Tag Archives: COVID-19

4-year-old girl dies shortly after testing positive for COVID-19 in Galveston County, officials say

GALVESTON COUNTY – As COVID-19 cases are continuing to surge nationwide and in the state of Texas, Galveston County is reporting its youngest COVID-19 related death.

Kali Cook, 4, died in her sleep shortly after testing positive for COVID-19, her family confirmed Thursday to KPRC, KSAT’s sister station.

Karra Harwood, Kali’s mother, told KPRC that within a day of Kali’s positive test, she succumbed to the virus.

“I just wanted everybody to know that it happened so fast,” Harwood said. “By 2 a.m. [Kali] started to run a fever. My mom came down and asked my fiancee if he could help her take some medicine. We gave her some medicine and by 7 a.m. she was gone.”

Karra and other members of her family have also tested positive for COVID-19, shortly after Kali’s positive result. She also confirmed her family was not vaccinated.

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“I got tested for COVID and became positive. I tried to quarantine myself from them. We have a two-story home. They were upstairs and I was downstairs,” Harwood told KPRC. “My 5-month-old baby even has it. I’ve taken him to the hospital every night since because I feel like they’re not getting better, and I’m terrified.”

On Thursday, the Galveston County Health District confirmed Kali’s death was the first COVID-19 related death of a child in the area.

KPRC reports that medical examiners also determined her cause of death was from the virus.

However, health officials said they wouldn’t count Kali’s death as a COVID-19 death until the autopsy was completed, which began around 1 p.m., Friday.

“[They told me] she did die because of Covid, but they are doing an autopsy to see if there are any underlying medical conditions that could have caused her to go so fast,” Harwood told KPRC.

As the Delta variant is accounting for the majority of COVID-19 cases nationwide, and with children under the age of 12 still not eligible to receive a vaccine, the Galveston County Local Health Authority said it’s not surprising that more children are testing positive.

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“Now we’re seeing our largest group of people with COVID is children under 10. So the fact that we’re getting more and more children under 10 getting COVID, it shouldn’t be surprising that some of them are getting sick. Some of them are getting in the hospital and some dying. So in that way, it’s not a surprise,” Dr. Philip Keiser, Galveston County Local Health Authority, said. “It’s very sad. It’s very sobering. I hope that this will be an opportunity for people to start putting away the anger that they have about COVID and realize that this is serious.”

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4-Year-Old Texas Preschooler Kali Cook Dies of COVID Within Hours of First Symptoms

A Texas preschooler died of COVID-19 this week within hours of a fever first coming on, her family says. Kali Cook, 4, died in her sleep early Tuesday morning, about five hours after she was found to have a fever, her mother Karra Harwood told the Houston Chronicle.

“Kali was perfectly fine, and then she was gone,” her mother was quoted saying. “It took her so fast.”

The preschooler at Bacliff’s Kenneth E. Little Elementary School had enjoyed a pleasant evening with her family less than 12 hours before becoming the youngest child to die of the virus in Galveston County.

Kali had just started preschool last month—and she loved it, telling her mother that she “can’t wait to go to school.”

The rambunctious 4-year-old passed away just one day after her mother, brother, and 5-month-old sister learned they were infected. The family is currently quarantined at home.

The Galveston County Health Department confirmed that a young girl died of COVID-19 died on Tuesday morning, calling it “the first in someone 10 and younger” in the county.

Both Harwood and Galveston County health officials are unsure of where Kali contracted the virus. Health officials have expressed doubt about the possibility of Kali contracting it in her classroom.

As the family holes up in their home, financial realities have begun to seep in. Harwood started a GoFundMe page to help pay for Kali’s funeral and medical expenses. So far, they’ve raised $16,568 of their $20,000 goal. In the page’s description box, Harwood writes that Kali’s “heart was too pure for this cruel world” and describes how the family is collectively “broken and lost” while attempting to navigate their grief.

The donation page is filled with comments sending their best to the family. “Pro-Vax or Anti-Vax, no one should lose their child at such a young age. I am deeply sorry for your loss,” wrote Rene Ureta.

Kali’s tragic death comes amid a massive surge of the delta variant, which has plagued young children at rates far higher than expected. According to the Texas Department of State Health Services, as of Sep. 10, at least 2,384 children have contracted COVID-19 in the state.

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Jefferson County shuts down mobile vaccine sites after harassment

JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colo. — Frustrations that have been boiling over recently came to a head over the weekend in Jefferson and Gilpin counties.

The executive director of Jefferson County Public Health, Dr. Dawn Comstock, had to shut down several of mobile vaccine clinics after one driver ran over their sign, others screamed profanities at the vaccine staff and one driver even threw water on a nurse.

“Unfortunately, this isn’t new,” Comstock said. “We’ve had someone throw live fireworks. We’ve had someone drive up onto a curb toward a vaccination staff member.

Comstock says she’s fed up.

“I respect everyone’s right to their own opinion. What I do not respect is violence and contempt and acting abusively toward Jefferson County Public Health staff,” Comstock said.

The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office released a statement Wednesday saying, in part, that it is “aware of instances of bad behavior.”

The statement goes on to say the sheriff’s office has increased patrols around the sites, “however, our investigations have not resulted in criminal charges. We will continue to investigate any threats brought to our attention and will file appropriate charges against individuals involved in criminal activity.”

Comstock says she’s seen enough.

“I’m tired of being polite and calling it misinformation,” Comstock said. “It is lies, and those lies are contributing to continued loss and suffering in our community.”

Cara Bradbury, the executive director of Colorado Association of Local Public Health Officials, said the work alone is already “emotionally taxing” for health care workers, but the added divisiveness has made it even worse.

“It’s very distressing when you feel like your whole aim was to make your community stronger and better and you have folks in your community who don’t see the value in your community or what you’re doing.”

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Minnesota’s COVID-19 update for Wednesday, September 8

Due to the Labor Day holiday, data from Sept. 4-7 is included in today’s update. The numbers will be higher than usual because of the reporting lag. 

Wednesday’s COVID-19 update from the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) includes 5,777 new cases and 9 newly reported deaths, including three people in their 40s from Becker, Otter Tail and Ramsey counties. Seven of the nine deaths happened in August, with two occurring in September. 

The state’s death toll is 7,865 since the start of the pandemic. Of the total deaths, 58.0% (4,555) were residents of long-term care.

As of Sept. 6, the state reported that 3,342,677 people have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, while 3,149,597 people have completed the vaccine series. The percentage of Minnesota’s population with at least one shot, based on age group:

  • 12-15: 52%
  • 16-17: 58%
  • 18-49: 62%
  • 50-64: 74%
  • 65+: 92%
  • Total population: 60%

56.6% of Minnesota’s total population, including children under the age of 12 who are not eligible for the vaccine, has completed the vaccine series. That jumps to 67.0% when excluding kids under the age of 12. MDH has a public dashboard to track vaccine progress in Minnesota, and you can view it here.

Hospitalizations

Through Sept. 7, the number of people with COVID-19 hospitalized in Minnesota was 654 (up from 615 reported Tuesday). 

Of those hospitalized, 174 people are in intensive care and 480 were in general hospital care. The spring surge saw a high of 202 patients in intensive care and 517 people in general hospital care.

Here’s how many people are hospitalized based on regional location, though this doesn’t mean that each patient contracted the virus in these specific regions, as they may have been diverted depending upon available staffed beds.

  • Metro: 93 ICU, 260 non-ICU
  • Central: 28 ICU, 56 non-ICU
  • Southeast: 24 ICU, 66 non-ICU
  • Northeast: 13 ICU, 28 non-ICU
  • Northwest: 5 ICU, 14 non-ICU
  • South-central: 5 ICU, 36 non-ICU
  • Southwest: 2 ICU, 13 non-ICU
  • West-central: 4 ICU, 7 non-ICU

Testing and positivity rates.

The 5,777 positive results in Wednesday’s update were from 81,167 completed tests, creating a test positivity rate of 7.11%.

According to Johns Hopkins University, Minnesota’s test positivity rate over the past seven days is 6.56%.

The World Health Organization recommends that a percent positive rate (total positives divided by total completed tests) of below 5% for at least two weeks is necessary to safely keep the economy open.

Coronavirus in Minnesota by the numbers

  • Total tests: 11,684,659 (up from 11,603,529)
  • People tested: 5,199,753 (up from 5,152,429)
  • People with at least 1 vaccine shot: 3,149,597 (up from 3,332,860)
  • People who have completed vaccine series: 3,134,652 (up from 3,134,652)
  • Positive cases: 663,248 (up from 657,492)
  • Deaths: 7,865 – 433 of which are “probable*” (up from 7,856)
  • Patients no longer requiring isolation: 642,434 (up from 635,784)

* Probable deaths are patients who died after testing positive using the COVID-19 antigen test, which is thought to be less accurate than the more common PCR test.

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Former NBA player Cedric Ceballos hospitalized with COVID-19 asks for prayers: “My fight is not done.”

Former NBA player Cedric Ceballos has spent the past 10 days hospitalized in an intensive care unit with COVID-19, he announced on Twitter. Ceballos, 52, is asking his friends and family for prayers.

“On my 10th day in ICU, COVID-19 is officially kicking my butt,” Ceballos tweeted Monday with a photo of him wearing an oxygen mask. “I am asking ALL family, friends, prayer warriors healers for your prayers and well wish for my recovery.”

“If I have done and anything to you in the past, allow me to publicly apologize,” he added. “My fight is not done.”

On August 27, the former NBA star first announced he had contracted COVID-19 on Instagram, forcing him to cancel a scheduled meet and greet. At the time, he told fans he was at home after a hospital visit and was hopeful for a quick recovery.

The Phoenix Suns drafted Ceballos in the second round of the 1990 NBA draft. He spent most of his 11-year career with the Suns but had stints with the Los Angeles Lakers, Miami Heat, Dallas Mavericks and Detroit Pistons. 

In 1995, he made the All-Star team with the Lakers but injury prevented him from competing. After leaving the Heat, he signed to several overseas teams before returning to the states. He also competed on the 30th season of the CBS show “The Amazing Race.”



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WHO says delta remains ‘most concerning’

Mirimus lab scientists preparing to test COVID-19 samples from recovered patients on April 8, 2020 in Brooklyn, New York.

Misha Friedman | Getty Images

The fast-spreading delta variant remains the “most concerning” coronavirus strain despite the emergence of the mu variant, World Health Organization officials said Tuesday.

The mu variant, which was added to the WHO’s list of variants “of interest” last week, has mutations that suggest it could evade the immune protection provided by natural infection or vaccination, Maria Van Kerkhove, the agency’s technical lead for Covid-19, said during a virtual press event. Still, the new variant — first detected in Colombia but now confirmed in at least 39 countries — hasn’t taken off like delta, she said.

“The delta variant for me is the one that’s most concerning because of the increased transmissibility,” Kerkhove said, adding it has at least double the transmissibility of the original ancestral virus that emerged in late 2019.

Delta has rapidly spread to at least 170 countries, including the U.S., since it was first detected in India in October, quickly becoming the dominant variant in many of those regions, according to the international health agency.

Mu, also known by scientists as B.1.621, is increasing its prevalence in some South American countries but is also decreasing in other regions of the world, especially where the delta variant is already circulating, she said.

Any new virus that emerges has to be able to compete with the “best of class,” and right now that is delta, said Dr. Mike Ryan, head of the WHO’s health emergencies program. The delta variant tends to “outcompete” other variants, like mu, he said.

It doesn’t matter if a new variant has genetic changes that allow it to evade the protection of vaccines if it can transmit efficiently, Ryan said.

“We will expect to see more” variants like delta, he said. “Not every variant means the sky is going to fall in. Each variant needs to be looked at for its characteristics in terms of its potential to cause more severe disease, its potential to transmit, its potential to escape vaccines.”

The agency is monitoring four variants “of concern”: alpha, which was first detected in the U.K.; beta, first detected in South Africa; gamma, first detected in Brazil, and delta. A variant of concern is generally defined as a mutated strain that’s either more contagious, more deadly or more resistant to current vaccines and treatments.

The WHO is also keeping a close watch on four other variants of interest — including lambda, first identified in Peru — that have caused outbreaks in multiple countries and have genetic changes that could make them more dangerous than other strains.

White House chief medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci addressed concerns about the mu variant last week, saying it wasn’t an immediate threat to the U.S.

“We’re paying attention to it, we take everything like that seriously, but we don’t consider it an immediate threat right now,” Fauci said at a press briefing Thursday.

The WHO has said more studies are required to understand the clinical characteristics of the new variant.

Right now it’s a “variant of interest,” Ryan said Tuesday. “If it’s of concern, then we really need to look at diagnostics and how we develop our vaccines.”

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Correction may strike stocks after record September: Tom Lee

Longtime market bull Tom Lee is predicting a profitable period for investors in September.

According to Lee, the S&P 500 is positioned to surge more than 100 points this month. However, he warns the positive momentum has an expiration date.

“We could have a really strong rally in September,” the Fundstrat Global Advisors’ co-founder and head of research told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Friday. “We didn’t think there was a window for a 10% correction for most of 2021. The window where we think you could start to have potentially a 10% pullback is October.”

Lee attributes the vulnerability to growing fiscal and monetary policy risks — as well as uncertainty surrounding the pandemic and flu season.

“We get that much closer to tapering,” the CNBC contributor said. “That’s really when the debt ceiling rhetoric comes back, and if there are going to be concerns about the debt ceiling, the bond market could panic.”

When there’s upheaval in the bond market, it typically spills to stocks. But in the meantime, Lee indicates he would be a buyer.

He sees uncertainty regarding Covid-19 delta cases and its economic impact pushing the Federal Reserve to stay dovish for longer. According to Lee, it’s a recipe for new market highs.

“The U.S. is still in an underlying expansion. This is a risk on formula,” said Lee, who ran equity strategy for JPMorgan Chase from 2007 until 2014.

He cites a crude oil price comeback and bitcoin’s return above $50,000 as evidence.

Lee’s top market picks still involve trades most tied to the economic recovery. He particularly likes energy, and materials. He also sees opportunities in FAANG stocks, otherwise known as Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Alphabet.

“My guess is that quite a number of investors thought we’d have a 10% correction in August,” Lee said. “So, money was taken off the table. Usually when people re-risk they start buying cyclical and epicenter ideas.”

Lee believes the S&P 500 could exceed 4,650 in September — 50 points above his year-end target. On Friday, the index closed at 4,535.43 and is about a quarter of a percent below its record high.

Disclosure: Tom Lee owns bitcoin.

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Marshalltown doctor’s message urging people to get vaccinated goes viral

MARSHALLTOWN, Iowa (WOI) – An Iowa Emergency Room doctor’s message urging people to get vaccinated is going viral.

UnityPoint Health Marshalltown Dr. Lance VanGundy said he was fed up after four days in a row of long shifts, and a few conversations with unvaccinated patients skeptical of the vaccines.

“I feel like I wouldn’t be doing my job if I didn’t say something,” Dr. VanGundy said.

So, from the front seat of his car, still in scrubs, he went live on Facebook last week.

He talked about not being able to admit patients or find open ICU beds in Iowa.

The video now has more than 2,100, and more than 17,000 views.

“I was just flabbergasted that I had just met a few more people who had access to the vaccine and these people were scared of taking the vaccine, and I just felt like it was time for me to say something,” he said.

VanGundy said the goal of the video was to share how COVID-19 is burdening the hospital system.

He wants Iowans to take the virus seriously and get vaccinated.

Copyright 2021 KCRG. All rights reserved.

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CEO of salad restaurant chain accused of ‘fat phobia’ for suggesting we ‘focus on overall health’ to fight COVID

The CEO and co-founder of Sweetgreen, a fast casual restaurant chain that sells salads, was accused of “fat phobia” after suggesting in a social media post that shedding fat and becoming healthier is a better solution to the COVID-19 pandemic than controversial face mask and vaccine mandates.

Sweetgreen CEO Jonathan Neman raised concerns about the connection between obesity and COVID-19 complications in a now-deleted LinkedIn post last Tuesday.

“78% of hospitalizations due to COVID are Obese and Overweight people. Is there an underlying problem that perhaps we have not given enough attention to? Is there another way to think about how we tackle ‘healthcare’ by addressing the root cause?” Neman wrote.

A worker sets up the salad bar inside a Sweetgreen Inc. restaurant in Boston, Massachusetts. (Adam Glanzman/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Noting that COVID “is here to stay for the foreseeable future,” Neman added that instead of focusing on “preventing infections,” we should “focus on overall health.”

“We have been quick to put in place mask and vaccine mandates but zero conversation on HEALTH MANDATES. All the while we have printed unlimited money to soften the blow the shutdowns have caused to our country,” Neman wrote. “What if we focused on the ROOT CAUSE and used this pandemic as a catalyst for creating a healthier future??”

Floating possible solutions, Neman suggested taxing processed foods and refined sugars “to pay for the impact of the pandemic” or even outlawing “the food that is making us sick.”

As Insider noted, critics accused Neman of “fat phobia” and called his post “incredibly fat-phobic” and “disgusting.”

What do data show?

While Neman’s post may not be politically correct, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified a strong link between COVID complications and obesity.

In fact, the CDC said in March that nearly 80% of people who were hospitalized, needed a ventilator, or died from COVID were overweight or obese. And while experts disagree that body mass index is an accurate metric for determining what constitutes “overweight” or “obese,” the key finding in the CDC’s study holds sturdy: having more extra fat increases the chances of experiencing COVID complications.

The CDC states that obesity triples the chances of being hospitalized due to COVID because obesity “is linked to impaired immune function” and “decreases lung capacity and reserve and can make ventilation more difficult.”

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Pfizer Covid booster shots likely ready Sept. 20, Anthony Fauci says

Top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci responds to accusations by Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) as he testifies before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee on Capitol hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., July 20, 2021.

J. Scott Applewhite | Reuters

The U.S. will likely start to widely distribute Pfizer Covid-19 booster shots during the week of Sept. 20, but the rollout for Moderna’s vaccine could be delayed, White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said Sunday.

The Biden administration has announced plans to offer third doses to people who received the Pfizer and Moderna shots, pending approval from public health officials. The U.S. recommends an additional shot eight months after the second dose.

Only the Pfizer vaccine booster may get Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention approval in time for a rollout the week of Sept. 20, Fauci said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” People who received Moderna shots may have to hold off for longer as the company waits for regulators to sign off on a third dose.

“Looks like Pfizer has their data in, likely would meet the deadline,” the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases told CBS. “We hope that Moderna would also be able to do it, so we could do it simultaneously.”

“But if not, we’ll do it sequentially,” he continued. “So the bottom line is, very likely, at least part of the plan will be implemented, but ultimately the entire plan will be.”

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Later Sunday, Fauci told CNN that for people who got two doses of the Moderna vaccine, “it’s better to wait” for a third Moderna dose than get a Pfizer shot. He noted that the U.S. plans to release data in the coming weeks on mixing vaccines from different manufacturers.

The Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine is the most widely administered in the U.S. More than 95 million people have received the full two-shot regimen, according to CDC data.

About 66 million people have been fully vaccinated with the Moderna shot. Meanwhile, about 14 million people have received the one-dose Johnson & Johnson shot. Regulators have not announced plans for a J&J booster.

In calling for third Pfizer and Moderna doses, U.S. health officials cited CDC data that found protection against infection waned several months after the second shot. More than 1.3 million people have received an additional shot after the U.S. authorized them for certain immunocompromised individuals, according to the CDC.

On Sunday, White House chief of staff Ron Klain told CNN’s “State of the Union” that the administration will have booster shots “ready to go” whenever regulators approve them for wider use.

An FDA advisory panel will review Pfizer’s application for a booster on Sept. 17, only three days before shots are supposed to start.

The Biden administration’s booster plan has sparked criticism within the U.S. and around the world. The World Health Organization has urged wealthy countries with higher vaccination rates to hold off on additional shots until poorer countries can give more people first vaccine doses.

As the virus spreads around the globe, it raises the prospect of new — and potentially more dangerous — variants emerging.

The White House has defended its booster plan, citing U.S. donations of vaccine doses to other countries. Last month, Fauci told CNBC that the U.S. has given 120 million doses to 80 countries.

“We are doing both,” he said of vaccinating Americans and people around the world.

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