Tag Archives: autumn

Brace for a potentially record-breaking winter after sweltering summer and autumn, say researchers – Phys.org

  1. Brace for a potentially record-breaking winter after sweltering summer and autumn, say researchers Phys.org
  2. WMO Confirms 2023 as Warmest Year on Record, Calls for Urgent Climate Action at COP28 | Weather.com The Weather Channel
  3. Will 2023 be Orlando’s hottest year on record? It’s a nail-biting race to the finish Orlando Sentinel
  4. “We Are Living Through Climate Collapse”: U.N. Issues Urgent Warning as COP28 Opens in Dubai Democracy Now!
  5. Planet Earth Keeps Shattering the Most Terrible Record of All The New Republic
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Epidemiological update: COVID-19 transmission in the EU/EEA, SARS-CoV-2 variants, and public health considerations for Autumn 2023 – ecdc.europa.eu

  1. Epidemiological update: COVID-19 transmission in the EU/EEA, SARS-CoV-2 variants, and public health considerations for Autumn 2023 ecdc.europa.eu
  2. Humoral immunity to an endemic coronavirus is associated with postacute sequelae of COVID-19 in individuals with rheumatic diseases Science
  3. Study characterizes SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA.2.86: New variant under watch News-Medical.Net
  4. SARS-CoV-2, the virus behind COVID-19, can infect sensory neurons Medical Xpress
  5. Communique on SARS-CoV-2 BA.2.86 sub-variant – Africa CDC africacdc.org
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Covid hospitalizations rising post-Thanksgiving after an autumn lull

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A post-Thanksgiving uptick in covid-19 patients at U.S. hospitals is arriving even as health systems contend with waves of feverish, coughing people stricken with RSV and influenza infections.

Covid hospitalizations last week reached their highest level in three months, with more than 35,000 patients being treated, according to Washington Post data tracking. National hospitalizations had stagnated throughout fall but started rising in the days leading up to Thanksgiving. All but a few states reported per capita increases in the past week.

Public health authorities are concerned that the increase in the number of covid patients will worsen the strain on hospitals already under pressure from the effects of two other viral ailments, influenza and respiratory syncytial virus, widely known as RSV.

Nearly 20,000 Americans were hospitalized with influenza during Thanksgiving week, the most for that week in more than a decade and almost double the previous week’s count.

RSV, covid and flu bring hospitals to the brink — and it may grow worse

Nancy Foster of the American Hospital Association said members are still mostly raising concerns about RSV and flu rather than covid.

“It could be in a week or two we are seeing many more covid patients than we are seeing RSV or flu, but the real concern is we will see a large influx of all of them really stressing out the hospitals’ capacity to care for these very sick patients,” said Foster, the association’s vice president of quality and patient safety policy.

Experts warn that holiday gatherings are a prime time for the coronavirus to spread as millions of Americans travel and get together. The increase in hospitalizations probably reflects a combination of patients who were infected before the Thanksgiving holiday rush and those exposed during Thanksgiving week, health experts said.

Daily new covid hospital admissions are now above 9,000 after hovering between 5,000 and 7,000 for much of autumn.

XBB, BQ.1.1, BA.2.75.2 — a variant swarm could fuel a winter surge

Winter is typically hectic for hospitals, especially in cold-weather states where people are more likely to congregate indoors, providing ample opportunities for respiratory viruses to flourish.

In late 2020 and early 2021, before the widespread availability of coronavirus vaccines, covid patients put the nation’s hospital wards under enormous strain, with deaths peaking at more than 3,000 a day. And last winter, the explosion of cases fueled by the omicron variant of the coronavirus left hospitals struggling to provide basic care as they endured staffing shortages when the virus tore through their workforces.

This winter, most people in the United States have some degree of immunity because of vaccination, prior infection or both, which should reduce the severity of infections. And those who do become sick have a broader suite of therapeutics to accelerate recovery and keep them out of the hospital.

“If we are going to see a big surge, it’s going to start to ramp up now, and it’s going to extend and probably peak in late December and early January,” said Columbia University epidemiologist Jeffrey Shaman. “The hope will be it will be somewhat mild, of course, and enough boosting and prior exposure is going to keep a large chunk of people out of the hospital.”

How China’s vaccine strategy created a looming crisis

At Banner Health, Arizona’s largest health system, covid hospitalizations have doubled in the past month to nearly 600 patients. They make up fewer than 10 percent of all patients, compared with nearly 40 percent at earlier stages of the pandemic. But the relatively smaller covid caseload is balanced out by an early spike in influenza and RSV cases exceeding five-year averages.

“What is happening this winter already and what we can continue to expect is influenza and RSV are not going to be at unprecedented low levels,” said Banner Chief Clinical Officer Marjorie Bessel. “We are going to have a high-volume winter like we have had previously in the pandemic. How much of a high volume due to all this coming together is an unknown.”

For hospitals already strained by other viruses, the coronavirus is an additional complication.

At the Norton Healthcare system in Louisville, coronavirus cases are flat, RSV is declining and flu is rising.

“Some winters are more challenging than others, and I think we are in a more challenging winter this year,” said Norton’s senior vice president and chief clinical and strategy officer, Steven Hester. “We are going to see covid as part of the regular challenge we have.”

Children’s medication hard to come by as respiratory viruses surge

RSV cases have slammed Children’s Hospital of Orange County in California, prompting the county to declare and extend an emergency. The hospital’s emergency department had a record influx of 12,000 patients in November and, at times, had to divert patients to other medical centers. Now, the children’s hospital also is seeing a rise in covid hospitalizations, although nowhere near to the number of cases related to RSV. Some children arrive infected with multiple viruses.

“It’s forcing us to be organized and thoughtful, and we have to be innovative in space. We have to always seek out supplies,” said Sandip Godambe, the system’s chief medical officer.

Although children’s hospitals and pediatric wings have been facing the greatest strain because of other respiratory viruses, older patients account for most new covid hospitalizations, according to Department of Health and Human Services data.

Experts say the trend drives home the importance of people 65 and older receiving updated booster shots tailored to the omicron variant. Less than a third of that age cohort has received the latest shot, according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“The principal issue we are grappling with is the waning of immunity,” said Eric Topol, a professor of molecular medicine at Scripps Research Institute. “We are under-vaccinated and under-boosted, particularly in people of advanced age.”

White House promotes updated boosters ahead of feared covid winter wave

To reduce the strain on hospitals, California’s state epidemiologist said it is essential to increase booster uptake among older people and ensure that medically vulnerable patients are receiving antiviral treatments such as Paxlovid soon after they test positive.

“Even when you have mild or moderate symptoms, if you are over the age of 50 or if you have any sort of medical problems, you can likely benefit from treatment for a few days so you don’t need to go to hospital,” said Erica Pan.

Carmela Coyle, the president and chief executive of the California Hospital Association, said the public should still be concerned about the ability of hospitals to deliver care even if there are fewer coronavirus patients this winter compared with earlier in the pandemic. A health-care workforce shortage has left hospitals understaffed, and hospitals are financially strapped nearly three years into the pandemic, she said.

“Covid for hospitals was like a flood,” Coyle said. “And while the floodwaters may have receded if you look at the last two winters compared to where we are now, the damage is still here.”

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Steam Black Friday Discounts Begin Today In Autumn Sale

The Steam Autumn Sale returns today, November 22, and brings with it early Black Friday and Cyber Monday deals that see the likes of Cyberpunk 2077, Stray, and more discounted.

Kicking off at 10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern / 6PM UK (so 4am on November 23 AEST), the sale will run for exactly one week and end on November 29.

Valve’s announcement trailer features its usual long list of heavily discounted games, spanning a library of new and old hits, major publishers, and smaller indie projects. Alongside Cyberpunk 2077 and Stray, Hitman 3, Hades, V Rising, Disney Dreamlight Valley, Slime Rancher 2, and Satisfactory were also shown off to tease the sale.

New Cyberpunk 2077 Gameplay Screenshots

IGN has reviewed several of these games, saying of CD Projekt Red’s latest that “Cyberpunk 2077 throws you into a beautiful, dense cityscape and offers a staggering amount of flexibility in how you choose to take it from there.”

We called Stray “a delightful cat-based platforming adventure in a cyberpunk world worth exploring,” and said Hades is “a one-of-a-kind rogue-lite that does a brilliant job of marrying its fast-paced action with its persistent, progressing story through a vividly reimagined Greek mythological underworld.”

To take these games on the go, Valve’s portable PC gaming platform the Steam Deck seems to have eliminated its lengthy waiting list, meaning a reservation is no longer needed. Just make sure the games you pick up are on the Steam Deck Verified Games list if you want optimum performance.

Andrea Shearon is a freelance contributor for IGN covering games and entertainment. She’s worn several hats over her seven-year career in the games industry, with bylines over at Fanbyte, USA Today’s FTW, TheGamer, VG247, and RPG Site. Find her on Twitter (@Maajora) or the Materia Possessions podcast chatting about FFXIV, RPGs, and any series involving giant robots.



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Autumn Statement live updates: What to look for in Jeremy Hunt’s fiscal plan

UK chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s Autumn Statement will be the government’s first fiscal announcement under Rishi Sunak’s premiership.

Hunt, chancellor since October 14, has scrapped almost all the measures outlined by his predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng, who was sacked after 38 days in the job.

The past 12 months have seen several budgetary announcements under three prime ministers and four chancellors:

Autumn 2021

Prime minister: Boris Johnson; chancellor Rishi Sunak

Sunak introduced his third Budget as a gateway towards a post-Covid economy. He pledged to pump more money into public services to help a post-pandemic recovery. His statement outlined plans to raise taxes to their highest in more than 70 years, including a rise in corporation tax.

March 2022

Prime minister: Boris Johnson; chancellor Rishi Sunak

Rishi Sunak unveiled tax-cutting measures in his Spring Statement, his last as chancellor, which was delivered against a backdrop of rising inflation in the month that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Sunak maintained a planned 1.25 percentage-point rise in national insurance contributions but increased the minimum threshold by £3,000. He aimed to cut the basic rate of income tax by 1 percentage point to 19 per cent in 2024 and proposed to cut fuel duty by 5p a litre.

September 23

Prime minister: Liz Truss; chancellor: Kwasi Kwarteng

Kwasi Kwarteng revealed the biggest tax cuts for 50 years in his fiscal statement, hailing his £45bn debt-financed “mini” Budget as the beginning of a “new era” of economic growth.

Kwarteng proposed ending the 45p additional income tax rate for the highest earners, reducing the basic rate from 20p in the pound to 19p, lowering stamp duty, national insurance and taxes on dividends, and instituting a levy on house purchases.

He planned to scrap a proposed corporate tax rise and keep it at 19 per cent while maintaining the 8 per cent charge on bank profits, which had been set to be reduced next year.

But markets went into a tailspin after the announcement, and sterling tumbled to a record low against the dollar. Borrowing costs surged and pension funds came under pressure. The Bank of England intervened.

The fiscal announcement led to his downfall — he was soon sacked as chancellor — and Liz Truss followed by quitting as prime minister. Her tenure had lasted 45 days.

September 28

Prime minister: Liz Truss; chancellor: Kwasi Kwarteng

The Bank of England launched a £65bn emergency government bond-buying programme to stem a debt crisis and protect pension funds threatened by insolvency after gilt yields soared.

The central bank warned of a “material risk to UK financial stability” from turmoil in the gilts market.

October 17

Prime minister: Liz Truss; chancellor: Jeremy Hunt

Three days into his chancellorship, Hunt ripped up two-thirds of Kwarteng’s “mini” Budget measures and warned of “eye-wateringly difficult” decisions. Truss had already axed tax cuts for big business and the wealthy.

Hunt scrapped a £6bn cut in the basic rate of income tax, along with changes to dividend taxes, a VAT tax break for foreign shoppers and a freeze on alcohol duty.

The chancellor curtailed Truss’s scheme to cap British households’ annual energy bills at £2,500 on average for two years, saying it would end after six months.

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4 Dietitian-Approved Stew Recipes For Weight Loss Over 50

The key to healthy weight loss over 50 is by creating a balanced diet (with ample protein and fiber), exercising regularly, and not overdoing it. With that said, we checked in with dietitians, nutritionists and other health experts to learn more about essential nutrients your body needs for not only healthy aging, but in order to lose weight, if that is your goal. With the coldest months of the year just around the corner, we rounded up tasty and healthy stew recipes as well, to aid your weight loss journey!

Read on for suggestions and insight from Nicole Olen, RDN, registered dietitian, nutritionist and health expert,  Jake Dickson, CPT-NASM, certified personal trainer and contributing editor at BarBend, Trista Best, MPH, RD, LD, registered dietitian at Balance One Supplements, and Stephanie Wells, MS, RD, registered dietitian and owner of Thyme To Go Vegan Nutrition Services.

 

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1. Cannellini Bean Stew

Fiber is not only essential for a healthier digestion over 50, Olen explains, but also vital for healthy weight loss, as eating enough of it will keep you satiated and fuller for longer (and less likely to snack more later on!)

 

For a quick way to add more fiber to your seasonal stew, Olen suggests following a recipe with beans, such as this one. “For more fiber, swap out your beef, pork, or. chicken with lentils or beans instead,” she advises, adding that “lots of soups, stews & slow cooker meals can easily use beans as well.” For dipping, she suggests “swapping out refined grains for whole-grain options when you can, like whole-wheat bread, English muffins, bagels, or tortillas” to go along with your stew.

 

This stew recipe has plenty of vegetables (tomatoes, carrots, onions) and fiber-filled beans to support your weight loss journey, while also keeping you cozy on a warm day.
 
Ingredients: onions, garlic, carrots, extra virgin olive oil, chopped tomatoes, dried bay leaves, vegetable stock cubes, water, cannellini beans, wholemeal bread (optional)
 
Full Recipe

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2. Slow Cooker Moroccan Chickpea & Turkey Stew

While fiber is crucial for healthy weight loss, protein is as well, Dickson explains. By centering your favorite winter stew around a protein source, you will be able to stay satiated and build lean muscle (and shed fat in the process). For a cozy (and clever option with Thanksgiving coming up), Dickson recommends using ground turkey in your stew (and you can use leftover turkey from the upcoming holiday!) “In place of ground beef, I think ground turkey is a popular choice [for weight loss-friendly stews] because of the meat’s low fat and high protein content,” Dickson says.
 
It’s versatile enough to be “thrown into a wide range of dishes, from soups to stews,” he continues, adding, “true, some cuts of turkey are healthier than others, but the whole bird is healthy and lean.” He also advises to be wary of “prepackaged lunchmeats, as they frequently include excessive amounts of salt and other unhealthy additives.” This stew recipe is not only weight loss-friendly, but also gluten-free. It includes ground turkey and chickpeas, another great source of protein. It also features tasty ingredients and spices that promote optimal gut health, like turmeric, paprika, and essential veggies like carrots and celery.
 
Ingredients: lean ground turkey, extra virgin olive oil, chopped onions, garlic cloves, poblano peppers, carrots, celery, diced tomatoes, chickpeas, fat free chicken broth, turmeric, paprika, coriander, bay leaves, crushed red pepper flakes, coarse salt, parsley, spearmint
 
Full Recipe

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3. Quinoa & Vegetable Stew

When you begin working towards a weight loss goal, being realistic and attainable is important for sustainable success, Best explains. “A healthy and sustainable weight loss is typically around 1-2 pounds per week,” she points out, while reiterating that stews that are “rich in fiber, protein, and/ or healthy fats” will help to keep you full and satisfied while “not increasing your calorie intake significantly.”She specifically recommends opting for quinoa in your meal, as it is a “plant-based complete protein, which means it contains all nine essential amino acids.”

Complete proteins are typically “animal food sources only,” she notes, which makes quinoa ideal for any vegan diet. “It is also gluten free, high in fiber, and antioxidants,” she says, and these characteristics make it an ideal grain for a gluten free diet, as well. Ultimately, apart from promoting healthy weight loss, the “fiber and antioxidant content” in quinoa are beneficial for immune health. This stew recipe includes quinoa along with other healthy vegetables and sources of carbohydrates such as corn, peas and red potatoes.

 

Ingredients: olive oil, chopped onions, bell peppers, garlic, paprika, ground coriander, ground cumin, low-sodium vegetable broth, red potatoes, white quinoa, corn, tomatoes, frozen peas, salt and pepper, queso fresco or feta cheese crumbled, avocadoes, minced cilantro

 

Full Recipe

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4. Sweet Potato Stew

Another great vegetable for weight loss is a sweet potato, Wells says, and these can be added to any great stew for a healthy source of carbohydrates, energy, antioxidants, and more. When it comes to stews, soups and other hot meals, she instructs to “include starchy vegetables” like sweet potatoes in them. “Starchy vegetables like potatoes and sweet potatoes provide fiber and antioxidants, in addition to their energy-providing carbohydrates.” She adds that these foods help “keep you full for longer throughout the day,” and when making stew, it’s important to include resistant starch.

 

“When cooked and cooled, some starchy foods form resistant starch,” Wells notes, continuing that “resistant starch acts like fiber in the gut, promoting feelings of satiety, decreasing hunger, and providing fuel for the beneficial bacteria in your gut.” This stew centers entirely around sweet potatoes, and also features the gut-loving spice turmeric, the healthy digestion-promoting veggie, kale,  and anti-inflammatory coconut milk.

Ingredients: olive oil, white or yellow onion diced, chopped fresh ginger, garlic cloves grated or diced, pink salt or sea salt, paprika, turmeric, black pepper, cinnamon, nutmeg, cayenne pepper, carrots sliced, spinach or chopped kale, sweet potato diced, vegetable stock, full-fat coconut milk, cooked jasmine, basmati, or wild rice

 

Full Recipe

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Autumn COVID variants look shockingly similar and powerful for these 2 reasons

Earlier this year, fears of a new “super strain” of Omicron were real—and rising.

A researcher in Cyprus identified a COVID-19 variant that had features of both the deadly Delta and the highly transmissible, immune-evasive Omicron variants. “Deltacron,” as the new variant became known, was a bit of a “frankenvirus” that combined the two strains.

Deltacron failed to take off, and it soon disappeared. A second Delta-Omicron hybrid later arose then also subsided.

But the phenomenon that caused it is likely to come into play this fall. Scientists expect a sizable wave of COVID cases October through January, fueled by multiple Omicron spinoffs that look increasingly alike—both to each other and to older versions of the scourge.

They’re expected to be the most immune-evasive, transmissible versions of the virus yet. Their similarity could be a blessing or curse: It could make them easier to fight—or harder to control.

As Omicron evolves, it’s “rediscovering solutions that have been used before” in variants like Alpha, Gamma, and Delta “while bringing some new things along with its lineage,” Dr. Stuart Ray, vice chair of medicine for data integrity and analytics at Johns Hopkins Department of Medicine, told Fortune.

“It’s a fascinating part of evolution,” he said. “We see the same scraps of cloth being used to make a new quilt.”

Different paths, same goal

While a fall wave of COVID may be fueled by multiple variants—as many as five or more—the differences between them could be minor, Dr. Raj Rajnarayanan, assistant dean of research and associate professor at the New York Institute of Technology campus in Jonesboro, Ark., told Fortune.

In a form of parallel evolution called convergent evolution, variants are collecting identical sets of concerning mutations. In other words, multiple strains of the same virus are picking up similar mutations, like ones that will help them evade immunity and make it easier for the virus to spread, according to Rajnarayanan.

One example: The wave of globally dominant BA.5 is beginning to recede in many locations—but its spin-offs are picking up mutations that promote immune evasion, Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP), told Fortune.

“We’ve not seen this type of immune evasion before,” he said, speaking of the variants’ increasing ability to dodge the immune system and tools that bolster it, like vaccines and treatments.

Meanwhile, COVID strains are also mutating through a process called recombination—the same strategy the so-called Deltacron strain used. In this scenario, two variants meld into one. Case in point: new variant XBB, a merger of two different Omicron spawns that is the most immune-evasive COVID strain seen yet, according to Rajnarayanan.

Unlike the initial Deltacron—which was only identified in a single lab, signaling that it may have been a product of lab contamination—XBB is being found worldwide in places like Bangladesh, Israel, Singapore, Germany, and Denmark, he said.

With all the mixing and matching of Omicron spawn occurring this fall, will the resulting muddled mess constitute some kind of “super virus”?

It’s impossible to know, experts say. But Omicron may be close to reaching a “local fitness peak,” meaning the variant—while still evolving quickly—might soon be unable to spread or evade human immune systems any better than their predecessors.

“I do wonder if it’s running out of options,” Ray said of Omicron. “It doesn’t mean it’s reached the peak of spread, but it may put some bounds on it.”

A new foe this winter?

If Omicron is indeed peaking in terms of performance, it could pave the way for the entrance of a completely new variant, like Delta, which arrived in the U.S. in the summer of 2021, and Omicron, which hit several months later.

“Somewhere there might be a Pi lurking that has a new set of solutions,” Ray said, referring to the possibility of another major variant along the lines of Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, and Omicron. “If the virus runs out of space for advantageous changes, a new variant might emerge that changes the calculus for all of us.”

He continued: “It’s been a while since we’ve seen a big new variant come out of left field. But I think it’s reasonable to believe it’s going to happen this winter. It’s just nothing anyone can predict.”

Osterholm agrees that the world “could be in a situation where Pi or Sigma show up.”

“None of us know—that’s the challenge right now,” he said. “We just have to be very humble and say we don’t know what the next shoe to drop is.”

It’s also possible that “we begin to see what I call a ‘soft landing,’” a gradual lowering in the number of cases, he added.

Osterholm sees no evidence, however, that COVID is turning into a seasonal virus like the flu and that one vaccine a year will suffice, like some White House officials recently suggested.

The virus, he says, is a “three act play.”

“I think we’re only in the second act,” he said. “That’s the problem.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

.

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Autumn COVID variants look shockingly similar and powerful for these 2 reasons

Earlier this year, fears of a new “super strain” of Omicron were real—and rising.

A researcher in Cyprus identified a COVID-19 variant that had features of both the deadly Delta and the highly transmissible, immune-evasive Omicron variants. “Deltacron,” as the new variant became known, was a bit of a “frankenvirus” that combined the two strains.

Deltacron failed to take off, and it soon disappeared. A second Delta-Omicron hybrid later arose then also subsided. 

But the phenomenon that caused it is likely to come into play this fall. Scientists expect a sizable wave of COVID cases October through January, fueled by multiple Omicron spinoffs that look increasingly alike—both to each other and to older versions of the scourge.

They’re expected to be the most immune-evasive, transmissible versions of the virus yet. Their similarity could be a blessing or curse: It could make them easier to fight—or harder to control.

As Omicron evolves, it’s “rediscovering solutions that have been used before” in variants like Alpha, Gamma, and Delta “while bringing some new things along with its lineage,” Dr. Stuart Ray, vice chair of medicine for data integrity and analytics at Johns Hopkins Department of Medicine, told Fortune.

“It’s a fascinating part of evolution,” he said. “We see the same scraps of cloth being used to make a new quilt.”

Different paths, same goal

While a fall wave of COVID may be fueled by multiple variants—as many as five or more—the differences between them could be minor, Dr. Raj Rajnarayanan, assistant dean of research and associate professor at the New York Institute of Technology campus in Jonesboro, Ark., told Fortune.

In a form of parallel evolution called convergent evolution, variants are collecting identical sets of concerning mutations. In other words, multiple strains of the same virus are picking up similar mutations, like ones that will help them evade immunity and make it easier for the virus to spread, according to Rajnarayanan.

One example: The wave of globally dominant BA.5 is beginning to recede in many locations—but its spin-offs are picking up mutations that promote immune evasion, Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP), told Fortune.

“We’ve not seen this type of immune evasion before,” he said, speaking of the variants’ increasing ability to dodge the immune system and tools that bolster it, like vaccines and treatments.

Meanwhile, COVID strains are also mutating through a process called recombination—the same strategy the so-called Deltacron strain used. In this scenario, two variants meld into one. Case in point: new variant XBB, a merger of two different Omicron spawns that is the most immune-evasive COVID strain seen yet, according to Rajnarayanan.

Unlike the initial Deltacron—which was only identified in a single lab, signaling that it may have been a product of lab contamination—XBB is being found worldwide in places like Bangladesh, Israel, Singapore, Germany, and Denmark, he said.

With all the mixing and matching of Omicron spawn occurring this fall, will the resulting muddled mess constitute some kind of “super virus”?

It’s impossible to know, experts say. But Omicron may be close to reaching a “local fitness peak,” meaning the variant—while still evolving quickly—might soon be unable to spread or evade human immune systems any better than their predecessors. 

“I do wonder if it’s running out of options,” Ray said of Omicron. “It doesn’t mean it’s reached the peak of spread, but it may put some bounds on it.”

A new foe this winter?

If Omicron is indeed peaking in terms of performance, it could pave the way for the entrance of a completely new variant, like Delta, which arrived in the U.S. in the summer of 2021, and Omicron, which hit several months later.

“Somewhere there might be a Pi lurking that has a new set of solutions,” Ray said, referring to the possibility of another major variant along the lines of Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, and Omicron. “If the virus runs out of space for advantageous changes, a new variant might emerge that changes the calculus for all of us.”

He continued: “It’s been a while since we’ve seen a big new variant come out of left field. But I think it’s reasonable to believe it’s going to happen this winter. It’s just nothing anyone can predict.”

Osterholm agrees that the world “could be in a situation where Pi or Sigma show up.”

“None of us know—that’s the challenge right now,” he said. “We just have to be very humble and say we don’t know what the next shoe to drop is.”

It’s also possible that “we begin to see what I call a ‘soft landing,’” a gradual lowering in the number of cases, he added.

Osterholm sees no evidence, however, that COVID is turning into a seasonal virus like the flu and that one vaccine a year will suffice, like some White House officials recently suggested.

The virus, he says, is a “three act play.”

“I think we’re only in the second act,” he said. “That’s the problem.”

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Ben Affleck Calls Justice League the “Nadir” of His Career

Image: Warner Bros.

The development of 2017 (and later 2021’s) Justice League is one of the most well-documented messes of a film in recent history, and its stars are still feeling its impact years later. Ray Fisher’s spoken about his time working on the film the most, but this weekend, it’s Ben Affleck in the spotlight for his words on the troubled film.

Affleck, speaking to the LA Times, was asked about his short-lived rocky time as Batman that began with 2016’s Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. At the time, the 49-year-old actor was reported to also be headlining, writing, and directing a solo Batman movie that would eventually become The Batman. But it was his alcohol addiction and the realization of where his life was going that made him drop out to seek treatment. “I looked at it [Batman] and thought, ‘I’m not gonna be happy doing this. The person who does this should love it,’” Affleck recalled. “I probably would have loved doing it at 32 or something. But it was the point where I started to realize it’s not worth it.”

Speaking rather candidly, the actor continued to talk about how Justice League in particular was what he considered “the nadir” of his career. With everything going on at the time — his divorce, the “competing agendas” at Warner Bros., and the death of director Zack Snyder’s daughter Autumn — working on the film was just torture. Describing it as “everything that I didn’t like about this,” he knew that was the moment where he had to leave Batman entirely, but also added that at that point in his life, anything could’ve set him off. “It’s not even about, like, Justice League was so bad. Because it could have been anything.” Bleak as it sounds for Affleck, there is somewhat of a happy ending here: he’s returning to the character for November’s Flash movie, and it sounds like he had some fun with his iteration of the character before putting him to rest.

Now that Batman’s behind him, Affleck’s reorienting himself towards pursuing projects he genuinely wants to do, like last year’s The Last Duel. While the film underperformed financially, his performance as Count Pierre d’Alençon was something he enjoyed doing, and many viewers enjoyed watching. “I really loved the movie!…I was disappointed more people didn’t see it, but I can’t chase what’s going to be cool.” That realization of needing to stick to his guns is what he thinks will be better for every actor going forward, and the industry in general. “I’m not preoccupied with notions of success or failure about money or commercial success, because those things really corrupt your choices. Then what happens is the movies are less interesting and you’re less good.”


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Austria becomes first EU country to go into full lockdown this autumn

Streets in the city center of Vienna, Austria, are empty on November 22. (Lisa Leutner/AP)

Austria on Monday became the first nation in the European Union to go into full lockdown this autumn.

The 20-day national lockdown came into force at midnight, meaning all people — vaccinated or not — can only leave their homes for essential reasons such as food, work and school. Non-essential shops are closed.

The lockdown will be reviewed after an initial 10 days, as per law.

The tough new restrictions come as the country battles a surge in Covid-19 infections. Last week Austria’s seven-day incidence rate passed 1,000 per 1000,000 inhabitants for the first time during the pandemic, according to the Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety (AGES).

On Tuesday, the country of roughly 9 million also reported 16,717 cases — its highest number of cases in a single day.

Just under 66% of the population are fully vaccinated — one of western Europe’s lower rates — according to figures from the Ministry of Health, last updated on Saturday. However the vaccination rate curve has been increasing in recent days, ministry data shows.

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