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Monthly Archives: February 2022
Record editorial: A return to normalcy appears close. But the coronavirus has proven unpredictable. – The Park Record
Posted: February 26, 2022 at 11:05 am
Take a deep breath, Parkites.
COVID-19 case numbers have plunged in recent weeks following the omicron-fueled surge that pushed coronavirus transmission to never-before-seen levels in Summit County and the rest of the state. For the first time since last summer, prior to the emergence of the delta and omicron variants, there is a sense of optimism that we may be nearing a point where the coronavirus recedes into the background of daily life.
State officials announced recently that they plan to close mass testing sites at the end of March and begin treating the coronavirus as endemic rather than as a pandemic. And the Summit County Health Department has indicated that it intends shortly to take a similar tack.
The current situation is particularly promising for people who are vaccinated or better yet, boosted. With case numbers similar to where they were in the early fall and hopefully continuing to decline, its reasonable for people whove been inoculated or have a measure of immunity through infection to let their guards down a bit as long as they abide by common-sense COVID guidelines.
The prospect of a time when we can learn to live with the virus like we do other diseases such as the flu is welcome as we near the two-year anniversary of the pandemic striking Summit County. It represents a kind of freedom that weve been largely living without since March 2020.
As weve seen time and again, though, predicting the course of the pandemic is tricky. There are simply too many variables to say with certainty whether we are at a turning point. It felt like we were there in the late spring and summer last year, but then the variants plunged us back into crisis.
The optimism many people are feeling as spring approaches is justified. But another variant could arrive and wash it away.
Are we truly entering a new, less dangerous phase of the pandemic, or even the long-awaited transition to the coronavirus becoming endemic? Or is this merely another brief period of calm before the disease returns with a vengeance?
Its far too early to know. But for the first time in months, a return to normalcy appears close. Heres to hoping it actually arrives.
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Covid-19, Mask Guidance, and Testing News: Live Updates – The New York Times
Posted: at 11:05 am
Zia Hellman, a teacher, helps her student, Averie Colvin, 5, at Walter P. Carter Elementary/Middle School in Baltimore.Credit...Rosem Morton for The New York Times
A Maryland legislative committee on Friday approved the State Board of Educations decision to allow all 24 local school districts to decide whether to require face coverings in schools.
The decision, effective immediately, ends an emergency order mandating the masking in schools that had been in effect since the beginning of the school year. Both Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, and the state superintendent of schools, Mohammed Choudhury, had lobbied for the decision, which came on the same day that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new masking guidance that allows many more areas of the country to ease pandemic restrictions.
Other states also announced the easing of some restrictions on Friday, including California, Colorado and Illinois.
The Maryland State Education Association, the union that represents 76,000 teachers and other support staff, had urged caution, asking for the mask mandate to remain in place longer.
The mandate was updated in December to allow local school systems the option to end the mask requirement if the spread of the coronavirus remains moderate or low for two weeks, or if the vaccination rate is higher than 80 percent in the school or community. A few school districts have passed the threshold, and one, Anne Arundel County, met the standards and decided to make masks optional. Face coverings will remain required on school buses.
Cheryl Bost, a fourth- and fifth-grade teacher who serves as the unions president, said in an interview that the system was working well and that school districts were reaching safe levels. She had urged waiting a week or two before removing the state mask mandate.
You must allow districts and families transitional time to make decisions, she said. There are students and educators currently able to take part in in-person instruction because of the mask mandate.
Ms. Bost, who is immunocompromised, said the union wants students and families with higher levels of vulnerability to have increased remote-schooling options. Educators with special medical needs should also have paid sick leave or alternate job placements, she said, and districts should continue to provide masks, testing and contact tracing to keep community transmission rates low.
Fewer than 10 states still require masks in K-12 schools, though federal guidance recommends that people in places with outbreaks, and all students, teachers and school staff members, wear masks regardless of their vaccination status. Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, New Jersey and Oregon, among other states, have announced plans to lift statewide mask requirements in schools, citing the easing of the Omicron surge.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will release new guidelines on Friday for determining when and where people should wear masks, practice social distancing and avoid crowded indoor spaces. According to two federal officials with knowledge of the plans, the guidelines will direct counties to consider three measures to assess risk of the virus: new Covid-related hospital admissions over the previous week, the percentage of hospital beds occupied by Covid patients and new coronavirus cases per 100,000 people over the previous week.
Using the new framework, Maryland is in a great place, Mr. Choudhury, the school superintendent, said Friday afternoon. We cant mask our kids forever. This is a good time to do it.
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Covid-19, Mask Guidance, and Testing News: Live Updates - The New York Times
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Covid News: Several Parts of U.S. Ease Mask Rules – The New York Times
Posted: at 11:05 am
Family members at a mass crematorium ground in East Delhi, India, in April 2021.Credit...Atul Loke for The New York Times
A new study estimates that at least 5.2 million children around the world lost a parent or other caregiver to Covid-19 in the first 19 months of the pandemic.
Children are suffering immensely now and need our help, said Susan Hillis, a senior researcher at the University of Oxford and a lead author of the study, which was published in the medical journal The Lancet on Thursday.
The study was based on data from 20 countries, including India, the United States and Peru, and was completed by an international research team that included experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization and several colleges and universities.
It warns that a child who loses a parent or a caregiver could suffer negative effects including an increased risk of poverty, sexual abuse, mental health challenges and severe stress.
An earlier study, focused on the first 13 months of the pandemic, arrived at an estimate of 1.5 million affected children. The new figure is much higher not just because it adds data for six more months, researchers say, but also because the first estimate was a significant undercount. Using updated figures on Covid-related deaths, the researchers now calculate that at least 2.7 million children lost a parent or caregiver during the first 13 months.
The new study covers data through October 2021, and does not include the latest surge in cases from the Omicron variant, which have undoubtedly added to the toll.
It took 10 years for five million children to be orphaned by H.I.V./AIDS, whereas the same number of children have been orphaned by Covid-19 in just two years, Lorraine Sherr, a professor of psychology at University College London and an author of the study, said in a statement.
Davyon Johnson, 11, from Muskogee, Okla., is one of the millions of children to have lost a parent in his case, his father, Willie James Logan, who died two days after being hospitalized with Covid in August 2021.
Its been a rocky road, Ill say it like that, Davyons mother, LaToya Johnson, said in an interview.
Davyon has dealt with the grief as best as he can, she said. His grades are still strong. Hes still eager to see friends. Still, there are days when they are both exhausted.
Up and down up and down, Ms. Johnson said of their emotions. Its him wanting to call his daddy and not being able to.
Darcey Merritt, a professor of child welfare at New York University who was not involved in the study, said the deaths of parents and caregivers would have a long, far-reaching impact on children, especially those in lower-income households.
Children of color in the United States, she added, are particularly at risk of negative consequences.
A study in the journal Pediatrics last year found that in the United States, one in every 168 American Indian or Alaska Native children, one in every 310 Black children, one in every 412 Hispanic children, and one in every 612 Asian children had lost a caregiver, compared with one in 753 white children.
The study in The Lancet found that two out of three children orphaned are between 10 and 17, and a majority of the children who lost a parent lost their father.
Juliette Unwin, a lead author of the study from Imperial College London, said in a statement that as the researchers receive more data, they expected the figures to grow 10 times higher than what is currently being reported.
The pandemic is still raging worldwide, Dr. Unwin said, which means Covid-19-related orphanhood will also continue to surge.
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Covid News: Several Parts of U.S. Ease Mask Rules - The New York Times
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PowerPoint slides and exponential curves: Vallance and Whittys best bits – The Guardian
Posted: at 11:05 am
Sir Patrick Vallance, the governments chief scientific adviser, and Sir Chris Whitty, Englands chief medical officer, became household names after they were propelled into the spotlight by the Covid pandemic. For the past two years, they have flanked Boris Johnson at Downing Street briefings armed with PowerPoint slides and exponential curves. But with the announcement this week of Englands plan for living with Covid the advisers are expected to take a step back. Here are some of their most memorable moments.
Early in the coronavirus pandemic, Sir Patrick Vallance suggested that building herd immunity in the UK through widespread transmission could be the UKs strategy for handling the pandemic.
On 13 March 2020, Sir Patrick Vallance, speaking to the BBCs Today show, said the key things the UK needed to do was to fight the pandemic was to build up some degree of herd immunity, saying that because the vast majority of people with coronavirus get a mild illness, herd immunity would mean that more people are immune to the virus and transmission would be reduced.
The concept of building herd immunity through exposure prompted backlash and was criticised by figures such as former health secretary Jeremy Hunt.
Speaking to the health select committee on the 17 March 2020, Sir Patrick Vallance stated that if the number of coronavirus deaths reached 20,000 or below, that would be a good outcome, although it would still be horrible and an enormous number of deaths.
Of course, the UKs total coronavirus death toll greatly surpassed this prediction. As of 25 February 2022, there were a total of 161,104 deaths recorded within 28 days of a positive test.
Amid the controversy over Dominic Cummingss journey to Durham during lockdown, Whitty and Vallance were asked whether they were entirely comfortable with the prime minister telling you you cant answer questions about Dominic Cummings.
In response, Chris Whitty said: I can assure you, the desire not to get pulled into politics is far stronger on the part of Sir Patrick [Vallance] and me than it is on the prime minister.
Vallance added: Im a civil servant, Im politically neutral and I dont want to get involved in politics at all.
On 10 June 2020, When looking at specific ways the UK could have improved their response to the coronavirus pandemic when it first emerged, Whitty said that if he had to choose one issue, it would be looking at how we could speed up testing early on in the epidemic.
There are many good reasons why it was tricky, but if I was to play things again, and this is largely based on what some other countries were able to do, in particular Germany, I think thats the one thing we would have put more emphasis on at an earlier stage.
In April 2020, the UKs daily coronavirus testing rate had only just passed 10,000.
In June 2021, a video was widely shared on social media of a man putting Whitty in a headlock when he declined to be in a photograph with him.
Whitty later said that he did not think anything of it and was surprised that the media picked up on it.
Im sure he will become a model citizen in due course, he added.
Both Lewis Hughes and Jonathan Chew, who were both involved in the incident and appeared in the video, were prosecuted.
Jonathan Chew was sentenced to eight weeks in prison in January after admitting harassment of Whitty on 29 June 2021.
Lewis Hughes, who was sacked from his job as an estate agent after the incident, received a suspended sentence last July for his involvement.
Asked about claims by the rapper Nicki Minaj that the coronavirus vaccine could make you impotent, Whitty said that people who know they are peddling untruths should be ashamed.
He said: There are a group of people who have strange beliefs, and thats fine but there are also people who go round trying to discourage other people from taking a vaccine which could be life saving.
And many of those people, I regret to say, know that they are peddling untruths, and still do it. And in my view, they should be ashamed.
In December last year, as the Omicron wave started taking off, Whitty said that people should prioritise what matters, and that by definition means de-prioritising other things.
I think I would recommend that, and most people would recommend that, and you dont need a medical degree to realise that is a sensible thing to do with an incredibly infectious virus.
At the time of Whittys comments, Independent Sage published a statement calling for an emergency circuit break lockdown given the rise of the Omicron variant, with numbers of infections doubling in England every two days.
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PowerPoint slides and exponential curves: Vallance and Whittys best bits - The Guardian
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If I am vaccinated and get COVID-19, what are my chances of dying? The answer is surprisingly hard to find – KRQE News 13
Posted: at 11:05 am
(THE CONVERSATION) Thankfully, most people who get COVID19 dont become seriously ill especially those who are vaccinated. But a small fraction do get hospitalized, and a smaller fraction do die. If you are vaccinated and catch the coronavirus, what are your chances of getting hospitalized or dying?
Asan epidemiologist, I have been asked to respond to this question in one form or another throughout the pandemic. This is a very reasonable question to ask, but a challenging one to answer.
To calculate the risk of hospitalization or death after getting infected with SARS-CoV-2 you need to know the total number of infections. The problem is that nobody knows exactly how many people have been infected by the coronavirus. So while it is very hard to estimate the true risk of dying if you are vaccinated and come down with COVID-19, there are some ways to better understand the risks.
Counting infections
The first thing to consider when thinking about risk is that the data has to be fresh. Each new variant has its own characteristics that change the risk it poses to those it infects. Omicron came on quickly and seems to be leaving quickly, so there has been little time for researchers or health officials to collect and publish data that can be used to estimate the risk of hospitalization or death.
If you have enough good data, it would be possible to calculate the risk of hospitalization or death. You would need to count the number of people who were hospitalized or died and divide that number by the total number of infections. Its also important to take into account time delays between infection, hospitalization and death. Doing this calculation would give you the true infection hospitalization or fatality rate. The trouble is health officialsdont know with certainty how many people have been infected.
The omicron variant is incredibly infectious, but therisk of it causing significant illness is much lowercompared to previous strains. Its great that omicron is less severe, but that may lead to fewer people seeking tests if they are infected.
Further complicating things is the widespread availability of at-home test kits. Recentdata from New York Citysuggests that 55% of the population had ordered these and that about a quarter of individuals who tested positive during the omicron surge used a home test. Many people who use home tests report their results,but many do not.
Finally, some people who do get symptoms simply may not get tested because they cant readily access testing resources, or they dont see a benefit in doing so.
When you combine all these factors, the result is that the official, reported count of coronavirus cases in the U.S. isfar lower than the actual number.
Estimating cases
Since the beginning of the pandemic, epidemiologists have been working on ways to estimate the true number of infections. There are a few ways to do this.
Researchers have previously usedantibody tests resultsfrom large populations to estimate the prevalence of the virus. This type of testing takes time to organize, and as of late February 2022, it doesnt appear that anyone has done this for omicron.
Another way to estimate cases is to rely onmathematical models. Researchers have used these models to make estimates oftotal case numbersand also forinfection fatality rates. But the models dont distinguish between estimated infections of vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals.
Research has shown time and again that vaccinationgreatly reduces ones risk of serious illness or death. This means that calculating the risk of death is only really useful if you can distinguish by vaccination status, and existing models dont enable this.
Whats known and what to do?
Without a good estimate of total cases by vaccination status, the best data available is known cases, hospitalizations and deaths. While this limited information doesnt allow researchers to calculate the absolute risk an individual faces, it is possible to compare the risk between vaccinated and unvaccinated people.
The mostrecent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionshows that hospitalization rates are 16 times higher in unvaccinated adults compared to fully vaccinated ones, andrates of death are 14 times higher.
What is there to take away from all this? Most importantly,vaccination greatly reduces the riskof hospitalization and death by many times.
But perhaps a second lesson is that the risks of hospitalization or death are much more complicated to understand and study than you might have thought and the same goes for deciding how to react to those risks.
I look at the numbers and feel confident in the ability of my COVID-19 vaccination and booster to protect me from severe disease. I also choose to wear a high-quality mask when Im indoors with lots of people to lessen my own risk even further and to protect those who may be unable to get vaccinated.
There have been many lessons learned from this pandemic, and there are many things researchers and the public still need to do better. It turns out that studying and talking about risk is one of them.
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How Often Will We Need to Update COVID Vaccines? – The Atlantic
Posted: at 11:05 am
Last June, as the Delta variant sat poised to take the globe by storm, Pfizers CEO, Albert Bourla, promised the world speed. Should an ultra-mutated version of SARS-CoV-2 sprout, he said, his company could have a variant-specific shot ready for rollout in about 100 daysa pledge he echoed in November when Omicron reared its head.
Now, with the 100-day finish line fast approaching and no clinical-trial data in sight, the company seems unlikely to meet its mark. (I asked Pfizer about this super-speedster timeline; when we have the data analyzed, we will share an update, the company responded.) Moderna, which started brewing up an Omicron vaccine around the same time, is eyeing late summer for its own debut.
Not that an Omicron vaccine would necessarily make a huge difference, even if Pfizer had made good. In many parts of the world, the variants record-breaking wave is receding. Having a bespoke vaccine in 100 days would have been an unprecedented accomplishment, but Omicron was simply too fast for a cooked-to-order shot to beat it, says Soumya Swaminathan, the chief scientist at the World Health Organization. This time, all things considered, we got lucky: Our original-recipe vaccines still work quite well against the variant, especially when theyre delivered as a trio of jabsenough that some researchers have wondered whether well ever need the elusive Omivax.
But Omicron wont be the last antibody-dodging variant that splinters off of the SARS-CoV-2 treewhich means the vaccines, too, will need to keep coming. Tough decisions are ahead about what triggers might prompt a whole new variant-specific vaccine campaign, and how well manage the shift in time. That said, we dont have to resign ourselves to a bleak future of infinite catch-up, with shots always lagging strains. Vaccine updates might not be that necessary that often, and when they are, we can poise ourselves to rapidly react. Rather than scrambling to sprint after SARS-CoV-2 every time it surprises us, we could watch the virus more closely, and use the intel we gather to act more deliberately.
To vaccinate properly against a variant, we must first detect it. That means keeping tabs on the coronavirus and rooting out the places where it likes to hide and transform.
Flu presents an excellent template for this sort of viral voyeurism. The viruses that cause that disease also shape-shift frequently enough to elude the immune systems grasp. For decades, scientists have been maintaining a massive, global surveillance network, now made of some 150 laboratories, that each year amasses millions of samples from sick people and susses out the genetic sequences of the viruses that linger within. That information then goes to the WHO, which convenes two meetings each yearone per hemisphereto decide which strains should be included in next winters vaccine.
A watchdog system for SARS-CoV-2 could piggyback off of flus. The symptoms of the two diseases overlap; hospitals are already collecting those samples, says Richard Webby, the director of the WHO Collaborating Center for Studies on the Ecology of Influenza in Animals and Birds. Youd just test them for two agents now. Scientists could scour coronavirus genomes for little red flagsbig-deal changes in the spike protein, say, that might befuddle antibodiesthen shuttle the most worrisome morphs to a high-security lab, where they could be pitted directly against immune molecules and cells. Based on flus model, ideal candidates for a vaccine revision might meet three criteria: Theyre riddled with unusual mutations; theyre recognized poorly by antibodies; and theyre spreading at least somewhat rapidly from one person to the next. A variant so heavily modified that it overcomes our immunity enough to make even healthy, vaccinated people quite sick would make the clearest-cut case for editing a shots recipe, Swaminathan told me.
Read: The coronavirus will surprise us again
In September, the WHO formed a new technical advisory group thats been tasked with recommending ingredient adjustments to COVID vaccines as needed; Swaminathan envisions the committee operating parallel to one that calls the shots for flu. But over time, the conditions that demand we take quick action for COVID vaccines might not arise all that often. At least some coronaviruses are thought to metamorphose more slowly and less dramatically than flu viruses, once they settle into a population, which could mean a less frantic variant pummel than what weve experienced so far. Some experts also hope that as the world continues to rack up infections and vaccinations, our immunity against this new coronavirus will hold better. Our defenses against flu have always been a bit brittlevaccine effectiveness for these shots doesnt start terribly high, then drops rather rapidly. If our shields against SARS-CoV-2 are more stalwart, and the virus genetically quiets, perhaps we will need to rejigger COVID vaccines less often than we do for flu.
Even against Omicron, the most heavily altered variant of concern identified to date, vaccine protection against severe disease seems extraordinarily sturdy. I dont think the entire population is going to need annual vaccines, Swaminathan told me. (The important exceptions, she noted, might be vulnerable populations, among them immunocompromised people and older individuals.) And when we do need vaccine revamps, the blistering speed at which mRNA shots can be switched up will be an advantage. Because most flu vaccines need about six months to slog through the production pipeline, vaccine strains are selected at the end of winter and injected into arms the next fall. That leaves a gap for the viruses to morph even more. mRNA shots like Pfizers and Modernas, meanwhile, couldOmicron saga notwithstandingzing from conception to distribution in about half the time, and eliminate a good chunk of the guesswork.
Some parts of this relatively rosy future may not come to passor at least, they could be a long way off. We just dont understand SARS-CoV-2 as well as we do flu viruses. In most of the world, flu viruses tend to wax in the winter, then wane in the warmer months, giving us a sense of the optimal time to roll out vaccines. And flu evolution occurs in a linear, ladderlike fashion; last years major strains tend to beget this years major strains. That makes it reasonably straightforward to predict the direction that flu viruses are going in and design our vaccines accordingly, says Emma Hodcroft, a molecular epidemiologist at the University of Bern.
The evolution of SARS-CoV-2, meanwhile, so far looks more radial, Webby told me, with new variants erupting out of old lineages rather than reliably riffing on dominant ones. Omicron, for instance, wasnt an offshoot of Delta. If we saw ladderlike evolution, we would know we need an Omicron vaccine now, Florian Krammer, a flu-virus expert at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, told me. Thats not what we have seen. The coronavirus has also so far been serving up new variants at an absolutely staggering clipfar faster than virologists expected it to at the pandemics startand scientists are unsure whether that churn will stop.
The coronavirus may eventually settle into more flu-like patternstrending its evolution to be more stepwise than starburst, or sticking to winter wavesas population immunity grows and it learns to better coexist with us. Host defenses, when theyre strong and abundant enough, have a way of constraining which paths a virus can take; perhaps they will slow the speed at which new variants arise and take over. The hope is that we head toward seasonality and stability, Helen Chu, a flu-vaccine researcher at the University of Washington, told me.
But theres no telling how long that transition will take, or how bumpy it will be, or if it will occur at all. Chu also worries that we dont yet have the proper infrastructure to pinpoint variants that gain steam in places where they can mutate unusually quickly: people with weakened immune systems, perhaps, or animals that can contract the pathogen and boomerang it back. (Similar events for flu, wherein other species pass a foreign version of the virus to us, can cause pandemics.) SARS-CoV-2 is unlikely to prefer exactly the same real estate that flu viruses do, and so our surveillance strategies will need to look different too. Even flu monitoring has notable holes: It still lags, for instance, in low-resourced parts of the globe. We need eyes and ears everywhere, Swaminathan told me.
For at least the short term, our COVID-vaccine-update process is likely to remain a bit plodding; variants will crop up, and our shots will pursue them. Even late-arriving shot rewrites arent necessarily useless, Hodcroft pointed out. Say our next variant is an Omicron descendant; dosing people up with Omivax could still prep the body for whats up ahead, even if the shot arrives too late to prevent past surges. That said, well also have to be careful about going all in on Omicron; several experts recently warned me that its probably premature to totally trash our original-recipe shots. If we went straight for an Omicron vaccine and stopped the others, that could potentially open up an immunity gap for the ancestral strains to mutate, and their descendants to roar back, says Cheryl Cohen, a member of the WHOs technical advisory group on COVID-19 vaccines and an epidemiologist at the National Institute for Communicable Diseases, in South Africa.
Read: Should we go all in on Omicron vaccines?
The pitfalls of pivoting from one spike version to the next are part of why this whack-a-mole approach of chasing single variants must end, says Raina MacIntyre, a member of the WHOs technical advisory group on COVID-19 vaccines and a biosecurity expert at the University of New South Wales, in Australia. Ideally, future vaccines should protect, with a single injection, against multiple variants at once. An easy first step would be to combine multiple spikes into one shotan Omicron-original combo, say, or an Omicron-Delta-original triple threat. Eventually, we might hit upon a universal formula that guards against all variants, including ones we dont know about yet, Hodcroft said. If the flus any indication, that could be an enormous challenge: Even after many years of study, weve struggled to find a catch-all shot for that disease. With SARS-CoV-2, we dont yet have a strong enough sense of all the evolutionary paths the virus could take; we may not be able to execute a wider-range shot until we understand our enemy better. Still, with so many efforts in the vaccine pipeline, Swaminathan is optimistic. I am fairly confident it is scientifically feasible, she said. It is no longer, Can we do it? It is, We can.
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How Often Will We Need to Update COVID Vaccines? - The Atlantic
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Gov. Newsom scales back COVID-19 executive actions, lifting all but 5% – Action News Now
Posted: at 11:05 am
SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Gov. Gavin Newsom has announced the state is rolling back executive orders put in place for the pandemic.
Newsom said he lifted all but 5% of COVID-19 related executive order provisions but the state will maintain provisions in key components of the states SMARTER Plan.
The state will also keep provisions for testing and vaccination programs. It will also keep provisions for hospitals and health facilities capacity.
As we move the states recovery forward, well continue to focus on scaling back provisions while maintaining essential testing, vaccination and health care system supports that ensure California has the needed tools and flexibility to strategically adapt our response for what lies ahead, Newsom said.
Before Friday, 15% of COVID executive actions remained in place.
Nineteen of the remaining provisions were terminated Friday, 18 will be terminated at the end of March. Newsom said another 15 will expire on June 30.
Seventeen executive actions remain in effect, which Newsom says will help with the states COVID-19 testing and vaccination programs. The executive actions highlighted are listed below:
The executive order can be found here.
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Gov. Newsom scales back COVID-19 executive actions, lifting all but 5% - Action News Now
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The War on Drugs reflect on the making of ‘I Don’t Live Here Anymore’ as tour hits Innings – The Arizona Republic
Posted: at 11:04 am
Adam Granduciel doesn't think he's seen the sun in 30 days. And he's OK with that because the trade off has been so rewarding.
In exchange for the subzero temperatures that can come with a "basically deep-winter tour," as he calls it, Granduciel and his bandmates have beenplaying almost every night, reconnecting with fans after more than a year on the sidelinesthanks toCOVID-19.
When The War on Drugs hit the stage for a headlining set at the Desert Daze festivalin California last November, they hadn't done aproper concert since the previous December.
They'd been looking forward to returning to the road "eversince it was taken away from us and everybody else," Granduciel says. "And the band sounds better than it ever has."
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Theyput a lot of work into sounding that much better when finallygettingtogetherin July to beginthe process of learning how to bring the songs on last year's"I Don't Live Here Anymore" to life.
A cinematic masterstroke of deeply felt reflections with a grandeur built to translate all that introspectiontothe back rows of a stadium,the album had been in the making since early 2018.
And very little of that making had been done by Granduciel and his bandmates in the same room at the same time.
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"We were just dipping our toes into the new songs," Granduciel recalls of those rehearsals.
"Because we didn't really make the album as a band per se,we kind of had tofigure out how to not reinterpret but to play these songs in real life, not just track them. That was challenging, but we got over that hump pretty quickly."
By the time they got to Desert Daze, they hadalready woodshedded those songs more than they'd done for any previous release.
And there were more rehearsalsprior to mid-January, when they launched the tour that makes its way to Innings Festival at Tempe Beach Park on Sunday, Feb. 27, having made the rounds of year-end critics lists.
"It's been incredibly satisfying," Granduciel says. "I feel like the band is really firing on all cylinders. And it's been a real joy to kind of stretch the songs out every night."
Some songs are sounding better live than Granduciel would have thought the song "Victim" for instance, which was built on tape loops.
"I would normally have said that one will be impossible for us to play," he says. "But it has actually been somehow the most natural sounding.We just kind of figured out the essence of it."
The same thing happened with another highlight of the album, "I Don't Wanna Wait."
"Instead of trying to recreate the track exactly, we just kind of found the spirit," Granduciel says. "It was challenging to learn to play these songs. Their tapestry is rich. But we really cracked the code."
Granduciel started work on "I Don't Live Here Anymore" in March 2018 while still on the road in support of The War on Drugs'fourth album, 2017's "A Deeper Understanding."
The pandemic hitting when it did in early 2020 had a major impact on that stage of the creative process, with members recording parts in their own studios.
"It kind of made the record go in a different direction, because I had more time at home to mess with certain ideas or approaches,"Granduciel says.
"And it gave everybody the ability to work at their own pace andspend as much time as they wanted in their studioinstead of flying them out to LA. It let everybody get inside the songs in a way that maybe they don't really get the opportunity to."
As a result, he got some "really spirited performances and cool ideas" from his bandmatesthat maybe they wouldn't have spent that kind of time on in LA."
The limitations of working remotely"kind of expanded the palate of the record," Granduciel says.
"It wasn't the hi-fi studio experience we did on the last record. But I think it was better for having those moments."
When Granduciel and co-producer/engineerShawn Everett got together at Sound City in Van Nuys in October 2020 after six or seven months of working by remote, it was "a jumping off point" for the rest of the recordings.
"It was weird because everyone had to wear masks, but it was me and Shawn diving back in with a renewed sense of urgency and a renewed love of what it means to work togetherin person."
Asked how they knew when the record was done after three years, Granduciel says it's more a matter of logistics and accepting the idea that you need to turn a record in at some point if you want to book a tour around it.
"You never really sit back and listen and say, 'Oh, my God, it's so good! We're so done!'" hesays.
"You just kind of accept a level of doneness. You can always keep going. But I think it was ready to be done. It's not about making it sonically perfect. It's about making sure these 10 songs live together in a way that feels real."
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Midway through the album-making process, Granduciel became a father. At first, that just meant carving out the time he planned to spend recording so that he could be there for his family when he wasn't actively engaged in working on the record.
As his son, who's two and a half now,got a little older, he started wanting to hang with his dad in the studio, which had an unanticipated impact on how Granduciel came to look at the recording process.
"I would give him a keyboard and he'd hit the buttons," Granduciel says.
"Andit would just remind me that a lot of this stuff should be filled with a certain level of wonder and naivete. I was like 'Oh yeah, this should just be fun. Don't forget about having fun with sound.' There's no right or wrong when it comes to sound, you know."
It's very likely that the songs on "I Don't Live Here Anymore" will keep evolving as the tour goes on, in much the same way songs they've played for years continue to evolve.
"Sometimes maybe we'll try a different key or a little bit of a different arrangement," Granduciel says.
"We've been doing that with our song 'Brothers.' We kind of changed the key, which is cool, but now we had to get back to the song. It's always trying to stay true to the material and just have fun with it and see what works in the set."
Which older songs work in the set can change from tour to tour.
"Because everything changes around you," Granduciel says.
"Thewhole sonic infrastructure of the band kind of suits the newer material in a way, and you adapt it for other material. Sometimes,you're like, 'I don't really know how to play that song with the sounds that I have curated for this tour.'"
What they play can also come down to what fans are yelling.
"We open up the floor a lot to people just yelling requests towards the end of the show, which I love," Granduciel says.
Sometimes, he'll joke about a certain older song not really going anywhere.
"To me, sometimes, the earlier material, a lot of it doesn't have the same kind of songwriting that maybe we got known for on the last couple albums," he says.
"I was still learning how to do a lot of different things. But it is cool to play a song like 'Come to the City' and have people really respond to it."
There are times when playing older songs inspires Granduciel to reflect on how his writing has evolved on the road from 2008's "Wagonwheel Blues" through their breakthrough with "Lost in the Dream" in 2014 to "I Don't Live Here Anymore."
"Itjust reminds me that it's been a journey and that at every step, there's different things that you're obsessed with as someone trying to enjoy himself and make music," he says.
"I mean, obviously, when we do stuff from 'Lost in the Dream,' you just remember that that was the record that gave us so many opportunities to grow and that people are very attached to that record."
It's not uncommon for their shows to end with a handful of highlights from "Lost in the Dream."
"I'm like, 'Whatever.... People love that record,'" Granduciel says. "And that's just how we're gonna close the show."
When:12:30 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, Feb. 26-27. (The War on Drugs play from7:15-8:20 p.m. on Sunday).
Where:Tempe Beach Park, 80 W. Rio Salado Parkway.
Admission:$105 a day; $179 for weekend pass.
Details:inningsfestival.com.
Reach the reporter at ed.masley@arizonarepublic.com or 602-444-4495. Follow him on Twitter @EdMasley.
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A thin line divides victims and perpetrators in the war on drugs in Mexico | LSE Latin America and Caribbean – LSE Latin America and Caribbean
Posted: at 11:04 am
Fifteen years ago, Mexico declared war on drugs. However, the country must still reflect on the factors that lead drug traffickers to engage in violence, and reconsider their strategy to break this long cycle of abuse, arguesKarina Garca Reyes (University of Bristol).
Read this article in Spanish
(Editors note: This article includes descriptions of violence)In December 2006, former president Felipe Caldern declared war on drugs, but fifteen years later, drug-related violence has been escalating alarmingly.
Recent studies show that Mexico is the fourth country with the highest rate of violence globally. Although the last administrations of Enrique Pea Nieto (2012-2018) and Andrs Manuel Lpez Obrador (2018-2024) have tried to combat this phenomenon with a military strategy, they have not achieved the two main objectives of this war, namely to reduce trafficking and to lower the homicides, kidnappings and disappearances.Mexico remains the world leader in the production and trafficking of illegal drugs such as heroin, marijuana, methamphetamines and synthetic opioids such as fentanyl.
With these figures, it is clear that the strategy has failed. Hence, many people advocate for abandoning a prohibitionist paradigm and legalising drugs instead, which is an approach that I agree with, even though it does not provide a magic solution. Drug trafficking is only one of the various businesses involved in organised crime, which also profits from organ and arms trafficking and human trafficking, so we cannot expect a sharp reduction in violence in countries where these crimes occur.
But the most important aspect to consider in places like Mexico is identifying the systemic conditions which enable violence linked to organised crime to spread. There is no use in deploying the army on the streets if there are many children and young people who are willing to replace those who have been killed and die in combat if necessary. In this context, rather than using violence against the perpetrators, it is more relevant to understand their motivations and to design policies that interrupt this cycle of violence from its roots.
Which factors determine drug traffickers to consider the option of killing, kidnapping and/or torture as a job option?I addressed this question in my doctoral dissertation by analysing 33 life stories of former drug traffickers by interviewing them in northern Mexico between October 2014 and January 2015.
In my analysis, I found that the participants had three common features. Most were victims of domestic violence, child abuse or domestic and gang violence, dropped out of school or were expelled before completing primary school, and had several suicide attempts.
In my book, Morir es un alivio (published in Spanish), I focus on a dozen of the more than thirty stories and share with readers one of the most important learnings from my research: the perpetrators desensitisation process was long and painful. Most of my interviewees were victims of appalling violence. The case of Cholo (not his real name) is one of the ones that had the greatest impact on me. Cholo was born and grew up in extreme poverty, and he told me that he and his 14 siblings almost starved to death. His father was an extremely violent and alcoholic man who beat him, his mother and his siblings daily.
Life was unbearable for Cholo, and he constantly asked God, Why did you allow me to live like this?As a teenager, tired of so much suffering, Cholo tried to kill his father and then eat him in broth, but he couldnt. He stabbed him with a knife, but instead of killing him, Cholo burst into tears, and his father beat him until he broke his ribs. That time, Cholo decided to report him, but the local authorities ignored him. That was when the young man stopped trusting institutions, and a year later, he found protection by joining a well-known cartel in his city. As an adult, Cholo became one of the most violent hitmen in northern Mexico: I liked seeing the blood, knocking out teeth, pulling out hair and scalp.
As a result of the abuse he suffered, Ruperto believes that he grew up with an inferiority complex and resentment for the condition in which we lived and to see that other people were happy
Rupertos (not his real name) childhood was also difficult. He did not know his father, and his mother was very violent; in the interview, he recalled how she beat me with light cables, burned my hands, burned my feet and tied me up like a little animal to the leg of a bed with a chain.Ruperto lived under these conditions until he was 7 when his uncle realised what was going on and took him to live with him. He had already been expelled from primary school for violent behaviour by then. As a result of the abuse he suffered, Ruperto believes that he grew up with an inferiority complex and resentment for the condition in which we lived and to see that other people were happy
Ruperto is also aware that his uncle was not a good influence, although he did not beat him. He took him to help him in his illegal cannabis growing business, and that is how Ruperto got into drug trafficking as a child. At the age of 12, he was already addicted to cocaine and was already engaging in violent acts as a cartel member. At 18, he became the leader of his group because he dared to commit crimes that others could not. In the interview, he admitted that he liked to inflict pain on others as revenge for what he had suffered.
These stories help me illustrate three points that I believe are crucial to understanding violence in Mexico. First, gender-based violence and child abuse are perpetrated by structural violence, which is state neglect. Through institutions such as public schools and the DIF (National System for Integral Family Development), administrations systematically fail to intervene timely and prevent them.
Moreover, this violence, considered micro because it occurs in social spaces such as homes, schools, and neighbourhoods, is the key to understanding how macro violence, such as organised crime violence, is sustained.
Ultimately, these stories confirm that violent criminals are not born but made.To explain graphically how drug violence sustains itself, I use the example of an iceberg. Until now, through military strategy, governments have only focused on attacking the tip of the iceberg, ignoring the multiple forms of violence and socio-economic conditions that make it possible.
Suppose administrations redirect their resources to address and prevent the violence at the bottom of the iceberg. In that case, it will be possible to break the cycles of abuse and suffering that allow the workforce willing to work for organised crime.
Notes: Translation by Mara Clara Montoya The views expressed here are of the author rather than the Centre or the LSE Please read our Comments Policy before commentingBanner image: Pepe Rivera (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
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JARS Cannabis and Terrapin offer scholarships to cannabis school for those affected by the war on drugs – Detroit Metro Times
Posted: at 11:04 am
Since Michiganders voted to legalize recreational cannabis in 2018, the industry has skyrocketed to new highs. Thats obvious. What isnt always so obvious is how people who were disproportionately affected by the war on drugs *cough* minorities and poor people *cough* can participate in the new money-making industry.
To help level the playing field, several cannabis companies in Michigan are working on social equity programs, including JARS Cannabis and grow facility Terrapin. The two have paired up to fund over 20 scholarships to Higher Learning Institutions, Michigans first licensed vocational and technical school for cannabis in Pontiac.
The scholarship program, called the Cannabis Community Social Equity Scholarship, will be available to those who reside in disproportionately impacted communities and have plans to operate a marijuana establishment there; those who have marijuana-related convictions; or people who have been registered as Primary Caregivers in Michigan.
The war on drugs disproportionately affected many groups and communities in Michigan, Terrapin CEO Chris Woods said in a press release. We feel a responsibility to help right those wrongs, and create pathways into the legal cannabis industry for those who were targeted the most.
Scholarship recipients will undergo a year-long professional development program focusing on subjects like cultivation, extraction, budtending, and licensing. The program will also offer facility tours, guest lecture seminars, and one-on-one mentorship with industry professionals.
Since opening in February of 2020, Higher Learning Institutions has had about 100 graduates so far. While this particular scholarship is only available to those affected by the war on drugs, enrollment in the school is open to anyone interested in learning the technical side of building a cannabusiness.
In addition to the social equity program, JARS Cannabis will also offer a general admission scholarship for Higher Learning Institutions students that can be used for individual courses.
More information, including the scholarship application, can be found here.
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