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‘Every Day Is Vital’: South Korea’s 11th-Hour Battle with Covid

SEOUL, South Korea – Intensive care beds are unavailable in several provinces in South Korea to treat the rapidly increasing number of Covid-19 patients. As of Monday, the government confirmed that only 42 beds were available nationwide. There were just six in the Seoul metropolitan area, which is home to half the country’s population and the majority of recent infections. If you

The recent explosion of coronavirus cases in South Korea has put the country at risk in ways it has not seen since the pandemic began. When cases cannot be brought under control and the burden on hospitals continues to worsen, the government can, for the first time, impose Level 3 restrictions, which are the highest level of socially distant rules before a lockdown in South Korea.

In a country that was a role model for the rest of the world for most of the year, a silent fear has spread. The streets of Seoul are getting emptier every day. Supermarkets have reported brisk sales of instant noodles and meal sets. Restaurant owners are concerned that they will be forced to close their doors to customers who only order takeout.

And now the virus is even harder to contain.

“Unlike in the past, this time around, the virus seems to be popping up everywhere and no place is safe,” said Myeong Hae-kyung, a head nurse at Yeungnam University Medical Center in Daegu who served on the front lines when the city was the epicenter of the city first coronavirus outbreak in the country earlier this year.

“In the last few days my life has only switched between hospital and home. I’m scared of going anywhere, ”she said.

This wave focuses on hospitals in South Korea. The country’s goal is to have hospital beds available to patients within one day of being diagnosed with the disease.

However, as of Sunday, 368 patients were waiting at home in the Seoul metropolitan area to be assigned to beds. Last week, a patient died at home in Seoul while waiting for a hospital bed. Another died at home in Seoul on Sunday.

The number of intensive care patients tripled this month to 274 on Monday. At the weekend, South Korea reported more than 1,000 new Covid-19 patients for five consecutive days, a record.

“We must secure hospital beds for seriously ill patients as if we were waging a war,” Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun said on Sunday. “Every day is critical.”

The rise in infections has created a bottleneck as health officials struggle to allocate a limited number of beds to patients. The government has ordered state and private general hospitals to convert at least one percent of their licensed beds to treat critically ill Covid patients.

Updated

Dec. Dec. 22, 2020 at 5:18 am ET

Health officials expect the bottleneck to decrease significantly in the coming week as more beds become available. The success of the effort will help determine whether the government increases social distancing restrictions to level 3, below which more than 2 million additional businesses would close or dramatically curtail their operations.

“As you can see, people don’t come in,” said Lee Jeong-ae, a restaurant owner in north Seoul, as she pointed to empty tables in her restaurant. “People who suffer most from social distancing are small business owners like us.”

Ms. Lee sells fish soups, fried pork, and other Korean dishes. She recently began preparing for new restrictions by addressing bulk orders for plastic containers, as restaurants like hers are only allowed to sell take-away under Level 3 guidelines.

The Seoul metropolitan area is still below level 2.5, schools, gyms, karaoke rooms, bars and other high risk facilities are closed. Restaurants, cinemas, hairdressing salons and many other shops remain open but must close before 9 p.m.

As of Monday, South Korea has reported 698 deaths in 50,591 cases. The aggressive campaign to “test, track and treat” patients has kept death rates comparatively low. But epidemiologists have urged the government to put level 3 restrictions in place before it’s too late.

Unlike previous waves of the virus with large clusters that officials could target and track, the most recent wave has spread across numerous small clusters in nursing homes, churches, prisons, saunas, and small private gatherings, making it difficult to contain.

Dr. Eom Joong-sik, who treats Covid-19 patients at Gachon University’s Gil Hospital in Incheon, a populous port city west of Seoul, said the current problems were due to the government, despite its reputation as a leader in being the EU could not plan ahead pandemic.

“Experts had already warned that if there was a wave in the Seoul metropolitan area, which is home to half the country’s population, hospital beds could become scarce and the government would have to develop a plan for this scenario,” said Dr. Eom. “Right now, not only are we struggling to secure hospital beds in the metropolitan area, but we’re also struggling to move patients to hospitals as we see hundreds of new patients every day.”

President Moon Jae-in, proud of his administration’s strategy of keeping as much of the economy going while fighting the pandemic, was reluctant to approve Level 3. Instead, the government has stepped up its testing and isolation campaigns and gradually introduced new social distancing rules.

67,000 people were tested for the virus every day over the past week, ten times more than in October. In Seoul and the surrounding cities, the government has added 134 temporary test stations to encourage people to get free tests even when they have no symptoms, in hopes of “preventively” isolating asymptomatic cases.

As part of the government’s efforts to stop people from spreading the disease over Christmas and New Years, birthday parties and other private gatherings of five or more people will be banned in the Seoul metropolitan area from Wednesday.

An annual Christmas Eve gathering around a Christmas tree in Seoul City Hall Square has been canceled. Large churches have put up their usual Christmas decorations but appear abandoned as prayer services with more than 20 people have been banned. The United Christian Churches of Korea have urged believers to celebrate the holidays at home by sharing Christmas carols with friends on social media.

“We will prepare carefully to introduce Level 3 if necessary,” said Son Young-rae, a health ministry spokesman. “But we hope the government and the people can work together to control the wave without going there.”

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World News

New Covid pressure leaves UK remoted, 1,500 vehicles stranded at border

The French borders have been closed at the entrance to the port of Dover because of a new COVID-19 strain in the Eastern Dock, where the cross-channel port is located. Ferries to Calais in France will depart on December 21, 2020. Kent, UK.

Andrew Aitchison | In pictures via Getty Images

French and British officials are working to lift a ban on freight traffic imposed by France amid fears across the continent of a new strain of coronavirus identified in the UK

France activated the 48-hour border closure on Monday and 1,500 trucks were stuck in Kent on Tuesday morning that couldn’t leave the UK, UK Home Secretary Priti Patel said Tuesday.

UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has urged drivers not to travel through the affected counties of Kent, Sussex and Hampshire. Passenger ferry and freight services also ceased in the major ports of Dover and Portsmouth, leaving several thousand ferry travelers stuck.

Meanwhile, more than 40 countries have ceased transport links with the UK after a variation in the coronavirus – which health officials say could be up to 70% more transmissible – was sweeping the country.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has effectively canceled Christmas plans for much of the country, subjecting around 17 million people to strict lockdown rules. The coronavirus has already killed more than 67,000 people in the UK

Patel told the BBC on Tuesday morning that “a solution” to the freight disruption is to be found between Britain and France.

“You will hear about developments and updates later today,” she said, adding that part of the consideration was having truck drivers tested for Covid-19 in ports. Any resolution would have to be agreed by Johnson and French President Emmanual Macron and would start on Wednesday, said the French European Minister.

Transport for goods coming to the UK from France was still ongoing, a Eurotunnel representative said Monday evening, and unaccompanied cargo trailers could still be shipped to France, Shapps said. The current ban applies to accompanied cargo.

The news and the Christmas blackout have sparked panic buying and resulted in empty supermarket shelves in some parts of the UK. Shapps said stores were still well stocked, but major UK chain Sainsbury’s warned that if the disruption persists, there could be shortages of certain fresh foods in a matter of days.

The crisis comes just nine days before the UK ends its transition period with the European Union after voting to leave the bloc in 2016. At the time of writing, neither side had reached a new trade agreement.

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Health

The New Covid Pressure within the UK: Questions and Solutions

In recent days, the world has watched with curiosity and growing alarm as scientists in the U.K. have described a newly identified variant of the coronavirus that appears to be more contagious than, and genetically distinct from, more established variants. Initial studies of the new variant prompted Prime Minister Boris Johnson to tighten restrictions over Christmas, and spurred officials in the Netherlands, Germany and other European countries to ban travel from the U.K.

The new variant is now the focus of intense debate and analysis. Here’s some of what scientists have learned so far.

No. It’s just one variation among many that have arisen as the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 has spread around the world. Mutations arise as the virus replicates, and this variant — known as B.1.1.7 — has acquired its own distinctive set of them.

The variant came to the attention of researchers in December, when it began to turn up more frequently in samples from parts of southern England. It turned out to have been collected from patients as early as September.

When researchers took a close look at its genome, they were struck by the relatively large number of mutations — 23, all told — that it had acquired. Most mutations that arise in the coronavirus are either harmful to the virus or have no effect one way or another. But a number of the mutations in B.1.1.7 looked as if they could potentially affect how the virus spread.

It appears so. In preliminary work, researchers in the U.K. have found that the virus is spreading quickly in parts of southern England, displacing a crowded field of other variants that have been circulating for months.

However, a virus lineage becoming more common is not proof that it spreads faster than others. It could grow more widespread simply through luck. For instance, a variant might start out in the middle of a crowded city, where transmission is easy, allowing it to make more copies of itself.

Still, the epidemiological evidence gathered so far from England does seem to suggest that this variant is very good at spreading. In places where it has become more common, the overall number of coronavirus cases is spiking. Neil Ferguson, an epidemiologist at Imperial College London, estimates that the variant has an increased transmission rate of 50 to 70 percent compared to other variants in the United Kingdom.

Some scientists have raised the possibility that the increase in transmission is at least partly the result of how it infects children. Normally, children are less likely than teenagers or adults to get infected or pass on the virus. But the new strain may make children “as equally susceptible as adults,” said Wendy Barclay, government adviser and virologist at Imperial College London.

To confirm that the variant truly is more contagious, researchers are now running laboratory experiments on it, observing up close how it infects cells.

Researchers have already used such experiments to investigate a mutant that arose earlier in the pandemic, called 614G. That variant proved to be more transmissible than its predecessors, studies in cell culture and animals found.

But disciplined containment measures worked just as well against 614G as other variants. The same is likely true for B.1.1.7. “According to what we already know, it does not alter the effectiveness of social distancing, face masks, hand washing, hand sanitizers and ventilation,” Dr. Muge Cevik, an infectious disease specialist at the University of St. Andrews School of Medicine, said on Twitter.

Covid-19 Vaccines ›

Answers to Your Vaccine Questions

With distribution of a coronavirus vaccine beginning in the U.S., here are answers to some questions you may be wondering about:

    • If I live in the U.S., when can I get the vaccine? While the exact order of vaccine recipients may vary by state, most will likely put medical workers and residents of long-term care facilities first. If you want to understand how this decision is getting made, this article will help.
    • When can I return to normal life after being vaccinated? Life will return to normal only when society as a whole gains enough protection against the coronavirus. Once countries authorize a vaccine, they’ll only be able to vaccinate a few percent of their citizens at most in the first couple months. The unvaccinated majority will still remain vulnerable to getting infected. A growing number of coronavirus vaccines are showing robust protection against becoming sick. But it’s also possible for people to spread the virus without even knowing they’re infected because they experience only mild symptoms or none at all. Scientists don’t yet know if the vaccines also block the transmission of the coronavirus. So for the time being, even vaccinated people will need to wear masks, avoid indoor crowds, and so on. Once enough people get vaccinated, it will become very difficult for the coronavirus to find vulnerable people to infect. Depending on how quickly we as a society achieve that goal, life might start approaching something like normal by the fall 2021.
    • If I’ve been vaccinated, do I still need to wear a mask? Yes, but not forever. Here’s why. The coronavirus vaccines are injected deep into the muscles and stimulate the immune system to produce antibodies. This appears to be enough protection to keep the vaccinated person from getting ill. But what’s not clear is whether it’s possible for the virus to bloom in the nose — and be sneezed or breathed out to infect others — even as antibodies elsewhere in the body have mobilized to prevent the vaccinated person from getting sick. The vaccine clinical trials were designed to determine whether vaccinated people are protected from illness — not to find out whether they could still spread the coronavirus. Based on studies of flu vaccine and even patients infected with Covid-19, researchers have reason to be hopeful that vaccinated people won’t spread the virus, but more research is needed. In the meantime, everyone — even vaccinated people — will need to think of themselves as possible silent spreaders and keep wearing a mask. Read more here.
    • Will it hurt? What are the side effects? The Pfizer and BioNTech vaccine is delivered as a shot in the arm, like other typical vaccines. The injection into your arm won’t feel different than any other vaccine, but the rate of short-lived side effects does appear higher than a flu shot. Tens of thousands of people have already received the vaccines, and none of them have reported any serious health problems. The side effects, which can resemble the symptoms of Covid-19, last about a day and appear more likely after the second dose. Early reports from vaccine trials suggest some people might need to take a day off from work because they feel lousy after receiving the second dose. In the Pfizer study, about half developed fatigue. Other side effects occurred in at least 25 to 33 percent of patients, sometimes more, including headaches, chills and muscle pain. While these experiences aren’t pleasant, they are a good sign that your own immune system is mounting a potent response to the vaccine that will provide long-lasting immunity.
    • Will mRNA vaccines change my genes? No. The vaccines from Moderna and Pfizer use a genetic molecule to prime the immune system. That molecule, known as mRNA, is eventually destroyed by the body. The mRNA is packaged in an oily bubble that can fuse to a cell, allowing the molecule to slip in. The cell uses the mRNA to make proteins from the coronavirus, which can stimulate the immune system. At any moment, each of our cells may contain hundreds of thousands of mRNA molecules, which they produce in order to make proteins of their own. Once those proteins are made, our cells then shred the mRNA with special enzymes. The mRNA molecules our cells make can only survive a matter of minutes. The mRNA in vaccines is engineered to withstand the cell’s enzymes a bit longer, so that the cells can make extra virus proteins and prompt a stronger immune response. But the mRNA can only last for a few days at most before they are destroyed.

There is no strong evidence that it does, at least not yet. But there is reason to take the possibility seriously. In South Africa, another lineage of the coronavirus has gained one particular mutation that is also found in B.1.1.7. This variant is spreading quickly through coastal areas of South Africa. And in preliminary studies, doctors there have found that people infected with this variant carry a heightened viral load — a higher concentration of the virus in their upper respiratory tract. In many viral diseases, this is associated with more severe symptoms.

That is now a question of intense debate. One possibility is that the variant gained its array of new mutations inside a special set of hosts.

In a typical infection, people pick up the coronavirus and become infectious for a few days before showing symptoms. The virus then becomes less abundant in the body as the immune system marshals a defense. Unless patients suffer a serious case of Covid-19, they typically clear the virus completely in a few weeks at most.

But sometimes the virus infects people with weak immune systems. In their bodies, the virus can thrive for months. Case studies on these immunocompromised people have shown that the virus can accumulate a large number of mutations as it replicates in their bodies for a long period of time.

Over time, researchers have found, natural selection can favor mutant viruses that can evade the immune system. Researchers have also suggested that the evolution of the variant might have been additionally driven by medicine given to such patients. Some mutants might be able to withstand drugs such as monoclonal antibodies.

Other scientists have suggested that the virus could have gained new mutations by spreading through an animal population, like minks, before re-entering the human population. Such “animal reservoirs” have become a focus of intense interest as more animal infections have been detected.

Not yet, as far as anyone knows. But that does not mean it hasn’t already reached the United States. British scientists have established a much stronger system to monitor coronaviruses for new mutations. It’s conceivable that someone traveling from the United Kingdom has brought it with them. Now that the world knows to look for the variant, it may turn up in more countries.

No. Most experts doubt that it will have any great impact on vaccines, although it’s not yet possible to rule out any effect.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has authorized two vaccines, one from Moderna and the other from Pfizer and BioNTech. Both vaccines create immunity to the coronavirus by teaching our immune systems to make antibodies to a protein that sits on the surface of the virus, called spike. The spike protein latches onto cells and opens a passageway inside. Antibodies produced in response to the vaccines stick to the tip of the spike. The result: The viruses can’t get inside.

It is conceivable that a mutation to a coronavirus could change the shape of its spike proteins, making it harder for the antibodies to gain a tight grip on them. And B.1.1.7’s mutations include eight in the spike gene. But our immune systems can produce a range of antibodies against a single viral protein, making it less likely that viruses can easily escape their attack. Right now, experts don’t think that the variant will be able to evade vaccines. To confirm that, researchers at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research are analyzing the changes to the structure of its spike protein.

Dr. Moncef Slaoui, the head scientific adviser to Operation Warp Speed, the federal effort to deliver a vaccine to the American public, said that the new variant reported in Britain was unlikely to affect the efficacy of a vaccine.

At some point — “some day, somewhere” — a variant of the virus may make the current vaccine ineffective, he said, but the chance of that happening with this vaccine is very low. Nevertheless, he said, “we have to remain absolutely vigilant.”

But Kristian Andersen, a virologist at Scripps Research Institute, thinks it is too early to dismiss the risk to vaccines. If the U.K. variant evolved to evade the immune system in immunocompromised patients, those adaptations might help it avoid vaccines. The vaccines would not become useless, but they would become less effective. Fortunately, experiments are underway to test that possibility.

“We don’t know, but we’ll know soon,” Dr. Andersen said.

Benjamin Mueller and Katie Thomas contributed reporting to this article

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Joe Biden receives Covid vaccine, encourages public to get inoculated

US President-elect Joe Biden will receive a Covid-19 vaccination from Tabe Masa, nurse and head of health care for employees on December 21, 2020 on the Christiana Care campus in Newark, Delaware.

Alex Edelman | AFP | Getty Images

President-elect Joe Biden received a Covid-19 vaccine on live television Monday afternoon during a demonstration to encourage Americans to get their own footage if they can.

“There’s nothing to worry about. I’m looking forward to the second shot,” said Biden, from a Delaware hospital.

Jill Biden, the arriving first lady, was given a dose of the vaccine earlier in the day. Vice President-elect Sen. Kamala Harris of California and her husband Doug Emhoff will be vaccinated next week.

Biden’s vaccine, given by Tabe Masa, the head of health for staff at ChristianaCare Hospital, comes as officials try to vaccinate Americans across the country in hopes of controlling the rapidly spreading virus.

Covid-19, which killed more than 300,000 people in the U.S., shook the nation in 2020, freezing large swaths of the economy, and changing the traditional process by which candidates for presidency fight.

Biden, more so than his rival, President Donald Trump, was careful to avoid spreading the virus in the course of his bid, largely avoiding major events, and suspending door-to-door campaign activity.

After receiving the vaccine, Biden credited the Trump administration with her work, saying it “deserves some credit for getting this off the ground with Operation Warp Speed”.

The former vice president also encouraged Americans to cancel unnecessary travel plans and wear masks.

“We owe a lot to these people, the scientists and the people who put this together, the frontline workers, the ones who actually did the clinical work. It’s just amazing,” Biden said.

Biden received the first dose of the Pfizer-made vaccine, which was the first to be approved by US regulators. A second vaccine from Moderna was shipped across the country over the weekend. Both require two doses several weeks apart.

Public health officials have announced plans to vaccinate up to 20 million people in the remaining weeks of 2020, but have indicated that it could be months before most people can receive shots.

Biden, one of the first Americans to receive a vaccine, recognized this long period.

“Now Moderna will be on the road too, but it will take time,” said Biden. “It will take time, and in the meantime – I don’t want to hear a sour note here – I hope people listen to all the experts.”

In the past few days, other senior officials have also been publicly vaccinated, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., And Vice President Mike Pence.

Trump, who was hospitalized with coronavirus in October, has not yet received a vaccine.

Surgeon General Jerome Adams said Sunday that Trump did not receive the vaccine because he was recently treated with monoclonal antibodies.

“That’s actually a scenario where we tell people, ‘Maybe you should hold back on the vaccination and talk to your doctor about the right time,” Adams said on CBS News.

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NY Gov. Cuomo briefs the press on Covid pandemic as state distributes vaccines

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New York Governor Andrew Cuomo will hold a press conference on Friday on Covid vaccine sales plans as the state threatens further economic shutdown.

During a press conference on Wednesday, Cuomo warned that unnecessary businesses may be forced to close again early next year unless the state restricts escalating coronavirus cases. However, whether the state will again impose an economic lockdown depends on what New Yorkers do in the remaining vacation time and whether new Covid-19 infections decrease or increase, he said.

“Of course, a shutdown in January is possible,” said Cuomo at a press conference in Albany. “But there is a big but,” he said, spelling the word letter by letter “BUT”.

According to a CNBC analysis of the data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, New York is responding to a surge in Covid-19 cases above the levels reported in the spring, causing an average of 10,914 new infections per day over the past week.

Read CNBC’s live updates for the latest news on the Covid-19 outbreak.

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COVAX international Covid vaccine program secures almost 2 billion doses for UNICEF distribution

A pharmacist prepares a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine on Wednesday, December 16, 2020 at the UCI Medical Center in Orange, California, United States.

Bing Guan | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The global alliance, which aims to provide coronavirus vaccines to poor nations, announced Friday that it has supply agreements to provide nearly 2 billion doses and could ship them in the first quarter of its approval.

There are 190 countries and territories participating in COVAX, which is jointly managed by the World Health Organization Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovation. The facility said it could secure the cans through additional supply agreements with AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson.

COVAX plans to begin first shipments in the first quarter of 2021, when the drugs are approved. Enough doses should be given in the first half of next year to protect health and social workers in participating economies, the Alliance said. COVAX plans to ship at least 1.3 billion doses to 92 low and middle-income countries that will participate in the facility sometime next year.

“The arrival of vaccines gives us all a glimpse into the light at the end of the tunnel,” said Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director general of the World Health Organization, in a statement. “But we will only really end the pandemic if we end it everywhere at the same time. That means that it is important to vaccinate some people in all countries, rather than all people in some countries.”

UNICEF announced on Friday that up to 850 tons of Covid-19 vaccines per month could be shipped to middle- to low-income countries over the next year. Commercial airlines will be able to deliver the vaccines to almost all of the 92 countries participating in COVAX, a UNICEF statement said.

The United Nations Children’s Fund is a United Nations agency that provides humanitarian aid to children around the world. UNICEF will work with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) to coordinate vaccine procurement and support dispensing of the doses, said Gavi.

The humanitarian organization said the shots will likely be shipped primarily via existing passenger and cargo flights, although some charter flights or alternative modes of transportation will be required for hard-to-reach countries.

However, the world’s poorest countries are still facing a budget gap of $ 133 million for the distribution and storage of the cans, UNICEF said. According to the organization, which assesses global air cargo capacity and routes, the airline’s deliveries would cost the airline up to an estimated $ 70 million.

Countries will face additional challenges once the cans arrive, UNICEF said.

The temperature requirements for the vaccines being developed are range and require cold chain supply lines, trained medical staff and stronger contact efforts, said Henrietta Fore, executive director at UNICEF, in a statement released Friday.

“This is a mammoth and historic endeavor,” Fore said in a statement. “The scale of the task is huge and the stakes have never been higher, but we are ready to take on this.”

UNICEF said it would take $ 410 million to help countries deliver the vaccines and purchase therapeutic drugs and diagnostic tools over the next year. Funding has been a problem for the COVAX facility, which according to a Reuters report on Wednesday, citing internal documents, faces a “very high” risk of default due to lack of funds, delivery risks and complex contractual arrangements.

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Pelosi and McConnell obtain Pfizer Covid vaccine

House spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) will receive a COVID-19 vaccination from Dr Drs on December 18, 2020 in her office on Capitol Hill in Washington. Brian Monahan (R), attending physician for United States Congress, DC.

Ken Cedeno | Getty Images

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell received the Covid vaccine from Pfizer on Friday after the attending physician in Congress asked lawmakers to enroll.

The doctor, Dr. Brian Monahan, cited federal guidelines designed to ensure the U.S. government works during the pandemic.

Senior US government officials have already started receiving the vaccine. Vice President Mike Pence, his wife Karen and Surgeon General Jerome Adams streamed the recording live on national television Friday morning.

However, the general public is not expected to receive the vaccine for months as doses remain limited while Pfizer ramping up production. Moderna’s vaccine could get emergency approval as early as Friday. Congress is currently negotiating an aid package from Covid, which is expected to provide billions of dollars for vaccine distribution.

Monahan, who is also present as a doctor on the Supreme Court, said the National Security Council had told him that Congress, the court and executive agencies would be given a small number of vaccine doses for necessary staff.

“My recommendation to you is absolutely clear: there is no reason why you should postpone receiving this vaccine,” Monahan told Congress in a letter on Thursday. “The benefits far outweigh any small risk.”

Monahan stressed in his letter that “the small number of COVID19 vaccine doses that are being made available to us reflects a fraction of the first batch of vaccines being distributed across the country”. The US logistics plans for the first week of the vaccine rollout include 2.9 million doses for locations in all 50 states.

Monahan administered the vaccine to Pelosi, D-Calif. Friday after the House spokeswoman said she would follow the doctor’s instructions and receive the shot. In a press release on Thursday, she urged President Donald Trump to invoke the Defense Production Act to expedite manufacturing and ensure the equitable distribution of the vaccine to as many Americans as possible.

McConnell, a polio survivor, also received the shot on Friday, calling the vaccine safe and effective. In a statement Thursday, the Kentucky Republican expressed concern that polls show that a quarter of adults in the US are unsure whether they will receive the vaccine when it becomes available.

“As a polio survivor, I know both the fear of disease and the extraordinary promise of hope that vaccines bring,” said McConnell. “I really hope that all Kentuckians and Americans will take this advice and accept this safe and effective vaccine.”

More than 100 members of Congress have either quarantined, tested positive, or been exposed to someone with Covid, according to GovTrack. When the vaccine launches and members of Congress sign up for the shot, they still haven’t reached an agreement on an aid package from Covid that would include billions of dollars to distribute the vaccine. Members of a CDC advisory panel have warned that state and local governments will need more money to administer the vaccines.

The US government and 50 states are rationing the distribution of the vaccine over multiple phases, according to guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In the first phase, frontline health workers and residents of long-term care facilities, which have about 40% of deaths in Covid, will be given the vaccine. A CDC advisory panel will meet on Sunday to set guidelines on who should get the shot in the next stage of vaccinations.

The New York Times reported on Sunday that the White House had planned to quickly distribute the vaccine to west wing workers who are in close contact with the president. Trump, who contracted the virus and was hospitalized for several days in October, announced hours after the Times report that he had adjusted the plan and that White House workers would receive the vaccine later in the program.

“I don’t plan to take the vaccine, but I look forward to doing so in due course,” the president said in a Twitter post.

At least 52 people linked to Trump and the White House have contracted coronavirus in recent months as senior officials, including the president, violate CDC’s guidelines on social distancing.

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December is shaping as much as be the Covid pandemic’s deadliest month but within the U.S.

Sammie Michael Dent Jr., the grandson of Florence Bolton, a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patient who died November 2 at Roseland Community Hospital, carries her coffin to Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church on the south side of Chicago, Illinois. USA, December 9, 2020.

Shannan Stapleton | Reuters

December is well on the way to becoming the deadliest month of the Covid-19 pandemic in the United States. It tops April when more than 60,738 Americans lost their lives to the coronavirus.

Hospitals in the US are being overwhelmed and people are dying in record numbers again – even as US and state officials rush to get life-saving doses of vaccine across the country. December is already the second deadliest month of the pandemic in the United States, according to Johns Hopkins University, with more than 42,500 Covid-19 deaths on Thursday and two weeks left each month.

At the start of the pandemic in April, hospitals in the New York City area were overwhelmed by Covid patients and doctors knew little about how to treat them. The country also didn’t test as many people for the virus in April, so the death toll this month could be higher than the original data shows, epidemiologists warn.

The US currently reports more than 2,600 deaths per day based on a weekly average, up from an average of approximately 2,025 deaths per day in April.

The record comes as the US begins rolling out a vaccine for the disease. But health officials and medical staff are warning that a vaccine will not immediately rid the country of the outbreak.

Dr. Syra Madad, senior director of the system-wide program for specific pathogens at New York City Health + Hospitals, described the recent surge in Covid as “a terrible case of Deja Vu.”

“It’s a terrible PTSD to know that we were first on the front lines and in the epicenter and now see that the whole nation is not learning from the lessons of the Northeast,” she said in a telephone interview. “You can’t magically think that the virus will go away on its own without a strategy for containment and mitigation.”

She added that the outbreak will continue to worsen before it gets better based on current trends.

“If you don’t do anything, it will absolutely get worse,” she said. “When cases are widespread we have to put restrictions in place, but I think we can be a lot more strategic because we’ve learned a lot about the spread of the virus.”

People need to hold on and limit their interactions with others while the country works to roll out the vaccine, Madad said.

“We have an incredible scientific achievement that is benefiting healthcare workers across the country,” said Dr. Leana Wen, a former Baltimore health commissioner, in a telephone interview. “At the same time, we’re seeing an unprecedented number of people getting sick, hospitalized, and dying.”

The country reported more than 233,200 new infections and more than 3,200 deaths on Thursday, according to Hopkins data. Many hospitals across the country are running out of intensive care units, standard beds and staff to handle the surge in patients, data from the Department of Health and Human Services shows.

Large states like Texas, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and California each reported nearly 3,000 deaths or more this month, which is a significant fraction of the national total. However, many smaller states have been disproportionately affected by the virus, with North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, New Mexico, and Kansas topping the list when it comes to population adjustment.

Despite some signs of a slowdown in daily new cases in the Midwest, the number of new cases is still rising across the country, hitting a new high of nearly 217,000 average cases per day as of Thursday.

“Basically, we are now seeing the worst-case scenario of what we predicted a few months ago. This is the deadly winter that we thought could be the case if people don’t take the necessary measures to.” protect yourself and your loved ones, “said Wen, emergency physician and public health professor at George Washington University.

Some state and local officials are introducing new restrictions to contain the spread of the virus and protect hospitals from congestion. California Governor Gavin Newsom has issued orders that trigger restrictions when regions of the state reach a certain level of intensive care occupancy. Several regions have sparked new home stays.

And New York Mayor Bill de Blasio has been calling for further restrictions in the last few days, stating that “all forms of restrictions must be on the table”. He launched the idea of ​​a strict post-Christmas restriction while Governor Andrew Cuomo said restrictions could hit New York in January if current trends persist.

As officials ponder implementing new restrictions, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has urged Americans not to travel for Christmas and restrict all non-essential travel.

“I’m very worried about Christmas,” Wen said. “There are so many viruses across the country and I just hope people will remember that the end is not far away. We just have to get through this vacation and this winter.”

– CNBC’s Nate Rattner contributed to this report.

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Health

FDA says it hasn’t authorized Moderna Covid vaccine regardless of Trump tweet

US President Donald Trump gives a speech at an Operation Warp Speed ​​Vaccine Summit on December 8, 2020 at the White House in Washington, USA.

Tom Brenner | Reuters

The Food and Drug Administration has not yet approved Moderna’s coronavirus vaccine, contrary to a tweet from President Donald Trump on Friday that said the agency had “overwhelmingly approved” it and would distribute it immediately.

The FDA did not comment on Trump’s tweet, instead referring CNBC to a statement from FDA Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn said Thursday evening that the agency would “work quickly towards finalizing and issuing emergency clearance” for Moderna’s vaccine.

“The agency has also notified the US Centers for Disease Control, Prevention and Operation Warp Speed ​​so that they can implement their plans for a timely distribution of the vaccine,” Hahn said in a joint statement with Dr. Peter Marks, director of the FDA Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.

The FDA statement on Thursday “is current,” FDA spokesman Michael Felberbaum told CNBC after Trump’s tweet.

It’s possible that Trump was referring to a vote by the FDA’s Advisory Committee on Vaccines and Related Biological Products Thursday, which voted 20-0, with one member abstaining to approve Moderna’s emergency vaccine advocate. The advisory board plays a key role in approving influenza and other vaccines in the US and verifying that the vaccinations are safe for public use. While the FDA does not need to follow the advisory board’s recommendation, it often does.

The FDA is expected to approve Moderna’s vaccine as early as Friday. The US plans to ship close to 6 million cans next week pending agency approval. This was announced by General Gustave Perna, who oversees the logistics for the Operation Warp Speed ​​vaccination project, to reporters on Monday.

Categories
Business

Pent-up demand will maintain Covid increase in RV gross sales

Michael Happe, Winnebago CEO, told CNBC on Friday that he expected the coronavirus pandemic-inspired surge in recreational vehicle sales to continue into next year.

The comments came after the Forest City, Iowa-based company reported strong quarterly results that exceeded Wall Street’s expectations. Investors enjoyed the quarter on Friday as Winnebago shares rose more than 5%.

Winnebago reported adjusted earnings per share of $ 1.69, beating estimates of $ 1.01, according to FactSet. This corresponds to an increase of 131.5% compared to the same quarter of the previous year. Revenue for the quarter ended November 28th was $ 793.1 million, up 34.8% year over year and beating analysts’ guidance of $ 753 million.

“We were obviously very pleased with the way consumers flocked to the outdoors in 2020 as they tried to manage the impact of the pandemic on their lives and we believe you will see a similar behavioral trend in 2021,” said Happen on “close bell.”

“We believe that consumers who might have been interested in the space and category earlier this year and may not have pulled the trigger but are still very excited to find a way are in great demand for RVing and boating in the Year 2021, “added the executive.

Winnebago Industries RVs on display at Winnebago Motor Homes in Rockford, Illinois.

Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

As the coronavirus pandemic required social distancing, many outdoor recreational activities such as boating, biking, and RV travel have grown in popularity. Happe is not alone in his optimism that America’s newfound interest in nature will carry over into the next year.

David Foulkes, CEO of Brunswick, told CNBC earlier this month: “We have incredible momentum in the [boating] Industry now. We have attracted a new population. … I think that gives us great momentum, not only in the next year but also in the years to come. “

Winnebago, which sells RVs and boats, has seen a similar shift in buyers, according to Happe. “Our consumers are getting younger. They are becoming more diverse in background and profile, and they are using the products in many different ways,” he said. “The trend to work from anywhere is pretty strong right now, and many of our new consumers see these products as an opportunity to work from the street or from a nice campsite here in America.”

Winnebago’s shares are up 18% so far this year and more than 260% since the March 19 low.