself.

Experts say there are several possibilities.

Peaks and Troughs

One is that the virus breaks out and is suppressed in peaks and troughs, until enough of the population is vaccinated or potentially develops immunity.

Antibody tests in most places indicate that quarantine measures were very effective in slowing down the virus. Fewer than 10% of populations in France, Spain and Sweden have developed the antibodies that would be evidence of having caught the virus and, in theory, becoming immune, for at least a short time.

But that also means the vast majority of populations remain susceptible.

If societies reopen before the virus is sufficiently eradicated, it may be that this first wave does not completely go away, says Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Columbia University.

“In the US, we are lifting lockdowns when there are still increasing numbers of cases in a bunch of states … We may just have peaks and valleys of transmission occurring over and over again as people’s behaviour changes,” she says.

The scale of these peaks could be reduced by making changes such as wearing masks, using public transport in a staggered way and avoiding overcrowded social events – which are increasingly being blamed for being “super-spreaders” of the first wave of the coronavirus.

If outbreaks grow too large, some governments might choose to reimplement quarantines. “If we’re reopening and we start to see case numbers growing rapidly in a few weeks, we may see rolling lockdowns or shutdowns to try to control the virus in those areas,” Rasmussen says.
Future Waves

Most influenza pandemics have historically struck in distinct wave patterns, with a first peak usually followed by a resurgent second wave six months later. But there is no guarantee Sars-CoV-2 will play out in the same way.

Social distancing and robust testing – or a lack of it – will be critical in deciding the future of the pandemic. But its shape will also be influenced by factors outside our control.

The first is whether we can become immune to the virus, and if so, how long that protection endures for.

Sometimes immunity can last for decades. During the 2009 swine flu pandemic, public health authorities were initially confused as to why many older people seemed to be immune. Later, they discovered the virus was structurally similar to one that circulated during the 1918 pandemic. The immune systems of many older people had dealt with a similar virus 92 years ago.

Resistance to some earlier discovered coronaviruses has been thought to fade within a year. If immunity to Sars-CoV-2 is not permanent, a report from Harvard epidemiologists says it is likely to enter into regular circulation, coming in annual or biennial waves or sporadic outbursts.

The frequency of significant outbreaks may also be influenced by the weather. Most influenzas spread more easily in the winter because the virus is thought to prefer dry air over humidity, and because people in cold environments spend more time indoors and close to each other.

Existing coronaviruses also follow seasonal patterns. If this coronavirus behaves in the same way – and there is not yet strong evidence that it does – we could see regular wintertime surges of Covid-19.

But with so many people still apparently not immune to the virus, that summer relief may not arrive this year, says James Hay, a postdoctoral research fellow at Harvard’s Chan School of Public Health.

“The factor that most contributes towards transmission is how many people are still susceptible,” he says. “And with so many still susceptible, that’s going to swamp out any climate effect.”

Significant mutations in the virus might also lead to a wave of new infections down the track. So far, scientists say that isn’t a huge concern.

“Even though there are different genomes out there that have changes compared to each other … there’s no evidence any of those changes are in spots that are critical for the immune system to recognise,” Rasmussen says.

But that doesn’t mean we won’t see a significant mutation later. “We’ve only known about this for six months, so it’s possible different strains could emerge in the future, because it does have a higher mutation rate,” she says. “But right now there’s no evidence that that’s happening.”
Infections are Kept Under Control

For countries that are able to implement highly effective interventions such as testing and contact tracing, this first wave of coronavirus cases may be the last they experience, at least for some time.

In New Zealand, which has managed to virtually eradicate the virus and installed robust systems to monitor new outbreaks, there may be no significant new outbreaks or future waves at all, says Nick Wilson, a professor of public health at the University of Otago.

“New Zealand is about to eliminate this virus,” Wilson says. “Even if there are border control failures, I expect that the contact tracing system is now good enough to control an occasional outbreak. So this country should be able to avoid future waves until a vaccine arrives.”

Countries with small populations and isolated geography such as New Zealand and Australia may be able to pull this off. South Korea is another country whose virus detection and suppression systems may be advanced enough to smother any future outbreaks. But it will be extremely difficult for most countries, especially those with large populations and porous borders.
The Virus Peters Out

There are a minority of epidemiologists who argue the deadliness of the coronavirus has been overstated. One of the most prominent is Sunetra Gupta, a professor of theoretical epidemiology at Oxford University, who says the virus could already be on the way out.

She argues that the antibody studies conducted so far have been unreliable, and do not take into account the possibility that many people might already be immune to Covid-19 because of exposure to more benign coronaviruses.

Others, including neuroscientist Karl Friston, have also spoken of some populations such as Germany’s having some kind of immunological “dark matter” that has kept fatalities there low compared to Spain, Italy or the UK.

This view is an outlier, and most governments have preferred to plan for the worst-case scenario – that millions of people are vulnerable to the virus. But Gupta argues the fact that virus transmission rates have peaked and fallen even in some places that did not institute harsh lockdowns is evidence for her theory.

“In almost every context we’ve seen the epidemic grow, turn around and die away – almost like clockwork,” Gupta told the media outlet UnHerd last week.

“To me that suggests that much of the driving force here was due to the buildup of immunity,” she says. “I think that’s a more parsimonious explanation than one which requires in every country for lockdown, or various degrees of lockdown, including no lockdown, to have had the same effect.”

Michael Safi is an international correspondent for the Guardian, based in the Middle East.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  0  
Tue 9 Jun, 2020 07:33 pm
Texas Reports Record-Breaking COVID-19 Hospitalizations As State Reopens

June 8, 202010:27 PM ET
Vanessa Romo

https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/06/08/872660425/texas-reports-record-breaking-covid-19-hospitalizations-as-state-reopens

Vanessa Romo
Twitter

Visitors to the River Walk in San Antonio pass a reopened restaurant on May 18. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott says bars and bowling alleys are on the list of businesses that can reopen at 25% beginning Friday, and restaurants can increase to 50% capacity as the state continues to go through phases to reopen.
Eric Gay/AP

Texas reported a record-breaking number of COVID-19 hospitalizations Monday as the governor plans to reopen more businesses and double capacity.

Texas Department of State Health Services figures show 1,935 people were admitted as hospital patients for coronavirus-related treatment. That is up from a previous record of 1,888 on May 5.

The department's new figures were released as Gov. Greg Abbott moves forward with a plan to open bars, restaurants, amusement parks and other businesses to 50% capacity.

Abbott led most of the nation's governors in allowing Texas to lift statewide stay-at-home orders and urging businesses to reopen at limited capacity on May 1.

But even in states where officials left stringent restrictions in place, the number of newly diagnosed cases are rising. About 20 states, including California and Arizona, have also reported a rise in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, according to The New York Times. Meanwhile, state leaders have come under increasing pressure to restart the economy.

The pattern holds true worldwide. On Monday, the World Health Organization warned that the outbreak is worsening around the globe. The U.N. body said the world had recorded its highest daily jump of cases — 136,000. And the United States and Brazil continue to report the highest number of new cases on a daily basis with roughly 20,000 each.

Meanwhile, virus experts and epidemiologists are concerned that the recent protests that have cascaded across the country since the killing of George Floyd on Memorial Day will lead to an unprecedented spike in coronavirus cases.

In Texas, the availability of intensive care beds and ventilators — 1,600 and 5,800 respectively — have been seen as markers of improvement and evidence that it is time to reopen the economy.

Some officials have stated that the increase in cases has more to do with the spread of testing. Some counties are now including prison testing results in their data, which is driving reporting rates up.

And the numbers are likely to continue to rise. On Monday, Abbott pledged to increase testing "in underserved and minority communities that have been disproportionately impacted by the virus."

Throughout Texas, more than 75,000 people have been infected and more than 1,800 others have died from COVID-19, according to Johns Hopkins University.
0 Replies
 
bobsal u1553115
 
  1  
Tue 9 Jun, 2020 08:13 pm
Six Months of Coronavirus: Here’s Some of What We’ve Learned


https://www.nytimes.com/article/coronavirus-facts-history.html?algo=identity&fellback=false&imp_id=513627883

Much remains unknown and mysterious, but these are some of the things we’re pretty sure of after half a year of this pandemic.
Video
Cinemagraph
Jens Mortensen for The New York TimesCredit

By The New York Times

June 3, 2020

Leer en español

[Read our live updates on the Coronavirus pandemic.]

We don’t really know when the novel coronavirus first began infecting people. But as we turn a page on our calendars into June, it is fair to say that Sars-Cov-2 has been with us now for a full six months.

At first, it had no name or true identity. Early in January, news reports referred to strange and threatening symptoms that had sickened dozens of people in a large Chinese city with which many people in the world were probably not familiar. After half a year, that large metropolis, Wuhan, is well-known, as is the coronavirus and the illness it causes, Covid-19.

In that time, many reporters and editors on the health and science desk at The New York Times have shifted our journalistic focus as we have sought to tell the story of the coronavirus pandemic. While much remains unknown and mysterious after six months, there are some things we’re pretty sure of. These are some of those insights.
Here are some things we think we know about coronavirus:

We’ll have to live with this for a long time.
You should be wearing a mask.
American public health infrastructure needs an update.
Responding to the virus is extraordinarily expensive.
We have a long way to go to fix virus testing.
We can’t count on herd immunity to keep us healthy.
The virus produces more symptoms than expected.
We can worry a bit less about infection from surfaces.
We can also worry less about a mutating virus.
We can’t count on warm weather to defeat the virus.

WHAT WE STILL DON’T KNOW
These are six of the enduring mysteries of the coronavirus pandemic.
We’ll have to live with this for a long time.


Summer is almost here, states are reopening and new coronavirus cases are declining or, at least, holding steady in many parts of the United States. At least 100 scientific teams around the world are racing to develop a vaccine.

That’s about it for the good news.

The virus has shown no sign of going away: We will be in this pandemic era for the long haul, likely a year or more. The masks, the social distancing, the fretful hand-washing, the aching withdrawal from friends and family — those steps are still the best hope of staying well, and will be for some time to come.

“This virus just may become another endemic virus in our communities, and this virus may never go away,” Dr. Mike Ryan, the executive director of the World Health Organization’s health emergencies program, warned last month. Some scientists think that the longer we live with the virus, the milder its effects will become, but that remains to be seen.
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Predictions that millions of doses of a vaccine may be available by the end of this year may be too rosy. No vaccine has ever been created that fast.

The disease would be less frightening if there were a treatment that could cure it or, at least, prevent severe illness. But there is not. Remdesivir, the eagerly awaited antiviral drug? “Modest” benefit is the highest mark experts give it.

Which brings us back to masks and social distancing, which have come to feel quite antisocial. If only we could go back to life the way it used to be.

We cannot. Not yet. There are just enough wild cards with this disease — perfectly healthy adults and children who inexplicably become very, very sick — that no one can afford to be cavalier about catching it. About 35 percent of infected people have no symptoms at all, so if they are out and about, they could unknowingly infect other people.

Enormous questions loom. Can workplaces be made safe? What about trains, subways, airplanes, school buses? How many people can work from home? When would it be safe to reopen schools? How do you get a 6-year-old with the attention span of a squirrel to socially distance?

The bottom line: Wear a mask, keep your distance. When the time comes in the fall, get a flu shot, to protect yourself from one respiratory disease you can avoid and to help keep emergency rooms and urgent care from being overwhelmed. Hope for a treatment, a cure, a vaccine. Be patient. We have to pace ourselves. If there’s such a thing as a disease marathon, this is it.
Olivier5
 
  4  
Wed 10 Jun, 2020 05:33 am
Satellite images and internet trends suggest the coronavirus may have emerged months before China reported it: 'Something was happening in October'

[email protected] (Morgan McFall-Johnsen) , 12 hrs ago

Satellite and internet search data suggest that the coronavirus may have begun spreading in Wuhan, China, as early as August 2019. According to a new Harvard study, traffic at six major hospitals in Wuhan increased in fall 2019. People in Wuhan also began searching online for information about coughs and diarrhea — symptoms associated with COVID-19. But the research is not conclusive and has not yet been peer reviewed.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/satellite-images-and-internet-trends-suggest-the-coronavirus-may-have-emerged-months-before-china-reported-it-something-was-happening-in-october/ar-BB15gor5


0 Replies
 
farmerman
 
  3  
Wed 10 Jun, 2020 05:55 am
@bobsal u1553115,
masks for the public are mutating also. Th facial cloth masks that cover th nos and mouth are getting more pliable and act as a more efficient "filter", THEN , on top of that there is a new version of a plastic face shield that doesnt allow but a minimal amount of droplets and aerosols.
Its still a condition of "My mask protects you, so Wear a mask to protect me"
Its amazing how the wearing of masks was so politicized just a few weeks ago, now its almost a standard tool for group protection by personal isolation.
 

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