May 3, 2021 coronavirus news | CNN

May 3 coronavirus news

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Overwhelmed cemetery shows toll of India's Covid-19 crisis
07:52 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • India’s devastating Covid-19 outbreak broke new records last weekend, with authorities reporting more than 400,000 cases for the first time on Saturday and a record-high number of deaths on Sunday.
  • Multiple states in India will go into “complete lockdown” in the coming days.
  • Countries in South Asia are taking precautions as Covid-19 cases rise around the region.

 Our live coverage has ended for the day. Follow the latest on the pandemic here.

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UNICEF director calls on the world to send more supplies to India 

UNICEF has sent supplies to India but they are not enough, Executive Director Henrietta Fore told CNN’s Richard Quest.

She called on countries to lift import and export restrictions related to vaccines, to support the ability to manufacture vaccines in other locations and to consider licensing some production technologies. 

India is currently struggling to contain a Covid-19 outbreak that has left hospitals struggling with shortages of basic medical supplies like oxygen and ventilators.

Average daily Covid-19 cases and deaths in the US are now one-fifth of their respective peaks in January 

At their respective peaks in January, average daily Covid-19 cases and deaths in the United States were five times higher than they are now, data from Johns Hopkins University shows. 

Over the past seven days, an average of 669 Covid-19 deaths has been reported each day, according to JHU data. On Jan. 14, the seven-day average was 3,431 deaths per day, more than any other date. 

Average daily deaths topped 3,000 deaths per day for about a month, from Jan. 8 through Feb. 6, JHU data shows. 

The seven-day average of daily deaths has now been below 1,000 deaths per day for more than three weeks, since April 8. Average daily deaths were last lower than the current rate in early July.  

New Covid-19 cases are also about one-fifth of what they were at their peak in January. 

On Jan. 8, the average was 251,057 new cases over seven days, a higher seven-day average than any other date during the pandemic. But over the past seven days, an average of 49,209 new Covid-19 cases have been reported each day, according to JHU data.

Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of Brown University School of Public Health, said on Friday that the US has reached a “positive turning point” in the pandemic, but noted that “this virus has surprised us on so many turns.”

And globally, the pandemic is far from over. More cases of Covid-19 have been reported in the last two weeks than during the first six months of the pandemic, the director-general of the World Health Organization said Monday

India's neighbor Nepal sees a more than 1,200% increase in average Covid-19 cases since mid-April

A health worker is seen inside the COVID_19 ward while speaking to a patient's relative at Shukraraaj Tropical and Infectious Disease Hospital in Kathmandu, on April 26.

Nepal has seen a more than 1,200% rise in seven-day average of daily new Covid-19 cases since mid-April, CNN’s calculation of data from Johns Hopkins University showed.     

On Monday, the country posted its record high 7,388 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours according to government statistics. On average, the country is reporting 200 new daily cases per million people.     

Nepal’s neighbor India, which continues to grapple with a brutal second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, posted a similar rate of average new daily cases per million people at the end of April.

India reported an average of about 206 cases per million residents on April 22, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. Nepal’s average per capita infections are around where India’s were less than two weeks ago.    

The tiny South Asian nation had seen case numbers begin to fall in February and into March, with newly identified cases hovering between 50 to 100 each day. But infections erupted in mid-April as India’s second wave picked up speed — and daily cases are now in the thousands.         

Nepal, which has identified cases of the variant first identified in India, has limited health care infrastructure and access to life-saving resources, raising fears it is ill-equipped to deal with a massive outbreak like the one ravaging India.   

On Monday, Nepali Prime Minister Khadga Prasad Sharma Oli announced that country will ban all international flights starting at midnight on May 6 to May 14.  

Covid-19 vaccine booster doses would not require full US FDA review process, acting commissioner says

Any booster dose for a Covid-19 vaccine already given emergency use authorization would not be subject to the same scrutiny as a brand-new vaccine, acting US Food and Drug Administration, Commissioner Dr. Janet Woodcock said Monday.

Manufacturers would be asked to file supplemental information including efficacy data, safety data, and a rationale for a booster dose, but the FDA wouldn’t require the vaccine to get completely re-authorized, Woodcock told SiriusXM’s Doctor Radio Reports with Dr. Marc Siegel.

That clinical information would include why a booster is needed, the safety of another dose, and how a booster should be administered. Similar requirements for re-authorization could apply if manufacturers rework their vaccines to be variant-specific.

“They would also have to submit different manufacturing information, and so forth because that would be a different construct,” she said. “But it wouldn’t be a whole new process. It would be a modification to the existing EUA vaccine.”

The three coronavirus vaccines being used in the US now have emergency use authorization, or EUA. Woodcock said she expects manufacturers to eventually submit their vaccines for full approval under a Biologics License Application, or BLA.

“I would expect that the firms would be submitting, at some point, an application,” she said. “Obviously they’ve had other important things to do involving like mass producing vaccines for the country, and the world, but, having these on a standard footing would be good,” Woodcock said.

More than 40% of adults in the US are fully vaccinated against Covid-19, CDC data shows

People sit in the observation area after receiving a dose of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine at the American Museum of Natural History vaccination site in New York, , on Friday, April 30.

More than 105.5 million people in the United States are fully vaccinated against Covid-19 — including more than 40% of the adult population and nearly 70% of the senior population — according to data published Monday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

The CDC reported that 246,780,203 total doses of Covid-19 vaccine have been administered, about 79% of the 312,509,575 doses delivered.  

That’s about 1.2 million more doses reported administered since Sunday, for a seven-day average of about 2.3 million doses per day. The average daily rate of vaccinations has been declining for about two weeks. 

Data published by the CDC may be delayed, and doses may not have been given on the day reported. 

Global Covid-19 spread turns world into a "petri dish," acting US FDA commissioner says

The continuing spread of Covid-19 will only fuel the rise of more variants, US Food and Drug Administration Acting Commissioner Dr. Janet Woodcock said Monday.

 “We just have to be on our guard,” she added.  

Woodcock said variants may easily evade some current antibody treatments like Eli Lilly’s bamlanivimab, but vaccines so far appear to protect well against variants. Monoclonal antibodies are lab-engineered immune system proteins that work against specific targets. Vaccines elicit a broad immune response.

“We’ve already seen that with the variants in the United States, with bamlanivimab, and that it’s no longer effective against a number of the variants circulating in the United States,” Woocock said.

“This was expected with the monoclonals because they’re just monoclonal, of course. And so they have an exquisite specificity and they’re vulnerable to this type of shift. The vaccine is more robust because you’re having a human response, a polyclonal response.”

Woodcock said increased viral surveillance is important in understanding what needs to be done to combat variants.

President Biden predicts some normalcy in the US "by the end of the summer"

President Biden touted vaccination progress on Monday and predicted a return to some normalcy “by the end of the summer.”

He also addressed vaccine hesitancy, citing some promising statistics.  

“What’s happening now is all the talk about how people were not going to get shots and were not going to be involved, we were told that was most likely to be among people who are 65 years of age. But now, people over 65 years of age over 80% have now been vaccinated, and 66%, fully vaccinated. And there’s virtually no difference between white, Black, Hispanic, and Asian-American,” he said.

He touted ongoing efforts to expand vaccine access and steps toward promoting vaccine equity.

“What we’ve done, under some criticism, is we have expanded access to vaccinations to familiar places — 40,000 drugstores now, also all of the community health centers that are available all across the nation, mobile units going out, and it’s getting better and better and better,” he said.

Watch the moment:

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01:19 - Source: cnn

Indian Navy deploys its medical personnel to Covid-19 facilities

The Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met with the chief of the Naval staff Monday to discuss initiatives taken by the Navy to help with the second wave of Covid-19.

The Navy has deployed its medical personnel to hospitals across the country.

“Naval Personnel are being provided Battle Field Nursing Assistant Training to augment medical personnel deployed in Covid hospitals,” read the statement.

The Navy is also assisting in the transport of “oxygen containers as well as other supplies from Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait and Singapore to India.”

India is struggling to contain the second wave that began in April and has left hospitals struggling with shortages of basic medical supplies like oxygen and ventilators.

New York governor announces he's lifting more Covid-19 restrictions. Here's a look at the changes. 

Grand Central station in Manhattan, New York on April 27, 2021.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday that MTA subway service will return to a 24/7 schedule beginning May 17, coinciding with a curfew lift.

“Subway trains have never been cleaner than they are now,” Cuomo said Monday.

Beginning May 19, most Covid-19 capacity restrictions will end across the tri-state area, including retail, food services and gyms, according to Cuomo.

Restaurants, museums, theaters, Broadway, retail and shops are all included in the lifting of capacity restrictions.

In New York State, outdoor food and beverage curfew lifted on May 17, Cuomo said.

Indoor food and beverage curfews will be lifted on May 31.

Outdoor large stadiums will go to 33% capacity on May 19, according to Cuomo.

Also in New York State, the governor said they will keep the six-foot social distancing requirement. “Our capacity is subject to the six feet guidelines,” Cuomo noted.

Gatherings of events in New York State may occur in excess of six-foot distance if all people present proof of full vaccination or a recent negative PCR test.

The governor thanked Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont and New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy for their continued efforts in reopening.

The statewide positivity rate for New York stands at 1.94%, with 37 deaths reported Monday according to the governor. At least 7 million New Yorkers are fully vaccinated, according to Cuomo.

“You follow the science and you follow the data and you disregard the politics, which drove the Covid response in this nation last year.” 

Note: These numbers were released by the state’s public health agency and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Health and Human Services.

More global Covid-19 cases reported in last 2 weeks than first 6 months of the pandemic, WHO says

A health worker wearing personal protective equipment holds the hand of a patient at the Doctor Ernesto Che Guevara Public Hospital where patients infected with the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, are being treated on April 30, 2021 in Maricá, Brazil. 

Globally, there have been more cases of Covid-19 reported in the last two weeks than during the first six months of the pandemic, the director-general of the World Health Organization said during a news briefing in Geneva on Monday. 

WHO is providing equipment and supplies, such as oxygen concentrators, to India as well as providing advice on how to provide care at home for people who are unable to find hospital beds for patients. 

The WHO Foundation is also raising funds to support the need for oxygen and related supplies globally, he said.  

Tedros called upon everyone to continue following WHO and national advice around public health safety measures. 

“What’s happening in India and Brazil could happen elsewhere unless we all take these public health precautions that WHO has been calling for since the beginning of the pandemic,” Tedros said. “Vaccines are part of the answer, but they are not the only answer.” 

Pfizer is discussing expedited approval for Covid-19 vaccine with Indian government, CEO says

People line up to get the Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine in a school-turned-vaccination centre in New Delhi on May 3, 2021.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in a letter Monday the company is discussing with the Indian government how to expedite approval of its Covid-19 vaccine.

Bourla said that the company is “deeply concerned” by the critical Covid-19 situation in India and is committed to being a partner in India’s fight against the coronavirus, “quickly working to mobilize the largest humanitarian relief effort in our company’s history.”

Bourla said Pfizer is rushing shipments of medicines from the company that the government of India has identified as part of their treatment protocol. These medicines, valued at over $70 million, are being donated to India and include steroid medications and anticoagulants.  

Pfizer Foundation funding is also supporting humanitarian organizations that provide equipment such as ventilators and oxygen concentrators to India. 

Nepal will ban all international flights starting May 6

Nepal will ban all international flights starting at midnight on May 6 to May 14, Nepal’s Prime Minister Khadga Prasad Sharma Oli said in a televised address to the nation on Monday.

Domestic flights are also suspended starting at midnight Monday until May 14.

Oli said that 13 land border checkpoints between Nepal and India will operate to allow Nepali citizens to return home but they must obtain a negative Covid-19 test at the checkpoints. All arrivals of foreigners by land have been banned.

Every person coming via land or rescue flight will be tested for Covid, Oli added.

Go There: CNN answers your questions from New Delhi about India's worsening Covid-19 crisis 

India’s devastating Covid-19 outbreak broke new records last weekend, with authorities reporting more than 400,000 cases for the first time on Saturday and a record-high number of deaths on Sunday.

CNN’s Sam Kiley was live in New Delhi reporting on the latest and answering viewers’ questions:

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10:17 - Source: cnn

New York City has administered over 6.6 million Covid-19 vaccine doses, mayor says

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio talks with people who received the coronavirus vaccine as he tours a vaccination site at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, on April 23.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio celebrated a “turning point moment” Monday for the city as 80,000 city workers returned to the office.

“City hall is abuzz today – it’s a great feeling,” he said.

Approximately 80% of the city’s workforce has been working in the field throughout the pandemic, he said, and he thanked them.

New York City has administered over 6.6 million doses of Covid-19 vaccine, he said.

He also celebrated the downturn in Covid-19 metrics, saying “we got to keep earning it.”

Hospitalization rates are particularly “well well well below the threshold” with 95 patients admitted for suspected Covid-19, with a hospitalization rate of 1.76 per 100,000.

There were at least 1,202 new and suspected Covid-19 cases reported on a seven-day rolling average marking a 2.78% positivity which the mayor called “a great number.”

Note: These numbers were released by the City health dept and may not line up with JHU’s Covid Tracking project.

Around 175 Indian journalists have lost their lives to Covid-19, according to national media network

About 175 journalists and media workers have died after contracting Covid-19 in the past 14 months in India, according to a tally by the Network of Women in Media, India (NWMI). 

In a memorial page, NWMI has compiled a comprehensive list of retired and working reporters, editors, anchors, photographers, and photojournalists who have died. It is unknown how many contracted the virus while working. 

India is currently battling a second wave of Covid-19 cases and facing severe shortage of oxygen, hospital beds, medicines and vaccines. This has exacerbated the death toll across the country. 

Journalists in India were largely not included in the initial phase of the vaccination program when it was made available to frontline workers. Meanwhile, media houses have also failed to provide safe working conditions.

“Media houses need to actively ensure the safety and health of journalists who work for them and those who, as independent stringers or freelancers, supply vital information, photographs and videos to them. Media houses must stop forcing journalists to travel in dangerously unsafe conditions to work in offices instead of encouraging them to work from home,” stated the NWMI.

US may not get to zero cases, but "we can probably live with that," expert says 

Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Health, said on CNN’s New Day Monday that while it would be unfortunate for the United States to not to reach herd immunity against Covid-19, most people will still be able to get back to their pre-pandemic lives if case numbers continue to fall.

Jha said it isn’t known whether the US will reach herd immunity. 

There is a chunk of people in the United States who have not yet been vaccinated, saying that many of them need time and better access. He remains “pretty optimistic” that a lot more Americans will be vaccinated in the coming weeks and months. 

Experience from Israel has shown that when about 50 to 55% of the population is vaccinated, “you really see case numbers plummet.”  

How you can help India as it experiences the world's worst Covid-19 outbreak

India is experiencing the world’s worst coronavirus outbreak.

Grieving families are struggling to keep themselves and their loved ones safe amid an overwhelmed health care system, and medical workers are stretched thin as some hospitals run out of oxygen and supplies.

The global community is rallying to help India push back against the pandemic, with countries around the world offering aid.

You can help, too. Read about the charities working in India in the article below and click here to donate.

TOPSHOT - A health worker wearing a personal protective equipment (PPE) kit walks inside a banquet hall temporarily converted into a COVID-19 coronavirus ward in New Delhi on April 27, 2021. (Photo by Money SHARMA / AFP) (Photo by MONEY SHARMA/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article The coronavirus is ravaging India. Here's how you can help

It's unclear if India's Covid-19 cases have reached the peak, but expect high mortality in May, expert says

Chandrika Bahadur, chair of the Lancet Covid-19 Commission India Taskforce, speaks with CNN on Monday, May 3.

As India continues to record more than 300,000 daily cases of Covid-19, it’s hard to tell when the country will reach its peak, says Chandrika Bahadur, chair of the Lancet Covid-19 Commission India Taskforce.

However, India will continue to see high mortality due to Covid-19 in May, because deaths lag behind the rise in infections.

While Lancet has recommended lockdowns for bringing the numbers in control, Bahadur says it’s a “double-edged sword” for a country like India and needs a nuanced approach.

“There are still a large number of districts in the country that are not seeing the wave that we’re seeing in Delhi … and other high-risk spots of the country. And over there you can probably have a strategy that is less about lockdowns and much more about wearing masks and distancing and banning gatherings,” she explained. “In other places, however, unfortunately, there is no way out where the numbers are what they are other than shutting down for a few weeks.”

Evidence suggests that one-week lockdowns do not work and need to continue for “six weeks at a minimum before you really start seeing a significant decline,” she added.

Bahadur acknowledges that such a step would need provisions for the poor “because this could be devastating.”

“It’s a terrible choice. I have a lot of sympathy for the government because this is a difficult choice to make under all circumstances,” she said. “These are the choices in front of us. None of them are good.”

Watch:

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Nepal recalls retired medics and bans export of oxygen as it records worst number of Covid-19 cases

Workers unload oxygen cylinders at a hospital in Lalitpur, Nepal, on May 2.

Nepal has recalled retired medics to work for at least a year to help tackle the shortage of health workers as Covid-19 cases in the country rise.

Nepal’s Prime Minister Sharma Oli addressed the nation on television on Monday as the country recorded at least 7,388 Covid-19 cases, the highest number of new daily cases.

Oli also announced a ban on exporting oxygen and said that private hospitals and clinics, along with more public hospitals, would be converted into specialized Covid-19 hospitals, whereas public venues like stadiums and schools would be used as quarantine centers.

European Union promises more aid for India: "This is global solidarity in action"

The European Union “stands by India” and will supply more aid via its civil protection mechanism, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted Monday following a call with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

According to a press release from the EU commission, the country breakdown of who is supplying what is as follows:

  • Czech Republic: 500 oxygen cylinders
  • Denmark: 53 ventilators
  • Spain: 119 oxygen concentrators and 145 ventilators
  • Netherlands: 100 oxygen concentrators, 30,000 vials of antiviral drugs, remdesivir, and 449 ventilators
  • Germany: 15,000 vials antiviral drugs, 516 ventilators and 1 oxygen generator.

Following the call, Modi said in a tweet he had thanked the EU for its support and assistance to India’s Covid response.

“We discussed India-EU Leaders’ Meeting on 8 May. I am confident that the Meeting will provide a new momentum to our Strategic Partnership,” Modi added. 

Last week, the European Union announced medical aid for India was being supplied by the likes of Ireland, Belgium, Romania, Luxembourg, Portugal, Sweden, France, Italy, Austria and Finland.

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