Wednesday, May 12, 2021

The View from the Hermitage, Day 423

I really had to work to find interesting coronavirus news on the sites I visit daily. At least the number of pages for today in my now fourth paper journal seemed smaller than usual. I saw my mom today for the first time in about 14 months. She looked good. Her once-grey hair is now almost totally white. It looks good on her. I've always said that I hope my blonde hair turns white instead of grey. After seeing Mom, I was scheduled to work another afternoon of early voting. When I showed up along with the woman who is chief at my precinct, there were seven people set to work, which is about two too many given the small number of early voters coming right now. Since neither of us is working early voting for the money (there is at least one person doing so), we saved the county our afternoon pay and split. 

In terms of the Pfizer vaccine being approved for kids between the ages of 12 and 15, almost one fourth of new covid cases right now are in kids. That seems a pretty good argument for getting going on those immunizations. Several leaders here in Virginia are calling for school-based clinics to give the Pfizer shots. They will have to hurry, though, if they want to give the second shot before the end of the school year. One argument for school-based clinics is that requiring a permission slip from parents would relieve parents from taking their children somewhere to be vaccinated outside of school hours. When Son #2 was transitioning from elementary to middle school, the Health Department came to the school to give some required vaccination. I don't remember which one, though, and since I passed his immunization record on to him, I can't look at that to see. 

Covid deaths in the US are at their lowest level in 10 months. The number of deaths in some states has dropped into single digits more than once. Some states have even reported no deaths on several days. I hope that trend continues. I know that the warmer weather is getting more people outside more often, and that certainly helps, though the crowds at sporting events and graduations may paint a different picture. Fingers crossed that things such as cases and deaths continue to decline. 

India, on the other hand, is not seeing any real improvement. At least 90 more bodies were found washed up in a river used by rural residents for drinking and cooking. The 4,205 deaths Tuesday was a new record; the death toll has now climbed over 250,000. More than 860 medical personnel have died, 116 of them in less than one month. The Indian "variant of global concern" has now been identified in almost 50 countries worldwide. 

The WHO has released a report on the pandemic that they commissioned from an independent panel. Surprise, but the pandemic was preventable, with "weak links at every point in the chain." Preparation was inconsistent and underfunded, and the WHO was underpowered, making "global political leadership ... absent." The initial reports coming out of China in December 2019 should have been heeded. The lack of strong initial leadership made February 2020 "lost" in terms of the pandemic's progression. Looking ahead, the report recommends that high-income countries with enough vaccines ordered for their own needs should commit to providing at least one billion doses to Covax by September 1. The G7 should provide 60 percent of the $19 billion needed for vaccines, therapeutics, tests, and strengthening health systems. The remaining 40 percent should come from the G20 and other high-income countries. 

And the word on my computer from hell is, well, that it is behaving like a computer from hell in terms of the shop's being able to get everything backed up. On that cheery note, I do think I'll go fold laundry.

1 comment:

Caroline M said...

Son had his later vaccinations done at school. All the routine health monitoring used to be done during school hours although I think they do less of it now than they used to. It must be a very efficient way of doing it, you have them all on site all day and you can pull them a class at a time as you need them.

We're now on vaccinating those age 38 and over so it's dropped two years since I looked last. Schools here don't close until July but that's the target date for all adults to be offered a vaccine, so far there's been nothing said about children. Unless there's a major change I think vaccination will be part of the back to school package.