Charlie Baker says a lot of people got the COVID-19 outbreak in Provincetown all wrong – Boston.com

Charlie Baker says a lot of people got the COVID-19 outbreak in Provincetown all wrong – Boston.com

Regular COVID-19 testing in Austin schools could be more effective than mask wearing, UT analysis shows – KXAN.com

Regular COVID-19 testing in Austin schools could be more effective than mask wearing, UT analysis shows – KXAN.com

September 15, 2021

`;// articleContent = document.querySelector(".article-content");// articleContent.innerHTML = articleContent.innerHTML + formbox;let firstParagraph = document.querySelector("div.article-content > p:nth-child(1)");if (firstParagraph !== null) {firstParagraph.insertAdjacentHTML("afterend", formbox);}function waitForElement(id, callback){var goStahp = setInterval(function(){if(document.getElementById(id)){clearInterval(goStahp);callback();}}, 100);}waitForElement("JotFormIFrame-212304983870155", function(){const expandButton = document.querySelector('h3.expand_box_click_to_open_covid_form');expandButton.addEventListener('click', function() {let box = document.querySelector('.corona_form_expand_box_covid_form');let first = 'opening';let second = 'open';let buttonAction = 'Hide story tip submission form';let deviceAction = "Tap";if (window.innerWidth > 666) {deviceAction = "Click";}// console.log(window.innerWidth);if(box.classList.contains(first)) {[first, second] = [second, first];buttonAction = `${deviceAction} to submit a coronavirus story tip`;}expandButton.innerHTML = buttonAction;box.classList.toggle(first);setTimeout(() => {box.classList.toggle(second);}, 0);});var ifr = document.getElementById("JotFormIFrame-212304983870155");if(window.location.href && window.location.href.indexOf("?") > -1) {var get = window.location.href.substr(window.location.href.indexOf("?") + 1);if(ifr && get.length > 0) {var src = ifr.src;src = src.indexOf("?") > -1 ? src + "&" + get : src + "?" + get;ifr.src = src;}}window.handleIFrameMessage = function(e) {if (typeof e.data === 'object') { return; }var args = e.data.split(":");if (args.length > 2) { iframe = document.getElementById("JotFormIFrame-" + args[(args.length - 1)]); } else { iframe = document.getElementById("JotFormIFrame"); }if (!iframe) { return; }switch (args[0]) {case "scrollIntoView":iframe.scrollIntoView();break;case "setHeight":console.log(`case: setHeight`);iframe.style.height = parseInt(args[1]) + 15 + "px";break;case "collapseErrorPage":console.log(`case: collapseErrorPage`);if (iframe.clientHeight > window.innerHeight) {iframe.style.height = window.innerHeight + "px";}break;case "reloadPage":window.location.reload();break;case "loadScript":var src = args[1];if (args.length > 3) {src = args[1] + ':' + args[2];}var script = document.createElement('script');script.src = src;script.type = 'text/javascript';document.body.appendChild(script);break;case "exitFullscreen":if (window.document.exitFullscreen) window.document.exitFullscreen();else if (window.document.mozCancelFullScreen) window.document.mozCancelFullScreen();else if (window.document.mozCancelFullscreen) window.document.mozCancelFullScreen();else if (window.document.webkitExitFullscreen) window.document.webkitExitFullscreen();else if (window.document.msExitFullscreen) window.document.msExitFullscreen();break;}var isJotForm = (e.origin.indexOf("jotform") > -1) ? true : false;if(isJotForm && "contentWindow" in iframe && "postMessage" in iframe.contentWindow) {var urls = {"docurl":encodeURIComponent(document.URL),"referrer":encodeURIComponent(document.referrer)};iframe.contentWindow.postMessage(JSON.stringify({"type":"urls","value":urls}), "*");}};if (window.addEventListener) {window.addEventListener("message", handleIFrameMessage, false);} else if (window.attachEvent) {window.attachEvent("onmessage", handleIFrameMessage);}});//


See the article here: Regular COVID-19 testing in Austin schools could be more effective than mask wearing, UT analysis shows - KXAN.com
Colorado radio host who urged boycott of vaccines dies of Covid-19 – The Guardian

Colorado radio host who urged boycott of vaccines dies of Covid-19 – The Guardian

September 15, 2021

Bob Enyart, a rightwing talk radio host in Colorado who urged people to boycott vaccines for Covid-19, has died of Covid-19.

Enyarts death was reported two weeks after the Denver Bible church said he and his wife had been taken to hospital.

Pastor Bob and Cheryl are in good hands and improving daily, the church said then. We anticipate and pray for a full recovery. We both grieve and rejoice together during this challenging time.

In a Facebook post on Monday, Enyarts co-host, Fred Williams, said: It comes with an extremely heavy heart that my close friend and co-host of Real Science Radio has lost his battle with Covid.

Bob Enyart was one of the smartest, and without question the wisest person Ive known. All the while being exceedingly kind and humble, and always, always willing to listen and discuss anything you wanted.

Heavens gain has left an enormous hole here on earth.

In contrast, the Denver Post reported that Enyart was a practiced and brutal provocateur who once used a show on cable television to mock by name people who died of Aids.

According to a 1999 profile by Westword, Enyart gleefully read obituaries of Aids sufferers while cranking Another One Bites the Dust by Queen.

Enyart also called for women who had abortions to face the death penalty.

Regarding Covid-19 vaccines, Enyart said people should boycott the shots because they tested these three products on the cells of aborted babies.

Last October he successfully sued the state of Colorado over Covid-related restrictions on church attendance.

Enyart is not the first rightwing radio host to oppose vaccines and other Covid-19 public health measures including mask mandates before dying from Covid-19.

Four other such hosts have died.

More than 660,000 people have died of the virus in the US. Amid a surge of cases arising from the infectious Delta virus variant, the overwhelming majority of hospitalizations and deaths are among unvaccinated people.


More here: Colorado radio host who urged boycott of vaccines dies of Covid-19 - The Guardian
Increasing COVID-19 patients having negative impacts on ambulance response times – KPTV.com

Increasing COVID-19 patients having negative impacts on ambulance response times – KPTV.com

September 15, 2021

'); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body #mrd-alert"+ alertCount).append(""+val.title+""); if (val.poly != "" && val.polyimg != "") { $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body #mrd-alert"+ alertCount).append('"+val.ihtml+""); $("#expandable-weather-block .weather-index-alerts").show(); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body h2").css({"font-family":"'Fira Sans', sans-serif", "font-weight":"500", "padding-bottom":"10px"}); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body p").css({"font-size":"14px", "line-height":"24px"}); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body span.wxalertnum").css({"float":"left", "width":"40px", "height":"40px", "color":"#ffffff", "line-height":"40px", "background-color":"#888888", "border-radius":"40px", "text-align":"center", "margin-right":"12px"}); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body b").css("font-size", "18px"); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body li").css({"font-size":"14px", "line-height":"18px", "margin-bottom":"10px"}); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body ul").css({"margin-bottom":"24px"}); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body pre").css({"margin-bottom":"24px"}); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body img").css({"width":"100%", "margin-bottom":"20px", "borderWidth":"1px", "border-style":"solid", "border-color":"#aaaaaa"}); $("#expandable-weather-block .modal-body #mrd-alert"+ alertCount).css({"borderWidth":"0", "border-bottom-width":"1px", "border-style":"dashed", "border-color":"#aaaaaa", "padding-bottom":"10px", "margin-bottom":"40px"}); }); } function parseAlertJSON(json) { console.log(json); alertCount = 0; if (Object.keys(json.alerts).length > 0) { $("#mrd-wx-alerts .modal-body ").empty(); } $.each(json.alerts, function(key, val) { alertCount++; $("#mrd-wx-alerts .alert_count").text(alertCount); $("#mrd-wx-alerts .modal-body ").append(''); $("#mrd-wx-alerts .modal-body #mrd-alert"+ alertCount).append(""+val.title+""); if (val.poly != "" && val.polyimg != "") { $("#mrd-wx-alerts .modal-body #mrd-alert"+ alertCount).append(''); } else if (val.fips != "" && val.fipsimg != "") { // $("#mrd-wx-alerts .modal-body #mrd-alert"+ alertCount).append(''); } $("#mrd-wx-alerts .modal-body #mrd-alert"+ alertCount).append(val.dhtml+"

Instruction


Excerpt from:
Increasing COVID-19 patients having negative impacts on ambulance response times - KPTV.com
Bartholomew County reporting three new COVID-19 deaths – The Republic

Bartholomew County reporting three new COVID-19 deaths – The Republic

September 15, 2021

A sign marks the COVID-19 testing site at the old J.C. Penney store at FairOaks Mall in Columbus, Ind., which has since closed. Photo was taken Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2020. Mike Wolanin | The Republic Mike Wolanin

INDIANAPOLIS The Indiana Department of Health announced Wednesday that 4,733 additional Hoosiers have been diagnosed with COVID-19 through testing at state and private laboratories. That brings to 918,230 the number of Indiana residents now known to have had the novel coronavirus following corrections to the previous days dashboard.

To date, 14,550 Hoosiers are confirmed to have died from COVID-19, which includes 68 newly reported deaths that occurred between Aug. 21 and Sept. 14. Another 461 probable deaths have been reported to date based on clinical diagnoses in patients for whom no positive test is on record.

A total of 4,070,643 unique individuals have been tested in Indiana, up from 4,060,372 on Tuesday. A total of 12,960,663 tests, including repeat tests for unique individuals, have been reported to the state Department of Health since Feb. 26, 2020.

Bartholomew County is reporting 10,233 positive cases (up 49) with 166 deaths (up three).

Surrounding counties reported:

To find testing sites around the state, visit www.coronavirus.in.gov and click on the COVID-19 testing information link. Clinics are being added regularly around the state.

Hoosiers age 12 and older can receive a COVID-19 vaccine; individuals younger than age 18 are eligible for the Pfizer vaccine only. To find a vaccination clinic near you, visit https://ourshot.in.gov or call 211 if you do not have access to a computer or require assistance. Appointments are preferred, but walk-ins are accepted at most sites.

A free COVID-19 testing and vaccination clinic will be noon to 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the Bartholomew County Fairgrounds midway area. No appointment is necessary. Rapid antigen and PCR tests are available. Those attending may choose either Pfizer (two dose) or Johnson and Johnson vaccine (one dose). The Pfizer vaccine is the only vaccine available for children ages 12 to 17.

As of Wednesday, a total of 6,373,566 doses have been administered in Indiana. This includes 3,193,151 first doses and 3,180,415 individuals who are fully vaccinated. The fully vaccinated number represents individuals who have received a second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines and those who received the single Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

Please click here for an updated county advisory map, hospitalizations and other information.


Read the original post: Bartholomew County reporting three new COVID-19 deaths - The Republic
Color-coded school thresholds added to Utah COVID-19 dashboard | Utah Department of Health – Utah Department of Health

Color-coded school thresholds added to Utah COVID-19 dashboard | Utah Department of Health – Utah Department of Health

September 15, 2021

(Salt Lake City) The Utah Department of Health (UDOH) has added new color-coded information to the school tab of the COVID-19 data dashboard to make it easier to see which schools are approaching a Test to Stay event. During a Test to Stay event, schools are legally required to conduct a testing event of all students.

Utah law requires schools to do a Test to Stay event when:

Schools with confirmed COVID-19 cases will be shown in red, yellow, or green depending on how many students have tested positive for COVID. Those listed in red are schools which have met or exceeded the Test to Stay event requirements. Those schools listed in yellow are schools which are more than halfway to meeting the requirements and schools in green are less than halfway to meeting the requirements for Test to Stay.

We want to do all we can to keep students in school while keeping them as safe as possible. While school case data has been available for some time, we hope a color coding system will make it easier for families to know how many children have been identified with COVID-19 in their childs school so they can make the best decisions for their family during the pandemic, said Dr. Leisha Nolen, UDOH state epidemiologist.

Data on the state COVID-19 dashboard may not always match what is reported on local health department or school district websites due to delays in reporting school-associated cases to the UDOH. School-associated cases are identified through interviews with the person or parents/guardians of a child who tests positive by health department staff, and only cases who have been linked to a school are displayed on the state dashboard. Local health departments have the most accurate and timely data and will use this local data to determine when to implement Test to Stay, not the data on the state dashboard.

More information on Test to Stay can be found at https://coronavirus.utah.gov/education/#test-to-stay. Data on COVID-19 in schools and school-age children can be found at https://coronavirus.utah.gov/case-counts/#schools.


View original post here:
Color-coded school thresholds added to Utah COVID-19 dashboard | Utah Department of Health - Utah Department of Health
Elementary school closes because of COVID-19 and other illnesses – East Idaho News

Elementary school closes because of COVID-19 and other illnesses – East Idaho News

September 15, 2021

VICTOR Illness among staff and students at Victor Elementary School has closed its doors for three days.

The closure comes as seven staff members and more than 60 students have been absent, according to Teton School District 451 Superintendent Monte R. Woolstenhulme. He says some of the absences are in relation to COVID-19 and corresponding quarantine protocols, while others are associated with other sicknesses.

The school has kindergarten through third-grade students and will be closed Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Woolstenhulme said students and staff are expected to return to the school Monday. While the school is closed, students are receiving learning support at home.

RELATED | Superintendent tells Mayor school district will not comply with mask mandate

Teton School District has recently made headlines as Woolstenhulme announced schools are not bound by the city of Victors mask mandate. Mayor Will Frohlichs mandate says people in the city must wear masks in public settings.

The decision on how to best balance the need to effectively educate students and to protect their health and safety while in school is best left to the school board and its administrators, Woolstenhulme wrote in a letter to Frohlich. The balancing of education and student health is much different, in both kind and degree, than the balancing of such activities as shopping or dining out with public health.

Victor city Attorney Herb Heimerl disagreed and said in a letter to the city he believes the mandate is lawful and that the school district must comply. Heimerl cited Idaho law that says the mayor has jurisdiction over all places within the corporate limits of the city, when it comes to public health ordinances.

RELATED | Victors mask debacle reflects statewide debate

As of Tuesday evening, Eastern Idaho Public Health reports 30 active COVID-19 cases or 25.8 per 10,000 people in Teton County. EIPH reports 49% of the population is fully vaccinated in the health district against the coronavirus.

Victor Elementary is not the only school in eastern Idaho to face closure. The Shoshone Bannock Tribes announced Tuesday that due to multiple students and staff testing positive for COVID-19, Chief Taghee Elementary will be closed for students until Monday.


Read this article: Elementary school closes because of COVID-19 and other illnesses - East Idaho News
FDA Will Follow The Science On COVID-19 Vaccines For Young Children | FDA – FDA.gov

FDA Will Follow The Science On COVID-19 Vaccines For Young Children | FDA – FDA.gov

September 15, 2021

For Immediate Release: September 10, 2021 Statement From: Janet Woodcock, M.D. Acting Commissioner of Food and Drugs - Food and Drug Administration

Peter Marks, M.D., PhD. Director - Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER)

Espaol

As schools around the country are re-opening for in-person learning and families are returning to their busy school year schedules, we know many parents are anxious about the pandemic and protecting their children. Many parents have questions about COVID-19 and when vaccines will be available for children younger than 12 years of age.

Many of our team at the FDA are parents and grandparents themselves, and our team shares the same concerns as many in our country about protecting our loved ones from COVID-19. We are therefore also eager to see COVID-19 vaccines available for young children. We also know that we all share the interest in making sure this process is done with safety at top of mind. As regulators, we recognize we have an important task ahead of us that will require us to act expeditiously while undertaking an extremely meticulous and thoughtful review once we receive requests to authorize a COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use or submissions for approval of a COVID-19 vaccine for this population.

We know there have been questions and public commentary on the process surrounding vaccines for young children, so we think its important to share information about the process and the necessary considerations involved to provide greater clarity to the public about this effort.

Its important that the public recognize that, because young children are still growing and developing, its critical that thorough and robust clinical trials of adequate size are completed to evaluate the safety and the immune response to a COVID-19 vaccine in this population. Children are not small adults and issues that may be addressed in pediatric vaccine trials can include whether there is a need for different doses or different strength formulations of vaccines already used for adults.

Steps the FDA will take to ensure the safety and efficacy of these products for children:

Just like every vaccine decision weve made during this pandemic, our evaluation of data on the use of COVID-19 vaccines in children will not cut any corners. Conducting clinical trials to determine an appropriate vaccine dose in children requires additional work over that done in the adult studies, including ensuring that the vaccine dosage and formulation strength used is the appropriate one from the perspective of safety and generating an immune response. Our multi-disciplinary teams of doctors, scientists, statisticians and other experts will thoroughly assess this complex data in making any determination about COVID-19 vaccines in young children. We may also consult with our Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee on any questions that warrant a public discussion by external experts. Importantly, once a decision to authorize or approve a vaccine for a younger population has been made, the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices will meet to discuss further clinical recommendations.

Parents may be wondering if they can ask their health care providers to go ahead and vaccinate their kids using one of the currently available vaccines outside of the FDA-authorized or approved uses. Parents need to remember that the vaccine doses that are currently being studied in younger children are not necessarily the same vaccine doses that were authorized for individuals 12 years and older or approved for individuals 16 years of age and olderthere are different dosing regimens being investigated. It is important for the clinical trials to be completed before vaccinating young kids, so the FDAs team can conduct a thorough evaluation and ensure the data show that the vaccine under consideration is likely to work to prevent COVID-19 in young children and doesnt cause unexpected safety issues separate from those that have already been observed in adolescents and adults.

Just like you, we are eager to see our children and grandchildren vaccinated against COVID-19 as soon as possible. We have to let the science and data guide us. The FDA is working around the clock to support the process for making COVID-19 vaccines available for children. As outlined above, this process is complex and relies on robust manufacturer trials and data, and while we cannot offer a specific date or timeline for when it may be completed for the various manufacturers vaccine candidates, we can assure the public we are working as expeditiously as possible to meet this critical public health need and we very much hope to have pediatric COVID-19 vaccines available in the coming months.Until we authorize or approve a vaccine for this younger population, its especially important that parents and others who interact closely with children under 12 years of age get vaccinated, wear masks, and follow other recommended precautions so that we can protect those who cannot yet protect themselves through vaccination.

###

Boilerplate

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

09/10/2021


Read more: FDA Will Follow The Science On COVID-19 Vaccines For Young Children | FDA - FDA.gov
Israelis Who Flew Into the Country Using Fake Coronavirus Test Results Under Scrutiny – The New York Times

Israelis Who Flew Into the Country Using Fake Coronavirus Test Results Under Scrutiny – The New York Times

September 13, 2021

JERUSALEM More than 150 Israelis suspected of using fake negative coronavirus test results to board flights home after a pilgrimage to Uman, Ukraine, have been summoned for questioning by the Israeli police in accordance with a strict, new government directive.

Offenders could be charged with fraud, forgery and spreading disease in aggravated circumstances, the Ministry of Public Security warned in a statement this weekend criminal offenses that can lead to prison sentences of up to five years.

About 25,000 to 30,000 Israelis, most of them male Hasidic Jews, traveled to Uman to celebrate the Jewish New Year last week with a visit to the burial site of a revered 18th-century rabbi, Nachman of Breslav. Israels Health Ministry reported late last week that dozens of them had arrived back in Israel infected with the virus despite carrying documents indicating that they had tested negative.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennetts office said in a statement that it views with utmost gravity the entry of people with forged documents, willfully spreading a disease, adding that severe action would be taken against offenders.

Israel is one of the worlds most vaccinated countries, but its coronavirus caseload recently spiked to a pandemic high, according to the Our World in Data Project at Oxford University. Cases have dropped sharply over the past 10 days, which officials attribute to their rollout of booster shots to about a third of the population of nine million. Still, deaths have risen to about 42 percent of the countrys highest toll, which was reached in late January.

Dr. Sharon Alroy-Preis, a senior official in Israels Ministry of Health, told public radio that there were at least 1,500 verified cases among the more than 17,000 pilgrims who returned to from Ukraine on Thursday and Friday. The Ministry of Public Security said on Sunday that at least 154 of the recent arrivals had been summoned by the police for questioning after the end of their 10-day period of home quarantine.

Magen David Adom, Israels ambulance service, had set up two sites in Ukraine in cooperation with the Ukrainian Red Cross to offer rapid molecular tests for the returnees, one at the airport in the capital, Kyiv, and one near the rabbis tomb in Uman,. Negative results would allow them to board flights home.

The problem, Dr. Alroy-Preis said, was that some who tested positive at the sites hid their results, and acquired fraudulent negative PCR test results elsewhere. Some of those travelers, she said, canceled their direct flights back to Israel, aware that Magen David Adom would have passed their names on to the airlines. Instead, they arrived in Israel via connecting flights.

But the names of all those who had tested positive at the two sites in Ukraine were also known to Israels immigration authorities, enabling those travelers to be identified on arrival. Israel in any case does not rely on tests carried out abroad and anybody landing in Israel is tested before leaving the airport.


See the original post:
Israelis Who Flew Into the Country Using Fake Coronavirus Test Results Under Scrutiny - The New York Times
Coronavirus testing lawsuit inches toward trial, as Utah company tries to block it – Salt Lake Tribune

Coronavirus testing lawsuit inches toward trial, as Utah company tries to block it – Salt Lake Tribune

September 13, 2021

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) COVID-19 testing at a TestUtah site in Salt Lake City on Sept. 9. Nomi Health, which is fighting release of documents in Nebraska, Iowa and Utah, administers the TestUtah program.

| Sep. 12, 2021, 12:44 p.m.

| Updated: 8:43 p.m.

A coronavirus-related lawsuit filed in Nebraska that hinges on trade secrets and involves two Utah companies at the center of Utahs response to the pandemic will proceed.

The public records lawsuit seeks information that validated a diagnostic test provided by Orems Nomi Health for Nebraskas multimillion-dollar COVID-19 testing program.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Salt Lake Tribune board chair Paul Huntsman, seeks an unredacted copy of the validation report maintained by Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services. The report affirms the tests process and technical aspects.

A Nebraska district judge ruled Thursday an expert witness can review the report and determine if it includes trade secrets.

Salt Lake City-based Co-Diagnostics, which is not a named party in the lawsuit, supplied the test.

Nomi Health, which partnered with Co-Diagnostics to provide the tests and is listed as an interested party in the litigation, has argued the lawsuit should be dismissed because the requested information contains trade secrets.

The lawsuit was filed against State Epidemiologist Dr. Matthew Donahue and maintains Nebraska, which released a copy of the report that was largely blacked out, has not provided proof of trade secrets that would justify redactions. At trial, which is set for Oct. 19, Nebraska state officials must prove the report includes trade secrets.

Huntsmans team has filed similar lawsuits in Utah and Iowa.

In Utah, Gov. Spencer Cox is blocking the release of pandemic-related records, according to the complaint. The litigation in Iowa is centered on communication among state officials and their counterparts in Nebraska, Tennessee and Utah.

In his order, Nebraska District Court Judge Kevin R. McManaman said an expert witness may be called to review the validation report to determine if it includes trade secrets.

The lawsuit, which is funded by a limited liability corporation called Jittai that Huntsman started in March 2021 to obtain public records, stems from questions around Co-Diagnostics test results.

The tests were part of a tech-driven, publicly funded partnership between industry and government to expand testing and, eventually, vaccinations, that is known as TestUtah. Nomi received millions of dollars in taxpayer-funded contracts to run the Utah program, which was then replicated in Nebraska, Iowa and Tennessee.

The tests accuracy has been contested since shortly after the Food and Drug Administration granted the test an emergency use authorization in April 2020. Co-Diagnostics has attracted the attention of federal authorities.

Utah state officials stopped using Co-Diagnostics test last summer, but Nomi is now running almost all of the TestUtah sites throughout the state, which is struggling to keep up with testing demand as the delta variant continues to surge here.

Suzette Rasmussen, a former staff attorney and chief records officer for then-Gov. Gary Herbert who is representing Jittai through her firm All Utah Law, said in an email that the lawsuit in Nebraska and other states have a common theme.

As the COVID pandemic swept across the country, we placed trust in our elected leaders to make decisions that protected our health and safeguarded public funds, she said. We fear that, too often, those elected leaders instead made decisions that enriched private partners, and that those private companies fell short in delivering the products or services they promised. The hard truth is that without record access, the details of these publicprivate deals will never come to light.

Even after record-access litigation is filed, companies who welcomed public funds often fight to hide the details of the deals they secured. The public should not be forced to rely on those companies own representations about the nature of the information theyve kept secret.

Robin Felder, a pathology professor at the University of Virginia, will review the validation report.

David Lopez, an attorney representing Nomi Health, said the lifesaving reliability and validity of Nomi Healths COVID testing platforms have been confirmed numerous times. Attorneys for Nomi Health have argued that release of the report serves no public purpose.

While the out-of-state backers of this litigation claim to be interested in the reliability of public COVID testing platforms, their lawsuit is nothing more than an attempt to misappropriate trade secrets under the guise of a public records request, Lopez wrote via email. Any coverage that conflates trade secret protections with accurate COVID testing would be misleading and wrong, at a time when Utahns need those tests more than ever before.

Through a spokeswoman, the Nebraska Attorney Generals Office had no comment. Co-Diagnostics did not respond to a request for comment.

In a written statement, Huntsman, who is funding the multistate effort to release records related to the pandemic, said the courts decision to allow an expert to inspect information that has been withheld from public view strengthens Jittais dedication to shed light on sensitive decisions made by elected officials and their private partners.

Members of our communities have the right to understand how political decisions affect public health, he said, and taxpayers have the right to understand how public funds are spent.


Follow this link: Coronavirus testing lawsuit inches toward trial, as Utah company tries to block it - Salt Lake Tribune
Denmark Lifts the Last of Its Pandemic Restrictions – The New York Times

Denmark Lifts the Last of Its Pandemic Restrictions – The New York Times

September 13, 2021

Denmark has lifted the last of its coronavirus restrictions, effectively declaring that the virus was no longer a critical threat to society and allowing the country to get back to a semblance of prepandemic normal.

This can only be done because we have come a long way with the vaccination rollout, have a strong epidemic control, and because the entire Danish population has made an enormous effort to get here, Magnus Heunicke, Denmarks health minister, said in a statement on Friday about the lifting of restrictions.

The Danish government announced late last month that it would allow the restrictions to lapse, and pointed to Denmarks high vaccination rates. As of Saturday, about 76 percent of the countrys population had received one dose of a vaccine, and 73 percent had been fully vaccinated, according to data compiled by The New York Times.

While the rules lifted on Friday allow Danes to go more freely about their lives, foreign travelers will still be subject to some restrictions, including presenting a negative coronavirus test upon arrival or possibly even isolating for 10 days, depending on where they are coming from.

The Danish government had been gradually easing its coronavirus restrictions for weeks, including lifting a public transportation mask mandate in mid-August. But the rules lifted this week included the expiration of the coronavirus passport requirement that it had in place for entry into venues like nightclubs.

Mr. Heunicke said that the Danish government would continue to monitor the pandemic, and that it would be ready to act quickly if the situation were to deteriorate.

Denmark was one of the hardest hit countries of Scandinavia, though its northern neighbor Sweden, which shunned hard lockdowns, fared far worse. But cases have fallen in both, and Sweden expects to loosen most of its restrictions starting at the end of the month.

By contrast, Norway, which like Finland had kept cases low through most of the pandemic, is experiencing is worst outbreak to date. However, deaths remain low thanks to Norways high vaccination rates 74 percent of the population have had at least one shot and 64 percent are fully vaccinated.


Go here to see the original: Denmark Lifts the Last of Its Pandemic Restrictions - The New York Times