A spate of new coronavirus infections is striking California’s healthcare system, pushing COVID-19 hospitalizations to levels not seen since early spring — lending new urgency to efforts to tamp down transmission as a growing number of counties urge residents to wear masks indoors.

Statewide, the number of coronavirus patients in the hospital more than doubled in the last month, and the numbers have accelerated further in the last two weeks.

Even with the recent increase, though, the state’s healthcare system is nowhere near as swamped as it was during the fall-and-winter surge. And many health experts are confident that California will never see numbers on that scale again, given how many residents are vaccinated.

But with the continued spread of the highly infectious Delta variant, which officials fear could mushroom in communities with lower inoculation rates, the next few weeks are key in determining how potent the pandemic’s latest punch may be.

The recent increases confirm that nearly everyone falling seriously ill from COVID-19 at this point is unvaccinated.

“This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. And so, if you care about getting back to normalcy once and for all, please get vaccinated,” Gov. Gavin Newsom told reporters Tuesday.

Six more California counties are urging masks in indoor public spaces amid upticks in coronavirus cases and circulation of the Delta variant.

The fact that about 52% of all Californians are already fully vaccinated sets a ceiling on how many people remain exposed to potential infection.

Still, L.A. County Health Services Director Dr. Christina Ghaly said Tuesday that “the individual consequences of a choice not to get vaccinated can be dire for that person and his or her family and friends.”

Ghaly said seeing a continued stream of COVID-19 patients, the vast majority of whom are unvaccinated, triggers a range of emotions in healthcare workers who have long been on the front lines of the pandemic: frustration, sadness and “some level of disbelief that, after all of the pain and suffering that we’ve all seen … there’s still people who either don’t believe it or don’t believe that it can affect them.”

The highest-risk Californians — notably the elderly — have been vaccinated at high rates. But the numbers drop off for younger segments of the population, and children under the age of 12 still aren’t eligible to be vaccinated.

“I think sometimes the mentality is that people think, ‘Well, I’m not going to get that sick. I’m going to be OK. I’m not going to die from COVID; I’m young; I’m healthy,’ ” Ghaly said. “And I can tell you, hopefully that’s the case, but that’s not necessarily the case.”

Los Angeles County is now recording more than 10,000 coronavirus cases a week — a pace not seen since March.

From June 22 to July 6, the daily number of COVID-19 patients hospitalized in California increased from 978 to 1,228, a nearly 26% bump, state data show.

Over the last two weeks, the daily count swelled by an additional 76%, reaching 2,164 as of Monday.

California’s intensive care units also are filling up. As of Monday, 552 coronavirus-positive individuals were in ICUs statewide, more than double the total a month ago.

The latest numbers still pale in comparison to the peak of the last wave, when more than 21,000 COVID-19 patients were packed into hospitals and nearly 4,900 people were in ICUs on some days.

L.A. County officials say with COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations growing, they hope reinstituting masking as a social norm will help reduce disease transmission.

Officials have long characterized coronavirus transmission as a dangerous chain: The rising number of infections trigger corresponding increases in hospitalizations a week or two later and, eventually, an uptick in deaths.

However, inoculations have the power to interrupt that. There’s a wealth of academic and real-world data demonstrating the high level of protection afforded by vaccines, especially when it comes to preventing serious illness and death.

“We have the tools to end this epidemic. It is up to us to utilize those tools to their maximum,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U.S. government’s top infectious-diseases expert, told a Senate committee Tuesday.

In Los Angeles County, for example, the number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients has more than doubled in the last month.

But out of the nearly 4.8 million people countywide who had been fully vaccinated as of July 13, only 213 — or .0045% — later ended up hospitalized for COVID-19.

It used to be hard to find a vaccine appointment. Not any more. Here’s how to get your COVID-19 shot.

In Ventura County, Health Officer Dr. Robert Levin said recent data show that unvaccinated residents are 22 times more likely to be infected and hospitalized than those who have rolled up their sleeves.

“All community members should take action to protect themselves and others against this potentially deadly virus,” he said Monday.

San Bernardino County hospitals also are “seeing a rising number of COVID-19 patients, and, if national statistics are any indication, they are all unvaccinated,” according to interim Public Health Director Andrew Goldfrach.

“What everyone needs to recognize is that we cannot end this pandemic until we have vaccinated the vast majority of our population,” Goldfrach said in a recent situation update. “It was that way with polio, it was that way with smallpox, it was that way with the measles, and it will take mass vaccination to eliminate COVID-19. The truth is that we have it within our collective power to stop the sickness and deaths.”

Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has said that more than 97% of COVID-19 hospitalizations nationwide are among those who have not been vaccinated.

Newsom did not directly answer a question during a news conference in Sonoma County when asked about the possibility of a statewide indoor mask mandate.

Like hospitalizations, coronavirus cases have rebounded statewide over the last month — though they’re nowhere near as high as previous surges.

Over the weeklong period ending Monday, California reported an average of 4,200 new cases per day, more than four times the level in mid-June.

During the height of the fall-and-winter surge, the state was recording more than 40,000 daily cases, on average.

And many experts believe the healthcare system is better armored against an uptick in infections this time largely because of vaccinations.

Of particular concern now is the Delta variant, which is believed to be twice as transmissible as the conventional coronavirus strains. Despite arriving in the state fairly recently, it has quickly become the dominant variant in California.

Like other variants, Delta is the result of natural mutations that occur as the coronavirus replicates and spreads. Reducing the number of infections, Ghaly said, limits the chances for the virus to adapt in even more dangerous ways.

“The virus can’t mutate without a host. It doesn’t mutate sitting on a tabletop; it doesn’t mutate sitting in a respiratory droplet in the air,” she said.

Given the risk Delta poses to those who have yet to be fully inoculated, 16 counties — including Ventura, Santa Barbara, Sacramento, San Francisco and Santa Clara — are now urging all residents, even those who have been fully vaccinated, to wear masks in indoor public settings such as grocery stores, movie theaters and retail outlets.

L.A. County is mandating that masks be worn in such settings.

Throughout the coronavirus pandemic, many health and law enforcement officials have favored educating residents about masking rules and urging adherence rather than writing tickets.

All of those counties have gone beyond the guidance issued by the California Department of Public Health, which continues to advise that fully vaccinated residents are allowed to go mask-free nearly everywhere, though uninoculated residents must still mask up in public indoor spaces.

When asked about the possibility of issuing a new statewide mask mandate, Newsom said Tuesday that “if we can get more people vaccinated, that answer is unequivocal: We won’t need it.”

“We’re not looking to do any physical distancing, any social distancing. We’re not looking to close anything down. We’re fully committed to getting our kids back in school, in person, for instruction,” he said. “But we need to get more people vaccinated.”

The city also rules that in indoor public settings, all people, regardless of vaccination status, must wear masks.


While the inoculation campaign has largely entered a more deliberate phase — one where officials, in cooperation with community groups and local leaders, are working on the ground to answer questions, dispel misinformation and build vaccine confidence — some areas are taking a different approach, at least when it comes to their employees.

Pasadena will require all city employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19 once the shots receive federal approval — the first municipality in Southern California to take that step.

San Francisco already has ordered all workers in “high-risk settings,” such as hospitals, nursing homes and residential facilities for the elderly, and jails, to be fully vaccinated by Sept. 15. All 35,000 city workers — including police, firefighters, custodians and clerks — also will need to get vaccinated or risk losing their jobs once a vaccine has been formally approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

However, the vast majority of cities and counties have yet to adopt that tactic.

Dr. Muntu Davis, L.A. County’s health officer, said last week that “we do recognize that not everyone is going to get vaccinated, and we accept that. It is a personal decision at this time.”

But, he added, “If you make a decision to not get vaccinated, make sure you’re doing everything you can to reduce your risk, especially at this moment.”

Times staff writers Faith E. Pinho and Rong-Gong Lin II contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-07-21/california-coronavirus-hospitalizations-hit-highest-point-in-months

But operatives had already begun attempting to trail her, the leaked data suggests. The phones of top officials at Quest, a British private-security firm that had advised the princess for years, had been added to the list: Martin Smith, the company’s chief executive, and Ross Smith, its director of investigations and intelligence. So, too, had numbers for Haya’s personal assistant, the executive assistant of her Dubai household, and John Gosden, a horse trainer who had worked with Haya’s colts.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/07/21/dubai-princesses-spyware/

“If he was white, he wouldn’t have been at that hospital,” she said.

The statistics in the report released Wednesday laid bare the staggering toll of the pandemic, which has killed more than 600,000 Americans as it has, at times, pushed the health system to its limits.

Measuring life expectancy is not intended to precisely predict actual life spans; rather, it’s a measure of a population’s health, revealing either society-wide distress or advancement. The sheer magnitude of the drop in 2020 wiped away decades of progress.

In recent decades, life expectancy had steadily risen in the United States — until 2014, when an opioid epidemic took hold and caused the kind of decline rarely seen in developed countries. The decline flattened in 2018 and 2019.

The pandemic appears to have amplified the opioid crisis. More than 40 states have recorded increases in opioid-related deaths since the pandemic began, according to the American Medical Association.

Even if deaths from Covid-19 markedly decline in 2021, the economic and social effects will linger, especially among racial groups that were disproportionately affected, researchers have noted.

Though there have long been racial and ethnic disparities in life expectancy, the gaps had been narrowing for decades. In 1993, white Americans were expected to live 7.1 years longer than Black Americans, but the gap had been winnowed to 4.1 years in 2019.

Covid-19 did away much of that progress: White Americans are now expected to live 5.8 years longer.

As before, there remains a gender gap. Women in the United States were expected to live 80.2 years in the new figures, down from 81.4 in 2019, while men were expected to live 74.5 years, down from 76.3.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/21/us/american-life-expectancy-report.html

A dozen people died Wednesday after getting trapped in a flooded subway in Zhengzhou, China — which was inundated by what experts said were the heaviest rains in 1,000 years.

Horrifying video captured terrified commuters chest-deep in the gushing water on a train as an underground station in the city in central Henan province was swept by the roiling flood. More than 500 people were rescued.

“The water reached my chest,” one straphanger wrote on social media. “I was really scared, but the most terrifying thing was not the water, but the diminishing air supply in the carriage.”

President Xi Jinping called the flood control situation “very severe” and ordered authorities to “prioritize the safety of people’s lives and properties,” CNN reported, citing state news agency Xinhua.

Over 500 people had to be rescued from the flooded subways of Zhengzhou, China.weibo

Footage broadcast by the Chinese outlet shows passengers trapped inside the flooded subway car, packed tightly together as the water climbs higher while dark floodwater surges down the tracks.

Many of those trapped posted desperate calls for help on social media.

People trapped in the subway trains desperately reached out for help via social media.
Courtesy of Weibo user merakiZz-/AFP via Getty Images
While many were rescued, 12 people died trapped in a flooded subway in Zhengzhou, China.
Courtesy of Weibo user merakiZz-/AFP via Getty Images

“The water inside the carriage has reached chest-levels! I already can’t speak anymore, please help!” wrote one woman, who went by the name Xiaopei, CNN reported.

“If no rescue comes in 20 minutes, several hundreds of us will lose our lives in Zhengzhou subway,” she added later. Authorities later confirmed she had been rescued.

A woman was captured in one video posted by the BBC being rescued after being swept down a street flooded by muddy water and another clip shows children and teachers being rescued from a flooded school in Zhengzhou.

A woman stands on a flooded road in Henan, Zhengzhou province, China, on July 20, 2021.
VIA REUTERS

Due to the epic deluge, authorities in the city of 12 million people about 400 miles southwest of Beijing had halted bus services, said a Zhengzhou resident surnamed Guo, who spent the night at his office.

“That’s why many people took the subway, and the tragedy happened,” Guo told Reuters.

The death toll since the torrential rains began last weekend rose to at least 16 on Wednesday, with four residents reported dead in Gongyi, a city located by the banks of the Yellow River, like Zhengzhou, according to local reports.

The rainfall in Zhengzhou in the past three days was described as happening “once in a thousand years.”
WeChat

More rain is forecast across Henan for the next three days, and the People’s Liberation Army has deployed more than 3,000 troops and personnel to help with search and rescue.

The rainfall in Zhengzhou in the past three days was on a level seen only “once in a thousand years,” according to local meteorologists.

Scientists told Reuters that the extreme rainfall in China was almost certainly linked to global warming, as is the case of the major flooding that has ravaged Western Europe. “The common thread here is clearly global warming,” Johnny Chan, professor of atmospheric science at City University of Hong Kong, told the news agency.

People walk in the flooded road after record downpours in Zhengzhou, China, on July 20, 2021.
EPA

“Such extreme weather events will likely become more frequent in the future. What is needed is for governments (city, provincial and national) to develop strategies to adapt to such changes,” he added.

With Post wires

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/07/21/12-die-in-flooded-subway-car-during-historic-rains-in-china/

Dr. Brytney Cobia said Monday that all but one of her COVID patients in Alabama did not receive the vaccine. The vaccinated patient, she said, just needed a little oxygen and is expected to fully recover. Some of the others are dying.

“I’m admitting young healthy people to the hospital with very serious COVID infections,” wrote Cobia, a hospitalist at Grandview Medical Center in Birmingham, in an emotional Facebook post Sunday. “One of the last things they do before they’re intubated is beg me for the vaccine. I hold their hand and tell them that I’m sorry, but it’s too late.”

Three COVID-19 vaccines have been widely available in Alabama for months now, yet the state is last in the nation in vaccination rate, with only 33.7 percent of the population fully vaccinated. COVID-19 case numbers and hospitalizations are surging yet again due to the more contagious Delta variant of the virus and Alabama’s low vaccination rate.

Read More: New COVID surge begins in Alabama, hospitalizations double in July

For the first year and a half of the pandemic, Cobia and hundreds of other Alabama physicians caring for critically ill COVID-19 patients worked themselves to the bone trying to save as many as possible.

“Back in 2020 and early 2021, when the vaccine wasn’t available, it was just tragedy after tragedy after tragedy,” Cobia told AL.com this week. “You know, so many people that did all the right things, and yet still came in, and were critically ill and died.”

In the United States, COVID is now a pandemic of the unvaccinated, according to the head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In Alabama, state officials report 94% of COVID hospital patients and 96% of Alabamians who have died of COVID since April were not fully vaccinated.

“A few days later when I call time of death,” continued Cobia on Facebook, “I hug their family members and I tell them the best way to honor their loved one is to go get vaccinated and encourage everyone they know to do the same.”

“They cry. And they tell me they didn’t know. They thought it was a hoax. They thought it was political. They thought because they had a certain blood type or a certain skin color they wouldn’t get as sick. They thought it was ‘just the flu’. But they were wrong. And they wish they could go back. But they can’t. So they thank me and they go get the vaccine. And I go back to my office, write their death note, and say a small prayer that this loss will save more lives.”

More than 11,400 Alabamians have died of COVID so far, but midway through 2021, caring for COVID patients is a different story than it was in the beginning. Cobia said it’s different mentally and emotionally to care for someone who could have prevented their disease but chose not to.

“You kind of go into it thinking, ‘Okay, I’m not going to feel bad for this person, because they make their own choice,’” Cobia said. “But then you actually see them, you see them face to face, and it really changes your whole perspective, because they’re still just a person that thinks that they made the best decision that they could with the information that they have, and all the misinformation that’s out there.

“And now all you really see is their fear and their regret. And even though I may walk into the room thinking, ‘Okay, this is your fault, you did this to yourself,’ when I leave the room, I just see a person that’s really suffering, and that is so regretful for the choice that they made.”

Cobia said that the strain wears on healthcare workers after the trauma of 2020 and 2021.

“It’s really hard because all of us physicians and other medical staff, we’ve been doing this for a long time and all of us are very, at this point, tired and emotionally drained and cynical,” she said.

Cobia said the current wave of Delta patients reminds her of the time in October and November of 2020, just before Alabama’s peak of coronavirus cases and deaths.

“What we saw in December 2020, and January 2021, that was the absolute peak, the height of the pandemic, where I was signing 10 death certificates a day,” she said. “Now, it’s certainly not like that, but it’s very reminiscent of probably October, November of 2020, where we know there’s a lot of big things coming up.”

Cobia worries that the upcoming school year will lead to a similar surge.

“All these kids are about to go back to school. No mask mandates are in place at all, 70% of Alabama is unvaccinated. Of course, no kids are vaccinated for the most part because they can’t be,” Cobia said. “So it feels like impending doom, basically.”

Drs. Miles and Brytney Cobia with children Carter and Claire.

Cobia also had a personal experience with the virus, contracting it in July while 27 weeks pregnant with her second child. Her symptoms were mild and the child, Carter, was delivered early out of caution but suffered no serious complications.

Her husband, Miles, is also a physician, and the couple says they were both extremely cautious about wearing protective equipment but one of them still caught the virus and gave it to the other, as well as other family members.

“We still went to work but we masked 100% of the time,” Cobia said. “We didn’t go anywhere or do anything, we ordered through Shipt for all of our groceries, we did nothing at the time.”

Cobia said she delivered in September without incident and got the vaccine herself in December when it was made available to healthcare workers.

“I did not hesitate to get it,” she said. “There was a lot unknown at that time, because I was still breastfeeding about whether that was safe or not. I talked to as many other physician colleagues as I could and spoke with my OB as far as data that she had available and decided to continue breastfeeding after vaccination.”

Read More: Unvaccinated represent 96% of Alabama COVID deaths since April

For people who are hesitant to receive the vaccine, Cobia recommends speaking to their primary care physician about their concerns, just as she did.

“I try to be very non-judgmental when I’m getting a new COVID patient that’s unvaccinated, but I really just started asking them, ‘Why haven’t you gotten the vaccine?’ And I’ll just ask it point blank, in the least judgmental way possible,” she said. “And most of them, they’re very honest, they give me answers. ‘I talked to this person, I saw this thing on Facebook, I got this email, I saw this on the news,’ you know, these are all the reasons that I didn’t get vaccinated.

“And the one question that I always ask them is, did you make an appointment with your primary care doctor and ask them for their opinion on whether or not you should receive the vaccine? And so far, nobody has answered yes to that question.”

Source Article from https://www.al.com/news/2021/07/im-sorry-but-its-too-late-alabama-doctor-on-treating-unvaccinated-dying-covid-patients.html

RUSTIC, Colo. (CBS4) – One person is dead after rain over the burn scar from the Cameron Peak Fire flooded the Cache la Poudre River and caused mudslides. Larimer County Sheriff Justin Smith confirmed the death in the area around the community of Rustic early Wednesday morning.

(credit: CBS)

At least five structures were also damaged in Tuesday’s flash floods, as well as at least one bridge. A large amount of debris washed across Highway 14, which is now closed in the area south of Red Feather Lakes in Poudre Canyon. Some campers told CBS4 they saw large logs floating down the river.

A mandatory evacuation order went out for people who live east of Rustic when the flash flooding started. Smith said some people didn’t get out of the area safely and that crews are now searching for at least two missing people. The search includes crews on foot and drones in the Black Hollow Road area.

The body of the adult female who died is near Arrowhead Lodge in a spot that’s hard to navigate and crews were set to try to recover the body for a second time on Wednesday. Divers will be attempting to recover the body of the deceased female and a passenger vehicle that is in the river.

Smith said “our deepest sympathy goes out to the yet-unidentified victim of this flooding and their family along with any other potential victims yet to be located.”

Highway 14 is closed west of Rustic to Cameron Pass as crews from the Colorado Department of Transportation work to clean up the road.

(credit: James Czarnecki)

James Czarnecki told CBS4 the Cache la Poudre River went from being clear to having multiple feet of debris. He and a friend went from campground to campground warning dozens of people and anglers in the river.

“I was astounded at how fast the river went from being completely clear, a normal day on the river, to a condition to where there was bank-to-bank debris flow and the water had risen two-and-a-half feet in a matter of 15-20 seconds,” said Czarnecki. “I don’t think people understand how flash floods can work. This was the first one I had seen and I was astounded by it.”

COLORADO WEATHER ALERT: Monsoon Storms Pose Flash Flood Threat Again Wednesday

A map of the affected area is at larimer.org/poudre-canyon-flooding.

LCSO set up a Joint Information Center for residents who are affected to call: 970-980-2500.

The American Red Cross opened an evacuation center at Cache La Porte Middle School.

Source Article from https://denver.cbslocal.com/2021/07/21/flooding-colorado-death-cache-la-poudre-river-cameron-peak-fire-burn-scar-larimer-county/

US life expectancy fell by a year and a half in 2020, the largest one-year decline since the second world war, public health officials said Wednesday. The decrease for both Black Americans and Hispanic Americans was even worse: three years.

The drop spelled out by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is due mainly to the pandemic, which health officials said is responsible for close to 74% of the overall life expectancy decline. More than 3.3 million Americans died last year, far more than any other year in US history, with Covid accounting for about 11% of those deaths.

The findings come as officials across the country weigh the possibility of reinstating some of the stricter efforts to curb the virus, including universal mask wearing and vaccine work requirements. Los Angeles county recently reinstated its indoor mask guidance.

Black life expectancy has not fallen so much in one year since the mid-1930s, during the Great Depression. Health officials have not tracked Hispanic life expectancy for nearly as long, but the 2020 decline was the largest recorded one-year drop.

The abrupt fall is “basically catastrophic,” said Mark Hayward, a University of Texas sociology professor who studies changes in US mortality.

Killers other than Covid played a role. Drug overdoses pushed life expectancy down, particularly for white people. And rising homicides were a small but significant reason for the decline for Black Americans, said Elizabeth Arias, the report’s lead author.

Other problems affected Black and Hispanic people, including lack of access to quality health care, more crowded living conditions, and a greater share of the population in lower-paying jobs that required them to keep working when the pandemic was at its worst, experts said.

Life expectancy is an estimate of the average number of years a baby born in a given year might expect to live. It’s an important statistical snapshot of a country’s health that can be influenced both by sustained trends such as obesity as well as more temporary threats like pandemics or war that might not endanger those newborns in their lifetimes.

For decades, US life expectancy was on the upswing. But that trend stalled in 2015, for several years, before hitting 78 years and 10 months in 2019. Last year, the CDC said, it dropped to about 77 years and four months.

More than 80% of last year’s Covid deaths were people 65 and older, CDC data shows.

That actually diminished the pandemic’s toll on life expectancy at birth, which is swayed more by deaths of younger adults and children than those among seniors.

That’s why last year’s decline was just half as much as the three-year drop between 1942 and 1943, when young soldiers were dying in the war. And it was just a fraction of the drop between 1917 and 1918, when the first war and a Spanish flu pandemic devastated younger generations.

Life expectancy bounced back after those drops, and experts believe it will this time, too. But some said it could take years.

Source Article from https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/21/us-life-expectancy-second-world-war-covid

Zhang Lanjuan, 33, a volunteer in Zhengzhou, said some 200 people were stranded in one neighborhood that she visited Wednesday. She said she saw some men swim their way out, but no women or children, and the water was too deep for the volunteers to enter.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/07/21/china-floods-zhengzhou-volunteers/

The delta variant now makes up about 83% of new COVID-19 cases in the country, and the uptick is seen everywhere.

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Sacramento County is up roughly five new cases from exactly one week ago at 14.2 new cases per 100,000 people, and vaccination numbers are still low. Specifically, in the North Highlands area with 95660 zip code, where 41% of residents have received one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and only 35% are fully vaccinated.

The reasons for vaccine hesitancy vary. On the ground, we heard fear, misinformation and a lack of access to information among some unvaccinated residents like Aurora, who had a vaccination appointment last week and backed out once she heard someone got sick from COVID-19 after receiving their shot.

But the CDC says that this isn’t possible, since the vaccines don’t actually contain the live virus.

“It only includes instructions to make one part of the virus and that’s the spike protein and once you make that spike protein, then your body forms an immune response to that,” said Dr. Dean Blumberg, a professor and chief of pediatric infectious diseases at UC Davis Children’s Hospital.

“I also wanted to see how it was going to play out with everybody because people are having different reactions,” said another North Highlands resident who chose not to be identified.

Can I get long-term side effects from the COVID-19 vaccine?

“The FDA required a long-term [two-month] follow-up following vaccinations, to make sure that these vaccines were safe and found no long-term side effects,” Blumberg added.

The CDC and the American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists haven’t found evidence that suggests that vaccines have any impact on fertility.

And if you’re still hoping to be protected from a previous COVID-19 infection, you might want to think that one over.

“The immune response following vaccination is stronger than the immune response following natural infection, so the vaccines protect better against reinfection compared to getting naturally infected,” Blumberg said.

KCRA 3 reached out to the offices of Sacramento County Supervisors Phil Serna and Rich Desmond, to find out how they’re engaging and educating residents so that residents can access accurate information and resources; as of the publishing of this article, neither have responded.

Should I get the COVID-19 vaccine if I’m healthy?

“At this point in the pandemic you have two choices: you can either get vaccinated or you can get COVID,” Blumberg said.

“More than 97% of cases in the U.S. that are being hospitalized are in unvaccinated individuals, more than 97% of deaths that occur with COVID-19 are unvaccinated individuals. So, if you want to decrease your chance of ending up in the hospital, if you want to decrease your chance of dying, then the clear choice is to get vaccinated,” he added.

Can receiving a COVID-19 vaccine cause you to be magnetic?

COVID-19 vaccines do not contain ingredients that can produce an electromagnetic field at the site of your injection. All COVID-19 vaccines are free from metals.

“There is no microchip in the vaccine. There is no metal in the vaccine. You can’t get magnetized by getting vaccinated. That’s just false. Those are all lies,” adds Blumberg.

Source Article from https://www.kcra.com/article/covid-19-cases-up-vaccinations-stay-stagnant-sacramento-county-areas/37084284

Republicans will vote against a key procedural vote Wednesday to proceed with debate on the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill in the Senate, lead GOP negotiator Rob Portman told CNBC on Wednesday.

“We’re just not ready,” the Ohio senator said in a “Squawk Box” interview.

“The bill is still being negotiated,” Portman said, adding that Republicans have warned for days that “there’s no way we can pull this thing together” in time for the Wednesday vote set by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

“So we’re going to vote no,” Portman said. “We just want time to get it right.”

He predicted that Republicans would be able to support the vote if it is pushed to Monday.

A spokesman for Schumer’s office did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment on Portman’s remarks.

Schumer and other Democratic leaders, with the backing of President Joe Biden, seek to advance the bipartisan infrastructure bill in tandem with a $3.5 trillion budget resolution that is likely to get no Republican support.

The bipartisan plan, which would fund a nationwide update of physical infrastructure systems such as bridges and waterways, would include $579 billion in new spending above a congressional baseline and cost $1.2 trillion over eight years.

The budget resolution, meanwhile, would pour federal money into addressing an array of issues, including climate change and health care.

Facing a tough legislative calendar to pull off this “two-track” feat, Schumer has ratcheted up pressure on the group of senators negotiating the infrastructure bill to finish up with the text of the legislation.

Schumer on Monday evening pushed the legislative process forward — even though the bill has yet to be written — by filing a motion to proceed with a shell bill that he can later swap the infrastructure text into.

On Tuesday, Schumer rejected Republican calls to slow down the process.

Wednesday’s vote, he said on the Senate floor, “is not an attempt to jam anyone,” but rather is “only a signal that the Senate is ready to get the process started.”

To invoke cloture and trigger hours of debate in the Senate, Schumer needs the support of 60 senators in a chamber that is divided 50-50 between Republicans and Democrats.

Portman’s remarks on CNBC suggest that Schumer is unlikely to reach that threshold.

Schumer said Tuesday that if the vote fails, Republicans would “be denying the Senate an opportunity to consider the bipartisan amendment.”

“In order to finish the bill, we first need to agree to start,” he said.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/21/infrastructure-bill-is-still-being-negotiated-republicans-to-block-key-senate-vote-top-gop-senator-says.html

Scientists who are skeptical of chief White House medical adviser Anthony Fauci’s proclamations about the coronavirus pandemic don’t want to go public with their concerns for fear it will affect their funding, Sen. Rand Paul claimed Tuesday.

“He’s been there for 40 years, probably 39 years too long, but he controls all the funding, so people are deathly afraid of him,” Paul, a Republican from Kentucky, told “Fox News Primetime” of Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) since 1984.

“I get letters from scientists all the time. You can find them. They’re very distrustful of what he’s saying,” Paul added. “They don’t think he’s making sense. They don’t think he’s reading the science accurately, but they’re afraid to speak out because many of them are university scientists and they depend on NIH [National Institutes of Health] funds, and to cross him means it’s the last money you’ll ever get.”

Paul is among Fauci’s most fervent critics on Capitol Hill and the senator clashed with the Brooklyn-born virologist again earlier Tuesday over the issue of whether NIH funded so-called “gain-of-function” research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

Sen. Rand Paul says university researchers are fearful of speaking out against Dr. Anthony Fauci’s decisions.
Greg Nash/Pool via AP

“Dr. Fauci, knowing that it is a crime to lie to Congress, do you wish to retract your statement of May 11 where you claimed that the NIH never funded gain-of-function research and move on?” asked Paul.

“Senator Paul, I have never lied before the Congress, and I do not retract that statement,” Fauci responded.

Paul has maintained that a 2015 paper about bat coronaviruses co-authored by Dr. Shi Zhengli, a Wuhan Institute of Virology researcher known as the “bat woman” for her work on the topic, represents proof that the NIH financed research increasing the transmissibility and virulence of viruses.

Fauci has denied that the work outlined in the paper constituted gain-of-function research and did so again on Tuesday.

Dr. Anthony Fauci has been accused amid the COVID-19 pandemic of funding the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, Pool)

“This paper that you’re referring to was judged by qualified staff, up and down the chain, as not being gain-of-function,” the doctor insisted.

“Gain-of-function research is defined by the NIH. We read the definition to him,” Paul said Tuesday night.

“It’s when you take an animal virus and you make it more transmissible or more dangerous, or more likely to cause a disease in humans. So we presented a paper from the Wuhan Institute, by Dr. Shi, where she took viruses, combined two viruses, that were not infectious in humans and made them infectious in humans … and all Dr. Fauci could do was sputter, call me a liar, but he never, at any point in time, did he address the facts that we laid out – that the money he was giving to Wuhan was indeed for gain of function,” he added.

The Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China on June 24, 2021.
Kyodo News via Getty Images

At one point during the hearing, a visibly annoyed Fauci told Paul that “you do not know what you are talking about, quite frankly, and I want to say that officially.” Paul, for his part, accused Fauci of “dancing around this, because you’re trying to obscure responsibility for 4 million people dying around the globe because of the pandemic.”

“If this disease came from the lab and they were funding gain of function, guess what? There’s at the very least moral culpability he has for the beginning of the pandemic,” Paul told Fox News. “But if you go back to Fauci’s statements in 2012, he said that the research was worth it even if a pandemic should occur, even if a leak from a lab should occur, the research was worth it. That, to me, shows incredibly bad judgment.”

The theory that the coronavirus leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology rather than jumping naturally from animals to humans, once dismissed as fringe, has gained traction in recent months.

Sen. Rand Paul suggests Wuhan Institute of Virology researcher Shi Zhengli created a coronavirus “infectious in humans”.
Chinatopix via AP, File

Earlier this week, CNN reported that an increasing number of top Biden administration officials back the so-called “lab leak theory,” though opinion remains split with the zoonotic theory. In May, President Biden ordered the intelligence community to conduct a 90-day review of all evidence related to the origins of the pandemic.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/07/20/rand-paul-says-researchers-afraid-to-speak-out-against-fauci/

GUANGZHOU, China — Taiwan electronics manufacturer Foxconn said Wednesday that its factory in Zhengzhou — known as the world’s largest iPhone assembly plant — has not been impacted by major flooding in the city.

Zhengzhou in China’s central Henan province has been hit with torrential rain. Authorities said it rained more in an hour on Tuesday than it normally would in an average month.

The result has been intense flooding in the city of more than 10 million people. Over 100,000 people have been relocated to safety and 12 people have died, according to state media reports.

Zhengzhou, an important industrial hub, is home to a major factory run by Hon Hai Precision Industry, also known a Foxconn. It is the biggest assembly plant for Apple’s iPhones in the world. Foxconn said its operations had not been affected by the flooding.

Foxconn told CNBC that it had “activated an emergency response plan for flood control measures in that location.”

“We can confirm that there has been no direct impact on our facility in that location to date and we are closely monitoring the situation and will provide any updates as appropriate,” a company spokesperson added.

Apple did not respond to a request for comment.

However, its CEO Tim Cook posted on China’s Twitter-like service Weibo.

“Our thoughts are with everyone affected by the flooding across Henan province, and the first responders helping people to safety,” Cook said, adding that Apple will be donating to support the relief effort.

Several other technology companies including Tencent, Alibaba and TikTok-owner ByteDance also pledged donations. China’s tech giants are currently under intense scrutiny from the country’s regulators.

‘Extremely severe’

Chinese President Xi Jinping called the flooding “extremely severe,” according to his comments published by the official Xinhua news agency.

Unverified videos circulating on Chinese social media such as Weibo, showed people trapped on a train in Zhengzhou’s subway system submerged in water up to their chests.

Other images show cars floating in flooded streets.

Zhengzhou’s subway network has suspended its operations while hundreds of flights have been cancelled. The army has been called in to help with the rescue efforts.

Various state media reported stories of rescue efforts including 150 kindergarten teachers and students being successfully saved and people being taken off buses stuck in flooded roads.

State-backed newspaper Xinhua, citing the chief forecaster for Henan province’s meteorological station, said the heavy rainfall is expected to last until Wednesday evening.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/21/china-zhengzhou-flooding-foxconn-says-iphone-factory-not-impacted.html

(CNN)With the highly contagious Delta variant spreading, particularly among unvaccinated Americans, it may be time to hit the “reset button” on pandemic response and for much of the country to put their masks back on, an expert said.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/21/health/us-coronavirus-wednesday/index.html

    A fence alongside Greenwood Cemetery, in Brooklyn, N.Y., is covered with memorial art for people who died of COVID-19. Pandemic deaths caused the biggest drop in life expectancy in decades.

    Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images


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    A fence alongside Greenwood Cemetery, in Brooklyn, N.Y., is covered with memorial art for people who died of COVID-19. Pandemic deaths caused the biggest drop in life expectancy in decades.

    Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

    Life expectancy in the United States declined by a year and a half in 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which says the coronavirus is largely to blame.

    COVID-19 contributed to 74% of the decline in life expectancy from 78.8 years in 2019 to 77.3 years in 2020, according to the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.

    It was the largest one-year decline since World War II, when life expectancy dropped by 2.9 years between 1942 and 1943. Hispanic and Black communities saw the biggest declines.

    For African Americans, life expectancy dropped by 2.9 years from 74.7 years in 2019 to 71.8 in 2020.

    U.S. Hispanics — who have a longer life expectancy than non-Hispanic Blacks or whites saw the largest decline in life expectancy during the pandemic, dropping 3 years from 81.8 years in 2019 to 78.8 years in 2020. Hispanic males saw the biggest decline, with a drop of 3.7 years. COVID-19 was responsible for 90% of the decline among Hispanics.

    The increase in drug overdose deaths was also a factor in declining life expectancy. More than 93,000 people died from drug overdoses in 2020. That’s the highest number reported in a single year. Other causes of death contributing to the decline were increases in homicide and deaths from diabetes and chronic liver disease.

    Just last month a study published in the British Medical Journal looked at life expectancy data for the U.S. and compared it to life expectancy data from 16 other high income countries. The study found the U.S. decrease in life expectancy from 2018 to 2020 was 8.5 times greater than the average decrease in peer countries. And the U.S. declines were most pronounced among minority groups, specifically Black and Hispanic people.

    Study author Steven Woolf of the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, told NPR’s Allison Aubrey, “We have not seen a decrease like this since World War II. It’s a horrific decrease in life expectancy.”

    “It is impossible to look at these findings and not see a reflection of the systemic racism in the U.S.,” Lesley Curtis, chair of the Department of Population Health Sciences at Duke University School of Medicine, told NPR.

    “The range of factors that play into this include income inequality, the social safety net, as well as racial inequality and access to health care,” Curtis said.

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2021/07/21/1018590263/u-s-life-expectancy-fell-1-5-years-2020-biggest-drop-since-ww-ii-covid

    Performing last rites before the cremation of a family member who died of COVID-19.

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    Performing last rites before the cremation of a family member who died of COVID-19.

    Anupam Nath/AP

    How many people have died of COVID-19 since the pandemic began?

    The official global total as of this week: 4.1 million.

    But everyone agrees the true toll is far greater. A study released on Tuesday looks at how much of a disparity there may be in India, one of the epicenters of the pandemic.

    The analysis, from the Center for Global Development, a think tank in Washington, D.C., looks at the number of “excess deaths” that occurred in India between January 2020 and June 2021 – in other words, how many more people died during that period than during a similar period of time in 2019 or other recent years.

    Drawing death data from civil registries and other sources, the report came up with three estimates for undercounts. The conclusion is that between 3.4 and 4.7 million more people died in that pandemic period than would have been predicted. That’s up to 10 times higher than the Indian government’s official death toll of 414,482.

    The researchers looked at India in particular because, says study co-author Justin Sandefur, the country has been hit so hard by COVID-19. “The second wave in particular led to heart-wrenching stories from friends and colleagues – and a sense that official numbers are not capturing the true scale of that toll.”

    But COVID death undercounts are happening almost everywhere. In the United States, the official toll is 500,000 but the real number is closer to 700,000, says Ali Mokdad of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME). The group’s website has a global rundown that estimates “excess mortality” in many countries during the pandemic.

    When counting “excess deaths,” the cause of death is not part of the data set. But during a health crisis like the pandemic, the assumption is that these additional deaths are part of the COVID-19 toll, says Mokdad. They reflect not only those who died of the virus but those who might have died, say, of heart disease or diabetes because they were afraid to seek treatment during lockdowns, and those who killed themselves due to pandemic stresses, he adds.

    Relatives carry a body for cremation past corpses partially exposed in shallow sand graves. In May, rains washed away the top layer of sand at a cremation ground on the banks of the Ganges River in Shringverpur, India.

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    Relatives carry a body for cremation past corpses partially exposed in shallow sand graves. In May, rains washed away the top layer of sand at a cremation ground on the banks of the Ganges River in Shringverpur, India.

    Ritesh Shukla/Getty Images

    How The India Undercount Happened

    There are various reasons for the death toll discrepancies in India, as NPR’s Lauren Frayer and Sushmita Pathak reported earlier this year. Dr. Aniket Sirohi, a municipal health official in south Delhi, told NPR he counted 702 deaths on a day in mid-April and passed those numbers up the chain of command. But the death figures the government has published for his region have been at least 20% lower than what he’s seeing on the ground, he said.

    He attributed this disparity to administrative chaos. People from neighboring states flock to Delhi for medical treatment. Some die in Delhi and are cremated there but remain registered as residents somewhere else. They don’t get counted anywhere, he said.

    “Somehow the numbers are not getting recorded or not shown or getting missed,” Sirohi said. “India always had a poor record of maintaining these things. We have a lot of population. So there’s a bit of a problem with coordination – especially in times like this [pandemic second wave], when 50% of my staff is sick.”

    In the western state of Gujarat, local media tracked 689 bodies that were cremated or buried under COVID-19 protocols in one day in mid-April. But just over a 10th of those deaths made it to the government’s tally: The official death toll that day was 78. Such discrepancies were being reported in several states.

    There have also been allegations that some politicians tried to suppress inconvenient news about rising case numbers, as NPR reported in April.

    In the not-too-distant future, the estimates in India and around the world will likely be confirmed by the collection of additional data, says Mokdad. India, for example, conducts household surveys asking about family deaths, which will fill in some of the death tally gaps. In addition, census numbers will reflect the people who “disappeared” during the pandemic, he says.

    What Do ‘Excess Deaths’ Show Us?

    More accurate death counts will help the world “understand what went wrong from a public health and policy perspective” during the pandemic, says Sandefur. To determine what could have “been done to limit the death toll, we have to understand the scale and scope of the tragedy,” he says.

    Mokdad agrees with Sandefur’s assessment. For example, he says, a realistic COVID death count will shed light on the impact of vaccine inequality — the lack of doses provided in a timely fashion to low-resource countries.

    Knowing the death counts will also bring new insights into the “ripple effects [of mortality rates] that we are only beginning to understand – such as erosion of confidence in the health system and state,” says Liana Rosenkrantz Woskie of the Harvard Global Health Institute.

    There’s also a very human reason for finding the truth. “Accurate accounting of death is also one of the simplest dignities,” says Woskie. “Knowing how and why your family member died is fundamental to grieving but also to knowing that they were valued by society — and their loss might help mitigate future harm.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/07/20/1018438334/indias-pandemic-death-toll-estimated-at-about-4-million-10-times-the-official-co