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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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Health

NHS contact tracing app downloads spike

Selective focus. Concept photo.

Oleksandr Siedov | iStock editorial team | Getty Images

LONDON – UK contact tracking app downloads spiked last week, according to new data, despite widespread concerns about people being asked to self-isolate amid a surge in coronavirus cases.

The NHS Covid-19 app was downloaded 161,000 times in the week of July 11-17, according to analysis firm App Annie, up from 131,000 the previous week and 137,000 times from June 27 to July 3.

Meanwhile, weekly active users – defined as anyone who opens the app in a given week – stayed at 14.7 million for the weeks July 11-17 and July 4-10, compared with 14.4 million from June 27th to July 3rd.

This doesn’t mean that everyone who uses the app has the contact tracking feature turned on. Some may have disabled the feature.

Even so, it shows that engagement with the app is still strong, despite fears that more people will delete it to avoid self-isolation.

“Downloads have skyrocketed when an announcement depends on the usage of the app and then they tend to decrease, but usage has stayed strong week after week,” said Lexi Sydow, head of market insights at App Annie. opposite CNBC.

“Ultimately, usage will be a better measure of how people actually interact with the app.”

Millions of Britons could be pinged by the app over the summer after the country lifted its remaining Covid restrictions and the number of infections in the country increased.

More than 1.1 million people in England and Wales have been pinged from the app in the past two weeks.

Last Friday, the UK reported more than 50,000 new cases for the first time since mid-January. The daily cases have decreased somewhat since then, but are still on the order of tens of thousands.

What is contact tracking?

The NHS Covid-19 app was launched by the UK government last year to do traditional contact tracing – which involves notifying an infected person’s contacts – using technology.

The idea is that people will be informed if they have been around someone infected with the coronavirus and it is recommended that they isolate themselves to reduce the spread among the population.

The contact tracking app for England and Wales, like many others, uses Bluetooth to discover users who are nearby. If a user comes near a person who has tested positive, he is informed and asked to isolate himself.

This is controversial for businesses at a time when the UK is experiencing a resurgence of the Covid cases and England is lifting almost all remaining restrictions on public life.

According to the Chartered Institute of Personal and Development, 57% of HR professionals say they experienced a staff shortage in the past month because the app asked employees to self-isolate.

The app was originally introduced as a key part of plans to lift England’s lockdown restrictions at the start of the pandemic. More recently, however, the government is trying to downplay its importance.

A policy change is expected to go into effect on August 16, which means that those who have received two Covid vaccine syringes will be exempt from self-isolation if prompted by the app.

The government has also identified a list of workers who could avoid isolation even if exposed to the virus.

There are now doubts as to how effective the app will be in the future.

“The exposure notification app made sense at the start of the pandemic, when we had no vaccines and we had high deaths and hospital admissions,” Stephanie Hare, an independent technology researcher, told CNBC.

“The goal was to break the chain of transmission – to stop the virus from spreading – and all of our policies were aligned,” she added.

“Under Boris Johnson’s new policy for England, we are no longer trying to break the chain of transmission, making the exposure notification app less useful to society,” said Hare.

“It could still be useful to people who want to download and use it and would rather know if they’ve been exposed.”

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Health

Dr. Scott Gottlieb says the Covid delta spike could peak in late August

Dr. Scott Gottlieb told CNBC on Thursday the current spike in Covid infections due to the highly contagious delta variant may be over sooner than many experts believe.

However, the former FDA chief urged Americans to take precautions in the meantime as delta, first found in India, takes hold as the dominant variant in the U.S.

“I think the bottom line is we’re going to see continued growth, at least in the next three to four weeks. There’s going to be a peak sometime probably around late August, early September,” Gottlieb said on “Squawk Box.” “I happen to believe that we’re further into this delta wave than we’re measuring so this may be over sooner than we think. But we don’t really know because we’re not doing a lot of testing now either.”

There may be another small bump in infection rates as schools reopen in the fall and become “vectors of transmission” as they did with the B.1.1.7 variant, first discovered in Britain, and now called alpha, said Gottlieb, who led the Food and Drug Administration from 2017 to 2019 during Donald Trump’s presidency.

Gottlieb also warned that just wearing masks, particularly cloth masks, may not enough to prevent Covid infections from the delta variant in classrooms. He advised schools to create pods, space out children in the classroom, avoid group meals and suspend certain large activities, as well as improve air filtration and quality levels. 

“There might be other things you do that actually achieve more risk reduction than the masks in the setting of a much more contagious variant where we know there’s going to be spread even with masks,” Gottlieb said. “If we’re going to tell people to wear masks, I do think we need to start educating people better about quality of masks and the differences in terms of the reduction and risk you’re achieving with different kinds of masks.”

For businesses wanting to bring people back into offices, Gottlieb said that October may be a more “prudent” time than September.

Gottlieb, who serves on the board of Covid vaccine maker Pfizer, said the critical question right now is how likely vaccinated people are to transmit the virus if they become infected. He said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should be collecting that data because it’s likely the current delta variant may be the newer, more permanent form of coronavirus going forward.

“When you’re dealing with a new variant where the virus levels that you achieve early in the course of your infection are thousandfold the original strain, it’s possible that you’re shedding more virus and you could be more contagious,” he said.

Local officials across the country are advising and reimposing indoor mask mandates as the highly transmissible delta variant causes Covid cases and deaths to increase again in the U.S., particularly in largely unvaccinated communities.

Nearly 162 million people in the U.S. are fully vaccinated — almost 49% of the nation’s population — even as the rate of daily administered shots has seen a sharp dip in recent months, according to a CDC tracker.

The CDC eased its Covid guidelines on masks for fully vaccinated people on May 13.

Since delta has taken a stronger hold, however, health experts are cautioning people to again use masks and follow public health measures. White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci told CNBC on Wednesday that even fully vaccinated people may want to consider wearing masks indoors as a protective measure against the delta variant.

Last week, Gottlieb told CNBC that he believes the U.S. is “vastly underestimating” the number of Covid delta infections, particularly among vaccinated people with mild symptoms, making it harder to understand if the variant is causing higher-than-expected hospitalization and death rates. 

“The endgame here was always going to be a final wave of infection,” Gottlieb told CNBC on Thursday. “We had anticipated that this summer would be relatively quiet and we’d have a surge of infections in the fall with B.1.1.7, and that would be sort of the final wave of the pandemic phase of this virus and we would enter a more endemic phase where this virus just becomes a fact of life and it circulates at a certain level.”

But unlike the early last year, he added, “We have therapeutics and vaccines to deal with it, we’re better at treating it and it becomes sort of like a second flu.”

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

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Entertainment

Spike Lee By accident Reveals Palme d’Or Winner Early: It’s ‘Titane’

CANNES, France – The 2021 edition of the Cannes Film Festival awarded the French film “Titane” its grand prize, the prestigious Palme d’Or.

A wild serial killer story featuring some of the festival’s most controversial scenes, “Titane” was directed by Julia Ducournau, who was only the second woman to win the Palm after Jane Campion won the 1993 award for “The Piano”. ”

And although “Titane” was hotly touted as the main contender for the palm, that reveal came much earlier than intended: At the beginning of the graduation ceremony, when Jury President Spike Lee was asked to take the first prize of the night, he misunderstood and read that instead first prize winner.

“Do not do it!” shouted actress-director Mélanie Laurent, a jury member who sits next to Lee. But the cat was already out of the bag.

(At a post-ceremony press conference, Lee said he had no excuses and that “I screwed it up,” added, “I’m a huge sports fan. It’s like the guy at the end of the game on the foul line. Him misses the free throw or a guy misses a kick. “He also said he apologized to the Cannes organizers.” They said forget it. “

The accidental disclosure of “Titane” was only the first of several chaotic moments at the ceremony, as the spoiled palm unveiling was followed by a Best Actor Award for Caleb Landry Jones for the Australian tragedy “Nitram”. When a nervous looking Jones took the stage, he seemed to have a bad stomach, said, “I can’t do this,” and hurriedly backed off.

When, at the end of the ceremony, a tearful Ducournau was brought out to finally accept her palm, chaos had embraced her. “This evening was perfect,” she said, “because it’s not perfect that way.”

Other big winners were Leos Carax, who received the award for the best director for his eccentric musical “Annette”, the winner of the best leading actress Renate Reinsve for the Norwegian romantic dramedy “The Worst Person in the World” and a pair of ties: The Second -Place was split between “A Hero” by Iranian director Asghar Farhadi and the Finnish drama “Compartment No. 6”, while third prize went to the Nadav Lapid films “Ahed’s Knee” and “Memoria”. with Tilda Swinton.

At the last Cannes Film Festival in 2019, the palm tree winner was “Parasite”, the first big prize that Bong Joon Ho’s film took on its way to the Best Picture Oscar. Although “Titane” is far too bloody to be a major Oscar contender, her Palme win makes Ducournau only two feature films in her career as a major international director.

Correction: July 17, 2021

In an earlier version of this article, the name of the winner of the Best Director Award was misspelled. He’s Leos Carax, not Leox Carax.

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Health

Goldman Sachs downgrades India’s progress forecast as Covid instances spike

NOIDA, INDIA – APRIL 11: A woman holds a pot at a food distribution by Noida Authority in Morna Village in Sector 35 on the eighteenth day of the 21 day coronavirus limit lockdown on April 11, 2020 in Noida, India. (Photo by Virendra Singh Gosain / Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

Hindustan Times | Hindustan Times | Getty Images

A second wave of Covid-19 infections is likely to slow India’s economic recovery in the three months between April and June, according to Goldman Sachs.

The investment bank cut India’s growth forecast for the quarter from 33.4% yoy to 31.3% on Tuesday. Lower consumption and service activity was cited, likely due to the increasing social restrictions put in place by India’s Indian and federal governments to combat the new outbreak.

Goldman expects gross domestic product (GDP) to shrink sequentially by 12.2% year-on-year in the three months to June. This is the first quarter of India’s fiscal year, which started on April 1 and ends on March 31, 2022. Last year, India fell into a technical recession after two consecutive quarters of contraction.

“Given that virus cases hit a new high of over 100,000 / day over the weekend and a number of states, including Maharashtra, are announcing stricter lockdown restrictions that are expected to widen in the coming weeks, we expect slower GDP growth second quarter than previously originally expected, “wrote Goldman analysts.

Record highs

Cases in India have risen since mid-February, with Maharashtra state – home of India’s financial capital Mumbai – being hit particularly hard. On Monday, India reported more than 103,000 new cases over a 24-hour period, beating September levels when the first wave of infections peaked.

On Tuesday, the South Asian nation reported 96,982 new cases, much of them in eight states, including Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh and Karnataka.

Maharashtra authorities tightened restrictions, including imposing curfews at night if only essential services remain open, as concerns grow over a possible shortage of hospital beds and doctors. Other states are also preventively increasing restrictions to slow the spread of the virus.

On the other hand, India has also stepped up its vaccination efforts. According to government data, the country has administered more than 84 million doses since Tuesday, since it launched its mass vaccination program in January.

Some analysts and investors have said the impact of the recent surge is likely to be limited in cases if India can avoid a strict national lockdown like last year.

Sharp upswing in the following quarters

Goldman expects activity to rebound strongly in the following quarters – July through September and beyond – as Indian containment policies normalize and the pace of vaccination accelerates. Still, the success of the April-June quarter is likely to affect India’s overall fiscal year growth forecast, which Goldman now expects to be 11.7%, compared to an earlier forecast of 12.3%.

However, the investment bank warned that the uncertainties surrounding its estimates remain high and the actual impact could be greater or lesser depending on how strict India’s containment policy is and whether it affects sectors such as construction and manufacturing.

The impact on GDP can potentially be cushioned by more targeted, localized restrictions on trouble spots, as opposed to a broad national lockdown like the one India put in place last year, which Goldman said had a significant socio-economic impact.

“Measures were also more targeted and targeted at service sectors such as leisure, leisure and transport, with no or little or no impact on agriculture, manufacturing, construction and utilities,” the analysts said, adding that the bank’s analysis suggested they get used to it more to a post-covid environment with a shift towards e-commerce and working from home Hence, their response to states’ containment policies is likely to be less sensitive.

Goldman also expects the Reserve Bank of India to keep its policy rate at 4% and maintain its accommodative stance and an ample liquidity environment for longer than expected.

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Business

Papua New Guinea coronavirus circumstances spike, well being system on the brink

Australian officials carry boxes of about 8,000 starting doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine after arriving aboard a Royal Australian Air Force plane at Port Moresby International Airport on March 23, 2021, following the fragile healthcare system.

Andrew Kutan | AFP | Getty Images

The coronavirus crisis in Papua New Guinea continues to escalate as the Indo-Pacific nation seriously waits for vaccines to arrive.

In just one week – between March 22-28 – 1,786 new cases of Covid-19 and 13 deaths were reported, according to the latest report from the World Health Organization and National Ministry of Health from PNG.

The weekly joint report said the island nation reported a total of 5,349 cases and 49 deaths on March 28, 12:00 p.m. local time. It was the eighth week in a row of gains.

Papua New Guinea is a heavily forested nation of fewer than 9 million people, located about 160 km north of Australia at its closest point.

Prime Minister James Marape admitted last week that there is “rampant community broadcast”.

Health system as a “risk of collapse”

The situation on the ground in PNG is said to be dire, and international organizations such as Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) have warned of an impending collapse of the country’s overstretched health system.

“The health care system in PNG is threatened with collapse as the health facilities that manage COVID-19 are almost at full capacity and almost too congested to provide regular basic care,” said Doctors Without Borders.

The Pacific island nation has only about 500 doctors, fewer than 4,000 nurses, and fewer than 3,000 community health workers. This emerges from data shared by the Prime Minister during an address to Parliament last year. There are only about 5,000 beds in hospitals, he added.

Doctors Without Borders, who provide medical humanitarian aid in troubled countries, said more and more health care workers in PNG have tested positive for Covid-19 and have been forced to quarantine at home. The health facilities handling the outbreak are almost at full capacity, resulting in longer waiting times.

According to Kate Schuetze, a Pacific researcher at Amnesty International, PNG also has relatively poor health indicators.

Additional personal protective equipment, testing capacity and staff must be quickly considered to support the already strained healthcare system.

Ghulam Nabi

Interim Head of Mission for Papua New Guinea at MSF

“We already have a bad health system and then you also have a high level of comorbidities, which will also affect the Covid-19 crisis,” Schütze told CNBC on Wednesday. “So you have malaria in the country, you have multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, as well as a number of other diseases that could increase the effects of Covid-19.”

Large numbers of people also live in rural or remote communities where it is difficult to get the same health care as in urban centers like Port Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea, she added.

Stressed health system

According to the joint report by the WHO and the Ministry of Health, only 7,061 Covid tests were performed between March 22 and 28 – this means that 25.29% of these tests were positive.

Large-scale testing remains low in most of the country, and there is a shortage of test kits as well as logistical difficulties, the report said. This suggests that the actual number of infections across the country may be significantly higher than officially reported.

As the isolation wards in hospitals filled up, PNG turned a sports complex into a temporary field hospital for Covid-19 patients.

MSF said Friday that it is helping local health services by providing staff and cartridges to analyze samples from polymerase chain reaction tests, which are often used to detect the coronavirus. According to Doctors Without Borders, almost 40% of people tested in any of the health facilities have Covid-19. The organization expects more cases in the coming weeks.

MSF also said it only has enough trial cartridges to last up to two weeks.

“Additional personal protective equipment, testing capacity and human resources must be seen as swift to support the already strained healthcare system,” Ghulam Nabi, MSF interim head of mission for Papua New Guinea, said in a statement.

He added that MSF urges organizations in the region to act quickly and mobilize to increase their support for the Pacific nation.

Access to vaccines and tackle misinformation

PNG launched its vaccination campaign this week with the 8,000 doses of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 shots donated by Australia.

Of the country Prime Minister Marape reportedly received his first dose on Tuesday.

Growing vaccine nationalism around the world is making it difficult for small developing countries like PNG to gain access to shots to vaccinate their populations.

Many of them rely on a global vaccination initiative called Covax, which aims to ensure an equitable distribution of shots in less affluent countries. It is jointly managed by the WHO, Gavi – the Vaccine Alliance and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations.

According to Amnesty Schuetze, one of the challenges with the Covax facility is that not enough countries are donating enough money, resources or vaccines to ensure fairer distribution.

PNG is slated to receive around 588,000 doses of vaccine from Covax by June.

For its part, Australia has reportedly asked the European Union to distribute 1 million doses of AstraZeneca’s vaccine to PNG. It was in the beginning contracted to go to Australia. Reuters reported last week that the EU has not yet responded to this request.

Canberra has also reportedly asked the US, Japan and India – the other members of the informal Quad Alliance – to help PNG.

Meanwhile, vaccine skepticism and the spread of misinformation complicate matters in the island nation. Opposition leader Belden Namah reportedly urged the government to suspend the launch of the AstraZeneca vaccine as it would expose citizens to potentially serious harm.

The PNG government needs to do more to educate and educate the public about vaccines and health treatments for Covid-19, Amnestys Schuetze said.

Categories
World News

Fauci Warns Coronavirus Instances May Spike as States Ease Restrictions

The B.1.1.7 variant, which was first identified in the UK, is spreading so rapidly in the US that data analysis suggests it will most likely account for 20 percent of new US cases as of this week. And scientists in Oregon have identified a single case of a native variant with the same spine as B.1.1.7 that has a mutation that could affect vaccine effectiveness.

Earlier this week, Texas and Mississippi, both Republican-led states, lifted mask mandates. President Biden denounced these moves as a “big mistake” reflecting “Neanderthal thinking” and said it was vital for officials to follow directions from doctors and public health executives when the coronavirus vaccination campaign begins Dynamism gains.

Other Republicans were more cautious. Ohio Governor Mike DeWine said he will lift all public health measures to contain the virus crisis, but only if new cases there fall below a certain threshold. In Alabama, Governor Kay Ivey said she would extend the state’s mask mandate through April 9.

In Arizona, Governor Doug Ducey has adopted what is known as a “measured approach,” which prohibits local executives from taking any action that closes businesses and allows sports to be restarted in major leagues if approved by the state health department become.

Among the Democrats, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer said Tuesday that she would relax restrictions on businesses and allow family members who tested negative for the coronavirus to visit nursing home residents. In California, the state health department also eased some restrictions on Friday, stating that limited amusement parks could reopen as early as April 1.

In New York City, limited indoor dining has returned. And on Thursday, the Connecticut governor said the state would end capacity restrictions on restaurants, gyms and offices later this month. Masks remain required in both places.

Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has urged states not to relax their restrictions just yet. A new report from the CDC found that districts where restaurants in the US could be opened for personal meals saw an increase in daily infections weeks later. The study also said counties that issued mask mandates reported a decrease in virus cases and deaths within weeks.

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Health

Extra elements of China lock down as virus circumstances spike forward of WHO go to

A resident is undergoing a Covid-19 coronavirus test as part of a mass test program in the basement of a residential area after new cases of the virus emerged on January 12, 2021 in Shijiazhuang, central China’s Hebei Province.

STR | AFP | Getty Images

BEIJING – Local authorities in areas near Beijing tighten restrictions on social activities as coronavirus cases rise.

The city of Langfang, which is about 1.5 hours south of downtown Beijing, urged its nearly 5 million residents on Tuesday to stay home for the next seven days. The city is located in Hebei, the same province as Shijiazhuang, a city of 11 million that closed late last week after a surge in coronavirus cases.

Shijiazhuang reported 39 new confirmed cases on Monday while Langfang disclosed one. This brings the total number of currently confirmed and asymptomatic cases in Hebei Province to more than 500 people.

Separately, two regions in the northernmost Chinese province of Heilongjiang announced lockdowns on Tuesday. The province reported one new confirmed case and 36 asymptomatic cases for Monday.

Beijing reported a confirmed case on Monday. Since mid-December, the city has reported a handful of cases in close succession, leading to tighter restrictions on some residential complexes and mass testing on the outskirts of the country’s capital.

It was not immediately clear to what extent the local economy would be affected as there was no official order to stop work. Heilongjiang accounted for just over 1% of China’s GDP in 2019, and Hebei about 3.6%. Neither of the two provinces is as economically important as the one in southeast China.

Representatives from European and American business associations in China said members were not significantly affected by the recent surge in virus cases. Economic activity generally slows in late January through February as hundreds of millions of workers return to their hometown for the New Year celebrations.

However, some provinces have started to announce bans on large-scale gatherings and events. The central government is encouraging people to remain in custody during the New Year holiday, which officially takes place in mid-February this year.

“The worsening coronavirus situation will affect economic activity and markets may need to soften expectations for strong pent-up consumer demand in the upcoming LNY holidays in mid-February,” Ting Lu, Nomura’s chief economist, said in a statement on Monday .

“With the virus situation worsening and the coldest winter in decades, the growth recovery has lost some of its momentum in recent weeks,” he said. “A full recovery in the services sector could be delayed, as weaker PMI indices for services suggest in December.”

Both official and private polls for the past month showed that the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for services remained in the expansion area but declined from November.

China’s economy contracted 6.8% in the first quarter of last year when authorities shut down more than half of the country to control the outbreak.

WHO team begins investigation

Covid-19 first appeared in the Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019. Authorities locked the city until the end of January 2020, but the disease soon spread to the rest of the world in a global pandemic. The coronavirus has since infected more than 90 million people and killed over 1.9 million people worldwide.

A team from the World Health Organization will come to China on Thursday to study the origins of the virus with local scientists. WHO said the study would begin in Wuhan.

A separate WHO team is working with manufacturers of Covid-19 vaccines from the Chinese pharmaceutical companies Sinovac and Sinopharm “to assess compliance with international quality manufacturing practices before the WHO lists potential emergencies,” said WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

Beijing has resisted the idea that Covid-19 came from China. After the domestic spread of the virus stalled in March last year, authorities have blamed foreign sources for later spikes.

For the most recent outbreak, Hebei Province started reporting cases about 10 days ago. On Sunday, an epidemiologist from the provincial disease control center told reporters that the cases likely came from foreign sources that were in contact with the province prior to December 15.