The Biden administration is withdrawing its vaccination and testing regulation aimed at large businesses, following the Supreme Court’s decision to block the rule earlier this month.
Pfizer and BioNTech have begun a clinical trial for an Omicron-specific Covid-19 vaccine. The Omicron variant caused 99.9% of new coronavirus cases in the US last week, CDC estimates show.
Former CDC director is "optimistic" about the direction of the Covid-19 pandemic
From CNN's Jen Christensen
As the US passes two years since the first laboratory-confirmed case of Covid-19, formerUS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) director Tom Frieden admitted to feeling positive about the direction the nation is headed.
Frieden, currently the CEO and president of a global health initiative called Resolve to Save Lives, says the “flash flood” of cases stemming from a surge in the Omicron variant should soon slow down, largely as a result of effective vaccines.
“We don’t know if there will be another wave, but we do know that we’ve got much stronger defenses than we’ve ever had,” Frieden said.
“We’re in much better shape than we’ve ever been. But we do need to hang on for just a few more weeks until the Omicron flood recedes, so we don’t overwhelm the hospitals, which are really stressed out,” Frieden added.
As companies, including Moderna, Pfizer, and BioNTech, continue testing Omicron-specific boosters, Frieden is unconvinced that such measures will be required.
“I don’t know if this will ever be approved for Americans, and really, I’m disappointed that a company like Moderna might be doing something like this and trying to adjust their market valuation,” Frieden said.
While scientists work towards the creation and approval of a universal Covid-19 vaccine, Frieden pushed patience.
“Remember, we’ve been trying to make a universal flu vaccine for several decades, and an HIV vaccine for several decades, a malaria vaccine for several decades. And we’re just beginning to see some progress,” Frieden said. “I wouldn’t hold your breath for a universal vaccine, but it’s certainly a goal worth trying.”
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About 26% of the US has received a booster dose of Covid-19 vaccine, CDC data shows
From CNN’s Deidre McPhillips
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has published new data showing that 63.5%of the total US population (all ages), or about 211 million people, have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19.
More data from the CDC:
Not vaccinated: At least 19.5% of the eligible population (age 5+) has not received any dose of Covid-19 vaccine, at least 61 million people.
Current pace of vaccinations (seven-day average): 962,958 doses are being administered each day.
Most doses being administered – about 504,000 – are booster doses.
Only about 259,000 people are initiating vaccination each day.
About 85.2 million people have received a booster dose. That’s about 25.7% of the US population.
To note: CDC data on Covid-19 vaccinations are estimates. The agency notes that data on people who are fully vaccinated and those with a booster dose may be underestimated, while data on people with at least one dose may be overestimated.
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UK study: Nearly two-thirds of participants who tested positive during Omicron surge reported prior infection
From CNN's Katherine Dillinger
Almost two-thirds of people participating in the REACT-1 study, which looked at coronavirus transmission in the United Kingdom, who tested positive for the virus during the surge of the Omicron variant reported that they’d had a confirmed previous infection, according to findings published Wednesday.
Researchers from Imperial College London looked at more than 100,000 valid tests collected between Jan. 5 and Jan. 20. About 4.41% of the tests were positive, three times more than in December, and 99% of sequenced samples were found to include the Omicron variant.
Of the 3,582 people who tested positive and reported whether they’d had a previous infection, 2,315 (64.6%) reported a confirmed previous infection.
Researchers on separate studies had reported last month that the proportion of Omicron cases that were likely reinfections in people who have had Covid-19 before was more than 10 times that of Delta.
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New York City schools shorten Covid-19 isolation period to five days
The New York City school system has changed its Covid-19 isolation period for students in kindergarten and higher who test positive for Covid-19 from ten to five days to be in accordance with CDC and New York state health department guidance.
“This isn’t something we created,” said Nathaniel Styer, a spokesman for NYC’s education department. “This is just bringing us in line with the CDC and state. They changed these rules already.”
Staff and students will not be required to produce negative test results before being allowed to return to school or work after their isolation period. The change will go into effect on January 31, the DOE said.
The ten-day isolation period for students enrolled in Pre-K and other early childhood education will remain. If a student is not fully-vaccinated and is exposed to Covid-19 outside of a school setting, that student must quarantine for at least five days.
Unvaccinated students exposed to Covid-19 in their home must also quarantine for an additional five days “after a household member’s isolation period has ended, if the household member is not isolated from the student or the student continues to be exposed to the household member in the same home during that time,” the DOE said.
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Denmark will lift all Covid-19 restrictions in the country
From CNN’s Antonia Mortensen
Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen holds a joint press conference in Copenhagen on January 26.
Denmark will lift all Covid-19 restrictions within the country, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen announced in a news conference on Wednesday evening, adding that coronavirus “should no longer be categorized as a socially critical sickness.”
“Denmark will be completely open from 1 February,” Frederiksen said. “Tonight we can start lowering our shoulders and find our smiles again.”
Frederiksen said she expected spring, summer, and early autumn to be “an open Denmark with hugs, parties, and festivals.” Then later in autumn and into the winter, the government said it expects another season of increased infections, which may require additional vaccinations. She said the government is not ruling out the possibility that a fourth shot could be necessary for everyone.
Earlier on Wednesday, Denmark’s Minister of Health Magnus Heunicke recommended that some testing upon entry to the country is the only pandemic restriction that should remain.
Tests for certain people when entering Denmark will primarily apply to those who have not been vaccinated or previously infected, Heunicke said on Wednesday evening. Maintaining that restriction would require the support of a majority in the parliament, and the health minister said he expects an answer from parliament on Friday.
Danish authorities continue to recommend taking an at-home test before being in contact with groups of people, especially vulnerable people, according to the health minister. PCR tests will continue to be available to the public in order to confirm Covid-19 cases.
National Board of Health Director Søren Brostrøm said that authorities are confident about lifting restrictions due to the high levels of immunity because of widespread vaccination and previous infections, as well as the nature of the Omicron variant, which he said is “completely dominant and … less pathogenic.”
“We have an enormously high immunity in Denmark. Probably at least 80% of the population from cradle to grave is well-protected,” Brostrøm said, adding that roughly twice as many people in Denmark have been infected with Omicron compared to previous variants.
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White House: 85% of Covid-19 antiviral pills go to states, while 15% are sent to community health centers
From CNN Health's Jacqueline Howard
A Paxlovid pill is shown in this image provided by Pfizer.
(courtesy Pfizer)
The majority of the millions of Covid-19 antiviral pills that the United States has purchased have been distributed directly to states, White House Covid-19 Response Coordinator Jeff Zients told reporters during a briefing Wednesday.
The other 15% goes directly to community health centers around the country, he added.
“We’re making sure that we’re reaching those who are harder to reach and more vulnerable locations and that our response is fair and equitable,” Zients said. “It’s important to note that as soon as we get monoclonal treatments or pills, we distribute them out to the states so that they can get to patients as quickly as possible.”
The US has purchased 20 million treatment courses of the Pfizer antiviral pill Paxlovid, with the first 10 million expected to be delivered by the end of June.
“I want to remind everybody that that is one of five Pfizer pills, one of five effective treatments that we have in our nation’s medicine cabinet — in that, we have more treatments between the Pfizer pill, the Merck pill, GSK’s monoclonal antibody which is effective against Omicron, AstraZeneca’s preventive therapy, and remdesivir,” Zients said. “We have more available than we’ve had at any point in the pandemic and we’re using every tool at our disposal to keep people safe.”
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Universal coronavirus vaccines are in the works but "going to take years to develop," Fauci says
From CNN's Jacqueline Howard
Scientists are working around the clock to develop a universal, or “pan-coronavirus,” vaccine — one that offers protection against any type of coronavirus or multiple types that are out there, including variants that cause Covid-19.
But such vaccines are “going to take years to develop,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), said during a White House briefing on Wednesday.
Coronaviruses that infect humans were first identified in the mid-1960s and, so far, there are seven known human coronaviruses: four that cause common colds; Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, or MERS; severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS; and SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes Covid-19.
“However, since September of 2020, there have been five SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern: Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta and now the current Omicron,” Fauci said during Wednesday’s briefing.
Fauci added that NIAID has invested more than $3 billion overall on coronavirus research since the pandemic began and a subset of that supports vaccine research, including studies on investigational pan-coronavirus vaccine candidates.
“I don’t want anyone to think that pan-coronavirus vaccines are literally around the corner in a month or two. It’s going to take years to develop in an incremental fashion. Some of these are already in Phase 1 clinical trials,” Fauci said Wednesday.
“Don’t forget, however, that our current vaccine regimens do provide strong protection, particularly when used with a booster against severe coronavirus disease and death,” Fauci said. “So do not wait to receive your primary vaccine regimen and please get your booster if you are eligible,” he said.
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CDC forecast predicts at least 62,000 more people could die in the US from Covid-19 over the next 4 weeks
From CNN's Naomi Thomas
An ensemble forecast from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published Wednesday predicts more than 62,000 additional people could die from Covid-19 over the next four weeks.
This is the first week that deaths have been predicted to have a stable or uncertain trend after predicted increases since the forecast published on Dec. 29.
The CDC included projections that indicate the number of deaths will slowly but steadily rise for the first three weeks, before dropping quickly in the last week.
The forecast predicts that there could be a total of 923,000 to 979,000 Covid-19 deaths in the US reported by Feb. 19.
According to data from Johns Hopkins University, coronavirus has killed at least 872,126 people in the United States.
The forecast could mean an average of 2,622 Covid-19 deaths a day, up from a current average of 2,258 per day, according to JHU data.
Hospitalizations are predicted to decrease for the first time after eight weeks of predicted increases, followed by one week of predicted stable or uncertain trends. CDC predicts that there will be 4,900 to 27,800 new confirmed Covid-19 hospital admissions likely reported on Feb. 18.
There are currently 150,178 people hospitalized with Covid-19, according to US Department of Health and Human Services data.
The forecast for cases did not predict an increase or decrease, or give a predicted number of cases.
“Recent case forecasts have shown low reliability, with more reported cases than expected falling outside the forecast prediction intervals for 1-, 2-, 3-, and 4-week ahead case forecasts. Therefore, case forecasts will continue to be collected and analyzed but will not be summarized until sustained improvements in performance are observed,” the CDC said.
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It's "dangerous" to assume we are at the end of the pandemic, WHO director-general says
From CNN’s Naomi Thomas
World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus speaks during a press conference in December.
(Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images)
It’s dangerous to assume that there will be no more Covid-19 variants after Omicron or that the world is in the end game of the pandemic, World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Monday.
“There are different scenarios for how the pandemic could play out and how the acute phase could end. But it’s dangerous to assume that Omicron will be the last variant or that we are in the end game,” Tedros said during the 150th session of the WHO executive board on Monday. “On the contrary, globally, the conditions are ideal for more variants to emerge.”
“To change the course of the pandemic, we must change the conditions that are driving it,” Tedros continued, adding that the WHO recognizes everyone is tired of the pandemic and restrictions, that businesses and economies are hurting and that “many governments are walking a tightrope, attempting to balance what is effective with what is acceptable to their people.”
Every country is in a unique situation, he said, “and must chart its way out of the acute phase of the pandemic with a careful, stepwise approach,” something that doesn’t have easy answers.
If WHO resources — including evidence, strategies and support — are used in a comprehensive way, the world could see not only an end to the acute phase of the pandemic, but an end to Covid-19 as a global health emergency this year, he said.
But that requires reaching high vaccinations rates, equitable health care and increasing sequencing abilities, he said:
It is “astonishing” that Covid-19 vaccines work so well against preventing hospitalization and death, including with Omicron, WHO’s technical lead for Covid-19 Maria Van Kerkhove said during a social media live Q&A session on Tuesday, underscoring that it is critical for people to be vaccinated.
“Vaccine equity is absolutely critical, but it’s not vaccine equity in only some countries,” she said. “There are challenges in every single country about reaching those who are most at risk, high income as well as low income.”
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Austria will end lockdown for unvaccinated people as country's hospitals stabilize
From CNN's Chris Stern
Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said in a tweet today that the country is ending its lockdown for unvaccinated people on Monday as the situation in the hospitals “has stabilized.”
On Dec. 7, Nehammer announced that Austria’s nationwide lockdown would be extended for unvaccinated people. This measure was taken to “prevent people from becoming infected & to protect the health care system from being overburdened,” Nehammer said Wednesday.
Austria became the first country in Europe to impose a nationwide vaccine mandate last week after lawmakers passed a bill making Covid-19 vaccines compulsory for all residents from ages 18 and older.
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White House will announce US has shipped 400 million vaccine doses globally
From CNN's Betsy Klein
Vials of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine are seen in December 2020.
(Leon Neal/Getty Images)
The Biden administration will mark a milestone of vaccines shipped abroad, announcing Wednesday that the US has shared 400 million doses of Covid-19 vaccine with the world.
White House Covid-19 response coordinator Jeff Zients is expected to announce the 400 million marker at Wednesday’s Covid-19 response briefing as the US ships an additional 3.2 million doses of Pfizer’s vaccine to Bangladesh and 4.7 million doses to Pakistan through the COVAX global vaccine sharing program, a White House official tells CNN exclusively.
Pakistan has received the most doses from the US, for a total of 47.4 million doses shipped as of Wednesday.
The US has donated more doses than any other country, Zients will note.
President Biden announced to the UN General Assembly last fall that the US had purchased another 500 million doses of Pfizer’s vaccine, which would begin shipping this month, with 800 million vaccines expected to be shipped abroad through September of this year.
The efforts to share vaccines globally comes as the US has acknowledged the importance of eliminating the pandemic — and the possibility of new variants — around the world. The highly-contagious Omicron variant continues to spread in the US, now accounting for 99.9% of new cases in the last week.
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Highest number of new global Covid-19 cases reported since start of the pandemic, WHO says
From CNN's Naomi Thomas
From Jan. 17 to 23, Covid-19 cases increased 5% compared to the week before with over 21 million new cases reported, the World Health Organization said in its Covid-19 Weekly Epidemiological Update published Tuesday.
“Across the six WHO regions, over 21 million new cases were reported, representing the highest number of weekly cases recorded since the beginning of the pandemic,” the update said.
The case increases were slower than last week, WHO said, with only half of the six WHO regions reporting an increase of new cases, compared with five of six reporting one the week before.
The largest increase was in the eastern Mediterranean region, 39%, followed by the South-East Asia region, 36% and the European, 13%. The Western Pacific region reported a similar number of cases to the week before. Decreases were reported in the African region, 31%, and the region of the Americas, 10%.
The United States reported the highest number of new cases, followed by France, India, Italy and Brazil.
There have been over 346 million confirmed Covid-19 cases globally as of Jan. 23.
The number of deaths reported, nearly 50,000, was similar to the week before.
Three WHO regions reported increases in the number of deaths, the South-East Asia Region, 44%, the Eastern Mediterranean Region, 15% and the Region of the Americas, 7%. The remaining three regions reported declines in new weekly deaths.
The United States also reported the highest number of new deaths, followed by the Russian Federation, India, Italy and the United Kingdom.
As of Jan. 23, the have been over 5.5 million deaths reported across the world.
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Covid-19 infection before or after vaccination may lead to stronger immune responses, new study suggests
From CNN’s Anokhi Saklecha
Infection with the coronavirus, either before or after vaccination, may enhance immune responses, according to a study published Tuesday in the journal Science Immunology.
The study, conducted by researchers at the Oregon Health & Science University, analyzed antibody responses in 104 vaccinated health care workers. Of this group, 31 people had a breakthrough infection after vaccination, 31 were infected before vaccination (referred to as hybrid immunity), and 42 had no history of infection.
The researchers found that both the hybrid and breakthrough groups had significantly higher levels of antibodies against Covid-19 proteins compared with the group with no infections.These antibodies were also more efficient and potent, and they had higher rates of virus neutralization: up to 32 times higher in the hybrid group and up to 17 times higher in the breakthrough group. This pattern was seen against the wild-type virus as well as the Alpha, Beta and Delta variants.
In the group with no infections, antibody levels declined with age, as previous research has found. However, this effect was not seen in either the hybrid or breakthrough groups. No significant differences were observed between the hybrid-immunity and breakthrough cohorts.
While previous studies have shown increased immune responses from pre-vaccination infections, the researchers claimed there was a gap of knowledge about responses to breakthrough infections.
However, they highlight the importance of getting the vaccine, regardless of previous infection status.
Experts also warn against trying to develop or boost coronavirus antibodies by catching Covid-19 on purpose. Even vaccinated people can become severely ill or spread the virus to people around them who might be at higher risk for serious complications.
The new study did not include participants with boosters or third doses of the vaccine, though an early external study may suggest that boosters offer increases in immune protection similar to those seen in the hybrid-immunity and breakthrough groups, according to the authors.
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Fauci expected to discuss universal coronavirus vaccine at White House briefing
From CNN’s Katherine Dillinger and John Bonifield
Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser, said he will discuss efforts toward a universal coronavirus vaccine at an upcoming White House briefing, according to pre-recorded comments scheduled to air Wednesday at 2 p.m. ET on SiriusXM’s “Doctor Radio Reports” with Dr. Marc Siegel.
“There’s a big effort, and I’m gonna be talking about this tomorrow at the White House press conference is the efforts that we’re putting in to develop a pan-coronavirus vaccine, which is gonna be multiphasic,” he said.
“It’s not gonna be trying to get a vaccine against all the coronaviruses all at once, but start with a vaccine that covers all the different variants of SARS CoV2. And then get a pan-sarbecovirus, which includes SARS-CoV-1 and SARS-CoV-2 … a lot of activity that’s going on in that regard,” Fauci said.
The White House Covid-19 Response Team briefing is scheduled for 11 a.m ET.