The latest U.S. officials continue to focus their pandemic-relief efforts on the risk posed by the coronavirus's delta variant, which now represents about 25 percent of the country's confirmed infections. The White House on Thursday said they had formed "surge response" teams that will deploy extra supplies such as testing and therapeutics to areas experiencing delta outbreaks, including Arkansas, Colorado, Missouri and Utah. The Biden administration said this initiative might also include increased paid promotions in affected areas about the benefits of getting the vaccines. More than a year after scientists began their urgent push to develop those vaccines, researchers continue to test new immunization candidates. While they were optimistic about another mRNA vaccine developed by German company CureVac, the two-dose inoculation was shown to be only 48 percent effective at preventing symptomatic illness in clinical trials, the firm announced Wednesday. Still, CureVac emphasized that efficacy was higher in adults 60 and younger. The importance of widespread access to effective vaccines was underscored by a recent increase in coronavirus infections across Europe — the first such rise in 10 weeks, according to the World Health Organization. Health officials had hoped the pandemic would continue to wane as more people got their shots, but the WHO's regional director for Europe said increased socialization, summer travel and the spread of the delta variant were hindrances. That increase in infections comes as the European Union begins its "vaccine passport" program, which is meant to ease travel across Europe for vaccinated people. But people who got AstraZeneca doses made in India, which have not been approved by E.U. regulators, do not meet the program's criteria. The WHO and Covax said the decision will worsen global vaccine inequity. That inequity is on display in each of Africa's main regions, where the delta variant is causing a sharp increase in cases. African countries, meanwhile, have only gotten a trickle of vaccines from wealthier nations. Other important news Another Republican lawmaker compared public-health measures to Nazi atrocities, signaling an escalation in the use of similar extremist rhetoric from fringe groups to elected officials. The federal deficit will reach $3 trillion this year, largely because of pandemic relief spending, the Congressional Budget Office said. Crowded stadiums have returned to Europe for the Euro 2020 quarterfinals, making some officials nervous as infections rise. Germany's interior minister called UEFA, which is organizing the tournament, "utterly irresponsible." More than 80 teens and adults are infected with the coronavirus after attending a summer camp that did not verify vaccination status or require face masks indoors. |
No comments:
Post a Comment