Pollution is plummeting in Italy in the wake of coronavirus, emissions data show #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Pollution is plummeting in Italy in the wake of coronavirus, emissions data show

Mar 14. 2020
File photo of a scene in Italy by Syndication Washington Post

File photo of a scene in Italy by Syndication Washington Post
By The Washington Post · Chris Mooney, John Muyskens, Brady Dennis, Andrew Freedman

First it happened in China. Now, Italy. The coronavirus struck hard, and authorities responded with sweeping interventions to keep people from spreading the disease further. As citizens hunkered down at home, businesses and roads suddenly fell empty and silent. One startling result: a decline in air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.

The Washington Post this week analyzed data from the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-5P satellite, which can measure concentrations of greenhouse gases and other pollutants in the lower atmosphere. It shows that between Jan. 1 and March 12, concentrations of nitrogen dioxide, or NO2, fell drastically, especially over hard-hit northern Italy.

Nitrogen dioxide is not one of the major greenhouse gases linked to climate change. But it is produced from combustion – by cars, power plants, and other industrial sources. So it serves as a proxy for other emissions that warm the atmosphere. It also is a pollutant that can increase the risk of asthma, inflammation of the lungs and other harmful health conditions. Several experts told The Washington Post that the changing concentrations probably reflect the decline of driving in particular, in a country in which more than half of cars burn diesel.

“I guess this is mostly diesel cars out of the road,” Emanuele Massetti, an expert on the economics of climate change at Georgia Tech University who has studied Italy’s climate policies, said in an email.

“I expect pollution to drop even further as the particles in the atmosphere (concentration) get either dispersed or absorbed,” he continued. “In a few days, they will enjoy the cleanest air ever in northern Italy.”

That shift is little comfort, of course, to a region in the grips of a deadly outbreak, wrestling with an overwhelmed health system and understandably focused on the crisis at hand rather than the long-term effects of climate change. At the same time, the stark changes offer yet another example of the impact humans have on the environment – and how swiftly emissions can vanish when humans drastically reduce the burning of fossil fuels.

Despite the wide use of diesel engines, Italy’s electricity sector doesn’t burn a massive amount of coal, Massetti said – rather, it is driven largely by natural gas and renewable energy.

Greenhouse gas emissions in the country also have plummeted in recent years. That’s one reason Massetti said he thinks the emissions decline mainly represents a steep decrease in the driving of diesel vehicles. The transportation sector produces more than 70 percent of all nitrogen dioxide emissions in Milan, according to a recent analysis by the European Commission’s Joint Research Center.

“This makes a lot of sense especially since it shows that the highest decrease in concentration has happened in Lombardy, where the most stringent choices were taken first,” Edoardo Marcucci, who directs the Transport Research Lab at Roma Tre University in Rome, said in an email. “I would expect that to become true for the whole country in the next few days.”

Riccardo Valentini, a professor at Italy’s University of Tuscia and director of the impacts division of the Euro-Mediterranean Center on Climate Change, said in an email that the country’s aggressive measures to contain the virus have had a profound effect on everyday life – and by extension, on emissions.

“Nobody can go out from homes unless for precise working duties and/or food purchase or health emergency,” he said. “For sure, there has been a decline of car traffic everywhere. This explains the NOx emission decline.”

He added that Italy’s troubles could potentially soon extend throughout the region and to other parts of the globe. “We are the first E.U. country to get the epidemic outbreak, but numbers are increasing in Spain, France and Germany, plus the others,” Valentini wrote, adding, “The real impact on climate policies could vary country by country depending on the size of the containment measures.”

In the United States, for example, school closures, event cancellations and work-from-home policies will mean millions of people are no longer commuting by car during rush hour, resulting in pollution declines here, too. Beyond the public health and economic crises, he said, the pandemic ultimately could trigger the most significant reduction of greenhouse gas emissions of the past century.

While the ongoing crisis has drastically slowed emissions in China, Italy and potentially elsewhere, that has offered little cause for celebration.

“It is, of course, not a good thing,” Valentini wrote. “This is not the way to reduce emissions!”

Climate advocates agree, saying the current catastrophe is not the way any reasonable person would envision the world lowering its carbon footprint. In addition, the outbreak has halted meetings to plan for public protests for climate action in the coming months, as well as the global push to get nations to commit to more ambitious emission reduction plans at a key U.N. summit scheduled for this fall.

Moreover, the drop in emissions is expected to be temporary. “This will have just a minor effect of global concentrations of CO2, unless it leads to a really long depression of the world economy,” Massetti said.

Italy has been a world leader in its reductions of greenhouse gases in recent years. Carbon dioxide emissions in the country declined by over 30 percent between 2004 and 2018. Last year, Italy announced that it planned to become the first country to make it mandatory for schoolchildren to learn about climate change and sustainable development.

Italian education minister Lorenzo Fioramonti said at the time that beginning this September, teachers in all state schools and all grades would dedicate 33 hours per year – nearly an hour per week of instruction – to issues related to climate change and environmental sustainability.

For now, however, all schools in Italy remain closed.

Coronavirus curve shows much of Europe could face Italy-like surge within weeks #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Coronavirus curve shows much of Europe could face Italy-like surge within weeks

Mar 14. 2020
Photo by: The Washington Post — The Washington Post

Photo by: The Washington Post — The Washington Post
By The Washington Post · Loveday Morris, William Booth · WORLD, HEALTH, EUROPE 

BERLIN – Some of the world’s top experts tracking the spread of the coronavirus predict that in a matter of weeks much of Europe could be facing a surge in cases similar to the one that has locked down Italy, overwhelmed its hospitals in the north and brought the country of 60 million to a standstill.

Mathematical models developed by epidemiologists to track the virus show a sharp trajectory of infections in Spain, Germany, France and Britain. Spain, which declared a state of emergency Friday, showed particularly concerning exponential growth, experts said.

The U.S. has a similar number of coronavirus cases as Italy had 11 days ago, on Feb. 27 Photo by: The Washington Post — The Washington Post

The U.S. has a similar number of coronavirus cases as Italy had 11 days ago, on Feb. 27 Photo by: The Washington Post — The Washington Post

The modelers in Europe say a similar arc is likely in the United States, but anticipating the spread is made more difficult by the lack of widespread testing. U.S. officials are working with 50 academic modeling groups, but no forecasts have been released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or the White House coronavirus task force. One model, for the American Hospital Association, projects a worst-case scenario of hundreds of thousands of deaths.

“Italy is about two weeks ahead of Britain and the rest of Europe,” said Francois Balloux, director of the Genetics Institute at University College London.

 

Observations by epidemiologists show that if unchecked, the number of infections double approximately every five days, with infected individuals, on average, capable of passing the virus on to an average of about 2.5 people.

“What we are seeing is not rocket science,” Balloux said. “You have two cases, then four, then eight, then 16.”

Epidemiologists say that decisive action is required to change the rate of infection and “flatten the curve.” That reality appeared to sink in for some political leaders in the United States and Europe this week, as countries closed schools, encouraged working from home, banned large gatherings and imposed new travel restrictions. French Health Ministry Director General Jérôme Salomon said France must prepare itself for “the Italian scenario.”

Still, some experts worry that governments aren’t doing enough to reduce rates of transmission so cases don’t soar exponentially and overwhelm health systems. A lack of urgency in previous weeks may have wasted valuable time, they say.

On Friday, the director-general of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said, “Europe has now become the epicenter of the pandemic, with more reported cases and deaths than the rest of the world combined, apart from China.”

Irish doctors on Friday warned in a letter to the British Medical Journal that the country is “exactly 14 days behind Italy.” They said only stringent measures could head off a medical crisis like Italy’s and produce a more manageable outbreak like South Korea’s.

At the beginning of an outbreak, experts say viral spread can be contained by isolating individuals and tracing those in contact. But when cases begin to emerge where the infection source is unknown, as they have in parts of Europe and the United States, mass behavioral changes and social distancing appear to be the better strategy.

Italy is one country that has had to accept quickly the need for drastic action. Just three weeks ago, it did not have much of a coronavirus problem. Now it has had more than 15,000 confirmed cases. Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte extended a lockdown on a handful of small villages to wide swaths across northern Italy on Sunday morning and then to the entire country Monday night. On Wednesday, he went even further, with the announcement of a shutdown of most commercial activity.

Italy may have been particularly hard hit in part because the virus spread in the community for several weeks unchecked, and the government has had to play catch-up.

Dirk Brockmann, a professor at the Humboldt University in Berlin who does infectious-disease modeling for Germany’s Robert Koch Institute, the federal agency tasked with disease control, said looking at the number of confirmed cases at a particular moment can be misleading – if people think it is just a few thousand cases here and there.

“It’s almost like taking a still picture of cars on a highway, it doesn’t tell you anything,” he said. “It’s about how the numbers change.”

The current snapshot may be as much as two weeks old, given the time it may take for the virus to cause symptoms and for patients to be tested and diagnosed.

Britain’s chief science adviser, Patrick Vallance, said Thursday that the United Kingdom had 600 confirmed cases, which he said means that 5,000 to 10,000 people there probably are infected.

If the virus continues to infect people at its current rate, which is not a certainty, a European country such as Spain, with 3,000 cases, could see 250,000 infected individuals in about a month, based on doubling times of five days.

“Those are the numbers that epidemiologists are expecting,” said Roy Anderson, professor of infectious disease at Imperial College London.

“I think it’s highly likely we all go the way of Italy” in the coming weeks, he said.

Whether the caseloads explode will depend in part on public health controls, decisions by governments and businesses, and individual actions, the disease modelers say.

 

Many people were taken aback when Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday warned that 60 to 70 percent of Germany’s population of 83 million could contract the disease.

But infectious-disease specialists say that’s quite possible.

“If governments do nothing, or do things that are not effective, and the population does nothing, then you certainly could see 60 percent of a population infected,” Anderson said.

Some European countries appear to be “renouncing efforts to contain the epidemic,” said Giovanni Rezza, director of the Infectious Disease Department at the Italian National Institutes of Health.

“We are applying very tough measures” in Italy, he said. “But in other countries where the incidents of the disease are increasing, it’s like they are not looking at Lombardy,” he added, referring to the Italy’s worst-hit region.

“For the other countries around us, we should be a lesson. They know the virus is there, so they should act more promptly,” Rezza said.

For the United States, Rezza said, there was still a “window of opportunity” to try to contain the virus, given the large geographical area and isolated outbreaks.

 

Infectious-disease specialists say it is possible the case numbers in the Northern Hemisphere will soar in March, and then begin to go down if the coronavirus proves to be seasonal, like common flu, which produces less infection in the warmer summer months.

The British government, especially, appears to be hoping the infection rate drops in April and May, but so far there is no evidence to support the optimism.

In northern Italy, where the wards are running out of beds for all the coronavirus patients, doctors report they are battling out-of-control transmission.

Earlier, a group of Italian doctors sent out an appeal to their colleagues working in intensive care units in Europe.

“Get ready,” they wrote.

Angelo Pan, head of infectious diseases at a hard-hit hospital in Corona, Italy, warned that without effective containment measures, a similar scenario could be ahead for France, Germany and possibly the United States.

“It’s just a matter of time,” he said. “I think we are just maybe 10 days ahead.”

Benjamin Maier, who is Brockmann’s research partner at Robert Koch Institute, has plotted the infection curves of countries in Europe and Asia that have seen outbreaks.

Spain is showing galloping exponential growth, he said, while Britain, Germany and France are still on a steep trajectory.

“You can see that many countries will follow Italy’s example if they don’t follow strict and stricter measures,” Maier said.

Those measures can have a significant impact on how many cases develop. Brockmann and Maier examined the epidemiological curves of the outbreak in China. Although Hubei province initially had an exponential growth rate, the government’s massive containment effort, involving mandatory behavior changes, managed to slow the rate of infection.

South Korea, which has carried out widespread testing, has identified nearly 8,000 cases, but the numbers of new infections are tapering off. Singapore, Malaysia and Japan also have seen flatter growth.

For those countries facing steep increases in coming weeks, all is not lost, said Alexander Kekulé, a German virologist who heads the institute of medical microbiology at the University of Halle.

Acting in advance, rather than in reaction to numbers that lag behind the picture on the ground by weeks, he said, can make a huge difference.

“This really decides if you win the battle, or you lose it,” he added. For weeks, Kekulé has publicly urged Germany to act more swiftly with measures to ban mass events, close schools and test everyone who has flu-like symptoms.

But China’s swift and drastic action is more of a challenge in Western democracies.

Politicians in Europe have been slow to make proactive decisions that could be lifesaving until the danger has sunk in for the public, said Kekulé, meaning they are reacting, rather than getting ahead of the curve.

The fact that German Health Minister Jens Spahn recommended events with more than 1,000 people be stopped on the same day that the first German national died was no coincidence, he said.

“It’s always the problem of a Democratic system; you have to explain yourself to your voters on why this measure has to be taken,” he said. “You have to wait until it’s hurting.”

Trump had photo taken with infected Brazilian official but does not plan to get tested for coronavirus #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Trump had photo taken with infected Brazilian official but does not plan to get tested for coronavirus

Mar 13. 2020
By The Washington Post · Anne Gearan, Josh Dawsey, Terrence McCoy · NATIONAL, WORLD, HEALTH

A senior Brazilian official who dined and was photographed with President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence last weekend in Florida is infected with the coronavirus, marking the closest known contact between Trump and someone carrying the highly communicable illness that has shuttered many aspects of daily life across the globe and cratered financial markets.

Fabio Wajngarten, communications secretary for Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, posed for a photograph with Trump and Pence at a dinner for Bolsonaro at Mar-a-Lago, the president’s private club in Palm Beach, on Saturday.

Prominent members of the Trump administration and Trump family members also attended either the dinner or a party the same night in honor of former Fox News host Kimberly Guilfoyle, who is dating Donald Trump Jr.

Trump’s contact with Wajngarten is the latest example of a potential coronavirus close call for the president, who says he is following at least some of his administration’s advice about preventing the spread of the disease but also continues to play down the threat of a potentially deadly illness.

“Let’s put it this way: I’m not concerned,” Trump said Thursday as news broke that Wajngarten had fallen ill and tested positive for the virus after returning to Brazil.

Bolsonaro underwent testing and is awaiting results. Trump is not being tested and brushed off the risk Thursday.

“Yeah, I did hear something about that. We had dinner together in Florida in – at Mar-a-Lago, with the entire delegation,” Trump said. “I don’t know if the press aide was there. If he was there, he was there.”

“But we did nothing very unusual. We sat next to each other for a period of time, had a great conversation. He’s doing a terrific job in Brazil,” Trump said, referring to Bolsonaro. “And we’ll find out what happens. I guess they’re being tested right now, right?”

Trump did not seem to remember Wajngarten well, but a photo the aide posted on social media shows him standing shoulder to shoulder with Trump, with Pence on the president’s other side.

The interaction follows several instances in which Trump has spent time with members of Congress and others who had been in contact with an attendee at the Conservative Political Action Conference in late February who tested positive for the coronavirus after the conference ended. But word of the infection did not come until after Reps. Douglas Collins, R-Ga., and Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., had spent time with Trump.

Both congressmen opted to self-quarantine until it was clear they were not infected. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., announced Thursday that he is doing the same “as a precautionary measure” after attending the Mar-a-Lago dinner. Like many Americans, Graham will be working from home.

Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., another dinner guest, announced a self-quarantine Thursday because of attendance at Mar-a-Lago, as did the mayors of Miami and Miami-Dade County.

No such announcements of quarantines or testing came on behalf of anyone at the White House – though Trump advisers Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, acting director of national intelligence Richard Grenell, national security adviser Robert O’Brien and others close to the president attended the dinner.

Donors who saw Trump in small settings this past weekend in Florida were asked when they last left the country and whether they’d had any flu-like symptoms but were not asked to undergo any additional screening, said people familiar with the arrangements who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive issue. Trump attended at least four fundraisers over the weekend, some with dozens of attendees.

On Saturday, Trump interacted with a much larger group of people, including many who had not been asked screening questions. After dinner with the visiting Brazilian delegation, Trump went into the ballroom at Mar-a-Lago and stood amid the crowd and gave a toast to Guilfoyle.

He was seen shaking dozens of hands throughout the packed club, attendees said.

One person who was present said there is no way to know whether fellow guests were sick.

“You don’t get a health screening at Mar-a-Lago obviously,” this person said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss private events at the club.

White House officials have sought to limit foreign leader contact at the White House going forward, according to a senior administration official.

Sitting alongside visiting Irish prime minister Leo Varadkar at the White House on Thursday, Trump acknowledged that he has adjusted his routine a bit.

“Well, we didn’t shake hands today. And we looked at each other. We said, ‘What are we going to do?’ You know, it’s sort of a weird feeling,” Trump said to laughter.

Varadkar said that the two leaders had opted for clasping their own hands together in front of their chests. He demonstrated, with a small tilt of the head.

Trump noted that in other cultures, in places such as India and Japan, people do not routinely shake hands, virus or no virus, and he seemed to approve.

“They were ahead of the curve, OK?” Trump said.

“It’s a very strange feeling,” he said. “You know, I was never a big hand-shaker, as you probably heard. But once you become a politician, shaking hands is very normal.”

Trump has described himself as a germaphobe, but since entering politics he has made peace with the rope line and the rally. Trump’s rallies often place thousands of people in close quarters for hours, something the president acknowledged Thursday he is reconsidering because of the virus risk.

But his motivation to continue with public events and to resist getting tested may be rooted in his aversion to any sign of weakness. People close to Trump described him as uninterested in being tested. He has told at least two advisers that if he gets sick, he will get tested.

A former aide said Trump never wanted to be viewed as sick, because he saw it as being weak. So even when Trump would come down with a cough or lose his voice, he would try to keep a strong public face – or staffers would come up with other reasons to move events. The former aide spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe Trump’s behavior.

Sounding somewhat dejected Thursday, Trump said he is unlikely to hold big rallies for a while. He has canceled events this weekend in Nevada and Colorado and said a previously unannounced event in Tampa is unlikely to go forward.

The Secret Service has not advised Trump to stay close to home, he said.

“They have not, but it’s common sense,” Trump said. “You know, a lot of it is – and what I say is: Use common sense, like washing your hands and, you know, certain things. Keep a little bit of distance away.”

But still, no test, according to White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham.

“Exposures from the case are being assessed, which will dictate next steps,” she said in a statement Thursday. “Both the President and Vice President had almost no interactions with the individual who tested positive and do not require being tested at this time.”

She added that under guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “there is currently no indication to test patients without symptoms, and only people with prolonged close exposure to confirmed positive cases should self-quarantine.”

Meanwhile, test results for Bolsonaro, who sat next to Trump at dinner, were expected Friday.

“The medical service of the presidency of the Republic has adopted and is adopting all of the necessary preventive measures to preserve the health of the President of the Republic and the entire presidential committee that accompanied him in the recent official trip to the United States,” the presidential press office said in a statement.

Coronavirus can live in patients for five weeks after contagion #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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Coronavirus can live in patients for five weeks after contagion

Mar 12. 2020
File photo

File photo
By Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Claire Che · HEALTH 

Patients with the new coronavirus keep the pathogen in their respiratory tract for as long as 37 days, a new study found, suggesting they could remain infectious for many weeks.

In yet another sign of how difficult the pandemic may be to contain, doctors in China detected the virus’ RNA in respiratory samples from survivors for a median of 20 days after they became infected, they wrote in an article published in the Lancet medical journal.

The new coronavirus has spread to 118 countries and infected about 125,000 people since first emerging in Wuhan, China, at the end of last year, evading drastic efforts by local authorities and subsequent containment attempts in other nations.

The findings have “important implications for both patient isolation decision-making and guidance around the length of antiviral treatment,” Fei Zhou from the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and the other authors wrote.

Currently, the recommended isolation period after exposure is 14 days to avoid spreading the virus. But if people remain contagious long after their symptoms have vanished, they may unwittingly propagate the pathogen after they return from quarantine.

By comparison, only a third of patients with SARS still harbored the virus in their respiratory tract after as long as four weeks, the Chinese scientists said. They studied the medical records and laboratory data from 191 Covid-19 patients treated at Jinyintan Hospital and Wuhan Pulmonary Hospital, including 54 who died from the infection.

The best hope for coronavirus treatment is an experimental drug that fizzled against Ebola #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

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The best hope for coronavirus treatment is an experimental drug that fizzled against Ebola

Mar 11. 2020
File photo

File photo
By The Washington Post · Christopher Rowland · BUSINESS, HEALTH, SCIENCE-ENVIRONMENT, US-GLOBAL-MARKETS

Medical researchers spent much of the past year trying to save Ebola victims in Congo using a clutch of experimental drugs. Of the four medications being tested, researchers said, one demonstrated especially poor ability to save patients from the deadly virus.

The drug, called remdesivir, had blocked the Ebola virus in laboratories and in animal experiments. But it did such a bad job extending survival in humans compared to two of the other treatments that researchers decided in August not to try it on any more patients.

Now the drug, created by pharmaceutical giant Gilead Sciences, is being tested in new clinical trials, and global health authorities deem it the most promising of possible treatments for people who are severely ill with the novel coronavirus, which causes the covid-19 disease. Because it is a “broad spectrum” drug that has been effective against multiple viral targets in the lab and in animals, the strategy could work, experts said.

The drug’s journey – from failing to prolong the lives of Ebola patients in sub-Saharan Africa just last year to being rushed into coronavirus clinical trials in China and the United States this year – symbolizes a dire lack of antiviral drugs that can fight emerging infectious threats.

As the outbreak spreads worldwide, a vaccine to prevent infection remains at least a year away. Meanwhile, there is no approved treatment to stop the virus once someone is infected, and the severe and sometimes fatal respiratory distress that afflicts a minority of patients.

The hope is that remdesivir will show better results with the coronavirus than it did with Ebola, which is from a different viral family, officials said. The first trial results could be available in April.

Gilead, the National Institutes of Health and Chinese health authorities are racing to test it on hundreds of people in controlled clinical trials, including a patient who was quarantined in Nebraska after being removed from the Diamond Princess cruise ship. Axios reported this month that Gilead acted so quickly that it did not even wait for required approval by the Food and Drug Administration before it shipped doses to China. Asked to respond, Gilead said it thinks its “limited shipments” were made in compliance with U.S. law.

“I just hope remdesivir works, because we really need a therapeutic that can intervene in this crisis,” said Richard Whitley, director of an NIH-funded research effort involving the world’s most dangerous viruses.

Gilead did not respond directly about the drug’s failure in the Ebola trial. “Covid-19 is a coronavirus that is unrelated to Ebola virus,” the company said. “Covid-19 is associated with different symptoms, pathology, and a different course of disease.”

Invented by Gilead about a decade ago, remdesivir has been proven to stop certain viruses from replicating in lab experiments and in animals. It has been researched in academic labs in North Carolina and Tennessee with backing from federal taxpayers since 2014, as part of a $37.5 million effort by NIH to find treatments for infectious diseases.

Until Monday, when it fell in a brutal market rout, Gilead’s stock price had defied the overall market decline of recent weeks, rising almost 20 percent from Feb. 21 to March 6, on hopes that the drug could provide the first treatment for covid-19.

The lack of treatment helps explain why. The stock price increased 5% on Feb. 24 alone when a top official of the World Health Organization pinned much of the world’s hopes for a treatment on the drug.

“There is only one drug right now that we think may have real efficacy, and that’s remdesivir,” said Bruce Aylward, WHO’s assistant director general. Ten days later, RBC Capital Markets gave it only a 50 percent chance of succeeding as a treatment.

The mixed signals have done little to dampen interest. There have been desperate pleas for supplies to treat patients on a “compassionate use” basis.

Although Gilead leads the pack on treatments, large drug companies such as Merck, Johnson & Johnson and Sanofi, as well as lesser-known companies Regeneron and Moderna, are pursuing coronavirus vaccines and medications, and executives estimate that at least 40 small biotech companies are developing drugs to fight it.

Every time there is a new virus, “we get started, but we don’t cross the finish line,” Julie Gerberding, a former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention who is now the executive vice president and chief patient officer at Merck, said at a news briefing in Washington last week. This time, she said, industry is committed to pushing a vaccine to cross the line for regulatory approval.

“If we don’t cross it, it will be because it’s scientifically hard,” she said, “not because of the will or the investment.”

But drug companies also have been accused of not pursuing vaccines and antiviral treatments aggressively because the commercial markets for such drugs are weak.

The potential patient pool for clinical trials dries up once a new infectious outbreak subsides, so investment can be frozen in partly completed projects. And the pool of medical customers for a drug can be short-lived, if a seasonal epidemic quickly disappears, offering little chance to recoup an investment of what could be hundreds of millions of dollars.

Vaccine and treatment development tailed off after outbreaks of the earlier coronavirus cousins, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). The drug industry’s lobbying arm, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA), said that at least half of its members have mobilized in various ways to fight the new coronavirus in recent weeks.

“We need to encourage as many shots on goal as possible,” Stephen J. Ubl, PhRMA’s chief executive officer, told reporters.

Government efforts to spur development have produced sporadic progress. In the nearly 20 years since the SARS outbreak, the National Institutes of Health has spent nearly $700 million on research and development efforts around coronavirus, according to a survey by the advocacy group Public Citizen, which criticized the pharmaceutical industry for a “lack of interest that has left us lagging behind.”

Every epidemic presents uncertainty for drug companies, said Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar for the Center for Health Security at Johns Hopkins University.

“You never know how long it’s going to last. You never know what the market size is going to be,” he said. “Every conversation about price is when you’re in the middle of an emergency.”

Given the large degree of public financial support, debates are already flaring about how much Gilead should charge for its treatment if it ever makes it to market.

Congress and President Trump authorized up to $3 billion last week for efforts by academic researchers and drug companies to develop vaccines and treatments for coronavirus, part of an $8.3 billion emergency spending bill. The industry successfully opposed efforts by some House Democrats to attach guarantees for affordable prices for vaccines or treatments that result.

Gilead said it is too soon to discuss potential markets, in written responses to The Washington Post.

“We are focused on the potential clinical value that remdesivir may bring to patients and doing our part to respond to the coronavirus outbreak,” the company said.

Earlier testing of remdesivir has been performed by a partnership of university academics and the National Institutes of Health called the Antiviral Drug Discovery and Development Center, coordinated by the University of Alabama at Birmingham. It is focused on finding treatments for the family of coronaviruses, as well as Ebola, Zika, dengue and chikungunya.

Gilead said it donates free drug samples for the government-funded research of remdesivir and helps design scientific studies and clinical trials. Whitley, an infectious-disease expert who leads the drug development center in Alabama, credited Gilead for staying focused on fighting viral infections despite the poor market incentives.

“Drug companies don’t have an interest in emerging infectious diseases,” he said.

The public should not be excessively discouraged by the negative Ebola results last year, Whitley added. The trial in rural areas of Congo, a conflict zone with rudimentary conditions, was complicated by the fact that remdesivir’s correct dosage was unknown, he said. Also, it required a cumbersome daily IV administration, after being reconstituted from a freeze-dried form used for shipping in the uncontrolled climate conditions.

The drug has not been studied in human trials for SARS or MERS, because there are not enough patients, Gilead said.

“The number of clinical MERS infections was limited, with almost exclusive localization in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and there were no SARS infections,” the company said.

In the new coronavirus outbreak, it said, it is reviewing individual requests from physicians to provide the drug on a “compassionate use” basis but only to patients who are hospitalized and showing “significant clinical manifestations.”

I’ve been working from home for eight days. The Netflix-and-quarantine life is not that chill. #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30383893?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

I’ve been working from home for eight days. The Netflix-and-quarantine life is not that chill.

Mar 11. 2020
For columnist Geoffrey A. Fowler, tech has been a blessing and a curse while working from home. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Geoffrey A. Fowler.

For columnist Geoffrey A. Fowler, tech has been a blessing and a curse while working from home. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Geoffrey A. Fowler.
By  The Washington Post · Geoffrey A. Fowler · BUSINESS, TECHNOLOGY, CAREER-WORKPLACE

It’s been eight days since I last stepped into the office. Like thousands of other workers in California, I’ve been doing my job (and staying put) at home to avoid spreading or catching the coronavirus contagion called covid-19

This isn’t my first outbreak: Seventeen years ago, I self-quarantined in my Hong Kong apartment for three weeks to avoid the epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS.

My work-from-home beard is the same. But this time, the Internet has changed everything else.

The work-from-home beard is the same. But since SARS in 2003, the Internet has changed everything else about the experience of self-quarantine. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Geoffrey A. Fowler.

The work-from-home beard is the same. But since SARS in 2003, the Internet has changed everything else about the experience of self-quarantine. MUST CREDIT: Washington Post photo by Geoffrey A. Fowler.

From my couch, I can have a face-to-face with my boss, who commented on the beard. Just using my phone, I can brainstorm with co-workers. Or get lunch delivered. Or have groceries dropped at my door. Or check out a book from the library. Or join a (virtual) happy hour. Or watch pretty much any movie.

It’s a Netflix-and-quarantine life. But it’s not particularly chill.

My San Francisco self-quarantine is an experiment to see how far an app-operated life can stretch. The experience is easy, but it hasn’t put me at ease. Video conferencing fails 50 percent of the time. The online tools I’m using – Slack, Microsoft Office, Dropbox – treat work as paramount, so it never really goes away. I’m paying double for food delivered by apps. My Apple Watch, which tracks physical activity, beeped with a message: Geoff, you can do better. I turn on my Apple TV, and the outbreak is there, too, pitching “Contagion,” the trending movie about dying from a disease spread in part by touching your face. (I indulged the paranoia.)

Then there was the morning my broadband went out.

Quarantine might not seem like a big sacrifice, but my experience shows it’s no snow day. It lays bare the vulnerabilities – and the vulnerable – in our online-everything economy.

My online cloister is nowhere close to the nightmare facing the people under medical orders to quarantine or isolate in hotels, nursing homes and cruise ships. To limit the spread of the disease, Microsoft, Twitter and other companies told their employees in early March to start working from home. I followed their lead and self-quarantined to see how it might feel different with all of today’s tech. On Tuesday, The Washington Post encouraged employees all over the United States to start working from home if they could.

Even before the coronavirus, there was a name for the Internet’s on-demand economy: hermit tech. Or sometimes, assisted living for millennials. “You already live in quarantine,” wrote Georgia Institute of Technology professor Ian Bogost last week about apps ranging from Netflix and Instagram to DoorDash and Amazon Prime Now that help people practice the “social distancing” being recommended by some health authorities. (Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

There’s not a huge difference between living in a millennial bubble and being cloistered. Over the past week, growth in the use of grocery-delivery service Instacart has surged by 10 times in California and Washington and by 20 times in New York, says spokeswoman Natalia Montalvo. On Instacart, searches for hand sanitizer increased by 23 times.

Now this tech has a more urgent purpose than the luxury of convenience. It makes staying at home possible (and much more palatable) to people who can afford it. For the fortunate, work, shopping and even school can be rerouted through the Internet. But it also bakes in tech-industry assumptions about work happening behind a keyboard, not to mention access to resources and how we interact with others. These apps were designed by engineers with efficiency as the No. 1 goal.

My hermit-tech lifestyle is extreme for the United States because I’m also avoiding leaving my house. But it’s not that far off from the new reality elsewhere, now including parts of New York state. In some Chinese cities, people have been in quarantine for over a month and online services are even more advanced. My favorite example: In locked-down Wuhan, teachers use an app called DingTalk to remotely assign homework. So thousands of kids gave it one-star reviews in hopes it would get booted from the App Store.

Depending on the speed covid-19 spreads here, I could be on the leading edge of a great American self-quarantine. That would test many aspects of our government, economy and – closer at hand – personal technology. So it’s time to ask: Is the home WiFi ready? And just how much power are we handing over to Silicon Valley’s values?

During SARS, when I also worked as a newspaper reporter, I had Internet access in my apartment. But in 2003, working meant going into the office. Texting still required repeatedly tapping on my phone’s numerical keypad.

Most of my remote work got done over email. In the month of April 2003 alone, I sent and received over 1,100 emails that contained the word SARS. (I kept the archives.) Going through my inbox required logging into a secure PC.

This time, working from home felt pretty unremarkable . . . at first. I often take calls from home at odd hours, or stay home for a day jamming on a project. Some 43 percent of Americans work from home at least some, according to a 2017 Gallup poll.

I knew my WiFi would hold. I’d previously invested in a mesh router (I recommend Eero). And I was already plugged into work with cloud-connected office tech that I can access on my office laptop, personal iMac, smartphone and tablet, too. I signed up for more Slack messaging channels, so I could better track what everyone was doing.

Not all of it worked as advertised. I know video conferencing has major devotees, but in my experience it has worked about half of the time. My smart Post colleagues dig up amazing scoops but are continually befuddled by Cisco Webex. For some meetings with far-flung people, I’m the only one on video because nobody else could make it work.

Then, at 8:45 a.m. on my third day at home, I had a real jolt: My Internet went down. My heart raced as I ran around the house trying to figure out what happened. I blame my Internet service provider Comcast, though it tells me there were no major outages in my area. The problem fixed itself, but uh-oh: What’s going to happen when networks designed for home use suddenly get stressed by millions? Even when you pay extra for faster downloads, with many residential broadband services you are still sharing a limited resource with all your neighbors.

As the days tick by, I’ve noticed a bigger problem. Without any boundaries between work and life, I just keep working. No screen is an escape. Why, oh why, did I sign up for all those Slack channels? The software just keeps sending me a mountain of information; it doesn’t care if I’m actually processing it. I’m part of the problem. I feel guilty WFH, and sending Slack messages at all hours lets me show what a good colleague I am!

There is no technology to replace the intel you get in an office: that someone is on a call, having a bad day, or at home taking care of a sick kid. I can only imagine how these frustrations multiply if you also have kids on coronavirus leave from school bouncing around the house.

Friends and colleagues who work remotely on a regular basis advise a few things no office app is going to do for you: Use a separate, dedicated work device. Have a dedicated work wardrobe – at least different WFH pajamas and sleep pajamas, as Vice noted. And most of all, have clear remote work hours that end with a daily ritual like working out. Or a stiff cocktail.

During my 2003 confinement, I ate canned soup, frozen dumplings and peanut butter. So much peanut butter.

That’s what I had in my supplies, which I didn’t venture out to replenish very often, both to respect my boss’s marching orders and, to be honest, because I was terrified. During those weeks when the mechanics of SARS remained a mystery, the safe bet was not to trust anyone. There was no Prime, no same-day delivery. If you wanted something, you had to wait a week or put on a mask and go find a store selling it.

Fast forward and my coronavirus self-quarantine has been delicious. I can choose from thousands of restaurants from delivery apps that bring the food right to my door.

But it hasn’t been cheap. On my first day at home, a $10.78 Impossible Whopper meal from Burger King ran me a whopping $24.46 through Uber Eats.

One time, I asked the DoorDash driver bringing me Thai takeout if he worried about being out interacting with so many people. His was a tale of two Silicon Valleys: He’s doing on-demand work for apps, while his girlfriend, who works for a tech company, has been ordered to work from home indefinitely. “I’ve got cars and stuff I’ve got to pay for. So I have to go out and get it,” said the driver, who asked not to be named.

“Maybe I’m a little less afraid of it than other people are,” he said. “But I know that my immune system is like every other person.”

As my colleague Nitasha Tiku has written, the on-demand economy conditions us to not think about why these services are affordable. Gig workers typically don’t get paid sick leave or masks and sanitizer as they run around town, though on Monday Instacart and DoorDash announced new sick pay policies for in-store shoppers.

Both DoorDash and Instacart also began promoting “contactless” deliveries – an option for people who order online to say “leave it at my door.” To borrow a favorite techie phrase, it’s social distancing “as a service.”

I lost it around day three during SARS. That’s when I emailed my work friend Karen: “I’m getting worried that this is messing with me psychologically. I tried to go to the grocery store about an hour ago, but couldn’t make it out the door. I sat down and ate peanut butter instead.”

My entertainment options included a small collection of DVDs, terrestrial TV, books and telephone calls. Some friends passed the hours with the help of an Xbox, but I didn’t have one.

This time around, I lost it around day five. There’s certainly a lot more to keep me entertained: I eat lunch with Twitter, tracking the infected cruise ship docking a few miles away in Oakland. There’s a growing list of streaming services that each want $8 to $35 per month to keep me entertained: Apple TV Plus, CBS, Amazon Prime, Hulu, Sling TV and Netflix. By my rough estimate, I’ve streamed at least 30 hours of TV over eight days.

I checked out an e-book from the library for my book club but can’t seem to find the focus to finish it. I’ve also become a sloth: Normally, I walk 3.9 miles per day, according to my Apple Watch. In the past week, I’ve averaged less than one mile per day.

A group of tech workers and journalists working at home experimented with a form of virtual socializing on Monday: A 5:00 #WFHHappyHour streamed over Zoom video. Sadly, when I joined few participants seemed to actually have cocktails.

I hit peak anxiety on Saturday night when I sat on my couch with a plate of cookies and streamed the 2011 thriller “Contagion.” The Apple TV movie store recommended it to me and, apparently, lots and lots of other Americans, because it’s currently the second most popular film in the Warner Bros. catalog, up from 270th last year.

Well, if I wasn’t freaked out before, I sure am now. In the film, a disease spreads much like the coronavirus, with health officials reminding people to wash their hands and not touch their faces . . . until it kills off millions and millions of people.

Shortly after I finished the movie, there was a knock at the door. It was my groceries from Instacart. I brought them inside and felt compelled to wipe them all down with antiseptic wipes.

Perhaps I need to try meditating. There are apps for that, too.

Coronavirus: This is the way we wash our hands, wash our hands, wash our hands… #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30383803?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Coronavirus: This is the way we wash our hands, wash our hands, wash our hands…

Mar 10. 2020
By The Washington Post · Amy Joyce · FEATURES, PARENTING 

We have by now all heard the best way to prevent catching the coronavirus is by making sure to properly wash hands. Easy, right?

Well, for small children, and their parents, handwashing is not exactly the easiest task. It has to be taught. It’s especially important now, of course, because even though children don’t seem to be getting hit hard by this virus yet, they are major germ carriers. So teaching them to wash their hands helps not only them but everyone who comes in contact with them.

“A lot of us don’t think about it,” says Elizabeth Meade, a pediatrician and national spokeswoman for the American Academy of Pediatrics based in Seattle. It’s so second nature to so many of us, parents often forget it’s a skill they need to teach. “The most important thing is to start early with kids, when they’re toddlers,” Meade says.

So how do we teach these amazingly wonderful and absolutely germ-filled little people how (and why) to wash their hands regularly? We make it fun, and let them know this is a regular part of our lives: Look! Parents do it too!

It’s important to “make it a habit, a standard,” Meade says. Explain that we always wash before we eat, after using the bathroom and after playing with animals, for example.

It’s not easy to get those little uncoordinated hands to scrub all those germs away (coronavirus and others). The best thing to use is warm water, which has been proven to kill germs more than cold. Soap up, and sing either “Happy Birthday” or “Row, Row, Row Your Boat” for 20 seconds, at least, while rubbing your hands together, covering every surface with suds. You can even make a game out of it, she suggests, to see who can get the most soap bubbles on their hands and between their fingers.

Using fun soap, such as those with characters on them, or even soaps that change color when used long enough, will help encourage kids. “We want to teach them to wash all parts of their hands,” Meade says. (I remember watching my son put soap on his palm, rinse it off, then proclaim “Done!” when he was small.) Washing all parts of their hands means the fronts, the backs, between the fingers, their nails and even their wrists.

The other very important thing is to not make this seem like a chore. Have fun, sing along, talk to them, Meade says, about being “germ-busting superheroes” and explain that’s how they can save the world.

Sometimes, they are so small, it’s actually uncomfortable to reach the sink and wash hands, so make sure they have a step stool so they can reach the faucets and water. Hand sanitizer also works, but the CDC recommends washing hands with soap and water above all else. Sanitizer can be used when soap and water aren’t available, but kids still have to get to all the hidden germy spots, so much of the lessons here still apply. And on that note: This is a good time to remember how many germs can live under nails, so keep them trimmed and clean, too.

Meade admits that yes, even a pediatrician like herself has to work on this at home. She has a 5-year-old stepson who is “quite reluctant to handwash.”

Time to pull out the superhero cape and your best version of “Happy Birthday.”

Fake coronavirus treatments bring warnings from federal agencies #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30383726?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Fake coronavirus treatments bring warnings from federal agencies

Mar 10. 2020
By  Syndication Washington Post, Bloomberg · Jacquie Lee · NATIONAL, BUSINESS 

Seven companies are violating federal law and putting patients at risk by falsely claiming their products, including essential oils and teas, can prevent or treat the coronavirus, the FDA and FTC said in joint warning letters released Monday.

No treatments or vaccines have been approved for Covid-19, a virus spreading across the globe that can kill vulnerable populations. As of Monday morning eleven people have died in the U.S. from the virus, according to a tally from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“There already is a high level of anxiety over the potential spread of coronavirus,” Federal Trade Commission Chairman Joe Simons said in a statement. “What we don’t need in this situation are companies preying on consumers by promoting products with fraudulent prevention and treatment claims.”

Simons said the agency will take enforcement actions against companies that continue to “market this type of scam.” Enforcement could mean demanding financial relief for customers or imposing civil penalties on the companies.

The Food and Drug Administration is especially concerned patients will delay or stop getting treatment for the virus because of false promises made by the companies. The agencies sent letters to N-Ergetics, GuruNanda LLC, Herbal Amy LLC, the Jim Bakker Show, Quinessence Aromatherapy, Vital Silver, and Vivify Holistic Clinic.

THB sets up new facility for Covid-19 cases #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30383695?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

THB sets up new facility for Covid-19 cases

Mar 09. 2020
Inside Triage building

Inside Triage building
By The Nation

Thonburi Bamrungmuang Hospital in collaboration with the Department of Disease Control recently organised a seminar on Coronavirus (Covid-19) Prevention.

Thonburi Bamrungmuang Hospital has opened a new facility for Covid-19 cases, led by a multidisciplinary medical team.

In view of the virus outbreak causing widespread concerns among the general public and foreigners residing in Thailand, Thonburi Bamrungmuang Hospital (THB), a personalised healthcare centre with advanced technology, hosted the seminar “International Practice Guideline for the Prevention of Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19)” to create awareness and advise preventive measures in tackling spread of the virus.

Dr Boon Vanasin (left) and Dr Jurai Wongsawat (right)

Dr Boon Vanasin (left) and Dr Jurai Wongsawat (right)

Speakers featured at the seminar were two highly-experience doctors: Dr Boon Vanasin, Chairman of the Board of Directors, Thonburi Healthcare Group, and Dr Jurai Wongsawat, MD, Senior Expert in Prevention Medicine, Bamrasnaradura Infectious Diseases Institute, Department of Disease Control, Ministry of Public Health.

Dr Boon said the target customers of Thonburi Bamrungmuang Hospital include both locals and foreigners. As such, it is mandatory for the hospital to have the highest level of screening and monitoring practice. It has set up a separate facility, staffed by a team of multidisciplinary medical professionals for the diagnosis and treatment of patients suspected of contracting Covid-19.

Dr Jurai Wongsawat summarised the present situation, saying: “At the moment, the outbreak in Thailand is under control. Our public health officers have managed to keep the level of disease spreading at ‘Phase 2’ – which means the outbreak is not severe but the disease is spread easily from person to person – for more than a month since the first confirmed case was reported. To prevent the domestic outbreak from entering ‘Phase 3,’ government agencies and public health officers are working as hard as they can with help from various parties, including private organisations and the general public.

First health checkpoint before entering

First health checkpoint before entering

“Furthermore, the government and the Ministry of Public Health have implemented policies to prevent the spread of Coivid-19, both personal and national levels, such as screening measures at airports and monitoring process at medical facilities. There are also proactive measures to help prevent communal spread, particularly among people who are most at risk such as embassy workers, tourism and hospitality workers, and travellers from affected areas.

“The Ministry of Public Health has also recommended people returning from affected areas to impose self-quarantine at home for at least 14 days, in order to prevent potential transmission and closely monitor their symptoms. If they develop a fever with respiratory symptoms such as cough, sore throat or runny nose, they should seek medical attention at the hospital and provide travel history to healthcare workers immediately”.

 

Negative pressure room

Negative pressure room

Meanwhile, foreigners living in Thailand are urged to be vigilant and follow preventive measures to reduce the risk of infection.

Dr Boon Vanasin affirmed that Thonburi Bamrungmuang Hospital is well-prepared to serve all international customers, especially Middle Eastern and Chinese patients who have been its biggest target groups.

The new facility will ensure that every patient receives the best healthcare services in every step of the way, he added.

Trump ‘didn’t know people died from the flu.’ It killed his grandfather. #ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย

#ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

https://www.nationthailand.com/lifestyle/30383620?utm_source=category&utm_medium=internal_referral

Trump ‘didn’t know people died from the flu.’ It killed his grandfather.

Mar 08. 2020
President Trump/ File photo by Syndication Washington Post

President Trump/ File photo by Syndication Washington Post
By The Washington Post · Gillian Brockell · NATIONAL, HEALTH 

In Atlanta on Friday, President Donald Trump talked about the number of people infected with the novel coronavirus in other countries vs. the United States. He also compared coronavirus disease with influenza.

“Over the last long period of time, you have an average of 36,000 people dying” a year, the president said, gesturing toward National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci, who nodded confirmation.

Trump continued: “I never heard those numbers. I would’ve been shocked. I would’ve said, ‘Does anybody die from the flu? I didn’t know people died from the flu.’ . . . And again, you had a couple of years where it was over a 100,000 people died from the flu.”

The president is correct. Seasonal influenza has killed 12,000 to 61,000 people in the United States every year since 2010, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There have been several years where more than 100,000 Americans were killed by particularly nasty influenza strains.

One of those episodes was the 1958 pandemic, which killed 116,000 in the United States.

Another was 1918.

That is the year Trump’s paternal grandfather died.

He died of the flu.

In 1918, Friedrich Trump was a successful, 49-year-old businessman, husband and father of three living in Queens, according to Gwenda Blair in her 2001 book “The Trumps: Three Generations That Built an Empire.” One day in May, he came home from a stroll feeling sick. He died almost immediately.

He was a victim of the first wave of the Spanish flu pandemic. A second, deadlier wave hit in the fall. All told, the pandemic killed at least 50 million people worldwide and 675,000 in the United States, according to the CDC.

Friedrich’s eldest son, Frederick, was only 12 when his father died, but he and his mother would pick up the family business. It would be another 28 years before Fred and his wife would have their fourth child, a boy they named Donald.

This same grandfather’s biography has come up as a sticking point before. Friedrich came to the United States at 16 from Germany and today would be classed as an “unaccompanied alien child,” experts told The Washington Post in 2018. Trump has come under fire for his administration’s treatment of unaccompanied minors and other children from Central America trying to enter the country via the southern border.

In his 20s, Friedrich Trump made his way to the Pacific Northwest, where he made his fortune opening taverns, restaurants and hotels, usually in red-light districts, in Gold Rush-era mining towns.

He also attempted a return to Germany in his 30s but was deported because he had avoided the military draft as a teenager.

The president is at least partially aware of his grandfather’s biography. As recently as February 2019, he said in a speech, “My grandfather was up in Alaska for a long time. He was looking for gold. He was searching for gold. He didn’t find it, but he started opening up little hotels for those looking for gold. And it worked out.”

At other times, he has said erroneously that his father, not his grandfather, was born in Germany. His father was born in New York.

At the same news conference Friday where Trump appeared unaware of his grandfather’s cause of death, he cited another family member – a “super-genius uncle,” his grandfather’s youngest son – as having given him the family genes to understand the science of the coronavirus outbreak.

“People are really surprised I understand this stuff,” he said. “Every one of these doctors said, ‘How do you know so much about this?’ Maybe I have a natural ability.”