Friday, December 31, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 156 (656)
Thursday, December 30, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 155 (655)
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 154 (654)
"Lots of" does not begin to describe the amount of chatter there has been about the CDC and various other entities shortening the isolation and quarantine times. Some medical people support the decision while others don't. There is certainly some confusion out there as to exactly why this decision was made. Says a senior pastor of a church in Chicago, "Either we're in a surge that we need to take very seriously or are we winding down the pandemic and that's why we're shortening the isolation and quarantine times. They might want to give us a little more information to go with."
The CDC director explains that, "Not all of these cases are going to be severe. In fact, many are going to be asymptomatic. We want to make sure there is a mechanism by which we can safely continue to keep society functioning while following the science." And what does the science say? Omicron may have a shorter incubation period, 72 hours. It was four to six days for Delta and the original virus. People infected with Omicron may thus become non-contagious faster than people with other forms. Cutting the time-out length will help keep hospitals staffed, airplanes flying, and the continuation of other services depending on number of workers. As for the public health side, the CDC director also noted that the decision to shorten the isolation period was driven by the evidence on transmissibility but also what isolation period people "would be able to tolerate."
I go back and forth as to whether this is a good idea. I guess that people staying isolated or quarantined for five days is better than their looking at 10 days and saying, "Screw that! I'm going out!" England has shortened its period to seven days and also requires two negative lateral flow tests taken a day apart. I've seen nothing about negative tests on this side of the pond. Some of the professional sports leagues have testing requirements, but I haven't seen any mention in what I've read about the CDC,
Cases are going crazy. We may very well hit the half million mark today or tomorrow. The seven-day average number of cases is 267,305, up 126 percent over two weeks. Closer to home, Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia all broke records on Monday. For the District, there have been almost 1,000 percent more new cases over the past two weeks and over 9,000 new cases since December 24. Maryland's seven-day average for new cases is more than double the previous high in January 2020.
And really, really close to home, the local university is seeing surging cases among faculty and staff. There were 54 new cases Monday, and 53 more new cases yesterday. Since those numbers represent only tests given or processed at the university, there are likely more out there who tested privately. The Professor notes that he is glad not to be one of them. No word yet on classes in January. The interim January term is supposed to start on Monday. I wonder how the profs teaching those classes are doing.
I wonder what the over-under on cases tomorrow should be....
Tuesday, December 28, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 153 (653)
Looking to covid in the future rather than in the present, the dean of Brown University's School of Public Health predicts, "January is going to be a really, really hard month and people should just brace themselves for a month where lots of people are going to get infected." In the present, the seven-day average number of cases was about 240,000 yesterday. Back to the future one expert says, "I think we're going to see half a million cases a day--easy--sometime over the next week to 10 days." At the same time, POTUS says that Omicron's surge in cases "should be a source of concern but it should not be a source of panic." Much as I like POTUS, this comment probably won't win him any new friends and is going to hurt him with some others.
The CDC is changing its guidance on how long to isolate following a positive test or potential exposure. The 10 days of isolation they were suggesting has shortened to five days followed by five days of serious mask-wearing. The CDC says that most viral spread happens in the first five days and with proper masking, viral spread after that is minimal. People who were sick but whose symptoms are improving and who no longer have fever can also leave isolation after five days as long as they stay masked. The same holds for fully vaccinated people who have been exposed as opposed to tested. The National Basketball Association is taking the CDC guidance a step further and saying that players testing positive but whose viral load is low can return to playing sooner.
The CDC is actively investigating or observing 68 cruise ships following outbreaks on board. Seven others are being monitored for covid, but the case numbers are below the threshold for starting an investigation. That threshold is positive cases reported in over 0.10 percent of passengers or a single crew member in the previous seven days. While I greatly enjoyed our trips along the Norwegian coastline on the coastal ferry and mailboat, I have no desire whatever to take one of the multi-story resort cruises around the Caribbean or other sun-drenched body of water. Truth be told, I have no desire right now even to sail on the coastal ferry.
New York City schools will reopen in-person classes on Monday, January 3 but with changes in their covid policies. The city was quarantining entire classes if there were any possible exposure. Now, they will use an enhanced testing program to allow asymptomatic students who test negative to remain in school, a program known as "Stay Safe, and Stay Open." The outgoing mayor announced the program, but the incoming mayor is on board with the decision. The aim is to detect more infections while mitigating disruptions. The specifics of how it will work were described as follows: After one student tests positive. all the other students are given rapid at-home tests. Students who are asymptomatic and test negative can return to school the next day. They will get a second at-home test within seven days of the original exposure. Major in-school spread across classes or levels can mean a temporary closure. The testing plan is to test 20 percent of students in each school weekly. BUT (there's always a catch) the only students who can be tested are those whose parents have given permission for testing. If you won't get your child vaccinated, will you let that child be tested?
I remember sometime in a past post to this blog noting that we had passed the milestone of at least one in every 500 people having died from covid. That number is now at least one in every 406 people. At least one in every six people living in the US have been infected. I wonder how that one in six might change after (I wish I could say "if" here, but I don't feel comfortable with that) half a million cases are counted in one day.
Monday, December 27, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 152 (652)
New York City's new mayor will be sworn in at midnight January 1. One of his first major decisions will be whether public schools re-open on January 3. He does not support large-scale shutdowns, saying, "We can't close down the city anytime a new variant comes up." He is not alone on the school-closing front. Some 300 schools in Maryland, New Jersey, New Mexico, and New York have already said they will remain closed. New Jersey has told schools to do the first two weeks of school remotely. It is not an easy decision. One public health expert says that the only reason to close schools would be severe staffing shortages. Apart from schools, the number of children hospitalized with covid has been rising. Pediatric hospitalizations in New York have quadrupled. It does not help that just 16 percent of children between the ages of five and 11 have been vaccinated compared with 71 percent of children between the ages of 12 and 17.
Flights continue to be canceled or delayed. The main reason given is medical, though weather has played into some of the decisions. Dr. Fauci weighed in an air travel: "When you make vaccination a requirement, that's another incentive to get more people vaccinated. If you want to do that with domestic flights, I think that's something that seriously should be considered." That's an interesting idea, but would there be exceptions for emergency cases in which someone not fully vaccinated needs to get to the other coast because an immediate family member is seriously ill or dying? Would vaccine passports be used? Some states have essentially outlawed those. With only 62 percent of Americans fully vaccinated, the number of people asking for an exemption would likely not be small.
The national record for average daily cases is 251,232 set in January 2021. I expect to see a new record in the early days of 2022 if not before 2022 arrives. Delaware, Hawaii, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Puerto Rico have seen more cases in the past week than in any other seven-day period.
Continuing with domestic covid news, five of the 42 post-season college football bowl games have been cancelled due to at least one of the teams not having enough players given covid issues. The local university is one of those teams, backing out of the bowl game that would have been the farewell game for a coach leaving not because he was fired or because he was taking a job at another school. He's trying to figure out what to do with his life other than coach football. There are four teams in the running to be national champion. The two semi-final games and the final game will be counted as forfeitures if one team cannot play due to covid. With one semi-final and the final cancelled we could crown the last team standing as national champs, not something I want to see happen. Finally, at least four large cruise ships have had to cut their voyages short due to covid outbreaks. It will be interesting to see how many keep on cruising.
A lab in Sydney, Australia mistakenly told 400 people that they had tested negative when, in fact, they had tested positive. Another 995 people were told they'd tested negative when their results were not yet known. Testing centers are overloaded. International travel requires a negative test but so does visiting Queensland and Tasmania. Forget the cause of the mishap and deal with it. How many people have the initial 400 people been in contact with? Unless they are as much of a hermit as I have been, there are probably a lot more people out there who will be testing positive in the near future. I would much rather be told I tested positive when I had not than the opposite. I would feel a nontrivial amount of guilt at potentially exposing other people.
Sunday, December 26, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 151 (651)
Saturday, December 25, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 150 (650)
Merry Christmas
or
Happy Holiday of your choosing
stay warm ... stay safe
Friday, December 24, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 149 (649)
A relaxed Christmas Eve always demands a hectic Christmas Eve Day, or at least so it seems. Random one-shot things today. The director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota called Omicron a "viral uzi," noting that it "is a game-changer. As much as Covid has been an immense challenge, Omicron takes it to a whole new level."
Best get-together advice I've seen: Plan for the most vulnerable person in the room. "Who do we put at risk if we're infected?"
Over 3,500 flights have been canceled for today and tomorrow around the world due to crew members either having covid or having been exposed to someone who had it. Weather had something to do with some of the cancellations as well.
New data from Britain suggest that booster protection against asymptomatic covid wanes against Omicron within 10 weeks. Protection from Delta lasts longer. Results are supposed to be taken with caution since people who caught Omicron early may not be representative of the broader population. I had my booster over 10 weeks ago. Hmmm.
Some scientists warn against a fourth shot saying that immune cells may stop responding to shots if too many doses are given.
The ban on entry from countries in southern Africa will expire at midnight on December 31.
A large number of white-tail deer in Ohio and Pennsylvania have been found to be carrying the coronavirus responsible for covid-19. It is not clear how the virus jumped from humans to deer; it seems inevitable for it to return the other way.
And now to finish the needle-felted ornament that is the cat's present.
Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!
Thursday, December 23, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 148 (648)
Word came today that the New Year's Eve celebration would still go on, though that might change before December 31. Instead of 58,000 people, though, there will be only 15,000. I have not yet heard how those 15,000 people will be chosen. They must have proof of full vaccination, wear masks, and practice social distancing. I'm not sure of the specifics on distancing--family groups, maybe? The last New Year's Eve on which The Professor and I saw midnight was December 31, 2018, aboard MS Lofoten anchored outside Tromso, Norway. The fireworks display was the best I've seen.
The graph showing case numbers in the District of Columbia shows a vertical line. Cases on Saturday nearly tripled the previous record high. An ER nurse in the District comments, "What do you do when you have a tidal wave coming at you in a little paddle boat? There's going to be a huge uptick. Our entire waiting room is going to be all Covid-positive."
Data from the UK suggest that Omicron appears to reduce the chance of a hospital visit 20 to 25 percent and an overnight admission by at least 40 percent. The data were based on 56,000 Omicron cases and 269,000 Delta ones. Still, new daily cases just went over 100,000 for the first time. There were 301 hospital admissions on December 20, up 78 percent in one week and the highest single day number since February 7. For unvaccinated people who had not had a case of covid, risk of hospitalization was about 11 percent lower for Omicron than Delta. Modeling suggests that there could be 3,000 hospitalizations per day at the peak of the wave in January if no new restrictions are put in place.
Meanwhile in Europe, the continent, Spain is responding to a daily all-time record of almost 50,000 new cases in one day and enacting an outdoor mask mandate. Italy is considering an outdoor mask mandate as well as making the health pass valid for six months rather than nine, and banning parties or events, indoors or out, until the end of January. In Greece, all outdoor and indoor areas not currently requiring masks must start to require them. There will be no public events until January 3 at the earliest. Data from France suggest that unvaccinated children are helping drive the surge there. Vatican City now requires all workers to be vaccinated or recovered from covid. Regular testing is no longer an option. Finally, Putin has said there will be no vaccine mandates. Russians, he says, are "inventive people" meaning "whatever you start to push, they find ways to circumvent it."
There's more news I could include, but Son #1 asked for my help with his Christmas present to Son #2, and I have a bit more to do tonight so that I can hand it off in the morning for him to finish. The Professor is making butter tarts tonight, and I've already been called into the kitchen for a consult. Multitasking may be my middle name this evening.
Wednesday, December 22, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 147 (647)
Late-breaking news: The FDA has given authorization to Pfeizer's antiviral, Paxlovid. It can be used by adults and children over the age of 12 with mild to moderate covid who are at risk of progressing to more serious disease. The full course of treatment is 30 pills with three pills twice daily for five days. The drug will only be available by prescription and muct be given within five days of symptom onset. The bad news with the good news is that there are only 180,000 courses of treatment currently available. There should be another 80 million ready by the end of 2022; the federal government has reserved 10 million of those.
Only one of the three monoclonal antibody treatments currently available works against Omicron. Sotrovimab was developed by GlaxoSmithKlein. While the other two treatments were developed using blood of people who survived covid-19. Sotrovimab was developed using blood of people who survived the 2003 SARS epidemic.
Opinions on the plan POTUS discussed yesterday are mixed. One criticism was that it is a reactive plan instead of a proactive one. Only 30 percent of Americans have gotten boosters. The roll-out was rocky which may have contributed to the 30 percent. Covid tests are critical to the plan but in short supply. Finally, hospitals are already stretched thin. Perhaps military or federal aid could have been given sooner. I am not sure how POTUS was supposed to get vaccine-hesitant or -resistant people to be vaccinated, but that was another dig at him, that only 62 percent of Americans are fully vaccinated. An emergency doctor and academic dean for Brown University's School of Public Health summarized, "Everything in this plan that he released today is what I want to see. I just wish we'd had it earlier."
England has cut the number of days of isolation required for people after they show symptoms. It was 10 and has been shortened to seven. Two negative tests, one each on days 6 and 7, are required to end isolation at seven days. In the US, isolation lasts for 10 days after showing symptoms. A vaccinated person is good to go if there has been no fever in 24 hours and symptoms are improving. Unvaccinated people are required to isolate for a full 10 days if they have contact with an infected person.
Israel is beginning to give a fourth dose of vaccine to people over 60 and to medical workers. Whether this is in response to Omicron, I do not know. I wonder if the idea will cross the pond and happen here as well. Things are going to get complicated number-wise what with number or percent of people who have had at least one dose, two doses, three doses or four. What would "fully vaccinated" mean after that?
I heard today of two children in different places who were exposed to covid via their preschool. In both cases, the kids are too young to be vaccinated. So far both have tested negative. I do not want to think how I might have handled that happening with one of my children. I don't think I would have handled it at all well. I also today heard several people say that we will all eventually be infected with some coronavirus variant known or not yet known. Survival of the fittest in real time?
Tuesday, December 21, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 146 (646)
Monday, December 20, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 145 (645)
As European countries put new restrictions in place or tighten the ones already in effect, we in the US are doing very little in terms of trying to slow the pace of Omicron. New York City will announce this week whether they will hold or cancel next week's New Year's Eve celebration in Times Square. The fact that they have noted that it will be outside and allow entry only to vaccinated people leads me to believe it will still be held. Some local governments and private institutions have been putting in place pandemic measures that feel like last year, but it may well be too little even if it's at the right time. Several governors, including one currently testing positive for covid, have said they have no intention of putting restrictions in place again.
So just how bad are things here? Last week saw a 17 percent increase in covid cases and a nine percent increase in deaths. Descriptors bandied about include "viral blizzard," "winter of severe illness and death," and "extraordinary." Fifty million Americans remain unvaccinated, and it's not at all clear if many or most of those ever will get vaccinated. New cases in New York City are up 60 percent over two weeks. Washington, DC is seeing three times as many new cases daily as at the start of December. POTUS will address the nation tomorrow night. According to his press secretary, he "will announce new steps the Administration is taking to help communities in need of assistance, while also issuing a stark warning of what the winter will look like for Americans that choose to remain unvaccinated."
Not too long ago, the news was that the majority of new cases were in people who had not yet been vaccinated. Reports out of Denmark are that most of the people infected there are fully vaccinated. As for the severity of a case of Omicron, data from Imperial College London found no evidence that Omicron is less severe than Delta based on the proportion of people seeking hospital care after they have been infected. I'll be looking for more detail on that study given how important the results would be.
Mild or severe illness aside, there are three signs of hope. First, anti-viral drugs are becoming available. These reduce the amount of virus produced in the body and lessen that chance patients will need hospital treatment. Second, cases in South Africa appear to have peaked while early signs are that deaths could be lower than in earlier waves. The caveat is that many South Africans have infection-induced immunity in addition to that induced by vaccines. Finally, Omicron appears much more efficient than Delta in reproducing in bronchial tubes in the upper respiratory tract, where it can be more easily coughed out onto other people. However, it appears far less efficient in spreading to the lungs where it poses the greatest danger to an infected person.
And on a "you have to be kidding, right?" note, this year's flu shot seems to have been poorly matched to the flu strains circulating this season. I'll have a respiratory disease, bartender; make it a double.
It's clear that we won't be putting in place anything like the restrictions being put in place in Europe. I read that hospitals will be filled to a greater capacity than they were in the spring of 2020. Is it pandemic fatigue that makes people today not see the value in inconvenient-for-a-short-while measures most people accepted at the outset? The less people do to help slow the spread of variants such as Omicron or to help block the development of even more such variants, the longer we may very well be only wishing we could be home for Christmas.
Sunday, December 19, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 144 (644)
How are things going in the Netherlands? The prime minister explains, "We have to act now to prevent a worst-case scenario. Without measures, we could be witnessing an uncontrollable situation at the start of January." What measures? The country is in nationwide lockdown. All but the most essential stores plus restaurants, hairdressers, gyms, museums, and other public spaces are closed until at least January 14. Schools and universities are closing a week early for the Christmas break and will stay closed until at least January 9. If that doesn't sound like enough, households are recommended to have no more than two visitors, though four will be allowed for Christmas and New Year's. Outside gatherings are limited to two people. Omicron will become the dominant strain by year's end. Hospitals have been canceling regular care for weeks and are still running out of beds. Cases are at record highs, though there is likely some error in the counts for the early days of the pandemic.
The UK's health minister is not ruling out more restrictions there. London's mayor says that new restrictions are "inevitable" and could affect social distancing and household mixing. Cases in Greater London are up 200 percent over the last two weeks. There were 65,525 new cases last week, and 26,418 in the last day of the week. Paris has canceled the New Year's Eve fireworks. Denmark has closed theaters, concert halls, amusement parks, and museums. Ireland has imposed an 8:00 pm curfew on pubs and bars and limited attendance at events both indoors and out.
So much for how Europe is handling Omicron. Here, only 30 percent of vaccinated Americans have gotten a booster. Just over half of Americans ages 65 and older have gotten boosters. New York saw 3,909 covid patients enter hospitals on Friday, an increase of 70 percent. Test positivity was 7.53 up from 2.6 percent on September 22. The number that floored me was that in Tompkins County, home to the city of Ithaca and Cornell University, cases rose 640 percent over a 14-day period. No, that is not a typo. The only decimal point would be one after the zero. They are seeing 224 cases per 100,000 people; the rate in New York City is 61 per 100,000.
Harvard University has announced that they will be offering remote learning for the first three weeks of January. The Professor is worried that the local university might go the same route. Having taught remotely for several semesters, he does not want to do it again. We appear to be lagging behind Europe in terms of Omicron's impact. Are we willing to reinstate stronger restrictions as several European countries are? I know that we likely won't here in Virginia unless there is a federal order. Our governor-elect is a conservative who has been mentioned as a potential running mate for He Who Shall Not Be Named in 2024. I don't expect any mandated mitigation measures here. [Yes, I have reverted to my original way of referring to a certain orange someone.]
Saturday, December 18, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 143 (643)
New York City is becoming pandemic ground zero as it was at the pandemic's 2020 start. They recorded 21,027 cases Friday. If you ignore the fact that many cases were probably missed in the early days, this is a record for the entire pandemic. Cases have gone up 56 percent in 14 days, while hospitalizations are up 25 percent. The current percent positivity is almost eight percent. Probably in response to Omicron's ability to bypass two doses of vaccine, New York State is changing their definition or "fully vaccinated" to include the booster dose. At Cornell University in Ithaca, 99 percent of the student body was vaccinated (under the two-dose standard). The university still saw 1,567 cases arise in the seven days ending Thursday out of a student body of over 26,000 students. In New York City, Broadway shows have closed temporarily as has Radio City Music Hall, home of the Rockettes.
A federal appeals court has reinstated POTUS's executive order requiring companies with at least 100 employees to require employees be vaccinated, have a valid exemption, or agree to be tested weekly. The school system in Prince George's County, Maryland, home to some 131,000 students, will go to remote learning for the four days they are open next week as well as for the first two weeks in January. Not what anyone wanted, probably, but out of an abundance of caution likely the right thing to do. The CDC just endorsed a strategy already in use by some systems, Test to Stay. Unvaccinated students who are explosed to covid can remain in school as long as they're tested twice in the following week and both tests are negative. A caveat is that the tests underlying this strategy were carried out before the arrival of Omicron.
Pfizer has been testing its vaccine on children between the ages of six months and five years. With two doses of a low-dose vaccine, about one-third of the adult dose, children between the ages of six months and two years showed a immune response equal to that shown by adults between the ages of 16 and 25, to adult doses. Children between the ages of two and five did not show this increase. Pfizer will also test using one-third the adult dose as a booster for children between the ages of five and 11.
WHO gave emergency authorization to Novavax, a vaccine developed by US company Novavax and the Serum Institute of India. Novavax has promised to deliver 1.1 billion doses to Covax. Novavax is not an mRNA vaccine and does not need the cold storage required by the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. It does, however, require two doses, meaning there may be extra coordination needed in rural areas.
Are South African and the UK sending warning messages to the US? Both have been dealing with the surge in Omicron cases that the US presumably will suffer all too soon. The research released regarding their experiences with Omicron say that it is more transmissible but is less likely to cause severe disease. There is, of course, a cautionary "BUT." The US lags both the UK and South Africa in terms of the average immunity people have from being vaccinated or having had covid. They are not dealing with the vaccine-hesitance or -resistance we have here. It doesn't help that some of the vaccine-deniers claim that the fact someone who is fully vaccinated and boosted can catch Omicron suggests the vaccine doesn't do anything, so why should they take it. They don't look at the next card on the table, the one that mentions protection against severe disease, hospitalization, or even death. They need to stay at the table until Mother Nature plays the rest of her hand.
Christmas is but one week away. If you are traveling to visit family and/or friends, be careful. Find some rapid tests to have on hand just in case. Stay masked in public settings or on public transit. If you have a feeling you should not do something, don't do it. You'll never know if you made the right decision, but that's better in this case than learning you didn't.
Friday, December 17, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 142 (642)
Thursday, December 16, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 141 (641)
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 140 (640)
Remember Cornell University's moving final exams online and telling students to begone? Princeton University did the same right after. A large proportion of each school probably comes from far enough away that they fly to and from university. I wonder what some of those kids may be paying to cancel or reschedule their flights. The kids whose finals ended early in the exam period are probably breathing a sigh of relief that they'd already left.
Interesting factoid: People in London having cold-like symptoms are more likely to have covid than a cold. The UK seems right now to be experiencing two covid epidemics, one from Delta and another from Omicron. New cases in one day just set a new record for the entire pandemic, 78,610. Right now, infections are doubling every 2.5 days. Right next door, Ireland will likely be tightening restrictions as Omicron is expected to be dominant there next week.
The governments of Denmark and Norway are both tightening restrictions in the face of covid surges. Denmark is seeing a 50 percent increase in the number of new cases. There were 7,799 new cases Monday, twice the number of the previous Monday. They are closing schools and colleges early, putting limits on nightlife, and urging remote working where possible. Denmark says that Omicron will be dominant in Copenhagen this week and nationally soon after. Norway says that Omicron is "becoming established and will dominate" country before Christmas. Norway's prime minister warns of a "total saturation of the national health system" and adds, "There is no doubt, the new variant really changes the rules. That's why we need to act fast and we need to act again. For many this will feel like a lockdown, if not of society then of their lives and of their livelihoods." Right now, Norway is banning the sale of alcohol in bars and restaurants, requiring remote working where possible, extending mask mandates, and restricting access to pools and gyms.
Elsewhere in Europe, Italy is making entry requirements stiffer. Everyone coming in from the EU has to test negative, while anyone who is unvaccinated must quarantine for five days. Poland is restricting the number of people in restaurants, hotels, and theaters. The Polish cabinet is divided on vaccine mandates for health care workers, teachers, and the military. France is warning of a sixth surge. Countries in southern Europe that did not have autumn surges are starting to have winter ones. The EU Commission President warns that Omicron could be dominant in Europe by mid-January,
Google is requiring that all US staff must be vaccinated by the middle of January or face serious repercussions. Staff who miss the January 18 deadline will first go on paid administrative leave for 30 days, then six months of "unpaid personal leave." If they still are not vaccinated, they will become unemployed.
The US just went over 800,000 deaths. That's the highest reported death toll in the world and very likely an underestimate. The US accounts for four percent of the world's population but 15 percent of the world's known covid deaths, not a distinction to be proud of. A University of Washington model predicts 880,000 deaths by March 1. In March or April of 2020 one of the worst-case scenarios projected 240,000 American deaths. Don't we wish it had been that few.
A not-yet-peer-reviewed article reports that Omicron grows 70 times faster than Delta in bronchial tissue (the tubes from the windpipe to the lungs) which may account for its greater transmissibility. The article also reports that Omicron grows 10 times slower than Delta in lung tissue which may account for its symptoms being milder.
Finally, a statement by the WHO director general that pretty much sums up my current view: "Omicron is spreading at a rate we have not seen with any previous variant." As one-time Boston Celtic Paul Pierce liked to say, truth.
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 139 (639)
Shades of spring 2020, Cornell University in Ithaca, New York is shutting down for the semester. Students and staff are being sent home. The remaining final exams will be moved online. They had almost 500 new student cases at one time, and that was too many. They also had a percent positivity rate of 3.01. Ha! The percent positivity rates of the local university are 4.56 for students and 4.92 for faculty and staff. Finals here end on Friday, and numbers of cases are about what they've been all semester, so we may be okay. There was no word in the Cornell press releases about spring semester, so the best may be yet to come.
Happy first anniversary! One year ago today, the first dose of covid vaccine was given to a front-line nurse. That seems so short time ago at the same time as it feels longer than one year. Last week was two years since the first confirmed case; now we're one year since having vaccines that help prevent it. Early on, the demand for vaccines greatly exceeded the supply. As the pandemic appeared to lessen and restrictions were relaxed, the demand for vaccines plummeted.
The Air Force dismissed 27 service members for refusing to get vaccinated. Each branch of military services set their own vaccination deadline, and the Air Force's was the earliest, November 2. All 27 had fewer than six years of service. The military has granted no religious exemptions, though it has granted medical ones. It also has allowed those members whose service is ending within a certain time frame not to be vaccinated. The Pentagon has not yet declared whether boosters will also be required.
Omicron is expected to become the dominant strain in Denmark this week. England has seen the first death from Omicron, and 10 people have been hospitalized. If even a small percentage of people with Omicron need to be hospitalized, it could overwhelm the health system. South Korea just saw its deadliest day of the pandemic. Ninety-four people died in 24 hours; some died waiting for hospital beds. Another 906 people are in serious or critical condition.
Here, a senior official in the Biden administration warns, "Everything points to a large wave. A large wave is coming. It will be fast. It won't be as severe, but regrettably, there will be plenty of hospitalizations." One article described Omicron as a dress rehearsal for the next pandemic. Yes, we already have vaccines and treatments. But the next pandemic will come on as rapidly as Omicron did and without warning. Are we ready? I hope so, but my gut reaction is that we probably are not.
If you're looking for a good read relating to the pandemic, get The Premonition: A Pandemic Story by Michael Lewis. I'm about halfway through it, and it is spell-binding.
Monday, December 13, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 138 (638)
This afternoon I found an incredibly, well at least to me, interesting aspect of the coronavirus pandemic. It seems that the Merck antiviral, molnupravir, might insert errors into DNA which could in theory harm developing fetuses, sperm cells, or even children. It's not clear whether it might also cause mutations in human DNA and extend the risk to men wanting to be fathers. A member of an FDA advisory committee says,"Do we want to reduce the risk for the mother by 30 percent while exposing the embryo and the fetus to a much higher risk of harm by this drug? My answer is no, and there is no circumstance in which I would advise a pregnant woman to take this drug."
The antiviral works by disguising itself as a building block of RNA. When the virus enters a cell to replicate, the drug slips into the virus's RNA and inserts enough errors that the virus can not survive. But the same compound that interferes with the virus's genetic material can also resemble a building block of DNA--the patient's own or that of a developing fetus. At least it does in hamsters according to one study. Because the drug performs the error-insertion in developing cells, one doctor said her would not give it to pregnant women, breastfeeding moms, children, or teenagers, all of whom have cell division going on. Merck says that the hamster study exposed the animals to a longer course of the drug than people would get and that its own rodent studies showed no problems. That said, they have so far not released the results of their own rodent studies.
Merck said that it did not include pregnant or breastfeeding women in their clinical trials just in case there might be a problem. so there's really no way of knowing how the drug might act in a human. Are hamsters a valid stand-in for humans? I can't see infecting a pregnant chimpanzee with covid and then the antiviral, though that would be closer to a pregnant human. Is 30 percent efficacy worth the ethical dilemmas this raises? Would it be simpler not to authorize its use? I know that I would not have taken it while pregnant. (Note to self: Do not include comment about my kids having enough to deal with given they have half of my genes.)
Also of interest are the results of a survey of 1,089 adults in the US in early December. Compared with October, more Americans are worried about getting covid, but they are not taking more precautions. In December, 36 percent of respondents said that they were extremely or very worried about themselves or family members getting covid. In October, only 25 percent expressed those levels of concern. The October and December surveys both showed some 31 percent of people somewhat worried. Finally, 33 percent were not too or not at all worried in December compared with 43 percent in October. (Results have a 4.1 percent margin of error). But, (another discussion with a "But"), only 21 percent of respondents reported taking safety precautions such as wearing masks or avoiding long-distance travel. Behavior did not really change between October and December despite the changes in level of concern.
As if those issues aren't of enough concern, only about half of US nursing home residents have gotten a booster shot. Only 44 percent of eligible adults ages 65 and older got a booster shot before Thanksgiving. Covid has killed one of every 100 Americans in this age group. There have been about 800,000 deaths from covid; about 600,000 or 75 percent have been in people over the age of 65. One in 100 older Americans has died of covid compared with one in 1,400 for people under 65. Covid is the third leading cause of death for older Americans after heart disease and cancer, causing about 13 percent of all deaths in that group. At least older Americans are the most vaccinated group; 87 percent are fully vaccinated.
Fully vaccinated people in England who have had contact with a person who tested positive have been advised that they should take a rapid lateral flow test every day for seven days. The problem with this? They appear to be out of such tests in England. The government website from which such tests used to be ordered now announces, "There are no more home test kits available. Try again later." The website through which a test could be booked is overloaded. Just a wee bit of a problem there.
And last but not least, Elon Musk is Time magazine's 2021 Person of the Year. How jealous are Richard Branson and Jeff Bezos not to mention the ex-President who used to manipulate images so that he, too, could be Person of the Year?
Sunday, December 12, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 137 (637)
Saturday, December 11, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 136 (636)
So this is it for today. First thing this morning, I spent a nontrivial amount of time reading about last night's tornadoes. Then I made blueberry muffins, a dozen of which I took with me when I went to my neighborhood shepherd's open house where I selected yarns as compensation for the Fall Fiber Festival. I'm thinking scarf, so I got black silk for the warp and a camel-colored silk-cotton blend for the weft. It is impossible to get away quickly, and between chatting and helping another person get what they needed, I did not get home until about 20 minutes ago. Having taken no notes from the little coronavirus news I saw this morning, I will take today off and be back tomorrow hopefully with something to say.
Friday, December 10, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 135 (635)
Omicron appears to have been discovered in Virginia. The state health department is not being too transparent in terms of details, but the region in which the case has been identified includes Charlottesville. It was only a matter of time until Omicron was found here. Virginia is apparently the 24th state to have identified Omicron, though that "24th" was as of this morning and could be higher now. It's gonna get interesting now.
Nationwide, covid hospitalizations are up 40 percent compared to a month ago. Hospitalizations are up 88 percent in the state of Michigan. It seems that younger and younger people are dying of covid there. One contributing factor may be weather. We are headed into not only winter but also our first winter with the Delta variant, at least until Omicron becomes dominant. I base that statement on the predictions from Britain that Omicron will become the dominant variant there before Christmas.
As for Britain, right now 30 percent of the cases reported in London are Omicron. The UK just reported its highest number of new cases since January 9, almost a year ago. There were 58,194 new cases and 120 deaths that occurred within 28 days of a positive covid test. I found an intriguing reference in one of the articles in the Guardian. It was to the effect that the UK government has been "presented with some very challenging new information" about Omicron. Health officials will consider possibly necessary new actions while awaiting additional data.
Only about one in 10 Americans say that the covid vaccine would violate their religious beliefs, and 60 percent say that too many people are using religion as an excuse to avoid vaccination. A majority of Americans are critical of religious exemptions with the sharp divide seen in so many covid issues. Over 80 percent of vaccinated Democrats say they're angry at people who won't get vaccinated. Over 80 percent of unvaccinated Republicans say they're angry at people telling them to be vaccinated.
No major religions or denominations oppose covid vaccines, and many have publicly endorsed them. However, only 41 percent of white evangelical Protestants agreed with a statement that there are no religious reasons to refuse vaccination. White evangelical Protestants are also the only major religious group among which a majority of members believe the statement that "the government is not telling us about other treatments for Covid-19 that are just as effective as the vaccine."
One in five Americans say that the issue of vaccination has caused major conflict within their family. We are fortunate, it seems, in having a relatively small number of family members with whom to congregate on a holiday. There are relatives on The Professor's side of the family and probably on my side as well who are not going to get vaccinated, but they are far enough away that the subject of getting together never comes up. I did put at the end of my annual Christmas letter that we were only accepting guests who were fully vaccinated, but no one has complained so far. Given how few times we have had people stay with us, I don't expect it will become an issue.
Thursday, December 9, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 134 (634)
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 133 (633)
An outright theft from Axios:
10 key dates in our pandemic journey:
- Dec. 8, 2019: The World Health Organization's official date for the onset of the first cases in Wuhan, China, that were later confirmed to be COVID-19.
- Feb. 23, 2020: Italy becomes the first country outside China to impose a lockdown.
- March 11, 2020: The WHO declares a pandemic. 4,616 deaths have been recorded.
- April 2020: School closures affect 82% of the world's students, according to UNESCO.
- Sept. 28, 2020: The world crosses 1 million deaths, with the U.S. and Brazil recording the most.
- December 2020: The FDA authorizes the Pfizer vaccine for emergency use Dec. 11, followed by the Moderna vaccine Dec. 18.
- Early July 2021: After falling sharply in the spring, cases begin to rise again in both the U.S. and E.U., with the unvaccinated hit hardest.
- Nov. 1, 2021: The official worldwide death count hits 5 million.
- Nov. 5, 2021: Half the global population has had at least one shot.
- Nov. 24, 2021: South Africa reports the Omicron variant.
Yes, two years ago today the coronavirus took root. I can't say it has blossomed; it's more like an overgrown ground cover than a flower. Of course, most of us knew nothing of it until February 2020. I first heard about it when I was at a meeting of what I call my online quilt guild in San Marcos, Texas. I flew in and out of San Antonio. When it turned out that one of the early cases in the US was someone flying into San Antonio for some sort of military boot camp, this thing then called the novel coronavirus got my attention. I would add an item numbered 3.5, but the automatic numbering makes that difficult. The added item would be March 16, 2020 ... Jean Lightner Norum starts a daily pandemic blog.
Some experts are starting to warn of a covid-flu "twindemic." Sixty percent of Americans are fully vaccinated against covid. On the flu side, 41 percent of adults and 39 percent of children have had a flu shot. The CDC says that the dominant strain this year is A (H3N2). In previous years, this has meant more hospitalizations and deaths among people ages 65 and older. I'm sure there are places that will give the covid booster and a flu shot, one in each arm on the same visit. The Professor and I doubled up on shingrix and flu shots.
It appears that Omicron partly evades the immunity provided by two injections of the Pfizer vaccine. Blood samples of people who had gotten two doses of the Pfizer vaccine showed a 25-fold reduction in antibody levels against Omicron. Two weeks after a booster injection, the neutralizing antibodies against Omicron were comparable to the levels of antibodies against previous covid variants. People who had a case of covid before they were vaccinated seem to have more protection. I would not, however, recommend that as a vaccine strategy. And Dr. Fauci warns, "We shouldn't be making any definitive conclusions, certainly not before the next couple of weeks."
Omicron is doubling in the UK every two or three days such that it could be the dominant strain before Christmas. Scotland has called for working from home. England is expected to announce new restrictions this evening (which is pretty much right as I'm typing this) that may also require working from home where possible. Various places around the world are canceling or cutting back their New Year's Eve celebrations. Rio de Janeiro has canceled the celebration planned for Copacabana. Baltimore has scaled back their celebration. I haven't seen anything about Times Square and actually don't expect to. I don't think they'll cancel or limit it a second year in a row, though requiring vaccination to be there is something of a limit. South Korea is shutting unvaccinated students out of study rooms, libraries, and private cram schools known as hagwon.
WHO's top official in Europe says that since Omicron has now been detected around the world, travel bans will not contain it and should be lifted. He called for five "pandemic stabilisers:" increasing vaccination rates, giving boosters to the most vulnerable, doubling mask-wearing rates indoors, ventilating crowded spaces, and providing "rigorous therapeutic protocols for severe cases."
Here is a link to the top 10 emojis of 2021. Spoiler: the poop emoji is not one of them. If you happen to be in Des Moines, Iowa, check out their Canada geese management plan. They are trying to make Des Moines less habitable for geese by installing tall plant buffers and riprap along riverbanks and reducing winter water aeration to create more freezing. Let us know if those work, Des Moines. We could probably use our own Canada geese management plan here.
If your mind wants to wonder, try to imagine what the third year of the pandemic will be like. I expect I'll be doing a bit of that.
Tuesday, December 7, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 132 (632)
Monday, December 6, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 131 (631)
I have a couple of pages of notes on the stricter restrictions being put in place by various countries, mostly European ones. I was ready to start summarizing those but found an article in The Guardian that while actually dated in October is relevant today and will be relevant for quite some time. What will it take to make the current pandemic endemic? There's actually no easy answer, which makes sense given how different the conditions are in different parts of the world. One objective criterion is that an infectious disease becomes endemic when the rate of infections has more of less stabilized across years (seasonal changes are to be expected). Under this rubric, R0 is stably at one; each person who is infected will infect only one other person. This is far from the whole picture, though, keeping in mind that the R0 of measles is around 18, and WHO has declared it not only endemic but also eliminated in the US.
On a more subjective level, a pandemic becomes endemic when health experts, global governmental bodies, and the general public are all okay with the level of illness or death that is occurring as a result of the disease. So, what is an "acceptable" level of mortality? Influenza kills 12,000 to 52,000 Americans each year according to the CDC. Some experts say that that is too high, but we as a society seem to have accepted it. With the coronavirus, though, there is covid and there is long covid, which has been recognized as a disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act. One epidemiologist summarizes the situation as, "What you want is to get to a stage where you don't have to worry about disruption because of Covid. The pandemic is over when the crises stop--not just when we get to a certain level of death."
When will the crises stop? It's probably best to consider just which aspects of our current state are crises and which are inconveniences. Clearly some that I would call an "inconvenience" are, to others, a "crisis." After two years, I wonder why we did not do what the Japanese do sooner and wear a mask when suffering from a cold. Those who won't wear a mask see wearing one as an infringement of a basic liberty. And some that I would call a "crisis" are to others a fact of life, not just an inconvenience. I see the high number of Americans who will not get vaccinated as a crisis. The vaccine-resistant see the situation as "they won't get vaccinated" period full stop.
Assessing the current situation of the pandemic is made more difficult by the other, very different things that have happened during it. Think George Floyd, Black Lives Matter, Ahmaud Arbery, Climate Change, the Big Lie, the January 6 insurrection, and the ex-POTUS whose name I don't want to type. All of those swirl around and at times leave me not clear as to how one affected the other(s). How many people stayed home rather than joined a protest because they were avoiding crowds? How might things have gone if all those people had shown up? So much was bound together or pulled apart because everything happened in the context of the pandemic. Was this a good thing or a bad thing or will we just never know the answer?
I wish I could express my thoughts here better. I start to type one thing and another butts its way in demanding to be considered. Pandemic to endemic. Crisis to inconvenience. Thoughts to words. Transitions that may happen or may never happen. I'm just along for the ride.
Sunday, December 5, 2021
The Road goes ever on and on ... Day 130 (630)
Christmas decorating is underway. A couple of cards are hung from the mantle along with a "LET*IT*SNOW" banner. The tree (artificial) is up with the tree skirt positioned beneath it. The next step is for The Professor to check the strings of lights. Once the lights are up on the tree, the ornaments go on. The Christmas Ape will go atop the tree in the morning; Son #1, being the tallest person in the family, traditionally positions Christmas Ape. I cannot remember when the Christmas Ape displaced a star atop the tree, but it was probably about 30 years ago. If I remember, I'll include a photo of Christmas Ape in tomorrow's post.
Now, back to the not-so-novel-any-longer coronavirus. Sir Jeremy Farrar, one of Britain's most senior scientific officials, said that Omicron shows we are "closer to the start of the pandemic than the end." He went on the add, "The longer this virus continues to spread in largely unvaccinated populations globally, the more likely it is that a variant that can overcome our vaccines and treatments will emerge. If that happens, we could be close to square one."
Britain is considered a leader in genomic sequencing and testing and has detected about 160 cases of Omicron. Travel restrictions are being tightened. Everyone must be tested within 48 hours of travel to Britain, even those who are fully vaccinated. Right now, travelers need to self-isolate and test on the second day after arriving. If the test is negative, travelers may leave isolation. It it is positive, the traveler must isolate until a test is negative.
Over 40,000 people gathered in Vienna to protest the tightened restrictions in Austria. There were about 1,500 counter-protesters. The opposition to mask and vaccination mandates is led by the far-right Freedom Party, the third largest group in Parliament. Members tend to back conspiracy theories and treatments such as ivermectin. Several protesters wore t-shirts proclaiming "Make Austria Great Again." Bring back any memories here?
After many travelers canceled trips, Switzerland dropped the 10-day quarantine requirement it had instituted. It has been replaced with a test before entering the country and another between four and seven days after arrival. A traveler arriving from a risky region must prove that they are fully vaccinated. Proof of vaccination is required to enter public establishments; masks are required for all indoor public events.
Finally on the European front, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands tested positive and is isolating. The now 83-year-old queen held the throne from 1980 to 2013 before turning it over to her son King Willem-Alexander. The queen was something of a neighbor the year we lived in the Netherlands. We lived in a small town about 18 kilometres outside Amsterdam, and the palace was within easy walking distance of our house. Many a morning or afternoon, I pushed a stroller past the palace while the inhabitant of the stroller napped.
Here at home, it is getting harder to get vaccine or a booster. Expanded eligibility and fear of Omicron have upped demand. In October an average of less than one million doses per day was being administered. Now, that average is about 1.5 million. Many drugstores are using an appointment system as they did at the start of immunization. This is not a bad thing.
The Minnesota man who was one of the first Omicron cases identified in the US went to a New York City anime convention with about 30 people, half of whom later tested positive. It is not clear if they also had the Omicron variant. The governor of Connecticut said that the first Omicron case there had a relative who had attended the same convention.
We will again get together only with close family this Christmas. I understand that many people feel safe flying or otherwise traveling. I'm not ready to do that. The one trip I have planned, to a quilt show in Hampton, Virginia, in late February is now dependent on what Omicron or its yet-to-arrive cousin might throw at us. Everything is subject to change, and right now everything is going as scheduled.