Tag Archives: COVID-19

The Moderna vaccine makes more antibodies than Pfizer’s. Does it matter?

Ten months ago, the results of large clinical trials appeared almost too good to be true: Two messenger RNA vaccines reduced symptomatic COVID-19 cases by more than 90% in almost every group that got them.

Now, subtle differences between the Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE and Moderna Inc. vaccines are emerging across patient groups over time. One small U.S. study found waning levels of antibodies with Pfizer’s vaccine, particularly in an older group of people. And a larger study from Belgium found that Moderna’s shot may generate more antibodies than Pfizer’s.

But what this all means in the real world is still unclear. While hundreds of millions of doses of vaccines have been administered around the world, researchers are still working to understand the nuances of how long their protection lasts, and how it differs from one person to another.

Getting answers to those questions is a crucial step to determine who might need a booster shot, especially when it comes to older people and those with weakened immune systems. The more infectious delta variant, the rise of which has coincided with slight drop-offs in vaccine effectiveness, has raised the stakes and led governments to begin rolling out a third dose of the shots. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration will hear public arguments on Sept. 17 about whether or not to go ahead with booster shots of Pfizer’s vaccine.

Much of the focus has been on levels of antibodies, which serve as one of the immune system’s front-line defenses. One theory about Moderna’s vaccine is that it creates more of those antibodies because it uses a larger dose and the two doses are administered over a one-week longer period than Pfizer’s.

But antibodies are just one component of immunity, and it isn’t clear if they are the most important one, especially over the long-term.

“Do we know an antibody level that protects against COVID? The simple answer is we still do not know that,” said Paul Burton, Moderna’s chief medical officer, in a Friday call with reporters. Still, Moderna’s trial data show that a third shot six months after the second raises antibody levels “well into that comfort zone” back above levels seen in the initial late-stage trial.

Immune memory

Along with shorter-lasting antibodies, COVID-19 vaccines also trigger what’s essentially a long-term memory in the immune system. That memory appears to increase and become better at making variant-fighting antibodies over time. That longer-term protection, which includes what are known as T cells and memory B cells, is harder to measure in the lab than antibodies. But it’s thought to play an important role in preventing severe illness and hospitalizations.

But less than a year into the vaccine campaign, much of the research has focused on vaccine-derived antibodies, which help lock onto an invading pathogen and tag it for attack by the rest of the immune system.

A small U.S. study examined a group of nursing home patients and staff who got two doses of the Pfizer vaccine. It found antibody levels in both groups waned over time. But the 120 residents in the study, who had a median age of 76, started out with a much lower level of antibodies than the younger staff did.

A teenager receives a COVID-19 vaccine at a pop-up clinic in Middlefield, Connecticut. | CHRISTOPHER CAPOZZIELLO / THE NEW YORK TIMES

Over a number of months, “they end up in an even worse spot,” said David Canaday, an infectious disease physician and professor of medicine at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, who led the study, which was released as a preprint before publication in late August.

Two weeks after a second inoculation, neutralizing antibodies had fallen below the level of detection in 16% of nursing home residents who hadn’t had COVID-19 before their immunizations. Six months post-vaccination, 70% had extremely low levels. By contrast, only 16% of the 64 younger caregivers had such meager antibodies six months out, the research found.

“Definitely the protection will drop a fair amount with these levels of antibody loss,” Canaday said. But it’s unlikely such a loss will mean zero protection.

A second study compared antibody levels in 167 University of Virginia health system staff immunized with either the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine. Antibodies levels after the second vaccine were about 50% higher in people who got the Moderna shot, the researchers said Thursday in a letter in Jama Network Open.

Subtle differences

But when the researchers dug further, they found that the difference was mostly explained by an inferior response to the Pfizer vaccine in people 50 and older, says Jeffrey Wilson, an immunologist at the University of Virginia and co-author on the study. With the Moderna vaccine, the antibody response after two shots didn’t differ dramatically by age group.

“There are probably subtle differences between Pfizer and Moderna,” said Wilson. “Whether that has a clinically meaningful impact on protection against the virus remains to be seen.”

The University of Virginia finding is broadly consistent with a bigger study of more than 1,600 workers at a hospital in Belgium that found people who got the Moderna vaccine had, on average, double the antibody levels of those who got Pfizer. But the Belgian study, which was published Monday in the Journal of the American Medical Association, found Moderna produced higher antibody levels in all age groups.

None of the studies measured whether fewer antibodies results in less protection over time. But as the delta variant has taken over, emerging data increasingly show a deteriorating level of protection from immunizations, leading to more reports of breakthrough infections where a vaccinated person becomes ill.

Protection against severe disease and hospitalization — the most important health benefit of vaccination — has generally remained strong.

“We’re not seeing the hospitals filling up with vaccinated people,” says Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon. “What we’re seeing is mostly unvaccinated people still making up the bulk of the new cases.”

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COVID 19 vaccine: Chicago begins offering $100 Visa gift cards for getting vaccinated

CHICAGO (WLS) — The Chicago Department of Public Health is offering $100 Visa gift cards for getting vaccinated against COVID-19.

The cards will be available at CDPH’s mobile vaccination events starting Saturday and through Protect Chicago At Home appointments beginning Tuesday.

Residents will get a $50 gift card when they get each dose of the Pfizer vaccine or two $50 gift cards upon getting the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

Gift cards will also be available at vaccination clinics for CPS students and their families. Everyone 12 and up is eligible to get a vaccine and a gift card. The Pfizer vaccine is the only one approved for children aged 12 to 17.

RELATED: Chicago Travel Advisory updated with all states except Vermont on list

For a full list of mobile and pop-up vaccinations, visit Chicago.gov/vaxcalendar.

For in-home vaccinations, up to 10 people can be vaccinated at a time. Appointments are available Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. and can be made by calling 312-746-4835 or visiting www.chicago.gov/athome.

All vaccinations are free and no insurance or government ID is required.

Copyright © 2021 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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​​Teen who was on ventilator for 11 days urges people to get vaccinated

A 15-year-old teenager from Florida is urging those who are eligible to get the COVID-19 vaccine after she was hospitalized for days with the virus.

In an interview with CNN, Paulina Velasquez said that she was infected with COVID-19 in July and experienced a loss of taste and smell, difficulty breathing and headaches. 

She was not vaccinated against the disease. 

Within a week she was sent to the hospital where she was placed on a ventilator due to low oxygen levels.

“That was the scariest moment when they told me because I didn’t know what to expect. I started asking questions,” her mother, Agnes Velasquez, told CNN.

The network also reported that she had pneumonia. She was placed in a medically induced coma by doctors and stayed on the ventilator for 11 days. The hospital later released her in mid-August.

“It is a very serious virus. This virus does not pick and choose who to infect. It could hit you as hard as it hit me. And I don’t want anybody to go through what I went through,” Paulina told CNN.

She told the outlet that she had planned to get vaccinated before getting sick.

“My message, technically is, just, if you’re eligible to get the vaccine, please do. I plan on getting vaccinated as soon as my doctor lets us know when I can,” she added.

Velasquez’s story is unfortunately not unique. The United States has continued to see a rise in COVID-19 cases due to the highly contagious delta variant, particularly in states with low vaccination rates. 

The state of Florida has one of the highest daily averages of new coronavirus cases behind Texas, according to data compiled by The New York Times.

Doctors have also seen a rise of pediatric COVID-19 cases, amid school re-openings and in-person classes. The rise of cases in children is especially worrisome because a vaccine has not yet been authorized for minors under the age of 12. 

Pfizer and Moderna have both said that they have started trials testing the COVID-19 vaccine in children under 12, though it remains unclear when the shot will become available for this age group. 

According to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the U.S. saw close to 158,000 new COVID-19 cases on Friday and over 164,000 the day prior.

Roughly 73 percent of Americans aged 12 years and older have received at least one shot of the vaccine, wile 62 percent are fully vaccinated.



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Arizona Dad Rishi Rambaran Arrested After Angry Trio Threatens to Zip-Tie Principal Over COVID Rules

Police arrested a 40-year-old Arizona dad after he stormed into an elementary school principal’s office with a friend wielding plastic handcuffs, insisting the administration broke the law by asking his child and six others to wear a mask and quarantine after being in close contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19.

“I can tell you the end result of that incident was we did make one arrest for trespassing,” Sgt. Richard Gradillas of the Tucson, Arizona, Police Department told The Daily Beast, identifying the dad arrested as Rishi Rambaran.

Two men accompanied Rambaran on Thursday as he ambushed Principal Diane Vargo while she sat with another educator at the Mesquite Elementary School in Tucson. One of the men, Kelly Walker, livestreamed the incident on Instagram, explaining that Rambaran, who is also known as “Reese,” had called him and asked him to be there in case he needed backup. The third man, who has not been identified, stood in the doorway of Vargo’s office with a fistful of “law enforcement-grade” zip ties at the ready—as the trio was prepared to make a citizen’s arrest, Walker said.

“When this kind of coercion and bullying is perpetrated by school administrators, breaking the law, a citizens’ arrest is an option worth looking into,” Walker wrote on Facebook. Gradillas told the Beast that in his 14 years on the force, he’s “never seen a citizens’ arrest.”

The Vail School District’s COVID policy follows public health guidance issued by Pima County, which requires students to quarantine at home for at least a week after exposure. The school in fact was abiding by Pima’s rules, and had not violated any laws by asking the students to mask up or quarantine.

Walker, a local marketing strategist and copywriter, co-owns a coffee shop in Tucson with his wife and in-laws. The shop, which describes itself as “Tucson’s hub of Freedom and delicious coffee,” recently hosted a meet-and-greet with far-right author and convicted felon Dinesh D’Souza. Next month, Walker, who compared Thursday’s elementary school dust-up to Rosa Parks’ struggle for equal rights, will be welcoming Matthew Lohmeier, a disgraced Space Force lieutenant colonel who was relieved of his post in May over a self-published book warning of an impending “white genocide,” as well as a “neo-Marxist agenda” within the military “designed to patiently and methodically overthrow the US government and replace it with a communist dictatorship.”

The surreal event at Mesquite Elementary began with a message from Rambaran, Walker said in a video he streamed while driving over to meet him.

“I’m headed to Mesquite Elementary School right now, where a friend just notified me and some others that his son was indiscriminately taken to the office to be quarantined because supposedly someone had decided he but not other kids in this classroom were exposed to COVID,” said Walker, a father of five who reportedly homeschools his own children. “And they shoved a mask on his face, wouldn’t let him call his parents, and now his dad is there… [T]he school is blatantly breaking the law, blatantly going against the will of the people. I think this community has expressed that they’re not going to have this kind of bullying of our kids, these kinds of scare tactics.”

In reality, administrators at Mesquite Elementary had reported a positive COVID case to the Pima County Health Department, which requires schools to provide the names of anyone that has been exposed to someone testing positive for the virus.

Walker said he was prepared to “raise hell,” and insisted the school couldn’t take the law “into their own hands” by instructing a student to quarantine.

Once inside Vargo’s office, the principal listened patiently as Rambaran and Walker attempted to browbeat her into reversing the quarantine order. In video shot by Walker, Rambaran can be seen calling the police and asking them to arrest Vargo. If Rambaran’s child wasn’t allowed back into the classroom immediately, the group said they were prepared to execute a citizens’ arrest.

Vargo, who did not respond to a request for comment, then asked the three to leave the premises. When they refused, Vargo walked out and called the police. The trio departed the scene before cops arrived.

Rambaran was taken into custody about two hours after the fracas, and was later released, according to Gradillas. In a follow-up video recorded by Walker and posted to his coffee shop’s Instagram page, Rambaran complains, “They portrayed me to be this monster… They cried and whined about how I refused to leave,” saying to Walker that the police are now “after you and the other party” that was there.

Rishi Rambaran being interviewed by Walker after the incident.

Instagram/screenshot

Gradillas confirmed to The Daily Beast that more arrests “could be made.” The police showed up at Walker’s coffee shop after the incident, but he ducked them and wrote on Instagram, “Come back with a warrant.”

Walker, perhaps not surprisingly, sees things somewhat differently.

“No one ‘planned’ to make an arrest,” Walker wrote in an email to The Daily Beast. “No one was ‘threatened.’ The father asked the officer to respond, come to the school, and arrest the administration because they were currently breaking the law by forcing kids to put on masks (meanwhile the administrators were NOT wearing masks themselves). The officer asked the father to come down to the police station and file the report. The father asked for written documentation of why they pulled his son, and once he received that, he left. The police only showed up at the school 2 hours after that.”

Rambaran was unable to be reached. Walker did not respond when asked if he could provide contact info for him.

To some, Walker is simply a pest. To others, he’s someone “making a stand.” He makes no secret of his extreme views, including the incorrect belief that the 2020 presidential election was stolen by anti-Trump Democrats, using his coffee house’s blog as a platform.

“The 2020 election was demonstrably fraudulent; treasonous usurpers are now in office from the White House on down,” Walker wrote in July. “As a result, the American people have been fettered with egregious violations of our civil rights without recourse or restoration. It is past time to declare our Independence as a Nation of sovereign Free People and notify this governing oligarchy that they no longer have the consent of the Governed.”

Walker also claims to believe that the U.S. is “on a sure and certain path to democide,” as he wrote in late August, comparing government mask mandates and vaccine guidance to the “Holocaust in Germany, the Warsaw Ghetto genocide, the murder of millions of Russians and Chinese under Communist regimes, the Killing Fields of Cambodia.”

Last September, Walker was arrested at a Pima County Board of Supervisors meeting for refusing to stop using foul language. In October, after three failed inspections for ignoring Pima’s masking and social distancing requirements, Walker’s coffee house was shut down by county health inspectors. When it reopened, Walker posted a picture of white supremacist meme Pepe the Frog on Facebook, which he captioned: “Sales Person [sic] of the Month.” Area residents who complained got doxxed.

“I’m working so very hard to wake people up,” Walker posted on social media last week.

On Monday, Walker posted a tribute to a friend, father, and anti-masker who recently succumbed to COVID.

The Vail Unified School District, which includes Mesquite Elementary School, has endured no shortage of rowdy interactions with parents who reject public health guidelines under the guise of “freedom.” In April, police had to be called to maintain order when dozens of unmasked parents forced their way into a school board meeting and refused to leave.

The issue closely mirrors similar situations taking place across the country. In Pennsylvania, a dispute over masking requirements for elementary school students recently resulted in death threats that led one board member to quit. A California parent allegedly assaulted his daughter’s teacher last month after seeing their child walking out of the school building in a face covering. In late August, a 50-year-old Florida man was arrested and charged with aggravated child abuse after a dispute over masking with a female high school student turned physical. Teachers have had their masks ripped off by angry parents, and have been the targets of relentless verbal abuse.

According to official data, there is currently one active COVID case at Mesquite Elementary School. Across the entire district, 47 students and eight staff were positive for the virus as of Aug. 29. The district said it will be sending a letter to parents of Mesquite Elementary students about Thursday’s incident.



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Here’s what to know Sept. 3, 2021

DETROIT – Michigan reported 4,448 new cases of COVID-19 and 51 virus-related deaths Friday — an average of 2,224 cases over the past two days.

Friday’s update brings the total number of confirmed COVID cases in Michigan to 955,640, including 20,367 deaths. These numbers are up from 951,192 cases and 20,347 deaths, as of Wednesday.

NOTE: The state of Michigan reported 20,347 deaths on Wednesday, but when Friday’s update was posted, Wednesday’s number was decreased to 20,316. Therefore, the state announced Friday’s total of 20,367 deaths as an increase of 51, not 20.

The deaths announced Friday include 28 identified during a Vital Records review.

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Testing has increased to around 20,000 diagnostic tests reported per day on average, with the 7-day positive rate at 9.44% as of Wednesday, slightly higher than the previous week. The positive test rate has been steadily climbing since the end of June, when it was at its lowest. Hospitalizations have increased by 231% since July 1.

Cases are rising again in Michigan. The state’s 7-day moving average for daily cases was 1,995 on Friday — a significant jump since the beginning of July. The 7-day death average was 25 on Friday. The state’s fatality rate is 2.1%. The state also reports “active cases,” which were listed at 54,000 on Friday.

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Michigan has reported more than 9.6 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine administered as of Friday, with 66% of 16+ residents having received at least one dose while 57.4% of 12+ residents are considered fully vaccinated.

According to Johns Hopkins University, more than 39 million cases have been reported in the U.S., with more than 642,000 deaths reported from the virus. Globally, more than 5 billion vaccine doses have been administered, including more than 370 million doses in the U.S. alone.


Coronavirus headlines:


VIEW: Chart: Michigan COVID vaccine coverage

VIEW: Tracking coronavirus cases, outbreaks in Michigan schools

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Flu expected to circulate more this year due to fewer COVID precautions

While coronavirus pandemic precautions helped keep the flu away last year, experts are worried that we won’t be so lucky this year.

Precautions and restrictions designed to prevent the spread of COVID-19 actually also helped prevent the spread of the flu, a respiratory illness caused by influenza viruses, during the 2020 flu season. This time last year, health experts were concerned that the U.S. would experience a “twindemic” with COVID and the flu, but that didn’t happen, likely due to a combination of mask wearing, social distancing, most schools being closed and overall reduced travel.

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But this year, many of those precautions and restrictions are no longer in effect, and the flu is expected to circulate more widely.

Learn more here.

Detroit opens scheduling for third dose of COVID vaccinations

Detroit has opened up scheduling for residents with compromised immune systems to receive a third dose of the COVID-19 vaccination.

Residents must have been fully vaccinated for at least six months and have compromised immune systems to schedule an appointment for a third dose.

Third doses of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccinations, which were approved by the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention, will be offered at the TCF Center drive-thru to those with an appointment.

Read more here.

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MDHHS ‘strongly recommends’ Michigan schools require universal masking when students return

Michigan health officials are strongly recommending schools require universal masking when students return for in-person learning.

Last month, the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services updated its guidance for preventing the spread of COVID-19 within school buildings.

“Because many students have yet to be vaccinated and students under age 12 are not yet eligible, layered prevention measures, including universal masking, must be put in place for consistent in-person learning to keep kids, staff and families safe,” an MDHHS release says.

This update brings MDHHS guidance in line with that of the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention.

Read more here.

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CDC recommends vaccinated people wear masks in schools, some indoor settings

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is now recommending that even vaccinated people wear masks indoors in parts of the United States where coronavirus is surging.

The CDC on Tuesday, July 27 cited new information about the ability of the delta variant to spread among vaccinated people. The CDC also recommended indoor masks for all teachers, staff, students and visitors to schools regardless of vaccination status.

The CDC said that in the United States most new infections are among unvaccinated people. But “breakthrough” infections, which generally cause milder illness, can occur in vaccinated people.

Learn more here.


Michigan COVID-19 daily reported cases since Aug. 16:

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  • Aug. 16 — 1,184 new cases

  • Aug. 17 — 1,345 new cases

  • Aug. 18 — 1,345 new cases

  • Aug. 19 — 2,098 new cases

  • Aug. 20 — 2,099 new cases

  • Aug. 21 — 1,306 new cases

  • Aug. 22 — 1,307 new cases

  • Aug. 23 — 1,307 new cases

  • Aug. 24 — 2,163 new cases

  • Aug. 25 — 2,163 new cases

  • Aug. 26 — 1,979 new cases

  • Aug. 27 — 1,979 new cases

  • Aug. 28 — 1,673 new cases

  • Aug. 29 — 1,673 new cases

  • Aug. 30 — 1,674 new cases

  • Aug. 31 — 2,247 new cases

  • Sept. 1 — 2,247 new cases

  • Sept. 2 — 2,224 new cases

  • Sept. 3 — 2,224 new cases

Michigan COVID-19 daily reported deaths since Aug. 16:

  • Aug. 16 — 7 new deaths (8 from past three days from vital records)

  • Aug. 17 — 23 new deaths

  • Aug. 18 — 23 new deaths (15 from past two days from vital records)

  • Aug. 19 — 18 new deaths

  • Aug. 20 — 19 new deaths (13 from past two days from vital records)

  • Aug. 21 — 4 new deaths

  • Aug. 22 — 4 new deaths

  • Aug. 23 — 2 new deaths (5 from past three days from vital records)

  • Aug. 24 — 19 new deaths

  • Aug. 25 — 19 new deaths (10 from past two days from vital records)

  • Aug. 26 — 34 new deaths

  • Aug. 27 — 35 new deaths (42 deaths from past two days from vital records)

  • Aug. 28 — 9 new deaths

  • Aug. 29 — 9 new deaths

  • Aug. 30 — 8 new deaths (6 from past three days from vital records)

  • Aug. 31 — 45 new deaths

  • Sept. 1 — 46 new deaths (36 from past two days from vital records)

  • Sept. 3 — 51 new deaths (28 from past two days from vital records)


Coronavirus resources:


COVID-19 Discussion Forum:

Join our dedicated space to discuss the pandemic. You’re invited to share questions, experiences, insights and opinions.

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Copyright 2021 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

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Michigan reports 4,448 new COVID cases, 51 deaths — average of 2,224 cases per day

DETROIT – Michigan reported 4,448 new cases of COVID-19 and 51 virus-related deaths Friday — an average of 2,224 cases over the past two days.

Friday’s update brings the total number of confirmed COVID cases in Michigan to 955,640, including 20,367 deaths. These numbers are up from 951,192 cases and 20,347 deaths, as of Wednesday.

NOTE: The state of Michigan reported 20,347 deaths on Wednesday, but when Friday’s update was posted, Wednesday’s number was decreased to 20,316. Therefore, the state announced Friday’s total of 20,367 deaths as an increase of 51, not 20.

The deaths announced Friday include 28 identified during a Vital Records review.

Testing has increased to around 20,000 diagnostic tests reported per day on average, with the 7-day positive rate at 9.44% as of Wednesday, slightly higher than the previous week. The positive test rate has been steadily climbing since the end of June, when it was at its lowest. Hospitalizations have increased by 231% since July 1.

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Cases are rising again in Michigan. The state’s 7-day moving average for daily cases was 1,995 on Friday — a significant jump since the beginning of July. The 7-day death average was 25 on Friday. The state’s fatality rate is 2.1%. The state also reports “active cases,” which were listed at 54,000 on Friday.

Michigan has reported more than 9.6 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine administered as of Friday, with 66% of 16+ residents having received at least one dose while 57.4% of 12+ residents are considered fully vaccinated.

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According to Johns Hopkins University, more than 39 million cases have been reported in the U.S., with more than 642,000 deaths reported from the virus. Globally, more than 5 billion vaccine doses have been administered, including more than 370 million doses in the U.S. alone.

Worldwide, more than 218 million people have been confirmed infected and more than 4.5 million have died, according to Johns Hopkins University. The true numbers are certainly much higher, because of limited testing, different ways nations count the dead and deliberate under-reporting by some governments.

New daily Michigan COVID-19 totals since July 30:

  • July 30 — 2,250 new cases (case count for three days)

  • Aug. 3 — 2,605 new cases (case count for four days)

  • Aug. 6 — 3,962 new cases (case count for three days)

  • Aug. 9 — 2,720 new cases (case count for three days)

  • Aug. 11 — 2,786 new cases (case count for two days)

  • Aug. 13 — 3,127 new cases (case count for two days)

  • Aug. 16 — 3,554 new cases (case count for three days)

  • Aug. 18 — 2,690 new cases (case count for two days)

  • Aug. 20 — 4,197 new cases (case count for two days)

  • Aug. 23 — 3,920 new cases (case count for three days)

  • Aug. 25 — 4,326 new cases (case count for two days)

  • Aug. 27 — 3,958 new cases (case count for two days)

  • Aug. 30 — 5,020 new cases (case count for three days)

  • Sept. 1 — 4,494 new cases (case count for two days)

  • Sept. 3 — XXXX new cases (case count for two days)

Latest COVID-19 data in Michigan:

Here is a charted timeline of confirmed coronavirus (COVID-19) cases in Michigan:

Here are Michigan COVID-19 cases broken down by gender (view here if you’re not seeing the table):

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Sign up for the Michigan Coronavirus Newsletter for updates delivered right to your inbox:

COVID-19 Discussion Forum:

Join our dedicated space to discuss the pandemic. You’re invited to share questions, experiences, insights and opinions.

Join the conversation here.

Copyright 2021 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

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New Drug Shows Promise As COVID-19 Treatment – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

A drug created by a Texas A&M University professor could become a useful treatment for patients with COVID-19.

The compound called MPI8 is designed to target a specific enzyme in SARS-CoV-2 and stop the virus from replicating.

Less virus in your body would mean a faster recovery and fewer COVID-19 symptoms.

“It’s gonna serve as a really good treatment option,” said biological chemist and lead researcher Dr. Wenshe Ray Liu, professor in the Department of Chemistry at Texas A&M University.

According to the Texas A&M University System, the potential effectiveness of MPI8 led Sorrento Therapeutics of San Diego, Calif., to seek exclusive intellectual property rights to the ingredient.

An agreement between the company and Texas A&M University System was announced in August.

Liu said the molecule MPI8 could be highly effective in treating not only the original COVID-19 viral strain, but also the more aggressive variants such as delta.

Liu said that Sorrento hopes to complete pre-clinical studies of MPI8 by the end of the year and seek FDA approval to begin clinical trials on humans in early 2022.

You can read the university’s announcement about the drug here.

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Bexar County leaders urge community to stay vigilant of COVID-19 spread over Labor Day weekend

Labor Day weekend

SAN ANTONIO – Ahead of Labor Day weekend, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg on Thursday urged residents to remain vigilant and take precautions to help curb the spread of COVID-19.

“Remember again that the choices that you make over this holiday weekend will determine how much longer this surge of COVID-19 lasts,” Nirenberg said. “So please do your part to help us contain this virus.”

Nirenberg recommended that families have individually packaged meals and snacks at gatherings to reduce the chances of infection.

“Regardless of your vaccination status, mask up around others, wearing a mask is still the easiest thing to do for anyone to slow the spread fo this virus,” Nirenberg said.

Officials said no curfew will be imposed over the holiday weekend.

See today’s COVID-19 numbers and what to know about the latest rise in San Antonio and surrounding areas here.

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Hospital admissions are still high

Though overall hospitalizations have decreased, Nirenberg said there were still 195 new COVID-19 hospital admissions over the past 24 hours. Nirenberg said admissions have been “staying near those record numbers each day.”

Roughly 85% of those hospitalized are unvaccinated, Nirenberg said.

Part of the decrease in hospitalizations is due to the increased use of monoclonal antibody treatments like Regeneron, Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff said.

“Until the incoming patients start really dramatically going down, I think we still have a problem,” Wolff said.

Hospitals have also tried to bring certain medical services to patients at their home to cut down on admissions.

Flu season

Flu season is right around the corner, kicking off on Oct. 1. With COVID-19 cases still surging, officials recommended families get their flu shots as soon as possible to reduce their chances of getting sick.

“Don’t wait for a high number of (flu) cases in the community. The best time to get vaccinated is before the cases come,” said Dr. Anita Kurian, assistant director of Metro Health.

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Kurian said the city will begin receiving shipments of the flu vaccine toward the end of August and begin administering it in September. Other medical providers may have already started offering the flu shot, Kurian said.

If flu cases rise, experts worry about a potential “triple threat” amid the pandemic with COVID-19, the flu, and RSV.

MORE CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE FROM KSAT

Copyright 2021 by KSAT – All rights reserved.

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Escondido youth football coach dies of COVID-19

ESCONDIDO, Calif. (KGTV) — With San Diego County’s COVID-19 death rate climbing, loved ones are mourning the death of a popular North County youth football coach.

Carlos Chavez came down with a fever, sore throat, and cough in late July. More than a week later, he was hospitalized.

“We had to call 911 because he became very short of breath,” said his wife, Ruth Chavez.

Ruth says Chavez was hospitalized with COVID pneumonia, before being placed on a ventilator. Then, after more than three weeks, Chavez, a husband and father of three teenage boys, passed away at the age of 47.

“It seemed surreal, that it was just a bad dream. Unfortunately, it was true. It was very heartbreaking because he has been my husband for 20 years. We just celebrated our anniversary,” said Ruth.

Ruth calls her husband a caring and happy person.

“Very loving. He walked into a room, and he lit up the room,” she said.

Ruth said her husband, who worked as a hospital record inspector, was passionate about youth football.

For 12 years, he coached for Escondido Pop Warner football, serving on its board for nearly a decade.

“He wanted to make a difference within his community. He said in order to change something for the better, we need to get involved,” said Ruth.

Ruth, a medical assistant, says when it came to COVID-19, “he just felt it was overblown.” She said she tried to convince him, but he refused to be vaccinated.

“He was leery about the side effects of the vaccine,” said Ruth.

Ruth, who is vaccinated and also tested positive for COVID-19, suffered mild symptoms. She made this plea to others.

“You need to get vaccinated … In my case, it saved my life. Unfortunately, for my husband not being vaccinated, it cost him his life,” said Ruth.

A celebration of life will be held for Chavez on the football field at Orange Glen High at 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 18. It is open to the public.

A GoFundMe campaign has been set up to help the family with expenses.

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Masks Lead to Less Covid-19, Massive Study Finds

Commuters wearing protective face masks board a train on August 07, 2020 in Berlin, Germany.
Photo: Sean Gallup (Getty Images)

An enormous randomized trial of communities in Bangladesh seems to provide the clearest evidence yet that regular mask-wearing can impede the spread of the covid-19 pandemic. The study found that villages where masks were highly promoted and became more popular experienced noticeably lower rates of covid-like symptoms and confirmed past infections than villages where mask-wearing remained low. These improvements were even more pronounced for villages given free surgical masks over cloth masks.

Plenty of data has emerged over the last year and a half to support the use of masks during the covid-19 pandemic, both in the real world and in the lab. But it’s less clear exactly how much of a benefit these masks can provide wearers (and their communities), and there are at least some studies that have been inconclusive in showing a noticeable benefit.

One problem in interpreting all this information is that we’ve largely relied on observational studies, which can only ever show a correlation between any two things, not establish a cause-and-effect relationship. There might be other factors that both explain why one city has a higher rate of mask-wearing and a lower rate of diagnosed cases than another city, for instance, rather than the former helping cause the latter.

Last late year, however, dozens of scientists teamed up with public health advocacy organizations and the Bangladesh government to conduct a massive randomized trial of masks—often seen as the gold standard of evidence. And on Wednesday, they released the results of their research in a working paper through the research nonprofit Innovations for Poverty Action.

The study involved 600 villages in a single region of the country with over 350,000 adult residents combined. Similarly matched villages were randomly assigned to two conditions (a pair of villages with similar population density, for instance, would go to one condition or the other). In one condition, the researchers and their partners promoted the use of masks through various incentives between November 2020 and January 2021. These incentives included free masks, endorsements by local leaders, and sometimes financial prizes for villages that achieved widespread mask usage. In two-thirds of the intervention villages, the free masks given were surgical, while one-third were given free cloth masks. In the second condition, the researchers simply observed the villages and did nothing to encourage masks during that time.

Residents in the villages where masks were encouraged did start wearing them more, though no individual nudge or incentive seemed to do better than the others. By the end, about 42% of residents in these villages wore masks regularly, compared to 13% of those in the control group. And in these communities, the odds of people reporting symptoms that may have been covid or testing positive for antibodies to the virus declined.

Overall, the average proportion of people who reported symptoms in the weeks following the mask promotions went down by 11% in these villages compared to the control group, and the average number of people having antibodies went down by over 9%. These differences were larger for surgical mask-wearing villages (12% vs 5% for reducing symptoms) and for residents over 60 (35% for reducing infections for older residents in surgical mask-wearing villages).

Some of this effect might not have come directly from the ability of masks to block transmission of the virus. Those who used masks, the study found, were also more likely to practice social distancing. That’s a relevant finding, the authors note, since some people who have argued against mask mandates do so by claiming that masks will only make people act more carelessly. This study suggests that the opposite is true—that masks make us more, not less, conscientious of others.

The findings are not in a peer-reviewed journal as of yet, an important step for validating any research. And they do carry some limitations, as any study does. The study began and ended before the emergence of the Delta variant, for instance, a much more transmissible version of the coronavirus that’s become widespread throughout the world (at the time, the Alpha variant was most prevalent).

Study author Jason Abaluck, a health and behavioral economist at Yale University, told Gizmodo in an email that his team has submitted the paper for publication in the journal Science. On Twitter, Abaluck has addressed other potential caveats of the study. Some have pointed out, for instance, that the authors only found a protective effect from masks for people under the age of 50 in experiencing covid-like symptoms, not in having antibodies (for older people, a reduction in symptoms and antibodies was seen across the board in mask-wearing villages). But Abaluck argues that this may simply be due to the fact that only 40% of people with symptoms opted to get tested, so any estimates from this group may be less precise. And even if masks somehow had no direct effect for people under 50, they may yet reduce the spread of the virus from younger people to older, so masking would still be a net positive on a population level.

The authors also say that masks could conceivably have a greater effect in slowing down the spread of the current pandemic on a population level than they did when the study concluded, given the higher transmissibility of Delta per case. And because they noticed a significant effect after only a modest increase in mask use, the benefits could be even greater with widespread masking.

“Our results should not be taken to imply that masks can prevent only 10% of covid-19 cases, let alone 10% of covid-19 mortality,” they wrote. “Our intervention induced 29 more people out of every 100 to wear masks, with 42% of people wearing masks in total. The total impact with near universal masking—perhaps achievable with alternative strategies or stricter enforcement—may be several times larger than our 10% estimate.”

If that assumption turns out to be true, it provides more support for models showing that universal mask coverage in places like the U.S. can still significantly blunt the impact of the pandemic. A recent forecast from researchers at the University of Washington, for instance, estimated that universal mask coverage could prevent up to 50,000 deaths by December 1 of this year.

Perhaps most importantly on the individual level, the study also suggests that cloth masks should be phased out as a recommended choice of mask and that surgical masks should be the default moving forward, the authors say.

“While cloth masks clearly reduce symptoms, we cannot reject that they have zero or only a small impact on symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections,” they wrote.



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