Tag Archives: Contracted

5 Reasons Why You Haven’t Contracted Covid-19 Yet

Image: Alina Rosanova (Shutterstock)

We have been battling Covid for a few years now and there are some people who have never been diagnosed with the disease. Are they an anomaly? A special kind of person? How are people dodging this disease?

Dr. Melissa Clarke is here with a few reasons why, and according to her, “The fact of the matter is that those who have remained COVID-free are a minority segment of the population. Only a portion of the population has remained Covid-free; the disease is everywhere.”

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1. Masks

The first reason is masking. Dr. Melissa Clarke is confident that masking has been a significant help in preventing the spread of Covid believing that, “The healthiest people are those who have been devoted maskers throughout the pandemic.” There are an overwhelming amount of masks to choose to wear, but the best are N95s, as they provide the most protection. The next highest level of protection is KN95 masks. Surgical masks provide much less protection, and cloth masks are very ineffective.

2. Social distancing

The second reason is that you might be good at physical distancing. Distancing allows circulation to happen, keeping the infected particles from crowding. Those who think they’ve evaded the virus this long may have been able to successfully physically distance themselves, which includes working from home, avoiding gathering indoors in crowded places, and staying isolated from household members while they were infected with COVID.

The next two reasons are still being researched.

3. Built up antibodies

You might have a lot of immune cells and antibodies built up in your system from prior common cold infections caused by other previous coronaviruses. These people have had some built-in protection to keep them from getting infected by SARS COVID 2 coronavirus.

4. Genetics

The fourth potential reason that is being researched is genetics. A minority of people’s bodies may not be vulnerable enough to the virus because of genetic variations that make it harder for the Coronavirus to bind to and get inside their cells.

5. You may have unknowingly had it

And lastly, the majority of people who think they have not gotten Covid likely had it but never realized it. According to Dr. Melissa Clarke, “40% of people who get infected will never develop symptoms, and many more had mild symptoms so never got tested for COVID, and hence never knew they had it.”

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Your sore throat can determine if you have contracted Covid-19. Here’s how to understand

On similar tracks, the common symptom of common cold – sore throat- can also determine of you have contracted the coronavirus or not. 

In a recent media briefing World Health Organization (WHO) chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus spoke of a new sub-variant of the highly transmissible Omicron variant of Covid-19 that has now been detected in India.

Omicron sub-variants BA.4, BA.5 may fuel into a new Covid infection surge, a top health official in India said on 8 July.

Ghebreyesus also talked about the global sudden surge in coronavirus cases. “Globally reported cases have increased nearly 30 per cent over the past two weeks. Four out of six of the WHO subregions saw cases increase in the last week,” he said. “In Europe and America, BA.4 and BA.5 are driving waves. In countries like India a new sub-lineage of BA.2.75 has also been detected, which we’re following,” he added.

The SARs-CoV-2 virus is a respiratory illness just like a common cold or influenza. It can impact both the upper and the lower respiratory tract giving light to several symptoms.

Sore throat for symptom

With the oncoming monsoon season after a difficult phase of prolonged heat wave, the season change has caused viral fever with cough and cold in many. 

At such a time, sore throat is very common among patients and recently experts believe the duration of your symptom could reveal whether you have Covid-19 or not. 

However, there are no evidence to support that the sore throat and a Covid-19 are throat are any different. 

What happens during sore throat?

Sore throat is one of the most common symptoms that arises with respiratory infections. Other than that, fever, cough, runny nose, and sneezing are some of the other most commonly reported symptoms in people infected with Covid or common cold/flu.

If you develop a sore throat due to Covid-19, you may experience pain, scratchiness, thickness in your throat, especially while swallowing something. There could be a dry, irritating feeling which could be an outcome of inflammation in the back of your throat.

How to differentiate between Covid and non Covid sore throat?

The best way to differentiate between COVID and common cold/flu is by looking at the severity of the disease and how fast the viruses travel. Covid-19 seems to spread more easily than the flu or the common cold and takes more time when it comes to recovery.

According to the data collected by the UK’s ZOE Covid Symptom Study app, while a sore throat is a less well-known symptom of Covid, it is an early sign of the disease and common among children and adults aged 65 and above.

Besides being “relatively mild”, experts in charge of the app suggest that sore throat from Covid lasts no more than five days.

Anyone suffering from sore throat for over five days should get themselves tested for some other illness, as per the experts.

Reportedly, a Covid sore throat “usually” appears in the first week of illness and can improve “quite quickly”.

“It feels worse on the first day of infection but gets better on each following day,” researchers at ZOE explain.

While sore throat is a commonly reported symptom of COVID-19, it is not the only one. According to the ZOE Covid app, 69% of users have reported headache, making it a leading symptom.

Other signs and symptoms of Covid-19

A person should take a Covid-19 test if they are suffering from the illnesses listed below

– Fever or chills

– Cough

– Fatigue

– Muscle or body aches

– New loss of taste or smell

– Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing

– Congestion or runny nose

– Gastrointestinal issues like nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, diarrhea

Remedies for Covid sore throat

One must drink plenty of warm water and stay hydrated. You can also mix a spoonful of honey to soothe the irritation and inflammation in the throat.

Gargling with saltwater is also read to be a soothing practice. You can also do such on throat lozenges, which helps keep your throat moist.

Make sure you get enough rest so that your body’s immune system is recharged and can combat infections efficiently.

In case the home remedies fail, you can take over-the-counter medications prescribed by your doctors to ease your pain.

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Data show Chinese factory activity contracted again in May

SINGAPORE — Shares in Asia-Pacific were mixed in Tuesday trade as investors watched for market reaction to the release of official Chinese factory activity data for May. Oil prices rose after EU leaders agreed to ban 90% of Russian crude.

The Shanghai Composite in mainland China was close to flat while the Shenzhen Component dipped 0.196%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index traded 0.18% higher.

China’s official manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index for May came in at 49.6, an improvement over April’s reading of 47.4.

The May reading was above the 48.6 level expected from a Reuters poll but still below the 50-point mark that separates growth from contraction. PMI readings are sequential and represent month-on-month expansion or contraction.

The Nikkei 225 in Japan hovered close to the flatline while the Topix index declined 0.09%. Over in South Korea, the Kospi climbed 0.1%.

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Australian stocks were lower as the S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.23%.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan traded little changed.

Markets in the U.S. were closed on Monday for a holiday.

Oil prices rise after EU agrees on Russia sanctions

Oil prices traded higher in the morning of Asia hours, after European Union leaders agreed to ban most Russian oil for its invasion of Ukraine by the end of 2022.

The agreement would “effectively cut around 90% of oil imports from Russia to the EU by the end of the year,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a tweet.

International benchmark Brent crude futures gained 0.62% to $122.43 per barrel. U.S. crude futures jumped 2.41% to $117.84 per barrel.

Currencies

The U.S. dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of its peers, was at 101.616 — still off levels above 102 seen last week.

The Japanese yen traded at 128.08 per dollar following yesterday’s weakening from levels below 127.2 against the greenback. The Australian dollar was at $0.7184, against an earlier high of $0.7203.

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Jimmy Kimmel tests positive for COVID-19 again… two weeks after family contracted the virus

Jimmy Kimmel reveals John Mulaney and Andy Samberg will fill in for him on his late night show after he contracted COVID-19 again… two weeks after his family came down with the virus

  • Jimmy Kimmel announced he tested positive for COVID-19 again on Tuesday
  • The host, 54, revealed the news in a tweet, confirming he was ‘feeling fine’ and John Mulaney and Andy Samberg would fill in for him on his late night show
  • ‘I’m such a positive person, I tested positive AGAIN,’ the star tweeted
  • His latest announcement comes just two weeks after he opted to sit out on taping his show after his family comes down with COVID-19
  • In a tweet earlier this month, the dad-of-four joked: ‘Our daughter brought us covid (even though we specifically asked her not to)’
  • His latest announcement comes just two weeks after he opted to sit out of taping his show after his family comes down with the virus

Jimmy Kimmel announced he tested positive for COVID-19 for a second time on Tuesday, two weeks after members of his family contracted the virus.

The 54-year-old late-night host revealed the news in a cheeky tweet, which confirmed he was ‘feeling fine’ and had scheduled two comedians to step in for him during his absence.

‘I’m such a positive person, I tested positive AGAIN,’ the star tweeted. ‘The great John @Mulaney & Andy Samberg @TheLonelyIsland have graciously agreed to host @JimmyKimmelLive for me tomorrow.’

Yikes: Jimmy Kimmel announced he tested tests positive for coronavirus again on Tuesday, just two weeks after members of his family contracted the virus

His latest announcement comes just two weeks after he opted to sit out on taping his show after his family came down with COVID-19. 

In a tweet earlier this month, the dad-of-four joked: ‘Our daughter brought us covid (even though we specifically asked her not to).’

At the time, he assured his followers that he wasn’t experiencing all major symptoms or complications from the illness. 

Out sick: The 54-year-old late-night host revealed the news in a cheeky tweet, which confirmed he was ‘feeling fine’ and already scheduled two comedians to step in for him during his absence

‘I’m such a positive person, I tested positive AGAIN,’ the star tweeted. ‘The great John @Mulaney & Andy Samberg @TheLonelyIsland have graciously agreed to host @JimmyKimmelLive for me tomorrow’ (John Mulaney pictured in 2020)

Replacements: Kimmel revealed Andy Samberg will also be stepping up for him

‘All feeling fine, I am double vaxxed and boosted but the show must not go on,’ he continued. ‘Apologies to @TomCruise & @iliza and thanks to Mike Birbiglia @birbigs who’ll be filling in for me starting tomorrow night.’

Due to the short notice, his taping featuring Tom Cruise was canceled as he wasn’t able to get a guest host on such short notice.

Cruise was set to be his big guest as he promoted his upcoming Top Gun sequel, while comedian Iliza Shlesinger would also be appearing. 

Canceled: Jimmy joked that his daughter had gotten the family sick. It appeared that Monday’s show with Tom Cruise and Iliza Shlesinger would be scrapped completely

Family: He and his wife Molly McNearney, 44, share two young children: Jane, seven, and William, five; seen together on April 24 in Washington, D.C.

The late night host didn’t specify if everyone in his family had contracted COVID-19, or just some members.

He and his wife Molly McNearney, 44, share two young children: Jane, seven, and William, five.

He also has two adult children from his first marriage to Gina Kimmel: Katie, 30, and Kevin, 28. 

Out of the nest: He also has two adult children from his first marriage to Gina Kimmel: Katie, 30, and Kevin, 28; seen with Gillian Anderson on April 12

Jimmy was presumably referring to his youngest daughter Jane in his tweet, though it wasn’t clear if she was the likely vector for the COVID-19 infections, or if he was just joking with his fans.

Jimmy did manage to get comedian Mike Birbiglia to replace him while he was out.

Birbiglia, who also acts and co-wrote and directed the autobiographical film Sleepwalk With Me, will be performing on Tuesday night in Los Angeles as part of the Netflix Is a Joke comedy festival.

Perfect timing: Luckily for Jimmy, comedian Mike Birbiglia was in town to replace him earlier this month; seen in October in NYC

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Economy Contracted in the First Quarter, but Underlying Measures Were Solid

The U.S. economy contracted in the first three months of the year, as supply constraints at home, demand shortfalls abroad and rapid inflation worldwide weighed on an otherwise resilient recovery.

Gross domestic product, adjusted for inflation, fell 0.4 percent in the first quarter, the Commerce Department said Thursday. It was the first decline since the early days of the pandemic, and a sharp reversal from the rapid 1.7 percent growth in the final three months of 2021.

But the negative number masked evidence of a recovery that economists said remained fundamentally strong. The decline — 1.4 percent on an annualized basis — mostly resulted from the way inventories and trade figure in the calculation, as well as reduced government spending as Covid-19 relief efforts wind down. Measures of underlying demand showed solid growth.

Most important, consumer spending, the engine of the U.S. economy, grew 0.7 percent in the first quarter despite soaring gas prices and the Omicron wave of the coronavirus, which restrained spending on restaurants, travel and similar services in January.

“Consumer spending is the aircraft carrier in the middle of the ocean — it just keeps plowing ahead,” said Jay Bryson, chief economist for Wells Fargo.

Still, that resilience could be tested in coming months as the fastest inflation in four decades continues to take a toll. Consumer prices rose at a 7 percent annual rate in the first quarter, and Americans’ after-tax incomes, adjusted for inflation, fell for the fourth quarter in a row.

The share of Americans listing inflation as the most significant household financial problem reached a record high in a Gallup survey released Thursday. A total of 46 percent rated their personal finances positively, down from 57 percent a year ago, when a majority of households were freshly benefiting from rounds of direct federal aid.

Despite that gloomy outlook, higher prices haven’t yet dampened consumers’ willingness to spend. But that will change if inflation keeps outpacing income gains, said Beth Ann Bovino, chief U.S. economist for S&P Global. The saving rate in the first quarter fell below its prepandemic level for the first time, as consumers saved less in order to keep spending.

“There’s a tipping point,” she said. Sometime this year, she added, “I’m expecting to see households starting to respond either by trading down, looking for deals, being less willing to pay higher prices.”

At the Melting Pot, a national chain of nearly 100 fondue restaurants, revenue dipped in early January as soaring coronavirus cases kept both diners and employees at home. But reservations bounced back quickly, and Valentine’s Day — “our Super Bowl,” said the chief executive, Bob Johnston — was the strongest on record. Sales this spring have been up 40 percent or more from 2019, and growth would be even stronger if franchisees could hire enough people.

“We’re not able to meet demand,” Mr. Johnston said. “We need more team members, and we’re struggling with keeping the bench full.”

The Melting Pot is raising wages to attract workers, and is paying more for many ingredients. So far, it has been able to raise prices to compensate for higher costs without losing business, but Mr. Johnston said he didn’t know how long that would continue.

“We try to be very careful with that and not overly confident that we can continue to raise prices with no impact,” he said. “There could be a line we can’t see, and we don’t want to cross that line.”

Republicans have seized on rising prices to blast President Biden’s economic policies. The report on Thursday gave them room to ramp up that criticism.

“Accelerating inflation, a worker crisis and the growing risk of a significant recession are the signature economic failures of the Biden administration,” Representative Kevin Brady of Texas, the top Republican on the House Ways and Means Committee, said in a news release.

The White House sought to dismiss the decline in gross domestic product as a result of quirks in the data that didn’t reflect the economy’s overall strength.

“While last quarter’s growth estimate was affected by technical factors, the United States confronts the challenges of Covid-19 around the world, Putin’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine and global inflation from a position of strength,” Mr. Biden said in a statement after the release, referring to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.

Indeed, the first-quarter weakness was partly related to the robustness of the U.S. recovery compared with the rest of the world. American retailers have responded to consumer demand by importing more. At the same time, U.S. exports have lagged because of weaker economic growth abroad. As a result, the trade deficit has ballooned, taking more than three percentage points away from the change in gross domestic product in the first quarter.

“The moral of the story is that the Omicron wave, the war in Ukraine and new lockdowns in China were more costly for growth abroad than they were at home,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist for the accounting firm Grant Thornton. “Domestic spending was remarkably resilient. It actually accelerated.”

Slower inventory expansion shaved nearly another percentage point off growth. Companies raced to build up inventories in late 2021 to make sure supply-chain disruptions didn’t leave them with bare shelves during the holiday season. That meant they didn’t have to do as much restocking as usual in the new year.

A measure of underlying growth that strips out the effects of inventories and trade rose 0.6 percent in the first quarter, adjusted for inflation. That was a modest acceleration from the end of last year.

Still, economists warned not to dismiss inventory and trade effects entirely. Both reflect the challenges that domestic producers are having meeting sky-high consumer demand.

“If we are importing things rather than making them here, that reflects that we are demanding more than we can produce,” said Wendy Edelberg, director of the Hamilton Project, an economic policy arm of the Brookings Institution. “It suggests that our economy just does not have the capacity to meet demand.”

The Federal Reserve is trying to tamp down demand by raising interest rates, which policymakers hope will tame inflation. But Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and a new round of Covid lockdowns in China have complicated its job by prolonging supply disruptions, which the central bank can do little about.

Matt Younger, who owns a small construction firm in Annapolis, Md., is dealing with long delays and higher prices for just about everything that goes into building a house: two-by-fours, plywood, windows, garage doors.

“It’s like playing a game of chess — I’ve got to be a couple moves ahead on everything in case I can’t get something,” he said.

Now, rising interest rates are threatening to cool off the red-hot real estate market. Mortgage applications have fallen sharply, sales of new and existing homes have also dipped, and anecdotal evidence from across the country suggests that the madcap bidding wars that characterized the residential real estate market for much of the past two years may be starting to fade.

So far, however, none of that has led to a slowdown in the construction business. Residential construction grew 0.5 percent in the first quarter, only slightly slower than in the final quarter of 2021, and applications for building permits rose in March. Mr. Younger’s business is still booming.

Mr. Younger said he had stopped offering fixed-price contracts because he couldn’t be sure in advance how much his materials would cost. Eventually, he suspects, some renovation customers will scale back projects to fit their budgets. But in terms of new homes, there is such a housing shortage in the Washington area that he doubts demand will dry up — and even if sales slow, he can always rent out the homes he is building.

Farther up the supply chain, however, some businesses are getting squeezed.

Marilyn Santiago runs Creative Architectural Resin Products, a Florida-based manufacturer of faux wood beams, shutters and other decorative features for homes. Ms. Santiago, like Mr. Younger, has seen the costs of her materials skyrocket in recent months. But she has struggled to pass those increases on to her homebuilder clients because they are looking for ways to keep their own costs down.

Construction delays are also wreaking havoc on Ms. Santiago’s business. Her products generally can’t be installed until after a house’s windows, and with windows on back order across the country her warehouse is overflowing with finished pieces that should have been delivered months ago.

“If you got to my house, you’re going to see a bunch of brackets, and my truck is a warehouse, too,” she said.

Now Ms. Santiago is considering getting a new warehouse — but storage prices have soared as well.

“It’s like everyone is taking advantage of the situation — and we as small-business owners, we are basically the punching bag of the supply-and-demand world,” she said.

Jeanna Smialek, Talmon Joseph Smith and Ana Swanson contributed reporting.

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U.S. GDP contracted 1.4 percent in 2022’s first quarter

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The U.S. economy unexpectedly shrank at a 1.4 percent annualized rate in the first three months of 2022 after more than a year of rapid growth, according to a Bureau of Economic Analysis report released Thursday. The new data is fueling concerns about a recession amid steady inflationary pressures and uncertainty over the war in Ukraine.

The slowdown — the first since the covid recession back in April 2020 — marks a reversal from the torrid pace that followed intense fiscal and monetary stimulus in the wake of the pandemic. Last year, for example, the U.S. economy grew by 5.7 percent, the fastest full-year clip since 1984.

While most economists still believe the expansion has plenty of momentum, particularly given the strength of the job market, recession fears have been rising, as inflation shows little signs of easing. The weakness comes amid worrisome signs that some of the world’s largest economies, including China and Europe, are grinding to a standstill.

“There are definitely clouds on the horizon,” said Kenneth Rogoff, an economics professor at Harvard University and former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund. “You can’t read too much into this number, but I do have significant concerns about the risk or recession, both in the U.S. and also in Europe and China, possibly all reinforcing each other like the perfect storm.”

Among the factors dragging down the economy at the beginning of 2022 were a reduction in retailers’ inventory purchases and a growing gap between U.S. exports and imports. The country’s trade deficit for goods — the difference between incoming and outgoing products — widened to a record high in March, the Commerce Department reported this week.

In addition, many businesses bought less inventory than they normally would in early 2022, because they had leftover merchandise from late last year, when they stocked up on extra goods to guard against supply chain shortages and delays. That drop in purchasing is likely to artificially drag down GDP numbers, economists say.

“We’ve got a resilient economy but signs of weakness are starting to show,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton. “The reality is that rate hikes and higher prices have consequences.”

Still, many parts of the economy remain robust. Employers have created more than 400,000 jobs for 11 straight months, sending the unemployment rate to a new pandemic low and near a multi-decade low. And despite higher costs, families and businesses are continuing to spend and invest.

Even so, the contraction creates new complications for the Biden administration and Democratic lawmakers, who until now have pointed to the strong recovery as a sign that the country is on the right track.

One of the economy’s biggest pressure points is inflation. Prices have risen 8.5 percent in the last year, posing the defining challenge for the Biden administration and Federal Reserve.

The central bank last month began raising interest rates in hopes of slowing the economy enough to corral prices, and Democrats are exploring new policies they hope could address high gas prices.

The Fed’s effort has already begun to curb demand for some big-ticket purchases. New-home sales have fallen for three months in a row, as rising interest rates deter would-be home buyers. Mortgage rates, which for years hovered around 3 percent, exceeded 5 percent this month for the first time in over a decade.

Chuck Wilson, co-owner of Boston Builders, a custom home builder in Westminster, Md., said demand for new homes has slowed markedly in recent weeks following the Fed’s decision. At the same time, just about every building component — including shingles, siding and lumber — has gotten costlier, he added.

“Home buyers are pulling back, because interest rates are going up and prices are through the roof,” Wilson said. “I’m finishing up a house now, but I don’t have any new contracts signed. There is very little good to report.”

Economists say some form of slowdown was inevitable, given the economy’s rapid recovery last year. But they remain divided over whether the latest reading represents a one-time deceleration or a sign that the economy is taking a turn for the worse. Many still say they expect the economy to bounce back later this year, with gross domestic product growing between 2.5 and 3 percent in 2023, despite bumps along the way.

“When the Fed has to raise interest rates as far as they say they’re going to, recession risks are high,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “There’s just no graceful way for the economic plane to land on the tarmac. It might land without crashing, but it’s going to be a scary ride.”

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In March, people who are fully vaccinated contracted COVID-19 about as much as those not fully vaccinated

The state Department of Health Services released new COVID-19 data for the first time in three months this week surrounding the differences in illness, hospitalization and death rates among residents not fully vaccinated and those fully vaccinated.

The DHS found that in March, those not fully vaccinated were being diagnosed with COVID-19 at a similar rate as those who were fully vaccinated. To be exact, people not fully vaccinated were diagnosed with COVID-19 at a rate 1.1 times higher than people who were fully vaccinated. The state attributes this finding to the omicron variant.

Differences in hospitalization and death rates were also significantly smaller than previous months. According to March data, people not fully vaccinated were hospitalized at a rate 2.4 times higher than fully vaccinated people, and they died at a 3.4 times higher rate.

When the DHS last reported illness after vaccination data it was in January with December data, it found residents not fully vaccinated were 10 times more likely to be hospitalized and 14 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than the fully vaccinated.

The state also provided data for January and February and it found that people not fully vaccinated were diagnosed with COVID-19 at a rate 1.3 times higher than people who were fully vaccinated in those two months.

In January, people not fully vaccinated were 3.4 times more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 and 7.4 times more likely to die from it.

In February, people not fully vaccinated were 2.8 times more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 and 5.5 times more likely to die from it.

The newly added data for January, February and March 2022 comes after delays from “technical difficulties” with how the data was gathered and stored.

Track COVID and the vaccine in Wisconsin: See the latest data on cases, deaths and administered doses

Latest COVID-19 numbers

  • New cases reported (Friday): 804

  • New deaths reported (Friday), confirmed: 7

  • New deaths reported (Friday), probable: 0

  • New deaths reported (this week), confirmed: 38

  • New deaths reported (this week), probable: 8

  • Number hospitalized: 140 (intensive care: 30); down 131 patients from a month ago

  • Seven-day average of daily cases: 626 (up 271 cases from one month ago)

  • Seven-day average of confirmed daily deaths: 3 (down 28 deaths from a month ago)

  • Seven-day average of new deaths reported within 30 days of death: 5 (down 7 deaths from a month ago)

  • Seven-day average positivity rate: 5.4% of all COVID-19 tests given

  • Total cases since the start of pandemic: 1,401,454

  • Total confirmed deaths: 12,861

  • Total probable deaths: 1,529

Latest vaccine numbers

  • Total doses administered: 9,430,507

  • Seven-day average of daily doses: 1,984

  • Weekly doses administered: 9,436 (as of Friday)

  • Total booster doses administered: 1,991,857

  • Seven-day average of daily booster doses: 997

  • Residents who have received one dose: 3,745,977 (64.2% of the population)

  • Residents who are fully vaccinated: 3,554,423 (60.9% of the population)

  • Residents who have received a booster dose: 1,972,539 (33.8% of the population)

  • Residents ages 5 to 11 with at least one dose: 133,626 (27.4% of age group)

  • Residents ages 12 to 17 with at least one dose: 273,017 (61.4% of age group)

  • Residents ages 18 to 24 with at least one dose: 327,476 (60.1% of age group)

  • Residents ages 25 to 34 with at least one dose: 475,427 (64.2% of age group)

  • Residents ages 35 to 44 with at least one dose: 499,859 (69.2% of age group)

  • Residents ages 45 to 54 with at least one dose: 500,689 (71.6% of age group)

  • Residents ages 55 to 64 with at least one dose: 640,124 (78.1% of age group)

  • Residents 65 and older with at least one dose: 895,759 (85.5% of age group)

Variant case sequencing

State and private labs regularly do further tests on a portion of positive COVID-19 samples to find the prevalence of different variants of the virus. The numbers below are just a fraction of the total number of variant cases.

Omicron variant was identified in more than 99% of tests sequenced during the week starting March 13. “Other” variants were identified in less than 1% of tests sequenced.

Contact Drake Bentley at (414) 391-5647 or DBentley1@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DrakeBentleyMJS.

Our subscribers make this reporting possible. Please consider supporting local journalism by subscribing to the Journal Sentinel at jsonline.com/deal.

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This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: The fully vaccinated contracted COVID-19 about as much as those not



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Those who haven’t contracted COVID may be key to defeating virus

(WXYZ) — According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s COVID Data Tracker, over half of Americans may have avoided getting infected with coronavirus.

Scientists say those who haven’t caught COVID-19 may hold the key to defeating it.

There is evidence that suggests some people may have what’s called “super immunity,” meaning their bodies appear to be naturally resistant to the virus and the immunity isn’t traced to vaccination.

Now, this type of natural immunity is considered rare. But it’s important that scientists study these cases. We need to understand why some people are able to avoid getting infected because the answers could shed light on how to beat this incredibly contagious virus.

Here’s a good example: Researchers in the United Kingdom followed a group of health care workers early in the pandemic. Some of those workers got rid of the virus from their systems fairly quickly, even before their bodies made antibodies to fight off the virus.

When the scientists looked into why this might have happened, they found that exposure to previous seasonal cold viruses had played a key role, most likely because T-cells provided cross-protection. T-cells are produced by our immune system, and our bodies make them to help stop the spread of infection.

While T-cells may not have recognized the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, the cells could have recognized genetic parts of previous seasonal coronaviruses that are also contained in the new virus behind the pandemic.

If T-cells can detect different parts of coronavirus and fight it off, then scientists could study how this happens and potentially improve our vaccines by targeting the same parts of the virus that the T-cells are targeting.

Right now, our T-cells that are produced by COVID-19 vaccines or because of a COVID-19 infection actually target the virus’ spike protein, which we all know changes, mutates and causes new variants to pop up.

So, if our vaccines could instead attack the virus’ internal machinery and not the spike protein, then they could become more efficient at preventing infection and hopefully prevent infection from all future coronaviruses as well. There are companies working on a new single shot that would hopefully offer this broader protection.

In the meantime, it’s important for people to get vaccinated and boosted and to consider a second booster shot if you’re 50 and older. Our numbers may still be low, but there’s one thing we know with certainty, and that’s the virus is very unpredictable.

Additional Coronavirus information and resources:

View a global coronavirus tracker with data from Johns Hopkins University.

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Long COVID symptoms may depend on the variant a person contracted

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Different variants of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID, may give rise to different long COVID symptoms, according to a study that will be presented at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases (ECCMID 2022) in Lisbon next month. 

Italian researchers suggested that individuals who were infected with the alpha variant of the virus displayed different emotional and neurological symptoms compared to those who were infected with the original form of SARS-CoV-2, an early release from the ECCMID regarding the study. 

FILE – In this April 20, 2020, file photo, resident physician Leslie Bottrell stands outside a room at an Intensive Care Unit as a nurse suctions the lungs of a COVID-19 patient at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Yonkers, N.Y. 
(AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

The study led by Dr. Michele Spinicci and colleagues from the University of Florence and Careggi University Hospital in Italy performed a retrospective observational study of 428 patients who were treated at the Careggi University Hospital’s post-COVID outpatient service between June 2020 and June 2021. According to the release, that was the period when the original form of SARS-CoV-2 and the Alpha variant were affecting the population.

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According to the report, at least three-quarters 325/428 (76%) of patients reported at least one persistent symptom. The most common symptoms reported by the group of long COVID patients were shortness of breath (37%) and chronic fatigue (36%).  These were followed by sleep problems (16%), brain fog (13%) and visual problems (13%), according to the release. 

The researchers’ analysis suggested that individuals with severe cases, who required immunosuppressant drugs such as tocilizumab, were six times as likely to report long COVID symptoms and those who were treated with high flow oxygen support were 40 percent more likely to experience long hauler symptoms. 

The release also noted that women compared to men, were almost twice as likely to report long COVID symptoms. The authors noted that patients with type 2 diabetes seemed to have a lower risk of developing long COVID symptoms and said further studies are needed to better understand this finding. 

Business woman sleeping by closing laptop while working, concept of new normal burnout, over or late night work at home during coronavirus covid-19 pandemic.
(iStock)

Upon further evaluation of the long COVID symptoms, the researchers discovered a substantial change in the pattern of neurological and cognitive/emotional problems reported by patients infected during the period between March and December 2020, when the original SARS-COV-2 was dominant, compared to those reported by patients infected between January and April 2021 when alpha was the dominant variant.

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The release stated that the researchers found when the alpha variant was the dominant strain, the prevalence of muscle aches and pain, insomnia, brain fog and anxiety/depression significantly increased, while loss of smell, dysgeusia (a distorted sense of taste), and impaired hearing were less common.

“Many of the symptoms reported in this study have been measured, but this is the first time they have been linked to different COVID-19 variants”, Dr. Spinicci said in the release. “The long duration and broad range of symptoms reminds us that the problem is not going away, and we need to do more to support and protect these patients in the long term. Future research should focus on the potential impacts of variants of concern and vaccination status on ongoing symptoms.”

Data for the study was obtained from electronic medical records of patients who were hospitalized with COVID-19 and discharged 4-12 weeks before being seen for outpatient service. The data for the study included a questionnaire on persistent symptoms completed by the individuals on average 53 days after hospital discharge. Additional data included patient demographics, medical history, and microbiological and clinical COVID-19 course, the release said. 

Emergency Room nurses speak to each other at the Houston Methodist The Woodlands Hospital on August 18, 2021, in Houston, Texas.
(Brandon Bell/Getty Images)

Dr. Aaron Glatt, chief of infectious diseases at Mount Sinai South Nassau in New York, was not part of the study but told Fox News that it would be surprising if there were not such differences. 

Glatt, who is also a spokesperson for the Infectious Diseases Society of America also said, “It is eminently clear that the different variants have different capabilities. Clearly, some of them are more contagious, and some of them are able to cause more severe illness. Likewise, some variants have a greater predilection for different age groups. Therefore, it is no surprise that there may be differences in “long COVID” between the variants as well.”

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The release also stated that the authors acknowledged, “The study was observational and does not prove cause and effect, and they could not confirm which variant of the virus caused the infection in different patients—which may limit the conclusions that can be drawn.”

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China Evergrande shares briefly pop in reopen after developer says contracted sales dropped 38.7% in 2021

An exterior view of China Evergrande Centre in Hong Kong, China March 26, 2018.

Bobby Yip | Reuters

BEIJING — Indebted property developer China Evergrande’s contracted sales plunged last year as the real estate giant struggled to repay creditors.

A filing Tuesday showed the company’s contracted sales of properties totaled 443.02 billion yuan ($69.22 billion) last year, down 38.7% from the 723.25 billion yuan in contracted sales reported for 2020.

Evergrande shares reopened higher in Hong Kong on Tuesday afternoon, with shares trying to hold gains of about 3% before turning lower.

Trading was halted as of 9 a.m. Monday, with shares at 1.59 Hong Kong dollars (20 cents) each. That’s just above the all-time intraday low of 1.42 Hong Kong dollars per share set on Dec. 24, according to FactSet.

The company added it “will continue to actively maintain communication with creditors, strive to resolve risks and safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of all parties.”

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Evergrande shares have plunged more than 88% over the last 250 trading days. The company missed payments to creditors in December, Fitch Ratings said, sending the developer into default.

Evergrande is the largest Chinese real estate developer by issuance of offshore, U.S. dollar-denominated debt, which stood at $19 billion last year. The developer had a total of $300 billion in liabilities as of last year.

The company was China’s second largest developer by sales in 2020.

Like other Chinese real estate developers, Evergrande’s business model relies heavily on sales of apartments to customers before the units are completed. S&P Global Ratings said in November that an Evergrande default “is highly likely” since the company is no longer able to sell new homes.

Evergrande added that a demolition order for its Ocean Flower Island project only applied to 39 buildings, according to Tuesday’s filing with the Hong Kong stock exchange.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

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