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COVID cases among kids overwhelming Florida hospitals: doc

Pediatric hospitals in Florida have become “completely overwhelmed” with young patients battling COVID-19 amid the spread of the highly contagious Delta variant, a doctor says.

The grim development comes as Florida on Sunday reported having the highest number of children — 172 — hospitalized with the coronavirus, according to data from the US Department of Health and Human Services.

“The numbers of cases in our hospitals in children and our children’s hospitals are completely overwhelmed,” said Dr. Aileen Marty, an infectious-disease expert at Florida International University, to CNN late Friday.

“Our pediatricians, the nursing, the staff are exhausted, and the children are suffering. And it is absolutely devastating … Our children are very much affected. We’ve never seen numbers like this before,” she said.

Sharp rises in hospital admissions involving kids with COVID-19 have been recorded in other states, too — including Arkansas, which had its own record number of children Wednesday hospitalized with the virus.

“We’re seeing a real surge with the Delta variant that we did not see previously,” said Dr. Rick Barr, chief clinical officer at Arkansas Children’s Hospital, to CNN at the end of last month. “This is the worst that we’ve seen it for kids, absolutely.”

“[Parents are] shocked because the messaging out there has been that kids don’t really get sick with Covid, and we didn’t see serious illnesses, except for rare instances, with the previous variants,” he said. 

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson admitted Wednesday that he was wrong for previously banning mask mandates in the state. 

Experts have urged people in areas with high positivity rates for COVID-19 to wear masks regardless of vaccination status in order to protect vulnerable groups, such as children too young to receive the shot.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has faced criticism for forbidding school districts in his state from requiring masks for students and school workers amid the crisis, saying it should be up the parents and employees to decide.

Families protesting potential mask mandates in school at a Hillsborough County Schools Board meeting in Tampa, Florida on July 27, 2021.
Photo by Octavio Jones/Getty Image

Republican Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana on Sunday blasted DeSantis for standing in the way of mask mandates.

“The local officials should have control here,” said Cassidy, who is also a physician, CNN’s “State of the Union.” “Whenever politicians mess with public health, usually it doesn’t work out well for public health.’’

Cassidy said the Republican governor’s approach went against conservative values.

“I’m a conservative. I think you govern best when you govern closest to the people being governed,” Cassidy said.

“And if a local community is [seeing] their ICU is full and the people at the local schools see that they’ve got to make sure they stay open because otherwise children miss out for another year of school and they put in policy, then the local officials should be listened to. That is a conservative principle.”

People calling for mask mandates in schools outside the Duval County School Board building in Jacksonville, Florida on August 3, 2021.
Bob Self/The Florida Times-Union via AP

Surging case numbers have been recorded in the state amid the spread of the highly contagious Delta variant.

Florida broke a new record over the weekend for COVID-19 cases — recording 134,506 infections Friday for the first time since the pandemic began.

The state’s hospitalizations also reached their highest point in the pandemic last week, with more than 12,864 confirmed COVID-19 patients as of Friday.

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Life after death: Bill Nye says ‘overwhelming evidence’ proves there is no afterlife | Science | News

The jury is still out on whether life after death is real, even though most of the world’s religions claim to know the answer. Scientifically, there is very little evidence of the human spirit living on outside of the body. And yet, some people claim to have caught a glimpse of the afterlife, having gone through so-called near-death experiences (NDEs).

According to Mr Nye, most people imagine life after death involves our spirits taking on an idealised version of ourselves from our past.

However, Mr Nye argued this is highly improbable because most people tend to die at an old age, making it unusual for the spirit to not resemble us at the moment of our death.

He said: “Everybody is going to die. I have never met anyone who is not going to die.

“I’ve never met anyone who is of a certain age who’s not already dead. It sucks!

“Now here’s the evidence for why I don’t believe in an afterlife.”

“And so watching ourselves die is to me, overwhelming evidence that there is no life after death.

“There’s certainly no — it doesn’t seem to be any reason to think that when you die, you go back to your optimum age at your optimum athletic ability in your optimum intellectual sharpness.”

Mr Nye added: “Evolution, if it were an entity, doesn’t really care about you, man.

“You had your kids, your genes are passed on and you expire.

“You lose your faculties as you run out of steam and that’s just how it is.”

According to Manchester Metropolitan University Neil Dagnall and Ken Drinkwater, there is no definitive answer for why some people claim to have seen the afterlife.

However, the researchers said ongoing studies will shed more light on the phenomenon.

In a 2018 article for The Conversation, they said: “Whether paranormal or not, near-death experiences are extremely important.

“They provide meaning, hope, and purpose for many people, while offering an appreciation of the human desire to survive beyond death.”



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Ohio State football voted overwhelming 2021 Big Ten favorite in cleveland.com preseason poll

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State football begins the season with a first-time quarterback, an unsettled running back situation, and new starters at over half of its defensive positions.

Those unknowns do not lower the Buckeyes’ expectations within the Big Ten Conference.

Ohio State was the near-unanimous preseason favorite in the 2021 cleveland.com Preseason Big Ten Poll. All but one of the 34 members of our voting panel picked the Buckeyes — the four-time defending champions — to win the Big Ten East and the championship game.

(NOTE: Due to a tabulation error, Ohio State was originally credited with being the unanimous choice to win the Big Ten championship game.)

The voters picked Wisconsin as the West favorite with 29 first-place votes. Second-place Iowa received the other five first-place votes. One voter picked Wisconsin to defeat the Buckeyes in the Big Ten championship game.

Cleveland.com picked up the responsibility for organizing the poll for posterity when the Big Ten dropped it 11 years ago. The panel included at least one beat writer from all 14 Big Ten teams and a few who cover the entire league or have a national perspective.

• Olave voted Preseason Offensive Player of the Year

• Northwestern safety Brandon Joseph voted Preseason Defensive Player of the Year

Ohio State was voted the preseason favorite for the seventh time in the past nine years. It barely missed being the first the unanimous choice for champion since 2015. Michigan State won the Big Ten that season, as voters failed to predict the champion in each of the first six polls.

Each writer was asked to vote 1-7 in both divisions, with first-place votes worth seven points, second-place votes worth six and so on.

BIG TEN WEST

1. Wisconsin (29 first-place votes) 233 points

2. Iowa (5) 202

3. Northwestern 160

4. Minnesota 146

5. Nebraska 91.5

6. Purdue 72.5

7. Illinois 47

BIG TEN EAST

1. Ohio State (34 first-place votes) 238

2. Penn State 192

3. Indiana 169

4. Michigan 144

5. Maryland 79

6. Rutgers 77.5

7. Michigan State 52.5

BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIP GAME

Ohio State over Wisconsin (28)

Ohio State over Iowa (5)

Wisconsin over Ohio State (1)

OTHER POLL NOTES

• Iowa received votes to finish anywhere from first to fifth in the West. Rutgers was the most polarizing team in the East, picked to finish anywhere from third to last.

• Many voters presumably had to make a choice between Penn State and Indiana for second place in the East. They chose the Nittany Lions by a 23-11 margin on second-place votes.

• Only one voter (cleveland.com’s Doug Lesmerises) correctly picked Northwestern to win the West in the 2020 poll. Wisconsin and Minnesota were considered the division’s top two contenders, and the consensus vote picked the Wildcats to finish fifth. Instead, they reached the Big Ten championship game for the second time in three years.

Looking back at the poll’s history, here are the favorites and the eventual league champions since the divisional split, the introduction of the title game and the Big Ten shirking a full preseason ranking.

2020: Pick: Ohio State. Actual: Ohio State

2019: Pick: Michigan. Actual: Ohio State

2018: Pick: Ohio State. Actual: Ohio State.

2017: Pick: Ohio State. Actual: Ohio State.

2016: Pick: Ohio State. Actual: Penn State.

2015: Pick: Ohio State. Actual: Michigan State.

2014: Pick: Michigan State. Actual: Ohio State.

2013: Pick: Ohio State. Actual: Michigan State.

2012: Pick: Michigan. Actual: Wisconsin.

2011: Pick: Nebraska. Actual: Wisconsin.

Fields’ Bears jersey: Ohio State football fans can purchase Justin Fields’ new Chicago Bears jersey here. It’s available in white, blue and orange – and in men’s, women’s and youth sizes. There’s also a cheaper T-shirt option.

More Buckeyes coverage

Are OSU’s receivers far better than any other title contender’s? The College Football Playoff Show

What’s up with 2022 linebacker recruiting? Hey, Stephen

Olave voted Preseason Big Ten Offensive Player of the Year

NW safety Brandon Joseph voted Preseason Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year

Sweden’s Theo Melin Öhrström on how Ohio State stands out

Oregon DE Kayvon Thibodeaux: Buckeyes’ best opponents, No. 1

How Notre Dame’s Marcus Freeman sparked recruiting war with OSU

Purdue DE George Karlaftis: Buckeyes’ best opponents, No. 2

Will OSU face a new Big Ten title game opponent in 2021?

Jaiden Ausberry, five-star 2023 LB, puts Ohio State in top 10

Michigan DE Aidan Hutchinson: Buckeyes’ best opponents, No. 3

Which Buckeye wins an individual award this season? Hey, Buckeye Talk

Who will represent OSU at 2021 Big Ten Media Days?

Indiana QB Michael Penix Jr.: Buckeyes’ best opponents, No. 4

What Treyaun Webb’s commitment to Oklahoma means for OSU

Ginn Jr.’s greatness was realized most when he was gone: Lesmerises

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France Has ‘Overwhelming’ Responsibility for Rwanda Genocide, Report Says

PARIS — Blinded by its fears of losing influence in Africa and by a colonial view of the continent’s people, France remained close to the “racist, corrupt and violent regime’’ responsible for the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, and bears “serious and overwhelming” responsibilities, according to a report released Friday.

But the report — commissioned by President Emmanuel Macron in 2019 and put together by 15 historians with unprecedented access to French government archives — cleared France of complicity in the genocide that led to the deaths of 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and contributed to decades of conflicts and instability in Central Africa.

“Is France an accomplice to the genocide of the Tutsi? If by this we mean a willingness to join a genocidal operation, nothing in the archives that were examined demonstrates this,’’ said the report, which was presented to Mr. Macron on Friday afternoon.

But the commission said that France had long been involved with Rwanda’s Hutu-led government even as that government prepared the genocide of the Tutsis, regarding the country’s leadership as a crucial ally in a French sphere of influence in the region.

For decades, France’s actions during the genocide have been the source of intense debate in Africa and in Europe, with critics accusing France of not having done enough to prevent the killings or of having actively supported the Hutu-led government behind the genocide. The unresolved history has long poisoned relations between France and the government of President Paul Kagame, the Tutsi leader who has controlled Rwanda for nearly a quarter century.

Mr. Macron, who has spoken of his desire to reset France’s relations with a continent where it was a colonial power, is believed to have commissioned the report to try to improve relations with Rwanda.

Though the 992-page report presents fresh information from the French government archives, it is unlikely to resolve the debate over France’s role during the genocide, said Filip Reyntjens, a Belgian expert on the genocide.

“This will not be good enough for one side, and it won’t be good enough for the other side,’’ Mr. Reyntjens said. “So my guess is that this will not settle the issue.’’

According to the report, François Mitterrand, the French president at the time, maintained a “strong, personal and direct relationship’’ with Juvenal Habyarimana, the longtime Hutu president of Rwanda, despite his “racist, corrupt and violent regime.’’

Mr. Mitterrand and members of his inner circle believed that Mr. Habyarimana and the Hutus were key allies in a French-speaking bloc that also included Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, known then as Zaire.

The French saw Mr. Kagame and other Tutsi leaders — who had spent years in exile in neighboring Anglophone Uganda — as allies in an American push into the region.

“The principal interest of this country for France is that it be francophone,’’ a high-ranking military official wrote in 1990, according to the report, which concluded: “France’s interpretation of the Rwandan situation can be viewed through the prism of defending la Francophonie.’’

French leaders at the time viewed the Hutus and Tutsis through a colonial lens, ascribing to each group stereotypical physical traits and behavior, compounding their misinterpretation of the events that led to the genocide, according to the report.

In one of the report’s most damning conclusions, its authors wrote, “The failure of France in Rwanda, the causes of which are not all its own, can be likened in this respect to a final imperial defeat, all the more significant because it was neither expressed nor acknowledged.’’

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Brazil coronavirus variant and surging second wave are overwhelming hospitals

While a new variant of the coronavirus spreads throughout the country, many Brazilians continue to defy mask mandates mobility restrictions following the example of President Jair Bolsonaro, who recently said people need to “stop being sissies” and “whining” about the virus.

The consequences of that combination are deadly, experts say. “We are going through the worst-case scenario since the beginning of the pandemic. You just have to look at the trends in the average number of deaths,” Gonzalo Vecina Neto, a Sao Paulo University professor of Public Health, recently told Reuters television. “This could have been avoided and the most important factor is gatherings.”

Brazil has broken its own record three times this month for number of deaths in a 24-hour period. On Wednesday, Brazil’s Health Ministry registered a devastating new high — 2,286 lives lost to the virus. In total, more than 270,000 people are known to have died due to Covid-19, making Brazil’s the second-highest national death toll after the United States.

In 22 of Brazil’s 26 states, ICU occupancy has surpassed 80%. In the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul, hospital patients must line up to wait for beds as occupancy rates in intensive care units soar past 103%. The neighboring state of Santa Catarina has already surpassed 99% occupancy and is on the verge of collapsing, as cases surge throughout the state.

One hospital in Santa Catarina’s capital, Florianopolis, is already beyond capacity. David Molin, the hospital’s head nurse, tells CNN his team is exhausted and overwhelmed.

“I was here during the first wave and it wasn’t like this. We are completely overwhelmed, with our occupancy rate at over 100%. Many of those patients who are waiting for an ICU don’t make it,” Molina told CNN during a telephone interview.

Health workers blame gatherings

Molina and other health care workers blame the recent surge of Covid-19 cases on larges parties and gatherings that began around New Year’s Eve and continued through the pre-Lent carnival holiday and into today. Many of these were held in defiance of local city and state restrictions.

Last week, Rio de Janeiro’s Mayor Eduardo Paes announced a new curfew for bars and restaurants throughout the city, limiting hours of operation from 6:00 am to 5:00 pm. But hundreds of people stayed out anyway — 230 curfew-related fines and closures were issued from Friday to Saturday alone, according to the city government. At one bar, more than 200 mostly-maskless partygoers were found at a party that had been going for seven hours, reported CNN affiliate CNN Brasil.

Many municipal and state health officials and lawmakers blame Bolsonaro’s government for undermining their efforts to slow the spread of the coronavirus. And the country’s National Council of Health Secretaries (CONASS) has asked the federal government to adopt stricter measures to support hospitals and enforce social distancing.

“The health system in Brazil is on the verge of collapse,” Sao Paulo Governor Joao Doria told CNN’s Becky Anderson during a recent interview. “There is no national coordination to combat the pandemic in Brazil. It would be important for the President and the governors to send the same message to the population, but this unfortunately, doesn’t happen in Brazil.

The issue of social distancing measures and lockdowns has become a political football in Brazil. While Doria ordered nonessential businesses to close for two weeks in his state last weekend, Bolsonaro claims that such restrictions sink Brazil’s economy and lead to an increase of suicides and depression. He has made disobeying health guidance a point of pride, congratulating agricultural workers at an event last week for not staying home “like cowards.”

“We have to face our problems. Stop being sissies, enough whining, how long are they going to keep on crying? We have to confront the problems, respecting the elderly, those with illnesses, chronic conditions. But where is Brazil going to end up if we all stop?” he said.

This week, Bolsonaro declared that he had the “power” to declare a national lockdown — but would never do so. “My army is not going to force the people to stay at home,” he said.

Fears over new variant

With Brazilian hospitals overloaded and government officials divided over lockdown measures, the country has few defenses against a coronavirus variant that may be even more contagious.

A preprint of a new modelling study by researchers in Brazil and the UK suggests the variant first detected in the northern city of Manaus late last year, known as P.1, may be up to 2.2 times more transmissible.

The study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed or published in a medical journal, suggests that even people who have already had the coronavirus could be vulnerable. The same study showed that the P.1 variant could evade immunity from previous Covid-19 infection by up to 61%.

That variant is now prevalent in Covid-19 patients across at least six Brazilian states, according to a study earlier this month released by the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz), a Brazilian Ministry of Health research institution. P.1 has also been detected in the United States, United Kingdom and neighboring Venezuela.

“The emergence of new variants, which combine both the potential to be more transmissible and the absence of broad and articulated mitigation and suppression measures, are highly worrisome,” the study’s authors wrote, urging Brazil to encourage behaviors that limit the viral spread.

“The data showing the prevalence of this variant in several states and its ample spread throughout the country, as well as the challenges presented due to its high level of transmission, reinforce the immediate need to adopt non-pharmaceutical measures in order to reduce the speed or its spread and the increases in cases.”

Felipe Naveca, virologist and researcher at Fiocruz Amazonia and one of the main authors of the study, told CNN that the Covid-19 virus and the different variants and strains are likely to get stronger if not stopped.

“This is what viruses do: They evolve, they get stronger. The only way to stop it is to contain its spread, which is why we need restrictive measures — there is no other solution. Even if the Government decrees a national lockdown, we need the population to adhere. The action of each one of us will impact everyone as a whole,” Naveca said.

Vaccination

Hope could be on its way, in the form of vaccines. But Brazil’s vaccination rollout was slow in comparison to other countries, including others in the region, like Chile and Mexico.

In January, health regulator Anvisa authorized emergency use of vaccines by Sinovac and Oxford/AstraZeneca. Since then, roughly 4% of Brazil’s 211 million citizens have received at least one vaccine dose, according to data from the Brazilian Health Ministry, and 2.3 million have had two doses.

According to the Health Ministry, Brazil is in negotiation to buy Pfizer, Moderna, Janssen, Sputinik and Covaxin vaccines as well, though only the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine among those has been granted authorization from Anvisa.

Bolsonaro had long promoted the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine as the only one he would back, dismissing and discrediting many of the other vaccines on the market, including Pfizer’s. Brazil’s health minister Eduardo Pazuello even turned down an August offer from Pfizer to purchase up to 70 million doses of its vaccine.

“Pfizer says this very clearly on the contract, ‘we are not responsible for any collateral side effects’ – if you turn into an alligator it’s your problem,” Bolsonaro said in December. “If you become Superman, or grow a beard as a woman, or a man’s voice becomes high pitched, they say they have nothing to do with that.”

But a New England Journal of Medicine study now suggests that the Pfizer/BionTech vaccine could “efficiently” neutralize the P.1 variant. The news came as Bolsonaro held a virtual meeting Monday with Pfizer Global CEO Albert Bourla and other executives to negotiate the purchase of 100 million vaccines.

“I thank you for this meeting and we recognize Pfizer as a great world company,” Bolsonaro said, during an excerpt of the meeting posted to his official Twitter account. “We would like to close these deals with you, even more given the aggressiveness of this virus in Brazil.”

For now, Brazil’s failure to contain the virus is increasingly a cautionary tale for the world. Dr. Michael Ryan, the executive director of the World Health Organization’s Health Emergencies Program, said at a briefing last week that he worried the country’s surge in cases could be repeated elsewhere.

“The story in Brazil can be and will be repeated elsewhere if we stop implementing the measures as we need to implement them,” he said. “Countries are going to lurch back into third and fourth surges if we’re not careful.”

For Molina, the exhausted Santa Catarina nurse, Brazil’s future seems bleaker than ever.

“Unfortunately, I don’t think we’ve learned our lesson,” Molina said. “We [health workers] are tired, exhausted and are getting sick. We feel powerless. We need a more coordinated action if we’re going to keep this from happening again.

Journalist Marcia Reverdosa reported from Sao Paulo and CNN’s Flora Charner reported from Atlanta.

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Martian rover sends back ‘overwhelming’ video, audio from the Red Planet | Science

Just four martian days after touching down on the Red Planet, NASA’s Perseverance rover has sent back its first video of its new home: a 1-minute arabesque of color and motion captured from four on-board cameras, as the car-size rover dangles from its rocket-propelled descent vehicle, a red-and-white parachute snaps into place, and the pitted surface of Mars comes slowly into view, dark canyons giving way to ripples of dust that look like giant, rust-colored dunes (see video, above).

But perhaps even more thrilling, an unexpected gift arrived along with the video and the thousands of new images that were downloaded over the weekend: the first sound recording taken from the surface of Mars. The recording, captured 1 day after landing by an on-board microphone, features the whine of the rover, followed by a gust of martian wind drumming gently against the microphone. Hearing that sound was “overwhelming,” said Dave Gruel, lead engineer for the mission’s entry, descent, and landing cameras, at a NASA event announcing the new video and images. “We’re just beginning to do amazing things on the surface of Mars.”

That feeling lasted all weekend as the images and video rolled in, said Michael Watkins, director of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). “These are really amazing videos. We all binge-watched them over the weekend, if you can call a 1-minute video binge-watching. But we watched it many, many times, and it’s just fantastic.”

The videos and images also suggest the mission is going according to plan: So far, only a few pieces appear to be missing or out of place (an antenna cover, the parachute cover, and a wayward spring), and all instruments are functioning as expected, says Jessica Samuels, surface mission manager at JPL. Next, after a new software upload is complete, the science team plans to do an in-depth examination of the rover’s instruments, deploy its robotic arm, and take Perseverance for its first test drive on the Red Planet.

The only sad note, Gruel says, was that the rover’s microphones malfunctioned during entry, meaning the mission doesn’t have any sound to go with its new video. But the microphone is back online, and he said that his team got through the initial mishap with a favorite mantra: “We get what we get, and we don’t get upset.”

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