The Delta variant now accounts for an estimated 93.4% of Covid-19 cases in the US, according to new US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention numbers.
The World Health Organization is calling for a moratorium on booster shots until at least the end of September, so more of the global population can get initial doses.
Meanwhile, new global Covid-19 cases have been increasing for more than a month, and the world is on track to hit more than 200 million cases next week, the WHO says.
Our live coverage has ended for the day. Follow the latest on the pandemic here.
29 Posts
Daily pace of new Covid-19 vaccinations tops 400,000 in the US, CDC data shows
From CNN's Deidre McPhillips
Roughly 49.8% of the total US population have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19, according to the latest data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Here is some more data from the CDC:
Not vaccinated: 32.1% of the eligible US population (ages 12 and older).
Current pace of vaccinations (seven-day average): 445,691 people are initiating vaccination each day.
This seven-day average of new vaccinations has topped 400,000 a day for nearly a week.
This is a 17% increase over last week’s pace.
An average of 677,279 doses are being administered each day.
20states have fully vaccinated more than half of their residents: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin, as well as Washington, DC.
Alabama and Mississippi are the only states to have fully vaccinated less than 35% of residents.
Link Copied!
USAID announces $720 million in funding to expand global fight against Covid-19
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
The US Agency for International Development announced $720 million in new funding “to expand and intensify the fight against Covid-19 abroad, respond to humanitarian crises exacerbated by Covid-19, and support a global recovery while preparing for future pandemic threats,” according to an agency release.
According to USAID, “approximately $445 million of the total funding is for sub-Saharan Africa to support Covid-19 response and vaccine readiness and urgent humanitarian needs consistent with the African Union’s continental Covid response strategy.”
The release added: “This funding will also help countries to reduce Covid-19 cases and deaths until vaccines are more widely available, including programs to expand Covid-19 testing, keep health workers safe with protective equipment such as masks and gloves, increase countries’ oxygen supply, fight misinformation, better equip laboratories, and strengthen disease surveillance.”
Link Copied!
Chicago's Hyde Park Summer Fest canceled over Covid-19 concerns
From CNN’s Keith Allen
Just days after hundreds of thousands of people gathered for the four-day Lollapalooza festival in Chicago’s Grant Park, a September festival in nearby Hyde Park has been canceled due to concerns over Covid-19, organizers announced Wednesday.
The festival was to take place on Sept. 11 and 12 on Chicago’s Midway Plaisance Park.
CNN’s Natalie Andes contributed to this report.
Link Copied!
Nearly 500 Covid-19 cases connected to Milwaukee Bucks' Deer District crowds
From CNN’s Carma Hassan and Keith Allen
Fans make their way into the Deer District before Game 6 of the NBA basketball finals game between the Milwaukee Bucks and the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday, July 20.
(Jeffrey Phelps/AP/FILE)
The Wisconsin Department of Health Services (WDHS) has connected at least 491 positive cases of Covid-19 to people who gathered in Milwaukee’s Deer District to cheer on their hometown Bucks throughout their historic playoff run and NBA Finals victory.
The 491 cases were from people who “self-declared” that they had attended a Deer District gathering at some point during the month of July, according to Milwaukee Health Department spokesperson Emily Tau.
WDHS spokesperson Elizabeth Goodsitt cautioned that while the 491 confirmed cases were from people who either attended an NBA Finals game inside the arena or gathered in the Deer District while the games were being played, they cannot be certain that the virus was acquired in these specific settings.
“Also, we are likely undercounting or underrepresenting cases who attended and then got sick but did not report, or interview was not completed, or information was not completely documented,” Goodsitt told CNN over email Wednesday.
The Deer District is the name of the entertainment district outside the Bucks’ home arena, which served as a gathering point for thousands of fans throughout the postseason. The Bucks NBA championship victory on July 20 brought roughly 100,000 people to the Deer District to party and watch the win on massive outdoor screens, according to an earlier statement from the Milwaukee Police Department.
WDHS contract tracers are still conducting interviews and are routinely asking people who have Covid-19 about any large events they may have attended.
“This question allows us to gather information on a wide variety of large gatherings, including the basketball victory celebrations,” Goodsitt said.
Link Copied!
The University of New Mexico will require proof of Covid-19 vaccination
From CNN’s Chris Boyette
(Matt Patterson/AP)
The University of New Mexico in Albuquerque is reversing course and now requiring proof of Covid-19 vaccination for faculty, staff and students before the start of the semester, according to updated information posted on the university’s website.
In an Aug. 2 letter to the university community, university president Garnett S. Stokes said that due to rising cases of Covid-19 throughout the country and across New Mexico due to the Delta variant, the university had to reconsider its announcement on July 8 that they would not mandate vaccinations and effective Aug. 5, faculty, staff and students must be vaccinated no later than Sept. 30.
Stokes said the policy change was “not a decision that has been made lightly,” and that “In short, with cases of Covid and its variants slowly increasing, if we wish to return to a fully operational campus in a manner that protects the safety of our community, encouraging vaccination and mask wearing is not enough.”
There will be accommodations made for disability, medical condition, or sincere religious belief, the letter said.
Link Copied!
Los Angeles council members propose proof of Covid-19 vaccination in indoor spaces
From CNN's Cheri Mossburg
The Los Angeles City Council will consider a motion that would require proof of vaccination in order to enter indoor public spaces like retails stores, gyms and restaurants, expanding on a similar order in New York City.
A motion introduced Wednesday by two city council members calls for the Los Angeles City Attorney to develop an ordinance that will require people to show proof of having received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine to access indoor public spaces for shopping, concerts, movies, and sporting events.
The legislation goes beyond the requirement announced Tuesday in New York, adding retail stores to the list of indoor public places where residents would need to present proof of vaccination. Los Angeles residents are also required to wear face masks while in indoor public spaces, regardless of vaccination status.
Council President Nury Martinez and member Mitch O’Farrell introduced the legislation as Los Angeles County endures a surge in coronavirus cases, driven by the highly contagious delta variant.
More context: Despite a relatively high vaccination rate, the number of people hospitalized in Los Angeles has tripled in the past month, and cases have increased twenty-fold, according to county health data.
“Hard-working Angelenos, their customers, and the general public deserve to be safe in public spaces. The vaccines are our most effective form of protection, and the time to act is now,” O’Farrell added in a statement.
Link Copied!
Global Covid-19 cases surpass 200 million
From CNN's Deidre McPhillips
More than 200 million cases of Covid-19 have been reported globally, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
Three countries account for more than 40% of cases:
United States: 35,292,721 cases (18% of total global cases)
India: 31,769,132 cases (16% of total global cases)
Brazil: 19,985,817 cases (10% of total global cases)
The World Health Organization declared coronavirus a pandemic on March 11, 2020.
Since then:
The first 50 million cases were reported by Nov. 7, 2020.
By Jan. 26, 80 days later, there were 100 million global cases.
By April 29, 93 days later, there were 150 million.
Now, 97 days after that, there are a total of 200,014,602 reported cases of Covid-19 worldwide and at least 4,252,873 deaths.
Globally, about 2.3 billion people have received at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine, and about 1.2 billion people are fully vaccinated, according to Our World in Data.
Link Copied!
Illinois governor announces statewide school mask mandate
From CNN’s Keith Allen
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker
(Pool)
Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Wednesday announced a statewide school mask mandate for students and staff returning to classrooms, saying the Delta variant made masks a necessity.
Pritzker’s school mask mandate applies to all schools throughout the state, both public and private, and for pre-K through grade 12 students, the state lawmaker said Wednesday.
“My goal has always been to safely bring all kids back into the classroom at the start of the school year and, crucially, to keep them there. Without these measures, we would likely see many more outbreaks,” he added.
Face coverings will also be required for all indoor school sports and recreation in pre-K through grade 12 schools, Pritzker said.
Chicago Public Schools last month announced their own districtwide mask mandate for the resumption of in-person classes on Aug. 30, CNN previously reported.
Link Copied!
As debate around school mask mandates heats up, local health officials fear for their safety
From CNN's Jacqueline Howard
In cities and counties where there has been ongoing debate around mask mandates in public schools, several local health officials have reported again being intimidated by or receiving threats from anti-maskers, Lori Tremmel Freeman, chief executive officer of the National Association of County and City Health Officials, told CNN on Wednesday.
This is something NACCHO is now monitoring closely.
As a return to school gets underway, “these are heated conversations sometimes that are turning nasty and out of control,” Freeman said. “We are going to see more of this in communities that have these high transmission rates and are returning to some of these mitigation efforts. We’re going to have to track it closely.”
Throughout the pandemic, public health officers have reported receiving death threats and harassment in response to their recommendations to wear masks and follow certain Covid-19 mitigation measures. For instance, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has spoken openly about receiving death threats.
CNN previously reported that during a live public briefing on Facebook last year, “someone very casually suggested” Los Angeles County’s public health director, Barbara Ferrer, should be shot. And in Washington state, Okanogan County community health director Lauri Jones installed a new security system and asked for police patrols around her home following repeated online threats.
“Just last week, we started seeing extremist groups come out again in opposition to their public health officers’ orders in California,” Freeman said on Wednesday. “Another example, in North Carolina, involved school board meetings where parents were picketing that there was no way they were sending their kids to school in masks. Really, this is going on in different places across the country.”
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its guidance on masks last week, recommending that everyone older than age 2 wear masks in schools, whether vaccinated or not.
These pressures of the pandemic seem to be taking a toll on the public health workforce.
Freeman previously told CNN in May that NACCHO has tracked more than 250 public health officials leaving the field since the beginning of the pandemic.
Link Copied!
CDC ensemble forecasts project new Covid-19 deaths likely to increase over the next 4 weeks
From CNN's Naomi Thomas
The figures show the number of new (top row) and total (bottom row) COVID-19 deaths reported in the United States each week from May 29 through July 31 and forecasted over the next 4 weeks, through August 28. Models make various assumptions about the levels of social distancing and other interventions, which may not reflect recent changes in behavior. See model descriptions below for details on the assumptions and methods used to produce the forecasts.
(CDC)
Covid-19 hospitalizations and deaths are likely to increase over the next four weeks, according to ensemble forecasts published Wednesday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
When it comes to Covid-19 cases, the agency says that its forecast should be interpreted with caution — since actual numbers have fallen outside the range of previous predictions. CDC’s latest forecast predicts 350,000 to 1,800,000 new cases during the week ending Aug. 28.
The forecast predicts a total of 624,000 to 642,000 deaths will be reported by Aug. 28.
The previous forecast, published July 28, projected up to 633,000 deaths by Aug. 21.
According to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, there have been 614,342 coronavirus deaths in the United States.
The forecast predicts that there will be 6,700 to 24,000 new confirmed Covid-19 hospital admissions likely reported on Aug. 30.
Link Copied!
Florida governor's office holds strong on allowing parents to make masking choices for students
From CNN's Leyla Santiago, Sara Weisfeldt and Alyssa Kraus
Parents with the Education Advocates of Alachua County take part in a rally to support that children should be required to wear face coverings in Alachua County schools this year, outside the Alachua County Administration Building in Gainesville, Florida, on August 3, 2021.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ office is now “finalizing health and education emergency rules this week that do not prohibit masks in schools but will require parents to have the right to opt their children out,” his press secretary Christina Pushaw told CNN.
The order leaves Florida schools with a complicated balancing act: how to keep students and staff safe from the state’s rapid Covid-19 surge while also avoiding retaliation from the governor.
After a heated school board meeting in Duval County in northeast Florida last night, where more than 70 parents and community members showed up with a range of passionate opinions about masking their children, the school board voted to recommend mask use at schools. It will also require parents to opt-out if they want their child to ditch the mask, a process which will require additional time and paperwork.
Alachua County’s school district will require students to be masked in schools for two weeks. The board said it will re-evaluate the mask policy in mid-August.
Alachua County School Director of Communications Jackie Johnson said masks are required inside school buildings, but are optional outside.
The policy also includes exceptions. For example, parents can submit documentation from a doctor to exempt a child from the mask requirement. Johnson also said there will be some special needs situations like speech therapy where masks can be removed.
With the vaccination rate in Florida still under 50%, both Alachua and Duval County school districts said they plan to set up vaccination sites in schools with hopes of getting as many students, staff, and community members vaccinated.
Link Copied!
New York Auto Show canceled due to Delta variant
From CNN's Peter Valdes-Dapen
The New York International Auto show, set for later this month, was canceled by organizers on Wednesday due to an increasing number of cases of the Covid-19 Delta variant and the local measures used to combat them.
The New York Auto Show was set to take place between Aug. 20 and 29 at the Javits Convention Center in New York City. In a typical year, the 121-year-old New York Auto Show says 628,000 households attend.
New York City recently announced it will require proof of vaccination for people to enter indoor public events as well as restaurants, fitness centers and indoor entertainment venues. The policy will take effect over the next few weeks.
Link Copied!
White House convenes meeting of all living former US surgeon generals to discuss Covid-19
From CNN's Kate Sullivan and Jeremy Diamond
Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy and members of the White House Covid-19 response team convened a meeting of all living former US surgeon generals on Wednesday morning, according to White House press secretary Jen Psaki, as the White House ramps up efforts to get the rest of the population vaccinated.
Those attending the meeting included Dr. Antonia Novello, Dr. Joycelyn Elders, Dr. David Satcher, Dr. Richard Carmona, Dr. Regina Benjamin and Dr. Jerome Adams.
In a Q&A session with reporters following the meeting, Murthy talked about the misinformation about the vaccine that is spreading in some communities of color and said he spoke with the former surgeons general about ways to ramp up partnerships with trusted messengers in those communities to counter that misinformation.
Asked by CNN why the administration only began to take more urgent action in response to the Delta variant last week even though it was identified as a variant of concern in June, Murthy said he believes the CDC moved quickly to act on new information about transmission among vaccinated individuals last week. He stressed that the CDC has to strike a balance between being confident in the data that is informing decisions and moving quickly enough.
He also stressed that vaccinated people “still have a high degree of protection” and stressed that “the majority of transmission is among unvaccinated individuals.”
Addressing a question about booster shots, Murthy said it is very possible booster shots will be needed but noted that the FDA and CDC are still studying that issue.
Link Copied!
All city employees in this Virginia city must get vaccinated and show proof, mayor says
From CNN's Melissa Alonso
Mayor Levar Stoney speaks in Richmond, Virginia, on August 4, 2021.
WTVR
Richmond, Virginia, Mayor Levar Stoney on Wednesday announced all city employees will be required to get vaccinated against Covid-19 and provide proof of vaccination.
“The vaccine protects those who cannot get the shot, because of their health status, or because of their age,” Stoney said during a weekly press briefing.
City employees who are already vaccinated will need to submit documentation of their vaccination status by Aug. 18, according to Stoney.
“If you are currently unvaccinated, you will be expected to have at least one dose of the vaccine by Aug. 18 and fully vaccinated by Oct. 1,” said Stoney.
Stoney said, “medical and religious exemptions will be granted with appropriate documentation.”
“For the vast majority of employees, we know that the vaccine is safe, the vaccine is effective, and the vaccine is a vital lifesaving tool to protect ourselves and our community,” said Stoney.
Link Copied!
Covid-19 case increases driven by US and Mexico, PAHO leader says
From CNN's Virginia Langmaid
Covid-19 case increases in the Americas are being caused in part by surges in cases in the United States, Dr. Carissa F. Etienne, director of the Pan American Health Organization, said on Wednesday.
“Over the last week, more than 1.2 million Covid-19 cases and 20,000 Covid-related deaths were reported in the Americas,” Etienne said in a media briefing from PAHO, a division of the World Health Organization.
According to the Weekly Epidemiological Report released Wednesday from the World Health Organization, the United States reported more new cases of Covid-19 in the last week than any other country. New cases in the Americas, a WHO region that includes North, South, and Central America, accounted for 30% of global new cases reported last week, according to WHO.
Link Copied!
Louisiana governor says he is not looking into a vaccine passport requirement for the state
From CNN’s Gregory Lemos
People visit a market in New Orleans on August 3, 2021.
Lan Wei/Xinhua/Getty Images
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said Wednesday he is not looking into requiring a vaccine passport for the state.
Edwards said he is not considering requiring the vaccine for state employees “unless and until the FDA grants full licensure to one of more of the Covid vaccines.”
Edwards said, “the least onerous thing we can do in order to try and curb transmission and give some breathing room back to our hospitals is to reinstate the mask mandate.”
Edwards called the statewide mask mandate, which went into effect Wednesday and will remain in place until Sept. 1 “a very targeted and limited approach.”
“We do need compliance because we know that this works. This isn’t theoretical anymore,” Edwards said noting the state hit a 15.4% positivity rate Wednesday.
“That’s up from 13.2% previously and when you have increasing percent positivity, you have no reason to believe, in fact you have no reason not to believe, you are approaching your peak in terms of cases. And that’s going to mean continued hospitalizations and death as well.”
Edwards highlighted while the state was reporting around two deaths a day a month ago, there have been 103 in just the past two days.
“The capacity at our hospitals is just absolutely strained,” Edwards said.
Link Copied!
UK recommends first vaccine dose for children ages 16 and 17 "as soon as possible"
From CNN's Lauren Kent and Sharon Braithwaite
Vials containing the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine are pictured in London on June 14, 2021.
The UK government is recommending children ages 16 and 17 receive the first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine “as soon as possible,” according to a statement from Health Secretary Sajid Javid on Wednesday.
The recommendation comes after the UK’s Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) updated their guidance to advise all 16- and 17-year olds to receive their first dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine.
The updated guidance is a change from the UK’s previous plan to only offer Covid-19 vaccines to children if they had underlying health conditions.
“In the last few weeks, there have been large changes in the way COVID-19 has been spreading in the UK, particularly in younger age groups. The adult vaccine programme has progressed very successfully and more safety data has become available, so it was important to review the advice for the vaccination of children and young people,” the JCVI said in a statement.
The UK government plans to prioritize the first dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine for young people, while delaying a recommendation for a second dose, according to the JCVI statement.
“In the UK where there is good uptake of the vaccine amongst adults, we can take a more precautionary approach to vaccine rollout in younger people, who are at lower risk of serious harm from COVID-19,” the JCVI continued, also noting that research shows young people respond better to the vaccine than older people and are expected to have around 80% protection against hospitalization following one dose.
“COVID-19 vaccines have saved more than 60,000 lives and prevented 22 million infections in England alone. They are building a wall of defence against the virus and are the best way to protect people from serious illness. I encourage everyone who is eligible to come forward for both their jabs as quickly as possible,” Javid said.
“Those aged 12 to 15 with severe neuro-disabilities, Down’s Syndrome, immunosuppression and multiple or severe learning disabilities, as well as people in this age group who are household contacts of individuals who are immunosuppressed, are already eligible for vaccination. JCVI will continue to review data and provide updates on at risk groups aged 12-15 and whether any additional groups will be added.”
Link Copied!
Louisiana doctor encourages adult vaccinations to help prevent Covid-19 cases among children
From CNN’s Jeff Simon and Nadia Romero
Dr. Trey Dunbar, president of Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Health, speaks with CNN.
CNN
A 3-week-old baby who spent time in the neonatal intensive care unit being treated for Covid-19 at a Baton Rouge children’s hospital has been released, the President of Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital told CNN Wednesday morning. The 3-week-old baby was discharged last night and is not the first baby treated in this NICU for Covid.
Dr. Trey Dunbar reflected on how children are being victimized by a pandemic that has a simple solution: adult vaccination.
Across the street at the largest hospital in the state of Louisiana, Our Lady of the Lakes Hospital, is still at 100 percent capacity.
“Where the increase really worries me is will that make an impact on our other hospital functions?” Dunbar said. “We’re dedicating a lot of time, especially on the adult campus, to taking care of people with Covid. I want to be able to make sure that we can take care of people that are in auto accidents, for example. We’re a pediatric trauma center. We’ve seen a lot more trauma over the last year. I don’t want to impact our care in trauma because we’re sort of inundated with Covid.”
For the first time in a long while, Dunbar said there was a line outside of the children’s hospital pharmacy yesterday – mostly adolescence waiting to get vaccinated. He hopes that’s a positive sign that community outreach is working.
Dunbar said that nurses are working longer shifts and coming in on their days off. He said the hospital could use an additional five to six nurses to keep up with the influx of pediatric Covid cases and their normal needs as a pediatric trauma center.
Link Copied!
FDA official says agency "does not recommend taking things into your own hands" on Covid-19 booster shots
From CNN's Sarah Braner and Lauren Mascarenhas
Dr. Peter Marks, director of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research at the US Food and Drug Administration, said the “FDA does not recommend taking things into your own hands” regarding Covid-19 vaccine booster shots.
“It’s actually not something you’re supposed to do under emergency use authorization,” he said.
Some background: Currently, the FDA and the US Centers for Disease Control have no recommendation for booster shots. US health officials maintain there is no data to indicate the need for them. Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health told CNN on Tuesday, “At the present time, though, the data in the United States does not indicate that that’s necessary.”
On Tuesday, the San Francisco Department of Public Health announced that they will allow people who received the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine to get a supplemental dose of an mRNA vaccine, either Pfizer or Moderna. They will be providing these supplemental doses to those who have consulted with their doctor beforehand.
The health department maintains it aligns with the CDC and FDA. “We are not recommending, we are accommodating requests,” Dr. Naveena Bobba, deputy director of health for the department, said during a media briefing Tuesday. “We have gotten a few requests based on patients talking to their physicians and that’s why we are allowing for the accommodation.”
Link Copied!
Brazil says 20% of its total population is now fully vaccinated against Covid-19
From CNN's Juliana Kochs
A health worker prepares a Covid-19 vaccine dose in São Paulo, Brazil, on July 25, 2021.
Rahel Patrasso/Xinhua/Getty Images
Brazil’s Health Ministry says 20% of its total population is fully vaccinated against Covid-19.
As of late Tuesday, at least 42,756,263 Brazilians were fully vaccinated against the virus, 20.34% of the country’s total population, according to the Ministry.
Currently, close to 103 million Brazilians (102,802,001) have been partially vaccinated – 48.91% of the country’s total population, the health ministry reports.
The Brazilian Southern state of Mato Grosso do Sul reports the highest number of fully vaccinated people with 33% of the state’s population; while the neighboring state of Sao Paulo – the most populous state of the country – has 58% of the population partially vaccinated.
Brazil has been vaccinating most of its population in partnership with Oxford’s AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine; accounting for 48.2% of the doses applied in the country, and followed by Coronavac with 37.1% of the total number of doses.
The remaining 11.7% were vaccinated with the Pfizer vaccine and 3% with Janssen’s.
Link Copied!
WHO calls for a moratorium on booster shots until at least the end of September
From CNN’s Naomi Thomas
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, speaks at a briefing in Geneva, Switzerland, on August 4, 2021.
World Health Organization
The World Health Organization is calling for a moratorium on booster shots until at least the end of September, WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during a news briefing in Geneva on Wednesday.
“WHO is calling for a moratorium on boosters until at least the end of September to enable at least 10% of the population of every country to be vaccinated. To make that happen, we need everyone’s cooperation, especially the handful of countries and companies that control the global supply of vaccines,” he said.
Germany, the UK, and Israel have all announced plans to provide booster shots for certain vulnerable populations.
While Tedros said he understood the concern of all governments to protect their people from the Delta variant, “we cannot and we should not accept countries that have already used most of the global supply of vaccines using even more of it while the world’s most vulnerable people remain unprotected.”
Some background: In May, Tedros called for global support to enable countries to vaccinate at least 10% of their populations by September. He said that although it’s more than halfway to the target date, the world is not on track.
When his challenge was issued, high income countries had administered around 50 doses for every 100 people, Tedros said. Since then, the number has doubled, with high income countries having now administered almost 100 doses for every 100 people, while low income countries have been able to administer 1.5 doses for every 100 people due to lack of supply.
“We need an urgent reversal from the majority of vaccines going to high income countries to the majority going to low income countries,” Tedros said.
Tedros called upon the G20 leaders to make concrete commitments to support WHO’s global vaccination targets, for vaccine producers to prioritize COVAX, and for everyone with influence to support the call for the moratorium on boosters.
Link Copied!
Trump getting vaccinated on television could have helped, former Covid-19 testing czar says
From CNN’s Naomi Thomas
Admiral Brett Giroir on August 4, 2021.
CNN
Admiral Brett Giroir, former coronavirus testing czar under President Trump, told CNN that former President Donald Trump getting vaccinated on television could have helped the vaccination effort.
Trump has a “very large and loyal followership,” Giroir said on New Day Wednesday, adding that anything Trump did or can do, including getting vaccinated on television, could be important.
Asked again by Berman whether Trump getting his Covid-19 shot on television could have made a difference, Giroir said “I think I answered the question and that is yes, anything President Trump could have done or can do could be important and I think it might have been helpful. But you know, these are personal medical decisions, and you remember the time, it was quite a divisive time, so it’s hard to go back and turn those pages.”
Giroir said he believes “we did try to do everything we could on vaccine hesitancy, and we often did not get the cooperation of national media when we did that.”
On Tuesday, Alex Azar, former US Secretary of Health and Human Services under Trump, penned an opinion essay in the New York Times, writing “I’m glad former President Trump got vaccinated, but it would have been even better for him to have done so on national television so that his supporters could see how much trust and confidence he has in what is arguably one of his greatest accomplishments.”
In the interview on New Day, Giroir said all US presidents, current and former, need to set the best example they can when it comes to the coronavirus.
Link Copied!
Florida Covid-19 hospitalizations up 13% from previous peak in July 2020
From CNN’s Gregory Lemos
Coronavirus-related hospitalizations are up 13% from Florida’s previous peak on July 23, 2020, according to the Florida Hospital Association. FHA said they expect 60% of hospitals in the state to face a “critical staffing shortage” in the next 7 days.
According to a press release Tuesday, there are currently 11,515 patients hospitalized with Covid-19 in the Sunshine State. FHA reports 84% of all in patients beds and 86.5% of ICU beds are currently occupied.
According to FHA, of those hospitalized with Covid-19, 21% are in the ICU and 13% are on ventilators.
Data released by FHA Tuesday is from a survey of hospitals completed August 2 and represents 82% of Florida’s acute care hospitals. Statewide data is taken from the federal Department of Health and Human Services.
Link Copied!
Delta variant now accounts for more than 93% of Covid-19 cases in the US
From CNN’s Michael Nedelman
A health care worker prepares a Covid-19 test in Los Angeles on July 29, 2021.
Eric Thayer/Bloomberg/Getty Images
The Delta variant now accounts for an estimated 93.4% of coronavirus circulating in the United States, according to figures published by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
This includes several sub-lineages of Delta, all of which are classified as variants of concern. Together, they made up about 93.4% of cases during the last two weeks of July.
This number is even higher in certain parts of the country, including the region that includes Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska, where Delta accounts for more than 98% of circulating virus.
These figures have shown a rapid increase over the past two months. In the two weeks ending May 22, for example, Delta’s prevalence was estimated around 3%.
At that same time in May, another variant first identified in the UK – Alpha, or B.1.1.7 – was the dominant one in the US, causing 69% of cases. Now, CDC’s most recent estimates put that variant at just under 3%.
Link Copied!
Students are going back to school soon. Here's how campuses should respond to a possible Covid-19 outbreak.
From CNN's Jacqueline Howard
An elementary school classroom is set up in Buxton, Maine, on June 4, 2021.
Derek Davis/Portland Press Herald/Getty Images
Getting children back in classrooms has been a top priority for the United States – but if a coronavirus outbreak were to happen within a school, how should schools respond?
Institutions must respond quickly – with contact tracing, testing, the quarantining of people who were exposed to the virus and the isolation of people with infections, Dr. William Schaffner, a professor at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine and medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, told CNN.
“The first thing that would happen – or one of the very first things – is that you would notify the health department,” Schaffner, who is not associated with the Drew Charter School, said about a potential outbreak.
“They likely would do a fair amount of testing,” Schaffner said.
Overall, testing would play a big role in responding to an outbreak – as well as local health departments.
Some schools may turn to certain resources – such as the online tool whentotest.org, which is supported by the National Institutes of Health’s RADx Tech program – to help with implementing an effective Covid-19 testing program for their institution to either prevent or respond to an outbreak.
At Drew Charter School in Atlanta, five Covid-19 cases were detected before the start of the school year on Tuesday following the testing of about 1,900 students and staff, according to Peter McKnight, the head of the school. All staff and employees are tested weekly, and students are highly encouraged to also participate in weekly testing through the school.
If an outbreak is confined to a classroom or team, people who had “significant exposure” initially may quarantine but “that does not necessarily include everyone if masks are worn at all times and there is adequate distancing which limits exposure,” Pavia wrote.
Whether masks and other mitigation measures are required or enforced in schools varies across states and school districts.At Drew Charter in Atlanta, for instance, all staff and students are required to use their masks at all times, except when eating or drinking.
However, again, rules can vary across districts.
Read more about schools and what the CDC advises here.
Link Copied!
Covid-19 positivity rate in kids has risen "significantly" in 6 weeks, Louisiana doctor says
From CNN's Adrienne Vogt
Dr. Katherine Baumgarten on August 4, 2021.
CNN
Louisiana physician Dr. Katherine Baumgarten said the positivity rate of Covid-19 in kids has increased “significantly” in her community.
She said the state is seeing a rise in kids who are hospitalized.
“Our hospital has seen a slight increase in the number of kids in our units and in our hospitals, but across our state we are seeing increased numbers of children in the hospital. We had a 19-year-old that died here two weeks ago despite everything that we did. And that’s disheartening. It’s heartbreaking. No one should die from Covid at this point, especially not our kids,” Baumgarten said.
Baumgarten also said the medical staff is feeling stretched due to the sharp increase in patients.
Watch:
Link Copied!
US Covid-19 cases in children and teens jumped 84% in a week, pediatrician group says
From CNN's Jen Christensen and Theresa Waldrop
Almost 72,000 children and teens caught Covid-19 last week – a “substantial” increase from a week earlier, the American Academy of Pediatrics reported Tuesday.
The group counted 71,726 new cases from July 22 to 29. That is a “substantial” increase from the nearly 39,000 cases reported a week before, and five times as many kids who were sick at the end of June. The definition of a child varies by state but generally includes those up to age 17 or 18.
After decreases in reported cases over the past couple of months, the July numbers started trending upward again as the highly transmissible Delta variant of the virus became dominant in the country.
“That’s high and considering the fact that we are vaccinated now, what that’s telling us is that unvaccinated people are getting infected in higher numbers because the virus is more infectious with the Delta variant,” said Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, chief of the division of infectious diseases in the Department of Pediatrics at Stanford Medicine and chair of the AAP committee on infectious diseases.
Nearly 4.2 million kids have tested positive for Covid-19 since the start of the pandemic. Children and teens represented 19% of reported cases in the latest weekly data.
The report comes as schools have just started or will soon start, with some requiring no masks or social distancing, and as cases in many parts of the country are surging and hospitalizations at levels not seen in months.
At one Georgia school, more than 100 students were in quarantine after nine students and five staff members tested positive for Covid-19 just days after the first day back.
Children under 12 years old are not eligible for any of the three vaccines currently used in the United States, and the fast-spreading Delta variant has put them especially at risk, health experts say.
Vaccines are being tested now in children as young as 6 months, but they probably won’t be available for children younger than 12 for several more months.
Leaders around the country are taking various approaches to keep children safe, from Utah Gov. Spencer Cox saying the state will give away KN-95 masks to children, to Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson calling on the state’s legislature to amend a law in order to give school districts the flexibility to require masks.
The academy, which represents pediatricians, pointed out that severe illness still appears to be rare among children. The number of hospitalizations has remained steady through much of the pandemic. Children accounted for 1.3%-3.5% of the hospitalizations, depending on the state.
Seven states have reported no child deaths from Covid-19 during the pandemic. As of Monday, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports 526 deaths among children ages 0 to 17.
Among the some 25 million US children between 12 and 17 years old, about 10.9 million have been vaccinated with at least one dose of vaccine, according to CDC data.
CNN’s Naomi Thomas contributed to this report.
Link Copied!
Global number of Covid-19 cases will exceed 200 million cases next week, WHO says
From CNN’s Naomi Thomas
New global Covid-19 cases have been increasing for more than a month and the world is on track to hit more than 200 million cases next week, according to the weekly epidemiological report published Wednesday by the World Health Organization.
More than 4 million cases were reported in the last week, and the increasing trend is largely attributed to substantial increases in the Eastern Mediterranean and Western Pacific regions, the WHO update says.
The Eastern Mediterranean region reported a 37% increase compared with the week before, and the Western Pacific region at 33% increase. There was a 9% increase in the South-East Asia region and the three other WHO regions, the Americas, Africa and Europe, reported similar weekly case incidence or a slight decrease compared to the previous week.
The cumulative number of globally reported cases is now nearly 197 million.
The highest numbers of new cases in the past week were reported by the US, India, Indonesia, Brazil and the Islamic Republic of Iran.
The global number of deaths decreased by 8% compared with the previous week, with more than 64,000 deaths reported, however it differed between regions.
The Western Pacific and Eastern Mediterranean regions both reported “a sharp increase” in new deaths compared to the week before, with 48% and 31% increases respectively. The region of the Americas, however, reported a 29% decrease.
Cumulative global deaths now reach 4.2 million.
The Alpha variant has now been reported in 182 countries. The Beta variant has been reported in 132 countries, and the Gamma variant in 81 countries, both of these variants were reported in one new country in the past week. The Delta variant has now been reported in 135 countries, with three new countries reporting in the past week.
Link Copied!
It could be February before all eligible Americans get at least 1 Covid-19 vaccine dose, analysis shows
From CNN's Madeline Holcombe
A health care worker prepares a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine in Boston on June 17, 2021.
Adam Glanzman/Bloomberg/Getty Images
At the current pace of vaccinations, it will take until mid-February to get at least one dose of Covid-19 vaccine to all eligible Americans, according to a CNN analysis of data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
More than 90 million eligible people in the US are still unvaccinated. And though the seven-day average of people initiating vaccination each day is the highest it has been since July 4 at 446,300, many experts say the US is still not where it needs to be to get the pandemic – and the rapidly spreading Delta variant – under control.
With less than half of the population fully vaccinated, cases have surged again, causing serious illness.
On Tuesday, for the first time since February, more than 50,000 hospital beds across the country were occupied by Covid-19 patients, according to new data from the US Department of Health and Human Services. That number is more than triple what it was a month ago.
“We are not crying wolf here. This surge that we’re going through right now has every potential to be – and already looks to be – the worst surge we’ve faced so far,” former US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams said during a live online interview with The Washington Post on Tuesday.
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci said Tuesday he would like the US to be at upwards of one million vaccinations per day to close the vaccination gap.
With the spread of the Delta variant, it might not be possible to stop the spread of coronavirus completely, National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins said Tuesday.
“But we could still get to a place where this becomes a nuisance instead of a threat to your life.”
Although experts have said data so far does not indicate a need for the general population to get vaccines boosters, Fauci said there is an effort underway to get them for immunocompromised people.
Some conditions – including autoimmune diseases, transplants and cancer treated with chemotherapy – compromise people’s immune systems.
“Those individuals we know almost invariably do not have an adequate response, so the need to give them an additional boost is much more emergent than the general population,” Fauci said during a virtual event hosted by Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam Tuesday.
Vaccine advisers to the CDC have met to discuss whether immunocompromised people may need additional protection from a vaccine booster but have not yet presented a formal recommendation or voted on guidance.
“We are trying very hard to get the regulatory mechanism in place very soon to get those individuals a boost that might bring up their immunity to the level where it should be, if possible,” Fauci said.
During a discussion hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies Tuesday, Fauci said it’s “very likely” Covid-19 variants evolved in the bodies of those who are immunosuppressed.
People with immune suppression may be unable to fight off Covid-19 infections for weeks or even months, meaning the virus has plenty of time to evolve and change.
“Variants, we all know, have emerged because of the pressure that the human immune system has put on the virus, very likely from people who are immunosuppressed … and had virus in them for days and days and days before they cleared it and/or died, and then essentially led to the emergence of a variant,” Fauci said.