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At Ailey’s Spring Gala, Completely different Sorts of Hope

Uplift is what people expect from Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. And so it is no surprise that for its spring gala — this spring of all springs — the company focused explicitly on themes of hope, promise and the future.

What’s pledged is delivered, with much of the roteness that comes with reliability. But the Ailey company’s official hope doesn’t entirely eclipse a more troubled and therefore trustworthy kind, supplied mostly by the troupe’s increasingly important resident choreographer, Jamar Roberts.

The one-hour gala, available free on the company’s website until Saturday night, is a typical Ailey product. Like other troupes, Ailey needs to ask for donations and make a case for its importance, but here the asking and endorsing are done by Alicia Keys and Michelle Obama. Attractive dancers and adorable students plug themselves. As part of an earnest tribute to Washington, the company’s “second home,” Representative James Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina, makes an appearance; and Lonnie G. Bunch III, the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, likens Ailey to the organization he runs. It’s cross branding.

Three company members — Ghrai DeVore-Stokes, Chalvar Monteiro and Kanji Segawa — debut their first choreographic efforts, each tackling one of the three theme words. These pieces look like first efforts, without much distinctive juice or spark. Each is filmed in a striking New York location — the Vessel at Hudson Yards, a basketball court in St. Nicholas Park, the Unisphere in Flushing Meadows Corona Park — but the generic quality of the choreography is heightened by generic music, courtesy of a commercial licensing service. (A budget measure? At least in Monteiro’s “Promise,” the most stylish of the three, the music is generically funky.)

The opener, “For Four,” a new piece by the company’s artistic director, Robert Battle, is more intriguing. Battle explains that the four-person work “speaks to the pent-up energy over the last year and a half,” and says that it’s a manifestation of being “free to express ourselves.” With all its spinning and attitudinizing to a jazz track by Wynton Marsalis, it can seem like simple release. But there’s also a darker, more desperate undertone, a hint of having to perform.

In the middle, Renaldo Maurice writhes in a floor projection of an American flag. At the end, while the other three dancers strike Black Power poses, he rolls on the ground in a circle. Something more than pent-up energy is being expressed.

That something more is less hidden in Roberts’s contribution, a solo tribute to the civil rights hero John Lewis called “In Memory.” Silhouetted against a white brick wall, Roberts crosses the screen, bending and rising to a piano version of “Precious Lord.” The matador strength and strain of his stance, and the way his body bends, deliver more of the pain and majesty of Lewis’s struggle than Rep. Clyburn’s words in praise of his late friend.

Then “In Memory,” by far the strongest part of the gala program, suddenly ends. It’s only an excerpt, alas. Fortunately, more of Roberts’s recent work can be found elsewhere. An Ailey virtual program for Cal Performances, released earlier this month and available on demand through Sept. 8, features his new “Holding Space.”

In it, the members of an ensemble are silhouetted in lines against blue light (by the excellent Brandon Stirling Baker). Their movements are a little mechanical but with an irregular rhythm and stretch that suggest an imminent breaking down or breaking free. Later, the dancers take turns inside a cube of scaffolding on rollers, while other dancers move the cube around. Those attendants are holding a space for the soloist, but it’s an ambiguous one: maybe a space of healing, maybe a cage.

This is a difference between Roberts and the newbie choreographers of the gala program. His choreography — individual, original and freshly contemporary in feel — says something, even as it resists paraphrase. “Holding Space” ends with a backlit vision of apotheosis, which if it’s uplifting, is shaded by what precedes it and is thus earned.

The concern with confinement has been a running theme in Roberts’s work. It was there in “Cooped,” the remarkable short film he made on his iPad at the start of the pandemic for Works & Process. Accompanied by bagpipes and drums, his tightly framed body expressed, with a terrible beauty, a sense of emergency that was of the moment, but also deeper and older.

It’s an idea he’s expanded in “Colored Me,” a film he made during a fellowship at the Center for Ballet and the Arts at New York University. Again, his body is tightly framed, but now his image is blurred and shadowed. His dancing is intercut with a slow release of text: Zora Neale Hurston’s well-known quote, “I feel most colored when I am thrown against a sharp white background.” By the end, he has thrown himself against a sharp white background, filling the frame in a fetal position.

Like “Cooped,” “Colored Me” resonates both broadly and narrowly. The quote comes from Hurston’s essay “How It Feels to Be Colored Me,” and the dance could be seen as exploring what it might mean to be free to express oneself, how it might feel. I wonder if among the many kinds of confinement on Roberts’s mind lately, one might be the Ailey expectation of uplift. He seems to be resisting it productively.

With “In Memory,” “Holding Space” and “Colored Me,” Roberts has not only confirmed that he is one of the vital choreographers at work and one of the most spellbinding makers of dance film — he has confirmed that he is an artist. And for people who care about art, that is a sign of hope.

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Health

How one can Rejoice the Spring Holidays Safely With Your Household

Suppose there are two healthy families of four. If the children are not vaccinated in any household but all the adults are vaccinated, you can consider inviting people out while the windows are open and everyone is wearing masks, said Dr. Asaf Bitton, a family doctor who runs a public health research laboratory at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. If the children were not vaccinated in any household and only a group of adults were vaccinated, he and other experts said meeting outdoors with masks and distancing would be safest.

You may also be wondering if your unvaccinated kids can finally get a hug and kiss from their healthy, vaccinated grandma. Experts differed on this issue. But in general, a hug or kiss is probably okay if everyone is healthy and you want to take some risk.

“The likelihood that my child will transmit a virus that will cause serious illnesses to my vaccinated parents is very, very small,” said Dr. Barocas.

It is also unlikely that a vaccinated adult will transmit the virus to a child. However, the experts advised doing what feels right for you and your family.

“I think anyone attending this visit needs to understand that we are balancing risks and benefits,” said Dr. Adam Ratner, director of the Department of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at NYU Langone’s Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital. But, he added, when the grandparents are vaccinated, “I hug and kiss.”

Jennifer Rogers, 46, a Philadelphia lawyer, said her husband and two children, 8 and 11, will celebrate Easter by visiting their parents’ home for several hours. You are planning an outdoor Easter egg hunt and you hit a piñata shaped like a coronavirus. But the children to whom Mrs. Rogers’ sister and her sister’s son will come will all wear masks. Ms. Rogers and her husband are both vaccinated, but they plan to wear masks as well, as their family will recently have returned from a vacation in Florida.

“It still feels like a loss, like it’s not the same as it used to be,” said Ms. Rogers, whose family usually stays with their parents during the holidays.

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Health

CDC chief warns of one other Covid surge as Individuals journey for spring break

Passengers arrive for American Airlines flights at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago, Illinois on February 05, 2021.

Scott Olson | Getty Images

The US could still see a renewed spike in coronavirus – even if vaccinations against Covid-19 surge across the country – as states relax restrictions and more Americans travel to spring break, the centers’ head warned disease control and prevention on Monday.

“With warmer weather coming, I know it is tempting to relax and lose our vigilance, especially after a harsh winter that unfortunately saw the most cases and deaths during the pandemic,” said CDC Director Dr . Rochelle Walensky said at a press conference.

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) examined more than 1.34 million people on Sunday, 86,000 more than the same day a year ago, shortly after the World Health Organization declared Covid-19 a pandemic.

TSA screenings have exceeded 1 million every day since Thursday, the highest volume in a year. While air traffic is well below 2019 levels, despite the CDC’s warning of non-essential travel, more and more Americans are returning to heaven, even those who are fully vaccinated.

Although many colleges in the US have scaled back their spring break to curb parties and infection, Biden’s top government officials are still concerned about travelers “enjoying a maskless spring break,” Walensky said.

“I beg you, for the sake of the health of our nation,” Walensky said at the briefing on Monday. “The cases rose last spring, they rose again in the summer, they will climb now if we no longer take precautions, if more and more people are being vaccinated.”

Even with infections declining and vaccine adoption rapidly growing, the US continues to report a dangerously high baseline of daily cases that could be higher if Americans lose their vigilance, Biden’s top health officials have warned. Around 37.5 million people in the US, about 11% of the population, have been fully vaccinated to date, according to the CDC.

The U.S. has come a long way since early January when it hit a weekly average of just over 250,000 new cases per day. According to a CNBC analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, the nation reports an average of 53,670 new infections per day for the past week, a 10% decrease from the previous week.

– Leslie Josephs of CNBC and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Health

Faculties vowed a safer spring, however then college students, and variants, arrived.

With nearly a year of coronavirus experience, executives at many universities across the United States have ushered in the new phrase of pledging not to repeat the mistakes of last year as infection rates rose at the sites and in the surrounding communities.

While most schools have committed to increasing the number of tests, it is an expensive proposition at a time when many are struggling financially and not all students test as often as recommended by public health experts.

Plans to keep the virus under control, for example at the University of Michigan, which had more than 2,500 confirmed cases by the end of the fall semester, included increasing testing, more online classes, restricting dorms to one inmate, and offering none Tolerance for rule violations. The school has announced more than 1,000 new virus cases since January 1.

Other universities across the country have also encountered obstacles to a smooth springtime, including the unexpected challenge of emerging variants that have been held in recent days at the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Miami, Tulane University in New Orleans, and the University of California were discovered. Berkeley – and the more common problem of unruly students.

At Vanderbilt University in Nashville, students returning after the winter break had to be tested on arrival and were then asked to avoid social interactions while waiting for results. But some had other ideas.

“We have identified a group of positive Covid-19 cases associated with students who do not adhere to the rules for arriving on site,” reported a campus-wide email on January 23, in which two student organizations for the violation of protocols was held responsible. “More than 100 students are now in quarantine.”

The foundation of most spring semester university plans is on reinforced testing to identify infected students before they show symptoms and then place them in isolation. The test spike has increased since July, when a study recommended testing students twice a week to better identify asymptomatic infections.

The American College Health Association later adopted the idea and issued guidelines in December. “For spring, we strongly recommend that all students be tested on arrival and twice a week if possible thereafter,” said Gerri Taylor, co-chair of the organization’s Covid-19 task force.

Ms. Taylor said her organization didn’t know what percentage of schools had accepted the recommendations, and a survey of colleges across the country found a variety of requirements ranging from voluntary testing to mandatory testing twice a week.

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Health

Widespread Covid vaccines will likely be accessible within the spring, says Walgreens exec

Walgreens pharmacist Jessica Sahni is preparing a Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine at The New Jewish Home long-term care facility on Manhattan’s Upper West Side in New York on December 21, 2020.

Bryan R. Smith | AFP | Getty Images

Covid vaccines are still hard to come by, but that should change by spring, said Rick Gates, senior vice president of pharmacy and healthcare at Walgreens.

“I would say the end of March and the beginning of April will be the schedule for you to have more general use of it in all of our branches across the country of pharmacies and other places where you can start vaccinations,” he said Tuesday at CNBC’s “Healthy Return” virtual event.

Walgreens is part of a federal pharmacy program that is delivering cans direct to drug stores this week. The pharmacy chain plans to start vaccinations in some of its stores in 15 states, as well as Chicago and New York City, on Friday. However, all of these pharmacies will have limited supplies and vaccines will only be available to Americans who are high priority due to factors like age or health.

On Tuesday, the Biden government announced it would also begin shipping vaccines to community health centers next week – part of their strategy to reach out to black and low-income families who may or may not have a grocery or drug store nearby other barriers have access, such as a lack of transportation.

Around 43.2 million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine were administered across the country on Tuesday morning, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Only 9.8 million people received two doses of the shot. Both vaccines currently under emergency approval from the Food and Drug Administration – Pfizer BioNTech and Moderna vaccines – require two doses.

Gates said he was confident that a vaccine developed by Johnson & Johnson could increase supply. The drug company filed for emergency approval with the FDA last week after data was released showing its vaccine was about 66% effective against the virus. It’s a one-shot vaccine and can be stored in the refrigerator for months.

“It’s just good news for all of us that there will be more vaccines,” he said.

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Health

US Well being Specialists: Vaccines Will Improve by Spring

Although more and more contagious variants are spreading in the US, the leading health authorities expressed optimism on Sunday that both the supply of vaccines and the vaccination rate will steadily increase.

“The demand currently significantly exceeds the supply,” said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease doctor, on NBC’s Meet the Press program.

“I can tell you that things will get better from February through March through April because the number of vaccine doses available will increase significantly.”

The number of daily shots administered in the United States has increased recently. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that more than 2.2 million doses were given on Saturday and 1.6 million on Friday. The average for the past seven days has been 1.4 million a day, which is close to President Biden’s new target of 1.5 million shots a day.

In addition, the supply of vaccines is growing – although still well below demand. Federal officials recently increased shipments to the states to 10.5 million cans per week as Moderna and Pfizer incrementally increase production. The two companies have signed deals to provide the US with a total of 400 million doses by the summer – enough to vaccinate 200 million people.

Pfizer recently announced that it would be dispensing its doses two months ahead of schedule by May, also because an extra dose is now counted in every vial it makes. And Moderna is considering a production change that would allow it to increase the number of doses in its vials from 10 to 15.

Officials also expect the Food and Drug Administration to approve a vaccine containing a dose of Johnson & Johnson later this month. Although this company will initially only supply the US with a few million cans, it is expected to increase production significantly by April. Other vaccines from Novavax and AstraZeneca could also be approved for use in the US this spring, further increasing supply.

Officials are trying to vaccinate as many people as possible to beat more contagious variants of the virus first identified in the UK and South Africa. The variant from Great Britain known as B.1.1.7 is spreading rapidly in the USA. According to a new study, their prevalence doubles roughly every 10 days. The CDC said it could become the dominant form of the virus in the United States by March.

While this variant is of concern because it is more transmissible than previous variants, vaccine developers are more concerned about a variant discovered in South Africa, known as B.1.351, as it appears to interfere with current vaccine effectiveness. Several manufacturers have said they are solving the problem by developing new versions of their vaccines that could serve as booster shots. The Food and Drug Administration has announced that it is working on a plan to allow these new versions of the vaccine to be approved.

AstraZeneca and Oxford University developers of the vaccine announced on Sunday that they are expected to have a modified version of their vaccine available in the fall.

Dr. Scott Gottlieb, former FDA commissioner and member of the Pfizer board of directors, said on CBS’s Face the Nation program on Sunday that it was possible to develop a booster that “bakes in many different variations,” we see. “

“I think there is a reasonable chance that we can be one step ahead of this virus,” he said.

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Health

How New Vaccine Information Provides Hope for Spring, if Sufficient Individuals Get the Pictures

Als Anfang November im ganzen Land Coronavirus-Infektionen zunahmen – und sich die Aussicht auf einen langen, dunklen Winter abzeichnete – war nicht klar, ob sich einer der in der Entwicklung befindlichen Impfstoffe durchsetzen würde.

Jetzt, drei Monate später, sieht das Bild ganz anders aus. Im ganzen Land werden zwei hochwirksame Covid-Impfstoffe eingeführt. Drei andere scheinen etwas weniger robust zu sein, bieten aber dennoch einen starken und in einigen Fällen vollständigen Schutz vor schweren Krankheiten und Todesfällen.

Alleine in der vergangenen Woche berichteten Novavax und Johnson & Johnson, dass ihre Impfstoffe einen guten Schutz bieten, auch gegen neue, ansteckendere Varianten des Coronavirus. Eine neue Analyse der Universität Oxford legt nahe, dass der mit AstraZeneca entwickelte Impfstoff die Übertragung verlangsamen kann und besonders gut funktioniert, wenn sich die zweite Dosis verzögert.

Nach einem Sputter-Start beschleunigt sich die Impfung in den USA: Mehr als 27 Millionen Amerikaner haben eine erste Dosis erhalten, und mehr als sechs Millionen wurden vollständig geimpft. Dieses Tempo hat sich so beschleunigt, dass Präsident Biden, der kritisiert wurde, dass das Ziel seiner Regierung, in seinen ersten 100 Tagen im Amt 100 Millionen Schüsse abzugeben, zu bescheiden war, letzte Woche das Ziel auf 150 Millionen Schüsse nach oben korrigierte.

“Wir haben einen langen Weg zurückgelegt”, sagte Akiko Iwasaki, Immunologe an der Yale University. “Wir leben immer noch mit tödlichen Krankheiten, weil wir nicht genug Menschen geimpft haben, aber sobald wir dies tun, wird sich die Art und Weise, wie wir mit diesem Virus leben und umgehen, wirklich ändern.”

Aber auch wenn es im Frühjahr und Sommer Grund zur Hoffnung gibt, bleiben viele Experten des öffentlichen Gesundheitswesens in den nächsten Monaten pessimistisch. Mehrere warnten, dass die Welt bei weitem nicht frei von einer Pandemie sei, bei der in den USA fast 450.000 Menschen und weltweit 2,2 Millionen Menschen ums Leben gekommen seien.

In reichen Ländern haben sich die Impfungen beschleunigt, aber ärmere Länder bleiben zurück. In den Vereinigten Staaten erhalten wohlhabendere weiße Einwohner häufiger Zugang zu dem Impfstoff als Schwarze und Latinos, die überproportional von der Pandemie betroffen sind.

Obwohl die Fälle in den Vereinigten Staaten in den letzten Wochen zurückgegangen sind, befinden sie sich immer noch auf einem Niveau, das fast doppelt so hoch ist wie der Höhepunkt des letzten Sommers, selbst wenn einige Großstädte wie Chicago und New York Speisen im Innenbereich und andere Aktivitäten eröffnen. Die Rücknahme von Beschränkungen kommt auch, da ansteckende neue Varianten den Globus umkreisen, von denen einige die Wirksamkeit der Impfstoffe zu verringern scheinen.

Dr. Eric Topol, Experte für klinische Studien bei Scripps Research in San Diego, erinnerte sich daran, dass er bereits im Dezember hoffnungsvoll war, dass die Pandemie in den USA bis Juni gezähmt werden könnte, dank der Flut ermutigender Impfstoffdaten. Aber als das Bild in den letzten Wochen klarer wurde, was die Bedrohung durch neue, ansteckendere Varianten des Virus betrifft, die sich in anderen Ländern ausbreiten, die in den Vereinigten Staaten aufgetaucht sind – insbesondere die Variante B.1.1.7, die erstmals in Großbritannien – sein Optimismus hat nachgelassen.

“Die Varianten haben alles verändert”, sagte Dr. Topol.

Vorläufige Studien haben gezeigt, dass die Impfstoffe von Pfizer, Moderna, Novavax und Johnson & Johnson gegen die Variante B.1.1.7 zu wirken scheinen und dass sie auch – wenn auch weniger – gegen die erstmals in Südafrika identifizierte Variante wirksam sind. Selbst im Fall dieser Variante zeigte die Studie von Johnson & Johnson, dass sie immer noch vor schweren Krankheiten schützt.

Einige der ersten Menschen, die geimpft wurden, sehen einen Weg aus der Pandemie.

Bei Bloom Senior Living, einer Kette von Seniorenwohneinrichtungen im Südosten und Mittleren Westen, haben Beamte an fünf ihrer neun Standorte nach und nach begonnen, ihre Türen für Besucher in Innenräumen wieder zu öffnen.

Diese Entscheidungen waren auf die Infektionsraten in der Gemeinde zurückzuführen, aber ein weiterer Faktor hat die Beamten von Bloom mit der Idee vertraut gemacht: 96 Prozent der Bewohner von Einrichtungen, die von Apothekenimpfungsteams besucht wurden, haben zugestimmt, einen Schuss zu bekommen.

“Es bedeutet alles für sie, ihre erwachsenen Kinder und hoffentlich schließlich ihre Enkelkinder sehen zu können – um das Gefühl zu haben, wieder ein Leben zu führen”, sagte Bradley Dubin, Direktor der Firma, die die Bloom-Einrichtungen besitzt.

Die Auswirkungen der US-Impfkampagne zeigen sich möglicherweise in den Daten. Die Anzahl der bestätigten Coronavirus-Fälle bei Pflegebewohnern ging in den ersten drei vollen Wochen, in denen Impfstoffe in Pflegeheimen verabreicht wurden, zurück. Dies geht aus Daten hervor, die Pflegeheime den Zentren für die Kontrolle und Prävention von Krankheiten melden. Es ist nicht klar, wie viel davon auf Impfungen zurückzuführen ist.

In Vermont, wo 85 Prozent der Menschen in Langzeitpflegeeinrichtungen zugestimmt haben, mindestens ihren ersten Impfstoff zu bekommen, sagten Beamte diese Woche, dass sie planen, die Besuchsbeschränkungen in diesen Häusern bald zu lockern, obwohl sie dies nicht festgelegt haben ein Datum dafür.

Die Impfkampagne in Pflegeheimen ist Teil einer Impfkampagne in den USA, die nach wochenlangen frustrierenden Verzögerungen an Dynamik gewonnen hat. Die Vereinigten Staaten geben derzeit durchschnittlich 1,3 Millionen Schüsse pro Tag ab, und in einigen Staaten wie Alaska und New Mexico haben mehr als 10 Prozent der Bevölkerung mindestens eine von zwei erforderlichen Dosen eines Impfstoffs erhalten.

Staatliche und lokale Gesundheitsbehörden richten Massenimpfaktionen durch, beispielsweise im Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, und arbeiten mit der Nationalgarde und der Federal Emergency Management Agency zusammen. Die Kampagne wird auch zunehmend auf Apotheken ausgeweitet, in denen viele Amerikaner daran gewöhnt sind, Impfstoffe zu erhalten.

Auch an der Versorgungsfront gibt es hoffnungsvolle Anzeichen.

Am Dienstag kündigte die Bundesregierung an, den Staaten für die nächsten drei Wochen mindestens 10,5 Millionen Dosen Coronavirus-Impfstoffe zuzuteilen. Gleichzeitig spricht Moderna mit der Food and Drug Administration über die Befüllung der Durchstechflaschen mit 15 statt der derzeit 10 Dosen. Diese Änderung könnte die Produktion des Unternehmens um 50 Prozent steigern.

Darüber hinaus hat Pfizer angekündigt, bis Mai zwei Monate vor dem geplanten Termin 200 Millionen Dosen in die USA liefern zu können, da jetzt eine zusätzliche Dosis in den Impfstoffflaschen gezählt wird.

Covid19 Impfungen >

Antworten auf Ihre Impfstofffragen

Bin ich in meinem Bundesstaat für den Covid-Impfstoff berechtigt?

Derzeit können mehr als 150 Millionen Menschen – fast die Hälfte der Bevölkerung – geimpft werden. Aber jeder Staat trifft die endgültige Entscheidung darüber, wer zuerst geht. Die 21 Millionen Beschäftigten im Gesundheitswesen des Landes und drei Millionen Einwohner von Langzeitpflegeeinrichtungen waren die ersten, die sich qualifizierten. Mitte Januar forderten Bundesbeamte alle Bundesstaaten auf, die Berechtigung für alle über 65-Jährigen und für Erwachsene jeden Alters mit Erkrankungen zu öffnen, bei denen ein hohes Risiko besteht, dass sie schwer krank werden oder an Covid-19 sterben. Erwachsene in der Allgemeinbevölkerung stehen am Ende der Reihe. Wenn Gesundheitsbehörden von Bund und Ländern Engpässe bei der Verteilung von Impfstoffen beseitigen können, sind alle ab 16 Jahren bereits im Frühjahr oder Frühsommer förderfähig. Der Impfstoff wurde bei Kindern nicht zugelassen, obwohl derzeit Studien durchgeführt werden. Es kann Monate dauern, bis ein Impfstoff für Personen unter 16 Jahren verfügbar ist. Aktuelle Informationen zu den Impfrichtlinien in Ihrer Region finden Sie auf Ihrer staatlichen Gesundheitswebsite

Ist der Impfstoff frei?

Sie sollten nichts aus eigener Tasche bezahlen müssen, um den Impfstoff zu erhalten, obwohl Sie nach Versicherungsinformationen gefragt werden. Wenn Sie nicht versichert sind, sollten Sie den Impfstoff trotzdem kostenlos erhalten. Der Kongress hat in diesem Frühjahr ein Gesetz verabschiedet, das es Versicherern verbietet, eine Kostenteilung wie eine Zuzahlung oder einen Selbstbehalt anzuwenden. Es bestand aus zusätzlichen Schutzmaßnahmen, die es Apotheken, Ärzten und Krankenhäusern untersagten, Patienten, einschließlich nicht versicherter Patienten, in Rechnung zu stellen. Trotzdem befürchten Gesundheitsexperten, dass Patienten in Schlupflöcher geraten, die sie für Überraschungsrechnungen anfällig machen. Dies kann bei Personen der Fall sein, denen zusammen mit ihrem Impfstoff eine Arztbesuchsgebühr berechnet wird, oder bei Amerikanern, die bestimmte Arten der Krankenversicherung haben, die nicht unter die neuen Vorschriften fallen. Wenn Sie Ihren Impfstoff von einer Arztpraxis oder einer Notfallklinik erhalten, sprechen Sie mit ihnen über mögliche versteckte Kosten. Um sicherzugehen, dass Sie keine Überraschungsrechnung erhalten, ist es am besten, Ihren Impfstoff an einer Impfstelle des Gesundheitsministeriums oder in einer örtlichen Apotheke zu erhalten, sobald die Aufnahmen breiter verfügbar sind.

Kann ich wählen, welchen Impfstoff ich bekomme?Wie lange hält der Impfstoff? Brauche ich nächstes Jahr noch einen?

Das ist zu bestimmen. Es ist möglich, dass Covid-19-Impfungen genau wie die Grippeimpfung zu einem jährlichen Ereignis werden. Oder es kann sein, dass der Nutzen des Impfstoffs länger als ein Jahr anhält. Wir müssen abwarten, wie dauerhaft der Schutz vor den Impfstoffen ist. Um dies festzustellen, werden Forscher geimpfte Menschen aufspüren, um nach „Durchbruchsfällen“ zu suchen – jenen Menschen, die trotz Impfung an Covid-19 erkranken. Dies ist ein Zeichen für eine Schwächung des Schutzes und gibt Forschern Hinweise darauf, wie lange der Impfstoff hält. Sie werden auch die Spiegel von Antikörpern und T-Zellen im Blut geimpfter Personen überwachen, um festzustellen, ob und wann ein Auffrischungsschuss erforderlich sein könnte. Es ist denkbar, dass Menschen alle paar Monate, einmal im Jahr oder nur alle paar Jahre Booster benötigen. Es geht nur darum, auf die Daten zu warten.

Benötigt mein Arbeitgeber Impfungen?Wo kann ich mehr erfahren?

Hunderte Millionen zusätzlicher Impfstoffdosen von Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca und Novavax könnten das Angebot bis zum Sommer weiter ausbauen.

Obwohl die neueren Impfstoffe nicht die gleiche hohe Gesamtwirksamkeit zeigten wie Moderna und Pfizer im letzten Jahr und zwei noch keine Ergebnisse aus ihren klinischen Studien in den USA gemeldet haben, haben mehrere Impfstoffexperten auf ein übersehenes, aber vielversprechendes Detail hingewiesen: Alle Die Impfstoffe haben einen hervorragenden Schutz gegen die schwere Form von Covid-19 gezeigt, die zu Krankenhausaufenthalten und zum Tod führt.

“Was ich vermeiden möchte, ist, dass Menschen bis zum Krankenhausaufenthalt krank werden oder auf tragische Weise von Covid-19 sterben”, sagte Dr. Stefan Baral, Epidemiologe an der Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Die Nachricht, dass die Impfstoffe vor diesen Ergebnissen schützen, sei “unglaublich erhebend”.

Die Herausforderung besteht jedoch darin, “an einen Punkt zu gelangen, an dem tatsächlich genug Menschen geimpft werden können, um diese Vorteile auf Bevölkerungsebene zu sehen”, sagte Angela Rasmussen, Virologin am Center for Global Health Science and Security der Georgetown University. “Meine derzeit größte Sorge ist, dass die Menschen nicht die Vorsichtsmaßnahmen treffen, die sie kurzfristig treffen sollten, damit wir in den kommenden Monaten bequem an diesen Punkt gelangen können.”

Experten haben gesagt, es sei noch zu früh, um die allgemeinen Auswirkungen der Massenimpfung auf die öffentliche Gesundheit in den USA zu erkennen. Aber ein anderes Land – Israel – bietet Hoffnung. Forscher in diesem Land, das weltweit führend bei der Impfung seiner Bevölkerung ist, haben nach nur einer Dosis Pfizers Schuss einen signifikanten Rückgang der Infektion und nach zwei Schüssen bessere Ergebnisse als erwartet gemeldet, vorläufige Daten, die Experten als ermutigend beschrieben haben.

“Dies ist, was passieren kann, wenn die Dinge richtig laufen”, sagte Dr. Iwasaki aus Yale.

Um dieses Ziel zu erreichen, müssen die Vereinigten Staaten jedoch schnell handeln und das Virus in Schach halten, da hoch ansteckende Varianten häufiger auftreten.

Die Gesundheitsbehörden müssen auch den Zugang zu den Impfstoffen für diejenigen verbessern, die am anfälligsten für Covid-19 sind. Frühe Impfdaten, die unvollständig sind, zeigen, dass Menschen aus wohlhabenderen, weißen Gegenden Impfterminsysteme überflutet haben und einen übergroßen Anteil am begrenzten Angebot haben.

Die gleiche Dynamik spielt sich auch global ab. Wohlhabende Länder haben einen Großteil des weltweiten Impfstoffangebots gekauft, was bedeutet, dass viele ärmere Länder bei der Impfung ihrer Bürger wahrscheinlich zurückbleiben werden. Am Mittwoch kündigte ein internationales Programm zur kostengünstigen oder kostenlosen Lieferung von Covid-19-Impfstoffen an Länder auf der ganzen Welt Pläne an, bis zum 30. Juni mehr als 300 Millionen Dosen abzugeben. Dies reicht jedoch nicht aus, um alle zu impfen.

“Ich denke, in der reichen Welt haben wir ein gutes Gefühl für Impfstoffe, aber weltweit ist es eine andere Geschichte”, sagte Marc Lipsitch, Professor für Epidemiologie und Direktor des Zentrums für Dynamik übertragbarer Krankheiten an der Harvard TH Chan School of Gesundheitswesen.

Dr. Baral von Johns Hopkins kümmert sich um die Bewohner mehrerer Obdachlosenunterkünfte in Toronto. Letzten Monat, sagte er, habe er Bewohner in einem Tierheim für ältere Männer geimpft. “Es war dieses unglaubliche Gefühl der Erleichterung – man konnte es auf ihren Gesichtern sehen”, sagte er. “Wir sind an einem anderen Ort als vor sechs Monaten.”

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Financial system may open up by late spring if sufficient individuals get vaccinated, says Dr. Ashish Jha

Dr. Ashish Jha told CNBC’s “The News with Shepard Smith” on Tuesday that US states could make decisions about opening up businesses and economies earlier than predicted if enough people are vaccinated.

“My relatively optimistic view is that we don’t have to wait until the end of summer or even the beginning of summer. If enough people have been vaccinated in late spring, you will really see case numbers come down a lot,” said Jha, dean of the School of Public Health at Brown University. “That will allow us to open up the economy a lot more so that we don’t have to wait and just make sure the infections – the high infection rates we have right now – get better . “

President Joe Biden set a benchmark in the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. He promised to get enough vaccine doses to the states for almost every American by the end of summer. Biden said he would give the government another 200 million doses of the vaccine – half from Pfizer and the other half from Moderna. The deal would increase the country’s vaccine supply to 600 million shots.

“This is enough vaccine to fully vaccinate 300 [million] Americans by the end of summer, the beginning of autumn, “Biden said at the White House on Tuesday.

To vaccinate 300 million people by September 22, the last day of summer, the nation will need 600 million doses at the rate of about 2.4 million shots a day. That assumes it goes beyond the 23 million that have already been bumped. Biden said the government would be sending 10 million shots a week for the next three weeks. That is an increase of almost 20% over what is currently being delivered.

Johnson & Johnson expects results for its Covid vaccine early next week. CNBC’s Meg Tirrell said the company conducted its test on three continents, including South Africa and Brazil, where the highly communicable new variants were identified. This means that Johnson & Johnson’s results could provide vital information on how vaccines developed around the original strain of Covid work against the emerging ones.

Dr. Bruce Becker, associate professor of behavioral medicine and social sciences at Brown University’s School of Public Health, told The News with Shepard Smith that the Johnson & Johnson vaccine requires only one shot and therefore achieves immunity in 14 to 21 years will days.

“The J&J vaccine can vaccinate twice the number of patients for any given vaccine supply – twice the coverage and immunity in less than half the time,” Becker said. “That is a much greater efficiency in blocking the spread of Covid.”

Jha told host Shepard Smith that a single dose would “greatly” aid in vaccination effort, but questioned the company’s manufacturing capacity.

“I think one of the less clear questions is how much stock of J&J vaccines we have.” asked Jha. “There have been some reports that it didn’t go that well, production didn’t go that well, but either way, a dose is so much easier to give as a vaccine.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published a study Tuesday that found that Covids spread in schools is very low with the right precautions. Jha stated that the US can open schools across the country, but “we have to do it” with preventive measures that include masks and effective ventilation.

Becker underlined the importance of preventive measures and even said that non-compliant students should be excluded from school.

“Masking work, social distancing work, and the deadly misinformation circulated by the previous government and their voices created our current dilemma,” Becker said. “Schools can be opened if the rules are followed exactly.”

Biden said Tuesday “it will be months before we can vaccinate the majority of Americans” and that “masks not vaccines” are the best defense against Covid as Americans wait for their vaccine.

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J&J plans to have 100 million vaccines for Individuals by spring, board member says

Dr. Johnson & Johnson board member Mark McClellan told CNBC that “if the clinical trial works,” the company could significantly increase the availability of Covid vaccines in the coming weeks.

“I know J&J has a very large supply with its production both here in the US and elsewhere in the world, with the goal of maybe having enough vaccines for 100 million Americans by spring or April So,” said the former FDA commissioner in a Thursday evening interview on “The News with Shepard Smith”.

During a speech at the White House Thursday, government lead infectious disease doctor Anthony Fauci said Johnson & Johnson would have enough data on its vaccine to start analysis within a week or two. McClellan told host Shepard Smith that the most important thing about the company’s vaccine is the large-scale clinical trial that is ongoing.

“Based on these results, the independent scientists overseeing this study should take a closer look in the near future and we’ll see how quickly the vaccine could advance,” McClellan said.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an average of 883,000 syringes of the Covid vaccine are given per day in the US for the past six days. Even so, less than 50% of the 37,960,000 cans distributed have found their way into people’s arms.

At least 12 states have reported vaccine shortages. Officials from San Francisco and New York warned they could be completely out of dose this week. At least 15 vaccination sites in New York City are temporarily closed. New York Mayor Bill DeBlasio told NBC’s Gabe Gutierrez that at least 23,000 vaccine appointments must be postponed.

McClellan noted that “the supply will go up, but probably not enough to keep up with the large number of Americans who are now really looking to get vaccinated.” However, he told Smith that he believes the Biden administration can help speed up the vaccine adoption rate.

“It’s going to be a challenge, but I think more than 100 million Americans can be vaccinated in the next few months,” said McClellan, a health policy expert at Duke University.

President Joe Biden promised a “full war effort” to fight the coronavirus pandemic and accelerate vaccine production using the Defense Production Act during a briefing Thursday.

“We have already identified suppliers and are working with them to move the plan forward,” said Biden.

He added that the DPA would help fix supply chain issues, including a shortage of syringes.