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Health

As Childhood Covid Circumstances Spike, College Vaccination Clinics Are Sluggish Going

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — There were no cheery signs urging “Get your Covid-19 vaccine!” at the back-to-school immunization clinic at Carey Junior High School last week. In the sun-drenched cafeteria, Valencia Bautista sat behind a folding table in a corner, delivering a decidedly soft sell.

Hundreds of 12- and 13-year-olds streamed through with their parents to pick up their fall schedules and iPads. Ms. Bautista, a county public health nurse, wore a T-shirt that said “Vaccinated. Thanks, Public Health” and offered vaccines against ailments like tetanus and meningitis, while broaching the subject of Covid shots gently — and last.

By day’s end, she had 11 takers. “If they’re a no, we won’t push it,” she said.

Vaccination rates among middle and high school students need to rise drastically if the United States is going to achieve what are arguably the two most important goals in addressing the pandemic in the country right now: curbing the spread of the highly infectious Delta variant and safely reopening schools. President Biden told school districts to hold vaccination clinics, but that is putting superintendents and principals — many of whom are already at the center of furious local battles over masking — in a delicate position.

The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is authorized for people 12 and older, but administering it to anyone younger than 18 usually requires parental consent, and getting shots into the arms of teenagers has proved harder than vaccinating adults. Only 33 percent of 12- to 15-year-olds and 43 percent of 16- and 17-year-olds are fully vaccinated, according to federal data, compared with 62 percent of adults. Yet some school districts offering the shots, along with pediatrics practices, appear to be making progress: Over the past month, the average daily number of 12- to 15-year-olds being vaccinated rose 75 percent, according to Biden administration officials.

As the school year begins, many superintendents do not know how many of their students are vaccinated against Covid-19; because it is not required, they do not ask.

It is no surprise that nurses like Ms. Bautista are circumspect in their approach. In Tennessee, the state’s top immunization leader, Dr. Michelle Fiscus, said she was fired last month after she distributed a memo that suggested some teenagers might be eligible for vaccinations without their parents’ consent.

In Detroit, where county health officials have been running school-based clinics all summer, nurses discovered “strong hesitancy” when they made more than 10,000 calls to parents of students 12 and older to ask whether their children would get the shots and answer questions about them, said the deputy superintendent, Alycia Meriweather. More than half said no.

In Georgia, Savannah-Chatham County Public Schools held their back-to-school clinic at the mall — a “neutral location,” said M. Ann Levett, the superintendent. She is also planning school-based clinics, she said, despite some political pushback and “Facebook chatter” accusing her of “pushing the vaccine on kids.”

Ms. Levett said she was deeply concerned about whether she would be able to keep schools open.

“This is only the second day of school, and already we have positive cases among children,” she said in a recent interview. Her district has a mask mandate, but with 37,000 students, “I just introduced 37,000 more opportunities for the numbers to rise.”

In Laramie County, the center of the Delta surge in Wyoming, the Health Department proposed back-to-school clinics to Janet Farmer, the head nurse in the larger of the county’s two school districts. Ms. Farmer knew she would have to tread carefully. The flier she drafted for parents of students at the county’s three middle schools made little mention of Covid-19.

“Vaccines — NOT Mandatory,” it declared.

Nationally, more children are hospitalized with Covid-19 — an average of 276 each day — than at any other point in the pandemic. In Laramie County, Dr. Andrew B. Rose, a pediatrician at the Cheyenne Children’s Clinic and the president of Wyoming’s chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said two newborns — one a few days old, the other younger than two weeks — were recently admitted to the hospital with Covid-19 symptoms after their parents tested positive.

Wyoming, a heavily Republican state where nearly 70 percent of voters cast their ballots for former President Donald J. Trump in 2020, has one of the nation’s lowest vaccination rates, with about a third of its population fully vaccinated. Laramie County has about 100,000 people and Cheyenne, the state capital, which bills itself as “home to all things Western” including “rodeos, ranches, gunslingers” and eight-foot-tall cowboy boots.

At Casey Junior High, few children or adults wore masks at the recent clinic, despite a sign on the door saying they were “strongly recommended.” Parents seemed to have visceral reactions; they were either enthusiastic about the Covid shot or adamantly against it. Those who were wavering were few and far between, and not easy to persuade.

A nurse in blue scrubs and her husband, a nuclear and missile operations officer at the nearby Air Force base, who declined to give their names, wandered past Ms. Bautista’s table with their 12-year-old son. Their daughter, 13, has cystic fibrosis and is vaccinated. But their son was reluctant. They chatted amiably with Ms. Bautista, but decided to wait.

Cheyenne Gower, 28, and her stepson Jaxson Fox, 12, both said they were leaning toward getting the shot after talking with their doctors. Ms. Gower, citing the Delta surge, said she would get vaccinated soon. Jaxson said he was “still thinking about it” after his pediatrician discussed the risk of heart inflammation, a very rare side effect seen in young boys ages 12 to 17.

Updated 

Aug. 20, 2021, 5:45 a.m. ET

“Put down that I’m more on the getting it side,” he instructed, eyeing a reporter’s notebook.

Although the vaccines were tested on tens of thousands of people and have been administered to nearly 200 million in the United States alone, many parents cited a lack of research in refusing. Aubrea Valencia, 29, a hair stylist, listened carefully as Ms. Bautista explained the reasons for the human papilloma virus and meningitis vaccines. Ms. Valencia agreed that her daughter should take both.

But when it came to the coronavirus vaccine, she drew the line. “The other two have been around longer,” she said, adding that she might feel “different about it if we had known someone who died” from the coronavirus.

Every once in a while, the nurses encountered a surprise, as when Kristen Simmons, 43, a professional dog handler, marched up with her son, Trent.

“He turned 12 on Monday, and so we want to get his Covid vaccine,” she declared. Ms. Bautista and the other nurses looked stunned.

“We tend to be more liberal,” Ms. Simmons later said — a statement that would have sounded odd in explaining a medical decision before the pandemic.

In the spring, when vaccines were limited to older Americans who were clamoring for them, officials including Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the top U.S. infectious diseases expert, envisioned fall 2021 as the last mile of a campaign that could produce “herd immunity” by year’s end. Vaccinating children was crucial to that plan.

Now it is clear that will not happen. Children ages 11 and under are not yet eligible, but if and when the vaccine is authorized for them, experts expect it could be harder to persuade their parents than those of older children. A recent survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation found that parents of younger children were “generally more likely to be hesitant to vaccinating,” said Liz Hamel, who directed the research.

Understand the State of Vaccine and Mask Mandates in the U.S.

    • Mask rules. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in July recommended that all Americans, regardless of vaccination status, wear masks in indoor public places within areas experiencing outbreaks, a reversal of the guidance it offered in May. See where the C.D.C. guidance would apply, and where states have instituted their own mask policies. The battle over masks has become contentious in some states, with some local leaders defying state bans.
    • Vaccine rules . . . and businesses. Private companies are increasingly mandating coronavirus vaccines for employees, with varying approaches. Such mandates are legally allowed and have been upheld in court challenges.
    • College and universities. More than 400 colleges and universities are requiring students to be vaccinated against Covid-19. Almost all are in states that voted for President Biden.
    • Schools. On Aug. 11, California announced that it would require teachers and staff of both public and private schools to be vaccinated or face regular testing, the first state in the nation to do so. A survey released in August found that many American parents of school-age children are opposed to mandated vaccines for students, but were more supportive of mask mandates for students, teachers and staff members who do not have their shots.  
    • Hospitals and medical centers. Many hospitals and major health systems are requiring employees to get a Covid-19 vaccine, citing rising caseloads fueled by the Delta variant and stubbornly low vaccination rates in their communities, even within their work force.
    • New York. On Aug. 3, Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York announced that proof of vaccination would be required of workers and customers for indoor dining, gyms, performances and other indoor situations, becoming the first U.S. city to require vaccines for a broad range of activities. City hospital workers must also get a vaccine or be subjected to weekly testing. Similar rules are in place for New York State employees.
    • At the federal level. The Pentagon announced that it would seek to make coronavirus vaccinations mandatory for the country’s 1.3 million active-duty troops “no later” than the middle of September. President Biden announced that all civilian federal employees would have to be vaccinated against the coronavirus or submit to regular testing, social distancing, mask requirements and restrictions on most travel.

For school superintendents and public health officials who are intent on bringing students back to the classroom — and keeping them there — the low vaccination rates, coupled with the Delta surge, are worrisome.

Wyoming won national praise for keeping schools open all last year. Gov. Mark Gordon, who contracted Covid-19 last year and has encouraged people to get vaccinated, imposed a statewide mask mandate in December that he kept in place for schools even after he lifted it in March, which helped limit the spread of disease in classrooms. Despite the Delta surge and a recommendation from the C.D.C. for universal masking in schools, Mr. Gordon, a Republican, said this month that he would not impose another mandate and that he would leave it to each district to decide.

In Laramie County School District 1, which has about 14,000 students, including about 840 at Carey Junior High, the school board recently cut short its public meeting about masking when a man began ranting about another hot-button issue: critical race theory.

“Fifty percent of the calls here have been, ‘Please mask our kids,’ and 50 percent of the calls have been, ‘We’re not wearing masks,’” said Margaret Crespo, who left Boulder, Colo., about six weeks ago to become the new District 1 superintendent. “There’s no gray area.”

Dr. Crespo plans to make an announcement on masking on Friday, just before the school year starts on Monday.

Fights over the masking issue are even more divisive than the vaccination campaign, “and that is playing out in front of our eyes,” said Ray Hart, the executive director of the Council of the Great City Schools, which represents the country’s largest urban school districts.

“Everywhere I go this summer, that’s part of the message: Let’s get vaccinated,” said Allen Pratt, the executive director of the National Rural Education Association. But “because it’s government, you’ve got a line in the sand where people don’t trust you, and you’ve got to be understanding.”

White House officials have also been encouraging pediatricians to incorporate coronavirus vaccination into back-to-school sports physicals. Many districts are offering the shots during sports practice, with a reminder to athletes that if they are vaccinated, they will not have to quarantine and miss games if they are exposed to the coronavirus.

Laramie County District 1 offered coronavirus vaccines at mandatory clinics to educate high school student athletes about concussions; 32 students accepted shots, said Ms. Farmer, the nurse. The numbers were better at the junior high clinics; over two days at three schools with a total of about 2,400 students, more than 100 took their shots.

Ms. Farmer was satisfied.

“If it’s 100 people,” she said, “that’s 100 that didn’t have it yesterday.”

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World News

U.S. Airstrikes Attempt to Gradual Taliban Advance in Afghanistan

KABUL, Afghanistan — U.S. military aircraft struck a number of Taliban positions this week in support of faltering Afghan government forces, in one of the first significant American reactions to the insurgents’ blistering advance across Afghanistan as U.S. troops withdraw.

At least one of the strikes was against Taliban positions in the key southern city of Kandahar, slowing an advance that threatened to take over the city. Others were in the neighboring province of Helmand, according to a strongly worded Taliban statement.

The Taliban’s harsh language — it called the strikes “disobedience” to last year’s withdrawal agreement with the Americans, and it warned of unspecified “consequences” — was an indication that the airstrikes had an impact on the insurgent group.

The scale and pace of the Taliban advance has provoked alarm among top U.S. military and civilian officials in recent days. The Taliban now threaten most of Afghanistan’s 34 provincial capitals and even Kabul, the national capital. The group has overrun more than half of the country’s 400-odd districts, in many cases seizing them without a fight, since it began its offensive in earnest in May.

This week’s airstrikes, which took place Wednesday and Thursday, appear to be an indication of that U.S. concern and of lingering American involvement in the country despite a nearly completed pullout of U.S. forces after almost 20 years of war. The United States and other major powers are pushing for a peace deal between the Taliban and the Afghan government, but the Taliban believe they are winning the war, leaving little incentive to negotiate.

“We do have deep concerns about the actions the Taliban is taking, indicating that it may be trying to take the country by force,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said Friday on MSNBC. “But were that to happen, Afghanistan would be a pariah state.”

On Wednesday, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark A. Milley, warned of the possibility of a “complete Taliban takeover,” saying the insurgents now had the “strategic momentum” in the fight against Afghan government forces.

Pentagon officials confirmed the recent American strikes but were tight-lipped about specifics. They have been similarly ambiguous for weeks about the scale and scope of continued American military involvement in Afghanistan’s war, though they indicated earlier this month that it could continue at least until the withdrawal was completed at the end of August.

Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III said this week that American forces had equipped a base in Qatar “to be able to conduct over-the-horizon strikes” in Afghanistan.

As the U.S. pullout accelerated and Bagram Air Base was handed over to the Afghans, American officials suggested that U.S. air power would be employed against the Taliban in limited circumstances, at least through Aug. 31.

But they did not specify what those circumstances would be. This week’s strikes are a sign that the near-collapse of Afghan forces in the last month has caught the attention of official Washington.

The United States no longer has aircraft stationed in Afghanistan. The planes deployed this week would have been based in the Persian Gulf and elsewhere in the Middle East.

“In the last several days, we have acted through airstrikes to support the ANDSF but, I won’t get into tactical details of those strikes,” Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said at a briefing Thursday, referring to the Afghan forces by their acronym.

He noted Mr. Austin’s statement about the ability to conduct such strikes, adding, “General McKenzie has those authorities,” referring to the head of the Pentagon’s Central Command, Gen. Kenneth F. McKenzie.

A senior Afghan official in Kandahar, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the American strikes had “boosted the morale of our security forces.” He added that “we are hoping these airstrikes will help to push the Taliban away from the city of Kandahar.”

A B-52 long-range bomber was spotted over Kabul in recent days, for the first time in some years. The plane’s massive size and distinctive silhouette were likely intended as a show of force. The bombers have been moved to Qatar to cover the withdrawal of U.S. and international forces.

Several Pentagon officials confirmed that additional bombing raids around Kandahar are likely in coming days. “We’ve been doing it where and when feasible, and we’ll keep doing it where and when feasible,” one official said, speaking anonymously to describe operational planning.

Even as their military advance continues almost unchecked — though government forces claim to have taken back a handful of districts — the Taliban have become increasingly emboldened. They left top Afghan government officials empty-handed after a peace meeting in Doha, Qatar, last weekend, not even agreeing to the traditional cease-fire over the Eid holiday.

On Tuesday rockets were fired at the presidential palace in Kabul as officials were gathered for Eid prayers, though the attack was later claimed by a branch of Islamic State.

Adam Nossiter reported from Kabul, and Eric Schmitt from Washington, D.C. Taimoor Shah and Thomas Gibbons-Neff contributed reporting.

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Health

As Virus Instances Pace Up, Seoul Tells Fitness center Customers to Sluggish Down

Kang Seung Hyun, a teacher and former rugby player preparing for a fitness photo shoot, said his gym decided to turn off the treadmills instead of imposing the slow pace. However, the bikes remained open for reasons he did not understand.

“So we can’t run or use the treadmills, but we can ride bikes? It seems strange to me, ”he said.

Ralph Yun, a CrossFit instructor who has been teaching for five months, said listening to music at a pace similar to your heart rate can improve performance, but it doesn’t necessarily make you harder.

“You could listen to slow music and train just as intensely,” he said.

Costas Karageorghis, a professor at Brunel University in London who has studied the effects of music on training for 30 years, was amused by the recommendations and called them “ridiculous”.

“If people are motivated enough to train at high intensity, the music can’t stop them,” he said.

However, research has shown that music can make significant changes to exercise even if it wasn’t what the Korean authorities intended.

Dr. Karageorghis said the sweet spot for aerobic exercise, like running on a treadmill or cycling, is 120 to 140 beats per minute. Music can distract the mind from feelings of fatigue, diminish your perception of how hard your body is working, and improve your mood. Loud music above 75 decibels can make a workout more intense, although very loud music carries the risk of hearing problems such as tinnitus.

He said he was not surprised that health officials chose 120 strokes, as research has shown that this was, in some ways, a “key break.” It’s about twice the lower end of a healthy resting heart rate, and 120 steps per minute is a common walking pace, he said. Wedding DJs have told him they’ll use a 120-beat song to get people onto the dance floor (Whitney Houston’s “I Wanna Dance With Somebody” checks in at around 120).

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World News

Vaccinations Rise within the E.U. After a Lengthy, Sluggish Begin

Vaccinations are picking up speed in the European Union, an amazing turnaround after the bloc’s vaccination campaign stalled for months.

On average over the past week, nearly three million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine were administered daily in the European Union, a group of 27 nations, according to Our World in Data, an Oxford University database. When adjusted for population, the rate is roughly equivalent to the number of shots per day in the United States, where demand has declined.

The EU vaccination campaign, hampered by interruptions in supplies of the AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccines, last month revolved around the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine.

Last month, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Pfizer had agreed to an early delivery of doses that should likely allow the bloc to meet its goal of vaccinating 70 percent of adults by the end of summer. The European Union is also about to announce a contract with Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech for 2022 and 2023 that will include 1.8 billion doses for boosters, variants and children’s vaccines.

The United States acted aggressively as part of the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed ​​to raise millions of doses by funding and promoting vaccine production. But the European Union has not partnered with drug manufacturers like the US has, but more like a customer than an investor.

“I think it is overdue that the EU has stepped up its vaccination campaign,” said Beate Kampmann, director of the vaccine center at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

“I think with the number of deaths and new cases in the EU, it is absolutely important that we get the vaccine to the people there very, very quickly,” she added.

The rise of the EU underscores the differences in vaccination efforts around the world.

About 83 percent of Covid shots were given in high- and higher-middle-income countries, while only 0.3 percent of the doses were given in low-income countries. In North America, more than 30 percent of people have received at least one dose, according to Our World in Data. In Europe it is almost 24 percent. In Africa it is just over 1 percent.

Experts warn that if the virus is widespread in large parts of the world without vaccines and threatens all countries, dangerous variants will continue to evolve and spread.

Last week, the Biden government said it supported the waiver of intellectual property protection for Covid vaccines, which would have to be approved by the World Trade Organization. And even then, experts warn that drug companies around the world would need tech help to make the vaccines and time to ramp up production.

European leaders like Ms. von der Leyen and President Emmanuel Macron has made it clear that President Biden should take a different approach and instead lift the export restrictions on vaccines that the United States has used to keep most doses for domestic use. “We call on all vaccine-producing countries to allow exports and to avoid measures that disrupt the supply chain,” said Ms. von der Leyen in a speech last week.

But the matter is not so absolute, said Dr. Thomas Tsai, Professor of Health Policy at Harvard University. “What is really needed is a comprehensive approach,” he said. Abandoning patents is a big long-term step, but lifting export bans would help sooner.

“There is a need to develop a broader strategy,” said Dr. Tsai to vaccinate the world. “We need the same kind of Warp Speed ​​engagement. It’s an investment. “

Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the Biden government’s top advisor on Covid-19, said on Sunday that the United States and other countries, as well as vaccine manufacturers, need to help particularly address the crisis in India, which is less than 10 percent of the time Population are at least partially vaccinated as the country battles a devastating virus wave.

“Other countries need to step in to either supply the Indians with supplies to make their own vaccines, or to donate vaccines,” said Dr. Fauci in ABC’s “This Week”. “One of the ways to do this is if the big companies that are able to develop vaccines to scale really big are literally given hundreds of millions of doses to reach them.”

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Business

Netflix’s Dominance Begins to Gradual as Rivals Achieve

Netflix continues to rule the streaming universe. As of the end of March, the company had a total of 207.6 million paying subscribers, including around 67 million in the United States, the company found in an earnings report on Tuesday.

However, its main competitors – Disney +, HBO Max, Paramount +, and AppleTV +, as well as old-school streamers Amazon Prime Video and Hulu – have caught the attention of Netflix.

Global demand for original Netflix programming like “Bridgerton”, the much-vaunted romance of super producer Shonda Rhimes, has declined compared to similar offers from newcomers, according to developed data company Parrot Analytics, a metric that not only measures the number of viewers for certain programs but also their likelihood of attracting subscribers to a streaming service.

In its most recent ranking, Parrot reported that Netflix’s share of total demand – a measure of the popularity of its shows – was slightly above 50 percent in the first three months of the year, compared with 54 percent a year ago and 65 percent in the first quarter 2019.

In other words, competitors have started to participate in Netflix’s dominance.

That showed in the numbers. For the first quarter of 2021, Netflix reported four million new customers, less than the forecast six million. The company expects only one million new customers for the current quarter, which ends in June.

Netflix shares fell around 10 percent in after-hours trading on Tuesday after earnings were announced.

The company doesn’t think the newer competitors were the problem.

“Are we sure it’s not competition? Because there are obviously a lot of new competitions, “said Reed Hastings, co-managing director of the company along with Ted Sarandos, on the call to win after the report. “It’s fiercely competitive, but it’s always been like that. We’ve been competing with Amazon Prime for 13 years and Hulu for 14 years. “He added,” So there is no real change that we can see in the competitive landscape. “

Netflix withdrew productions during the pandemic, which has now been added to the release schedule. The company did not have any large series during the reporting period.

“We will return to a much more stable state in the second half of the year,” said Sarandos, citing the return of popular series like “The Witcher” and “You”.

In business today

Updated

April 20, 2021 at 1:25 p.m. ET

Netflix also hiked prices in October, increasing its standard plan by a dollar to $ 14 a month. The premium tier has been expanded by another $ 2, which is now $ 18. The company typically increases its fees roughly every 18 months. Attempts are also being made to curb password sharing, which has long been the practice.

During the same period when the pandemic was underway, the company had a record 15.7 million subscribers last year.

When much of the world was locked down, people turned to screens to pass the hours. Netflix saw a surge in new signups, creating a record year of nearly 37 million additional customers. The company is unlikely to repeat this feat in 2021 as restaurants, shops, theaters and sports stadiums across the country reach full capacity.

But Netflix is ​​an international business. Most of its revenue now comes from overseas and has based its future growth on emerging economies like India and Latin America. These regions have had a surge in coronavirus cases recently, which has resulted in new lockdowns. Most of the world, including Europe, didn’t vaccinate its citizens as quickly as the United States.

Netflix still spends a lot. $ 465 million was spent to purchase two sequels to the hit unit “Knives Out,” a price 50 percent above the gross proceeds of the first film. It’s also ten times the cost of producing the film. Hollywood lit up with chatter. Did Netflix Pay Too Much?

The director of the film, Rian Johnson, came up with the idea for the film, and he and his production partner control the rights. The lucrative deal is in line with Netflix’s expensive advertising for Hollywood creators. There are nine-digit agreements with prolific television producers such as Ms. Rhimes and Ryan Murphy, and actor-producer Adam Sandler. Mr Johnson could join their ranks by creating additional series and films for the company.

Despite Netflix’s endeavors to own content, Netflix recently signed a distribution agreement with Sony Pictures Entertainment, the last major Hollywood studio not tied to a streaming business. Netflix will have rights to a number of Marvel franchises, including Sony-controlled Spider-Man and several offshoots based on the character.

The company posted first quarter profits of $ 1.7 billion on sales of $ 7.16 billion. Investors targeted a profit of $ 1.3 billion on sales of $ 7.1 billion.

In addition, the board of directors approved a $ 5 billion share buyback plan designed to reduce the number of available shares in circulation and potentially make them more valuable.

Despite the competition gaining ground, Netflix is ​​in the best financial shape in history. It reached a milestone late last year when it said it would no longer try to borrow money to fund its content plan. Another way of looking at it: Netflix eventually became a really profitable company after more than 200 million subscribers were paying an average of $ 11 a month.

In other words, the competitors are still losing a lot of money streaming.

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Health

Sluggish rollout offers lesson in EU politics

Ursula von der Leyen, European Commission president.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

LONDON – European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said it herself: “It was a difficult start.”

The European Union has had a bumpy introduction of Covid-19 vaccines. The campaign has sparked complaints that regulators were too slow to approve the shots and sparked a simmering argument with AstraZeneca as the pharmaceutical company repeatedly cut its delivery obligations.

More recently, several countries have temporarily stopped using the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine for safety reasons. This has baffled health professionals and raised questions about future intake.

The World Health Organization earlier this week expressed concern that the ongoing coronavirus crisis in the region now appears “more worrying” than it has for several months. The warning comes as many countries introduce new measures to contain a third wave of infections.

The health department also described the vaccination campaign in Europe as “unacceptably slow” and said it was crucial to accelerate the rollout, as new infections are currently emerging in every age group except those over 80 years of age.

It is a chaotic picture, made even more complicated by the uniqueness of European politics.

“There were several problems with the system, and it is a complex system. I think it is important not to point the finger at a certain defect, but to realize that it is very complex,” said Linda Bauld, professor for public health at the University of Edinburgh, said CNBC.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive branch, was responsible for negotiating contracts with pharmaceutical companies on behalf of the 27 member states. The institution is also responsible for overseeing the exports of the shots produced in the block.

However, health policy matters are the responsibility of the Member States, which means that the 27 capitals can organize the vaccinations in their own countries and ultimately decide to buy Covid shots, for example outside of the agreements made by the Commission.

This juxtaposition between national and EU institutions has often damaged the bloc’s reputation in broader vaccination efforts.

“There are problems that have to do with both (national and EU institutions). There is clearly politics in it and we have all heard about it in the media, but there are also problems with decision-making and attitudes the commissions have to do and the priorities of the member states, “Bauld told CNBC.

AstraZeneca weft suspension

This was highlighted recently when 13 EU countries decided to stop using the Oxford AstraZeneca shot while investigating possible side effects.

At the time, the European Medicines Agency – the medicines agency for the entire 27-member region – was recommending countries to continue using the vaccine, despite reviewing data on blood clots in some vaccinated people. However, some member states preferred to be cautious and used their sovereign power to stop the use of this vaccine as the EMA completed its review. The Safety Committee of the Medicines Agency concluded in a preliminary review that the benefits of the vaccine continue to outweigh the risk of side effects.

It has also been the case that heads of state have used the institutions in Brussels to complain about the hiccups in the process. At the beginning of March, the Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said the decision to distribute the vaccines in the Commission’s steering committee was “secret”.

The group, chaired by the Commission, has representatives from all Member States, including Austria.

“Why do you get this idea when you know that Austria, like the 26 other member states, is a member of the steering committee and how the others have been informed about the previous allocations?” An EU official from another Member State who did not want to be named due to the sensitivity of the issue asked during a CNBC interview in March.

The vaccines are distributed proportionally depending on the population of the countries. However, some EU states were particularly interested in getting more of the AstraZeneca shot, as it’s cheaper and easier to store than the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine.

“If a Member State decides not to start its pro-rata allocation, the doses will be shared among the other interested Member States,” the Commission said in a statement in March.

We also know that AstraZeneca has unfortunately produced too little and delivered too little. And this, of course, painfully reduced the speed of the vaccination campaign.

Ursula von der Leyen

President of the European Commission

Vaccine distribution has become an issue due to AstraZeneca’s repeated cuts in supplies.

While the EU was expecting 90 million doses of the shot by the end of the first quarter, the pharmaceutical company said it could only deliver 40 million doses during that period. This was later reduced to 30 million cans.

AstraZeneca has blamed low yields at European plants for lower shipments. In addition, the drug maker has said it can only administer 70 million doses between April and June when the EU was expecting 180 million over the same period.

“We also know that AstraZeneca has unfortunately produced too little and delivered too little. And of course this has painfully reduced the speed of the vaccination campaign,” said von der Leyen at a press conference in March.

Stricter export rules

To address this problem, the Commission proposed stricter rules for the export of ingot-made shots.

Since the end of January, the 27 countries have been able to stop delivering Covid vaccines if a company does not meet delivery targets with the EU. This is how the Italian government stopped a delivery of AstraZeneca shots to Australia in March. Between the end of January and the end of March, the Commission received 315 applications for vaccine exports, but only this one was rejected.

However, as EU officials are concerned about further delivery delays, the Commission decided to tighten export regulations from the end of March.

I think the EU definitely prioritizes its population first, but it is no different from other high-income countries or regions.

Dimitri Eynikel

Coordinator at Medecins sans Frontieres

The Commission will not only check whether the pharmaceutical companies deliver on time, but also whether the recipient country has bans or restrictions on Covid vaccines produced there and whether this country also has a better epidemiological situation than the EU.

“At the political level, the entire discussion about export restrictions, controls or even bans is rather worrying,” Dimitri Eynikel, coordinator at Medecins sans Frontieres, told CNBC. He added that doing so could create further barriers, divisions and delays in vaccine distribution.

Ultimately, the supply chain is international and if a nation stopped sending raw materials to the EU, for example, it could undermine the production of the shots within the bloc.

The EU’s attempt to have tighter control over where vaccines go has sparked criticism of vaccine nationalism.

“I think the EU definitely prioritizes its people first, but it is no different from any other high-income country or region. The US is doing the same thing, the UK is doing the same thing, in that sense (the EU) is no different.” Said Eynicle.

International Monetary Fund data has shown that China, India and the EU are among the largest exporters of Covid shots, while the US and UK have not exported any to date.

Hopes for the second quarter

Despite several problems, the EU is confident that the next three months will prove to be a turning point in the vaccination program.

In total, the commission expects 360 million doses of Covid shots between April and June, meaning it is well positioned to meet its goal of vaccinating 70% of the adult population before the end of summer.

“Despite the fact that things could have gone faster, we had great success. The alternative of not having vaccines sourced together would be that we would compete between European member states and possibly some of us did not.” Vaccine at this point too, “Malta’s Minister of Health Chris Fearne told CNBC’s Squawk Box Europe on Tuesday.

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UK provides to gradual in coming weeks, rollout in danger

Assistant Nurse Katie McIntosh gives Vivien McKay, Clinical Nurse Manager at Western General Hospital, the first of two Pfizer / BioNTech COVID-19 shots on the first day of the largest vaccination program in UK history in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK December 8 2020.

Andrew Milligan | Reuters

LONDON – The UK government is facing questions whether the country is on the verge of a coronavirus vaccine shortage, a factor that could affect its so far successful vaccination program.

“We have less supply than we had hoped for in the coming weeks, but we assume that it will increase again later,” said housing secretary Robert Jenrick on Thursday to the BBC.

“The vaccine rollout will be a little slower than we hoped it would be, but not slower than the target,” he said. “We have every reason to believe that supply will increase in May, June and July.”

Jenrick later told Sky News that the government “sources vaccines from all over the world and we occasionally have some problems and that has led to this problem with some supply in the coming weeks.”

Jenrick’s comments come amid a spate of reports in the UK media that the UK rollout may be close to some turmoil. It has been widely reported that a shipment of millions of cans of the Oxford AstraZeneca shot produced by the Serum Institute of India could be delayed by four weeks.

Jenrick, however, refused to comment on certain contracts. CNBC has approached the Serum Institute of India, the world’s largest vaccine maker, for comment on the reports but has yet to receive a response.

According to Reuters, ten million doses of the AstraZeneca Covid vaccine should come from the SII in early March. In total, the UK has ordered 100 million doses of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, with the bulk of the supply coming from the UK

However, the UK also faces potential disruptions in supply if the EU makes a proposal to withhold exports of block-made vaccines while its own program is lagging behind. The supplies of the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine, which the UK also uses in its vaccination program, come from Belgium.

Since its launch in December, the UK healthcare system has monitored the vaccination of over 25 million people with a first dose of the vaccine. More than 1.7 million people have now received a second dose of the two-shot vaccines currently used in the UK, government data shows.

“Still on the right track”

According to the BBC, the National Health Service had already warned “in April in a letter to the local health organizations” against a reduction in the offer for England.

However, the government has stated that it is still on track to offer a first dose of the vaccine to all over 50s by April 15 and a first vaccination to all UK adults by the end of July.

“The vaccination program will continue in the coming weeks and more people will continue to receive the first and second dose,” a spokesman for the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs said in a statement on Wednesday evening.

“As has been the case since the program began, the number of vaccinations given over time will vary based on supply.”

‘Main problem’

Global health experts have long warned that vaccines, their supply and distribution could be an area where there could be discord between countries and regions.

Dr. Margaret Harris, a spokeswoman for the World Health Organization, told CNBC Thursday that the public health authority knew from the start of the pandemic that vaccine distribution would be a “big problem”.

“This is exactly what has happened in previous outbreaks. Some groups and countries had good access (to vaccines) and even excessive access, while many countries had nothing. We saw this during the 2009 pandemic flu,” she told CNBC’s Squawk Box Europe “.

“We’re really encouraging manufacturers to take steps so that more manufacturing companies around the world can really increase supply,” she said.

The UK vaccination program was his rescue after the pandemic that hit the country hard. The UK has had the fifth highest number of cases in the world, with over 4.2 million reported infections, and has recorded over 126,000 deaths to date, according to Johns Hopkins University.

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AstraZeneca vaccine halt might gradual Asia’s financial restoration: Moody’s Analytics

SINGAPORE – Asia’s economic recovery could slow as more countries stop using the Covid-19 vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University, Moody’s Analytics chief Asia-Pacific economist warned.

“It slightly increases the risk Asia is playing in terms of global economic turnaround,” Steve Cochrane told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Tuesday.

Reports of blood clots in some people who received the AstraZeneca Oxford shot resulted in several countries – many of them in Europe – temporarily stopping using the vaccine. The World Health Organization said there was no link between the shot and an increased risk of developing blood clots and is investigating this.

Impact of vaccines on world trade

Cochrane said issues related to the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine could affect world trade – and that’s bad news for Asia, where many economies are dependent on trading activities.

The vaccine is of course a risk. One of the critical risks is that vaccines will have to be introduced later this year to get the world economy back on its feet.

Steve Cochrane

Asia Pacific Chief Economist, Moody’s Analytics

“There is a possibility that world trade will be adversely affected if the introduction of vaccines in Europe is delayed. This would result in a more stalled economy in Europe. This could slow the pace of world trade.” ,” he explained.

Asian countries have contained the virus with relative success, and this has helped their economies recover faster than those in Europe and the US

Fortunately, re-locks in some parts of Europe haven’t affected manufacturing, Cochrane said. He added that “almost all” of the effects of these lockdowns have affected the service sector.

“So right now it’s not that big of a problem, and world trade still seems very, very strong,” said the economist. “The vaccine is, of course, a risk. It is one of the critical risks. We have yet to see how vaccines are introduced later this year to get the world economy back on its feet.”

Thailand briefly stops the AstraZeneca vaccine

Thailand temporarily stopped using the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine on Friday, but authorities said Monday they would continue to administer the shots.

Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha was the first in the country to receive the AstraZeneca-Oxford shot on Tuesday, Reuters reported.

Elsewhere in Asia, Indonesia on Monday said it would delay the rollout of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine while awaiting review by the WHO, the news agency reported.

– CNBC’s Sam Meredith contributed to this report.

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Health

Coronavirus anniversary: Europe’s gradual vaccine rollout

On Tuesday, January 12, 2021, a health care worker will take care of a Covid 19 patient in the intensive care unit of the Robert Bosch Hospital in Stuttgart. Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that Germany would face tough lockdown measures until the end of March if the authorities do not contain a rapidly spreading variant of the coronavirus.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

It’s been a year since the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus outbreak a pandemic, and as the UK and US progress with their vaccination rollouts, the EU is still in the depths of crisis.

The block is currently in a lethargic vaccination program and there are fears of another wave of infections from Paris to Prague.

On the first anniversary of the public health crisis, Europe doesn’t have much time to ponder the losses of the past year – when over 547,000 people in the region died from the virus and thousands lost their livelihoods.

There are more and more cases in parts of the bloc, mainly caused by the spread of more infectious virus variants, from western EU country France to Central Europe to Hungary in the east.

France reported 30,303 new coronavirus infections in the past 24 hours on Wednesday, with the number of new cases rising above 30,000 for the first time in two weeks. Health experts say the hospital system in the greater Paris area is on the verge of rupture, Reuters reported.

Meanwhile, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland have seen large increases in cases, which has led Eastern European governments to increase vaccination rates. So much so that several countries have resorted to a break with the EU with the approval of the Russian coronavirus vaccine Sputnik V, which has not yet been approved by the EU drug regulator.

Bulgaria and Serbia, as well as Sweden and Italy, are also among the countries where there has been an increase in cases.

The coronavirus, which first appeared in Wuhan in December 2019, was declared a pandemic a year ago, on March 11, 2020.

At this point it had already formed in northern Italy, which became the epicenter of Europe’s first eruption. The timing of the spread coincided with the peak of the ski season, allowing the virus to spread to the UK, France and Germany.

The EU’s Covid Experience

National responses to the pandemic have varied, but the EU tried to coordinate its response, closing external borders for all but non-essential travel, and coordinating purchases of personal protective equipment and medical supplies such as ventilators.

However, the state and structure of health services in different parts of the EU, as well as the tracking and tracing systems in place, played a role in determining the spread and damage caused by the virus.

Germany, for example, has been praised for its initial response to the virus, in which the infected and their contacts were tracked down and isolated. Modern hospital infrastructure has also helped limit the number of deaths compared to other countries. Germany (with around 83 million inhabitants) has so far reported 2.5 million cases and 72,858 deaths compared to Italy (a country of 60.3 million people), 3.1 million cases and 100,811 deaths, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

In total, according to the European Center for Disease Control and Prevention in the EU and in the entire European Economic Area (essentially in the EU plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway), over 22.5 million cases have been reported so far.

The extent to which countries blocked their economies and public life during the pandemic also had an impact on infection rates.

Most of the countries in the EU chose to close all shops but the main ones, to close gyms, restaurants, theaters and bars, and to close the region’s cultural and social life and economy. Although some, like Sweden, were notable for their decision not to lock, they sparked controversy and criticism from other EU countries, especially their neighbors.

However, it has gradually moved away from that position, especially in the face of a third wave of infections, and stricter restrictions on shops, gyms, swimming pools and sports facilities went into effect on March 6.

Economic damage

Economies across the bloc are hoping to open up as soon as possible, but the emergence of new, more virulent strains of the virus has ruined Christmas, ski season, and hopes that life could return to normal by Easter.

At the same time, vaccination adoption across the bloc remains painfully slow compared to the UK and US

The latest data from France shows that by March 9, 4.1 million people had received an initial coronavirus vaccine. In contrast, the UK had given over 22.8 million first doses at the same time.

The UK ordered, approved and administered vaccines faster than the EU, which placed orders in blocks rather than following individual guidelines. This was seen as an obstacle to the dynamics of the rollout.

The economic damage from the pandemic cannot be counted yet, but repeated lockdowns over the past year have taken their toll. A feared new wave could also delay a long-awaited reopening.

Data shows the damage the pandemic has already done to the region’s economy and citizens. Preliminary data from Eurostat, the EU data agency published in February, estimate that GDP (gross domestic product) fell by 6.8% in 2020 in the euro area and by 6.4% in the EU.

Eurostat estimates that 15.6 million men and women were unemployed in the EU in January 2021. Compared to January 2020, unemployment rose by 1.465 million in the EU and 1.010 million in the euro area.

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Business

Finest Purchase (BBY) earnings This fall 2021 beat projections, however gross sales features sluggish

Customers wait outside a Best Buy store in downtown Toronto, Ontario on November 23, 2020 to collect their online orders.

Geoff Robbins | AFP | Getty Images

Best Buy’s fourth quarter earnings surpassed Wall Street’s expectations on Thursday, but lagged behind sales as sales growth slowed compared to previous months of the pandemic.

The retailer said its sales are likely to slow even further. CFO Matt Bilunas said sales in the same store are projected to drop from 2% to 1% this year. The forecast assumes customers will resume or accelerate their spending in areas like travel and dining in the second half of the year, he said.

Shares fell more than 7% on the news early Thursday.

The company reported for the fiscal quarter ended January 30, versus Wall Street’s expectations, based on an analyst survey by Refinitiv:

  • Earnings per share: $ 3.48 adjusted versus $ 3.45 expected
  • Revenue: $ 16.94 billion versus $ 17.23 billion expected

Best Buy’s net income rose from $ 745 million, or $ 2.84 per share last year, to $ 816 million, or $ 3.10 per share.

Excluding items, the company earned $ 3.48 per share, above what Refinitiv polled analysts expected to earn $ 3.45 per share.

Net sales rose to $ 16.94 billion from $ 15.2 billion a year ago, but fell short of estimates of $ 17.23 billion.

Sales on the Internet and in stores that have been open for at least 14 months rose 12.6%, below the 14.7% growth forecast by analysts, according to StreetAccount. This is a sharp drop from the 23% growth rate in the third quarter.

Although still strong, the pace of online sales growth also slowed in the US. It grew 89.3% from 174% in the third quarter and 242% in the second quarter.

The retailer benefited from the stay-at-home restrictions that spurred purchases of equipment such as computer monitors for the home office, headphones and laptops for remote children to attend school, and kitchen appliances to make it easier to cook meals.

However, the rapid adoption of technology has rocked the way people shop. Instead of walking around the store, more customers have browsed the website, sent purchases home, or retrieved them in the company’s parking lot.

Best Buy estimates that online sales will account for around 40% of total domestic sales in the coming year.

This had an impact on Best Buy’s workforce. Corie Barry, CEO of Best Buy, said the company started with 123,000 employees last fiscal year and ended the year with around 102,000 – a decrease of around 21,000, or 17%. She said most of the reduced headcount came from attrition. Earlier this month, she said the company laid off about 5,000 employees, most of whom were full-time employees.

She said the company is determined to retrain and retrain employees as it makes organizational changes geared towards e-commerce. For example, some stores are testing a design that reduces the size of the retail space and takes up more space to fulfill online orders.

“Like many retailers, we believe that much of what we’ve seen over the past year will be permanent,” she said. “Our people and branches will always be at the heart of our strategy. We are just looking at how we can best use our team and physical assets to meet customer expectations and needs.”

Best Buy plans to spend $ 750 million to $ 850 million on investments and buy back at least $ 2 billion in shares. The board of directors approved an increase in the quarterly dividend by 27% to 70 cents per share.

At the close of trading on Wednesday, Best Buy shares were up nearly 33% last year. The company’s market value is $ 29.38 billion.

Read the Best Buy press release here.