Category: Covid-19

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Breakthrough COVID-19 cases: Less intense symptoms and less likely to infect others – WWLP.com

January 21, 2022

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WWLP) While the vaccine and booster may not prevent you from getting COVID-19, it can greatly lower the chances of you getting sick or even you getting someone else sick.

Its why medical experts are calling this a pandemic of the unvaccinated. Data from the states Department of Public Health show that two thirds of patients hospitalized for the virus are unvaccinated. However, getting the booster shot can be useful in other ways as well.

According to a Johns Hopkins Public Health Professor, if you get a breakthrough COVID-19 case but you have the booster shot, your symptoms should be less intense and you should be out for a shorter period of time. Another key factor is youll be less like to pass the virus onto others, even people living in the same house.

There are vaccine clinics that offer boosters, a number of them are walk-ins including at the site at the Springfield Technology Park that opened this week. You must register in advance.

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Breakthrough COVID-19 cases: Less intense symptoms and less likely to infect others - WWLP.com

NC health leaders say these communities are once again seeing higher COVID impacts than others – WCNC.com

January 21, 2022

North Carolina health officials have made equity in COVID-19 response a pandemic focus, but the rise of omicron has gone hand in hand with reemerging disparities.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. As North Carolina continues to see record-setting COVID-19 numbers,health officials warn that some groups are making up bigger shares of those cases than others.

After closing the gap in some respects, health leaders report seeing disproportionate cases and hospitalizations in Black and Hispanic North Carolinians once again.

North Carolina's Department of Health and Human Services reports that at the beginning of December, case rates in the Black community were below those of whites. However, by Dec. 26, those case rates were not only higher again, but they were also double that of white residents.

NCDHHS also states the Hispanic population is seeing 57% higher case rates than the non-Hispanic population.

Health officials said those higher case rates are translating into higher hospitalization rates. According to NCDHHS, in the first 17 days of the new year, Black residents had the highest hospitalization rates in the state, followed by American Indians.

The state's new Health and Human Services Secretary said the reemerging trends underscore the need to distribute pandemic tools equitably.

Vaccines, boosters and masks are the best tools that we have to prevent severe illness, hospitalization and death from COVID-19, Kody H. Kinsley, NCDHHS Secretary, said. Equity has been embedded in our pandemic response from the beginning, and we continue to focus on delivering life-saving tools to historically marginalized populations during this surge.

As of Thursday, NCDHHS data showed Black and American Indian residents have the lowest full vaccination rates (two shots of an mRNA vaccine or one shot of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine) -- 45% of Black North Carolinians are fully vaccinated, while 28% of American Indians in North Carolina are fully vaccinated.

Fifty percentof North Carolina's white population is fully vaccinated, and 69% of the state's Asian or Pacific Islander population is fully vaccinated.

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NC health leaders say these communities are once again seeing higher COVID impacts than others - WCNC.com

New data show those who recovered from Covid-19 were less likely than vaccinated to get infected during Delta wave – STAT

January 21, 2022

New data released Wednesday showed that both vaccination and prior infection offered strong protection against infection and hospitalization from Covid-19 during the Delta wave and that case and hospitalization rates were actually lower among people who had recovered from Covid-19 than among those who had been vaccinated.

The data, released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and health agencies in California and New York, are sure to inflame arguments from those who insist they dont need to be vaccinated if they can show theyve recovered from Covid-19. But the data contain many caveats that health officials stressed pointed to the value of vaccination, even on top of prior infection.

For one, the new report was based on data only through November, before the U.S. booster campaign really took off. It also looked at data during the Delta wave and does not account for the surging Omicron variant.

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And while research has shown that infection can train the immune system to guard against the coronavirus in different ways than vaccination, Covid-19 also has killed more than 850,000 people in this country, sickened often severely millions more, and caused untold cases of long Covid. Serious side effects from the Covid-19 vaccines are extremely rare.

We know that vaccination remains the safest strategy for protecting against Covid-19, Benjamin Silk, a CDC epidemiologist, told reporters Wednesday.

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The data also confirmed something weve known for a long time: Those who werent vaccinated and also hadnt been previously infected were far more likely to be infected and hospitalized than either group.

The new report examined Covid-19 trends among adults in New York and California from May 30 to Nov. 20, 2021.

In early October, after Delta became dominant, infection rates among vaccinated people who hadnt had Covid were 6.2-fold lower than among unvaccinated people who hadnt had Covid-19 in California, and 4.5-fold lower in New York. People who previously had Covid-19 but had not been vaccinated had 29-fold (California) and 14.7-fold (New York) lower case rates. Vaccinated people who had also had Covid-19 had the lowest rates, with a 32.5-fold (California) and 19.8-fold (New York) lower infection rate than people who had no protection.

Hospitalization rates in California followed a similar pattern, the report says. (There were no hospitalization data from New York.) In October, hospitalization rates for people whod been vaccinated but hadnt had Covid were 19.8-fold lower than among those who hadnt had Covid-19 or been vaccinated. The rates were 55.3-fold lower among unvaccinated people whod had Covid-19, and 57.5-fold lower among people whod been vaccinated and had Covid-19.

Erica Pan, Californias state epidemiologist, said hospitalizations among those who were vaccinated were mostly among older people.

Incidences among people whod been vaccinated were highest among people who received the Johnson & Johnson shot, followed by the Pfizer-BioNTech and then the Moderna shots, the report said.

Infection-derived protection was higher after the Delta variant became predominant, a time when vaccine-induced immunity for many persons declined because of immune evasion and immunologic waning, the report states. Immune evasion refers to how, as the virus evolved, it started to erode the protection elicited by vaccination or an infection from an earlier form of the virus; this happened to some degree with the Delta variant, and to a much larger extent with the Omicron variant.

The new CDC report notes that the analyzed data are from the period before most people had received additional shots. It was only in mid-October, for example, that the government authorized booster shots for people who had received the J&J vaccine, recommending that people get them two months after the original jab of the one-dose shot. Boosters werent given the green light for all adults until November.

Boosters not only ramp up the levels of protection that can wane over time after the primary series, studies have shown, but can also deepen the immune response in a way that allows people to better respond to different variants.

The report also notes that the data might not be as relevant during the Omicron period.

Studies have shown that while prior infection seems to generally protect otherwise healthy people from severe disease in the face of Omicron, it does not offer much of a shield against infection. For vaccinated people, boosters restore some of the protection thats been lost in the face of Omicron, but studies have also shown that some of the most powerful protection is generated when people whove had Covid are also vaccinated.

The new study underscores that both infection and vaccination offer protection, said Eli Rosenberg of New York State Department of Health. But, he added, having Covid the first time carries with it significant risks.

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New data show those who recovered from Covid-19 were less likely than vaccinated to get infected during Delta wave - STAT

Column: Their Mexican bakery weathered COVID-19’s devastation. Can it survive a fire? – Los Angeles Times

January 21, 2022

Dec. 7 started as a typical, ideal workday for Omar Lopez. He got up at 3:30 in the morning to shower. He nudged awake his wife, Stephanie Ramirez. He checked on their sleeping 12-year-old daughter, Ahtziri. He then left home and drove five minutes away to the family business, Spigas Bakery.

The Mexican panadera had earned a loyal following almost from the moment the small space debuted in 2011. Disneyland-area hotels and restaurants signed up for wholesale accounts; police officers and construction workers would be waiting every morning when Stephanie showed up at 5 a.m. Everyone clamored for Omars creations: silky flan, flaky chicken empanadas, powdery pan dulce and a small menu of Mexican breakfast staples like chilaquiles and memelas.

Stephanie the quiet one ran the register; Omar the wisecracker chatted up customers between rounds of baking, which he did for 14 hours a day, seven days a week. Spigas was the culmination of a promise the two Mexican immigrants had made to each other 25 years earlier, when they met at another panaderia in Santa Ana: Lets open one on our own, and lets get our American Dream.

That dream had nearly derailed over the last two years.

Stephanie Ramirez cleans seats inside Spigas.

(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

The pandemic erased Spigas corporate accounts and the life savings of Omar and Stephanie. Regulars couldnt afford to buy even coffee anymore. Revenue was already down 60% when Omar, Stephanie, and Ahtziri contracted COVID-19 in November 2020 and had to shut down Spigas until they recovered. When it reopened a few weeks later, only Stephanie returned: Omar was in the hospital, intubated and near death.

Spigas turned into a ghost of its former self Stephanie was terrified of serving anyone at first, because I thought everyone had COVID. When Omar finally returned to work last June, he was 60 pounds lighter and looked like a grandfather, she said.

Display cases, once groaning with goodies, were now nearly empty. All the employees had left. Omar needed help to do tasks that were once as simple to him as blinking, like taking trays out of ovens or using a rolling pin for more than a few minutes.

But there was never any question of shutting down permanently. Baking is like therapy for Omar, Stephanie said.

He and his wife had weathered a double gauntlet of COVID-19 devastation that has slammed Latinos. The group has been overrepresented in COVID cases and deaths in California since the start of the pandemic currently, they make up about 39% of the states population but 49% of cases and 45.2% of deaths. A survey by the Pew Research Center showed that 60% of Latino households nationwide have seen pay cuts or lost jobs since the pandemic began, compared with 44% of the overall U.S. population.

Stephanie Ramirez sits in a booth at Spigas.

(Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

Through sheer ganas willpower Omar and Stephanie brought back their bakery to a sense of normalcy. Debts were paid down; clients returned. Omar bought cornhusks by the bagsful for tamales to prepare for the holidays.

In fact, the 42-year-old initially thought that the lights he saw from a distance, as he approached Spigas on that Dec. 7 day, were a new Christmas display in the shopping plaza Spigas calls home.

They came from firetrucks that blocked off the parking lot.

Omar got out of his car and approached the commander, whom he recognized as a regular. The back of Spigas had burned. When Stephanie showed up soon after, her husband remained inconsolable.

We were starting to get back up, Omar told me. We spoke over the phone last week because he couldnt meet me at their bakery. Though it was almost a month and a half since the fire, smoke still permeated its walls and made it hard for Omar to breathe. Besides, he admitted, he couldnt stay there for more than a couple of minutes if he went because he would break down in tears.

We were getting our restaurants back, he said. The customers were starting to order again

He stayed quiet. Now? Nothing nothing.

I met Stephanie at Spigas because I wanted to see the damage for myself not just as a reporter, but also as a regular. I had enjoyed their food and smoothies nearly every Saturday morning for years, every time I picked up bagels and croissants so my wife could use them for sandwiches at her restaurant.

The bakery looked fine from a distance when I drove up. The front window still displayed a painted-on Happy Holidays and a list of daily specials. But it wasnt until I walked up that I noticed red caution tape wrapped around the handles of Spigas front door, and a heavy chain with a padlock on the other side.

I went around the building to the back, where Stephanie was waiting to show me the damage. There was a torched toilet in the restroom, where firefighters told Omar the blaze started. Water stains dirtied the walls. The booths, which I remembered always packed with people, were eerily quiet.

The smokes stench was still so bad that I could only stay inside for a couple of minutes before stepping back outside, even with my N95 mask. The fire had ruined the water, gas, and electrical lines. While the landlord has frozen rent for the foreseeable future, Stephanie estimates itll take at least $50,000 to just get to a point where they can decide on whether to continue.

And then we need to see if any of this works, she added, waving toward walk-in refrigerators now used as closets and ovens the size of a closet that cost $4,000 for just a regular tune-up.

Spigas had no fire insurance because she couldnt afford monthly payments after Omars hospital stay. They didnt win any state or federal emergency grants, and didnt qualify for pandemic loans. And the bills havent stopped, Stephanie added.

Friends have set up a GoFundMe account to help. But Omar and Stephanie are slowly preparing themselves for the possibility that Spigas may never reopen.

It makes me want to cry, said Omar. That was our future, our life of 25 years working in the United States.

To get up for 10 years every day at 4 a.m., and to see this, Stephanie said as we stood in the parking lot. Tears welled in her eyes.

Now you wake up and say, What is there to do? What do we do?

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Column: Their Mexican bakery weathered COVID-19's devastation. Can it survive a fire? - Los Angeles Times

Covac Global changes its COVID-19 evacuation membership policy amid growing demand for repatriation – The Points Guy

January 21, 2022

Covac Global changes their COVID-19 evacuation membership policy amid growing demand for repatriation

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Covac Global changes its COVID-19 evacuation membership policy amid growing demand for repatriation - The Points Guy

Here’s what Nantucket’s wastewater is showing about the number of COVID cases on island – Cape Cod Times

January 21, 2022

The good news about declining levels of COVID-19 in Bostons wastewater is that it's a trend spreading to the Cape and Islands.

The latest wastewater test report from Nantucketshows a sharp decline in viral loads, said Jerico Mele, Nantucket director of human services.

"We are seeing the wastewater count drop off in a manner similar to Bostons recently. We may start seeing a drop in cases next week," Mele said.

The new report posted online Thursday follows on the heels of a record spike in viral loads reported Jan. 12.

The concentration number went through the roof" at that time,Melesaid.

The amount of virus in the wastewater basically broke every record weve had for viral concentration for the last three weeks running, Mele said.

But this week the copies of viral RNAper liter of sewage,adjusted for flow, dropped to approximately 3.3 million, down from 4.8 million last week.

It looks like good news, especially if the trend continues, Mele said.

The Nantucket decline came a week or so after theMassachusetts Water Resources Authority's Deer Island Treatment Plant, in Boston Harbor, reported declining levels of COVID-19 in the wastewater.

The results from wastewater testing Provincetown are a bit more mixed.

The latest (wastewater test result) is up, said Richard J. Waldo, director of Provincetowns Department of Public Works.

Is itspiking to the level of the outbreak we saw (last summer)with Provincetown? No, Waldo said.

Provincetown made international news with a surge in COVID-19 cases last summer following the Fourth of July weekend.

The latest report from Jan. 5 shows a viral load that is approximately one-third lower than the summer's record peak, but it also represents anincrease over more recent test results.

Mobile infusion center: Cape Cod Hospital to expand outpatient COVID antibody treatments with new infusion center

Test results from Jan. 1 and Jan. 3 showed a dip in coronavirus loads, with 545,197 copies per liter and 451,487 copies per liter, respectively, Waldo said.

But the Jan. 5 report showed a jump to about 2.3 million copies of viral RNA per liter of sewage.

There are multiple factors that can explain the difference in viral loads, Waldo said, adding that the time of day the tests are run and whether the testing coincides with weekend visitors can influence test results.

You have to observe it over time."

He said the overall trend in Provincetown had beenincreasing, but he was waiting to see what the latest test results show, especially since the wastewater plant didn't conduct testing last week due to a short staff.

The new test results will be out later this week or early next week, he said.

Waldo said he expected to see a decline in viral loads soon.

"I think we've hit our peak."

Mele said wastewater results show the direction infections will take about aweek after the test report.

But in a press teleconference Thursday morning, state Sen. Julian Cyr, D-Truro, said COVID-19 cases already appear to be on the decline locally.

The seven-day average for new cases in Barnstable County is running about 272 a day, Cyr said.

Thats less than the 400s we were seeing last week.

Cyr said he believes Jan. 3 to 11 represented the peak of COVID-19 cases on Cape Cod.

Sean O'Brien, director of Barnstable County's department of health and environment, said it appeared the county was "climbing down the backside of a mountain" when it came to new COVID-19 cases.

More: Record-high COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations on Cape Cod omicron likely the cause

But during theteleconference he pleaded with the public to avoid large gatherings, wear a mask indoors and get vaccinated and boosted.

Cyr said that even though numbers of new cases appear to be on a downward trend, the testing positivity rate for many towns on the Cape remain at 15%, which is considered an outbreak level.

In the last two-week period reported by state public health officials Jan. 13, Nantucket had 460 new cases of COVID-19,which accounts for 16.7% of 2,753 COVID-19 cases on Nantucket since the start of the pandemic.

Provincetown, like the rest of the Cape and the state, also has seen a surge in cases, with 34 new COVID-19 infections in the same two-week time periodfor a total of 403 cases since the pandemic began.

Both Provincetown and Nantucket are working with Cambridge-based Biobot Analytics to track viral loads in wastewater.

Biobot was selected by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to analyze wastewater samples from more than 300 treatment plants serving more than 100 million people across the U.S., according to The Associated Press.

Cases of omicron,which are responsible for the latest surge, already have peaked in Great Britain.

U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy onSunday saidin some parts of the U.S., particularly the Northeast, cases have begun to plateau or even decline.

But Murthy said parts of the U.S. that saw omicron hit later will be dealing with it for a while. "The next few weeks will be tough."

Waldo said he doesn't know why coronavirus test results from Boston showed a decline in viral loads at the same time Provincetown's loads remained elevated.

Due to the amount of flow going through the Deer Island Treatment Plan, the samples may be a little more diluted than they are locally, Waldo said.

Or "there could be some kind of lag behind the big city."

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Here's what Nantucket's wastewater is showing about the number of COVID cases on island - Cape Cod Times

COVID-19 situation seeing improvements in northeast Ohio, but health officials still cautious – Akron Beacon Journal

January 21, 2022

Ohio health officials on Thursday cautioned against too much optimism that Ohio has reached its peak of the current omicron variant wave.

"Thankfully we are seeing many signs of improvements in many of Ohio's hardest-hit areas," Ohio Department of Health Director Bruce Vanderhoff said. "But the reality is thatmany other parts of the state are still on the rise of this omicron tidal wave.

Ohio has seen improvements inCOVID-19 hospitalization numbers after breaking daily records multiple times earlier this month. Since a week ago, the number of Ohioans currently in the hospital with COVID-19 has been on a steady decline.

Northeast Ohio, the hardest hit, has seen the steepest declines witharound a 24% drop over the last ten days.As of Wednesday, 5,889 Ohioans were in hospitals with the virus.

More: Ohio clearing data backlog as it faces unprecedented levels of COVID-19 cases, testing

More: Omicron forces nursing homes to freeze admissions, strands more Ohioans at hospitals

Ohio health experts have predicted that the current wave of the more contagious omicron variant would slowly trend down in Ohio toward the end of January.

The situation is still dire, however, Vanderhoff said. Hospitalization and COVID-19 levels are still above the previous winter surge when vaccines were only just becoming available.Ohio is still getting north of 20,000 positive COVID-19 tests every day.

And other regions of the state are seeing increases. Southwest Ohio saw a 14% increase and western Ohio saw a 13% increasein COVID-19 ICU admissions over the prior week.

Things continue in our Dayton area to be very critical," said Roberto Colon, chief medical officer of Miami Valley Hospital."The pace of new cases hasnot yet sloweddown like we have seen in other areas…it is tremendously taxing to our staff.

More than 2,000 Ohio National Guard members are still deployed to help hospitals understaffed and overwhelmed by COVID-19. They will soon be shiftedto other areas of the state, saidMajor General John C. Harris, Jr., head of the Ohio National Guard, with 400 moving from northeast Ohio to the Dayton and Cincinnati area.

Assistance from the federal level has arrived and is coming. President Joe Biden sent 20 Air Force medical professionals to Cleveland Clinic.Details have yet to come on theFederal Emergency Management Agency sending a team to help out Summa Health in Akron.

Testing demand has decreased in northeast Ohio as the situation improves slightly. But statewide and nationwide, the demand is causing strain on supplying COVID-19 tests.

This month, Ohio ordered 1.2 million testing kits, but only a fraction hasbeen delivered, said Vanderhoff. Once shipments arrive,400,000 testing kits can be distributed with priority going to schools.

It's likely that thestate'sability to provide tests could be intermittently affected," Vanderhoffsaid.

Titus Wu is a reporter for the USA TODAY Network Ohio Bureau, which serves the Columbus Dispatch, Cincinnati Enquirer, Akron Beacon Journal and 18 other affiliated news organizations across Ohio.

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COVID-19 situation seeing improvements in northeast Ohio, but health officials still cautious - Akron Beacon Journal

How the body’s immune system tries to fight off COVID-19 – Los Angeles Times

January 19, 2022

Vaccines have shown themselves to be the best defense against a serious case of COVID-19: According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, unvaccinated adults were about 13 times more likely to be hospitalized with the disease than vaccinated adults as of late November.

But vaccines and the antibodies they generate are just one piece of the puzzle when it comes to fighting off the coronavirus. The immune system has other sets of defenders that find and kill infected cells, then preserve a living record of the virus, bacteria or other infectious agent so the body can respond faster the next time its under assault.

And speed is essential, said E. John Wherry, director of the University of Pennsylvanias Institute for Immunology.

During an infection, its a race, with the immune system pressing to stop the virus before it has multiplied to a debilitating level, Wherry explained. Thats particularly true for the Omicron variant, which replicates at an alarming rate.

Heres a breakdown of how the bodys immune system works and how its been tested by Omicron:

Think of the immune system as having three layers of defense. One tries to keep hostile molecules pathogens on the outside, looking in. That job is performed by the skin, the bodys largest organ, whose cells can defeat invaders and warn the rest of the immune system that trouble is at hand.

The second layer tries to stop the attackers once theyve entered the body, but before they have infected cells. This is where the bone marrow comes in. It produces natural killer or NK cells as well as B cells, the ones that generate antibodies. Both are types of white blood cells, or lymphocytes.

We have natural killer or NK cells in the tonsils, lymph nodes and spleen, ready to fight any attackers.

(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases)

NKs earned their name because they arent produced in response to an attacker; theyre already present and ready to kill cells that dont belong in the body, such as tumor cells. NKs are part of the innate immune system, in scientific terms. According to researchers at Rockefeller University, NKs hang out in the tonsils, lymph nodes and spleen, then rush to confront attackers where they emerge.

Antibodies, on the other hand, are generated after an attacker is discovered, making them part of what scientists call the adaptive immune system. They attach themselves to specific pathogens, which then get gobbled up and destroyed by other members of the immune systems team.

In the case of SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, different antibodies bind to different parts of the virus, including the spike protein the virus uses to enter a healthy cell and replicate itself over and over. If the spike protein is gummed up by an antibody, the virus cant infect a cell.

Its conceivable that if youre freshly vaccinated or boosted, you could have so many antibodies ready to attack that you wont become infected, said Trudy U. Rey, a virologist and science communicator. This is called sterilizing immunity, although in the case of COVID-19, it would be merely temporary. But thats not the goal of a COVID-19 vaccination. (More on that later.)

A more common scenario is that some quantity of invading coronaviruses get past the antibodies. Cells have some innate defenses that can defeat the invaders, but SARS-CoV-2 has shown itself capable of evading them. Happily, there is a third line of defense: T cells.

T cells in the upper chests thymus gland can detect pathogens after theyve gotten inside a cell, where antibodies cant find them.

(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases)

Like B cells and NKs, T cells are white blood cells that originate in the bone marrow, but they develop in and emanate from the thymus gland in the upper chest. Their special power is their ability to detect viruses and other germs after theyve gotten inside a cell, where theyre hidden from antibodies.

T cells come in two basic flavors: killers and messengers. The lethal version detects cells that have been infected with a virus, then kills them (by releasing a toxic version of a granule called a cytokine) to stop the virus from replicating. Wherry called this destroying the village to save the nation. The messengers alert B cells to the new threat, and they respond by making antibodies designed to meet that threat.

Its a complex molecular dance with many other vital parts, including dendritic cells or DCs, which act as sentinels and couriers within the immune system. Among other things, the DCs tell the T cells which specific threat to hunt down and kill.

Once an infection is overcome, the immune system naturally winds down and sheds some antibodies and T cells. But some T cells live on as memory T cells, ready to respond by killing infected cells and stimulating the production of new antibodies if the same attacker returns. And some B cells remain as memory cells to handle antibody production.

Daniela Weiskopf, an immunologist at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology, said the bodys adaptive immune system is very specific. Thats good, she said, because otherwise youd be in a constant state of inflammation. But it also means that antibodies and T cells are limited in what they can bind to or recognize. They need to learn their enemy before they can defend against it.

Vaccines help us create antibodies and memory T cells that recognize a virus and infected cells so our immune systems react more quickly. Booster shots reinforce this process.

(Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times)

Vaccination, Weiskopf said, is nothing but training the immune system without getting sick. COVID-19 vaccines create antibodies that recognize the spike protein and other characteristics of SARS-CoV-2, along with memory T cells that can recognize cells that have been infected with the virus.

The more often your immune system sees a threat, Weiskopf said, the more detailed it makes the response. The speedier, too once your system has these memory cells, she said, it can react much, much, much faster the next time the same pathogen comes knocking. Hence the value of booster shots.

As viruses mutate, the parts that antibodies attach themselves to may change. If they change too much, the antibodies wont be as good at binding to them and preventing them from entering cells. That appears to be the case with the Omicron variant, which has multiple mutations that affect its spike protein.

But Omicrons mutations havent tempered the response of memory T cells, Weiskopf, Rey and Wherry said. Thats because the mutations havent had much effect on the parts of the virus that T cells recognize.

Beyond that, Weiskopf said, each person has multiple different T cells, and their T cells are different from everyone elses. If by some rare misfortune a new variant managed to dodge all of your memory T cells, she said, it would still encounter plenty of effective T cells in the rest of the population.

Rey added that much of the talk about waning immunity is based on the declining presence of what are known as neutralizing antibodies, which can block the virus from attaching to a cell and replicating. But other types of antibodies remain in the system.

There have even been studies that have shown that just because an antibody doesnt neutralize, it doesnt mean it cant do anything, Rey said. For example, she said, by binding just to some parts of the spike protein, it may prompt other immune cells to join the fight.

If youve never been exposed to SARS-CoV-2 or to COVID-19 vaccines, the coronavirus wont encounter any customized antibodies or T cells on its way to your respiratory system. Even if your immune system is healthy, it takes a week to 10 days to transform undifferentiated T cells into killers and get them in place to confront infected cells, Wherry said. During that time, the virus is replicating exponentially and spreading through the body.

But if youve been immunized, you can have killer T cells ready in four days or fewer, Wherry said. That head start makes a huge difference in keeping an infection from raging out of control.

Unvaccinated people may nevertheless have some T cells ready to defend at the first sign of an infection, Weiskopf said. Researchers found some T cells that responded to SARS-CoV-2 in samples taken from people whod never been exposed to the virus, she said. These cells created in response to the common cold, which can be caused by other kinds of coronaviruses helped speed up and strengthen the immune response, she said.

Not everyone whos caught a cold will have T cells with this kind of versatility, she added. But the discovery suggests to some researchers that scientists might be able to devise a vaccine capable of attacking any coronavirus variant by prompting the immune system to make T cells like these. (Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, owner of The Times, has another company that is exploring this possibility.)

At any rate, the more a virus replicates in the body, the bigger the response from killer T cells. That raises a second issue, Wherry said: T cells cant go on killing tissue forever; at some point, the system has to shift into repair mode. Thats why there are regulatory T cells to act as a counterweight on this whole system, helping to rein in the killer cells, he said.

Sometimes, however, the system doesnt throw the off switch soon enough. Wherry said that for some seriously ill COVID-19 patients, the virus spreads to many places inside their bodies, and a huge number of killer T cells flood their systems with very damaging cytokines. Clinicians help those patients by suppressing their immune systems to tamp down this response, he said.

If they recover from COVID-19, unvaccinated people will have antibodies and memory cells to help protect against the next encounter with SARS-CoV-2. But Rey said a persons immune response is much better after vaccination than with the natural immunity conferred by an infection. The reinfection rate for unvaccinated people who only have natural immunity is twice as high as the infection rate for people whove been vaccinated, she said.

Over the course of the pandemic, elderly people have tended to suffer far more serious consequences from COVID-19 than children have. There appear to be at least a couple of reasons for that.

Rey pointed to a study led by researchers at the Charit-Universittsmedizin Berlin, which found certain innate defenses in childrens nasal passages that may help them clobber the virus before it can replicate wildly.

This type of innate immune response seems to be delayed in older adults, and in an effort to catch up, may result in excessive inflammation, thereby ultimately causing more severe damage, she wrote in a blog post.

Wherry said the immune system is susceptible to the effects of aging, just like the rest of the body.

One of the key things is you lose production of these new, what we call naive, T cells, he said. These act as blank slates, ready to learn new threats. Late in life, Wherry said, they become a much smaller portion of the cells you can call into action.

As we age, problems emerge in other elements of the immune system as well, he said. Altogether, he said, these issues make it harder for the immune system to get out of the gate.

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How the body's immune system tries to fight off COVID-19 - Los Angeles Times

How the body’s immune system tries to fight off COVID-19 – Los Angeles Times

January 19, 2022

Vaccines have shown themselves to be the best defense against a serious case of COVID-19: According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, unvaccinated adults were about 13 times more likely to be hospitalized with the disease than vaccinated adults as of late November.

But vaccines and the antibodies they generate are just one piece of the puzzle when it comes to fighting off the coronavirus. The immune system has other sets of defenders that find and kill infected cells, then preserve a living record of the virus, bacteria or other infectious agent so the body can respond faster the next time its under assault.

And speed is essential, said E. John Wherry, director of the University of Pennsylvanias Institute for Immunology.

During an infection, its a race, with the immune system pressing to stop the virus before it has multiplied to a debilitating level, Wherry explained. Thats particularly true for the Omicron variant, which replicates at an alarming rate.

Heres a breakdown of how the bodys immune system works and how its been tested by Omicron:

Think of the immune system as having three layers of defense. One tries to keep hostile molecules pathogens on the outside, looking in. That job is performed by the skin, the bodys largest organ, whose cells can defeat invaders and warn the rest of the immune system that trouble is at hand.

The second layer tries to stop the attackers once theyve entered the body, but before they have infected cells. This is where the bone marrow comes in. It produces natural killer or NK cells as well as B cells, the ones that generate antibodies. Both are types of white blood cells, or lymphocytes.

We have natural killer or NK cells in the tonsils, lymph nodes and spleen, ready to fight any attackers.

(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases)

NKs earned their name because they arent produced in response to an attacker; theyre already present and ready to kill cells that dont belong in the body, such as tumor cells. NKs are part of the innate immune system, in scientific terms. According to researchers at Rockefeller University, NKs hang out in the tonsils, lymph nodes and spleen, then rush to confront attackers where they emerge.

Antibodies, on the other hand, are generated after an attacker is discovered, making them part of what scientists call the adaptive immune system. They attach themselves to specific pathogens, which then get gobbled up and destroyed by other members of the immune systems team.

In the case of SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, different antibodies bind to different parts of the virus, including the spike protein the virus uses to enter a healthy cell and replicate itself over and over. If the spike protein is gummed up by an antibody, the virus cant infect a cell.

Its conceivable that if youre freshly vaccinated or boosted, you could have so many antibodies ready to attack that you wont become infected, said Trudy U. Rey, a virologist and science communicator. This is called sterilizing immunity, although in the case of COVID-19, it would be merely temporary. But thats not the goal of a COVID-19 vaccination. (More on that later.)

A more common scenario is that some quantity of invading coronaviruses get past the antibodies. Cells have some innate defenses that can defeat the invaders, but SARS-CoV-2 has shown itself capable of evading them. Happily, there is a third line of defense: T cells.

T cells in the upper chests thymus gland can detect pathogens after theyve gotten inside a cell, where antibodies cant find them.

(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases)

Like B cells and NKs, T cells are white blood cells that originate in the bone marrow, but they develop in and emanate from the thymus gland in the upper chest. Their special power is their ability to detect viruses and other germs after theyve gotten inside a cell, where theyre hidden from antibodies.

T cells come in two basic flavors: killers and messengers. The lethal version detects cells that have been infected with a virus, then kills them (by releasing a toxic version of a granule called a cytokine) to stop the virus from replicating. Wherry called this destroying the village to save the nation. The messengers alert B cells to the new threat, and they respond by making antibodies designed to meet that threat.

Its a complex molecular dance with many other vital parts, including dendritic cells or DCs, which act as sentinels and couriers within the immune system. Among other things, the DCs tell the T cells which specific threat to hunt down and kill.

Once an infection is overcome, the immune system naturally winds down and sheds some antibodies and T cells. But some T cells live on as memory T cells, ready to respond by killing infected cells and stimulating the production of new antibodies if the same attacker returns. And some B cells remain as memory cells to handle antibody production.

Daniela Weiskopf, an immunologist at the La Jolla Institute for Immunology, said the bodys adaptive immune system is very specific. Thats good, she said, because otherwise youd be in a constant state of inflammation. But it also means that antibodies and T cells are limited in what they can bind to or recognize. They need to learn their enemy before they can defend against it.

Vaccines help us create antibodies and memory T cells that recognize a virus and infected cells so our immune systems react more quickly. Booster shots reinforce this process.

(Gary Coronado / Los Angeles Times)

Vaccination, Weiskopf said, is nothing but training the immune system without getting sick. COVID-19 vaccines create antibodies that recognize the spike protein and other characteristics of SARS-CoV-2, along with memory T cells that can recognize cells that have been infected with the virus.

The more often your immune system sees a threat, Weiskopf said, the more detailed it makes the response. The speedier, too once your system has these memory cells, she said, it can react much, much, much faster the next time the same pathogen comes knocking. Hence the value of booster shots.

As viruses mutate, the parts that antibodies attach themselves to may change. If they change too much, the antibodies wont be as good at binding to them and preventing them from entering cells. That appears to be the case with the Omicron variant, which has multiple mutations that affect its spike protein.

But Omicrons mutations havent tempered the response of memory T cells, Weiskopf, Rey and Wherry said. Thats because the mutations havent had much effect on the parts of the virus that T cells recognize.

Beyond that, Weiskopf said, each person has multiple different T cells, and their T cells are different from everyone elses. If by some rare misfortune a new variant managed to dodge all of your memory T cells, she said, it would still encounter plenty of effective T cells in the rest of the population.

Rey added that much of the talk about waning immunity is based on the declining presence of what are known as neutralizing antibodies, which can block the virus from attaching to a cell and replicating. But other types of antibodies remain in the system.

There have even been studies that have shown that just because an antibody doesnt neutralize, it doesnt mean it cant do anything, Rey said. For example, she said, by binding just to some parts of the spike protein, it may prompt other immune cells to join the fight.

If youve never been exposed to SARS-CoV-2 or to COVID-19 vaccines, the coronavirus wont encounter any customized antibodies or T cells on its way to your respiratory system. Even if your immune system is healthy, it takes a week to 10 days to transform undifferentiated T cells into killers and get them in place to confront infected cells, Wherry said. During that time, the virus is replicating exponentially and spreading through the body.

But if youve been immunized, you can have killer T cells ready in four days or fewer, Wherry said. That head start makes a huge difference in keeping an infection from raging out of control.

Unvaccinated people may nevertheless have some T cells ready to defend at the first sign of an infection, Weiskopf said. Researchers found some T cells that responded to SARS-CoV-2 in samples taken from people whod never been exposed to the virus, she said. These cells created in response to the common cold, which can be caused by other kinds of coronaviruses helped speed up and strengthen the immune response, she said.

Not everyone whos caught a cold will have T cells with this kind of versatility, she added. But the discovery suggests to some researchers that scientists might be able to devise a vaccine capable of attacking any coronavirus variant by prompting the immune system to make T cells like these. (Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, owner of The Times, has another company that is exploring this possibility.)

At any rate, the more a virus replicates in the body, the bigger the response from killer T cells. That raises a second issue, Wherry said: T cells cant go on killing tissue forever; at some point, the system has to shift into repair mode. Thats why there are regulatory T cells to act as a counterweight on this whole system, helping to rein in the killer cells, he said.

Sometimes, however, the system doesnt throw the off switch soon enough. Wherry said that for some seriously ill COVID-19 patients, the virus spreads to many places inside their bodies, and a huge number of killer T cells flood their systems with very damaging cytokines. Clinicians help those patients by suppressing their immune systems to tamp down this response, he said.

If they recover from COVID-19, unvaccinated people will have antibodies and memory cells to help protect against the next encounter with SARS-CoV-2. But Rey said a persons immune response is much better after vaccination than with the natural immunity conferred by an infection. The reinfection rate for unvaccinated people who only have natural immunity is twice as high as the infection rate for people whove been vaccinated, she said.

Over the course of the pandemic, elderly people have tended to suffer far more serious consequences from COVID-19 than children have. There appear to be at least a couple of reasons for that.

Rey pointed to a study led by researchers at the Charit-Universittsmedizin Berlin, which found certain innate defenses in childrens nasal passages that may help them clobber the virus before it can replicate wildly.

This type of innate immune response seems to be delayed in older adults, and in an effort to catch up, may result in excessive inflammation, thereby ultimately causing more severe damage, she wrote in a blog post.

Wherry said the immune system is susceptible to the effects of aging, just like the rest of the body.

One of the key things is you lose production of these new, what we call naive, T cells, he said. These act as blank slates, ready to learn new threats. Late in life, Wherry said, they become a much smaller portion of the cells you can call into action.

As we age, problems emerge in other elements of the immune system as well, he said. Altogether, he said, these issues make it harder for the immune system to get out of the gate.

See the rest here:

How the body's immune system tries to fight off COVID-19 - Los Angeles Times

COVID-19 health emergency could be over this year, WHO says – ABC News

January 19, 2022

A leading World Health Organization official says the worst of the coronavirus pandemic including deaths, hospitalizations and lockdowns could be over this year if huge inequities in vaccinations and medicines are addressed quickly

By JAMEY KEATEN Associated Press

January 18, 2022, 8:03 PM

4 min read

GENEVA -- The worst of the coronavirus pandemic deaths, hospitalizations and lockdowns could be over this year if huge inequities in vaccinations and medicines are addressed quickly, the head of emergencies at the World Health Organization said Tuesday.

Dr. Michael Ryan, speaking during a panel discussion on vaccine inequity hosted by the World Economic Forum, said we may never end the virus because such pandemic viruses end up becoming part of the ecosystem.

But we have a chance to end the public health emergency this year if we do the things that weve been talking about, he said.

WHO has slammed the imbalance in COVID-19 vaccinations between rich and poor countries as a catastrophic moral failure. Fewer than 10% of people in lower-income countries have received even one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Ryan told the virtual gathering of world and business leaders that if vaccines and other tools aren't shared fairly, the tragedy of the virus, which has so far killed more than 5.5 million people worldwide, would continue.

What we need to do is get to low levels of disease incidence with maximum vaccination of our populations, so nobody has to die, Ryan said. The issue is: Its the death. Its the hospitalizations. Its the disruption of our social, economic, political systems thats caused the tragedy not the virus."

Ryan also waded into the growing debate about whether COVID-19 should be considered endemic, a label some countries like Spain have called for to better help live with the virus, or still a pandemic involving intensified measures that many countries have taken to fight the spread.

Endemic malaria kills hundreds of thousands of people; endemic HIV; endemic violence in our inner cities. Endemic in itself does not mean good. Endemic just means its here forever," he said.

Public health officials have warned it is highly unlikely COVID-19 will be eliminated and say it will continue to kill people, though at much lower levels, even after it becomes endemic.

Fellow panelist Gabriela Bucher, executive director of the anti-poverty organization Oxfam International, cited the enormous urgency of fairer distribution of vaccines and the need for large-scale production. She said resources to fight the pandemic were being hoarded by a few companies and a few shareholders.

John Nkengasong, director of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, decried the total collapse of global cooperation and solidarity over the last two years, saying it was totally unacceptable how few people in Africa have gotten vaccine shots. His agency says only 10% of Africas 1.2 billion people are fully vaccinated.

He also sought to douse the belief among some that vaccine hesitancy is widespread in Africa, citing studies that say 80% of Africans were ready to get shots if the vaccines were available.

The comments came on the second day of the online alternative to the annual World Economic Forum gathering, which was postponed over pandemic health concerns.

In speeches at the event, world leaders like Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett discussed approaches to the pandemic. He said his country, which quickly rolled out a widespread vaccination campaign, has a strategy of being at the forefront of the medicines and the vaccines against COVID-19.

Israel's Health Ministry says 62% of people there are fully vaccinated, including with booster shots.

Citing advanced research in Israel, Bennett said, We want to be first in the world to know how vaccines and the new variants respond to one another.

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said his country had high levels of vaccination because society values protecting the elderly and the vulnerable. He plans to keep stringent border controls in place until the end of February.

He said he was trying to balance restrictions with keeping the economy open but that a zero COVID policy against the omicron variant is not possible nor appropriate.

In a separate press briefing Tuesday, WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the omicron variant continues to sweep the world, adding there were 18 million new COVID-19 cases reported last week.

Associated Press reporters Ilan Ben Zion in Jerusalem and Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo contributed.

Follow all AP stories on the pandemic at https://apnews.com/hub/coronavirus-pandemic.

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COVID-19 health emergency could be over this year, WHO says - ABC News

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