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Beyond India, a growing number of Asian countries are being ravaged by Coronavirus Waves

shockshiok

Alfrescian
Loyal
Soon CB II

https://www.cnn.com/2021/05/07/asia/asia-covid-hotspots-dst-intl-hnk/index.html

Nectar Gan, CNN
Updated 9:55 PM ET, Fri May 7, 2021


(CNN)As India's coronavirus catastrophe worsens, new waves of infections are fast engulfing a growing number of nations across South and Southeast Asia -- with some grappling with their worst outbreaks since the pandemic began.
The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday that India had accounted for nearly half of all global infections and a quarter of deaths reported in the past week.
But cases have also skyrocketed in countries around India, from Nepal in the north to Sri Lanka and the Maldives in the south. And it's not just India's neighbors -- further away in Southeast Asia, infections are also surging in Thailand, Cambodia and Indonesia.
"The Southeast Asia region reported over 2.7 million new cases and over 25,000 new deaths, a 19% and a 48% increase respectively compared to the previous week," the WHO said on Wednesday. "India is currently driving the vast majority of this upward trend."


The rapid resurgence of the virus has placed enormous pressure on the health systems and medical supplies of these countries. Some have called for international assistance amid the deepening crisis.
On Wednesday, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) warned more must be done to stop the tragedy unfolding across Asia.
"We need to act now and we need to act fast to have any hope of containing this human catastrophe," Alexander Matheou, the IFRC's Asia-Pacific regional director, said in a statement. "This virus has no respect for borders and these variants are running rampant across Asia."
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka has experienced a steep spike in coronavirus cases since mid-April, with infections quickly surpassing the peak of its previous wave in February.
On Friday, the South Asian island nation reported 1,895 cases -- almost five times the daily infections it was reporting in early April.
According to the country's Health Minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi, the uptick in infections was due to the large gatherings for Sri Lanka's New Year on April 13 and 14, during which people crowded the streets to celebrate and shop.
Before the event, authorities seemed confident Covid-19 was under control, and encouraged the public to celebrate while adhering to health guidelines.
In a New Year message on April 12, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa said while the pandemic prevented Sri Lanka from celebrating the festival last year, "this year all of us together have made it possible to enjoy the New Year festivities."
Travel to Sri Lanka: What it's like to visit now during the Covid pandemic

Travel to Sri Lanka: What it's like to visit now during the Covid pandemic


"It is my hope and expectation that all citizens without any discrimination will join the Sinhala and Tamil New Year celebrations with fresh hopes, determination, and righteous thoughts," he wrote.
But infections started to spike soon afterward. On April 27, the country reported 1,111 new cases, the first time daily infections had surged past 1,000 since the pandemic began. Authorities responded by shutting schools, banning private functions and imposing lockdowns in more than 100 areas across the country of 21 million people.
But the restrictions failed to flatten the rising caseload. On Wednesday, Sri Lanka expanded its lockdowns to four more districts. As of now, lockdowns have been imposed in 13 of the country's 25 administrative regions.
Sri Lanka has seen a steep spike in coronavirus cases since mid-April


Sri Lanka has seen a steep spike in coronavirus cases since mid-April

Despite its close proximity to India, the Indian coronavirus variant had not been detected in Sri Lanka as of last week, according to Dr. Chandima Jeewandara at the University of Sri Jayawardenapura, who leads a team that conducts genetic sequencing of Covid-19 in the country.
Instead, the rapid increase in cases is blamed on the highly contagious variant B.1.1.7, which was first detected in the United Kingdom and is circulating in Sri Lanka, Jeewandara said.
Last week, President Rajapaksa said the only answer the spiraling outbreak is vaccination. But Sri Lanka is facing a shortage of 600,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine it ordered from the Serum Institute of India to complete the second round of its inoculation program.
So far, only a million vaccines doses have been administered in the country of 21 million -- about five doses per 100 people. The rollout is slower than that of India, which has administered 12 doses per 100 people.
On Thursday, Sri Lanka became the latest neighboring country to seal its borders with India, following Bangladesh and Nepal. Flight passengers from India were banned from entering, and Sri Lanka's navy said it had stepped up patrols to keep away Indian trawlers.
The Maldives
The Maldives, another neighbor of India, on Tuesday reported a daily record of 601 new Covid-19 cases, according to the country's Health Protection Agency.
With its economy depending heavily on tourism, the Indian Ocean archipelago reopened its borders to international travelers last July after three months of lockdown, becoming the first country to welcome foreign tourists in the middle of the pandemic.
As India's other neighbors now rush to seal borders and impose travel bans, Maldives resorts are still welcoming Bollywood stars and other well-off Indians seeking to escape the crisis at home.
This year, India has become the largest source of tourists for the Maldives. From January to March, almost 70,000 Indians visited the atoll nation, accounting for 23% of the market share and doubling the number of Indian holidaymakers in the whole of 2020, according to the Ministry of Tourism.
The Maldives was the first country to reopen its borders to international travelers in the middle of the pandemic last summer.


The Maldives was the first country to reopen its borders to international travelers in the middle of the pandemic last summer.

Last month, Maldivian officials announced plans to offer vaccinations to tourists on arrival, in a bid to lure more visitors. But such plans will only be rolled out after Maldives residents are fully vaccinated, officials said. So far, the country of 530,000 people has administered more than 400,000 doses of Covid-19 vaccine, or 76 doses per 100 people. Only 21% of its population is fully vaccinated.
For now, the country is focusing on containing the virus among its own population -- especially in the densely populated Greater Malé Region.
On Monday, the country's Health Emergency Operation Centre warned the number of Covid-19 hospitalizations had tripled over the previous few days, and a new variant of the coronavirus may have entered in the Maldives.
A 9 p.m. to 4 a.m. curfew was introduced for the Greater Malé Region from Thursday, during which individuals may only go out for essential purposes and delivery services with a permit from the police.
Nepal
In Nepal, the situation is increasingly resembling the crisis in India, with skyrocketing infections, overwhelmed hospitals and pleas for help from other nations.
The country is now reporting about 20 daily Covid-19 cases per 100,000 people -- about the same rate that India was reporting two weeks ago.


Last weekend, 44% of Nepal's Covid tests came back positive, according to government figures quoted by the IFRC, suggesting it isn't catching nearly enough cases.
"What is happening in India right now is a horrifying preview of Nepal's future if we cannot contain this latest Covid surge that is claiming more lives by the minute," Nepal's Red Cross chairperson, Dr. Netra Prasad Timsina, said in a statement.
Nepal has fewer doctors per capita than India, and a lower vaccination rate than its southern neighbor.
Covid fears are spreading on Mount Everest, as climbers risk infection to reach the top of the world

Covid fears are spreading on Mount Everest, as climbers risk infection to reach the top of the world


Mass public events, including festivals, political gatherings and weddings, have allowed infections to spread, along with general public complacency and slow government action.
"The situations are worsening day by day and it may go out of control in future," Dr. Samir Adhikari, a spokesperson for Nepal's Ministry of Health and Population, said Monday.
Some have blamed Nepal's rapid surge in infections on the spillover effect from India. The two countries share a long, porous border. In recent weeks, some Indians have fled their country's second wave, hoping to access health care in Nepal or escape to a third country, Adhikari said.
Although Nepal has tightened borders and imposed lockdowns in its worst-hit regions -- including Kathmandu -- some fear that won't be enough to contain the virus as it spreads through the capital, and even as far as Mount Everest's Base Camp.
Thailand
Despite being the first country to report a Covid-19 case outside of China in January last year, Thailand kept its infection numbers low in 2020 thanks to successful containment measures.
This year, however, it is facing a much bigger challenge. After containing a second wave that started last December, Thailand is struggling to curb a third wave of infections that has pushed daily caseloads and death tolls to unprecedented levels.
Before the start of the latest wave, Thailand had reported 28,863 cases by March 31. In five weeks, that number has more than doubled to surpass 76,000. On Friday alone, it reported 1,911 new cases.
The ongoing outbreak has been traced to a number of nightlife venues in Bangkok. On April 5, the city announced the closure of 196 entertainment venues for two weeks. But the virus kept spreading. It was further exacerbated by mass travel for the Songkran Thai New Year in mid-April, when hundreds of thousands of Thais visited families and beaches.
The Chalerm Prakiat Bang Mod sports stadium in Bangkok has been converted into a field hospital to treat coronavirus patients.


The Chalerm Prakiat Bang Mod sports stadium in Bangkok has been converted into a field hospital to treat coronavirus patients.

Wayo Assawarungruang, an opposition member of parliament who oversees his party's public health policy, said some hospitals in Bangkok had denied patients coronavirus tests because they didn't have enough beds available and were required by the government to immediately admit positive patients.
Authorities have set up field hospitals, using sports centers, conference halls and hotels to accommodate anyone infected with the virus, including asymptomatic cases, to curb the spread in communities.
On Tuesday, the Thai government launched a campaign to vaccinate 50,000 people living in a densely packed district in Bangkok, after more than 300 residents were infected.
The government has been criticized for acting too slowly in rolling out its vaccines. In a country of nearly 70 million people, only two doses have been administered for every 100 people so far.
Cambodia
Cases are also surging in Cambodia, which until February had recorded one of the world's smallest coronavirus tallies and no fatalities.
But an outbreak that started in late February sent infections skyrocketing from around zero to hundreds per day. Its total caseload has swelled from about 500 in late February to 17,621 now, with 114 related deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. On Thursday, it recorded 650 new cases and four deaths.
The surging caseload has put huge strain on the country's fragile health care system. On April 6, Prime Minister Hun Sen ordered coronavirus patients with mild symptoms to be treated at home, as hospitals were nearing their capacity.
People line up to receive a dose of China's Sinopharm Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine at a school in Phnom Penh on May 3.


People line up to receive a dose of China's Sinopharm Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine at a school in Phnom Penh on May 3.

On April 11, the WHO warned Cambodia was "on the brink of a national tragedy."
"Despite our best efforts, we are struggling to control the virus," said WHO Representative to Cambodia Li Ailan. "Unless we can stop the outbreak, Cambodia's health system is at high risk of being overwhelmed, which would have disastrous consequences."
Li also warned the ongoing outbreak is different from last year due to the contagious UK variant, which has been detected in Cambodia.
To curb the spread of the virus, authorities imposed a lockdown in the capital Phnom Penh and a satellite district on April 15. The restrictions came in the middle of the Cambodian New Year, a three-day national holiday that usually sees large numbers of people return home to celebrate with their families.
Areas labeled as "red zones" -- home to about 300,000 people -- imposed strict measures that banned residents from leaving their homes except for medical emergencies. Rights groups warned the lockdowns were leading to an emerging humanitarian crisis, with residents struggling to get food and other necessities while NGO groups were barred from entering to distribute aid.
On Monday, Hun Sen ordered the end of the Phnom Penh lockdown, despite surging cases.
The country is pinning its hope on vaccinations to curb its second wave. On May 1, the Cambodian army began a month-long campaign to vaccinate nearly half a million residents in the worst-hit areas of Phnom Penh, with vaccines made by Chinese companies Sinopharm and Sinovac.
So far, more than 2.6 million doses have been administered in the country of 16 million people -- but just 6.33% of the population is fully vaccinated.
Indonesia
Earlier this week, Indonesia's Health Ministry confirmed two patients had the highly infectious coronavirus variant B.1.617, that was first identified in India. The country of 270 million has recorded a daily average of about 5,000 Covid-19 cases in the past week.
Authorities are concerned about the impact of the upcoming Mudik holiday, in which tens of millions of people travel to see their families in their hometowns to celebrate Eid al-Fitr, the end of Ramadan.
Workers bury a coffin containing the body of a Covid-19 victim at a cemetery reserved for coronavirus deaths in North Sumatra, Indonesia.


Workers bury a coffin containing the body of a Covid-19 victim at a cemetery reserved for coronavirus deaths in North Sumatra, Indonesia.

To halt the spread of Covid-19 during Eid festivities, the Indonesian government has banned all domestic travel from May 6 to May 17. The ban covers public and private journeys, including using cars, motorcycles, buses, trains, ferries, ships and planes.
Despite the travel ban, 18 million people -- or 7% of Indonesia's population -- were still planning on traveling for Eid al-Fitr, according to state news agency Antara.
About 155,000 personnel including 90,000 police and 11,500 military officers are being deployed to posts around the country to enforce the ban and restrictions around the holidays, Antara reported Wednesday. In Jakarta, more than 4,000 personnel will be stationed around the metropolitan region to enforce rules.
Additional reporting by CNN's Julia Hollingsworth, Helen Regan, Kocha Olarn, Iqbal Athas, Sugam Pokharel, Masrur Jamaluddin and Reuters.



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capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
Yet more proof that lockdowns don't work.

Wrong. Again. Call it 0 for 189 tries.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(21)01018-7/fulltext

COVID-19 vaccine impact in Israel and a way out of the pandemic



In December, 2020, Israel initiated a national campaign to vaccinate its population with Pfizer–BioNTech's mRNA COVID-19 vaccine BNT162b2 (tozinameran). Israel's Ministry of Health recommended a two-dose schedule with a 21-day interval between doses. Israel delivered more than 10 million doses within 4 months; by April 19, 2021, 54% of the entire population of 9·1 million people, and 88% of people aged 50 years or older, had received two doses.
1
Factors contributing to Israel's rapid roll-out include its small geographical and population sizes; advanced information technology that allowed prioritisation, allocation, and documentation of vaccines for eligible individuals; effective cooperation between government and community-based health funds, which were charged with providing vaccines to those they insured; and experience in rapid large-scale emergency responses.
2
Vaccines were rolled out around the time of Israel's third and largest wave of SARS-CoV-2 infections, with a peak 7-day moving average of 8328 new infections per day, which resulted in a 2-month national lockdown. Thus, Israel's setting provided a robust platform on which to examine vaccine effectiveness and the impact of high vaccine coverage in real-life conditions at a national level. From March, 2021, onwards, Israel reported a rapid decline in COVID-19 cases across all age groups, despite the easing of lockdown restrictions and reopening of education and commerce. By April 19, 2021, the 7-day moving average of new cases dropped to 149 per day, indicating effective control of the pandemic within the country's borders.
1
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3
The marked reduction in new cases prompted the Israeli Government to ease nationwide restrictions, including the discontinuation of face covering use in open spaces.
View related content for this article
In The Lancet, Eric Haas and colleagues report on a nationwide observational study of the impact and vaccine effectiveness of BNT162b2 in Israel.
3
Israel's Ministry of Health used aggregated data from the national SARS-CoV-2 surveillance and vaccination programme dataset to compare infection and disease incidence between vaccinated and unvaccinated people. Overall, of 232 268 SARS-CoV-2 infections during the study period (Jan 24 to April 3, 2021), 154 648 (66·6%) occurred in people aged 16 years or older and were included in the analyses (of which 20·4% were in the Arab sector, 15·7% in the ultra-Orthodox sector, and 63·9% in the general Jewish [non-ultra-Orthodox] sector). Adjusted estimates of vaccine effectiveness at 7 days or longer after the second dose were 95·3% (95% CI 94·9–95·7) against SARS-CoV-2 infection, 91·5% (90·7–92·2) against asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, 97·0% (96·7–97·2) against symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, 97·2% (96·8–97·5) against COVID-19-related hospitalisation, 97·5% (97·1–97·8) against severe or critical COVID-19-related hospitalisation, and 96·7% (96·0–97·3) against COVID-19-related death. Vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection, COVID-19-related hospitalisation, and COVID-19-related death exceeded 96% across all age groups, including older adults (aged ≥75 years and ≥85 years). These results closely mirror the efficacy estimates of the BNT162b2 vaccine reported in the phase 3 trial.
4
The strengths of the study include its nationwide design, mandatory routine reporting of new infections and of vaccination status to the national dataset, large sample size, exclusive use of BNT162b2, and occurrence of a highly efficient vaccine roll-out during peak transmission of SARS-CoV-2, which resulted in high vaccination coverage of most of the adult population. However, several limitations should be considered when interpreting the results. First, social desirability bias affecting symptom questionnaire respondents and presymptomatic infections at the time of questioning could have contributed to an overestimation of vaccine effectiveness against asymptomatic infection. Additionally, patients with COVID-19 who reported symptoms were defined as asymptomatic if they did not report fever or respiratory symptoms. This unorthodox case definition might have resulted in a substantial overestimation of vaccine effectiveness against asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection.
5
Second, during early 2021, the B.1.1.7 variant of SARS-CoV-2 was estimated to account for 95% of cases in Israel, and the results thus indicate that the vaccine was effective against this variant of concern. However, the study did not report on effectiveness against other variants of concern, such as B.1.351 and P.1. Concerns regarding breakthrough infections were recently raised as a case-cohort study from Israel reported a disproportionally high infection rate with the B.1.351 variant in fully vaccinated compared with unvaccinated individuals.
6
Nevertheless, the incidence of B.1.351 infection in Israel to date remains low. Rapid mass vaccination coupled with non-pharmaceutical interventions
7
might have successfully controlled its spread.
Haas and colleagues' findings from Israel suggest that high vaccine coverage rates could offer a way out of the pandemic.
5
,
8
Regrettably, rapid population level coverage cannot be easily replicated in many other countries. The global use of the BNT162b2 vaccine is limited by supply issues, high costs, and ultra-cold chain storage requirements. Global COVID-19 vaccine roll-out has been sluggish, and vaccine distribution is inequitable despite the achievements of COVAX, mainly due to the lack of adequate manufacturing scalability.
9
,
10
Rapid expansion of deployment of other effective vaccines with more achievable cold chain storage requirements remains an urgent global priority.
9
Facing such challenges, alternative approaches must be considered to allow rapid protection of at-risk populations against severe COVID-19. One such approach is deferring the second dose to accelerate and maximise coverage of the first dose in the population. Indeed, the situation in Scotland looks promising: the first dose of BNT162b2 was associated with a vaccine effectiveness of 91% (85–94) for COVID-19-related hospitalisation at 28–34 days post-vaccination.
11
Israel's robust dataset could allow further assessment and corroboration of first-dose short-term effectiveness and lead other countries to considering deferring the second vaccine dose.
3
Post-introduction vaccine effectiveness studies such as those from Israel
3
and the UK
5
,
11
will gain increasing importance in augmenting the current evidence, which has so far been based only on data from phase 3 efficacy trials. WHO has published a best practice guidance document on how to conduct vaccine effectiveness assessments using observational study designs.
12
Israel's experience provides impetus for countries to proactively pursue high vaccine coverage to protect the population;
8
however, rollout would need to follow the WHO prioritisation roadmap to maximise the public health impact, in light of vaccine supply constraints. More post-introduction vaccine effectiveness studies will be required. Timely reporting of vaccine effectiveness against variants of concern, the duration of protection across age groups and geographical settings, and the effectiveness of alternative dosing regimens is crucial to provide data-driven immunisation policies.
12
Figure thumbnail fx1


 

nirvarq

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Ah Heng already leaked to Sinkies just we never pay attention. 'By the time covid ends already 4,5 years' Btw it's already in the plan since day one they would say lock down buy never say fully open back from the start they say it's going to be the new norm remember ?

They know all variants of flu evolve all the time so does 'Covid' as our environment, Sun and our livelihood change hence flu vaccines needs to be updated every year. Until the economies are down on it's knees and reset it's a WW3 but more 'high class' version we even look up upon the authorities to 'save' us lol............... *But hey ! Gaia gets to be rejuvenated and restored it's an awesome thing and at the same time the weak and damaged old senile can 'siam' and let new higher vibrational entities arrive ?

This world looks hilarious but it's actually awesome and fun as long as u're woke and not living in fear. Go wif the flow ~~ lol........ :P <3
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Ah Heng already leaked to Sinkies just we never pay attention. 'By the time covid ends already 4,5 years' Btw it's already in the plan since day one they would say lock down buy never say fully open back from the start they say it's going to be the new norm remember ?

They know all variants of flu evolve all the time so does 'Covid' as our environment, Sun and our livelihood hence flu vaccines needs to be updated every year. Until the economies are down on it's knees and reset it's a WW3 but more 'high class' version we even look up upon the authorities to 'save' us lol............... *But hey ! Gaia gets to be rejuvenated and restored it's an awesome thing and at the same time the weak and damaged old senile can 'siam' and let new higher vibrational entities arrive ?

This world looks hilarious but it's actually awesome and fun as long as u're woke and not living in fear. Go wif the flow ~~ lol........ :P <3

Many states and countries have already moved despite the fact that the virus is still circulating and people are still dying.

That's because there will never be a time when humans will be able to operate in a zero risk environment. Something is always going to come along and kill us either sooner or later.

3.2 MILLION have died with Covid over the last year and 80 MILLION died from causes other than Covid.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
E0-AtWUWEAUCFk_.jpg


Texas fully open since March 2021. Over 73,000 at Cowboys stadium last night... no masks, no Vax cards, no nothing.

Screen Shot 2021-05-11 at 9.51.53 AM.png
 

redbull313

Alfrescian
Loyal
Many states and countries have already moved despite the fact that the virus is still circulating and people are still dying.

That's because there will never be a time when humans will be able to operate in a zero risk environment. Something is always going to come along and kill us either sooner or later.

3.2 MILLION have died with Covid over the last year and 80 MILLION died from causes other than Covid.

Blah blah blah blah you are an asshole. Fuck you.
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
Many states and countries have already moved despite the fact that the virus is still circulating and people are still dying.

That's because there will never be a time when humans will be able to operate in a zero risk environment. Something is always going to come along and kill us either sooner or later.

3.2 MILLION have died with Covid over the last year and 80 MILLION died from causes other than Covid.

Wrong. Again. Call it 0 for 196 tries.

https://www.aarp.org/health/conditions-treatments/info-2021/covid-4th-wave.html

COVID-19's Fourth Wave: What You Need to Know Now


After weeks of steady decline, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations are creeping back up. The U.S. is seeing, on average, 63,000 new coronavirus infections each day — about the same amount recorded in mid-July during the summer surge, or second wave. And an increasing number of Americans are being admitted to hospitals for COVID-19 treatment.
While the climb in cases and hospitalizations may feel like déjà vu, health experts are hopeful that this “fourth wave” will be different from previous peaks in the pandemic.

For the latest coronavirus news and advice go to AARP.org/coronavirus.
The main reason: The vaccines, which so far have proved highly effective at preventing severe COVID-19 illness, are making their way into millions of arms each day. “And that is likely to have an impact in terms of keeping hospitalizations and deaths under better control than previously,” says Shama Cash-Goldwasser, M.D., an infectious disease physician and a senior technical adviser in the Epidemic Intelligence Unit at Resolve to Save Lives.
Both hospitalizations and deaths saw the greatest swell in mid-January during the so-called third wave, when roughly 4,000 people died from COVID-19 each day. The current average hovers around 700 daily deaths, and experts expect to see that tally decline as more Americans get vaccinated.
Daily Trends in Numbers of COVID-19 Cases in the U.S.

U.S. CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL
For an interactive version of this chart, visit CDC.gov.
So far more than 64 million Americans have been fully vaccinated, and about 110 million Americans have received at least one dose of a two-dose series, federal data show. What's more, the majority of Americans 65 and older — the population most affected by serious illness and death from the virus — have been vaccinated. “That's a big difference now,” compared to previous COVID-19 waves, Cash-Goldwasser says.
Variants could send cases soaring
That's not to say the current trends are less worrisome. Vaccinating the most vulnerable drives down hospitalizations and deaths, but it's important to note that less severe cases are not entirely harmless, Cash-Goldwasser points out. “Even in a mild infection, there is a risk of long COVID or some of these complications that we hear about.”
"Long COVID” is the term coined to describe lingering symptoms — fatigue, headaches, brain fog and shortness of breath, to name a few — that can persist weeks, sometimes months, after a coronavirus infection. A report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that as many as 35 percent of people with mild cases of COVID-19 still felt its effects weeks after testing positive for the virus.
One difference at this stage in the pandemic that could drive up case counts, even as more Americans get vaccinated, is the continued spread of new virus variants, some of which are more contagious and potentially more lethal. CDC Director Rochelle Walensky recently announced that the B.1.1.7. variant, first identified in the United Kingdom, is “now the most common lineage circulating in the United States.” So far more than 16,000 reported COVID-19 cases have been caused by this variant, and spikes are occurring in a number of states, including Michigan, Minnesota, Florida, Colorado, California and Massachusetts, CDC data show.

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Other variants are circulating in the U.S., and more could emerge. But there are ways to protect yourself from these concerning strains, and that's by following the same public health guidance that experts have been promoting all along: Wear a mask in public, keep a safe distance from others, wash your hands often and avoid crowded and poorly ventilated spaces. Health leaders are also encouraging people to get vaccinated when it's their turn.
"This is a good reminder to follow those infection prevention efforts as we work to vaccinate people,” says Saskia Popescu, an infectious disease epidemiologist and assistant professor at George Mason University's Schar School of Policy and Government.
Pandemic fatigue threatens progress
Another factor that could determine whether current trends continue to climb is pandemic fatigue. The combination of a year of restrictions and the growing availability of vaccines is leading some to “let their guards down and socialize more and do more things,” Cash-Goldwasser says.
But doing so could result in devastating consequences, and health experts are pleading for Americans to stay the course. In an April 7 press briefing, Andy Slavitt, White House senior adviser for COVID-19 response, said “better days are on the horizon,” and even predicted that “a more normal Fourth of July holiday is within reach.” But he warned that all of the progress that has been made can be reversed if the public lets down its guard.
"We need to keep being careful, and we need to get shots into arms. And if people get vaccinated as soon as they possibly can and continue to practice these measures, hopefully we will be able to keep things under better control and not see a surge,” Cash-Goldwasser says.
Rachel Nania joined AARP as a health and medicine writer in 2019 after spending several years as a radio reporter and editor in Washington, D.C. She is the recipient of a 2018 Gracie Award and a 2019 regional Edward R. Murrow Award, and participated in a 2019 dementia fellowship with the National Press Foundation.
More on Coronavirus
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
View attachment 110472

Texas fully open since March 2021. Over 73,000 at Cowboys stadium last night... no masks, no Vax cards, no nothing.

View attachment 110473

Wrong. Again. Call it 0 for 197 tries

https://www.chron.com/coronavirus/a...19-expert-fourth-wave-UK-variant-16080910.php

Houston COVID-19 expert concerned about early stages of virus' fourth wave

Alison Medley
April 6, 2021Updated: April 6, 2021 2:47 p.m.


Amid a resurgence of COVID-19 cases across 25 states, the U.S. is in the early stages of a fourth wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Baylor College of Medicine's Infectious Disease Expert Dr. Peter Hotez.

"In the United States, the fourth wave has already started," Hotez told Chron. "You've got the uptick in Michigan, numbers up in New York and New Jersey, and now the numbers are starting to go up in Florida. The fourth wave has started. It's just a matter of how severe it will be."


In the past few weeks, the Midwest has seen a marked rise in new infections, with Michigan reporting second-highest cases of the U.K. variant, according to the Centers of Disease Control. Cases are also on the rise in Nebraska, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maine. President Biden's Coronavirus Task Force Adviser Michael Osterholm told NBC's Meet the Press that the next two weeks would essentially bring the "highest number of cases reported globally since the beginning of the pandemic."

"We're now, I think, in that cycle where the Upper Midwest is just now beginning to start this fourth surge," Osterholm said.

Behind the troubling COVID-19 trend are several factors, including a relaxing of COVID-19 restrictions statewide and the increased spread in more transmissible variants like the U.K. and Brazilian variant, Hotez added.

For instance, in Texas we have the B.1.1.7 variant. That's the one that's causing the greatest concern right now," Hotez said. "Will the cases go up in Texas—that's what we're waiting for, but it hasn't happened yet. There's no question we're in the fourth wave already."

The upswing in the highly transmissible B.1.1.7 variant among teens and young adults poses another threat as the fourth wave takes hold across the U.S., Hotez said.

"What we're starting to see now in the B.1.1.7 is that more kids and young adults are getting infected and we're seeing higher hospitalization rates as well," Hotez said.

From a global perspective, Hotez underscored that the situation was much more severe, in terms of new infections. Both France and Italy announced nationwide lockdowns right before Easter weekend due to a surge in COVID-19 cases, according to CNBC's Natasha Turak.
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
View attachment 110472

Texas fully open since March 2021. Over 73,000 at Cowboys stadium last night... no masks, no Vax cards, no nothing.

View attachment 110473

Just to show how incredibly stupid you are. Just for kicks.

https://www.tallahassee.com/story/n...ranking-vaccine-spread-deaths-week/115717582/

COVID-19 cases rising in Florida; state ranks 10th in places where virus is spreading fastest
Mike Stucka
USA TODAY NETWORK


New coronavirus cases increased 5.3% in Florida in the latest week ending Sunday as the state added 44,668 cases. The previous week had 42,407 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.

Florida ranked 10th among the states where coronavirus was spreading the fastest on a per-person basis, a USA TODAY Network analysis of Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the latest week, the United States added 472,154 reported cases of coronavirus, a decrease of 3.4% from the week before. Across the country, 21 states had more cases in the latest week than they did in the week before.

Many states did not report cases on Easter. Delayed reporting from the holiday will make some state-to-state comparisons inaccurate, and also some in-state week-to-week comparisons inaccurate.

Within Florida, the worst weekly outbreaks on a per-person basis were in Miami-Dade, Osceola and Broward counties. Adding the most new cases overall were Miami-Dade County, with 10,015 cases; Broward County, with 5,350 cases; and Hillsborough County, with 3,434. Weekly case counts rose in 44 counties from the previous week. The worst increases from the prior week's pace were in Miami-Dade, Polk and Hillsborough counties.

Florida ranked 29th among states in share of people receiving at least one shot, with 38.2% of its residents at least partially vaccinated. The national rate is 39.5%, a USA TODAY analysis of CDC data shows.

In the week ending Sunday, Florida reported administering another 1,485,190 vaccine doses, compared to 1,346,415 the week before that. In all, Florida reported it has administered 13,397,449 doses.

Across Florida, cases fell in 23 counties, with the best declines in Pinellas, Sarasota and Charlotte counties.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
India cases continue to plunge without ever reaching the infection levels experienced in South America and Europe which goes to show that the Indian variant is no worse than earlier variants and in fact looks a lot less transmissible.

I would like to congratulate Modi for not making things worse with harsh lockdowns. Keep up the good work.

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IMHDOCTOR

Alfrescian
Loyal
India cases continue to plunge without ever reaching the infection levels experienced in South America and Europe which goes to show that the Indian variant is no worse than earlier variants and in fact looks a lot less transmissible.

I would like to congratulate Modi for not making things worse with harsh lockdowns. Keep up the good work.

View attachment 111194

You are delusional, as we have tried to tell you on numerous occasions. We know the reality of the situation is difficult for you to accept, but the evidence is plain as day.

What you say does not compute. Hence, you cannot see what is real.

You might have noticed in your daily life you are having difficulty remembering things, in your daily routine.

Menial tasks become more difficult. Your thought process is not functioning normally, due to your mental illness.

This is a natural byproduct of your schizoid personal disorder, something we can help you with

kindly contact us for an assessment:

https://www.imh.com.sg/

Institute of Mental Health
http://www.imh.com.sg/
Buangkok Green Medical Park
10 Buangkok View
Singapore 539747
 

Peiweh

Alfrescian
Loyal
You are delusional, as we have tried to tell you on numerous occasions. We know the reality of the situation is difficult for you to accept, but the evidence is plain as day.

What you say does not compute. Hence, you cannot see what is real.

You might have noticed in your daily life you are having difficulty remembering things, in your daily routine.

Menial tasks become more difficult. Your thought process is not functioning normally, due to your mental illness.

This is a natural byproduct of your schizoid personal disorder, something we can help you with

kindly contact us for an assessment:

https://www.imh.com.sg/

Institute of Mental Health
http://www.imh.com.sg/
Buangkok Green Medical Park
10 Buangkok View
Singapore 539747

Dude you hit the nail on the head this guy is off his rocker

Used to be a stand up guy but he got smacked by some PRCs or something

Or he is an oompa loompa like you say

183nvg.jpg
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Latest data in from India. The so called "lethal" and highly transmissible Ah Neh variant is losing steam just like all other variants. Cases and deaths continue to fall rapidly.

To those in the media time to invent another variant!


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