Category: Corona Virus

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Omicron won’t be the last COVID-19 variant, WHO says – WXYZ

January 19, 2022

(WXYZ) Omicron will most likely not be the last COVID variant, according to Senior Official Dr. Bruce Aylward from the World Health Organization.He says the high transmission levels worldwide give the coronavirus plenty of opportunities to replicate and mutate.

Globally, there have been almost 19 million cases of COVID-19 in the last week. Thats up 20% from the previous week. Unfortunately, theres just a lot of opportunity for the Omicron variant.

Part of the spreading is because of the low immunization rates in developing countries. The World Health Organization has pushed for equal distribution worldwide, but that has not happened. Shockingly, less than 10% of residents in developing countries have received one shot of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Low immunization rates combined with an incredibly contagious variant means the door is wide open for the virus to mutate. Omicron is circulating at such intense levels right now, and I hope a more dangerous new variant doesnt emerge.

Endemic doesnt mean that the virus has disappeared. It just means that were living with it. Its circulating at lower levels and not causing many infections or significantly impacting our way of life. But itll still cause death because it will still find vulnerable people.

U.S. health officials are expecting a new wave of deaths from Omicron. Somewhere between 50,000 and 300,000 deceased. Hospitalizations follow case numbers, and deaths follow hospitalizations. Now I know people want to think that Omicron is mild. I get that because research shows people infected are less likely to get sick than if they were infected with Delta, but Omicron still kills.

Additional Coronavirus information and resources:

View a global coronavirus tracker with data from Johns Hopkins University.

See complete coverage on our Coronavirus Continuing Coverage page.

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Omicron won't be the last COVID-19 variant, WHO says - WXYZ

Lesson of the Day: At-Home Coronavirus Tests Are Inaccessible to Blind People – The New York Times

January 19, 2022

Lesson Overview

Featured Article: At-Home Coronavirus Tests Are Inaccessible to Blind People by Amanda Morris

At-home coronavirus tests have become a way for people to quickly know their Covid status before socializing or going to school or work. However, these tests rely on conducting complex steps and interpreting visual cues that often make them inaccessible to people who have limited vision or are blind.

In this lesson, you will learn about some low- and high-tech developments that could make at-home Covid testing more accessible. Then, you will reflect on other ways to make testing for the coronavirus more accessible for all people.

Have you ever taken an at-home Covid test? Have you been tested at school or at a health care facility? What experience do you have with coronavirus testing?

Consider the role that vision the ability to see plays in being able to safely and accurately test for Covid-19 during the pandemic. How is sight important or necessary as part of the testing process?

Read the article, then answer the following questions:

1. What are some of the obstacles that have prevented Christy Smith from ever being tested for the coronavirus?

2. What are low- and high-tech workarounds that might help people who are blind or who have limited vision get tested for the coronavirus? Discuss at least three ideas mentioned in the article.

3. For each workaround, describe a possible challenge to putting it in effect.

4. How does testing inaccessibility affect the quality of life for people who cannot go out for a Covid test or cannot use one at home?

5. Of all of the testing options and adjustments suggested in the article, which do you think sounds the most compelling? Why?

What is your reaction to the featured article? Are you surprised by the issues raised in the article? Do you feel hopeful about any of the solutions explored? Why or why not?

Can you think of any additional ideas that might be able to make testing more accessible for people who have limited vision or are blind?

Then consider the ways that testing for the coronavirus can be challenging or inaccessible for different people, whether they have a disability of not. You can consider a range of issues, including transportation, affordability, language and availability. Brainstorm some possible solutions that might make testing more accessible.

Additional Teaching and Learning Opportunities

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Lesson of the Day: At-Home Coronavirus Tests Are Inaccessible to Blind People - The New York Times

With many wondering whether Omicron means we’re approaching the endemic phase of Covid-19, Fauci cautions it’s still too soon to tell – CNN

January 18, 2022

"When you talk about whether or not Omicron -- because it's a highly transmissible, but apparently not as pathogenic, for example, as Delta -- I would hope that that's the case," the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said Monday.

"But that would only be the case if we don't get another variant that eludes the immune response to the prior variant," Fauci told the Davos Agenda, a virtual event being held this week by the World Economic Forum.

"We were fortunate" that Omicron did not share some of the same characteristics as Delta, "but the sheer volume of people who are getting infected overrides that rather less level of pathogenicity," Fauci said.

"It is an open question as to whether or not Omicron is going to be the live virus vaccination that everyone is hoping for, because you have such a great deal of variability with new variants emerging," he said.

Schools grappling with Omicron surge

Several districts in the Northern Virginia and metro Richmond area announced they will reject the latest order set to begin January 24.

"Our layered prevention strategies have proven effective in keeping transmission rates low in our schools," said Fairfax County Public Schools Superintendent Scott Brabrand in a letter to the school community.

"Universal mask use has proven effective in keeping Covid-19 transmission rates low in our schools and ensuring schools remain safe and open," a statement from Arlington Public Schools said about its decision.

In Texas, all schools and offices in the Houston Independent School District will be closed Tuesday due to rising cases in the community, the school district announced on its website. Classes are expected to resume Wednesday.

The school district encouraged students and staff to take "this extra day to mitigate potential exposure."

Progress on future vaccines moves forward

To further get ahead of variants, new vaccines are under development.

Moderna should have data available on its Omicron-specific Covid-19 vaccine in March, company CEO Stephane Bancel said Monday.

"It should be in the clinic in the coming weeks. And we're hoping in the March timeframe, we should be able to have data to share with regulators to figure out the next step forward," he said in a panel conversation at Davos.

A combined Covid-19 and flu booster shot from Moderna could also be available in some countries by fall 2023, Bancel said, but cautioned the date was a "best case scenario."

Vaccines doses remain the most effective way to ward off severe complications, which remain a factor in the nation's recovery as Americans continue to die from Covid-19. The average number of deaths has exceeded 1,600 daily over the last week, according to JHU data.

Booster doses have successfully demonstrated the ability to raise an individual's antibody levels months after initial inoculations, helping to keep those at higher risk out of the hospital.

In December, Israel started trialing a fourth dose of the coronavirus vaccines for healthy participants ahead of a roll out of the additional booster shot to at-risk populations -- marking the first study of its kind among healthy people receiving a fourth dose.

"I think that the decision to allow the fourth vaccine to vulnerable populations is probably correct," Dr. Gili-Regev Yochay, director of Infection Prevention Control Unit at the Sheba Medical Center, said Monday of the data. "It may give a little bit of benefit, but probably not enough to support the decision to give it to all of the population, I would say."

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With many wondering whether Omicron means we're approaching the endemic phase of Covid-19, Fauci cautions it's still too soon to tell - CNN

Study on 4th COVID vaccine dose shows effectiveness; results against omicron unclear – WXYZ

January 18, 2022

DETROIT (WXYZ) A new study done by researchers in Israel shows that a fourth dose of the COVID-19 vaccine could increase your antibodies to protect you from the virus.

I think this data is too preliminary to give us any direction on the fourth dose," said Dr. Teena Chopra, a professor of infectious diseases at Wayne State University.

Chopra is referring to researched released by Sheba Hospital in Israel.

What they found was that the antibody went up after the third shot, but whether they were effective against the omicron was really not seen," she said.

At the moment, a fourth shot is being administered in Israel, but not in the United States, where health leaders are still urging people to get their third shot.

Getting a booster shot protects us from getting severe disease and hospitalization," Chopra said.

As hospitals in our state see record-number COVID-19 patients, there is a push for Michiganders to get their hands on at-home COVID-19 testing kits to help stop the spread of the virus.

If you have it at your fingertips, it's a lot easier to do and stay quarantined and not infect other people and having to go to a site to get tested," Dr. Asha Shajahan said.

Shajahan, the medical director of community health at Beaumont Health Gross Pointe, says getting an accurate result with the at-home test is all about timing.

The best thing to do is if you were exposed to COVID or had symptoms to not test right away, wait until day three or five and test during that time because youre more likely to have an accurate test," she said.

Both doctors say testing and vaccines are tools that will help fight the virus.

If there is more distribution of the vaccine globally, we can see an end to this virus. When I say end, we want the virus to become and endemic, we dont want it to remain a pandemic," Chopra said.

For more information on where to get a vaccine or at-home test, visit michigan.gov/coronavirus/

Additional Coronavirus information and resources:

View a global coronavirus tracker with data from Johns Hopkins University.

See complete coverage on our Coronavirus Continuing Coverage page.

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Study on 4th COVID vaccine dose shows effectiveness; results against omicron unclear - WXYZ

Coronavirus in Ohio Monday update: Over 19,500 new cases, 2.4 million total – NBC4 WCMH-TV

January 18, 2022

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) The Ohio Department of Health has released the latest numbers related to the coronavirus pandemic in the state.

Numbers as of Monday, Jan. 17 follow:

The 21-day case average is above22,000.

The department reported2,563people started the vaccination process, bringing the total to7,108,819, which is 60.82% of the states population. And10,173received booster shots.

The Ohio Hospital Association reported the following numbers related to COVID-19 patients:

The White House announced the federal website torequest free COVID-19 testsWednesday. Scientists warn that omicrons whirlwind advance practically ensures it wont be thelast version of the coronavirus. COVID vaccinations may temporarily lengthen a womans menstrual cycle, a new study reveals.

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Coronavirus in Ohio Monday update: Over 19,500 new cases, 2.4 million total - NBC4 WCMH-TV

Preparing for the endemic stage of COVID-19: What this looks like – KOIN.com

January 18, 2022

by: Gayle Ong, Nexstar Media Wire

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) Theres growing talk in the medical community that the COVID-19 pandemic may soon be entering the endemic phase.

What an endemic phase of a viral infections means is that its not causing the terrible hospitalizations of the pandemic phase but that well have enough immunity of a population so its kept down to low levels, said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease doctor at the University of California, San Francisco.

California Gov. Gavin Newsoms administration is predicting that it will happen in a month.

This is a challenging period, Newsom said during a recent news conference. Were going to get through this. Just a few more weeks.

However, experts have warned that the unpredictability of the variant makes setting a timeline difficult.

Were still a way off from COVID-19 reaching endemicity, Dr. Catherine Smallwood, a senior emergency officer and COVID-19 incident manager at the WHOs Health Emergencies Programme, said during a virtual Europe news conference last week.

Exhausted after two years of the pandemic, many are wondering what exactly life will look like when we officially reach endemicity.

We will likely not be masking, distancing, contact tracing, doing asymptomatic testing, Dr. Gandhi said.

Well manage it more like influenza, which is vaccines, treatment and recommending masks for the vulnerable inside, Dr. Gandhi said.

Dr. Gandhi says the highly transmissible omicron variant could drive the pandemic into endemicity.

Theres [an] incredible number of cases in both vaccinated and unvaccinated. What that does is it exposes you to the entire virus and you develop antibodies, T cells and B cells across the entire virus, Dr. Gandhi said.

Infectious disease doctors are monitoring the omicron surge around the world. Data from samples of wastewater indicates omicron is declining.

In Boston, the wastewater is showing 40 percent decrease in COVID, we have all turned a corner in California with wastewater COVID amounts which means the amount of COVID is going down, Dr. Gandhi said. That will be reflected in our cases going down in a couple of days. Usually, wastewater surveillance goes first then when it comes down it will come down quickly.

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Preparing for the endemic stage of COVID-19: What this looks like - KOIN.com

White House to offer free COVID tests beginning Wednesday how to get them – KXAN.com

January 18, 2022

WASHINGTON, D.C. (KXAN) Beginning Wednesday, the White House will distribute half a billion free, at-home COVID-19 rapid tests to American households amid the latest coronavirus surge. This comes as President Joe Bidens administration is purchasing one billion tests to increase national testing capacity.

Under the initial program, people can request four free tests be sent to their home address. Tests can be ordered online at covidtests.gov and will take between seven to 12 days to ship after an order is placed.

Based on that shipment time frame, Americans will need to place order requests prior to an onset of symptoms. Common COVID-19 symptoms include:

Under the omicron variant, mild cases have reported cold-like symptoms that include a headache, chest or back pain and a dry cough or scratchy throat.

Guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends individuals test if they develop COVID-19 symptoms or have come into close contact with a positive case within the past five days. Similarly, testing is recommended for people gathering indoors with individuals who are either high risk or unvaccinated, per a White House press release.

To ensure equity and access for all Americans, the Administration will also launch a call line to help those unable to access the website to place orders, and work with national and local community-based organizations to support the nations hardest-hit and highest-risk communities in requesting tests, the release read in part.

This follows the Biden administrations earlier announcement that private health insurance companies will be required to cover at-home COVID-19 tests for free, as of Jan. 15.

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White House to offer free COVID tests beginning Wednesday how to get them - KXAN.com

COVID tests, other public service events on MLK Day in L.A. – Los Angeles Times

January 18, 2022

Los Angeles annual parade honoring Martin Luther King Jr. has been canceled for the second year in a row because of COVID-19 concerns, but numerous other events are planned across the city on Monday to celebrate the legacy of the late civil rights leader.

Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a federal holiday, is observed each year on the third Monday of January and is designated as a national day of public service. This years festivities include free pop-up coronavirus testing and vaccination sites, clothing drives, virtual handwritten letter events and more.

As celebrations take place throughout the area, L.A. county and city government offices, courts and libraries will be closed. Los Angeles Unified School District students have the day off. Post offices will also be closed, and mail will not be delivered. Some banks may be closed for in-person services.

Here are some Los Angeles-area events scheduled for Monday:

In-car COVID-19 rapid-testing: The Congress of Racial Equality Kingdom Day Parade Committee will sponsor a free in-car COVID-19 rapid-testing event. Five hundred rapid tests will be on tap, and vehicles can begin lining up on West 43rd Street off Degnan Boulevard from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

The Hope Clinic: The First African Methodist Episcopal Church, in partnership with Fulgent Genetics, will host a COVID-19 vaccination and testing event at 2270 S. Harvard Blvd. The event runs from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Seventh annual MLK Day Clothing Collection & Community Breakfast: The nonprofit Big Sunday is hosting its annual clothing collection drive and community breakfast from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 6111 Melrose Ave. Only new clothes business, casual and athletic wear will be accepted. There will also be arts and crafts for sale to benefit local nonprofits and live music from the Blue Breeze Band.

Caravan for social justice: To honor MLKs legacy, the Harriet Tubman Center for Social Justice will hold a caravan to fight against systemic racism and voter suppression. Organizers encourage participants to decorate their vehicles and join in beginning at 10 a.m. at Western Avenue and Martin Luther King Boulevard. There are no fees to participate, and the caravan begins at 11 a.m.

MLK Day of Service: Those interested in completing virtual service projects can participate in two events organized by Leadership Long Beach: writing handwritten letters to seniors in local care facilities or putting together a community care package with hygiene items and everyday household products to help a family in need. To sign up, visit leadershiplb.org/mlk/ .

Unity Skate & Walk Event: LAUSD second-grader Isabella Blue, Unite L.A. Foundation and other organizations will host Unity Skate and Walk with giveaways, music, birthday cake and COVID-19 vaccinations and testing. The event begins at 10:30 a.m. at Metro Rosa Parks Station, 11611 Willowbrook Ave.

King Day reading and discussion: A reading and online discussion of Kings 1967 speech A Christmas Sermon on Peace is part of the California African American Museums virtual program. Members of the Inner City Youth Orchestra of Los Angeles will sing spiritual and original music. To RSVP, visit: http://www.caamuseum.org/programs/kids-teens-and-families/king-day-2022.

37th annual MLK Celebration: In Santa Monica, MLK Westside Coalition shifted its in-person festivities to a virtual gathering featuring music by Linda Alvarez Trio, spoken word by Get Lit Words Ignite, and a keynote speech by Los Angeles Times columnist LZ Granderson. The livestream begins at 9 a.m. on http://www.mlkjrwestside.org.

MLK The Legacy: Beginning at 7 p.m., the city of Carson will livestream its virtual MLK tribute. To watch, visit http://www.ci.carson.ca.us/.

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COVID tests, other public service events on MLK Day in L.A. - Los Angeles Times

Covid loses 90% of ability to infect within 20 minutes in air study – The Guardian

January 18, 2022

Coronavirus loses 90% of its ability to infect us within 20 minutes of becoming airborne with most of the loss occurring within the first five minutes, the worlds first simulations of how the virus survives in exhaled air suggest.

The findings re-emphasise the importance of short-range Covid transmission, with physical distancing and mask-wearing likely to be the most effective means of preventing infection. Ventilation, though still worthwhile, is likely to have a lesser impact.

People have been focused on poorly ventilated spaces and thinking about airborne transmission over metres or across a room. Im not saying that doesnt happen, but I think still the greatest risk of exposure is when youre close to someone, said Prof Jonathan Reid, director of the University of Bristols Aerosol Research Centre and the studys lead author.

When you move further away, not only is the aerosol diluted down, theres also less infectious virus because the virus has lost infectivity [as a result of time].

Until now, our assumptions about how long the virus survives in tiny airborne droplets have been based on studies that involved spraying virus into sealed vessels called Goldberg drums, which rotate to keep the droplets airborne. Using this method, US researchers found that infectious virus could still be detected after three hours. Yet such experiments do not accurately replicate what happens when we cough or breathe.

Instead, researchers from the University of Bristol developed apparatus that allowed them to generate any number of tiny, virus-containing particles and gently levitate them between two electric rings for anywhere between five seconds to 20 minutes, while tightly controlling the temperature, humidity and UV light intensity of their surroundings. This is the first time anyone has been able to actually simulate what happens to the aerosol during the exhalation process, Reid said.

The study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, suggested that as the viral particles leave the relatively moist and carbon dioxide-rich conditions of the lungs, they rapidly lose water and dry out, while the transition to lower levels of carbon dioxide is associated with a rapid increase in pH. Both of these factors disrupt the viruss ability to infect human cells, but the speed at which the particles dry out varies according to the relative humidity of the surrounding air.

When this was lower than 50% similar to the relatively dry air found in many offices the virus had lost around half of its infectivity within five seconds, after which the decline was slower and more steady, with a further 19% loss over the next five minutes. At 90% humidity roughly equivalent to a steam or shower room the decline in infectivity was more gradual, with 52% of particles remaining infectious after five minutes, dropping to about 10% after 20 minutes, after which these was no difference between the two conditions.

However, the temperature of the air made no difference to viral infectivity, contradicting the widely held belief that viral transmission is lower at high temperatures.

It means that if Im meeting friends for lunch in a pub today, the primary [risk] is likely to be me transmitting it to my friends, or my friends transmitting it to me, rather than it being transmitted from someone on the other side of the room, said Reid. This highlights the importance of wearing a mask in situations where people cannot physically distance, he added.

The findings support what epidemiologists have been observing on the ground, said Dr Julian Tang, a clinical virologist at the University of Leicester, adding that masks are very effective as well as social distancing. Improved ventilation will also help particularly if this is close to the source.

Dr Stephen Griffin, associate professor of virology at the University of Leeds, emphasised the importance of ventilation, saying: Aerosols will fill up indoor spaces rapidly in the absence of proper ventilation, so assuming the infected individual remains within the room, the levels of virus will be replenished.

The same effects were seen across all three Sars-CoV-2 variants the team has tested so far, including Alpha. They hope to start experiments with the Omicron variant in the coming weeks.

This article was amended on 11 and 12 January 2022. In an earlier version, we said Covid loses 90% of ability to infect within five minutes. It is actually within the first 20 minutes with most of the loss occurring within the first 5 minutes. The article and headline have been corrected for clarity.

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Covid loses 90% of ability to infect within 20 minutes in air study - The Guardian

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