July 15, 2021 coronavirus news | CNN

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July 15 coronavirus news

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Tennessee doctors want investigation into state's handling of pandemic
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What we covered here

  • A rise in Covid-19 cases in the US has been attributed to the now dominant Delta variant, which is believed to be more transmissible.
  • Doctors say most new Covid-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths are among unvaccinated people.
  • Meanwhile, with just days to go until the Olympics, organizers announced changes to the medal ceremony, which will include mandatory masks for all participants and a modified podium.

Our live coverage has ended for the day. Follow the latest on the pandemic here.

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L.A. County will reinstate mask mandate as Covid-19 cases and hospitalizations rise

Los Angeles County will reinstate its mask mandate regardless of vaccination status starting 11:59 p.m. Saturday night amid a rise in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations. 

The new health officer order will require masking indoors regardless of vaccination status, Los Angeles County Health Officer Dr. Muntu Davis said in a news conference Thursday. 

The daily test positivity rate in Los Angeles County has risen to 3.75%, an increase from 1.2% on June 15. 

The county has seen more than 1,000 new coronavirus cases each day for the past seven days, an alarming new rise as the Delta variant spreads, Davis said.

“We’re at a substantial level of community transmission and we can’t wait for this to go higher,” Davis said Thursday, announcing a new mask mandate. “Once we’re at a higher level, that will be too late.”

He explained that the county was at a low level of transmission when it reopened last month. 

“We’re in a different situation,” Davis emphasized. “This is not the same situation as it was June 15.”

Los Angeles County reported 1,537 new cases on Thursday, an 83% increase over the last week.  

“Anything is on the table if things continue to get worse,” Davis said in response to a question about whether the county would consider more restrictions. 

The new health officer order, which requires the use of masks indoors regardless of vaccination status, will add that extra layer of protection where the risk is higher, he said.

The county is urging all residents to get vaccinated and has launched mobile clinics for easier access. 

Los Angeles County has administered more than 10.7 million doses of the vaccine and over five million residents are fully vaccinated, according to Davis.

Biden says he'll soon answer questions about European travel ban

President Biden says he’ll soon be able to answer persistent questions about travel to the US from Europe after German Chancellor Angela Merkel raised the matter in the Oval office.

Biden said he brought in members of his Covid team when Merkel raised the question during their bilateral talks.

“It’s in process now,” Biden said, adding he’d be “able to answer that question…in the next several days.” 

While Europe eased restrictions for American travelers last month, the US has maintained strict travel restrictions put in place under former President Trump. Officials have said the spread of the Delta variant has put a hold on reopening to country to Europe.

Merkel said she’d received similar assurances from Biden in their meeting that he was looking into the matter.

“Before such a decision one has to reflect,” Merkel said through a translator. “It’s not sensible to have to take it back after only a few days.”

She said she had “every confidence in the American Covid team.”

Positive Covid-19 tests within Yankees forces MLB to postpone today's game versus Red Sox

Tonight’s New York Yankees home game versus the Boston Red Sox has been postponed due to positive Covid-19 tests within the Yankees organization, according to Major League Baseball (MLB).

The Red Sox-Yankees game was the lone MLB game on tonight’s schedule following the annual All-Star Game break.

Read the MLB’s full statement:

“Following positive COVID-19 tests within the New York Yankees organization, tonight’s game between the Yankees and the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium has been postponed to allow for continued testing and contact tracing. Major League Baseball will continue to provide scheduling updates as available.”

All colleges and universities in Rhode Island require Covid-19 vaccinations for students

Rhode Island has become the first state where all public and private colleges and universities require their students to be fully vaccinated against Covid-19 before returning to campus this fall, Gov. Dan McKee announced this week.

“Thank you to our institutions for taking proactive steps to keep our communities safe,” McKee tweeted Tuesday.

Dr. Nicole Alexander-Scott, Rhode Island’s health director, said in the state’s news release that vaccinations are “key” to having a successful academic year.

“We cannot let our guard down now,” Scott said. “The Delta variant is now circulating in parts of the country where many of our students live. The good news is that the vaccines provide protection against this variant. Anyone who has not been vaccinated should get vaccinated today.”

The schools include:

  • Brown University
  • Bryant University
  • Community College of Rhode Island
  • Johnson & Wales University
  • New England Institute of Technology
  • Providence College
  • Rhode Island College
  • Rhode Island School of Design
  • Roger Williams University
  • Salve Regina University
  • University of Rhode Island

Nearly 100% of people tested positive for Covid-19 antibodies after second vaccine shot, study shows

Almost 100% of people tested positive for antibodies 14 or more days after their second Covid-19 vaccine dose, an English study has found.

More than 207,337 participants in England took part in the home surveillance study for Covid-19 antibodies between May 12 and May 25.

Participants tested themselves at home using a finger prick test 14 days after their second dose of either the Pfizer/BioNTech or the AstraZeneca vaccine as part of a study being conducted by Imperial College London and Ipsos MORI.

The researchers tested the blood for antibodies specifically generated by the vaccines – antibodies that researchers believe protect people against the worst effects of the virus. It’s a different test from the commercial tests used to detect evidence of past coronavirus infection. 

“Antibodies play an important role in protecting against future illness,” Paul Elliott, director of the testing program at Imperial’s School of Public Health, said in a statement released by the UK Department of Health. “So it’s very encouraging to see a greater than four-fold increase in antibody prevalence since our last findings in January, highlighting the impact of the vaccination program. More importantly, our findings also reinforce the need to get fully vaccinated to protect yourself and those around you.”

Some context: England is scheduled to lift all restrictions on social contact on Monday despite a rise in cases. On Thursday, 48,553 new cases and 63 Covid-related deaths were reported across the UK, according to government figures.

Following one dose of either vaccine, the proportion of people testing positive for antibodies peaked at four to five weeks after first dose and then started to decline before rising substantially in those who had a second dose, according to the news release.

On Wednesday, the government announced more than two in three adults in the UK have now received both doses of a Covid-19 vaccine.

Americans who say they will not get a Covid-19 vaccine cite mistrust, Census data shows

Misinformation and mistrust continue to play a key role in Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy, according to a CNN analysis of data from the US Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey. 

Nearly half (48%) of people who said they will “definitely” or “probably” not get a Covid-19 vaccine cited mistrust in the vaccines as a reason for not getting vaccinated, according to the latest data, published Wednesday and based on survey responses from June 23 to July 5. That’s an increase from about a month ago, when 46% of people who said they did not plan to be vaccinated gave the same reason. 

And in the latest survey, more than a half (51%) of people who said that they “definitely” or “probably” would not get a Covid-19 vaccine because they were concerned about side effects, up from 49% about a month ago. 

According to the latest Household Pulse Survey data, the top reasons people who said they “definitely” or “probably” will not get a Covid-19 vaccine are: 

  • Concerned about possible side effects: 51% (about 13.5 million people)
  • Don’t trust Covid-19 vaccines: 48% (about 12.7 million people)
  • Don’t believe I need a vaccine: 35% (about 9.3 million people)
  • Don’t trust the government: 34% (about 9.2 million people)
  • Plan to wait and see if it is safe: 27% (about 7.3 million people)

Additionally, 14% said that they don’t think Covid-19 is a serious illness and 18% said they don’t know if a vaccine will work. 

The White House is ramping up efforts to push back more aggressively on vaccine disinformation, and US Surgeon General Vivek Murthy warned in a new advisory published Thursday that health misinformation is “a serious threat to public health.”

WHO: We are asking China to be transparent with raw data for Covid-19 origins investigation

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director-general of the World Health Organization, said access to raw data was a challenge at the start of the investigation into the origins of Covid-19 and called on countries to be cooperative with future phases. 

“We have done the phase one, and the phase one has shown some progress, but there are also some challenges that have to be addressed,” he said during a news briefing in Geneva Thursday. “One of the challenges is what you mentioned, you know, access to raw data, especially the data at the start of the pandemic, the raw data was not shared.” 

In the second phase, “we are asking, actually, China to be transparent, open and cooperate, especially on the information, raw data we asked for at the early days of the pandemic,” he said, noting WHO would be discussing phase two of the investigation with member states.

Tedros later said that he didn’t think momentum had been lost on the origins investigation. 

“We need to continue the study in order to know what exactly happened,” he said. “If we know what happened, then we can prevent future similar crises or problems.” 

The investigation is one of the basics for outbreaks, regardless of their size, he said, and what is done when any outbreak happens, so that the origins can be understood.

“There is the other part of it, especially considering the unprecedented nature of this pandemic, the number of people that died and the number of people that suffered,” Tedros said. “Take the number of deaths alone, more than four million, I think we owe it to them to know what happened. And everybody should cooperate to know what happened, and to prevent the same crisis from happening again. And that’s why we need cooperation.” 

Some health misinformation is being spread unintentionally, US surgeon general says

Misinformation about health and health care frequently comes from people trying to share helpful information, US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy said Thursday.

“This is the of the challenges that we have, is that misinformation does spread more quickly, often, than accurate information. And it’s often being spread by people who have good intent,” Murthy said in a conversation on fighting health misinformation hosted by the Stanford Internet Observatory Cyber Policy Center.

Murthy released an advisory warning of the threat posed by the spread of health misinformation earlier Thursday.

Not all of it is spread deliberately, he told the Stanford panel.

“Yes, there are some nefarious actors who are actively and willfully trying to harm others or generate an advantage to themselves politically or financially by spreading misinformation. But much of what we are seeing is people who think they’re helping sharing misinformation,” he said.

Murthy said this means fighting misinformation can be a personal objective. The surgeon general recommended first making sure that you yourself are not spreading misinformation, and then having conversations with the people around you.

“So, when my parents shared something, show something to me, and I realize it’s false, I often will tell them, ‘Talk to your friend. Not judgmentally, not with blame, but let them know, because they may be unaware, that what they shared actually isn’t true,’” Murthy said. “Doing that with our family and friends respectfully, kindly, is actually an important step that we can take also to slow the spread of misinformation.”

Peer-to-peer talking is a powerful way to fight vaccine misinformation, US surgeon general says

Peer-to-peer sharing of information is a powerful and essential way to fight vaccine misinformation, US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy said Thursday.

“It’s about peers talking to peers,” he said during a Stanford University panel event on Thursday. “That is actually extraordinarily important.”

Murthy released an advisory earlier Thursday in which he called misinformation a serious threat to public health. “I am urging all Americans to help slow the spread of health misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond,” Murthy wrote in a 22-page advisory released Thursday.

College students can help, he told the Stanford panel later. “The trust that you have with your peers is absolutely essential. It’s very powerful,” he said.

And it’s important for people to not themselves be vectors of misinformation, Murthy said.

“Know that you yourself may be doing that, inadvertently. So pausing before you share to check sources, to make sure it’s coming from a scientifically credible source, is really important,” he said.

Pace of full vaccinations less than a quarter of what it was 2 months ago, CDC data shows

The pace of full Covid-19 vaccinations in the US is down 11% from last week and less than a quarter of the pace set in late spring, new government data shows.

The latest data on vaccination efforts in the United States, published Thursday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, shows:

  • 48.3% of the US population is fully vaccinated (160,408,538 people)
  • Current pace of vaccinations (seven-day average): 302,996 people fully vaccinated per day; 529,879 doses reported administered per day. 
  • This is an 11% decline from last week, when an average of about 343,000 people became fully vaccinated each day.
  • It’s less than a quarter of the pace from two months ago, when more than 1.3 million people were becoming vaccinated each day. 
  • 20 states have fully vaccinated more than half of their residents: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin, as well as Washington, DC.

US delivers 500,000 Covid-19 vaccine doses to Haiti 

The United States delivered 500,000 Moderna Covid-19 vaccine doses to Haiti on Wednesday, the US Embassy in Port au Prince said in a statement Thursday. 

“In these difficult times, we remain a committed partner to the Haitian people in building a more stable and secure Haiti, including in its fight against COVID,” the statement said.

“The Government of the United States worked closely with the Government of Haiti to arrange the secure transfer of the Moderna vaccines to the people of Haiti – the first major international delivery of COVID doses to Haiti, with plans to share more doses soon,” it said.

The doses were delivered with support from the US Coast Guard, the embassy said, adding that the US government “through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and U.S. Southern Command, is also providing more than $3 million in financial and equipment support to the Haitian Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP).”

“This support allows Haiti to improve its logistics capability for storage and distribution of the vaccine and craft communications to address vaccine hesitancy in the population,” the embassy statement said. 

US surgeon general calls on tech companies to do more to fight "misinformation superspreaders"

US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy is urging technology companies — as well as everyday Americans — to do more to fight the spread of Covid-19 misinformation online.

“Modern technology companies have enabled misinformation to poison our information environment, with little accountability to their users. They’ve allowed people to intentionally spread misinformation, what we call disinformation, to have extraordinary reach,” Murthy said during a White House press briefing on Thursday.

“They’ve designed product features, such as like buttons, that reward us for sharing emotionally charged content, not accurate content, and their algorithms tend to give us more of what we click on, pulling us deeper and deeper into a wealth of misinformation,” Murthy added, in an apparent allusion to Facebook.

“We expect more from our technology companies. We’re asking them to operate with greater transparency and accountability. We’re asking them to monitor misinformation more closely. We’re asking them to consistently take action against misinformation superspreaders on their platform,” Murthy said. “We’re also asking news organizations to proactively address the public’s question without inadvertently giving a platform to help misinformation that can harm their audience.”

Murthy also made recommendations for people who use social media or online platforms, asking Americans: “if you’re not sure, don’t share.”

“We ask people to raise the bar for sharing health information by checking sources before they share to ensure that information is backed by credible scientific sources. As we say in the advisory. If you’re not sure, don’t share. Second, we’re asking health organizations to proactively address misinformation with their patients,” Murthy said. “We’re asking educational institutions to help improve health information literacy. 

Murthy added that he has lost 10 family members to Covid-19 and it’s “painful” for him to know that every Covid-19 death happening now could have been prevented.

“Health misinformation has cost us lives,” Murthy said.

US surgeon general says misinformation is a "very important" factor in slowing vaccination pace

US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy, who issued an unprecedented advisory on Covid-19 misinformation Thursday, said that misinformation is among the key reasons that the pace of American vaccinations has slowed.

“It’s one of several reasons why people are not getting vaccinated, but it’s a very important one, because what we know from polls, Kaitlan, is that two-thirds of people who are not vaccinated, either believe common myths about the Covid-19 vaccine or think some of those myths might be true,” Murthy said Thursday in response to a question from CNN’s Kaitlan Collins during the White House press briefing.

He continued, “So we know that it’s not the only driver that’s leading people not to be vaccinated, but it is a very important one.”

Asked whether he believed public figures and companies that are helping spread misinformation should be held accountable, Murthy suggested that everyone, but especially those with large platforms, share accountability.

“All of us have to ask how we can be more accountable and responsible for the information that we share,” he said, adding that those with larger platforms “bear a greater responsibility to think about that.”

Technology companies, Murthy said, also “have a critically important role,” issuing an urgent call for them to take “aggressive action.”

“We know that the dramatic increase in the speed and scale of spread of misinformation has in part been enabled by these platforms, so that’s why in this advisory today, we are asking them to step up. We know they have taken some steps to address misinformation, but much, much more has to be done and we can’t wait longer for them to take aggressive action because it’s costing people their lives,” he said.

This hospital in Arkansas is seeing an uptick in Covid-19 in pregnant women

A hospital in Little Rock, Arkansas, has reached capacity due to the increased number of Covid-19 patients being admitted. 

The University of Arkansas Medical Center is currently treating 45 Covid-19 patients, 15 of which are in the intensive care unit, 12 are on ventilators and four are on life support, Leslie Taylor, University of Arkansas Medical Sciences spokesperson, tells CNN.  

Taylor says the patients they are currently treating are younger and sicker than those they saw in the first surge. 

Cam Patterson, chancellor with UAMS, tweeted on Tuesday that over 20% of Covid-19 inpatients at UAM Health are unvaccinated pregnant women. 

Taylor said there are emergency room patients and people with conditions other than Covid-19 who need to be transferred from other hospitals and are being turned away because there are no available beds for them at this time. 

University of Arkansas Medical Center is the only Level One Trauma Center in the state. 

Experts say disinformation is largely to blame for unvaccinated Americans

As the more transmissible Delta variant continues to spread and Covid-19 cases rise in the US, experts say the most effective way to stop the spread of the coronavirus is to vaccinate as many Americans as possible.

In 47 states, the rate of new cases in the past week are at least 10% higher than the previous week, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. Of those, 35 have seen increases of over 50%.

However, only 48.2% of the country is fully vaccinated, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Not to mention, the rate of new vaccinations is on the decline.

The reason for this, experts say, all boils down to disinformation.

As misleading information spreads, unvaccinated Americans are now seeing the largest impact of the pandemic.

“This is not just a matter of people expressing opinions that might be wrong, this is life and death,” said Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health.

Data now shows that over 99% of people currently hospitalized with Covid-19 are unvaccinated, Collins said. Therefore, those who are vaccinated have enough protection to prevent getting severely ill.

According to Collins, the data speaks for itself, proving that vaccines are effective.

“Why are we waiting folks? Let’s roll up our sleeves if we haven’t already done so,” he said.

Catch up: How Covid-19 is impacting the Tokyo 2020 Olympics

The 2020 Olympic Games, which were delayed a year due to the coronavirus pandemic, are kicking off next Friday in Tokyo. As the Games approach, vaccine rates have remained relatively low in Japan and daily cases have begun to spike in Tokyo.

Here’s everything you need to know ahead of next week’s Games:

Olympic medal ceremony: The Olympic medal ceremony is undergoing several changes in order to prevent the spread of Covid-19. According to the International Olympic Committee, some changes include mandatory masks for all participants and a modified podium with additional modules between medalists to allow for social distancing. There will also be no contact between participants and no group photo on the podium.

Spectators: Tokyo venues for the Olympics will no longer allow spectators, according to the Japanese Olympic Committee. This decision was made after Tokyo declared a coronavirus state of emergency from July 12 to August 22, a period which covers the 16-day Games. Tokyo 2020 chief Seiko Hashimoto said due to the pandemic, organizers have “no choice but to hold the Games in a limited way.”

Covid-19 cases: Tokyo reported 1,308 new Covid-19 cases today, the second straight day with cases over 1,000. Daily cases have been increasing weekly for the past 26 days, according to public broadcaster NHK, and recent numbers are some of the highest reported in half a year. According to Yasutoshi Nishimura, the minister in charge of the country’s pandemic response, the more infectious Delta variant now accounts for up to 30% of cases.

Vaccines: Japan has lagged behind Western countries in rolling out vaccines. Just less than 20% of Japan’s population is fully vaccinated in comparison to nearly 48% of US citizens and almost 52% of people in the United Kingdom, according to CNN’s global vaccine tracker.

CNN’s Alyssa Kraus, Aleks Klosok, Junko Ogura, Chie Kobayashi and Nectar Gan contributed to this report.

WHO: Covid-19 is still a public health emergency of international concern

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director general of the World Health Organization, said that the Covid-19 pandemic is still a public health emergency of international concern, in a WHO statement released Thursday.

This determination came after the eighth meeting of the International Health Regulations Emergency Committee regarding the pandemic, which happened on Wednesday.

“The Committee unanimously agreed that the COVID-19 pandemic still constitutes an extraordinary event that continues to adversely affect the health of populations around the world, poses a risk of international spread and interference with international traffic, and requires a coordinated international response. As such, the Committee concurred that the COVID-19 pandemic remains a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) and offered the following advice to the Director-General,” the WHO statement said. 

“The Director-General determined that the COVID-19 pandemic continues to constitute a PHEIC. He accepted the advice of the Committee to WHO and issued the Committee’s advice to States Parties as Temporary Recommendations under the IHR. 

Speaking about the Committee meeting during a news briefing in Geneva on Thursday, Tedros said “the committee has expressed concern that the pandemic is being mischaracterized as coming to an end when it’s nowhere near finished. It has also warned about the strong likelihood for the emergence and global spread of new and possibly more dangerous variants of concern that may be even more challenging to control.”

The Committee also “expressed deep concern” about the level of funding for WHO’s Strategic Preparedness and Response Plan for Covid-19, Tedros said, which constrains the ability of WHO to coordinate the global pandemic response, “particularly in terms of having the flexibility we need to move at the speed this virus moves.”

The advice of the committee to WHO included recommendations such as continuing to work with States Parties to implement public health social measures to control transmission; continuing to advocate for equitable vaccine access and distribution; expediting the work to establish means for documenting Covid-19 status of travelers; continuing to strengthen the global monitoring and assessment framework for variants; strengthening communication strategies at all levels and collecting information from State Parties on the uptake and progress in implementing temporary recommendations.

The committee’s temporary recommendations to States Parties include continuing evidence-informed use of public health social measures; implementing a risk-management approach for mass gathering events; achieving at least 10% of all countries populations vaccinated by September; enhancing surveillance of the virus and report to WHO; improving access to and administration of WHO recommended therapeutics; continuing a risk based approach to facilitate international travel and share information with WHO; no requiring proof of vaccination for international travel; recognizing all vaccines that have receive WHO emergency use listing and addressing community engagement and communication gaps at national and local levels.

"We are having a wintertime season in the summer," Louisiana doctor says about Covid-19 rise

A Louisiana hospital medical officer said it is “disheartening” to see “a surge happening again when we really have made [Covid-19] a preventible disease.”

Dr. Catherine O’Neal, chief medical officer at Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center in Baton Rogue, said that the current rise in cases that her hospital is seeing is different from other spikes in a few ways.

“The cases are younger. They’re largely unvaccinated, almost predominantly unvaccinated. And also people who made this choice. … They have the knowledge in their hand, but they choose not to take the life raft that we’ve been throwing at them,” she told CNN’s Poppy Harlow and Jim Sciutto.

One of the five largest under-vaccinated clusters is in Louisiana.

O’Neal said she has conversations with patients about getting vaccinated.

“We have a lot of conversations about risk, about what it means for you, about what it means for the community. And in the end … do you want to see a lot more death or do you want an end to the pandemic? Because the choice for vaccination right now … really boils down to those two things: Either a lot more people will die because everybody is going to get this or we’ll end the pandemic through vaccination,” she said. “And which side of that do you want to be on? And how do you want to contribute to this process? And I hope we make the right choice.”

Cuba reports a record number of Covid-19 deaths for second day in a row

Cuba reported a record 67 Covid-19 related deaths on Thursday, according to the country’s health ministry.

The death toll in Cuba since the start of the pandemic is 1,726.

Additionally, the island nation added 6,749 new cases of coronavirus, bringing the total number of cases to 263,356.

Cuba has seen the number of cases and deaths spike in recent weeks after controlling the infection rate for much of the pandemic.

Many Cubans have been critical of the governments Covid-19 response and the deep economic toll the pandemic has had on the country. 

Late Wednesday, the Cuban government announced it will lift restrictions on travelers bringing in food, medicines and hygiene products and custom duties on these products will not need to be paid. 

The announcement comes days after island-wide protests have occurred driven in part by chronic shortages in stores and the impact Covid-19 is having on the country.

The measure will stay in place for the rest of the year.

South Africa’s Olympic Rugby team is quarantining in Tokyo

South Africa’s Olympic Rugby Sevens team is isolating in Tokyo after a passenger on their incoming flight to Japan tested positive for coronavirus, according to a statement on the SA Rugby website.

The team’s players and management tested negative upon arrival but their onward travel to a training camp has been delayed.

Springbok Sevens coach Neil Powell told Springboks.Rugby that adaptability will be key to the Olympics. 

“We took a knock, but I can say the players took in their stride. We can only control the controllable, so we remain positive. We will still have a training session while we wait for clearance, the only difference is it will be via Zoom call with the players in their rooms,” Powell said.

A decision on further travel is expected after results are in from the team’s test on Thursday.

The massive backlog of US passport applications is largely due to Covid-19, official says

The State Department is grappling with a massive backlog of more than a million US passport applications, a problem largely caused by the coronavirus pandemic, a department official said.

Deputy Assistant Secretary for Passport Services Rachel Arndt said the backlog of passport applications is “currently is somewhere in the range of a million and a half to 2 million applications.”

Those who submit new passport applications now may not receive their passport “until well into the fall,” she said.

The backlog is unusually high, and the “workload started coming in faster” as vaccination availability increased, Arndt said.

Arndt attributed many of the delays in passport processing to the coronavirus pandemic, noting that “the pandemic’s disruptions continue to have a ripple effect on all steps of the passport process, including the amount of time it currently takes us to process a passport application.”

You can read more about the backlog here.

Why the Delta variant may be more transmissible

The Delta variant might spread faster than other strains of the coronavirus because it makes more copies of itself inside our bodies quicker than other strains of the coronavirus. 

In research posted online last week, Chinese scientists detected Delta viral loads that were about 1,260 times higher than earlier strains on initial positive tests. They compared 62 Delta cases with 63 cases from the early epidemic wave in 2020.

Moreover, the amount of time it took quarantined people to test positive for Covid-19 on PCR also shortened – from about six days with the earlier infections to four days with Delta.

“These data highlight that the Delta variant could be more infectious during the early stage of the infection,” the researchers wrote. 

Some context: Delta outbreaks in China have prompted some local governments to shorten the window for a negative test in order to travel from 72 hours to 48 hours. 

According to Public Health England, a number of analyses have shown Delta to be more transmissible, including lab studies that suggest “increased replication in biological systems that model human airway, and evidence of optimized furin cleavage” – a process that activates the virus’ entry into the human cell. The variant has also been observed to spread faster in real-world epidemiological studies. 

According to the World Health Organization, Delta is estimated to spread roughly 55% faster than the Alpha variant first identified in the UK, and roughly twice as fast as variants that do not rise to the level of “interest” or “concern.”

US surgeon general warns of dangers of misinformation amid misleading vaccine claims

US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy is warning in a new advisory that health misinformation is “a serious threat to public health,” as administration officials grow increasingly concerned about misleading claims about coronavirus vaccines.

“I am urging all Americans to help slow the spread of health misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond,” Murthy writes in the 22-page advisory. “Health misinformation is a serious threat to public health. It can cause confusion, sow mistrust, harm people’s health, and undermine public health efforts. Limiting the spread of health misinformation is a moral and civic imperative that will require a whole-of-society effort.”

Murthy is scheduled to appear at Thursday’s White House press briefing at 12:30 p.m. ET to discuss the advisory.

Here are some key things Murthy outlines in the advisory:

  • He warns that “misinformation has caused confusion and led people to decline COVID-19 vaccines, reject public health measures such as masking and physical distancing, and use unproven treatments.” The advisory does not only apply to the Covid-19 pandemic, but was prompted by it, according to an administration official.
  • Murthy also notes that misinformation “has also led to harassment of and violence against public health workers, health professionals, airline staff, and other frontline workers tasked with communicating evolving public health measures.”
  • Murthy notes there is a historical context to his warning, referencing how false beliefs that the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine caused autism have caused vaccine levels to drop, and the denial that HIV causes AIDS reduced access to treatment in the past.
  • He also highlights how the “rapidly changing information environment” — social media platforms and new publications — has made it easier for misinformation to spread, citing a study that false news stories “were 70 percent more likely to be shared on social media than true stories.”
  • The advisory lays out recommendations for families, health professionals, researchers, educators, media, funders, government and technology platforms, and urges individuals to take responsibility to limit the spread of misinformation. “Before posting or sharing an item on social media, for example, we can take a moment to verify whether the information is accurate and whether the original source is trustworthy,” it says. “If we’re not sure, we can choose not to share.”

As CNN reported, the White House is preparing to push back more aggressively on vaccine disinformation as vaccinations have dropped. This advisory is not part of that effort but will be used by officials as they call attention to the dangers of vaccine misinformation, according to an official. 

Tokyo reports 2nd straight day of more than 1,000 Covid-19 cases

Tokyo reports second straight day of more than 1,000 Covid-19 cases.

Tokyo reported 1,308 new Covid-19 cases Thursday, the second straight day with cases over 1,000.

Daily counts have been increasing week on week for the past 26 days, according to public broadcaster NHK and recent numbers are some of the highest reported in half a year.

The news comes with just days to go until the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo. The Games — which was delayed a year because of the pandemic — is due to kick off next Friday with the opening ceremony.

More places could reinstate travel restrictions for unvaccinated travelers as cases rise, CDC head says

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said more places might reinstate travel restrictions for unvaccinated travelers if trends in rising Covid-19 cases continue. 

Speaking to ABC’s Good Morning America Thursday, Walensky said it “may be the case” that more cities and states put in place restrictions similar to Chicago, which reinstated travel restrictions for unvaccinated travelers. 

“But I think now is our moment to really double down on our vaccination efforts and our other prevention interventions,” she said. “We still have to send the same messages as we did last year.” 

Those prevention measures include testing people who have upper respiratory symptoms or Covid-19 symptoms need to get tested. Those people may need to stay home, quarantine and wear a mask.

“All of the same prevention measures,” she said. “And, of course, this year, we have the best tool. That is: Go get vaccinated.”  

A fall surge in Covid-19 cases is preventable, CDC director says 

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said on CBS This Morning Thursday that a spike in Covid-19 cases in the fall is preventable and she hopes people get vaccinated now to stop it from happening.

Asked if she saw another spike in the fall happening, she said, “that is in our control at this point.”  

She pointed out that respiratory viruses circulate more in the winter and fall weather, when more when people are indoors as it’s colder outside.  

“What I’m really hoping now is as we’re starting to see these cases, that people will take the message, see that they don’t want this to go on and to really go and get vaccinated now, so we can prevent what could happen in the fall,” she said. 

Everyone must wear masks at Olympic medal ceremonies

The International Olympic Committee announced changes to the medal ceremonies Thursday which include mandatory masks for all participants, a modified podium, and assurances that presenters will be vaccinated.

The 2020 Games — which were delayed a year because of the Covid-19 pandemic — are set to begin next Friday.

A statement from the IOC said measures were being taken “with the aim of making the experience safe for everyone involved while also preserving the essence of this unique moment, when Olympians savour and celebrate the pinnacle of their sports career.” 

Athletes, presenters and volunteers will all have to wear masks, and the podium will be modified with additional modules between gold, silver and bronze medalist to allow for more social distancing.

Here’s how the ceremonies will play out, according to officials:

  • The presenters will be waiting for the athletes on the field of play, and will not be part of the procession with the athletes.
  • Trays with medals and gifts — a flower bouquet and a small Tokyo 2020 mascot — will be placed on a table or a stand.
  • The presenters will pick up the trays from the tables or stands, and will carry the trays to the medallists.
  • Athletes will take the medals and gifts from the trays and will have no contact with the presenters.
  • Athletes will stay on their own podium module during the entire duration of the ceremony.
  • There will be no group photo on the gold medal podium.

There is no apparent need for Covid-19 boosters right now, acting FDA commissioner says

There is currently no need for a booster dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, acting US Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Janet Woodcock said Wednesday.

“We don’t think that boosters are needed at the current time,” Woodcock said in a conversation hosted by STAT News. “We will follow the data on waning of immunity over time and the data on acquisition of infections by the vaccinated to see if, at some point, it appears that a booster would be warranted.”

Woodcock said what’s important is that people get their primary vaccinations.

“We think the most important thing is to get the unvaccinated people vaccinated,” she said. “The Delta variant is circulating and we’re seeing rise in infections in many states across the United States, especially where people aren’t, (where) there’s not a high rate of vaccination.”

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