Pandemic 2020

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Louisiana reinstates indoor mask mandate, including in schools, as COVID-19 surges and restrictions increase across US
Louisiana reinstates indoor mask mandate, including in schools, as COVID-19 surges and restrictions increase across US.
 

Dr.Amber Trichome

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Louisiana reinstates indoor mask mandate, including in schools, as COVID-19 surges and restrictions increase across US
Louisiana reinstates indoor mask mandate, including in schools, as COVID-19 surges and restrictions increase across US.
Smarter than Florida. Desantis is a cocksucking motherfucking asshole that needs to get Covid and suffer .
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Delta Is A 'Big Threat' To Unvaccinated People, Says NIH Director

NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins is encouraged by a rise in vaccinations across the country but says there's still a long way to go, and that enough Americans need to get vaccinated so the country doesn't have a variant that can get past the vaccine.
 

DIY-HP-LED

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There are better more effective antibody treatments in clinical trials, but they must be administered early in the illness or before it occurs.

FDA authorizes antibody treatment to prevent COVID after exposure

The Food and Drugs Administration has authorized a COVID antibody treatment for use as a preventative measure after exposure to the coronavirus.

Why it matters: Though the FDA said it should not be considered a vaccine substitute, the monoclonal antibodies can protect against severe illness by overwhelming the infection before it leaves the nose and throat, according to researchers.
  • The FDA's expanded authorization means REGEN-COV can be administered as an injection. The first dose would need to be injected within 96 hours of exposure.
  • People who qualify for its use must be unvaccinated or immunocompromised, at high risk of severe infection and in close contact with someone who tested positive.
  • Clinical trials show the treatment can reduce the risk of developing symptoms by more than 30%. It's been shown to prevent the need for emergency room visits and hospitalization.
What they're saying: "It’s a race between your ability to make an antibody to protect your lungs and the rest of your body and the virus," Myron Cohen, a researcher at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and one of the investigators behind the study of COVID antibodies, told NBC News.
  • "And if you’re likely to lose the race, you’re the person for whom these antibody drugs are appropriate."
  • It will help people who don't respond well to vaccines or don't make antibodies themselves, according to Ghady Haidar, a transplant infectious diseases physician at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.
 

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DeSantis knocks reporter for question about kids in ICU
A reporter asked about seven children who are at the Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital and if masks could have helped them avoid the virus.

DeSantis responded by asking the reporter if she knew the children were not wearing masks when they caught the virus.

“You’re blaming the kids, saying they weren’t wearing masks so they’re in the ICU. With all due respect, I find that deplorable to blame a victim who ends up being hospitalized,” DeSantis said at the press conference.

“This has been a really negative thing throughout this whole thing, with some of these, quote, experts, some of the media. Somebody can contract a highly transmissible airborne virus and they’re viewed as having done something wrong. That’s just not the way you do it,” DeSantis added.

We are not shutting down,” he said. “We are going to have schools open. We are protecting every Floridian’s job in this state. We are protecting people’s small businesses. These interventions have failed time and time again throughout this pandemic, not just in the United States but abroad. They have not stopped the spread, particularly with delta.”


"These interventions have failed time and time again throughout this pandemic, not just in the United States but abroad."

Really?
 

Dr.Amber Trichome

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DeSantis knocks reporter for question about kids in ICU
A reporter asked about seven children who are at the Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital and if masks could have helped them avoid the virus.

DeSantis responded by asking the reporter if she knew the children were not wearing masks when they caught the virus.

“You’re blaming the kids, saying they weren’t wearing masks so they’re in the ICU. With all due respect, I find that deplorable to blame a victim who ends up being hospitalized,” DeSantis said at the press conference.

“This has been a really negative thing throughout this whole thing, with some of these, quote, experts, some of the media. Somebody can contract a highly transmissible airborne virus and they’re viewed as having done something wrong. That’s just not the way you do it,” DeSantis added.

We are not shutting down,” he said. “We are going to have schools open. We are protecting every Floridian’s job in this state. We are protecting people’s small businesses. These interventions have failed time and time again throughout this pandemic, not just in the United States but abroad. They have not stopped the spread, particularly with delta.”


"These interventions have failed time and time again throughout this pandemic, not just in the United States but abroad."

Really?
He is know as “DeSantis for Death”
For him it was a failure time and time again to kill more people.
 

Dr.Amber Trichome

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Are you seeing more (any) youngsters coming into the ICU these days?
I don’t work in a hospital. I understand they are younger. That’s going to change real soon. The long term care facilities are getting hit now as well . Please be careful in all that you do because if you get into an accident there might not be any room to take care of you. ERs are filled up and elective surgeries have been cancelled. If you do get sick, your in it a alone. No visitors , just worn out healthcare workers who are on the brink of mental breakdowns.
 

waktoo

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I don’t work in a hospital. I understand they are younger. That’s going to change real soon. The long term care facilities are getting hit now as well . Please be careful in all that you do because if you get into an accident there might not be any room to take care of you. ERs are filled up and elective surgeries have been cancelled. If you do get sick, your in it a alone. No visitors , just worn out healthcare workers who are on the brink of mental breakdowns.
My bad. I knew you worked in health care, but didn't know you weren't in a hospital.

Hang in there. A lot of us appreciate the level of shit you front liner's are dealing with.

Best wishes, and thank you for your efforts. (:
 

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Poll: Crist Overtakes DeSantis Amid COVID Surge
Former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist is slightly outpolling current Gov. Ron DeSantis as COVID-19 cases are rising in the state, according to a new poll.

St. Pete Polls released the survey on Tuesday, showing Crist, currently serving as a Democratic member of Congress, with 45% support to Republican DeSantis' 44%. Eleven percent say they are undecided.

Crist's 1-point lead is within the poll's 1.6-point margin of error.

A St. Pete Polls survey in May showed that only 30% of voters believed that Crist, who was a Republican when he served as Florida governor from 2007 to 2011, would be able to defeat DeSantis in 2022, and that Nikki Fried, the state's agriculture commissioner, would be a better opponent.

Crist, who joined the Democratic Party in 2012, was down by double digits to DeSantis in previous polls.

Crist urged DeSantis on Tuesday to require that state employees be vaccinated. He has previously accused the governor of spending too much time worrying about the border crisis than the COVID crisis in his own state.


"What’s he [DeSantis] doing about it? He’s going to Texas. He goes to the border. Texas. You’re the governor of Florida, you know," Crist said. "He doesn’t understand. And you know he’s spending our tax dollars out there, giving our law enforcement to Texas while people are dying in Florida. Unbelievable."
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Column: Canada just surpassed us on vaccinations. Good for them, and shame on us

GORDON BAY, Canada —
Three months ago, Canada, which has no domestic manufacturer of COVID-19 vaccines, lagged far behind the United States in immunizations. Only 3% of its population was fully vaccinated. Canadians watched glumly as friends and relatives south of the border lined up for shots, while residents of Toronto and Montreal suffered repeated lockdowns.

No longer. Last month, Canada blew past the United States in the share of its population that’s fully vaccinated — 58% as of Friday, versus 49% in the U.S. — to take first place among the seven big industrial democracies. (The United States ranks sixth, ahead of only Japan.)

How did Canada, the country that most closely resembles the United States, do so much better, even though it had to wait longer for Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna to deliver their vaccines?

The simple answer is that in Canada, the pandemic didn’t become a politically polarized issue, as it did in the United States.

Canada’s major political parties, including the opposition Conservatives, joined early in full-throated support of mass vaccination. Leading politicians didn’t dismiss immunization as unnecessary, deride mask mandates or attack scientists.

When Andrew Scheer, then the Conservative leader, criticized Prime Minister Justin Trudeau last year over the immunization program, it was to complain that he wasn’t delivering vaccines fast enough.

Canadians have argued over how quickly to lift limits on public gatherings, restaurants and retail stores, but their debates have been muted by U.S. standards. The country’s toughest lockdown was imposed by Ontario Premier Doug Ford, a populist conservative who has been compared to former President Trump.

“I can’t stand lockdowns,” Ford complained, but he stuck by his health experts’ recommendation to keep the restrictions until almost 80% of Ontarians had received their first doses of vaccine.

Like the United States, Canada has anti-vaxxers — just fewer of them. An Angus Reid Institute poll last month found that only 8% of Canadians said they definitely do not intend to get a COVID vaccination, including 15% of Conservative Party voters. Polls in the United States have found refusal rates at least twice as high.

And there lies a clue toward a deeper, more complex explanation for Canada’s vaccination success over that of the U.S.: the underlying differences between the countries’ political cultures and, especially, their conservative parties.

“There is much less polarization in Canada overall,” Peter Loewen, a political scientist at the University of Toronto, told me. “There’s not a lot of political mileage in appearing to be anti-science in Canada; there is in the United States.”

Canadians also differ from Americans in that more of them trust their government to do the right thing. Frank Graves of Ekos Research, an Ottawa pollster, noted that in one survey last year, Americans’ trust in Washington was as low as 17%; the trust level in Canada was 37%, about twice as high.

“In Canada, our number actually bounced up during the pandemic, as people looked to government as a source of salvation,” he told me. “Trust in government, in science and in public health are all interrelated, and they are all key predictors of anti-vax sentiment.”

Another difference: Canada’s Conservative Party is more moderate than the post-Trump Republican Party.

“There’s a strain of authoritarian populism in both parties, but it has become the dominant faction in the Republican Party; it’s not as large in Canada,” Graves said.

Before the 2020 U.S. presidential election, Canada’s Leger Poll asked Canadians whether they would vote for Trump or Joe Biden. Among all Canadians, Biden was the favorite, by a whopping 84%; even Conservative Party voters preferred Biden over Trump, at 59%.

One last difference: Canada has no equivalent of Fox News spreading misinformation about COVID vaccines.

“We’ve got a more centrist media system, with one dominant, government-owned broadcast network,” Loewen said, referring to the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. “It’s hard to quantify the impact, but it’s clear that there is one.”

Of course, not everyone is impressed by Canada’s antipandemic measures. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis recently derided them as an example of what not to do.

“We were the leading state fighting against coronavirus lockdowns,” he bragged on Fox News. “I believe had Florida not done that, you would see the other states to have followed Canada, [which is] still locked down.”

But the governor should be careful about the comparisons he invites.

Florida led the United States in COVID-19 cases last week, and more than 39,000 Sunshine State residents have died from the disease.

Canada, with a much larger population, has had about 27,000 COVID deaths. Its per capita death rate is less than half that of Florida.

That should make even Republicans ask themselves: What is Canada doing right?
 

injinji

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Several months back I mentioned that my across the river neighbor had posted on FB that one of her teenage sons had Covid. He got better in just a few days. Now her other son has it, and he's having more trouble than his brother.
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Highly Potent COVID Treatment: New Nanobodies Stop SARS-CoV-2 and Its Dangerous Variants

Göttingen researchers have developed mini-antibodies that efficiently block the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the official name of the virus strain that causes coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Previous to this name being adopted, it was commonly referred to as the 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV), the Wuhan coronavirus, or the Wuhan virus. SARS-CoV-2 and its dangerous new variants. These so-called nanobodies bind and neutralize the virus up to 1000 times better than previously developed mini-antibodies. In addition, the scientists optimized their mini-antibodies for stability and resistance to extreme heat. This unique combination makes them promising agents to treat COVID-19

First identified in 2019 in Wuhan, China, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). It has spread globally, resulting in the 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic. COVID-19. Since nanobodies can be produced at low costs in large quantities, they could meet the global demand for COVID-19 therapeutics. The new nanobodies are currently in preparation for clinical trials.

Antibodies help our immune system to fend off pathogens. For example, the molecules attach to viruses and neutralize them so that they can no longer infect cells. Antibodies can also be produced industrially and administered to acutely ill patients. They then act like drugs, relieving symptoms and shortening recovery from the disease. This is established practice for treating hepatitis B and rabies. Antibodies are also used for treating COVID-19 patients. However, producing these molecules on an industrial scale is too complex and expensive to meet worldwide demand. Nanobodies could solve this problem.

Scientists at the Max Planck Institute (MPI) for Biophysical Chemistry in Göttingen (Germany) and the University Medical Center Göttingen (UMG) have now developed mini-antibodies (also known as VHH antibodies or nanobodies) that unite all the properties required for a potent drug against COVID-19. “For the first time, they combine extreme stability and outstanding efficacy against the virus and its Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Delta mutants,” emphasizes Dirk Görlich, director at the MPI for Biophysical Chemistry.

At first glance, the new nanobodies hardly differ from anti-SARS-CoV-2 nanobodies developed by other labs. They are all directed against a crucial part of the coronavirus spikes, the receptor-binding domain that the virus deploys for invading host cells. The nanobodies block this binding domain and thereby prevent the virus from infecting cells.

“Our nanobodies can withstand temperatures of up to 95 °C without losing their function or forming aggregates,” explains Matthias Dobbelstein, professor and director of the UMG’s Institute of Molecular Oncology. “For one thing, this tells us that they might remain active in the body long enough to be effective. For another, heat-resistant nanobodies are easier to produce, process, and store.”

Single, double, and triple nanobodies
The simplest mini-antibodies developed by the Göttingen team already bind up to 1000 times more strongly to the spike protein than previously reported nanobodies. They also bind very well to the mutated receptor-binding domains of the Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Delta strains. “Our single nanobodies are potentially suitable for inhalation and thus for direct virus neutralization in the respiratory tract,” Dobbelstein says. “In addition, because they are very small, they could readily penetrate tissues and prevent the virus from spreading further at the site of infection.”

A ‘nanobody triad’ further improves binding: The researchers bundled three identical nanobodies according to the symmetry of the spike protein, which is comprised of three identical building blocks with three binding domains. “With the nanobody triad, we literally join forces: In an ideal scenario, each of the three nanobodies attaches to one of the three binding domains,” reports Thomas Güttler, a scientist in Görlich’s team. “This creates a virtually irreversible bond. The triple will not let release the spike protein and neutralizes the virus even up to 30,000-fold better than the single nanobodies.” Another advantage: The larger size of the nanobody triad expectedly delays renal excretion. This keeps them in the body for longer and promises a longer-lasting therapeutic effect.

As a third design, the scientists produced tandems. These combine two nanobodies that target different parts of the receptor-binding domain and together can bind the spike protein. “Such tandems are extremely resistant to virus mutations and the resulting ‘immune escape’ because they bind the viral spike so strongly”, explains Metin Aksu, a researcher in Görlich’s team.

For all nanobody variants – monomeric, double as well as triple – the researchers found that very small amounts are sufficient to stop the pathogen. If used as a drug, this would allow for a low dosage and thus for fewer side effects and lower production costs.

Alpacas provide blueprints for mini-antibodies
“Our nanobodies originate from alpacas and are smaller and simpler than conventional antibodies,” Görlich says. To generate the nanobodies against SARS-CoV-2, the researchers immunized three alpacas – Britta, Nora, and Xenia from the herd at the MPI for Biophysical Chemistry – with parts of the coronavirus spike protein. The mares then produced antibodies, and the scientists drew a small blood sample from the animals. For the alpacas, the mission was then complete, as all further steps were carried out with the help of enzymes, bacteria, so-called bacteriophages, and yeast. “The overall burden on our animals is very low, comparable to vaccination and blood testing in humans,” Görlich explains.

Görlich’s team extracted around one billion blueprints for nanobodies from the alpacas’ blood. What then followed was a laboratory routine perfected over many years: The biochemists used bacteriophages to select the very best nanobodies from the initially vast pool of candidates. These were then tested for their efficacy against SARS-CoV-2 and further improved in successive rounds of optimization.

Not every antibody is ‘neutralizing’. Researchers of Dobbelstein’s group therefore determined if and how well the nanobodies prevent the viruses from replicating in cultured cells in the lab. “By testing a wide range of nanobody dilutions, we find out which quantity suffices to achieve this effect,” explains Antje Dickmanns from Dobbelstein’s team. Her colleague Kim Stegmann adds: “Some of the nanobodies were really impressive. Less than a millionth of a gram per liter of medium was enough to completely prevent infection. In the case of the nanobody triads, even another twenty-fold dilution was sufficient.“

Also effective against current coronavirus variants
Over the course of the coronavirus pandemic, new virus variants have emerged and rapidly became dominant. These variants are often more infectious than the strain that first appeared in Wuhan (China). Their mutated spike protein can also ‘escape’ neutralization by some originally effective antibodies of infected, recovered, or vaccinated persons. This makes it more difficult even for an already trained immune system to eliminate the virus. This problem also affects previously developed therapeutic antibodies and nanobodies.

This is where the new nanobodies show their full potential, as they are also effective against the major coronavirus variants of concern. The researchers had inoculated their alpacas with part of the spike protein of the first known SARS-CoV-2 virus, but remarkably, the animals’ immune system also produced antibodies that are active against the different virus variants. “Should our nanobodies prove ineffective against a future variant, we can reimmunize the alpacas. Since they have already been vaccinated against the virus, they would very quickly produce antibodies against the new variant,” Güttler asserts confidently.

Therapeutic application in view
The Göttingen team is currently preparing the nanobodies for therapeutic use. Dobbelstein emphasizes: “We want to test the nanobodies as soon as possible for safe use as a drug so that they can be of benefit to those seriously ill with COVID-19 and those who have not been vaccinated or cannot build up an effective immunity.” The team is supported by experts in technology transfer: Dieter Link (Max Planck Innovation), Johannes Bange (Lead Discovery Center, Dortmund, Germany), and Holm Keller (kENUP Foundation).

The receptor-binding domain of SARS-CoV-2 is known to be a good candidate for a protein vaccine but so far difficult to manufacture economically on a large scale and in a form, which activates the immune system against the virus. Bacteria programmed accordingly produce incorrectly folded material. The Göttingen researchers discovered a solution for this problem: They identified special nanobodies that enforce correct folding in bacterial cells, without obstructing the crucial neutralizing part of the receptor-binding domain. This might allow for vaccines that can be produced inexpensively, can be quickly adapted to new virus variants, and can be distributed with simple logistics even in countries with little infrastructure. “The fact that nanobodies can help with protein folding was previously not known and is extremely interesting for research and pharmaceutical applications,” Görlich says.
 

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Capacity limits, mask mandate to be eliminated for most places in Manitoba
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New public health orders take effect Saturday, include shift from requirements to recommendations
Masks will no longer be required in indoor public spaces and capacity limits will be eliminated for most businesses as Manitoba's next reopening steps take effect on Saturday — one month earlier than first planned.

There will also be no restrictions on indoor and outdoor gatherings at private residences.

"This is a significant reopening for Manitoba. It's the largest loosening of restrictions since the beginning of this pandemic," said Chief Provincial Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin.

Specifically, the new public health orders will allow retailers and malls, gyms and fitness centres, libraries, personal services such as hair and nail salons, day camps, markets and garden centres to open without restrictions. "We know that COVID is still with us and we still know those places, crowded spaces, prolonged contact increases the risk of transmission not only of COVID but of the other respiratory viruses that are likely to return [in the fall]," said Roussin.

As for masks, due to the ongoing presence of COVID-19 and the extra risk posed by the more contagious delta variant, health officials strongly recommend those who are not fully immunized continue to use masks and stay two metres away from others while indoors.

As of Tuesday, 80 per cent of eligible Manitobans ages 12 and up had received one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, the news release said. The province expects to reach 75 per cent with two doses within the next week.

Roussin was asked why he chose to loosen restrictions and eliminate the mask mandate even though Canada's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam is saying the country could be at the start of a fourth COVID-19 wave driven by the more infectious delta variant.

"Each province has to follow the epidemiology in their province," he said, acknowledging a fourth wave may very well show up in areas around the world but that's not the case in Manitoba right now.

Groundhog Day?
 
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