Monthly Archives: February 2022

Which casino games win the most money for the house? – Las Vegas Review-Journal

Posted: February 1, 2022 at 2:18 am

When the Nevada Gaming Control Board announced Thursday that the states more than 400 largest casinos won more from players in 2021 than in any year in history, it also disclosed which table games and which slot machine denominations won the most for the house.

Its no surprise that blackjack continues to be the most popular table game in the casino, but the No. 2 game is somewhat of an eye opener: roulette.

Even with new variations of the game that include more double and triple zeroes, roulettes 424 units statewide collected $428 million, a 103 percent increase over last year. Roulette hold by the casinos was at 19.87 percent.

Both tables and slots showed a different mix than we have seen in previous years, said Brendan Bussmann, director of government affairs for Las Vegas-based Global Market Advisors. This is in part due to preference of the current customer and their enthusiasm for different games and the level of play. One of the biggest increases was on roulette, which could be for a host of reasons including customer preference and new versions of double- and triple-zero playing a role.

The states 1,958 blackjack tables by far the largest segment of table games won $1.13 billion from players for the calendar year. That was 75.8 percent more than what casinos won a year ago. Blackjack tables won 14.1 percent of the amount of bets wagered.

The most popular slot machine denomination in 2021 was the penny slot, with 47,822 units across the state. They won a total $3.758 billion from players last year, a 59.7 percent increase over 2020, and those machines held 9.85 percent of the money put into them.

State coffers get boost

The amount of money held either at a table or by the slot is counted as gross gaming revenue for the casino, and thats the amount that is taxed by the state and funneled to the general fund.

In the first half of the 2021-22 fiscal year, through Wednesday, the state has collected $570.8 million in percentage-fee collections paying for a multitude of state services. Gaming tax collections are up 31.1 percent over the first six months of the 2020-21 fiscal year.

Casinos also pay a per-unit fee as part of their licensing.

The Control Board monitors gaming win on table games and slot machines by market. Statewide, win on all slots was up 0.25 percent and on tables, up 0.65 percent. The slot win percentage has decreased only three times in the past 25 years.

So, if youre a believer that slot machines are getting a little tighter, youd be right, although with such a low percentage increase and the high volume of slot revenue, the change should be imperceptible to the average player.

There was a little movement the other direction on some games in markets in Southern Nevada.

Slot win was down 0.17 percent in Laughlin. Table game win percentage was down 0.34 percent in downtown Las Vegas and down 0.44 percent in North Las Vegas. The biggest year-over-year change occurred in Mesquite, where table win in that market was up 1.31 percent.

Back to the slot denominations and table games. So given the numbers, what games should you consider playing to potentially get the biggest bang for your buck?

The lowest casino win percentage among slot machine denominations and thus the highest win percentage for players is for nickel slots. Casinos collected 5.31 percent of the money that went into the machines with $42.4 million brought in from 1,035 nickel slot machines statewide.

Other good options are $5 slots, which casinos kept 5.48 percent of coin in, and $25 slots, 5.71 percent. There are just 721 $5 slots statewide and 174 of the $25 denomination.

The worst bet by the numbers was the earlier noted penny slots with 9.85 percent hold and the popular quarter slots, from which casinos kept 8.04 percent from the 3,568 units statewide.

At tables and other games, casinos would love for you to play 3-card poker where casinos held 31.53 percent of the amount wagered. The states casinos won $106.8 million on 174 3-card poker units statewide.

What might be the best bet for the player? The good, old sportsbook, where casinos kept 5.46 percent of money wagered in 2021. The states books won $445.1 million from the 176 places in operation. Sports betting revenue was up 69.4 percent over the previous year.

Craps, a game generally viewed as having a better player edge than most other table games, won $407.7 million on 319 tables, an increase of 54.4 percent over last year. The casino win percentage was 15.37 percent for the year.

The future outlook is bright, Bussmann said.

This record year shows that strength of Nevada as a gaming state and a destination, he said. While we are still not back to 2019 in many aspects, gaming had a roaring year of success in 2021.

The strong results show that the Strip and downtown Las Vegas have potential for still more upside, Bussmann said, noting business and international customers have yet to return.

While there should be some caution as economic forces continue to put potential headwinds on gaming revenue, there is still room for growth as these segments have yet to return to pre-pandemic levels.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @RickVelotta on Twitter.

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Which casino games win the most money for the house? - Las Vegas Review-Journal

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Russia’s roulette: A war in Ukraine could have global consequences – The Straits Times

Posted: at 2:18 am

Seldom in the field of human conflict did so much hang on the whims of one man. Is Russian President Vladimir Putin about to invade Ukraine, as the massing Russian troops on its borders suggest? Or is he bluffing, to extort concessions from his neighbour and the West? No one can be sure of Mr Putin's intentions. Even his own foreign minister seems to be kept guessing. But, if fighting is about to break out, the world needs to understand the stakes.

Perhaps Mr Putin is planning a full-scale invasion, with Russian forces thrusting deep into Ukraine to seize the capital, Kiev, and overthrow the government. Or he may seek to annex more territory in eastern Ukraine, carving out a corridor linking Russia with Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula Mr Putin grabbed in 2014. Then again, he may want a small war, in which Russia "saves" Kremlin-backed separatists in Donbas, an eastern region of Ukraine, from supposed Ukrainian atrocities - and, at the same time, degrades Ukraine's armed forces.

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Russia's roulette: A war in Ukraine could have global consequences - The Straits Times

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Free-market economists would argue that the state should defer to local public health officials. – Salt Lake Tribune

Posted: at 2:18 am

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) People gather as the Salt Lake County Council holds a brief meeting on the mask mandate, in Salt Lake City on Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022.

By James Seidelman and John Watkins | Special to The Tribune

| Jan. 27, 2022, 5:00 p.m.

The Utah Legislatures decision to ban mask mandates appears to preserve individual freedom, the foundation of free markets. The irony is that businesses are free to continue to require masks, schools and colleges are not. Preserving freedom for some eliminates freedom for others, tantamount to playing Russian roulette with peoples lives.

Obstructing efforts to vaccinate people and forcing public schools and colleges to do in-person classes without mask mandates is an act of involuntary manslaughter the unintentional killing that results either from recklessness or criminal negligence.

The Legislature prides itself on demanding that local control should be up to local officials. Instead, the legislature has adopted a central planning approach, violating a fundamental tenant of conservative economics. As Nobel Laurette and champion of free markets Friedrich Hayek noted, central planners lack sufficient knowledge to make good choices.

This legislative body decided it knows better than public health experts in managing the pandemic. They claim the costs to freedom and individual liberty outweigh the public health benefits of mandates. Dont allow local communities to decide for themselves. We know whats best for the people; let the virus have its way.

Unfortunately, its too late to communicate the benefits of freedom to more than 4,000 Utahns who already died and thousands of others with debilitating long Covid. More will die and denying the publics freedom to live a pandemic-free life. Banning mask mandates in public schools will force many educators to leave the profession.

Further, the misguided strategy on part of the Legislature rests on a misunderstanding of free markets. Markets preserve freedom by basing economic relations on voluntary cooperation. Milton Friedman, the foremost spokesman of conservative economics in the last half of the 20th century, claimed that free markets create cooperation without coercion. Friedman recognized, however, the existence of externalities, what he called neighborhood effects, violate individual freedom, causing markets to fail.

Externalities impede freedom by involuntarily imposing costs or benefits on others. Polluted air along the Wasatch Front caused by industry and automobile emissions is an obvious example of a negative externality. Vaccinations and mask wearing against COVID-19 convey benefits to others creating positive externalities. We benefit because these behaviors reduce our risk of getting sick.

With externalities, the market fails because it under-supplies positive externalities and over-supplies negative externalities. Because markets generally respond to incentives (subsidies and taxes), the ideal government policy subsidizes activities that produce positive externalities and taxes activities that create negative externalities. Its why we should tax carbon emissions and subsidize renewable energy. Providing free COVID vaccines and subsidizing their development illustrate good public policy. The evidence is clear: the pandemic would be less lethal and disruptive if vaccination and mask wearing were more prevalent.

Arguing that banning mandates preserves liberty is specious, a deadly pathogen wrapped in a beautiful box called freedom. Why not eliminate other impediments to individual freedom? Why not eliminate speed limits, eliminate laws requiring seat belts, and end mandating car seats for infants? These laws restrict the freedom of some people to preserve the safety and lives of others. But mandating mask wearing, in the most populous county in Utah, is, of course, taboo, compounded by the hypocrisy that local governments should make local decisions, except where those decisions conflict with the ruling party.

This begs the question, if societies welfare is enhanced by vaccinations and mask wearing, why such resistance? Disinformation and conspiracy theories, the selfish individualism of the market, and anti-government bias all play a role.

So, why do Republicans deliberately promote these anti-science and anti-government sentiments. It appears that local and national Republican leaders want COVID and the pandemic to persist. Vaccine and mask obstructionism isnt about public safety, science, or sound economics. Instead, as Paul Krugman noted, it is about the pursuit of power. A successful vaccination campaign would have been a win for the Biden administration, so it had to be undermined using any and every argument available.

The anti-government and anti-science crazies, conspiracy theorists and right-wing libertarians are feeling empowered, thus solidifying the Republican base for the midterm elections. We would hope the Utah Legislature would be above this, that they would place public safety above ideology and power. Regrettably, we are mistaken.

James Cid Seidelman | Westminster College

James Cid Seidelman is distinguished service professor of economics and former provost of Westminster College.

John Watkins | Westminster College

John P. Watkins is a professor of economics at Westminster College.

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This longstanding NFL myth doesn’t actually support a Rams win over the 49ers – Yahoo Sports

Posted: at 2:18 am

A longstanding NFL trope says it's hard to beat a team three times in one season.

You're bound to hear it regurgitated as the Los Angeles Rams and San Francisco 49ers prepare to play in the NFC championship game. Don't believe it.

The familiar matchup between NFC West foes will mark the third time the rivals meet this season. The Rams, despite being the higher seed and the betting favorite at -3.5 with BetMGM, have been on the losing end of both previous matchups. The 49ers rolled to a 31-10 Week 10 win at home before eking out a 27-24 overtime win at SoFi Stadium in Week 18 that they needed to make the postseason.

Now, here they are fresh off two straight playoff wins with a chance to vanquish their division foes a third time for the right to play in the Super Bowl. And some folks will knock their chances simply because they've been the better team twice already this season.

While there are certainly plenty of rational reasons to pick the Rams over the 49ers, this is not one of them. It's not based in reason. It's not supported by history.

The logic or lack thereof recalls the gambling fallacy casinos exploit to lure players to roulette wheels. If red's been hot, black's bound to hit next. It's due, right?

Roulette tables proudly display past results on glowing screens as if they have anything to do with future spins. Some bettors will put their chips in play simply because they've spotted a trend they believe is bound to turn around.

Each spin, of course, is independent of every spin before it. Assuming an honest wheel, red has the same chance to hit as black every time even if red's hit for 10 straight spins. Meanwhile, green ensures that the house has the edge regardless of what bet you place. So long as you're putting chips on the table, the house is happy.

Story continues

If you bet on the Rams this week, do it because you believe they're the better football team, not some old myth. (Harry How/Getty Images)

This appears to be the rationalization behind the NFL's playoff myth. Surely the 49ers are at a disadvantage on Sunday simply because it seems hard to win three in a row even though they've already done 2/3 of the work to get there.

The logic is flawed even while the roulette comparison isn't perfect. Unlike spins of the wheel, past results between opponents on football fields most certainly influence future results. Players and coaches learn from previous matchups and take that knowledge into subsequent games. And opposing teams aren't equitable adversaries like red and black on a roulette wheel.

But this is a difference that reason dictates actually supports the previous winners. A team that's won two out of two games has already demonstrated an edge in the matchup, even if via a small sample size.

If logic doesn't sway you, then take a look at the history books. Statistics tallied by the Elias Sports Bureau and published by ESPN in 2018 showed that 20 such matchups had taken place in the NFL playoffs since the 1970 AFL/NFL merger. Of those matchups, the teams that swept the regular season went on to win the playoff matchup 13 times.

The NFL has seen two such matchups since. The 2017 New Orleans Saints swept the Carolina Panthers then went on to beat them a third time in a wild-card game. Last season, the New Orleans Saints swept the Tampa Bay Buccaneers before Tom Brady and company ended Drew Brees' career in the divisional round en route to a Super Bowl title.

It all adds to 14 playoff wins in 22 modern-era matchups for the teams that swept the regular season, which adds up to a 63.6% win rate. Because of course the team that's won twice already has an edge more times than not.

Will Sunday's game favor the two-time winner that's won nearly two out of every three previous matchups? This matchup looks harder to pick than most to pick.

While the 49ers swept the Rams, the Rams (12-5) were two games better than the 49ers (10-7) in the regular season. They won the NFC West. On the other hand, Kyle Shanahan's 49ers didn't just sweep Sean McVay's Rams this season. They've won six straight in the matchup dating back to the 2019 regular season. Their seventh-ranked offense and third-ranked defense were both better than the Rams' corresponding units in terms of yards and yards allowed during the regular season.

Then again, the Rams are better on both sides of the ball than they were to start the year thanks to the midseason acquisitions of Von Miller and Odell Beckham Jr., who are both paying dividends at the right time.

These are all factors to consider if you're thinking about placing bets on either team. But whatever you do, don't take the Rams on the moneyline simply because you've heard that it's hard to beat a single opponent a third straight time. It's just not true.

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‘When I say it’s oaber, Rosser, Ine thalken about me and Hodor’s business. It’s boddixed’ – The Irish Times

Posted: at 2:18 am

Its oaber! Ronan goes.

Seriously, I wonder sometimes does he ramp up the Dublin accent like Sorcha does whenever were in the States on Paddys Day.

Im like, Oaber? What are you on about, Ro?

Hes there, Ine saying its oaber, Rosser! Its oaber!

Oh, the restrictions, I go. Yeah, no, its great to be back, isnt it? Late pints. Bro hugs. And hopefully no more sourdough.

Hes there, When I say its oaber, Rosser, Ine thalken about me and Hodors business. Its boddixed, so it is.

Ronan and Honors business just to fill you in is called Remote Workforce Monitoring. Its, like, a confidential whistleblower line, where members of the public in return for a substantial cash incentive can inform on people who are supposably working from home, but are really, like, not?

The last I heard, more than two hundred companies had signed up to the service and there was talk of an Ernest & Young Entrepreneur of the Year award although that was mainly from my old man, who had about nine fingers of XO inside him at the time.

Im like, What happened, Ro?

And he goes, Tody bleaten Hoodihan happened. Hes arthur sinking eer whole operation by tedding the Government to open up. Is Hodor howum?

Im there, Yeah, no, shes in the kitchen with her old dear theyre burning their vaccination certs and putting the photos of it up on Instagram.

He follows me down to the kitchen. Sorcha and Honor are huddled over the sink and yeah, no theres a smell of smoke in the room, reminding me that I should possibly put the batteries back in the smoke alorm now that the Rock and Roll Santa has been put away for another year.

Oh, hi, Ronan! Sorcha goes, looking over her shoulder. Were just burning our vaccination certs although dont worry, were keeping the originals on our phones just in case the restrictions come back.

Once a Mount Anville Head Girl, forever a Mount Anville Head Girl.

He goes, Hodor, were in thrubble.

Thrubble? Honor goes. Are you trying to say trouble?

What kind of a divided city are we living in when listening to my son and daughter talk is like watching a scene from Skippy the Bush Kangaroo?

Ronans there, There was a time to seddle up. It was when Omicron came out that was when the fear was at its woorst. If wed walked away from the table then, wed have cleared ten mills each. But now that the returden to the woorkplace is about to steert, the thing is woortless.

Oh my God! Honor goes as she occasionally does. Thats, like, Oh! My actual God?

Ronans there, Were dead in the wather.

Sorcha goes, I think youre panicking unnecessarily. I think you should hold your nerve and Im saying that as someone who went to the Smurfit Business School.

Im there, You got a diploma in Renewable Energy and Environmental Finance and Im not being a d**k about it.

She goes, Ive also run my own business a boutique in the Powerscourt Townhouse Centre, can I just remind you? and been the keynote speaker at the Mount Anville Alumna Women in Business Luncheon . . . twice, Ross. Which means that my opinion is obviously valued? And Im saying that Ronan and Honor have an amazing, amazing business idea.

Honors there, Er, I thought you hated it? You said it brought out the worst instincts in people by monetizing curtain-twitching and turning neighbour against neighbour.

Yeah, no, she changed her tune when she found out how much moo the business was worth.

Yes, she goes, I did have certain moral misgivings about what you were doing. And lets be honest, youre never going to win a Davy Stockbrokers Responsible Business Award at the Mount Anville Alumna Women in Business Annual Awards Business Dinner. But this could set you both up for life. Look, Im sure the Collison brothers had wobbles along the way. And Mork Little. I think you should hold your nerve.

Ronans there, Its oaber, Sudeka. I sted at the roulette table too long stordee of me life.

Id say the coin cascade machine more than the roulette table, I go, remembering how much money I lost in Dr Quirkys Goodtime Emporium during the course of his childhood.

Sorchas there, Think about it, Ronan. One of the upsides of this whole, like, pandemic thing is that its offered us all the opportunity to reimagine how we live our lives including how we work? The days of the 40-hour office week are over.

Ronan bursts out laughing.

Sorcha goes, Sorry, have I said something funny?

Ros there, Sudeka, thats just something people say. Employers doatunt thrust their staff when thee say theyre woorking from howum. Thats what eer business model is based on.

I still say hybrid is the way of the future.

Thrust me, Sudeka, in a years time, all these companies thats arthur leasing these big office buildings will want to see their staff sitting right theer in fruddent of them.

And its at that exact moment that Sorchas phone ends up ringing.

My boss, she goes. You see? A perfect example of how not treating employees like schoolchildren actually pays off for employers in terms of increased productivity.

Im there, Are you going to mention that youve spent the entire morning trying to get the perfect picture of your vaccination cert on fire?

Yeah, no, she printed off dozens of copies.

She goes, Shush, Ross, this is possibly important.

She answers the thing. We only end up hearing her side of the conversation. But yeah, no she ends up going, Sorcha Lalor speaking . . . Oh, hi, how are you? I was just inputting the figures for- . . . Excuse me? . . . Sea swimming? . . . Yes, Ive swum in Sandycove oh my God, loads of times, but- . . . When supposedly was this? . . . Oh my God, it was, like, an hour. Then we went for coffee two hours, tops. Plus I made up the time later when- . . . Do you mind me asking where you got this information? Because it sounds like a breach of my GD-.

Sorchas boss has obviously hung up.

Oh my God, she goes, they want me back in the office full-time from, like, April.

Im there, Another satisfied customer, goys.

And Ronan goes, Maybe theres life in Remote Woorkforce Monitoding yet.

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'When I say it's oaber, Rosser, Ine thalken about me and Hodor's business. It's boddixed' - The Irish Times

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Are we nearing the end of the COVID-19 pandemic? – Al Jazeera English

Posted: at 2:16 am

People are suffering from pandemic fatigue. It has been a long two years and most of us have had to endure harsh and often unpredictable restrictions on our daily lives. Millions of people have died, livelihoods have been lost and economies have suffered. So it is understandable that many would cling to any hope that the COVID-19 pandemic is coming to an end. In some countries, the easing or complete removal of restrictions has given them that hope.

This sentiment has, in some ways, been fuelled by the Omicron variant, which has been shown to cause less severe disease, in adults at least, with one study from Imperial College London reporting that people infected with it were 40-45 percent less likely to be admitted for an overnight hospital stay than those infected with the Delta variant.

But the arrival of the Omicron variant, with its increased transmissibility and ability to evade at least some of the protection conferred by vaccines and previous infections, should remind us of how volatile the course of this pandemic can be.

The head of the World Health Organization (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, issued a stark warning this month when he said, Its dangerous to assume that Omicron will be the last variant and that we are in the end game.

While Omicron may be milder than Delta, although not mild, cases are continuing to soar, particularly across Europe. This suggests any hope that COVID-19 may soon become endemic, is misplaced.

In its most scientific terms, a disease is considered endemic once the number of cases becomes stable or static, not when the illness becomes less deadly. By this definition, COVID-19 is not yet endemic as cases are still on the rise. On the other hand, diseases such as malaria, which can kill 600,000 people a year, and dengue fever, which kills up to 25,000 people each year, are endemic in certain parts of the world.

So, when people, like the UKs health secretary, Sajid Javid, talk about learning to live with COVID, the question to ask is: What would be considered an acceptable number of COVID-19 deaths in order for the world to carry on as normal? It is, of course, important to note that this approach would put the clinically vulnerable and the elderly, who have a much higher chance of dying from the virus, at a major disadvantage.

Some may argue that flu, which we have all come to terms with, kills up to 650,000 people each year worldwide, so surely we can live with COVID-19. But flu isnt an endemic illness; rather we see waves of it during the winter months. And, although the flu virus and the SARS-CoV-2 virus are frequently compared, I am not convinced they should be. They cause two very different illnesses.COVID-19 is a multi-system inflammatory virus that is not only potentially deadly but can also lead to long-term health problems for people of all age groups. Flu, by contrast, typically affects onlythe respiratory system. This means millions of people worldwide may end up living with long COVID which in itself will have devastating effects on their livelihoods and the wider economy. In addition to this, COVID-19 deaths so far have significantly outnumbered flu deaths (although this includes deaths during the time before vaccines were widely available in wealthy countries and when we were still learning about the virus).

There is also some belief that any new variants that may arise in the future are likely to cause an even milder illness than Omicron. But there is nothing to substantiate this belief. It would only be true if the virus had anything to gain by causing a milder illness and keeping its host alive. Much of the SARS-Cov-2 transmission occurs in the days before a person develops symptoms and the first few days following the onset of symptoms. It is usually the hosts own immune response to the virus that causes much of the illness we have seen in those hospitalised with it. This is because the virus can cause an overstimulation of certain immune cells, which then become difficult to turn off as they start to attack healthy cells as well as infected ones. By the time the host becomes seriously ill, the virus has moved on to another person. This means there is no evolutionary pressure for the virus to become milder; we simply got lucky with Omicron.

So, as unpalatable as this may sound to many people, we are not yet in a position to start living with this virus. We must continue to adopt methods to suppress its spread until we are. This means putting measures in place to protect the most vulnerable by reducing their chances of getting the virus.

As COVIDs mode of transmission is airborne, we should equip schools and other buildings with air filters and look for innovative ways to improve airflow in areas where people might congregate for long periods of time. We must also accept that mask-wearing may become a part of our daily lives, much as it did in parts of Asia after MERS, a type of coronavirus first identified in 2012. But it has to be the right type of mask, with N95 or FFP2 masks being the most effective.

Also, vaccines are key, and getting them into the arms of people across the world remains paramount. Variants are more likely to arise where people remain unvaccinated. Those who are vaccinated are more likely to rid themselves of the virus more quickly compared with unvaccinated people. This means the virus has less time to multiply and less chance to mutate in those who are fully vaccinated. Pushing for global vaccine equity is in everyones best interests. We need to have at least 70-80 percent of the worlds population vaccinated to achieve global protection and significantly reduce the risk of illness. This sounds ambitious but it has been done before with the vaccine for polio, a disease that has been more or less eradicated worldwide. In addition, second-generation vaccines are being developed to tackle emerging variants more effectively and will be key to safeguarding us in the future.

It is not only the vaccines that need to be shared across the world. Antiviral treatments like molnupiravir and paxlovid, which have been shown to reduce the risk of hospital admission for those in the high-risk category who test positive for COVID-19, must also be made available. These drugs help stop viral replication which, in turn, can reduce the length of time someone is ill with COVID. A shorter illness means there is less time for mutations and variants to emerge. That is something we would all benefit from.

Continuing research into long COVID and a better understanding of the different ways this virus can affect our bodies may also lead to a time when we can consider living with this virus.

I have hope that a time will come when we are better protected from the effects of COVID-19 and equipped to deal with any emerging variants, but sadly that time is not quite now. We are in a much better position than we were two years ago and that is largely down to science, but we cannot yet claim that we are nearing the end of this pandemic.

Recent data and analysis from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) shows that in mid-late 2021 there was an increase in the number of cases of meningococcal disease in teenagers and young adults, mainly caused by group B meningococcal disease (MenB) with the majority of these cases detected in university students.

Meningitis B is caused by the bacteria Neisseria meningitidis. Meningitis can attack the brain and spinal cord and cause swelling in those areas as well as a serious infection of the bloodstream, called septicaemia. Approximately 10-15 percent of people infected with meningococcal disease will die, sometimes as quickly as within 24 hours after symptoms first appear. For those who survive, about one in five may experience a variety of long-term disabilities including hearing loss, brain damage, nervous system problems, kidney damage, loss of limbs, and scarring of the skin.

Commons signs and symptoms of meningitis and septicaemia are:

Early COVID-19 restrictions across the UK saw meningitis B cases fall to an all-time low in September 2021. But as restrictions eased and people were able to mix again, cases in teenagers, in particular, have begun to rise to levels higher than before the pandemic.

In the UK, teenagers are offered the meningococcal ACWY vaccine in an effort to protect them from some of the different bugs that can cause meningitis and the MenB vaccine is offered to infants. It is unclear exactly what is causing the rise in cases in these young people. One theory put forward by the authors of the report is that fewer people were exposed to the bacteria as a result of reduced mixing at the height of the pandemic. This meant that fewer people became immune,so when university campuses opened up there was an immunity debt which put them at risk of getting the illness.

The best thing students and young people can do to protect themselves from this serious illness is to take up the ACWY vaccine and to be alert to the symptoms of meningitis B so that they can seek medical help sooner rather than later.

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Are we nearing the end of the COVID-19 pandemic? - Al Jazeera English

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Coronavirus in Oregon: Weekly cases fall 22% in surest sign omicron is receding – OregonLive

Posted: at 2:16 am

Weekly coronavirus cases in Oregon fell 22% in the past seven days, state data released Monday shows, marking the clearest evidence yet that the highly transmissible omicron variant is receding.

The Oregon Health Authority tallied about 43,600 confirmed or presumed infections in the past week, including 13,443 announced Monday for the preceding three days.

Several closely watched benchmarks show improvement since last week, as well.

The number of Oregonians hospitalized and testing positive for coronavirus stands at 1,099, down slightly from Friday, and new projections have been downgraded to a potential peak of about 1,200. Test positivity rates reported Monday also dipped to a still high 20.6%. And the share of emergency department patients with COVID-19-like illness stayed below the highs from earlier this month.

State officials last week offered their most optimistic statements of the surge, indicating a possible peak in cases and the potential that spring and summer may offer some semblance of normalcy following two years of pandemic precautions.

The decline seen Monday in weekly cases marks the first dip since early December. (Prompted by questions from The Oregonian/OregonLive, state officials acknowledged that a weekly report issued last week erroneously said cases declined by 9.5% when they were instead flat. The Oregonian/OregonLive also erroneously reported cases rose by 14%, based on two weeks worth of incorrect state data that has since been adjusted).

Separately, the state on Monday also reported 15 COVID-19-related deaths.

Where the new cases are by county: Baker (41), Benton (286), Clackamas (1,070), Clatsop (97), Columbia (146), Coos (164), Crook (140), Curry (45), Deschutes (893), Douglas (216), Harney (19), Hood River (61), Jackson (817), Jefferson (208), Josephine (285), Klamath (369), Lake (7), Lane (1,353), Lincoln (127), Linn (611), Malheur (61), Marion (1,622), Morrow (30), Multnomah (1,807), Polk (302), Tillamook (69), Umatilla (281), Union (120), Wallowa (10), Wasco (81), Washington (1,741) and Yamhill (364).

Who died: A 78-year-old woman from Coos County who tested positive Dec. 6 and died Dec. 19 at Southern Coos Hospital & Health Center.

A 60-year-old woman from Polk County who tested positive Aug. 27 and died Sept. 19. Location of death is being confirmed.

A 77-year-old woman from Lane County who tested positive Sept. 6 and died Sept.16 at her residence.

A 50-year-old man from Washington County who tested positive Jan. 11 and died Jan. 25 at Providence St. Vincent Medical Center.

A 76-year-old woman from Washington County who tested positive Jan. 8 and died Jan. 16 at Kaiser Westside Medical Center.

A 75-year-old woman from Wasco County who died Nov. 27 at her residence. The death certificate listed COVID-19 as a cause or significant condition contributing to death.

A 64-year-old man from Wasco County who tested positive Jan. 24 and died Jan. 28 at Mid-Columbia Medical Center.

A 56-year-old man from Umatilla County who tested positive Jan. 13 and died Jan. 27 at PeaceHealth Sacred Heart Medical Center at Riverbend.

A 68-year-old man from Lane County who tested positive Jan. 26 and died Jan. 27 at PeaceHealth Sacred Heart Medical Center at Riverbend.

An 89-year-old woman from Lane County who tested positive Jan. 21 and died Jan. 26 at McKenzie Willamette Center.

A 55-year-old man from Douglas County who tested positive Nov. 21 and died Jan. 29 at Mercy Medical Center.

A 52-year-old woman from Jackson County who tested positive Jan. 2 and died Jan. 28 at Providence Medford Medical Center.

An 83-year-old woman from Clackamas County who tested positive Jan. 24 and died Jan. 25 at her residence.

A 69-year-old woman from Clackamas County who tested positive Jan. 26 and died Jan. 28 at Kaiser Sunnyside Medical Center.

An 89-year-old man from Clackamas County who tested positive Jan. 7 and died Jan. 14. Location of death is being confirmed.

Each person had underlying health conditions or the presence of conditions was being confirmed. State officials also removed a previously announced death of a 60-year-old man from Clackamas County announced Dec. 15. He did not die.

Hospitalizations: 1,099 people with confirmed coronavirus infections are hospitalized, down 26 since Friday. That includes 187 people in intensive care, up 11 since Friday.

Since it began: Oregon has reported 633,876 confirmed or presumed infections and 6,100 deaths, among the lowest per capita numbers in the nation. To date, the state has reported 7,193,854 vaccine doses administered, fully vaccinating 2,826,410 people and partially vaccinating 300,373 people.

To see more data and trends, visit https://projects.oregonlive.com/coronavirus/

-- Brad Schmidt; bschmidt@oregonian.com; 503-294-7628; @_brad_schmidt

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BA.2: A new version of the omicron coronavirus variant that is even more contagious but not more serious, acco – EL PAS in English

Posted: at 2:16 am

Some PCR tests look for three genes of the virus to diagnose the infection. The delta variant, which was detected in India and was dominant across the world until the end of 2021, would show up these three genes, but the classic version of omicron only showed up two. This characteristic allowed for the assumption to be made as to whether a person was infected with delta or omicron via a simple PCR test, without the need to sequence the complete genome of the virus. The subvariant BA.2, however, does not have this mutation and is indistinguishable from delta with these specific tests, prompting the name the stealth variant, a term that is not popular among many experts, including the virologist Mara Iglesaisa, from Spains National Microbiology Center.

It has made a lot of noise for something that is supposedly silent, jokes Iglesias, in reference to the media attention received by BA.2 in recent days. The moniker of stealth is very deceptive. A person infected with this subvariant tests positive with no problem in an antigen or PCR test, the only difference is that now it is not so simple to deduce which kind of coronavirus it is in the aforementioned tests that seek these three specific genes.

Mara Iglesias points out that 83% of cases in Spain are caused by the BA.1 subvariant of omicron, the classic strain. The delta variant is behind the other 17%. BA.2 is already being detected, albeit residually, in the Spanish regions of Madrid, Catalonia, Asturias and the Balearic Islands. We are not seeing the explosion of cases that there has been in Denmark, the virologist explains. Obviously the variants need to be monitored, but on a scientific level. This is not to say that each one deserves a front page in all media outlets, Iglesias argues, given her fears of excessive attention contributing to so-called pandemic fatigue. We dont know anything, its all speculation. People are starting to get tired and not believe anything, she warns.

On January 21, the World Health Organization (WHO) called for research into BA.2 to be prioritized, after there was a rise in the proportion of cases in India, South Africa, the United Kingdom and Denmark. In Berlin, around one in every three infections is already due to BA.2. In the world, however, nearly 99% of omicron cases continue to be caused by BA.1, according to the WHO.

Doctor Roger Paredes, from the Germans Trias Hospital in the Spanish city of Badalona, huffs and puffs when imagining the future. There is no sign that suggests that BA.2 is a more serious variant than its predecessor, but it is true that it could be a bit more transmissible, he explains. The consequence of the arrival of BA.2 could be that the end of this wave is delayed, which is what is happening in England: cases were falling and now they have stabilized. In his area, Paredes explains, only two cases of BA.2 have been detected for now.

Three doses of a Covid-19 vaccine have practically the same efficiency, up to 70%, when it comes to avoiding symptomatic infections with either of the two sub-variants of omicron, according to a report from the UKs Health Security Agency published on Thursday. The document confirms 95% protection against deaths caused by BA.1, but there is no data on BA.2 for now.

We are not seeing the explosion of cases that there has been in Denmark

Roger Paredes takes for granted that the success of vaccination combined with the fact that omicron is 25% less serious than delta in the same conditions will imminently lead to a new stage. The majority of society has reached a situation where they are fed up and are against more restrictions, so we are going to enter a new phase, basically without restrictions, Paredes predicts. Fundamentally, what is happening is the pressure is passed on to hospitals. We are likely to have waves with hundreds of patients in ICUs over the coming years. We are going to need good monitoring systems to know when things are getting out of hand, Paredes warns.

Biologist Iaki Comas, from the Valencia Biomedicine Institute (CSIC), is calm. It doesnt look like the face of the epidemic will change much even if we go from BA.1 to BA.2, he explains. In the absence of control measures, such transmissible variants as these will continue to find people who are susceptible to infection, which is going to mean that the fall in cases will probably be slower than in other waves. But we have already learned in the past that the variants can be controlled in the same way: vaccination, ventilation and masks, above all indoors, Comas adds.

The idea that SARS-CoV-2 is destined to become a more benign version has become generally accepted, but this is not the case, as pointed out by geneticist Emma Hodcroft, from the University of Bern. In fact, omicron did not come from delta, nor did delta come from alpha. We will see new variants, she explains. The important thing is whether these variants will be worrying and will have an impact on the pandemic and on our way of responding. And that we dont know. Perhaps SARS-CoV-2 has been left without any new tricks that will change its behavior, she continues. But perhaps there is another combination that will increase its transmissibility, severity or ability to escape our defenses even more. Unfortunately, there is no way of predicting that. This is why its so important to continue investing in the monitoring of the virus, she concludes.

English version by Simon Hunter.

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BA.2: A new version of the omicron coronavirus variant that is even more contagious but not more serious, acco - EL PAS in English

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Covids New Divide: Risk Takers vs. the Risk Averse – The New York Times

Posted: at 2:16 am

ROME The entire family is vaccinated, even the relatives, and all abide by masking requirements and respect Italys tough coronavirus restrictions. They are also all over the place in how they are living their lives.

Mariagiovanna Togna is willing to accompany her children to outdoor play dates after school. But her husband, more anxious by nature, is still wearing rubber gloves, wiping down groceries and turning away visitors. One of her sisters in Rome is more laid back and goes to yoga class and to work, and her 15-year-old daughter had a birthday party indoors. Her brother, in the northern region of Trento, who finally agreed to get vaccinated, she said, to keep going out to bars, recently vacationed along the Amalfi Coast. But when Christmas vacation rolled around, their parents, in their 70s, asked him to stay in a bed-and-breakfast.

Everyone who went home to Benevento had to take a rapid test, including another sister, who depends on their mother for babysitting. Even though the government shot down the efforts in the Campania Region, where she lives, to delay in-person school, she prefers to keep her child out of nursery school.

We are all vaccinated, many with the third dose already, we all have a civic sense about being careful for ourselves and for others, she said. But we have different styles of life.

As the Omicron variant of the coronavirus personally touches or swirls around so many individuals, vaccinated and largely protected families are strained by varying comfort levels. It is much the same the world over, especially where significant portions of the population have been vaccinated, like Italy, which now has one of the highest rates in the world.

Initially slammed by the virus, Italy today holds the promise of a near future where the schism in society is no longer between the vaccinated and the unvaccinated, or the socially responsible and the scofflaws, but between the risk takers and the risk averse.

For many with booster shots, life has become a constant negotiation between those who want to resume dining in restaurants, those still reluctant to accept deliveries and those who just want to get the virus already and get their mandatory quarantines over with.

For many vaccinated families, the recent holiday season and New Years celebrations hammered those variations home, as teenagers stumbled in after parties to take a swab test and reunite with shut-in uncles petrified of the virus, or grandparents unsure just how protected their booster shots left them. In Italy, where generations of families often see one another, and frequently live together, navigating the vagaries of Omicron decorum is a constant exercise.

In my world, there are no no-vax, said Giuseppe Cavallone, 73, who walked in the Villa Doria Pamphili park in Rome with his wife. But that did not mean they lived carefree. They had given up on going to the movies, in part because of the discomfort of wearing a mask for three straight hours, and had abandoned their annual travel to Paris and London. But their son, also fully vaccinated, was less cautious, flying to Patagonia for vacation.

The young feel much more free, said Mr. Cavallones wife, Maria Teresa Pucciano, 74. She added that they recently went to a wedding, but a friend of theirs stayed outside in the cold the whole time.

An increasing number of people who have received a third vaccine dose have, emboldened by the apparent light symptoms of Omicron for the vaccinated, entered a bring-it-on phase of the pandemic. Some are trying to time their resulting quarantines to a social and school calendar, or to have infections coincide with those of friends. Others are instead still coming to terms with a virus that is seemingly everywhere, and forcing themselves to adjust their comfort levels and do more, to be more social, to even dine inside an actual restaurant.

On a recent Sunday at the Il Cortile restaurant in Rome, where the front door bore a large reminder that all diners needed to present a health pass and its proof of vaccination, Isabella Carletti, 65, got up from lunch with her husband and walked outside.

Jan. 31, 2022, 9:57 p.m. ET

I felt uncomfortable in there, I wanted to get some air, she said. We usually book outside, but we couldnt find a table.

She lit a cigarette and suggested the smoke was less dangerous than the air inside. But then she went back in.

In Italy, more than 80 percent of the population, including children, has had two doses of the vaccine. That number is expected to tick up as 90 percent of the population, including many children who only recently became eligible for vaccination, already has one dose.

The Italian government has gradually tightened the screws on the unvaccinated, and on Tuesday, new restrictions will come into force requiring vaccination for people 50 and over.

Most of the problems we are facing today depend on the fact that there are unvaccinated people, Prime Minister Mario Draghi said. He added that unvaccinated people have a much higher chance of developing the disease and severe forms of the disease and were putting hospitals under pressure.

To force vaccinations, the health care system will forward the names of the unvaccinated people over 50 to tax authorities so they can be fined. But the real deterrent remains the isolation from public life, with everything from entering a cafe to taking a public bus or going to work banned for the unvaccinated.

Since the government announced its plans, around 600,000 people a day, about 1 percent of the population, have received a dose of a vaccine, including the now 45 percent of Italians who are receiving their third dose. But among them are also about 60,000 to 90,000 people who are receiving their first dose. Many are probably children, but the government is also confident the new rules are motivating more people over 50, who are more vulnerable, to be vaccinated. There are still an estimated 10 percent of Italians who are unvaccinated, many in their 40s and 50s.

Advocates for a speedier vaccination campaign would like the government to mandate the vaccine to people 40 and up, as about 15 percent of 40-year-olds remain unvaccinated. But the current delicate political moment in the wake of a destabilizing election for president has put that off for now. In any case, the government is pleased with the progress.

Maria Claudia Di Paolo, 71, and her husband, Natale Santucci, also 71, said they, too, had been encouraged by the success of Italys vaccination campaign and worried that the vaccine skeptics were getting too much attention. The couple, who contracted Covid last year after having friends over for dinner, decided recently to have their first nonrelated guest over for a meal.

Then the guest, a doctor like Mr. Santucci, called to say that one of his patients had tested positive, but he himself had tested negative and could still come.

We said, Better to wait, said Mr. Santucci, who added that the couple had moved their weekend family lunches to an outside table at a local restaurant. But they did celebrate Christmas together at home with their children and grandchildren, spaced apart at a big table, avoiding hugs and kisses and feeling out everyones comfort level. There is a great variability inside the vaccinated families, he said.

Ms. Togna said that she felt isolated and at wits end. Seeing so many people around her infected, quarantined and then going on with life, she said, had encouraged her to try to move ever so slightly off the extremely cautious end of the spectrum. But it was hard.

On one side, I think I have to change my behavior, and drag my whole family along, but it will be very difficult, she said. Even if its endemic, there is always the risk.

Gaia Pianigiani contributed reporting.

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COVID: Florida reports 197,768 cases and 1,192 deaths in a week, still on list where virus spreads fastest – Palm Beach Post

Posted: at 2:16 am

Fauci: Covid may not end, hopes to find normalcy

White House officials say hopefully we will get to where COVID-19 is acceptable and "it doesn't disrupt our capability to function in society in a relatively normal way." (Jan. 26)

AP

To keep up with our comprehensive COVID-19 coverage in Florida, sign up for our free weekday newsletter, Coronavirus Watch.

From No. 37 ... to No. 37.

Florida spent a nerve-wracking six weeks on a Top 10 list of states where coronavirus was spreading the fastest. From late December to mid-January, the state saw a spike in COVID-19 cases brought on by the more infectious, but less severe omicron variant. Last week the state was barely in the Top 40.

How are we doing this week?

Florida reported far fewer coronavirus cases in the week ending Sunday, adding 197,768 new cases. That's down 30% from the previous week's tally of 282,520 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.

Florida ranked 37th among the states where coronavirus was spreading the fastest on a per-person basis, a USA TODAY Network analysis of Johns Hopkins University data shows.

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Do at-home COVID tests still work if they get cold? What if they freeze in my mailbox?

In the latest week coronavirus cases in the United States decreased 30.3% from the week before, with 3,451,287 cases reported. With 6.45% of the country's population, Florida had 5.73% of the country's cases in the last week. Across the country, 10 states had more cases in the latest week than they did in the week before.

Here's a snapshot of the previous seven weeks (click on the hyperlinks to read those COVID-19 reports):

In the week ending Jan. 23, Florida ranked No. 37 in the nation when the state department of health added 282,520 cases. That figure was down 30.9% from the previous week's tally.

In the week ending Jan. 16, Florida was knocked out of the Top 10 list, ranking at No. 11, and reporting 408,841 cases, a 3.4% dip from the week before.

In the week ending Jan. 9, Florida ranked fifth, reporting 423,150 cases, a 40% rise from the week before.

In the week ending Jan. 2, the state ranked fourth when Florida Department of Health reported 302,179 cases, a 142% rise from the week before.

In the week ending Dec. 26, the state ranked ninth, reporting 124,865 cases, a 332.9% rise from the week before that.

In the week ending Dec. 19, the state had reported 28,841 cases of the virus that causes COVID-19, a 142% increase from mid-December.

It should be noted that while Florida ranks 37 on a list where coronavirus spreads the fastest and health officials have said COVID cases are falling here, the state still is reporting more than 100,000 new cases a week, compared with almost 29,000 cases in the week ending Dec. 19.

Long COVID: Why aren't my symptoms going away? Why did they come back? Am I a long-hauler?

Do COVID-19 boosters protect against omicron? Where and when can I get a booster in Florida?

Palm Beach County reported 8,711 cases and 51 deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 15,075 cases and 27 deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 350,714 cases and 4,407 deaths.

Martin County reported 1,097 cases and nine deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 1,358 cases and eight deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 29,796 cases and 541 deaths.

Okeechobee County reported 403 cases and zero deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 588 cases and one death. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 10,157 cases and 164 deaths.

Across Florida, cases fell in 58 counties, with the best declines in Miami-Dade County, with 23,019 cases from 46,959 a week earlier; in Broward County, with 11,917 cases from 23,063; and in Palm Beach County, with 8,711 cases from 15,075.

>> See how your community has fared with recent coronavirus cases

Florida ranked 19th among states in share of people receiving at least one shot, with 77.2% of its residents at least partially vaccinated. The national rate is 75.3%, a USA TODAY analysis of CDC data shows. The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which are the most used in the United States, require two doses administered a few weeks apart.

In the week ending Sunday, Florida reported administering another 254,074 vaccine doses, including 70,765 first doses. In the previous week, the state administered 390,947 vaccine doses, including 226,645 first doses. In all, Florida reported it has administered 35,340,821 total doses.

Within Florida, the worst weekly outbreaks on a per-person basis were in:

Taylor County with 2,717 cases per 100,000 per week

Madison County with 2,487 cases

Baker County with 1,862 cases

The Centers for Disease Control says high levels of community transmission begin at 100 cases per 100,000 per week.

Is it the flu, a cold, or the omicron variant? How to know, and when to get tested for COVID

Adding the most new cases overall were:

Miami-Dade Countywith 23,019 cases

Hillsborough Countywith 13,524 cases

Orange Countywith 12,455 cases

Weekly case counts rose in nine counties from the previous week. The worst increases from the prior week's pace were in Taylor, Franklin and Madison counties.

In Florida, 1,192 people were reported dead of COVID-19 in the week ending Sunday, Jan. 30. In the week before that, 605 people were reported dead.Johns Hopkins University data shows64,955 people have died from the disease since the pandemic began. In the U.S., 884,260 people have died.

A total of 5,522,206 people in Florida have tested positive for the coronavirus since the pandemic began, Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the United States, 74,333,001 people have tested positive.

>> Track coronavirus cases across the United States

USA TODAY analyzed federal hospital data as of Sunday, Jan. 30.

Likely COVID patients admitted in the state:

Last week: 12,792

The week before that: 14,710

Four weeks ago: 10,854

Likely COVID patients admitted in the nation:

Last week: 170,411

The week before that: 183,931

Four weeks ago: 147,900

Hospitals in 13 states reported more COVID-19 patients than a week earlier, while hospitals in 15 states had more COVID-19 patients in intensive-care beds. Hospitals in 18 states admitted more COVID-19 patients in the latest week than a week prior, the USA TODAY analysis of U.S. Health and Human Services data shows.

Vaccination is the best way to protect yourself and reduce the impact of COVID in your communities.

The same precautions still apply:

wash your hands

social distance

wash your hands frequently or use hand sanitizer to prevent the spread of germs

avoid crowds in which you are unsure of vaccination status

Please consider subscribing to a USA TODAY Network-Florida newspaper atoffers.usatodaynetwork.com/network-regional-florida.

The USA TODAY Network is publishing localized versions of this story on its news sites across the country, generated with data from Johns Hopkins University and the Centers for Disease Control. If you have questions about the data or the story, contact Mike Stucka atmstucka@gannett.com. Follow Mike on Twitter at @mikestucka.

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