Fauci has concerns, but ‘we will return to normal’ #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Fauci has concerns, but ‘we will return to normal’

Health & BeautyAug 21. 2020

By The Washington Post · Geoff Edgers · NATIONAL, HEALTH, SCIENCE-ENVIRONMENT 
Every Friday and many Tuesday afternoons, national arts reporter Geoff Edgers hosts The Washington Post’s first Instagram Live show from his barn in Concord, Mass. So far, he has interviewed, among others, actress Tracee Ellis Ross, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, basketball legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and journalist Dan Rather. 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/c/embed/64a19240-75e6-4180-a281-39c8acf80c7e?ptvads=block&playthrough=false

Recently, Edgers chatted with Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Here are some excerpts from their conversation.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/c/embed/a8a7a6bf-d827-49ea-93ee-0a245549b1f9?ptvads=block&playthrough=false 

Q: Does it drive you nuts when you see photos of people crowded outside, like at the beach or a motorcycle rally? Does it make your blood boil? 

A: The answer, Geoff, is yes. But my blood evaporates when I see people indoors in a bar or in a crowded area. It’s worse being indoors in a crowd without a mask, with poor ventilation, because outdoors is always better than indoors.

Q: Another thing that’s really been on everyone’s mind is how to send kids back to school. Tell me your views on that. 

A: It really depends. First of all, I think it’s important for people to understand that college is different than elementary school because you have people coming in from all different parts of the country. In general, when you’re talking about schools, it depends on the location you’re talking about at the state, city and county level. 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/c/embed/9ca66162-57b0-4b5a-a389-de6160198c84?ptvads=block&playthrough=false

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention comes out with the designation of green, yellow, red. If you are in a green zone, in general, there is a good degree of impunity, because of a lower risk of getting infected. If you’re in a red zone, then you really have to think twice about whether it’s prudent to bring the children back to school. If you’re in a yellow one, you should have a plan: Can you safeguard the health, the safety and the welfare of the children and the teachers? What do you do when a child gets infected? Do you have mask-wearing? Do you have the degree of physical separation? How long can you do outdoor classes? And what classes can you do outdoors? Can you keep children segregated when they’re outside playing? Because groups together are the things that do it, particularly indoors. So always remember outdoors, always better than indoors. Masks are very helpful. 

Q: I’m drinking from a Dr. Fauci mug. I assume you’re not receiving any residuals from all of the products out there? 

A: Absolutely not. 

Q: I don’t know if you Google yourself or look on eBay, but is it strange to you that you’re a scientist and yet you’ve become kind of a folk hero? 

A: Well, you know, I actually don’t pay attention to that because that could really be distracting. And I don’t pay attention to the death threats and the harassments either. So, yeah. We live in an extraordinary society where public health issues become so politicized and divisive that when you start talking about prudent things to do to preserve the public health, that’s actually considered by some, hopefully a really small minority, as something worthy of threatening you. I mean, that really is bizarre. 

Q: You know, I flip around the channels at night, and I find this guy, you know, Tucker Carlson. You heard of him? 

A: Yeah. He’s the guy that really loves me, right?

Q: The other night he called you Lord Fauci and said, “Has America put too much faith in just one man?” “Unelected Fauci has been leading this country” and “Fauci has made a lot of wrong predictions.” Does that get under your skin? Do you feel threatened or concerned when you see that sort of thing floating out there? 

A: Well, I’m not concerned about what he says. Though you could say that when he does that, it triggers some of the crazies in society to start threatening me, actually threatening me, which happens. 

Q: And you can’t always know everything, right? 

A: Yeah. Science is an iterative, self-correcting process. When you’re involved with a static situation that doesn’t change, then the scientific facts and what you use as evidence to make decisions and policy recommendations shouldn’t change much at all. But when you’re dealing with a moving target, an evolving pandemic with which we’ve never had any prior experience, you’ve got to make decisions and recommendations based on the data and the evidence that you have at any given time. But as the situation evolves, so too will the evidence. So too will the data. And you need to be humble enough and flexible enough to change things based on what the latest data and evidence are. That is interpreted by some people as “Science is wrong, they’re changing their minds, they’re fooling us.” No. What you’re doing is you’re being flexible enough as you learn more and more to make the data and the evidence drive your recommendations. 

Q: You hear all these stories about somebody who’s had it: “Oh, I’m fine.” I mean, my 99-year-old grandmother had it, showed no symptoms and was OK. But then you hear this heartbreaking story about a 35-year-old in perfect health who doesn’t make it or takes months and months to recover. Why are there so many variables in how people respond to the virus? 

A: That’s the most important question, because it’s at the root of the misunderstanding, the real misunderstanding about this virus. So, as you know, I’ve been chasing viruses, as it were, and responding to outbreaks now for almost 40 years, right from the beginning of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, through pandemic flu, Ebola, Zika, anthrax, all that. This is the only pathogen I’ve ever seen that has such a wide range of manifestations that you have to scratch your head. 

Q: Do you want to be back at the White House briefings? Or do you prefer to do what you’ve been doing, which is going all over the place and spreading this message? 

A: I like it this way – where I can be on a discussion without being in a situation where it’s a perfect setup to pit one against the press. When you have the president there, everybody’s watching your every move. You put your hand here, you scratch your ear. You know, it’s not the right way to educate the public. So I much prefer the kinds of things we’re doing now where you get the opportunity one-on-one in a television interview, a radio interview or a podcast, Instagram. 

Q: We haven’t spoken about voting. Do you plan to vote in-person or mail in your ballot?

A: I likely will vote in person. But only under the circumstances that I see in grocery stores, what I see at Starbucks – six or more feet apart and don’t move until the person ahead of you does. I believe that the polling stations are going to do that, but I absolutely understand people who have a concern about that and they should be able to vote by mail. 

Q: If you could, for those of us who sometimes wake up with this feeling of doom, how do we turn this around? How do we stop the suffering? Can you tell us what keeps you going and why we should be optimistic? 

A: Well, that’s a good way to end the discussion, Geoff, because this will end. I mean, when you’re in something that’s so stressful, you have to worry about despair setting in. Like, “My God, I’m in a hopeless situation.” It’s not. It will end. We will get out of this and we will return to normal. Don’t give up. Don’t despair. Don’t throw caution to the wind. We can end this. The combination of pulling together with public health measures and the scientific advances of vaccines and therapies and preventions. I will guarantee you that. 

WHO warns young people are driving virus’s spread #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

WHO warns young people are driving virus’s spread

Health & BeautyAug 19. 2020

By The Washington Post · William Wan, Moriah Balingit · NATIONAL, WORLD, HEALTH, POLITICS, SCIENCE-ENVIRONMENT, EDUCATION, HEALTH-NEWS 
The World Health Organization warned Tuesday that young people are becoming the primary drivers of the spread of the novel coronavirus in many countries – a worrisome trend experts fear may grow in the United States as many colleges and schools begin to reopen.

Many nations in Asia, which had previously pushed infections to enviably low rates, have experienced surges in recent weeks at the same time that the age of those infected skewed younger.

“People in their 20s, 30s and 40s are increasingly driving the spread,” Takeshi Kasai, the WHO’s Western Pacific regional director, said at a news briefing on Tuesday. “The epidemic is changing.”

More than half of confirmed infections in Australia and the Philippines in recent weeks have been in people younger than 40, WHO officials said, a stark contrast to predominantly older patients from the previous months. In Japan, 65 percent of recent infections occurred in people below age 40.

Because symptoms are often milder in the young, Kasai noted, many are unaware they are infected.

“This increases the risk of spillovers to the most vulnerable: the elderly, the sick, people in long-term care, people who live in densely populated urban areas and underserved rural areas,” Kasai said.

The global health agency’s warnings come amid intense debate in the United States about whether to bring students back to classrooms. So far, at least 168,000 people in the United States have died of covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, according to a Washington Post analysis.

For colleges and universities, where students in their late teens and 20s live in tight quarters and mingle at off-campus gatherings, the problem has proved particularly vexing.

The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill confidently reopened campus last week with social distancing measures, including leaving dorms partially vacant and blocking off chairs in lecture halls so students had to sit farther apart. But abruptly, on Monday, the school decided to close again when 177 students tested positive for the virus, as outbreaks sprang up in residence halls and a fraternity house.

Other colleges are reporting similarly concerning numbers.

On Tuesday, the University of Notre Dame announced that it will halt in-person teaching for at least two weeks after reporting that 147 people had tested positive since Aug. 3. Michigan State University also said Tuesday that it will shift to remote learning for the fall semester after 187 people in surrounding East Lansing were linked to an outbreak at a college bar in July.

At least 189 people at the University of Kentucky have tested positive for the virus since Aug. 3, according to the university’s website, representing a little more than 1 percent of those tested.

But public universities in several states are forging ahead with plans to fully reopen campuses, including those in Georgia and Florida, which have among the highest infection rates in the nation.

While unwilling to close those campuses, governors in Texas and Florida in recent weeks have instituted limits on bars and alcohol consumption, citing the skyrocketing number of young people who are contracting the virus. The actions came after videos of packed bars and crowded house parties with no partygoers wearing masks put several college towns on high alert.

An analysis by Davidson College in North Carolina that examined two public institutions in every state found that 23 planned some kind of in-person instruction. Experts say they are doing so in the face of stark warning signs of a potentially hazardous fall term ahead.

California’s public colleges and universities have decided to conduct most classes virtually. Several others, including Brown University and the University of Maryland, had planned to open but abruptly reversed course before the start of the school year.

Four major college athletic conferences – the Big Ten, the Pacific-12, the Mid-American Conference and the Mountain West – have canceled fall seasons to protect players and other students who would normally crowd into stadiums and arenas for games.

Students at several U.S. universities have staged “die-in” demonstrations – socially distanced on the grass with mock tombstones – to protest the reopening, amid concerns that in-person teaching may result in rapid spread of the coronavirus on campuses. In recent days, such protests have unfolded at Elon University in North Carolina, Georgia Tech, the University of Arizona, the University of Georgia and Virginia Commonwealth University.

Meanwhile, K-12 schools face similar issues. Schools in Georgia, Mississippi and Tennessee that reopened this month had to shutter or change course when students or staff tested positive for the coronavirus, forcing thousands to quarantine.

The closures have raised fears among educators who are set to return to school this month, including in Florida, where the state has mandated nearly every school system to open its doors. There, the state’s largest teachers union has sued Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican, an ally of President Donald Trump who has been repeatedly criticized for sidelining scientists and public health officials.

Many students throughout the country returned to classrooms this month only to have plans for in-person instruction derailed when students or staff tested positive or had to quarantine.

In Mississippi, at least 2,035 students and 589 teachers have been ordered to quarantine because of possible coronavirus exposure, state officials said Monday. Those numbers came after some schools restarted in-person instruction Monday, while others had not yet resumed classes.

In Arizona, one school district voted to reopen but had to cancel all classes Monday because many teachers refused to show up.

In a second news conference Tuesday that took place in Geneva, WHO officials warned school systems to proceed cautiously but also pleaded with young people not to indulge in increasingly risky behavior as the pandemic persists.

“We just need to make sure the message is getting out, particularly to young people, particularly to children and young adults, that you are not invulnerable to this and you can get infected,” said Maria Van Kerkhove, head of the WHO’s emerging disease and zoonosis unit. “We are seeing young people who are dying from this virus.”

In the United States, the virus has exacted a disproportionate toll on children of color. Hispanic children are about eight times more likely and Black children five times more likely to be hospitalized with covid-19 than their White peers, according to a study released this month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Analysis: Virus invaded capital region multiple times in March #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Analysis: Virus invaded capital region multiple times in March

Health & BeautyAug 18. 2020A medical worker in March instructs a driver at a coronavirus testing site in Arlington, Va. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Michael A. McCoyA medical worker in March instructs a driver at a coronavirus testing site in Arlington, Va. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Michael A. McCoy

By The Washington Post · Joel Achenbach · NATIONAL, HEALTH, SCIENCE-ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH-NEWS 
WASHINGTON – The coronavirus’s late-winter attack on the national capital region came from multiple, separate introductions, and the pathogen quickly spread among people who had not traveled outside the region recently or had known contact with infected people, according to a genetic analysis of virus samples from more than 100 patients.

The study, from Johns Hopkins University scientists, highlights the challenge in preventing the arrival and spread of the highly contagious virus within a region that anchors the Northeast Corridor and boasts three international airports and a highly mobile population.

The researchers report high levels of genetic diversity in the 114 genomes they completed, based on samples from patients treated in Johns Hopkins-affiliated hospitals in Maryland and Washington D.C. from March 11 to March 31. The research has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal but has been posted online at the preprint server medRxiv.

There are five major genetic groupings, known as clades, of the novel coronavirus, and all five were represented in the viral samples from patients. That suggested a single introduction could not have triggered all of those March infections. Instead, the virus must have been arriving at many different times.

Another important finding: The different genetic profiles of the virus infecting people in the Washington region did not correspond to any clear difference in disease severity among patients.

Where the virus came from is not covered by the report, and the researchers could not tell if the introductions came directly from places overseas or from points within the United States. A study by scientists at New York University showed that much of the early coronavirus spread in New York City was due to introductions from Europe.

“There were probably five or more introductions sometime before the end of March,” said study co-author Shirlee Wohl, a genomics expert at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “Even as early as March, the first three weeks of the outbreak, we were already seeing diversity rivaling the global diversity of this virus.”

This latest study and others preceding it provide clear evidence that the United States, and certainly big cities on the East Coast, were dealing with community spread of the virus well in advance of major shutdown efforts, including the Trump administration’s decision to ban travel from most European countries starting March 13.

“The number of introductions that occurred would make it difficult to enact a travel ban, would make it difficult to do anything except screen everybody with a diagnostic test,” said study co-author Peter Thielen, a molecular biologist at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory.

The diversity of virus in the national capital region “highlights the connectedness of the region to both the national and global epidemic, and the challenges that would likely confront any control strategy predicated on low rates of introduction,” the report states.

The NYU study found that the virus may have been spreading in New York as early as late January. A scientific conference attended by international travelers in Boston in late February has been dubbed a “superspreader” event that seeded the virus in many places in the United States.

According to the new Hopkins report, Maryland reported its first case of covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, on March 5. Two days later, the District and Virginia reported their first cases. Those patients were probably infected many days before, Thielen said.

Only 22% of the patients studied by the Hopkins researchers had traveled to places with known outbreaks of the virus, the report said.

All viruses mutate, and by the time the coronavirus reached the national capital region, it had mutated slightly. The Hopkins scientists counted a total of 153 genetic mutations in their virus samples, compared with the reference sample from Wuhan, China, where the outbreak is believed to have ignited.

But most mutations actually impair the fitness of the virus or have no effect at all. The Hopkins research did not find evidence that the variants of the virus led to any difference in patient outcomes, regardless of sex, race, symptoms or underlying conditions.

“The diversity of virus genetics, clinical symptoms, and patient outcomes suggests that viral mutations are not the main driver of clinical presentation,” the new study states.

Several recent studies have suggested that one mutation, known as D614G, has altered the structure of the spike protein of the virus in a way that could potentially facilitate transmission. That mutation is now seen across the planet, including in many of the virus samples in the national capital region, but the scientific community has not endorsed the conjecture that the virus has become more contagious.

Thielen pointed out that, without a vaccine, and with relatively few people having been exposed and having antibodies to the virus, the coronavirus is sailing along with no natural or artificial obstacles.

“Right now, with no immunity in the population, there’s not much pressure on the virus to evade immunity, which is what would drive transmissibility,” Thielen said.

CDC asks four states and a city to draft coronavirus vaccine distribution plans #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

CDC asks four states and a city to draft coronavirus vaccine distribution plans

Health & BeautyAug 15. 2020

By The Washington Post · Lena H. Sun, Brady Dennis · NATIONAL, HEALTH, SCIENCE-ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH-NEWS 
WASHINGTON – The federal government is asking four states and one city to draft plans for how they would distribute a coronavirus vaccine when limited doses become available, possibly as early as this fall.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Defense Department and other agencies began working with officials in California, Florida, Minnesota, North Dakota and Philadelphia this week to develop plans to transport and store vaccine doses, and to prioritize who would receive them.

Those plans, which will take into account each location’s racial and ethnic makeup, population density and other factors, will be shared with other states to help with their own vaccine distribution planning. The discussions with states this week offer some of the first details of the federal government’s plans at a time when information shared by the administration has been limited and often confusing. 

The race for a vaccine continues to unfold amid the backdrop of a crippling pandemic that shows few signs of abating. 

As of Friday, at least 164,ooo Americans have died after becoming infected, according to data tracked by The Washington Post. The seven-day average for deaths remains above 1,000 per day, where it has remained since July 27. On average, more than 50,000 new U.S. cases have been diagnosed per day since July 6. On Friday, California became the first state to report more than 600,000 coronavirus cases.

The United States has begun planning the largest vaccination campaign ever undertaken, requiring extraordinary coordination, planning and communication. U.S. officials said this week that Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration’s effort to expedite development of coronavirus countermeasures, is on track to deliver tens of millions of vaccine doses by January.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly said he hopes a viable vaccine can be ready before year’s end – a startlingly fast goal compared with the normal process – but public health experts have said the timetable remains in flux.

No vaccine for the novel coronavirus, which causes the disease named covid-19, has yet been approved. But of the roughly 200 experimental vaccines aimed at ending the pandemic, two have moved into the advanced stage of testing in the United States in thousands of people to check their effectiveness and safety.

In planning discussions, one of the hottest topics involves freezers. At least one vaccine candidate is expected to require storage at very cold temperatures, about minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 94 Fahrenheit). 

A top CDC official told state immunization officials Wednesday that states probably won’t be expected to buy special freezers. But if a vaccine is approved by the Food and Drug Administration that requires such cold storage, states should prepare sites for mass vaccination clinics, because doctors’ offices aren’t likely to store and administer such shots. 

On Friday, the Defense and Health and Human Services departments announced that McKesson Corp. will be a central distributor of the vaccines and related supplies. The CDC is executing an existing contract option of $178 million with McKesson to support vaccine distribution, an HHS statement said. McKesson also distributed the H1N1 vaccine during that pandemic in 2009-2010. The company will work under the CDC’s guidance to ship the vaccines to sites where shots will be administered, the statement said.

Although Trump has said repeatedly that the military will deliver vaccines, the Defense Department “is not actually going to be distributing or delivering the vaccines itself,” Paul Mango, deputy chief of staff for policy at HHS, told reporters this week. Rather, the military will handle logistics of manufacturing, including acquisition of raw material, establishing factories and training workers.

“With few exceptions, our commercial distribution partners will be responsible for handling all the vaccines,” Mango said in an email Thursday. 

In the months ahead, state and federal officials will face a huge logistical challenge. They must figure out how to transport and store massive amounts of vaccine. They must also determine who should get the first doses. 

The first doses will probably be given to high-priority groups such as front-line health-care personnel and essential workers. Final recommendations on who is considered high priority are expected to be made this fall by an independent advisory committee and a federal immunization advisory panel.

In a letter dated Aug. 4 and sent to state officials, the CDC directed states to make several assumptions for their planning.

States should assume any vaccine will be distributed directly to health-care providers. Vaccine providers must enroll with their jurisdiction’s immunization program to receive doses. Needles and syringes and limited amounts of face masks and face shields will be distributed to providers “proportionately by the federal government at no cost,” the letter to states said.

The amount of vaccine allocated to each jurisdiction will be based on several factors, including population size, the letter states.

Recommendations on which groups should receive vaccines will likely change, depending on the characteristics of each vaccine, available supply and the disease’s epidemiology.

In a meeting with state immunization officials and other experts Wednesday, Nancy Messonnier, who leads the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, stressed the need for urgency and flexibility in completing plans by Oct. 1, the earliest she said vaccines could be available.

“We need states to have draft plans even if the draft plans aren’t perfect,” she told the group. 

Other U.S. officials have said such an October scenario is extremely unlikely.

“That would be astounding,” National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins said during a Thursday HHS briefing. The only way that could happen, he said, is if one of the advanced trials underway was able to enroll volunteers “at absolute record speed,” and the vaccine was deemed safe and effective by the FDA even before all the volunteers signed up.

“That’s a number of unlikelihoods piled on top of each other,” Collins said, adding, “Maybe November, December would be my best bet.”

The relentless nature of the pandemic has battered not only the nation’s economy and those on the front line of combating the virus, but also a large swatch of ordinary Americans. 

A new report from the CDC on Friday found that 41 percent of more than 5,400 respondents to a recent Web-based survey reported “considerably elevated adverse mental health conditions associated with covid-19,” including the 30 percent who outlined symptoms of anxiety and depression.

At least 13 percent of those who responded with mental health symptoms reported having started use or increasing use of controlled substances, and nearly 11 percent said they had seriously considered suicide in the previous 30 days.

Hispanic respondents had a higher prevalence of anxiety disorder and depressive disorder symptoms, substance abuse and suicidal thoughts than non-Hispanic Whites or Asians. The report noted that Black respondents also saw an increase in substance use and suicidal thoughts in the past 30 days more than Whites and Asians who participated.

Responses to the pandemic have also acutely affected essential workers and unpaid caregivers, according to the report, which concluded that the identified high-risk groups should be prioritized in intervention and prevention efforts.

Friday also brought the latest reminders that the virus is adept at spreading wherever people gather, as the rocky reopening of schools across the country has demonstrated. 

Less than a week into the start of classes at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, school officials on Friday announced two clusters of coronavirus cases in student housing.

The university said in an alert sent to students and staff that the clusters, which are five or more cases within the same buildings, were identified at Ehringhaus Community, a freshman dorm, and Granville Towers apartments.

The school didn’t say how many infections are part of the outbreaks. A spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from The Washington Post.

The news of the clusters comes as other schools bring back students and report surges in cases. The University of Notre Dame tallied 29 confirmed cases Friday – more than double its count two days ago, according to a schoolwide tracker.

One of the main concerns for students, parents and administrators is the spread of the virus in student housing, especially in communal spaces or where residents may share close contact.

Columbia University President Lee Bollinger announced Friday that the school will “drastically scale back” student housing, meaning all classes will need to be held virtually.

Several European countries also ended the week with rising coronavirus cases and new restrictions in place in an effort to contain outbreaks without having to revert to major shutdowns.

Amid spiking case counts, Greece on Friday extended a midnight curfew on bars and restaurants, as well as a 50-person cap on public gatherings in areas with increasing coronavirus cases.

Spain on Friday issued a ban on nightclubs, late-night drinking, and smoking and drinking in public after the country recorded 2,935 new cases, including 8,000 since Wednesday. Spain was one of the epicenters of the virus in March and April, and the country went into a strict lockdown to flatten its curve. Since reopening, however, the tourism-reliant country has seen a sharp jump in cases again.

Italy on Friday announced that holidaymakers returning from Spain, Greece, Croatia and Malta would have to be tested for the virus. And Germany expanded its travel warning for Spain, marking the whole country except for the Canary Islands as high-risk and requiring coronavirus tests for all returnees.

Meanwhile, a ban on all “nonessential” travel at U.S. land borders with Canada and Mexico will extend into its sixth month, officials said Friday.

Acting U.S. homeland security secretary Chad Wolf and Canadian Public Safety Minister Bill Blair announced the extension on Twitter.

“We will continue to do what’s necessary to keep our communities safe,” Blair said.

The restrictions were imposed in mid-March and have been extended every month since. The current measures, which were set to expire next week, will remain in place until Sept. 21.

NYC covid-19 death toll rivals fatality rate during 1918 flu epidemic, researchers say #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

NYC covid-19 death toll rivals fatality rate during 1918 flu epidemic, researchers say

Health & BeautyAug 14. 2020Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, left, and Rep. Jamie B. Raskin (D-Md.) greet one another with an elbow bump after July 31 hearing. (Kevin Dietsch/AP)Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, left, and Rep. Jamie B. Raskin (D-Md.) greet one another with an elbow bump after July 31 hearing. (Kevin Dietsch/AP) 

By The Washington Post · Lenny Bernstein, Brady Dennis · NATIONAL, HEALTH, POLITICS, SCIENCE-ENVIRONMENT, HEALTH-NEWS 
The increase in deaths in New York City during the early months of the covid-19 pandemic rivals the death toll there at the peak of the 1918 flu pandemic, according to an analysis published Thursday.

The comparison, published online in the medical journal JAMA Network Open, found that the number of deaths from all causes was roughly equal during the two peak months of the flu epidemic and the first 61 days of the current outbreak.

The H1N1 flu pandemic eventually killed 50 million people a century ago, about 675,000 of them in the United States. The current pandemic has claimed at least 748,000 lives worldwide, about 163,000 of them in the United States, according to a tally kept by The Washington Post.

“For anyone who doesn’t understand the magnitude of what we’re living through, this pandemic is comparable in its effect on mortality to what everyone agrees is the previous worst pandemic,” said Jeremy Faust, an emergency physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston who led the team that conducted the data review.

(The AIDS epidemic has killed more than 700,000 people in the United States since it began in 1981.)

There were 31,589 deaths from all causes in New York during the peak period of the flu epidemic, nearly the same as the 33,465 tallied in the 61 days after the first death on March 11 of this year, the analysis shows.

New York in 1918 had a smaller population of 5.5 million people, so the death rate of 287 per 100,000 “person-months” was greater than the 202 of the current covid-19 pandemic. Person-months is a way of measuring the number of deaths in a population during a specific period of time.

But the current outbreak has seen a more dramatic rise in “excess deaths” – the number of fatalities above what would be expected in a normal year. With better medical care, public health, hygiene and medicines such as antibiotics, New York typically has about half the death rate of a century earlier – about 50 per person-month instead of 100. So the current outbreak has quadrupled the death rate, while the flu pandemic nearly tripled it.

The Post has reported that the United States recorded about 37,100 excess deaths in March and the first two weeks of April, nearly 13,500 more than were attributed to covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, during that time. The report was based on an analysis of federal data conducted for The Post by a research team led by the Yale School of Public Health.

The findings on Thursday brought the latest reminder of the startling human cost that the current pandemic has inflicted in recent months – and not just in New York, but around the nation. 

“This is the greatest public health crisis that’s hit this nation in a century,” Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said during an interview with WebMD, noting that years of underinvestment in public health infrastructure had left the United States “unprepared” for the pandemic and its still-growing toll

Redfield said the mounting fatalities will make covid-19 “clearly” one of the leading causes of death in the country by the year’s end.

Still, Redfield said he is optimistic that a vaccine could be ready for production before the end of the year, as a particularly dangerous flu season looms. He was similarly hopeful that the high rate of infections in the country would drop if Americans systematically wear masks, maintain social distancing, practice good hygiene and avoid large gatherings.

“You do those four things, it will bring this outbreak down,” he said. “But if we don’t do that, as I said last April, this could be the worst fall from a public health perspective we’ve ever had.”

Also on Thursday, presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden called for an immediate nationwide mask mandate that would require everyone in the country to wear face coverings when outside for the next three months.

Doing so would save the lives of at least 40,000 people, he said in brief remarks in Delaware that followed a lengthy briefing on the coronavirus crisis.

“Every single American should be wearing a mask when they’re outside for the next three months at a minimum,” Biden said, emphasizing each word. “Every governor should mandate it.”

Biden described that simple act as a civic responsibility, comparing it with giving blood or donating food to those in need. Although masks can be uncomfortable, he said, they are key to getting life back to normal.

“Be a patriot. Protect your fellow citizens,” he said. “Step up. Do the right thing.”

President Donald Trump, who earlier this year expressed doubt about the value of masks, has since endorsed their use. “Maybe they’re great and maybe they’re just good, and maybe they’re not so good,” Trump said Thursday during a White House coronavirus briefing. “But frankly, what do you have to lose?”

But he slammed Biden’s proposal. “He thinks it’s good politics I guess,” the president said. 

“I trust the American people and their governors very much,” he said. “I trust the American people and the governors want to do the right thing to make the smart decisions. Joe doesn’t, Joe doesn’t. Joe doesn’t know too much.”

Trump accused Biden of “playing politics from the sidelines” and called the former vice president’s plan “regressive,” “anti-scientific” and “very defeatist.”

In few places are the looming worries about the months ahead more immediate than in the nation’s public schools, where families and administrators alike face a series of excruciating decisions. 

Southern states such as Louisiana, Georgia, Arkansas and Texas have some of the earliest back-to-school start dates in the country. Parents, educators and elected officials have watched these early districts closely for clues on whether it’s safe to send teachers and students back into classrooms nationwide – even as the Trump administration has insisted that schools need to return to in-person learning.

So far, the news is not encouraging.

In Georgia, more than 900 students and staff in the Cherokee County School District have been ordered to quarantine after school officials reported nearly 60 students and staff had tested positive for covid-19.

Days after a photo went viral showing students packed into a hallway at North Paulding High School in suburban Atlanta, the district confirmed at least 35 new infections, according to WXIA-TV, which obtained a letter sent to parents.

In central Georgia, people in at least seven schools in the Houston County School District had tested positive for the coronavirus as of late Wednesday, the Macon Telegraph reported.

In Louisiana’s Livingston Parish, at least 150 students and staff have been forced to quarantine after positive cases emerged there, according to the Advocate of Baton Rouge.

Schools that opened even earlier have seen similar outcomes: A Mississippi school that resumed classes the first week of August reported one infected student; within two weeks, 116 students were sent home to quarantine.

If schools remain in limbo, so too do millions of American businesses and workers who are navigating a wave of unemployment and bankruptcies. 

AMC Theatres, the country’s largest movie theater chain, announced Thursday it will resume operations next week after a five-month shutdown, becoming the latest service-sector giant to reopen to the public at a time when infections remain high throughout the United States.

More than 100 AMC theaters in at least 19 states will start screening movies again starting Aug. 20, the company said in a statement. To lure customers back in, all tickets that day will be 15 cents – a campaign AMC is branding “Movies in 2020 at 1920 Prices.”

Guests and workers will be required to wear masks at all times, and auditoriums will operate at 30 percent capacity or less, depending on local restrictions. The company said it will also make hand sanitizer available and regularly disinfect its facilities.

The pandemic has forced AMC into a dire financial position. It furloughed more than 600 corporate employees in the spring, and in June, after reporting a $941.5 million drop in first-quarter revenue, the company warned in a financial filing that it had “substantial doubt” about its ability to stay afloat.

Meanwhile, about 960,000 workers filed for unemployment insurance last week, which marks the first time that initial claims dipped below 1 million since mid-March, when the pandemic first took hold and stay-at-home orders vacated workplaces.

The drop in jobless claims comes as the economy takes prominence in the presidential election. Trump has been touting the numbers of jobs that have been regained in the past three months, even though the unemployment rate and weekly claims remain around historic highs.

U.S. stocks also came close to making financial history Thursday, soaring toward record highs before slipping in late-day trading.

Russia unveils coronavirus vaccine, claiming victory in global race #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Russia unveils coronavirus vaccine, claiming victory in global race

Health & BeautyAug 12. 2020

By The Washington Post · Isabelle Khurshudyan, Carolyn Y. Johnson · WORLD, HEALTH, EUROPE, HEALTH-NEWS 

MOSCOW – Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed Tuesday that Russian scientists achieved a breakthrough in the global vaccine race, announcing that the country has become the first to approve an experimental covid-19 vaccine and that his own daughter has already taken a dose.

Officials have pledged to administer the possible vaccine to millions of people this summer and fall – including tens of thousands of teachers and front-line health-care workers in the coming weeks before even finishing clinical trials – with the formula developed by the Gamaleya Institute in Moscow.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/video/c/embed/7446a98d-9276-4687-9394-dc2118c25289?ptvads=block&playthrough=false

But Russia’s hard charge toward a potential vaccine has raised alarm among global health experts that the country is jumping dangerously ahead of critical, large-scale testing that is essential to determine whether a possible covid-19 protection is safe and effective. Few details of the Gamaleya research have been made public or underwent peer review.

Russia’s Health Ministry did not respond to requests for comment, and the Gamaleya Institute referred an interview request to the ministry.

Konstantin Chumakov, a member of the Global Virus Network, an international coalition working on viral threats, said “it is scientifically impossible to prove efficacy” without widespread trials, known as Phase 3.

“Using it in general population before the results of Phase 3 trials are fully studied is a gamble,” he said. “A Russian roulette, if you will.”

The vaccine is named Sputnik V, a reference to the first orbital satellite, which was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957 and set off the global space race. The name also evoked how Putin’s government has seen the vaccine race as a point of national pride and competition on a global scale, with labs in the United States, Europe, China and elsewhere are also in the hunt for a potential vaccine.

“Of course, what counts most is for us to be able to ensure the unconditional safety of the use of this vaccine and its efficiency in the future. I hope that this will be accomplished,” Putin said at a meeting with government members Tuesday, adding that one of his two daughters had received the potential Gamaleya vaccine. He didn’t identify which daughter.

Russian labs race to find a vaccine by fall, but concerns raised about fast-track methods

The aggressive strategy from a country eager to declare a victory amid one of the worst outbreaks in the world has been criticized by outside scientists who worry that shots could be harmful or give people a false sense of security about their immunity. China has already authorized one vaccine for use in its military, ahead of definitive data that it is safe and effective.

“This is changing the rules. This is cutting corners,” said J. Stephen Morrison, senior vice president at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “It’s a major development, and it starts with Putin. He needs a win.

“It’s hearkening [back to] the Sputnik moment,” he added. “It’s harking back to the glory days of Russian science, it’s putting the Russian propaganda machine into full gear. I think this could backfire.”

– – –

The international jockeying to find a vaccine has sharpened concerns about vaccine nationalism, in which countries’ need to declare victory over the pandemic could bypass long-standing safeguards to protect people from unproven medical products by ensuring that their benefits outweigh the risks.

For Russia, leading the vaccine race is an avenue for greater geopolitical clout. But the country is also looking to avoid appearing dependent on Western powers, with whom relations are historically poor, analysts said.

Last month, security officials from the United States, Britain and Canada accused hackers linked to a Russian intelligence service of trying to steal information from researches working to produce coronavirus vaccines in those countries.

Russian officials denied that, and Kirill Dmitriev, head of the Russian Direct Investment Fund that bankrolled the country’s vaccination effort, dismissed international scrutiny of Russia’s own vaccine efforts as political.

“For countries, it’s difficult to acknowledge that, ‘How is it possible that Russia, which has been always shown as this backward, authoritarian country, can do this?'” Dmitriev said last week.

Dmitriev said Russia has received preliminary applications for more than 1 billion doses of the vaccine from 20 countries and is prepared to manufacture more than 500 million doses of the vaccine per year in five countries.

Russia’s move could potentially increase political pressure on other countries to take a similar bet on an unproven vaccine.

That’s a huge concern because any adverse effects from the vaccine are far less likely to be transparently reported if it is given outside of a rigorous trial. There’s also concern, Morrison said, that people will be coerced to take an unproven and potentially dangerous vaccine to keep their jobs.

“We’re seeing, in all countries, the tension between the political need to demonstrate to the public you’re doing something useful and the scientific hesitancy to only act when a vaccine is shown to be safe and effective,” said Mark Poznansky, director of the Vaccine and Immunotherapy Center at Massachusetts General Hospital.

– – –

At a congressional hearing this month, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases testified that it would be problematic if countries made a vaccine available before extensive testing.

“I do hope that the Chinese and the Russians are actually testing the vaccine before they are administering the vaccine to anyone, because claims of having a vaccine ready to distribute before you do testing, I think, is problematic at best,” Fauci said.

Driven by the urgency of the pandemic, countries around the world are placing massive advance orders for vaccines and spending billions of dollars to help companies scale up production before they are proven safe and effective.

The risk is mainly a financial one – if the vaccines do not succeed in large-scale clinical trials, they will not be used.

The leading Russian vaccine candidate has so far been tested in small, early clinical trials designed to find the right dose and assess any safety concerns. It was given to scientists who developed it, in self-experimentation that is unusual in modern science, as well as to 50 members of the Russian military and a handful of other volunteers.

Dmitriev said Russia will go ahead with Phase 3, a larger trial involving thousands of participants normally considered an essential precursor to receive regulatory approval. Parallel trials are planned in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and possibly Brazil and the Philippines, he said.

The southern Brazilian state of Paraná announced that it will begin producing the possible Russian vaccine in November.

Russia also intends to start using the potential vaccine on willing front-line medical workers and teachers, who will be asked to document how they’re feeling.

But while Russian officials have repeatedly assured that the vaccine is safe, Dmitriev was unable to say whether it was tested on someone already infected with the coronavirus. Some vaccines, such as one developed for dengue fever and used in the Philippines, can make the disease more severe.

“We will have tens of thousands of people already vaccinated like this in August,” Dmitriev said.

The World Health Organization still lists the Gamaleya vaccine as being in Phase 1.

WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic said at a briefing in Geneva that, “We are in close contact with Russian health authorities and discussions are ongoing with respect to possible WHO prequalification of the vaccine.”

“But again,” he continued, “prequalification of any vaccine includes the rigorous review and assessment of all required safety and efficacy data.”

– – –

Most of what outside scientists know about the experimental vaccine is from secondhand sources and not from published medical studies. Dmitriev acknowledged that while that may be unusual elsewhere, Russia is traditionally secretive in its scientific endeavors.

The results from Phases 1 and 2 will be published by the end of this month, he said, adding that the delay was waiting for formal registration.

“You have to think a little bit about the Russian system; after Sputnik was flying for five days, only on day five did Russia acknowledge that there is a satellite flying,” he said.

Russia’s vaccine uses two doses to deliver different harmless cold viruses, or adenoviruses, that have been engineered to carry into cells the gene for the spiky protein that studs the outside of the coronavirus.

The approach was inspired by the Ebola vaccines Gamaleya developed in 2015 and 2018. But while Putin boasted earlier this year that Russia’s Ebola vaccine “proved to be the most effective in the world,” the WHO still lists it as a “candidate vaccine” on its website.

Adenoviruses are also being used by scientists at the pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson, the Chinese company CanSino Biologics and the University of Oxford in their vaccine candidates.

But those other efforts have published data on how vaccines perform in animals that range from mice to monkeys, and also presented data from early human trials showing the severity of any reactions, ranging from soreness at the injection site to fevers.

The CanSino vaccine uses one of the same harmless viruses the Russians are using in its vaccine, and its results have been disappointing to some scientists.

Dmitriev said his personal confidence in Russia’s vaccine was so high that he, his wife and his parents, both over the age of 70, were test subjects. He said just his wife reported a mild fever the first night of the injection.

“It’s not some crazy Russians using some crazy not proven stuff,” Dmitriev said. “Adenovirus existed with humans for thousands of years, and we made a bet on this proven platform because we understand that it takes very little time to develop, given the challenges.”

Many workers don’t get new paid sick leave, because of ‘broad’ exemption for providers, report finds #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Many workers don’t get new paid sick leave, because of ‘broad’ exemption for providers, report finds

Health & BeautyAug 12. 2020

By The Washington Post · Eli Rosenberg · NATIONAL, BUSINESS, HEALTH, HEALTH-NEWS 

WASHINGTON – A government watchdog said in a new report out Tuesday that the Labor Department “significantly broadened” an exemption allowing millions of health-care workers to be exempted from paid sick leave as part of the law Congress passed in March to help workers during the coronavirus pandemic.

Congress passed the Families First Coronavirus Response Act back in March to ensure workers at small and medium sized companies were able to take paid leave if they or a family member became sick with coronavirus. The law exempts health-care providers as well as companies with more than 500 employees.

But an Office of the Inspector General report noted that a move by the Labor Department to more broadly expand how they categorize health care providers ended up leaving far more workers without a guarantee of paid sick leave than the agency’s estimate of 9 million.

While existing federal statutes define health care workers as doctors, someone practicing medicine or providing health care services, the Labor Department’s exemption from paid sick leave included anyone employed at a doctor’s office, clinic, testing facility or hospital, including temporary sites. The report also found the agency also exempted companies that contract with clinics and hospitals, such as those that produce medical equipment or tests related to Covid-19, the OIG found.

The report also suggested that the Labor Department is not doing enough to enforce the paid-sick-leave provisions, as well as its existing laws on pay and overtime issues.

In an effort to be socially distant, the federal agency acknowledged it has been foregoing fact-finding, on-site investigations, where an investigator examines all aspects of whether an employer is complying with federal labor laws. Instead the agency has been using so-called conciliations, which are telephone-only reviews limited to looking into a single issue affecting one or a few employees, with no fact-finding.

Critics of the Labor Department more hands-off approach to the pandemic have seized on the report as another indication of the ways in which the Trump administration has abandoned its commitments to worker safety.

“The Inspector General’s report makes clear that the Department of Labor went out of its way to limit the number of workers who could take emergency paid leave,” Rep. Robert Scott, D-Va., the chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, said in a statement. “This absence of meaningful enforcement of our nation’s basic workplace laws creates a major risk to workers who are already vulnerable to exploitation amid record unemployment.”

Before the pandemic, limited or full on-site investigations, a more robust way the agency looked into pay and overtime issues, made up about 53 percent of its inquiries. But since March 18, only 19 percent of those inquiries have been on-site investigations.

Actions taken to enforce the sick leave provisions in the Families First Coronavirus Response Act have skewed even further away from investigations: 85 percent have been resolved through conciliation.

The agency’s Wage and Hour Division responded to the OIG’s findings, noting that they were “developing and sharing models for conducting virtual investigations,” and they also pledged to maintain a backlog of delayed on-site investigations to be tackled when it was safer to conduct those reviews.

But critics suggest the pandemic alone is not sufficient excuse for the drop-off in investigations, some aspects of which could be done remotely.

“These numbers just look so different than the numbers that I’m used to seeing in terms of conciliations versus investigations,” said Sharon Block, a senior Obama administration labor department official. “It really does jump out. That 85 percent is just a really big number.”

The issue about expanding who gets to opt out of offering paid sick leave has been the subject of complaints, according to the OIG report, as well as a federal lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Letitia James. That lawsuit argued that the Department of Labor overstepped its authority by defining health-care providers in such broad terms, saying it could be skewed to include workers like teaching assistants or librarians at universities, employees who work in food services or tech support at medical schools, and cashiers at hospital gift shops and cafeterias.

Federal Judge Paul Oetken, of New York’s Southern District, struck down Department of Labor’s definition, as well as three other provisions last week – but confusion remains about whether his ruling applies only to employers in New York.

In an internal response to the OIG report, that predates the New York ruling, the Labor Department said that it agreed with many of the OIG’s recommendations and that it would continue to use its definition of health-care providers until the resolution of the federal lawsuit.

The Department of Labor did not reply to requests for comment about whether it planned to contest the judge’s ruling, or the other findings in the report.

The Inspector General pointed to other ways that the Department is not doing enough to adjust to the challenges of the post-pandemic world.

The OIG report said that while the agency’s Wage and Hour Division referenced the coronavirus in an operating plan in late May, it pointed out that the division “focuses more on what the agency has already accomplished rather than thinking proactively and describing how it will continue to ensure FFCRA compliance while still maintaining enforcement coverage,” the report noted.

The DOL did not provide any goals about the enforcement nor provide any requirements for tracking and reporting the new violations created by the FFCRA.

“With the predicted surge of covid-19 cases nationwide in upcoming months as more Americans return to work and as a consequence, an anticipated increase in complaint call volume to WHD, it would be expedient of the agency to devise a detailed plan as to how it intends to address this issue,” the OIG noted.

The report is the latest to spotlight the Trump administration’s employer-friendly approach to worker safety and protections.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the part of the Department of Labor which investigates and is charged with upholding worker safety, has been criticized by workers and advocates for failing to issue citations for worker safety issues during the pandemic in significant numbers. It had only issued four citations out of more than 7,900 coronavirus-related complains according to figures from July 21.

AstraZeneca to send Japan 120 million doses of vaccine #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

AstraZeneca to send Japan 120 million doses of vaccine

Health & BeautyAug 09. 2020

By Syndication Washington Post, The Japan News-Yomiuri · No Author · BUSINESS, WORLD, ASIA-PACIFIC 
The Japanese government has reached a supply deal with British drugmaker giant AstraZeneca for 120 million doses of a coronavirus vaccine when it is available. 

Health, Labor and Welfare Minister Katsunobu Kato said at a news conference Friday that Japan is to receive the vaccine as early as next year, with 30 million doses to be supplied by March, should AstraZeneca succeed in developing the drug.

AstraZeneca, which is developing the vaccine in collaboration with the University of Oxford, is in the final stages of clinical trials and is aiming to commercialize the vaccine in September.

The company will begin clinical trials in Japan this month to confirm the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine when it is administered to Japanese, he said. 

The firm has yet to decide whether the vaccine will be administered once or twice per person. The vaccine supply is sufficient for at least 60 million people.

“We will continue discussions with other vaccine manufacturers as well,” Kato said at the news conference.

Case count increases in Midwestern states with previously low infections #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

Case count increases in Midwestern states with previously low infections

Health & BeautyAug 04. 2020Photo by: The Washington Post — The Washington PostPhoto by: The Washington Post — The Washington Post

By The Washington Post · Anne Gearan, John Wagner, Jacqueline Dupree · NATIONAL, HEALTH, HEALTH-NEWS 
WASHINGTON – The novel coronavirus is surging in several Midwestern states that had not previously seen high infection rates, while average daily deaths remained elevated Monday in Southern and Western states hit with a resurgence of the disease after lifting some restrictions earlier this summer.

Missouri, Montana and Oklahoma are among those witnessing the largest percentage surge of infections over the past week, while, adjusted for population, the number of new cases in Alabama, Florida and Mississippi still outpaced all other states, according to a Washington Post analysis of health data. 

Experts also see worrying trends emerging in major East Coast and Midwestern cities, and they anticipate major outbreaks in college towns as classes resume in August.

The University of Texas at Austin notified students that parties are prohibited when the campus reopens in three weeks. The school cited city health guidelines prohibiting groups larger than 10 people and requiring a mask when out in public.

President Donald Trump continued his push to fully reopen schools, even as some of the nation’s largest districts are delaying in-person instruction amid continuing spread of the virus.

“Ideally, we want to open those schools. We want to open them,” Trump said during a White House news conference

Trump also said the United States is doing much better dealing with the virus than most other countries – a claim inconsistent with the facts – and accused the news media of trying to make him and the country look “as bad as possible.”

At least 4.6 million coronavirus cases and 151,000 fatalities have been reported in the United States since February. 

Despite growing momentum in the search for a vaccine and Trump’s confident assessment Monday that “we’re on pace to have a vaccine available this year, maybe far in advance of the end of the year,” the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) warned that “there’s no silver bullet at the moment, and there might never be.”

WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Monday that “a number of coronavirus vaccines are now in Phase 3 clinical trials, and we all hope to have a number of effective vaccines that can help prevent people from infection.”

He cautioned, however, that “of course there are concerns that we may not have a vaccine that may work” or that its protection would be effective for a short time.

The economic fallout from the virus widened, with the parent company of Men’s Wearhouse declaring bankruptcy as people have stayed away from offices and the suits and other business attire once needed for work.

Tailored Brands, which also owns Jos. A. Bank, K&G and Moores, filed for Chapter 11 protection on Sunday evening, the same day that department store chain Lord & Taylor did so. They are among about a dozen large retailers that have tipped into bankruptcy as pandemic-fueled store closures sent sales plummeting.

Top executives at Disney, IBM, Mastercard and Microsoft were among more than 100 business leaders who called on Congress to provide emergency relief for small businesses facing economic calamity.

In a letter sent to congressional leaders of both major political parties Monday, the executives issued a dire warning of mass closures triggered by the coronavirus, as companies report declining revenue and face the prospect of shutting down yet again to contain the outbreak.

The signatories put forward a series of recommendations, including federally guaranteed loans to last into 2021, flexibility in how those loans are put to use, partial loan forgiveness for small and midsize companies that have suffered significant revenue declines, and a focus on funding for businesses owned by people of color, who have less access to funding.

More than 4 million businesses have received emergency loans from the Small Business Administration, with Congress approving $700 billion in funding to support them. But for the 30 million small businesses in the country, that funding was too limited and short-lived, business leaders say. The letter calls for a more robust and sustained effort from the federal government.

“We cannot stress enough the urgent need to act,” the letter says. “Every day that passes without a comprehensive recovery program makes recovery more difficult.”

The business leaders predict another wave of permanent business closures by Labor Day if the government does not provide aid. 

Trump continued to insist that hydroxychloroquine is an effective treatment for the coronavirus even as leading health officials in his administration have concluded otherwise. The president suggested that opposition to its effectiveness is because he supports it, not because of science.

“Hydroxy has tremendous support, but politically it’s toxic because I supported it,” Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday. “If I would have said, ‘Do not use hydroxychloroquine under any circumstances,’ they would have come out and they would have said, ‘It’s a great, it’s a great thing.’ “

He recounted taking the anti-malaria drug in May after it was announced that a couple of White House staffers had tested positive for the coronavirus.

“I mean, I had no problem. I had no problem whatsoever. And importantly, I didn’t test positive,” Trump said.

Pressed by a reporter about the differing opinions of leading health experts, including Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease official, Trump stood his ground.

“I don’t agree with Fauci on everything,” Trump said.

In several recent interviews, Fauci has dismissed hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for the coronavirus, calling it ineffective.

Trump also feuded publicly with the other leading official face of the U.S. government response. Trump on Monday tweeted criticism of Deborah Birx, the physician overseeing the White House’s coronavirus efforts, a day after she warned that the United States is entering a “new phase” of the pandemic.

Trump tweeted that after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., criticized Birx for being “too positive” about his handling of the pandemic, the doctor “took the bait & hit us.” He appeared to be referring to Birx telling CNN on Sunday that increasing outbreaks in rural and urban areas are “different from March and April” and “extraordinarily widespread.”

A roller coaster fanatic was too overweight to ride his dream ‘giga coaster.’ It motivated him to lose 195 pounds. #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation.

A roller coaster fanatic was too overweight to ride his dream ‘giga coaster.’ It motivated him to lose 195 pounds.

Health & BeautyAug 02. 2020

The Orion giga coaster with a 300-foot drop at Kings Island amusement park in Mason, Ohio. MUST CREDIT: Photo courtesy of Jared Ream

The Orion giga coaster with a 300-foot drop at Kings Island amusement park in Mason, Ohio. MUST CREDIT: Photo courtesy of Jared Ream

By Special To The Washington Post · Cathy Free · FEATURES 

Five years ago, roller coaster enthusiast Jared Ream was excited to take another ride on his all-time favorite coaster – the 310-foot Millennium Force at Ohio’s Cedar Point amusement park – when he received some bad news.

Because he couldn’t buckle his safety restraint, a park employee told him he would have to get off the coaster train.

At 430 pounds, he was too big to go on the ride.

“There’s nothing worse – it’s called the ‘walk of shame,'” said Ream, 35, who works for a digital advertising company in Dayton, Ohio.

Jared Ream at Walt Disney World in November 2018. MUST CREDIT: Photo courtesy of Jared Ream.

Jared Ream at Walt Disney World in November 2018. MUST CREDIT: Photo courtesy of Jared Ream.

“It’s a terrible feeling when that little green light doesn’t come on to show that you’re buckled in,” he said. “Everyone is looking at you as you have to climb out of the car and walk away. To know that you’ve become so overweight that you can’t ride a roller coaster is painful and humiliating.”

Ream, a card-carrying member of American Coaster Enthusiasts who until then had ridden nearly 300 roller coasters around the country, was so embarrassed by the experience that he gave up his passion, he said.

Jared Ream before he rode Orion July 1, his first ride on a roller coaster in five years. MUST CREDIT: Photo courtesy of Jared Ream.

Jared Ream before he rode Orion July 1, his first ride on a roller coaster in five years. MUST CREDIT: Photo courtesy of Jared Ream.

Then last August, he learned that his favorite coaster manufacturer, Bolliger & Mabillard, was building a “giga coaster” – one of only a handful of full-circuit coasters between 300 and 399 feet tall around the world.

Named the Orion, the coaster would be located at Kings Island amusement park in Mason, Ohio, just 30 miles from Ream’s home in Dayton.

At that moment, said Ream, he made a decision: He was going to lose enough weight to safely buckle up and ride the Orion when it opened.

In less than 11 months, Ream lost 195 pounds by limiting himself to 2,000 calories a day, eating more fruit and vegetables and jogging in place in his garage while watching television.

He wrote an essay in the Dayton Daily News about the inspiration for his weight loss.

The essay began, “When people ask me how I did it, they usually think I’ll respond with Keto, Atkins, Paleo or even surgery. They’re wrong. My answer: Orion.”

Kings Island invited him to ride the Orion as many times as he liked on the park’s media day, one day before it opened to the public.

On July 1, weighing 240 pounds, he sat down in the car of the Orion and buckled in, overjoyed that he fit in the safety restraint. He finally took the 300-foot drop on his dream roller coaster.

“When I pulled down the lap restraint and heard it click, I couldn’t stop smiling,” he said. “And I even had room to spare. It was an incredible feeling – all of that hard work had paid off.”

Chad Showalter, director of communications for Kings Island, called Jared’s weight loss journey “nothing short of amazing.”

“Orion’s first 300-foot drop makes it only the seventh giga coaster on the planet,” he said, “which is a pretty incredible way to celebrate such an accomplishment.”

At 6 feet 9 inches, Ream has always been a large man, he said, but it wasn’t until he took a desk job in digital advertising in 2015 that he started gaining a lot of weight.

“It was a lack of caring, a lack of exercise,” he said. “I’d come home, watch TV and eat whatever I wanted instead of doing something healthy.”

As the months passed, his eating became more problematic.

“When I could no longer ride roller coasters – something I’m passionate about – that made it worse,” he said. “I’d feel sad about it and eat a piece of cake.”

Ream’s love of roller coasters goes back to the day he learned he met the height requirement as a boy on a trip to Kings Island with his parents and three older brothers.

“I love everything about them – the speed, the height, the thrill, the views,” he said. “I’ve never been a screamer, though. More than anything, I find roller coasters relaxing. I just sit back and let them take me where they want to go.”

For years, he had gone out of his way to ride the fastest, smoothest and steepest coasters in the country, timing summer business trips to hit a park or two before coming home.

When that came to an end because of his weight gain, Ream said he felt defeated.

“I figured that I’d never get back that passion again,” he said. “I had no motivation.”

But last summer when he heard about the new Orion coaster, everything changed.

“To be honest, I don’t know if I’d have been able to do this if they hadn’t announced that roller coaster,” he said.

He gave himself less than a year to lose the weight.

Besides exercising and cutting calories, Ream said he limited his eating to two meals and one snack a day between the hours of 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.

“I also got more sleep,” he said. “The more sleeping I did, the less time I had to eat.”

The weight quickly began to drop off, and Ream was soon losing about 22 pounds a month, he said.

In less than a year, he went down 18 sizes and now wears pants in a size 36, down from 54.

Still, on the day when it mattered, he felt a little nervous about passing the “green light” test to ride the Orion. When he did, it made all his hard work worth it.

“That first 300-foot drop was really something,” he said.

Ream rode the 91-mile-per-hour Orion four times that day and plans to return for another spin around the track every chance he gets.

“It’s my happy place,” he said. “You can’t see me smiling because of my face mask, but believe me, I am. And if I can now help inspire somebody else to lose weight and also be able to see that green light, then I know it’s all been worthwhile.”