Coronavirus Global Updates 24 June :::Global Covid-19 caseload tops 179.5 mn; deaths surge to more than 3.88 mn
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Coronavirus Global Updates 24 June :::Global Covid-19 caseload tops 179.5 mn; deaths surge to more than 3.88 mn
Zimbabwe COVID19 Update
COVID-19 update: As at 23 June 2021, Zimbabwe had 43 480 confirmed cases, including 37 477 recoveries and 1 692 deaths. To date, a total of 715 056 people have been vaccinated against COVID-19.
Global Covid-19 caseload tops 179.5 mn; deaths surge to more than 3.88 mn
The overall global Covid-19 caseload has topped 179.5 million, while the deaths have surged to more than 3.88 million, according to the Johns Hopkins University.
In its latest update on Thursday morning, the University's Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) revealed that the current global caseload and death toll stood at 179,522,146 and 3,889,680, respectively.
The US continues to be the worst-hit country with the world's highest number of cases and deaths at 33,577,488 and 602,833, respectively, according to the CSSE.
In terms of infections, India follows in the second place with 30,028,709 cases.
The other worst countries with over 3 million cases are Brazil (18,169,881), France (5,824,127), Turkey (5,387,545), Russia (5,306,069), the UK (4,683,925), Argentina (4,326,101), Italy (4,255,434), Colombia (4,027,016), Spain (3,773,032), Germany (3,732,469) and Iran (3,128,395), the CSSE figures showed.
In terms of deaths, Brazil comes second with 507,109 fatalities.
Nations with a death toll of over 100,000 are India (390,660), Mexico (231,505), Peru (190,906), the UK (128,291), Italy (127,352), Russia (128,719) and France (111,024).
British Columbia reports 87 new cases, one death
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British Columbia reported 87 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday and one additional death.
It brought the seven-day average for new cases down to 86, the lowest it has been since last August.
In a written statement, B.C. health officials said the number of active cases in the province had fallen to 1,119.
There were 109 people in hospital, 41 of whom were in critical or intensive care.
More than 3.5 million British Columbians, accounting for more than 68 per cent of B.C.’s population, have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine.
More than 1.05 million people, or 20.4 per cent of B.C.’s population has now had two doses.
The figures climb to 75.8 per cent and 22.7 per cent of British Columbians aged 12 and older.
On Tuesday, provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said the province was aiming to have three-quarters of eligible British Columbians vaccinated by the end of July.
Since the start of the pandemic, B.C. has reported 147,271 cases of COVID-19 and 1,744 deaths.
U.S. to Send Brazil 3 Million Doses of J&J’s Vaccine
The White House plans to send 3 million doses of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine to Brazil on Thursday.
The White House said on Wednesday that the United States would send three million doses of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine to Brazil on Thursday. The country’s virus cases and fatalities are surging again, with a death toll above 500,000.
Less than a third of the country’s population has had at least one shot, and an average of 74,490 new cases per day were reported in the country in the last week — an increase of 26 percent from the average two weeks ago.
The vaccines, which are set to arrive in Campinas, near São Paulo, are part of President Biden’s pledge to dispatch 80 million doses overseas by the end of the month, a White House official said. The official added that “scientific teams and legal and regulatory authorities” from the United States and Brazil had worked to secure the arrangement.
The shipment to Brazil follows one to Taiwan last weekend: 2.5 million doses of Moderna’s vaccine. Mr. Biden, who has been under intense pressure to increase his vaccine commitments abroad, announced this month that his administration would buy 500 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and distribute them among about 100 countries over the next year.
Asked last week at a pandemic news conference whether the administration would send vaccines to Brazil, Jeffrey D. Zients, the White House Covid-19 response coordinator, said that the United States was working with other countries on complicated logistical issues, including securing needles, syringes and alcohol pads that would accompany the medicine.
The Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which confers a high level of protection against virus cases, hospitalizations and deaths, has faced sagging demand in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration in April recommended a pause in its use after reports of a rare blood-clotting disorder in a small number of people who had received the vaccine, a decision that state officials said had derailed interest in the shot.
And with manufacturing problems at a Baltimore plant operated by a subcontractor, Emergent BioSolutions, Johnson & Johnson has been able to deliver fewer than half of the 100 million doses it promised the federal government by the end of this month. A little more than half the Johnson & Johnson doses delivered to states so far have been administered, according to C.D.C. data.
Roughly two-thirds of the doses the U.S. is sending to Brazil are from a federal pool that holds vaccines that states choose not to order, the White House said. Around a third of them were produced at Emergent and recently cleared by the F.D.A. in a special review of the facility and the doses produced there.
Earlier this month, the F.D.A. cleared around 10 million doses for use in the United States or for export, with a proviso that regulators could not guarantee that Emergent had adhered to manufacturing standards.
Last week, the agency released another 15 million doses from Emergent. It is still reviewing other batches of the vaccine to determine if they are safe. A decision is expected soon.
The Delta variant is likely to make up 90 percent of E.U. cases by late August, officials warn.
Residents of the European Union should be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus as quickly as possible this summer, the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control warned on Wednesday, as concerns grew that the contagious Delta variant would sweep across the bloc.
Andrea Ammon, the agency’s director, said the variant was expected to account for 90 percent of all coronavirus cases in the European Union by the end of August. The variant has already spread to 23 European countries; in some it is linked to a limited share of cases, but it is responsible for more than 66 percent of new cases in Portugal, which has faced a recent surge of infections. In Moscow, 90 percent of new cases are reported to be the Delta variant, according to the local authorities.
“Unfortunately, preliminary data shows that it can also infect individuals that have received only one dose of the currently available vaccines,” Dr. Ammon said. “It is very likely that the Delta variant will circulate extensively during the summer, particularly among younger individuals that are not targeted for vaccination.”
The Delta variant is unlikely to pose much risk to people who have been fully vaccinated, experts said. According to one recent study, the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was 88 percent effective at protecting against symptomatic disease caused by Delta, nearly matching its 93 percent effectiveness against the Alpha variant. But a single dose of the vaccine was just 33 percent effective against Delta, the study found.
After a sluggish start, the distribution of vaccines in the European Union has sped up in recent months. Even so, around 30 percent of residents over 80 years old and around 40 percent of those over 60 have yet to be fully vaccinated, according to the center.
Most E.U. countries have not yet fully vaccinated one-third of their total populations: the average is about 27 percent.
Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said on Wednesday that her country’s entire population will have been offered at least one dose of a vaccine by Sept. 21 if vaccine deliveries arrive as planned.
Public health officials have said that Delta may be 50 percent more contagious than Alpha, though precise estimates of its infectiousness vary. The European Center for Disease Prevention and Control estimates that Delta is between 40 and 60 percent more transmissible.
The warning on Tuesday brought a feeling of déjà vu: Last summer, a rise of cases among younger populations in some European countries and the United States led to new lockdown measures and a surge of infections among older people. But vaccines are driving down coronavirus case numbers in most of the United States, and it’s unclear whether Delta will reverse that trend.
The Delta variant has been detected in at least 85 countries to date, and public health experts say a surge of new cases in Britain in recent weeks has been driven in part by the variant. Dr. Hans Kluge, the World Health Organization’s regional director for Europe, said this month that the variant was “poised to take hold” in Europe.
The European Union is set to launch a bloc-wide program for proof of vaccination — the so-called digital green certificate — on July 1. Its purpose is to allow residents to travel freely within the bloc if they have been fully vaccinated, have proof of a recent negative test, or have recovered from Covid-19, although individual countries can impose their own restrictions.
Under recommendations issued last week by the European Union, American visitors would be able to travel to countries of the bloc if they can show a proof of vaccination or a recent negative test.
Guam invites travelers to come and get vaccinated on the Pacific island.
The U.S. territory of Guam has begun offering Covid vaccinations to travelers from any country in a bid to lift tourism to the island.
On Tuesday, the authorities in Guam announced that a program called Air V&V, which previously allowed U.S. citizens to visit and get vaccinated, would now be open to international tourists age 12 and over.
The program aims mostly at countries in the Asia-Pacific region, where the rollout of vaccines has been relatively slow. The first three tourists will arrive from Taiwan on Wednesday evening, according to the Guam-based Pacific Daily News. Early next month, three more flights from Taiwan are set to bring about 500 passengers, another local news outlet, the Guam Daily Post, reported.
Carl Gutierrez, president of the island’s visitor bureau, said in a statement, “This program captures a unique demographic of travelers around the world that are tired of waiting to get vaccinated in this pandemic.”
Visitors will need to book a package from a participating government-approved hotel, which includes accommodation, meals, transportation to and from the airport, coronavirus tests, health monitoring and two doses of a vaccine. Participants can choose from the vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna, which require two doses, or the “one and done” shots from Johnson & Johnson.
The travelers are required to present a negative coronavirus test result before departing their home country and must quarantine for seven days upon arrival in Guam. They will receive a first vaccine shot on their second day on the island.
But it is not a cheap vacation for visitors who opt for a vaccine that requires two doses and who remain on the island for three weeks to get both: Hotel rooms are about $150 to $350 a night, while the additional coronavirus measures cost a flat rate of $880 per person.
About 71 percent of Guam’s population of 169,000 has had at least one vaccine dose, while 63 percent are fully inoculated.
Angela Merkel gets ‘mix and match’ vaccine doses, and other news from around the world.
When Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany received her second coronavirus vaccination recently, she was given a Moderna shot to follow the AstraZeneca one she received in mid-April, a spokesman confirmed on Tuesday.
Germany has permitted “mix and match” vaccinations for those who received one AstraZeneca dose before the authorities introduced age-specific recommendations for that vaccine at the end of March. Since then, the combination of one AstraZeneca shot followed by either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccine has become standard in Germany for people under 60.
It was not clear why Ms. Merkel, who will turn 67 next month, chose the mixed approach.
Initial studies suggest the combination of the two types of vaccines is effective, but a report published in May in The Lancet, a medical journal, also found that side effects were more common than with uniform first and second shots.
AstraZeneca shots make up only about 17 percent of the doses administered in Germany, while Moderna vaccines account for just 9 percent. The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is the most widely used, with nearly 71 percent of doses administered so far (unsurprising, perhaps, as BioNTech is a German company). A relatively small number of Johnson & Johnson vaccine doses have also been administered.
Unlike other world leaders, Ms. Merkel refrained from widely publicizing her vaccinations with a selfie photograph or public event. After her first dose in April, her spokesman merely tweeted a picture of her W.H.O.-issued vaccination booklet. It is not clear exactly when Ms. Merkel received the second dose, but a spokesman confirmed on Tuesday that it had been within the last few days.
Currently, 52 percent of the German population has received at least one dose of a vaccine. Ms. Merkel joined the 32 percent of Germans who are fully vaccinated.
In other news from around the world.
· The government of New Zealand announced on Wednesday that it would impose social-distancing and mask-wearing requirements until Sunday in the city of Wellington, after a tourist visiting the capital from Sydney, Australia, over the weekend tested positive for the coronavirus. New Zealand began a 72-hour pause on Tuesday for quarantine-free travel from the Australian state of New South Wales, which includes Sydney, after more than 20 cases were reported in the eastern suburbs of the city.
· The Red Cross has urged residents of the South Pacific island nation of Fiji to get vaccinated after a surge in new coronavirus infections there reached record highs. The health and humanitarian organization said that new infections were doubling every 10 days as the country grappled with the more transmissible Delta variant, adding that “misinformation and rumors” on social media were stoking fear and undermining immunization efforts.
· The health authorities in Greece announced on Wednesday that face masks will no longer be mandatory in uncrowded outdoor areas starting Thursday. The decision comes amid a significant drop in the rate of daily infections and follows the country‘s official opening to international tourists last month. Masks will continue to be obligatory in all indoor public areas and in outdoor spaces with crowds, officials told a news conference. The officials also announced the revocation, as of next Monday, of a public curfew first imposed last November, which has been gradually shortened in recent weeks.
· Despite concerns about the dangerous Delta variant of the coronavirus, Switzerland will terminate most remaining restrictions this weekend, including those limiting entry to the country, the government announced Wednesday. As of Saturday, the Swiss Ministry of Health said, rules requiring that masks be worn outdoors will end, shops will be permitted to open at full capacity, and limits on patrons in restaurants will be lifted. In a statement posted on its website, the health ministry attributed the relaxation of safety measures to “the positive development of the epidemic situation and the progress made with vaccination.”
· In a new sign of worry over the Delta variant, the Tourism Ministry of Israel said Wednesday that it had postponed, by at least one month, the granting of individual tourist visas. Despite the country’s high rate of vaccinations, the ministry said its plan to resume issuing those visas as of July 1 would now be delayed until Aug. 1. The new caution came as the Israeli news media reported that more than 100 new cases had been registered in the country for the third consecutive day. Just three weeks ago, with new cases having dropped below 20 a day, Israel lifted many restrictions.
The pandemic affected mental health and college plans for U.S. high schoolers.
Nearly 80 percent of American high school juniors and seniors say the coronavirus pandemic has affected their plans after graduation, and 72 percent of 13- to 19-year-olds have struggled with their mental health, a new survey shows.
The survey, conducted by America’s Promise Alliance, a nonprofit group, found that 58 percent of teenagers reported learning entirely or mostly online in the 2020-21 school year, and 22 percent said that they had learned about half online and half in person. Nineteen percent said they had learned mostly through in-person instruction.
The results are from a nationally representative survey of 2,400 high school students conducted in March and April.
Among those who said the pandemic had affected their plans after high school, one-third said they would attend college closer to home; one-quarter said they would attend a two-year college instead of a four-year institution; 17 percent said they would attend college remotely rather than in person; and 16 percent said they would put off attending college. Seven percent said they were no longer planning to attend college.
Nearly half the respondents who changed their plans said they were doing so because of financial pressure, suggesting that the pandemic will probably widen educational inequalities among young adults.
Given the extraordinary swell of racial-justice activism over the past year, the survey also asked students about how their schools had handled race issues. Two-thirds reported that “the history of racism” had been taught at their schools. But Asian, Black, Latino and multiracial students were less likely than white students to say that the curriculum represented their own “racial and ethnic background.”
New York’s state of emergency will end Thursday. Booze to go will end along with it.
New York’s state of emergency will end on Thursday, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said on Wednesday. And with it will depart the freedom restaurants and bars have had to deliver and sell alcoholic beverages to go.
The official end of the state of emergency comes just over a week after Mr. Cuomo relaxed most of the state’s remaining restrictions, welcome signs of the state’s steady march back toward normalcy after more than 53,000 deaths linked to the virus. The sudden halt to the freer sale of alcohol may be a boon to liquor stores, while surprising the bars and restaurants that came to rely on the business they generated to weather the pandemic.
“The Legislature failed to codify the ability of restaurants to offer alcohol to-go,” New York State’s Liquor Authority said in an emailed statement, referring to legislation to extend the takeaway alcohol that state lawmakers did not act on before their session ended this month. “With the state’s declaration of emergency expiring on Thursday, all temporary pandemic-related suspensions and directives, including privileges allowing bars, restaurants, and manufacturers to sell drinks to go, will end after June 24th.”
(Bill Crowley, a spokesman for the authority, noted that bars and restaurants could still deliver and sell beer to-go, as they could before the pandemic.)
The Distilled Spirits Council, a trade association that has lobbied to keep to-go alcohol sales, said that 15 states had passed bills to make them permanent and that 12 had extended the period for such sales.
Lisa Hawkins, an official with the council, expressed dismay that New York was ending the practice. “It’s shocking and extremely disappointing that this important revenue stream will soon dry up for New York’s hospitality businesses,” she said in an email.
Andrew Rigie, the executive director of the New York City Hospitality Alliance, an association representing restaurants, bars and nightclubs, said that many proprietors had thought takeout alcohol would be allowed at least through July 5, when the latest in a series of extensions of the authorization for freer sales was set to expire.
Customers who have grown accustomed to the convenience of takeout tequila, delivery daiquiris and walkaway wine could also be taken aback, Mr. Rigie said in an interview. “It’s a shame the state legislature failed to continue to support local restaurants and to continue to deliver a very popular policy to New Yorkers,” he said.
But with restaurants and bars once again open to full capacity and more than 70 percent of adults in the state having received at least one dose of a vaccine, some New York City restaurateurs welcomed the change, which they hope will further motivate customers to spend time and money on premises.
“I want people to now come in, order food and enjoy the venue,” said Michael Trenk, managing partner of the Baylander Steel Beach bar and restaurant, located on a decommissioned aircraft carrier docked at the West Harlem Piers. “I don’t want you to just come in, buy a drink and leave.”
Mr. Cuomo declared the state of emergency on March 7, 2020, as New York City became one of the world’s hardest-hit places. In mid-March, when he limited restaurants and bars to takeout and delivery, the New York State Liquor Authority granted “new off-premises privileges,” meaning drinks to go.
Virus numbers declined in the city by the fall, but the state experienced a new surge in cases around the holidays and until relatively recently was still reporting new cases at a high rate. Buffalo and other cities also struggled to tamp down outbreaks. Vaccinations have helped radically improve the state’s caseload trajectory.
At a news conference on Wednesday, Mr. Cuomo said: “The emergency is over. It’s a new chapter.”
He said that federal guidance advising people to go on wearing masks in many situations if they are unvaccinated, and on public transportation and in settings like homeless shelters, even if they are vaccinated, would remain in effect, and that state and local health departments would be able to ensure that precautions were adhered to. He asked New Yorkers to remain “wary and vigilant” about the virus and noted that many still needed to be vaccinated, especially young people.
Alcohol will be banned at the Tokyo Olympics.
Organizers of the Tokyo Olympics said on Wednesday that they would ban alcohol at the Games, bowing to an outcry from a Japanese public that is deeply skeptical of hosting the event and weary of months of pandemic restrictions.
Two days earlier, the organizing committee said that it was considering sales of alcohol during the Games, which are scheduled to begin in Tokyo on July 23. That prompted outrage from many Japanese, with Tokyo and several other areas just emerging from a prolonged state of emergency during which restaurants were prohibited from selling alcohol as a virus control measure.
On Wednesday, the president of Tokyo 2020, Seiko Hashimoto, said that the committee had consulted with experts and decided to ban the sale and consumption of alcohol at Olympic venues “to prevent expansion of infection.”
Asahi Breweries, an official partner and one of the largest beer and spirits producers in Japan, endorsed the ban. “We totally understand the decision by the committee,” said Takayuki Tanaka, a company spokesman. “We will keep supporting the Games’ success.”
The alcohol ban is the latest sign that the Tokyo Games, postponed from 2020 because of the pandemic, will be unlike any other. This week, organizers said that crowds would be limited to 50 percent of a venue’s capacity, up to 10,000 people. Only spectators who live in Japan will be permitted to attend, with the organizers having decided back in March not to allow fans to travel to the Games from overseas.
Organizers are still determining what the crowd guidelines will be for some outdoor events such as marathons and whether viewing events that could attract large groups should be allowed in certain parts of the country.
After a sharp spike in May, coronavirus cases in Japan are receding, with daily totals of new cases nationwide having fallen by 38 percent over the past two weeks. A sluggish vaccination drive is starting to pick up pace, but with only 8 percent of the country fully vaccinated, according to New York Times data, the Olympic events are set to take place in front of crowds that are mostly not immunized.
A Month Before the Olympics, How Is Japan Faring With Covid?
In the past month, cases have decreased and vaccination has ramped up dramatically — but with less than one-fifth of the country even partially vaccinated, many residents remain worried about hosting the Games.
Here’s what to know about the Delta variant in the U.S.
The super-contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus is now responsible for about one in every five Covid-19 cases in the United States, and its prevalence has doubled in the last two weeks, health officials said on Tuesday.
First identified in India, Delta is one of several “variants of concern,” as designated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization. It has spread rapidly through India and Britain.
Its appearance in the United States is not surprising. And with vaccinations ticking up and Covid-19 case numbers falling, it’s unclear how much of a problem Delta will cause here. Still, its swift rise has prompted concerns that it might jeopardize the nation’s progress in beating back the pandemic.
“The Delta variant is currently the greatest threat in the U.S. to our attempt to eliminate Covid-19,” Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, said at the briefing. The good news, he said, is that the vaccines authorized in the United States work against the variant. “We have the tools,” he said. “So let’s use them, and crush the outbreak.”
As mass vaccination sites close in the U.S., the focus shifts to the ‘ground game.’
On Sunday, the last of 39 mass vaccination centers operated by the U.S. government closed in Newark, the end of an effort that administered millions of Covid-19 shots over five months in 27 states. Many state-run sites are also closed or soon will be.
The United States’ shift away from high-volume vaccination centers is an acknowledgment of the harder road ahead. Health officials are pivoting to the “ground game”: a highly targeted push, akin to a get-out-the-vote effort, to persuade the reluctant to get their shots.
President Biden will travel to Raleigh, N.C., on Thursday to spotlight this time-consuming work. It will not be easy — as Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the president’s coronavirus response coordinator, discovered last weekend, when he went door-knocking in Anacostia, a majority-Black neighborhood in Washington, with Mayor Muriel E. Bowser.
In an interview on Tuesday, Dr. Fauci said he and the mayor spent 90 minutes talking to people on their front porches. He said he persuaded six to 10 people to get their shots, though he did encounter some flat refusals.
“We would say, ‘OK, come on, listen: Get out, walk down the street, a couple of blocks away. We have incentives, a $51 gift certificate, you can put yourself in a raffle, you could win a year’s supplies of groceries, you could win a Jeep,’” Dr. Fauci said. “And several of them said, ‘OK, I’m on my way and I’ll go.’”
INVESTORS DIARY 2021
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ART
PPC
Dairibord
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Fidelity
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Medtech
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