January 5, 2021 coronavirus news | CNN

January 5 coronavirus news

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Warp Speed adviser on vaccines: Nothing has gone wrong
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Texas Republican Rep. Kevin Brady tests positive for Covid-19

Texas Rep. Kevin Brady, the top Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee, has tested positive for coronavirus, he announced Tuesday.

Brady – who was on the floor voting this week, including on Sunday – added that he will “Begin treatment tomorrow” and should “be fine.”

Over 50 members of Congress have tested positive for Covid-19 or coronavirus antibodies, or were presumed positive.

Read more:

Rep. Kevin Brady (R-TX) speaks during a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, December 10, 2019. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP) (Photo by SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article Texas Republican Rep. Kevin Brady tests positive for Covid-19

Operation Warp Speed says it distributed 3 million coronavirus vaccines Tuesday

Christopher Miller testifies at a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee hearing on "Threats to the Homeland" on Capitol Hill on September 24 in Washington.

The federal government’s Operation Warp Speed said it distributed more than 3 million coronavirus vaccines on Tuesday, meaning that the government has now distributed more than 19 million vaccines across the United States.

Officials in President Donald Trump’s administration have been promising to speed up vaccine distribution. They have admitted they have fallen far short of promises to have vaccinated 20 million people by the end of 2020.

Earlier Tuesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 17 million vaccine doses had been distributed and more than 4.8 million people had been given their first doses of vaccine. 

North Korea just held a major political meeting with about 5,000 people — and there wasn't a mask in sight

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un addressed the opening session of its 8th Workers’ Party Congress on Tuesday morning, according to the state-run Korean Central News Agency. 

North Korea kicked off a rare political event that’s supposed to happen every five years or so with about 5,000 people – including leader Kim Jong Un – gathered indoors without masks and seated close together on Tuesday.

While it’s impossible to verify if face coverings were worn at any point in time, none of the images released by North Korea’s state-run KCNA news Wednesday of the Workers Party Congress show people wearing masks indoors.

From a propaganda standpoint, the images make sense: North Korea claims to not have recorded a single case of Covid-19, so holding a high-level meeting without masks is a way to reinforce that narrative.

But almost no one believes North Korea has been spared from a pandemic that has infected more than 86 million people and killed nearly 2 million. In fact, Kim’s regime recognizes the danger of the virus and has gone to incredible lengths to stop its spread.

Almost all travel into the country ceased shortly after the virus emerged a year ago, and internal travel is also heavily restricted. North Korean state media regularly carries articles reminding its people on the importance of its emergency anti-epidemic campaign. And the regime reportedly had two people executed for not following Covid-19 guidelines, including a customs official who did not follow virus prevention rules while importing goods from China.

Experts believe Pyongyang is enacting a vigilant response because it knows its dilapidated healthcare infrastructure likely cannot contain a major outbreak of Covid-19.

That makes the photographs from the meeting Tuesday all the more puzzling. Perhaps North Korea believes the safeguards it put in place were good enough to allow attendees not to wear masks to the meeting. This is a unique event that North Korea does not want to postpone – it’s just the eighth Party Congress in North Korea’s history and the second of Kim’s tenure. The last one held before Kim took power was in 1980.

But holding it is a risk. If just one of the 5,000 people who traveled from across the country to attend the meeting had Covid-19 and was infectious, it means Kim may have just kicked off an incredibly important political meeting with a super-spreader event.

In Australia and Taiwan's fight against Covid, flight crews are proving to be their Achilles heel

Countries around the Asia-Pacific region have closed borders and imposed strict quarantine requirements, essentially sealing themselves off from the world.

But in many jurisdictions there’s a key exception to those rules: flight crews.

For months, flight crews in a number of places – including Taiwan and Australia – have been able to avoid the tough quarantine rules imposed on other international travelers. But rule breaches by airline staff in both places in December have prompted questions about whether exemptions for aviation workers are creating an unnecessary risk to the public.

Taiwan has now tightened its quarantine rules for flight crews, something two Australian states did in December.

But it’s a tricky predicament. While health experts say that treating flight crews differently is a loophole in an otherwise tough border approach, aviation industry officials say exemptions are needed to keep the industry operating – and avoid jeopardizing flight crews’ mental health.

What happened in Taiwan? When Taiwan reported its first locally-transmitted case in more than 250 days on December 22, authorities quickly pin-pointed a foreign pilot as the source of infection.

Authorities said a New Zealand pilot in his 60s infected a woman in her 30s after completing the required three days of quarantine required for pilots, Taiwan state media CNA reported. That pilot has now been fined by Taiwanese authorities for not disclosing his complete contact history and fired by his company.

What happened in Australia? A series of incidents in December prompted questions over quarantine exemptions for flight crews. A Sydney van driver who had transported international flight crews tested positive at the start of December.

Later that month, New South Wales Police fined 13 international air crew members 1,000 Australian dollars ($760) each for going to a number of Sydney venues when they should have been quarantining. And just before Christmas, a Qantas crew member tested positive after flying into Darwin from Paris and then boarding a domestic flight.

Read the full story:

This picture taken on September 29, 2020 shows Qatar Airlines flight crew members walking past an illuminated sign displaying a message relating to the COVID-19 novel coronavirus at the Sydney International Airport in Sydney. (Photo by David GRAY / AFP) (Photo by DAVID GRAY/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article In Australia and Taiwan's fight against Covid, flight crews are proving to be their Achilles heel

Colombia authorizes emergency use of Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine

A member of staff poses with a vial of Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination health center in Cardiff, United Kingdom, on December 8, 2020.

Medical regulators in Colombia have authorized Pfizer/BioNTech’s Covid-19 vaccine for emergency use, Colombian President Ivan Duque announced on Tuesday.

This is the first coronavirus vaccine that Colombia’s medical authority, INVIMA, has authorized for emergency use. Duque said discussions were ongoing with AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson for future authorizations of their coronavirus vaccines.

In previous statements the Colombian government announced it had secured 10 million doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.

WHO chief "disappointed" as Covid-19 investigators' China mission stalls

WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus attends a news conference organized by the Geneva Association of United Nations Correspondents amid the Covid-19 pandemic on July 3, 2020 in Geneva.

World Health Organization Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that some members of the international scientific team investigating the origins of Covid-19 were told at the last minute that they did not yet have the necessary permissions to arrive in China – including some who were already en route.

Tedros said that some members of that scientific team had already begun their travels from their home countries to China in the 24 hours prior to learning arrangements that had been agreed to between WHO, the Chinese government and countries that the team were to travel through on their way to Wuhan had not been finalized. 

The WHO Director-General went on to say he had been in contact with Chinese officials to “once again made clear that the mission is a priority for WHO and the international team.”

He added that he was given assurances that China was speeding up the internal procedure for “the earliest possible deployment.”

“We are eager to get the mission underway as soon as possible,” he said.

US hits record number of Covid-19 hospitalizations

Clinicians care for a COVID-19 patient in the Intensive Care Unit at Providence St. Mary Medical Center on December 23, 2020 in Apple Valley, California.

The United States reported 131,195 current Covid-19 hospitalizations on Tuesday, setting a new record high since the pandemic began, according to the Covid Tracking Project (CTP).

This is the 35th consecutive day that the US has remained above 100,000 current hospitalizations.

According to CTP data, the highest hospitalization numbers were recorded on the following days:

  1. Jan. 5: 131,195 people hospitalized
  2. Jan. 4: 128,210 people hospitalized
  3. Jan. 3: 125,562 people hospitalized
  4. Dec. 31: 125,379 people hospitalized
  5. Dec. 30: 125,218 people hospitalized

One commercial flight led to a Covid-19 cluster despite pre-travel testing, case study shows

Seven people from five countries tested positive for Covid-19 after a long-haul flight from Dubai to New Zealand in late September, despite taking pre-flight precautions, according to a case study published Tuesday in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.

Five of the passengers tested negative several days ahead of the 18-hour flight, including two traveling from Switzerland who likely brought the virus onboard the plane. The rest of the passengers who later tested positive for Covid-19 sat in aisle seats up to two rows away from those traveling from Switzerland, according to the study.

Five of the seven passengers reported wearing masks and gloves, which were optional during the flight. Upon arrival in New Zealand the passengers were taken to a government quarantine facility, where they later tested positive. The study says one of the cases was likely infected in the quarantine facility by a family member who was among the other six cases.

The study serves as a cautionary counterpoint to other research suggesting that viruses don’t spread easily on planes because of air circulation and filtration systems. The study authors note the system that controls the cabin air would likely be turned off for about a half-hour during a refueling stop in Malaysia.

Researchers at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have estimated that getting tested three days before traveling reduces the risk of spreading the virus by only 5 - 9%. However, testing on the day of departure may reduce that risk by 37 - 61%, according to their paper, which was posted online in November and has not been peer-reviewed.

The November paper notes that pre-departure tests “can still miss infected travelers who are in their latent period, as they may not have enough viral shedding to be detected.”

US surpasses 21 million Covid-19 cases

There have been at least 21,007,694 total cases of coronavirus in the United States and at least 356,540 people have died from Covid-19 since the pandemic began, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University

Johns Hopkins recorded the first case of coronavirus in the United States on Jan. 21, 2020. 

Seventeen other countries have reported more than 1 million total Covid-19 cases, according to Johns Hopkins.

Here’s a breakdown of the countries and their total number of coronavirus cases:

  • India has more than 10 million total cases
  • Brazil has over 7 million total cases
  • Russia has more than 3 million total cases
  • France, United Kingdom, Turkey, and Italy have over 2 million total cases
  • Spain, Argentina, Colombia, Germany, Mexico, Poland, Iran, Ukraine, Peru, and South Africa all have over 1 million total cases each

1 in 15 Georgia residents infected by Covid-19, data shows

About one in 15 Georgia residents has been infected by Covid-19 and more than one in 1,000 has died, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. 

The state’s seven-day average of new cases reached a record high on Monday, with an average of 8,546 new cases reported each day.

Only eight other states had higher per capita rates of new cases over the same seven-day period. 

In hospitals across Georgia, 91% of intensive care unit beds are occupied and 85% of all inpatient beds are occupied, according to estimates published Sunday by the Department of Health and Human Services. 

In the Atlanta metro area, new cases rose 33% over the previous week, according to data published by the health department on Tuesday, nearly double the average increase for the 25 largest metro areas in the US.

Houston hospital system offers bonus of $500 to employees who get Covid-19 vaccine

Houston Methodist Hospital stands at the Texas Medical Center campus in Houston, Texas, on June 24, 2020.

Houston Methodist, a Texas hospital system, is offering a bonus of $500 to employees if they get vaccinated against Covid-19.

In an email written to the Houston Methodist staff last week, President and CEO Marc Boom said that employees are eligible for a “Hope Bonus” of $500 this March to thank them for their work during a challenging 2020.

“Eligibility criteria will include getting a Covid-19 vaccination, fulfilling our obligation as health care workers to lead the community,” Boom wrote.

Boom noted that the Covid-19 vaccine is not mandated for employees right now but will be eventually.

Houston Methodist employees previously received a $500 bonus in November to thank them for their work during the coronavirus pandemic.

More than 5,000 vaccinations carried out in France on Tuesday

A doctor administers a dose of the Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine on January 5 at the University Hospital Centre of Lille, France.

More than 5,000 Covid-19 vaccinations were carried out on Tuesday “in around thirty” hospitals in France, the country’s Health Minister Olivier Veran tweeted. 

“Tomorrow, doses will have been delivered to about one hundred hospitals,” Veran added, thanking those involved in the country’s mass-vaccination effort.  

Veran said on Monday that the country’s vaccination program would “intensify significantly” over the coming days, adding that the government expects to have “one million shots available by the end of the week.”

“As for nursing homes, the vaccinations are continuing progressively,” he said. 

According to the latest government data, 20,489 new cases were recorded in France on Tuesday, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 2,680,239. 

A total of 867 Covid-19-related deaths were registered over the last 24 hours, bringing the national death toll to 66,282. 

Puerto Rico's governor eliminates total quarantine on Sundays and changes curfew hours

Pedro Pierluisi speaks during a press conference in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on August 2, 2019.

The governor of Puerto Rico, Pedro Pierluisi, announced a decree on Tuesday to eliminate total quarantine on Sundays — a decision ordered by former Gov. Wanda Vázquez in December.

Pierluisi implemented a daily curfew from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. local time, which will begin Jan. 8 and last until Feb. 7.

Commercial establishments must close at 10 p.m., according to the new decree, and a physical distance of three meters (nine feet) between family members is requested.

The new decree states that beaches, marinas and recreational parks are now allowed to be open, but alcohol will not be allowed. Additionally the opening of urban recreational and commercial areas is allowed with a capacity of 30%.

The Condominium Boards and Associations will establish the 30% rule within each complex in relation to the number of residents.

Commercial areas still require physical distancing, and bars and discos will remain closed.

Pierluisi also announced plans to carry out widespread testing across the island, as well as an educational campaign for information and prevention through media and social networks. He ordered an economic assistance program for affected businesses, and emphasized the need to improve communication and distribution regarding the vaccine strategy on the island.

According to the Puerto Rico Department of Health, as of Jan. 4, there were 74,458 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 1,562 deaths.

Grammy Awards postponed due to Covid-19

Grammy trophies sit in the press room during the 60th Annual Grammy Awards on January 28, 2018, in New York. 

The Grammy Awards will not be happening later this month as planned.

The awards ceremony, which celebrates the best in music, has been postponed due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, according to a statement sent to members of the Recording Academy and obtained by CNN. It will now tentatively take place on March 21.

The event had been set to take place at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on Jan. 31, with “The Daily Show” host Trevor Noah acting as host.

Top nominees for the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards include Beyoncé, Dua Lipa, Roddy Ricch and Taylor Swift.

The move comes one day after the union that represents actors and media professionals, SAG-AFTRA, called for a production hold in Covid-plagued Southern California.

“Southern California hospitals are facing a crisis the likes of which we have never seen before. Patients are dying in ambulances waiting for treatment because hospital emergency rooms are overwhelmed. This is not a safe environment for in-person production right now,” SAG-AFTRA President Gabrielle Carteris said in a statement on Monday.

In its guidance, the union encouraged members to stay home and decline on-set employment.

“Even putting aside the risk of acquiring COVID on set — a risk that we have done a great deal to mitigate through our safety protocols — on-set production always poses some risk of injury, whether because of a stunt gone wrong, an equipment failure or a garden-variety fall. Right now, with few if any hospital beds available, it is hard to understand how a worker injured on set is supposed to seek treatment,” SAG-AFTRA National Executive Director David White said.

The Grammys was set to be the start of Hollywood awards season.

The Golden Globes, which is usually held in January, will now be the first award show of the season, if it goes forward. The ceremony is scheduled to take place on Feb. 28 in Beverly Hills, California.

CNN’s Marysabel Huston-Crespo contributed to this report.

Publix will open vaccination sites at 22 locations in Florida

Publix Supermarkets in three Florida counties are partnering with the Florida Division of Emergency Management and the Florida Department of Health to open Covid-19 vaccination sites at 22 locations, according to a news release from Gov. Ron DeSantis’ office.

According to the release, Publix is receiving 15,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine to launch the new pilot program at supermarkets in Citrus, Hernando and Marion counties.

Residents who qualify in Phase 1 of the vaccine rollout can begin making reservations on Thursday and vaccinations will begin on Friday, the release said.

US stocks end the trading day higher

Traders working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday, Jan. 5, 2021. 

US stocks closed higher on Tuesday, shaking off worries about the runoff election in Georgia and coronavirus infection.

Energy stocks were among the best performers after a group of major oil producing nations agreed to keep production broadly flat in February and March. Saudi Arabia announced a surprise voluntary production cut of one million barrels of oil per day, sending oil prices higher.

In economic data, the Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing report showed the sector fared better than expected in December.

Here’s how the major indexes closed:

Note: As stocks settle after the trading day, levels might still change slightly.

First case of UK variant found in Georgia, state's health department says 

The first case of the UK Covid-19 variant has been identified in Georgia, according to a release from the state Department of Health. 

The variant was discovered during analysis of a specimen sent by a pharmacy in Georgia to a commercial lab, the release said. The resident is an 18-year-old man with no travel history who is currently isolating at home.

Previously, cases of the UK variant have been reported in Colorado, California and New York. Last week, the US Centers for Disease Control and prevention said data suggests the new Covid-19 variant has been circulating undetected in the United States and transmitted person to person.

US vaccine administration slows to 28% of distributed doses, CDC vaccine tracker shows

Dr. Melisha Cumberland is given the the second dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine twenty-one days after receiving the first shot from RN Valerie Massaro of Hartford HealthCare, at the Hartford Convention Center in Hartford, Connecticut on January 4, 2021.

The pace of Covid-19 vaccine administration in the United States continues to slow, according to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

As of 9 a.m. ET Tuesday, just 4.8 million of the 17 million doses distributed had been administered – or 28%. That figure was closer to 30% on Monday and 33% over the weekend.

Only five states have administered at least half of the Covid-19 vaccine doses that have been distributed to them, according to the CDC data:

  • South Dakota: 64.5%
  • New Hampshire: 56%
  • North Dakota: 55.8%
  • Connecticut: 54.7%
  • Iowa: 50%

Meanwhile, 15 states have administered less than a quarter of doses distributed, including three states that have administered less than 20%: 

  • Kansas: 15.3%
  • Georgia: 16.3%
  • Arizona: 16.4%

Vaccine administration is moving even slower in long-term care facilities. Just 13% of the 3.3 million doses distributed for use in long-term care facilities have been administered, according to the CDC data.

EU in talks to secure millions of additional Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine doses

A doctor administers a dose of the Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine to a fellow doctor on January 5, 2021, at the University Hospital Centre (CHU) of Lille, northern France.

The European Union is in talks to procure some 100 million additional doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech coronavirus vaccine as part of a potential new contract, French Secretary of State for European Affairs Clément Beaune said Tuesday. 

While the Secretary of State for European Affairs denied that the EU has experienced a shortage in vaccine supplies, he confirmed that discussions are ongoing to procure more doses.

Speaking on Tuesday, European Council President Charles Michel said that the distribution of the vaccine across the EU has posed a “tremendous challenge,” but asserted that European authorities are “fully mobilised” with member states in order to ensure that doses are deployed. 

“Before the end of January, EU leaders will have another video conference to discuss again the Covid-19 crisis and the vaccine roll-out,” Michel added. 

In his interview with BFM on Tuesday, Secretary of State Beaune noted that the EU has so far “signed contracts with six major vaccine companies,” adding that one million doses had arrived in France on Tuesday evening.

CNN has reached out to BioNTech for comment and is awaiting a response.

Nearly 128,000 children diagnosed with Covid-19 between Christmas and New Year's Eve, pediatricians say

Nearly 128,000 children were diagnosed with coronavirus infections from Dec. 24 to Dec. 31, the American Academy of Pediatrics said Tuesday. 

The professional association, made up of pediatricians, noted that over a two-week period — from Dec. 17 to 31 — there was a 17% increase in Covid-19 cases in children.

These newly reported cases bring the cumulative total to more than 2.13 million cases since the start of the pandemic. Children account for a little more than 12% of all Covid-19 cases in the states that report cases by age. 

Some more context: Severe illness due to Covid-19 is still relatively rare among children. In each state between 0.2% and 3.4% of all children with Covid-19 were hospitalized, and children accounted for at most 0.19% of all Covid-19 deaths. Thirteen states reported no child deaths in this time period. 

The AAP says there still is an urgent need to collect more data on the long-term impacts of the pandemic on children, including how Covid-19 affects them physically and mentally. 

The count of cases is also not complete, because not all states report data in the same way. These numbers come from 49 states, New York City, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and Guam.

READ MORE

One American dies from Covid-19 every 33 seconds as the vaccine rollout hits snags
CDC hopes to double the number of coronavirus samples checked for new mutations
We’re entering year two of the pandemic. Here’s what happens next
She lost her dad and uncle to coronavirus. Trump’s claim that the virus is exaggerated is an insult, she says
UK emergency Covid-19 field hospitals asked to be ‘ready’ to admit patients as crisis looms

READ MORE

One American dies from Covid-19 every 33 seconds as the vaccine rollout hits snags
CDC hopes to double the number of coronavirus samples checked for new mutations
We’re entering year two of the pandemic. Here’s what happens next
She lost her dad and uncle to coronavirus. Trump’s claim that the virus is exaggerated is an insult, she says
UK emergency Covid-19 field hospitals asked to be ‘ready’ to admit patients as crisis looms