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Health

Twitter closes San Francisco, New York places of work as Covid circumstances surge

Pedestrians use cell phones as they walk past Twitter Inc. headquarters in San Francisco, California, USA

Bloomberg | Getty Images

Twitter has announced that it will immediately close its offices in San Francisco and New York as Covid cases increase across the country.

Wednesday’s announcement comes just two weeks after the social media company reopened its offices in both cities.

“After carefully reviewing the CDC’s updated guidelines, and given current conditions, Twitter has decided to close our New York and San Francisco offices and to suspend future office openings with immediate effect,” a Twitter spokesman said in a statement Wednesday.

The company added that it continues to closely monitor local conditions and make necessary changes that “prioritize the health and safety of our Tweeps”.

Twitter is the newest company in the Bay Area to either delay its reopening or to close its offices due to the Delta variant.

On Wednesday, Google announced that it would postpone the return of the offices until October. One month later than the original September date.

This story evolves. Stay with NBC Bay Area for updates.

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Health

Cats Are So Not Appreciated. Assume Once more.

Leslie Lyons is a veterinarian and specialist in cat genetics. She is also a cat owner and general cat partisan who has been known to tease her colleagues who study dog genetics with the well-worn adage that “Cats rule. Dogs drool.”

That has not been the case with research money and attention to the genetics of disease in cats and dogs, partly because the number of dog breeds offers variety in terms of genetic ailments and perhaps because of a general bias in favor of dogs. But Dr. Lyons, a professor at the University of Missouri, says there are many reasons cats and their diseases are invaluable models for human diseases. She took up the cause of cat science this week in an article in Trends in Genetics.

“People tend to either love them or hate them, and cats are often underappreciated by the scientific community,” she writes. But, she says, in some ways the organization of the cat genome is much like the human genome, and cat genomics could help in the understanding of the vast amount of mammalian DNA that does not constitute genes, and is poorly understood.

Among the advances in veterinary medicine that have benefited humans, she pointed out that remdesivir, an important drug in combating Covid, was first successfully used against a cat disease caused by another coronavirus.

She is the director of the 99 Lives Cat Genome Sequencing Initiative and as part of that project, she and a group of colleagues, including Wes Warren at the University of Missouri and William Murphy at Texas A&M University, recently produced the most detailed genome of the cat to date, which surpasses the dog genome.

“For the moment,” Dr. Lyons said.

I spoke last week with Dr. Lyons, Dr. Warren and Dr. Murphy, who refer to themselves as Team Feline. Dr. Lyons was visiting Texas, and with two of her colleagues she talked about why the genomes of cats are important to medical knowledge.

I report on animal science, and over the years, I admitted to the members of Team Feline, I seem to have written more about dogs than cats. The dog-cat rivalry in genomic science is mostly a good-natured rivalry, but just to assess what I was getting myself into I first asked about the scientists’ nonscientific approach to cats and dogs.

The conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

First, their personal preferences:

Dr. William Murphy: I do have cats and dogs as pets, but I prefer cats.

Dr. Wes Warren: I’m a dog owner. Unfortunately I’m allergic to cats.

Dr. Leslie Lyons: He has a very expensive dog that keeps having problems.

Why were you moved to write the article promoting the cause of cat science?

Dr. Lyons: Throughout my career, I’ve been trying to get people to recognize that our everyday pets have the same diseases as us and can really provide important information if we can understand what makes them tick a little bit better, how their genomes are constructed.

You have high quality genomes of several species of cats beyond the domestic cat?

Dr. Lyons: We already have the lions and tigers, the Asian leopard cat, Geoffroy’s cat, a half-dozen species with really, really good genomes that are even better than the dog genomes at this point in time.

Dr. Murphy: By far. It was actually better quality than the human reference genome until very recently. The goal is to have the complete encyclopedia of the cat’s DNA, so we can actually fully understand the genetic basis for all traits in the cat.

Dr. Lyons: For example the allergy gene that Wes is allergic to. We completely understand that gene now. We can maybe even knock it out of the cat to produce cats that are more hypoallergenic or at least understand what elicits the immune response better.

How are cat diseases a good model for human diseases?

Dr. Lyons: What we’re discovering is different species have different health problems. We should really be picking the right species.

Dr. Warren: We know that dogs get cancer more frequently, similar to ourselves. Cats don’t get cancer very often. And that’s a fascinating story of evolution. So are there signals or clues in the genome of the cat that allows us to zero in better on why cats get certain types of cancers and understand the differences among dogs, cats and humans.

How about the cats that are subjects of the research?

Dr. Lyons: Genomic research is fantastic because all we need is maybe a blood sample. And so once we have the blood sample, we don’t have to do experimentation on an animal. We’re actually observing what animals already have. We’re working with the diseases that are already there.

What about wild species?

Dr. Murphy: High quality genomes for wild cats can aid in their species survival plans and their recovery in the wild.

Dr. Lyons: We see half a dozen health problems in wild felids. We have a study of transitional cell carcinoma in fishing cats, inherited blindness in black-footed cats, polycystic kidney disease in Pallas’s cats. Snow leopards have terrible eye problems, probably because of inbreeding in zoos. So understanding their genomes can help us to stop those problems in the zoo populations, and that will help humans with the same conditions as well.

How about ancient DNA and cats? There’s been a lot of work on that in dogs. How is that progressing in cats?

Dr. Lyons: A couple of groups are moving forward with ancient DNA. I worked on some mummy cats and we showed that the mitochondrial DNA types that we found in the mummified cats are present more commonly in Egyptian cats today than they are anywhere else. So the cats of the pharaohs are the cats of present day Egyptians.

To switch gears: I’ve always been a dog person but I’ve been thinking about getting a cat. Any tips?

Dr. Lyons: Get two. They’ll be buddies. And give them something to scratch. Otherwise it is going to be your couch.

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World News

Disney World Will Require Masks Indoors Once more

Starting Friday, Disney World in Florida will require guests over the age of 2 to wear masks indoors, reversing the policy that allows fully vaccinated guests to walk without them.

The change was announced after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Tuesday recommended Americans wear face masks in public indoor spaces in areas with high transmission rates, regardless of vaccination status.

It also came when Orange County Mayor Jerry L. Demings signed an executive order on Wednesday declaring a local state of emergency as cases soared in the county where Disney World is located.

“I urge residents and visitors – vaccinated and unvaccinated – to wear a mask indoors and follow updated CDC guidelines,” Mr Demings wrote on Twitter.

In the past two weeks, Orange County’s coronavirus infections have increased 184 percent and hospital admissions increased 116 percent, according to the New York Times.

Disney World’s new policy could spark a backlash from Governor Ron DeSantis, who said it was up to parents to decide whether their children should wear masks after the CDC’s announcement.

On Wednesday, Governor DeSantis doubled his comments, saying that wearing masks for children was “bad policy”.

“Parents can best decide whether their children should wear a mask in school,” wrote the governor on Twitter. “Neither Washington bureaucrats nor local authorities should be able to override a parent’s decision.”

Disney World wasn’t the only company to respond to CDC advice. Apple also announced that employees and customers in certain stores across the country will be required to wear masks regardless of their vaccination status under the new CDC guidelines.

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Politics

Biden would require federal staff to get the Covid vaccine or undergo testing

President Joe Biden is expected to announce this week that his government will vaccinate federal employees against the coronavirus or undergo rigorous testing, NBC News reported Wednesday.

Biden will give a speech on Thursday to reveal the new rules following a review of the White House’s internal guidelines, two government officials told NBC. It is unclear when the changes will take effect.

Biden is also expected to announce new moves by his administration to increase the U.S. vaccination rate, which has slowed significantly in recent months and has fallen below the White House’s earlier targets, NBC reported.

The new measures come as the highly transmissible Delta variant spreads around the world, including the United States, where it represents a large proportion of new infections.

CNBC policy

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Public health officials warn the US could face another surge in cases this fall. They also point out that the overwhelming majority of people hospitalized or killed by Covid are unvaccinated and that “breakthrough infections” tend to be milder among those vaccinated.

In preparation, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed their guidelines on wearing masks indoors on Tuesday. The CDC now recommends that fully vaccinated people and children wear masks indoors again in places with high Covid transmission rates and in schools.

On the same day, Biden said it was “being considered” whether the White House would require vaccination of all federal employees.

A government agency has already taken the plunge. On Monday, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced that it would order its health care workers to get vaccinated. VA Secretary Denis McDonough said it was “the best way to protect veterans”.

Biden also endorsed the CDC’s latest mask guidelines. And on Tuesday night, the White House Bureau of Management and Household Budget announced federal agencies that they must mandate masks for employees in all federal buildings in high-transmission areas, according to NBC.

The White House did not have to make a decision on compulsory vaccination until Tuesday night.

A source familiar with the considerations told CNBC at the time that a system of “vaccination certification” – which requires federal employees to confirm their vaccination status or follow safety measures such as wearing masks and regular tests – is “an option” under strong consideration. “

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Health

The epidemic will sweep throughout the U.S. at completely different occasions, Dr. Scott Gottlieb says

Dr. Scott Gottlieb told CNBC that he expects surging U.S. coronavirus cases, linked to the highly transmissible delta variant, to start decreasing in just a few weeks. 

“Probably, in two or three weeks, I think that we were probably about three weeks behind the U.K.,” said the former FDA chief in the Trump administration.  

“The U.K. clearly is on a downslope…I would expect some of the southern states that really were the epicenter of this epidemic to start rolling over in the next two or three weeks.”

While the epidemic is still expanding across southern states, the rate of expansion is showing signs slowing. Gottlieb told “The News with Shepard Smith” that the slowdown is a sign that those southern states may be reaching their peak. 

Gottlieb did warn, however, that northern states may start to see more delta spread, as rates decrease in the south. 

“Here, in this country, it’s going to be much more regionalized now, I don’t expect the density of the spread of delta in states like New York or Michigan to be what it was in the south,” Gottlieb said. “We have more vaccine coverage, up there, we’ve had more prior infection, but you will see an uptick in cases, even in states where there is a lot of vaccine coverage, probably just not as severe.” 

Disclosure: Scott Gottlieb is a CNBC contributor and is a member of the boards of Pfizer, genetic testing start-up Tempus, health-care tech company Aetion Inc. and biotech company Illumina. He also serves as co-chair of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings’ and Royal Caribbean’s “Healthy Sail Panel.”

Categories
Entertainment

Examine Exhibits Extra Incapacity Tales Onscreen, however Few Disabled Actors

Let’s start with the good news: The significant representations of disability in film and television programs have almost tripled in the past decade compared to the past 10 years.

However, almost all of these titles still do not include disabled actors.

This is the conclusion reached by a new study published Wednesday by Nielsen and the nonprofit RespectAbility that analyzed the portrayal of disabled characters in film and television shows published from 1920 to 2020.

The titles come from a Nielsen database that contains more than 90,000 films and television shows that premiered in the last century. Of these, 3,000 titles were labeled with important topics or content on disabilities.

Movies fared better than television – about 64 percent (1,800) of depictions of disabled characters were in feature films and 16 percent (448) were in regular series. (The remaining representations were included in other categories such as short films, limited series, television films or specials.) The database also found a significant increase in the number of productions with disability topics from 41 in 2000 to 150 in 2020.

According to the report, about one in four adults in the United States has a physical or mental disability.

A survey accompanying the study also found that people with disabilities are slightly more likely to have problems with depictions of disabled characters. Viewers with disabilities were 8 percent more likely than those who were not disabled to describe a television presentation as inaccurate, and 7 percent were more likely to say that disabled characters are not adequately represented on screen.

Lauren Appelbaum, vice president at RespectAbility, said that although the number of disabled characters continues to grow, about 95 percent of those roles are still being played by actors who have no disabilities.

“When disability is part of a character’s story, content too often positions people with disabilities as someone to pity or heal, rather than portraying disabled people as full members of our society,” she said in a statement.

Several films with disabled characters made headlines with their casting last year: “Sound of Metal”, which tells the story of a drummer (Riz Ahmed) who loses his hearing, has been criticized for casting Paul Raci, a hearing actor who is a child of a deaf adult as a deaf mentor to Ahmed’s character. (Raci said he was comfortable with the casting because his character lost his hearing in the Vietnam War and was not deaf from birth.) CBS’s adaptation of Stephen King’s novel “The Stand” also opposed casting a hearing actor, Henry Zaga, as Nick Andros, a character who is deaf and signed throughout the series.

Last fall, “The Witches,” the Warner Bros. adaptation of the Roald Dahl story, starring Anne Hathaway as the witch with disfigured hands, was criticized for its split-hand resemblance or ectrodactyly, leading to the debate over the portrayal a disability flared up again as evil.

But there were also positive representations, such as Pixar’s “Luca”, which shows a character who was born without an arm and who takes the rare step of depicting a character with different limbs without making it a defining characteristic.

The report, coordinated to mark the 31st anniversary of the Americans With Disabilities Act, is the first in a three-part series by Nielsen and RespectAbility that also analyzes representations of disability in advertising and the media perception of viewers with disabilities. These reports will be published in August.

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Health

Dr. J. Allan Hobson, Who Studied the Dreaming Mind, Dies at 88

“In the psychoanalytic world, there has been this tendency to assume that everything is psychodynamic,” he added, noting that some doctors reflexively blamed mothers for their children’s behavior.

But dr. Hobson tempered his views in his later years.

“He came to believe that psychoanalysis could be useful in treating mental disorders,” said Dr. Lydic, “but he did not believe in rigid symbolism when interpreting dreams.”

For the most part, Dr. Hobson still, as the saying goes, a cigar is just a cigar.

John Allan Hobson was born on June 3, 1933 in Hartford, Conn. His mother Ann (Cotter) Hobson was a housewife. His father, John Robert Hobson, was a lawyer.

John attended Loomis School, now the Loomis Chaffee School, in Windsor, Connecticut, where he graduated in 1951. He spent a year abroad, then returned to study at Wesleyan University in Connecticut, where he majored in English and graduated from Harvard Medical School in 1959.

In 1956 he married Joan Harlowe; they divorced in 1992. In the mid-1990s he married Dr. Rosalia Silvestri, and she outlives him.

In addition to his wife and daughter, Dr. Hobson’s four sons, Ian, Christopher, Andrew, and Matthew; his brother Bruce; and four grandchildren.

After studying medicine, Dr. Hobson did a two year internship at Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan. Instead of military service, he served in the Public Health Service of the National Institutes of Health.

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Politics

Key Republicans Say They’re Able to Take Up an Infrastructure Deal

The new agreement would save $50 billion by delaying a Medicare rebate rule passed under President Donald J. Trump and raise nearly $30 billion by applying tax information reporting requirements to cryptocurrency. It also proposes to recoup $50 billion in fraudulently paid unemployment benefits during the pandemic.

Republicans blocked the Senate from moving ahead with the plan last week, saying that too many issues remained unresolved. Mr. Portman’s comments and those of other Republicans in the group, who spoke after meeting with Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the minority leader, suggested that they would now allow it to move forward.

It remained unclear whether enough Republicans would join the five core negotiators in advancing the measure, although a handful of G.O.P. senators outside the group signaled that they would be open to doing so.

“It’s not perfect but it’s, I think, in a good place,” said Senator Thom Tillis, Republican of North Carolina, who said he would vote in favor of taking it up.

Some Senate Democrats, including at least one key committee chairman, said they were still reviewing the plan before deciding whether to support it.

But Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York, said he believed “we have the votes.”

If they do, Democrats would still have to maneuver the bill through the evenly divided Senate over a Republican filibuster, which will require the support of all 50 Democrats and independents and at least 10 Republicans. That could take at least a week, particularly if Republicans opposed to it opt to slow the process. Should the measure clear the Senate, it will also have to pass the House, where some liberal Democrats have balked at the emerging details.

The five Republicans who have spearheaded the deal with Democrats — Mr. Portman and Senators Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Mitt Romney of Utah — urged their colleagues to support a measure they said would provide badly needed funding for infrastructure projects across the country.

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World News

Ford (F) earnings Q2 2021

DETROIT – Ford Motor raised its earnings forecast for the year after surprising earnings in the second quarter, saying demand for profitable new vehicles like the Ford Bronco SUV will boost its performance.

Sales were slightly below expectations due to the ongoing global shortage of semiconductor chips, which continues to affect the automaker’s production. Ford said Wednesday that supplies of the critical parts are improving, but production of about 700,000 vehicles was lost in the second quarter.

Here’s how Ford fared compared to Wall Street expectations based on Refinitiv’s average estimates.

  • Adjusted results: 13 cents per share, adjusted against a loss of 3 cents per share
  • Automobile sales: $ 24.13 billion versus $ 24.25 billion

Ford increased its adjusted earnings before tax expectations for the full year by approximately $ 3.5 billion to $ 9 billion to $ 10 billion. Sales volume is expected to increase by around 30% from the first to the second half of the year, driven by an improvement in market factors, according to the company.

“Our Q2 results were better than expected,” said CFO John Lawler on a call on Wednesday. “We are ‘spring loaded’ for growth.”

The “spring-loaded” comment was a topic touted in the automaker’s revenue, citing strong demand, including reservations, for newly launched and upcoming vehicles.

Ford’s recent vehicle presentations ranged from the electric Mustang Mach-E crossover and the redesigned F-150 to two new Bronco models, including the “big Bronco” SUV. It also revealed and took reservations for an all-electric version of its F-150 pickup truck, slated to arrive mid-next year, and a new little pickup truck called the Maverick.

The results were in line with Ford’s updated guidance. The company announced that its adjusted pre-tax profit for the second quarter would exceed expectations and be “significantly better than a year earlier,” while net income would be “significantly lower” than the same period of the previous year.

The company reported net income of $ 1.1 billion and an adjusted pre-tax loss of $ 1.9 billion in the second quarter of 2020.

In April, Ford projected its adjusted pre-tax profit for the year to be between $ 5.5 billion and $ 6.5 billion, including a negative impact of approximately $ 2.5 billion from semiconductor shortages. This impact was the top end of a previously incurred loss due to the problem.

Aside from Ford’s profits and any change in forecast, Wall Street analysts will be looking for updates on CEO Jim Farley’s Ford + turnaround plan, semiconductor die shortage and new product launches.

Ford’s shares have more than doubled since Jim Farley became CEO in October, including up more than 50% this year.

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Health

Listed here are the new spots beneath the CDC’s new masks steerage

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Tuesday recommended that fully vaccinated Americans return to wearing masks indoors in locations with high Covid-19 transmission rates as infection rates rise again across the country.

CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky told reporters Tuesday that in areas of “high and high transmission” everyone, including those who are fully vaccinated, should wear masks in public, indoors.

But what exactly is “high” or “significant” transmission, and where are the areas that the CDC cares about?

The agency uses two measures to divide U.S. counties into four levels of community transmission: the number of new cases per 100,000 residents and the percentage of positive Covid tests in the past week.

If a county has reported 50 to 100 cases per 100,000 population over a seven day period, or has a positivity rate of 8 to 10%, it falls into the “significant transmission” category, while those that report 100 cases or more per 100,000 or more have a positivity rate of at least 10% are referred to as “high transmission”. These are the two groups that the CDC recommends wearing masks.

According to the CDC, 1,495 counties fall into the highest broadcast tier and another 548 counties fall into the “significant” tier – the areas where masks should be worn in restaurants, businesses, and public spaces. These counties combined make up 225 million Americans, or about two-thirds of the US population, according to a CNBC analysis of CDC data.

The low-transmission counties that are not subject to the CDC’s recommendations make up an additional 31% of the population, while just over 1% of Americans live in low-transmission counties, according to the CDC’s criteria as of July 27 .

Federal health officials still believe that fully vaccinated individuals represent a very low level of transmission. The more contagious Delta variant, however, means that some vaccinated people may carry higher amounts of the virus than previously thought and may pass it on to others just as easily as unvaccinated people, Walensky said.

There are at least three states in which each county falls under the CDC’s mask recommendation: Florida, Louisiana, and Arkansas.

The Delta Covid variant is one of the most contagious respiratory diseases scientists have ever seen, Walensky said last week. The variant is highly contagious, mainly because people infected with the Delta strain can carry up to 1,000 times more viruses in their nasal passages than those infected with the original strain, according to new data.

“The Delta variant is more aggressive and much more transmissible than previously circulating strains,” said CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky reporters at a briefing Thursday. “It’s one of the most contagious respiratory viruses we know and that I’ve seen in my 20-year career.”

The CDC’s guidelines are only a recommendation, leaving it up to state and local officials to decide whether to reintroduce their masking rules for specific individuals. Some areas have started to reintroduce mask requirements in the past few weeks.

Dr. Natasha Bhuyan, a GP at One Medical in Phoenix, Ariz., Said she recommends that her patients wear a mask because the Delta variant is so much more contagious than other variants.

“We know that you are much less likely to be hospitalized or die of Covid after a vaccination,” she said. “But even if you are vaccinated, you can rarely get Covid and you can still be contagious and pass Covid on to other people.”

Phoenix is ​​located in Maricopa County, which is in the highest category of community broadcasts.

“Delta has changed the way we think about when people should wear masks,” added Bhuyan. “It won’t take forever. If we increase the vaccination rate and the Covid case rate decrease, people can take their masks off.”

CNBC’s Berkeley Lovelace Jr. contributed to the coverage.

Correction: This article has been updated to remove Hawaii as one of the states where each county meets the CDC’s mask recommendations. Kalawao County has a population of 86 and has low transmission rates.