December 2 coronavirus news | CNN

December 2 coronavirus news

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Covid-19 vaccine trial volunteer describes side effects
03:04 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • The UK has become the first country to allow the use of Pfizer and BioNTech’s Covid-19 vaccine after it was granted temporary authorization for emergency use.
  • US CDC advisers recommended that health care staff and long-term care facility residents be first in line for any Covid-19 vaccines that get emergency authorization.
  • The first shipments of Pfizer’s vaccine in the US will be delivered on Dec. 15, according to an Operation Warp Speed document.

Our live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic has moved here.

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NIH still looking for Covid-19 vaccine trial volunteers

The US National Institutes of Health is still looking for volunteers to participate in vaccine trials, Director Dr. Francis Collins said in an interview Wednesday with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer.

“We still do need people to take part in these trials,” Collins said.  

Even though two vaccines are close to receiving emergency use authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration, four more are still in the works, he said.

“And the more we have the better, because the sooner we can get those out to people,” Collins said.

Collins said the NIH is counting on volunteers, whom he called “heroes,” to participate in the trials.

Collins said the NIH is also still looking for people to donate convalescent plasma. “We’re still interested in that,” he said.

The website for those interested is Combatcovid.hhs.gov.

UK didn't scrutinize Pfizer coronavirus vaccine trial data as carefully as US FDA is, Fauci says

British health regulators who authorized Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine on Wednesday did not scrutinize the trial data as carefully as the US Food and Drug Administration is doing in its review, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, claimed.

Fauci said it’s important that Americans feel good about a potential Covid-19 vaccine.

“So, it’s almost a damned if you do and you’re damned if you don’t, because if you go quickly and you do it superficially, people are not going to want to get vaccinated,” he said. 

“We have the gold standard of a regulatory approach with the FDA. The UK did not do it as carefully and they got a couple of days ahead,” he said. “I don’t think that makes much difference. We’ll be there. We’ll be there very soon.”

People who have had Covid-19 can still get the vaccine, NIH's Collins says

People who have had Covid-19 can still get a coronavirus vaccine when one becomes available, Dr. Francis Collins, the director of the US National Institutes of Health, said Wednesday.

A new Covid-19 vaccine could be available before the end of the month, if the US Food and Drug Administration approves an emergency use authorization application submitted by Pfizer.

The first people in line to get the vaccine are healthcare workers and residents of long-term care facilities.

Former French president dies of Covid-19 

In this May 11, 2017 file photo, Former French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing attends a so-called "German-French Young Leaders Conference" in Berlin.

Former French president Valéry Giscard d’Estaing died on Wednesday at his family home in France’s Loire region, according to the Valéry Giscard d’Estaing Foundation in a statement posted on Twitter.

D’Estaing’s family confirmed the death in a statement to AFP, saying, “His state of health had worsened and he died as a consequence of Covid-19”.

He was surrounded by his family when he died, the statement said. It added his funeral would be a strictly private affair in accordance with his wishes. 

D’Estaing was 94 years old.

US reports highest number of Covid-19 deaths in a single day

The United States has reported a record-high number of new Covid-19 deaths on Wednesday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. 

So far on Wednesday, 2,658 Covid-19 deaths have been reported, according to JHU. The US is currently averaging 1,531 new deaths per day, the university’s data shows.

According to JHU data, the days with the highest number of new deaths are: 

  1. Dec. 2: 2,658
  2. April 15: 2,603
  3. Dec. 1: 2,597
  4. April 7: 2,570 
  5. April 21: 2,542 

Note: This is an ongoing tally and today’s final numbers will not be available until overnight tonight.

Vaccine trials for younger children could start early next year, NIH director says

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, appears before a Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing to discuss vaccines and protecting public health during the coronavirus pandemic on Sept. 9, in Washington.

Vaccine trials for children younger than 12 years old could start early next year, Dr. Francis Collins, the director of the US National Institutes of Health, said Wednesday.

We “very definitely need to get there,” Collins told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, because only children 12 and older are being studied right now.

Pfizer and Moderna are now testing their respective vaccines on children between 12 and 18 years old.

Both Pfizer’s and Moderna’s vaccines are expected to receive an emergency use authorization in the US for adults in the near future. Pfizer received emergency authorization for its vaccine in the United Kingdom on Wednesday. 

Pompeo to host holiday parties at State Department amid coronavirus spikes

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo looks on as he meets with civil society leaders in Tbilisi, Georgia, on November 18.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has invited hundreds of guests to the State Department for holiday receptions in the coming weeks, according to two State Department officials familiar with the planning.

These events, which will offer refreshments and drinks for guests, come as State Department employees have been told not to host holiday gatherings, to maximize teleworking from Thanksgiving until January and continue to receive emails from the department about Covid-19 outbreaks inside the building, the sources said.

The invitations for one of the events in mid-December went out to 900 people and the invite for another went to the 180 foreign ambassadors in the US, the sources said.

In total, State Department officials are hosting a holiday reception at the State Department or the Blair House almost every day over the next few weeks, two sources familiar with the planned gatherings said. With President Trump also hosting events, they said that Pompeo felt enabled to do the same.

The planned events are leaving State Department career officials enraged, as they have concerns about the parties leading to a greater spread of the virus. Career and contracted staff feel like they cannot say no to working the event, one of the officials explained. There is concern about the potentially dangerous position this forces people into.

“It is simply irresponsible,” the first official said, noting that some of the contractors who work in the kitchen may not have health insurance.

The Washington Post was first to report that more than 900 invites were sent.

A State Department spokesperson provided the following details about safety plans for holiday parties at the State Department:

California sheriff who refused to enforce Covid-19 restrictions tests positive for coronavirus

In this April 25, 2018 file photo, Sacramento sheriff Scott Jones speaks at a news conference on April 25, 2018 in Sacramento.

Sacramento County Sheriff Scott Jones, who has refused to enforce restrictions aimed at curbing an unprecedented surge in Covid-19 cases, has tested positive for the coronavirus, the sheriff’s office announced.

Jones took a test late last week following an exposure from another employee who had tested positive, and received his own positive result on Tuesday. His family is also in quarantine, the statement noted.

The sheriff is one of “dozens of Sacramento Sheriff’s Office employees who … have contracted the virus,” the department said in a statement. It is unclear how and by whom these people were infected. 

“The sheriff is doing well and has almost no symptoms remaining,” Rodney Grassman, a spokesperson for the sheriff, told CNN. Grassman declined to offer additional details, saying “the sheriff is an elected public official so he wanted to share the diagnosis with the public but at the same time this is a medical condition and thus a private matter for the sheriff and his family.”

Some background: The positive test result follows weeks of Jones publicly expressing his opposition to new Covid-19 restrictions from state and county officials meant to curb the spread of the virus. 

Last month, Jones said he would not enforce a curfew issued by Gov. Gavin Newsom prohibiting nonessential gatherings from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. for the vast majority of the state’s 40 million residents.

“The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office will not be determining … compliance with, or enforcing compliance of, any health or emergency orders related to curfews, staying at home, Thanksgiving or other social gatherings inside or outside the home,” Jones said in a Nov. 19 news release.

Jones also resisted earlier attempts by officials to halt the spread of the coronavirus, including the statewide mask mandate Newsom issued on June 18. The following day the sheriff’s department said, “it would be inappropriate for deputies to criminally enforce the Governor’s mandate.” Instead, the department would operate on an “educational capacity.”

911 emergency medical system in US "at a breaking point," ambulance group says

A medical worker walks outside of the Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn on December 1 in New York.

The 911 emergency call system is struggling to stay together, said the American Ambulance Association, which represents all of the nation’s ambulance services.

“The 911 emergency medical system throughout the United States is at a breaking point,” Aarron Reinert, the president of the American Ambulance Association, wrote in a recent letter to the Department of Health and Human Services. “Without additional relief, it seems likely to break, even as we enter the third surge of the virus in the Mid-West and West.”

CNN obtained a copy of the letter, which was dated Nov. 25, on Wednesday. 

Reinert said in the letter that public and private ambulance services in all 50 states must have additional funding in order to continue providing the services they have supplied since the pandemic began last spring.

“Similar to hospitals and many skilled nursing facilities, ground ambulance service providers and suppliers since March have been serving their communities in a disproportionate manner to their traditional role in the Medicare program,” Reinert wrote in the letter.

“Given the substantially heavier burden that AAA members are carrying during the pandemic, we reiterate our request for HHS to provide additional funding from the Congressionally allocated dollars for the Provider Relief Fund specifically to ground ambulance service providers to ensure the stability of these essential providers and suppliers as the country continues to battle the pandemic,” he said.

The trade group is asking for $2.6 billion from HHS to prevent the emergency medical system from buckling under the weight of the pandemic.

The organization’s CEO Maria Bianchi told CNN the money would mean every single ambulance in the US, regardless of affiliation, would get $43,500 to help with supplies, such as personal protective equipment, and continued operations.

Bianchi described the current situation with ambulance services as a “rubber band stretched to the breaking point.”

The US has just under 60,000 ambulances, Bianchi said, and the American Ambulance Association represents all of them.

“It has never been this bad and we are we are looking for a tonic, something that can help us to alleviate this surge, so that that does not happen, so that someone doesn’t call 911 and a unit doesn’t arrive within the appropriate amount of time to help that person,” she said.

US surpasses 100,000 Covid-19 hospitalizations

The United States has surpassed 100,000 current Covid-19 hospitalizations, setting a new record high since the pandemic began, according to the Covid Tracking Project (CTP). 

On Wednesday, 100,226 people were hospitalized with Covid-19, according to CTP. 

Arizona governor orders Covid-19 vaccine to be made available at no cost

Arizona Republican Gov. Doug Ducey arrives for a news conference to talk about the latest Arizona V-19 information Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2020, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin, Pool)

Arizona residents will not have to pay out-of-pocket to receive a Covid-19 vaccine when one is approved, under an executive order issued Wednesday by Gov. Doug Ducey.

Early test results from vaccines by Pfizer and Moderna have been characterized as very positive, and final government approval could come in a matter of days.

Ducey added that, when a vaccine is available, getting teachers vaccinated will be among the top priorities.

“We want our schools open and our teachers protected,” said Ducey.

Some context: State officials have been developing a plan for distributing the coronavirus vaccine, and the head of the state’s National Guard said they are prepared to help.

“If there are any gaps in the rural areas for that last mile, our logistics team will cover that, as well,” said Maj. Gen. Michael McGuire, Arizona’s adjutant general.

In addition to the vaccine plan, the governor’s office announced Monday that an additional $60 million in funding will be made available to fund a surge in hospital staffing. Ducey said the money will fund an additional 500 nurses through January.

48 NBA players test positive for Covid-19

The NBA and National Basketball Players Association (NBPA) jointly announced Wednesday that of the 546 players tested for Covid-19 during this initial return-to-market testing phase, 48 have tested positive for the virus.

Anyone who has returned a confirmed positive test during this initial phase of testing in their team’s market will be isolated until they are cleared for leaving isolation under the rules established by the NBA and NBPA in accordance with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance, according to a news release.

NBA players returned to a league-wide testing program during the past week, with testing beginning between Nov. 24-30 depending on the day that a player returned to the team’s market. 

Here's how Covid-19 vaccinations will be tracked in the US

Dr. Kelly Moore, associate director of the Immunization Action Coalition, which is supporting frontline workers who will administer Covid-19 vaccinations, said vaccination cards will be used as the “simplest” way to keep track of Covid-19 shots.

Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers, which is helping states with their immunization plans, said vaccination clinics will also be reporting to their state immunization registries what vaccine was given. For example, if an entity didn’t know where a patient got a first dose, they could run a query.

“If you’re in the same state, they can query the information system,” Hannan said.

On top of that, Moore said many places are planning to ask patients to voluntarily provide a cell phone number, so they can get a text message telling them when and where their next dose is scheduled to be administered.

Hannan said many states are also providing consumer access to records.

“So your record that’s in the immunization information system, you would have a way to access, so you could check. And if you went and showed up somewhere different to get a second dose, you would be able to find out what your first dose was,” she said.

Hannan said every dose administered is being reported to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well.

The CDC did not immediately respond to CNN’s inquiry about whether such a database would include a record of everyone immunized.

EPA administrator to quarantine following Covid-19 exposure

Andrew Wheeler, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), listens during a Senate Environment and Public Works Committee hearing on May 20 in Washington.

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Andrew Wheeler has been exposed to Covid-19 and will quarantine until he’s “gone through the proper testing protocols,” he announced in a statement. 

Wheeler was supposed to attend the 50th anniversary Nixon Library environmental exhibit opening tomorrow, but he said in the statement he will now attend virtually. 

He said he is quarantining after consulting with his doctor and “out of an abundance of caution” following what the statement says was a secondary exposure. The statement didn’t say how or where Wheeler was exposed.

“I look forward to carrying out agency business as usual,” he added.

Obama says he'll get a Covid-19 vaccine when he can and he'll do it on TV

Former President Barack Obama said he “absolutely” plans on getting a Covid-19 vaccine when it’s available.

Obama, in an interview with SiriusXM host Joe Madison scheduled to air Thursday, said if Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said a coronavirus is safe, he believes him. 

“I promise you that when it’s been made for people who are less at risk, I will be taking it,” he added.

During the interview, Obama appeared to acknowledge the very real problem of vaccine hesitancy, which some health experts worry could cause minorities, who have been more adversely impacted by the coronavirus pandemic, to avoid getting a shot.

“I understand you know historically, everything, dating back all the way to the Tuskegee experiments and so forth why the African American community, would have some skepticism. But the fact of the matter is, is that vaccines are why we don’t have polio anymore, the reason why we don’t have a whole bunch of kids dying from measles and smallpox and diseases that used to decimate entire populations and communities,” he said. 

Obama said he has no problem setting an example for getting a shot once one is available. 

“I may end up taking it on TV or having it filmed, just so that people know that I trust this science, and what I don’t trust is getting Covid.”

Some context: Previous studies have revealed that minority communities have higher death rates from Covid-19, are more exposed, and the most vulnerable in part because of pre-existing conditions.

Obama also said in addition to promising vaccines, another reason to be hopeful is the incoming President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

“In terms of Covid now, obviously at the end of the day, one of the great things about having Joe Biden and Kamala Harris back in charge on January 20th, is they will also then put scientists and medical experts in charge,” he said.

Moderna says US pivotal in bringing vaccine to the world

Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel speaks at a meeting with President Donald Trump, members of the Coronavirus Task Force and pharmaceutical executives in the Cabinet Room of the White House on March 2.

Moderna says the US is playing a pivotal role in bringing the vaccine to the world. 

“We got a billion dollars for funding the clinical trial. So, basically the US government, if you think about it, has offered to the world the cost of developing Moderna’s vaccine,” Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel said at a World Economic Forum conference on vaccines on Wednesday. 

Bancel said the company is on track to provide 500 million to 1 billion doses next year, in addition to the 20 millions doses they will have available by the end of this year, despite being a company of just 1,000 people. 

“The team is working as hard as they can 24/7, literally, to get as many products as we can out the door. We know that lives depend on it. We’re losing tens of thousands of people a day around the world,” he said. 

Moderna applied on Monday to the US Food and Drug Administration for authorization of its Covid-19 vaccine.

Moderna is the second company to apply to the FDA for emergency use authorization for a coronavirus vaccine. Pfizer applied on Nov. 20 with data showing similarly high efficacy.

The FDA is scheduled to meet with its Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee on Dec. 10 to review Pfizer’s application and on Dec.17 to review Moderna’s application.

Spain will ban travel between regions for Christmas holidays

Spain will ban movement between its regions starting Dec. 23 and Jan. 6, the country’s Health Minister Salvador Illa announced on Wednesday evening.

 “We stay at home during this Christmas,” Illa told reporters during a news conference.

After a meeting between the central government and the leaders of Spain’s 17 regions, the health minister also announced the following measures:

  • Family gatherings will be allowed with a maximum of 10 people for Dec. 24 and 25 as well as Dec. 31 and Jan. 1.
  • A national curfew will start at 1:30 a.m. local during these dates.
  • All regions will limit events and activities in order to avoid crowds during this period.
  • Religious ceremonies indoors are allowed following capacity limits, while singing is not recommended.

Spain’s Health Ministry reported at least 9,331 new Covid-19 infections on Wednesday, bringing the total number of cases in the country to at least 1,665,775. Spain’s death toll reached 45,784 with 273 new deaths.

The country has reported a decrease in the number of cases in the last couple of weeks, but it is too early for celebrations, Illa said.

“This data doesn’t give us space for optimism, it gives us space for caution” the Health Minister added.

Moderna starts testing its coronavirus vaccine in teens and children as young as 12

Moderna Protocol files for Covid-19 vaccinations are seen at the Research Centers of America in Hollywood, Florida, on August 13.

Biotechnology company Moderna has started enrolling children as young as 12 years old in trials to test its coronavirus vaccine. It’s the second coronavirus vaccine maker, after Pfizer, to test its vaccine in children and teens.

The trial seeks to enroll 3,000 volunteers who are 12 to 18 years old, according to the listing on clinicaltrials.gov.

Sites in six states are listed. They include Idaho, Minnesota, New York, Oklahoma, Texas and Utah.

Federal officials have said it’s important to test coronavirus vaccines in children before they are used more widely in younger populations.

Many colleges “really stepped up” to help lessen Covid-19 spread on campuses, CDC director says 

Mitigation strategies, such as mask wearing, social distancing, and good hand hygiene, in addition to weekly screening and contact tracing, helped dissolve outbreaks on college campuses, according to US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Dr. Robert Redfield.

The CDC director expressed his initial concerns that college students would be problematic in containing the number of infections. 

In August, colleges and universities across the US reported more the 8,700 cases in 36 states. Several outbreaks were reported due to private gatherings and parties among students. 

Some institutions implemented screening procedures to identify asymptomatic carriers and isolated those individuals to prevent transmission, according to Redfield.  

“It reaffirms to me that mitigation can work,” Redfield said. “The idea that coupling mitigation with routine screening surveillance, to be able to identify the asymptomatic carriers these techniques do work.” 

White House defends decision to host holiday parties

White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany on Wednesday defended the White House’s decision to continue its holiday parties, which, as CNN has previously reported, have already begun to flout public health recommendations.

When asked if it was responsible for the White House to be holding the receptions when health agencies are warning against large gatherings and of the impending massive impact the coronavirus will have on the country, McEnany said, “If you can loot businesses, burn down buildings, engage in protests, you can also go to a Christmas party. You can celebrate the holiday of Christmas.”

However, as CNN reported earlier this week, while there are some safety protocols in place for the events, most, if not all, of the holiday parties will still flout US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines for size restrictions, as well as Washington, DC, restrictions for indoor gatherings, which is currently capped at 10 people.

In addition, publicly accessible social media images posted by partygoers indicate there was little social distancing at a White House holiday event on Monday, and many guests were not wearing masks.

The Trump White House itself has already been the epicenter of at least three Covid-19 outbreaks among staff and allies, and a series of events, such as holiday gatherings, will likely put in peril several hundred more guests, workers and staff.

READ MORE

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CDC’s team of advisers set to decide who gets coronavirus vaccine first
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Fauci asks Americans to prepare to get vaccinated as states plan for distribution
Chicago officials shut down a 300-person party for violating coronavirus restrictions

READ MORE

When can I get a coronavirus vaccine?
CDC’s team of advisers set to decide who gets coronavirus vaccine first
A young family faces financial ruin trying to protect their baby from Covid-19
Fauci asks Americans to prepare to get vaccinated as states plan for distribution
Chicago officials shut down a 300-person party for violating coronavirus restrictions