Vacationers wander around an electronic flight recognize board displaying canceled flights at O.R. Tambo Worldwide Airport in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Saturday. Numerous nations around the world have started travel bans in response to the omicron variant.
Phill Magakoe/AFP by means of Getty Images
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Tourists stroll near an electronic flight detect board exhibiting canceled flights at O.R. Tambo Intercontinental Airport in Johannesburg, South Africa, on Saturday. Many nations have begun vacation bans in reaction to the omicron variant.
Phill Magakoe/AFP by means of Getty Images
The omicron pressure of the coronavirus is cropping up across Europe, with cases detected in two people in the United Kingdom, two in Germany and at minimum a single in Italy, as the latest variant of concern spreads all over the globe.
A number of nations, like the U.S., have initiated journey bans against South Africa — exactly where the speedily circulating new pressure was initially discovered on Nov. 24 — as very well as seven other southern African nations. More tests and self-isolation steps for travelers from these countries are also in location.
Circumstances have also been reported in Botswana, Belgium, Hong Kong and Israel throughout a rather short interval of time.
In the U.S., the Centers for Ailment Handle and Prevention so considerably has not discovered any cases of the rapid-spreading pressure.
President Biden has been briefed on the latest on the omicron variant, a White Property official stated Saturday.
“At the identical time, senior health officers and the COVID response staff have been monitoring the most current updates on omicron and in normal touch with health officials around the planet,” the formal said.
Stricter vacation restriction and testing steerage introduced
The issue over the quick distribute of the variant has led to constraints on travel from quite a few nations in southern Africa. The Biden administration declared limited journey for non-U.S. citizens starting up Monday from South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique and Malawi. The Condition Division also issued “do not travel” advisories for U.S. citizens.
The European Union also introduced designs to halt vacation from South Africa and other southern African nations.
In the U.K., Primary Minister Boris Johnson declared more necessities for travelers in a press convention Saturday.
Any tourists getting into the nation will be essential to take a PCR examination by the conclusion of the next working day immediately after arrival, and be needed to self-isolate till they obtain a detrimental final result, Johnson stated.
“We need to take qualified and proportionate steps now as a precaution as we find out far more,” Johnson reported. In aspect, he extra, the attempts are a way to obtain scientists additional time as they check out to discover additional about the variant.
Johnson also thanked the experts in South Africa who recognized and shared information on the new variant “widely and right away.”
More steps Johnson declared Saturday include at the time once more demanding face coverings in retailers and general public transportation, and requiring all contacts of everyone who exams positive for the omicron variant to isolate for 10 times no matter of vaccination standing.
The mutations of the omicron variant are about, WHO claims
The omicron variant is the initial new variant of problem given that the delta variant that swept as a result of the globe earlier this summer months, resulting in an uptick in bacterial infections and deaths, particularly among the the unvaccinated population. The delta strain was two times as infectious as the authentic COVID-19 virus.
When there are a range of scientific tests underway to continue evaluating the omicron variant, the Earth Wellness Corporation claims the selection of mutations in this variant is “concerning” and that it could propose an “greater possibility of reinfection.”
The WHO also suggests that existing COVID-19 tests are able of pinpointing this omicron variant, which is how authorities have been able to monitor how quickly the variant is spreading. But even more information and facts and experiments on the variant could get “times to weeks,” overall health officials from WHO mentioned.
Specifically how rapid the variant is spreading and no matter whether the present-day vaccines readily available can stop an infection are nevertheless unclear. But Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Well being, advised NPR: “Allow me be clear, there is no knowledge at the present time to indicate that the existing vaccines would not do the job.”
In the meantime, individuals ought to continue to just take steps to reduce their publicity to infection and lessen the spread of the virus, the WHO urges. This contains mask-carrying and having the vaccine when it is your switch to do so.
Collins also suggests that people who are six months out from becoming absolutely vaccinated get their booster shot.
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the novel coronavirus situation in B.C.
Author of the article:
Tiffany Crawford, David Carrigg
Publishing date:
Nov 20, 2021 • 16 hours ago • 5 minute read • 6 Comments
Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the novel coronavirus situation in B.C.Photo by Gilnature /iStock/Getty Images
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Here’s your daily update with everything you need to know on the novel coronavirus situation in B.C. for Nov. 20-21, 2021.
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We’ll provide summaries of what’s going on in B.C. right here so you can get the latest news at a glance. This page will be updated regularly throughout the day, with developments added as they happen.
Check back here for more updates throughout the day. You can also get the latest COVID-19 news delivered to your inbox weeknights at 7 p.m. by subscribing to our newsletter here.
B.C.’S COVID-19 CASE NUMBERS
As of the latest figures given on Nov. 19:
• Total number of confirmed cases: 214,636 (3,420 active) • New cases since Nov. 18: 497 • Total deaths: 2,293 (three additional deaths) • Hospitalized cases: 358 • Intensive care: 109 • Total vaccinations: 4,209,651 received first dose; 4,034,962 second doses • Recovered from acute infection: 208,702 • Long-term care and assisted-living homes, and acute care facilities currently affected: 21
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IN-DEPTH: Here are all the B.C. cases of the novel coronavirus in 2021 | in 2020
B.C. GUIDES AND LINKS
• COVID-19: Here’s everything you need to know about the novel coronavirus
• COVID-19: B.C.’s vaccine passport is here and this is how it works
• COVID-19: Here’s how to get your vaccination shot in B.C.
• COVID-19: Look up your neighbourhood in our interactive map of case and vaccination rates in B.C.
• COVID-19: Afraid of needles? Here’s how to overcome your fear and get vaccinated
• COVID-19: Five things to know about the P1 variant spreading in B.C.
• COVID-19: Here’s where to get tested in Metro Vancouver
Three more deaths, a new outbreak in health-care setting
B.C. reported 497 new cases of COVID-19 and three more deaths on Friday, pushing the death toll from the virus to 2,293.
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The Health Ministry says 3,420 infections are active across the province, including 358 people in hospital, with 109 in intensive care.
It says 87 per cent of eligible B.C. residents aged 12 and up have received two doses of COVID-19 vaccine, while nearly 91 per cent have had one.
British Columbia reported 497 new cases of COVID-19 Friday and three additional deaths.
Of the new cases, 138 were in the Fraser Health region, 64 were in Vancouver Coastal Health, 146 were in Interior Health, 78 were in Northern Health and 71 were in Island Health, provincial health officials said in a statement.
The deaths occurred to persons in the Fraser Health, Vancouver Coastal Health and Northern Health regions.
Also Friday, a new COVID-19 outbreak was reported in Northern Health’s Laurier Manor assisted-living facility while an outbreak in Fraser Health’s Rosemary Heights Seniors Village had been declared over.
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After millions of Quebecers rolled up their sleeves for COVID-19 vaccines, it could soon be zoo animals’ turn to get the shot.
The Granby Zoo, east of Montreal, says it is hoping in the coming weeks or months to vaccinate against COVID-19 about 90 animals, including gorillas, big cats and other creatures deemed susceptible to the disease. The vaccines are in the United States awaiting clearance to Canada.
“Hopefully, we can start at least a few species by Christmas. I’m crossing my fingers for that,” Emilie Couture, a veterinarian with the zoo, said in a recent interview.
She said the zoo is planning to vaccinate the species that appear to be the most vulnerable to COVID-19. Primates and big cats such as tigers, jaguars and leopards top the list, she said, adding that the zoo is also including some other mammals such as red pandas.
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There has been a “worrying” rise in the number of COVID-19 cases in North American zoos, especially among large felines such as lions and leopards, Couture said. Last week, three snow leopards died at the Lincoln Children’s Zoo, in Nebraska, of complications from COVID-19 — an event that she said shocked the North American zoo community.
—The Canadian Press
Ottawa to drop need for COVID-19 test after short-term U.S. visits as of Nov. 30
The federal government says that as of Nov. 30, fully vaccinated Canadians and permanent residents who are visiting the United States for less than 72 hours won’t need a costly molecular test for COVID-19 in order to return home.
The Public Health Agency of Canada also says that by the end of the month, travellers who received the Sinopharm, Sinovac and Covaxin vaccines will be considered fully vaccinated for travel purposes.
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Critics in both countries have been complaining for weeks about the need for what’s known as a PCR test, which can run between $150-$300 per swab, saying it’s a major deterrent to the resumption of cross-border travel.
Travellers who are out of the country for more than 72 hours, however, will still be required to present a negative molecular test at the border on their way home.
—The Canadian Press
B.C. health officials welcome approval of vaccine for kids
B.C.’s provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix are welcoming the news that Health Health Canada has approved Pfizer’s COVID-19 pediatric vaccine for children aged five to 11.
“The rigorous review confirms that this first vaccine formulated for younger children is safe and effective,” they said, in a joint statement Friday.
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“We look forward to making the pediatric vaccine available for 360,000 young British Columbians as soon as possible.”
Henry and Dix said while children are at a lower risk of severe disease from COVID-19, it can still result in serious outcomes in some children, including hospitalization and long-term symptoms.
B.C. parents and guardians can register their children to get vaccinated at www.getvaccinated.gov.bc.ca or by calling 1 833 838-2323 toll-free.
Already, more than 75,000 children have been registered for their vaccine and are on the list to be contacted to book an appointment and get their COVID-19 paediatric vaccine, according to the government.
—Tiffany Crawford
Health Canada approves first COVID-19 vaccine for kids 5 to 11
Health Canada has approved the first COVID-19 vaccine for children aged five to 11 in Canada.
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Pfizer and its partner BioNTech submitted a request for approval of a child-sized dose of its mRNA vaccine for COVID-19 on Oct. 18.
The companies say the results of their trials in children show comparable safety and efficacy to those recorded in a previous Pfizer-BioNTech study in people aged 16 to 25.
After a thorough review of the data, the department has determined the benefits of the vaccine for children between five and 11 years of age outweigh the risks, Health Canada said in a statement Friday.
B.C. MAP OF WEEKLY COVID CASE COUNTS, VACCINATION RATES
Find out how your neighbourhood is doing in the battle against COVID-19 with the latest number of new cases, positivity rates, and vaccination rates:
B.C. VACCINE TRACKER
LOCAL RESOURCES for COVID-19 information
Here are a number of information and landing pages for COVID-19 from various health and government agencies.
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President Biden speaks about COVID-19 vaccinations in Elk Grove Village, Ill. 10 states are filing a lawsuit over the administration’s rule requiring overall health treatment employees to be vaccinated.
Susan Walsh/AP
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President Biden speaks about COVID-19 vaccinations in Elk Grove Village, Sick. 10 states are submitting a lawsuit more than the administration’s rule demanding wellbeing treatment personnel to be vaccinated.
Susan Walsh/AP
A group of 10 states has filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration and its prerequisite that wellbeing care workers in the U.S. to be vaccinated against COVID-19, declaring the mandate is “unconstitutional and unlawful.”
Led by Missouri Lawyer General Eric Schmitt and Nebraska Attorney Common Doug Peterson, the 10 states say the required nationwide vaccine need will guide to shortages of wellness treatment personnel and could threaten the work opportunities of “hundreds of thousands of overall health care personnel” who risked their lives for the duration of the starting stages of the pandemic.
In addition to Missouri and Nebraska, lawyers typical from Arkansas, Kansas, Iowa, Wyoming, Alaska, South Dakota, North Dakota and New Hampshire also joined the lawsuit.
“Regrettably, with this latest mandate from the Biden Administration, final year’s healthcare heroes are turning into this year’s unemployed. Necessitating health care personnel to get a vaccination or encounter termination is unconstitutional and illegal, and could exacerbate healthcare staffing shortages to the stage of collapse, primarily in Missouri’s rural regions,” Schmitt said in a news launch.
He says his business office has been tough the Biden administration’s “unlawful edicts” and this is the newest.
“This scenario illustrates why the police electricity around obligatory vaccination has usually been the province of — and however adequately belongs to — the States,” the lawyers standard argued in their lawsuit.
The 58-website page lawsuit argues the Facilities for Medicare and Medicaid Companies vaccine mandate is intruding on states’ law enforcement power, stating it’s a violation of a number of acts and rights, which include the Administrative Treatments Act, the Social Security Act, the Tenth Modification and federalism.
“By disregarding the specifics on the floor and unreasonably dismissing concerns about workforce shortages, the CMS vaccine mandate jeopardizes the healthcare passions of rural People,” the lawsuit claims.
In September, President Biden unveiled a collection of techniques to overcome the surge of COVID-19 situations in the country, announcing that 17 million health treatment workers at hospitals and elsewhere that acquire Medicare or Medicaid funding would have to be vaccinated.
Final week, CMS issued an interim last rule requiring COVID-19 vaccinations for well being treatment employees in most configurations — this sort of as hospitals and wellbeing techniques — that participate in the Medicare and Medicaid applications.
The new necessities, which went into effect Nov. 5, will implement to about 76,000 providers.
Mandy Cohen, secretary of the state Department of Health and Human Services, has talked about her daughters many times as she helped steer the state through the COVID-19 pandemic.
Now the state gets to see them in a public service announcement about the kid-sized Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine that has just become available for children ages 5 to 11.
Cohen, the proud mother of a 7- and 9-year-old, took her children on Saturday to get a first dose of the two-dose Pfizer vaccine approved last week for emergency use by the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
“Like most kids, my daughters don’t like shots,” Cohen told reporters at a briefing on Wednesday. “But we talked as a family about the reasons it was important to protect them from COVID just like we protect them from flu and other childhood illnesses like chicken pox.”
Then she showed a video that she said she hopes will help persuade other parents of the safety and efficacy of the vaccine. In clinical trials, according to data reviewed by Cohen, the CDC and FDA, the kid-sized dose of the Pfizer vaccine, a third of the amount in the vaccines given to anyone 12 and older, is 90 percent effective at preventing COVID infection in the younger children.
“We love our kids so much and we want to make good decisions for them and their health, and I was really happy that we have a safe and effective COVID vaccine,” Cohen says in a video showing her hugging her daughters. “And I was really proud of them today that they got their vaccine. It was a huge sigh of relief for mom. So I hope everyone goes out and gets their COVID vaccine for their kids as soon as possible.”
Cohen posted photos of her daughters to her Twitter account on Saturday. There is one of her older daughter getting her vaccine. Another one shows the two girls together after getting their shots. The 9-year-old gave a thumbs-up while revealing the colorful Band-Aid covering the spot on her left arm where she got the shot. The younger girl is smiling with her hands raised in the air.
They might have been celebrating, too, because chocolate milk was coming to them after their shots, their mother said.
Cohen’s girls are among the more than 24,000 children in North Carolina who have received their first dose of the newly available vaccine. Though children can experience side effects such as a sore arm, fever, headaches or feeling tired for a few days, Cohen said her daughters experienced no side effects.
“We have plenty of vaccine supply across the state. Kids can get vaccinated at any location that has a smaller dose of the Pfizer vaccine available,” Cohen said. “This includes their pediatrician or doctor’s office or hospital. Unlike other vaccines, younger children can also get vaccinated at local pharmacies and grocery stores, making it even easier for parents to find a convenient location for them.”
Additionally, DHHS has worked with community partners to set up nine family COVID-19 vaccination centers in historically underserved communities that will be open for the next six weeks. The centers will be open on weekends and during the evening so parents don’t have to take their children out of school or miss work to get a vaccine.
The centers also will have vaccines available for people older than 12, as well as boosters. Spanish interpreters will be there, too.
Cohen and Charlene Wong, a Duke pediatrician and the DHHS assistant secretary for children and families, know that many parents might have questions about the vaccine and tried to provide answers to many at the briefing with reporters. They also encouraged parents to talk with their pediatricians and other trusted health care providers about any concerns they have.
Here are some of the questions and answers:
Q: Two physicians asserted in a recent Wall Street Journal opinion piece that a low number of children in this country have been hospitalized or died from COVID infections. But the piece also cited data that have not been peer reviewed and have been contested.
So, what’s the urgency to get the younger children vaccinated?
A: To date, North Carolina has seen more than 1,300 hospitalizations and 11 deaths in children under the age of 17, out of 244,902 cases, according to data on the DHHS COVID-19 dashboard. Cohen and Wong made the point that although the risks of hospitalization and death from COVID are rare in children in that age group, the virus can make them very sick.
Some children infected with COVID have come down with the multi-system inflammatory syndrome, or Mis-C, a rare condition in which their organs can become inflamed and in some cases can be deadly.
Children also can experience long-COVID symptoms such as fatigue, headaches, insomnia, trouble concentrating, muscle and joint pain, as well as a lingering cough, months after infection, according to the CDC.
“We are seeing that children can have longer-term side effects, fatigue, headache, muscle aches, lethargy, again, different kinds of tiredness. So we are seeing that in children and adults,” Cohen said. “And so I think what we want to do is say we have a tool here that is safe and effective at preventing your child from getting COVID in the first place. Let’s use that safe and effective tool to make sure they don’t get COVID.”
Q: How prevalent is long-COVID in children?
A: “It’s a known unknown,” Wong said, acknowledging that more research needs to be gathered on the issue. “I will say the patients who I know who have gotten long COVID-19, it’s really debilitating, really scary for the family. … The other thing that’s quite scary with it is that we don’t yet know what the best ways to treat it are and again, these are the types of symptoms that really impact what our children can do on a daily basis. Can they go to school or not? Can they play with their friends? Are they performing in school the way that they used to? …These can be really debilitating symptoms that can last for a really long time. It seems that it’s a known unknown, whereas we have a known safe and effective vaccine.”
Q: Is the state considering using incentives to get more children vaccinated?
A: Yes, Cohen said, but what those might be and how that might work has not been determined yet.
Q: Will I have to pay to have my child vaccinated?
A: Cohen reiterated that COVID-19 vaccines are free to everyone even for those without health insurance and regardless of immigration status.
Q: Can children get a COVID vaccine at the same time as getting a flu vaccine or any of the other vaccines routinely given to children at their check-ups?
A: “The answer is yes, they sure can,” Wong said. “We want to make sure our kids are vaccinated against all the different diseases that we protect against. Certainly in the season we’re in now, we really hope that everyone is getting their flu vaccine and it is totally fine to get a flu vaccine as well as the COVID vaccine at the same time. And there are also, there are other routine childhood vaccines that can be given at the same time making it more convenient for parents.”
Q: Is there a goal for the percentage of children that North Carolina wants to see vaccinated before schools and other places can finally put the pandemic in the rear view mirror?
A: Cohen said it can be difficult to settle on such a number because the virus is changing and a new variant as contagious as or more contagious than the Delta variant could change the course of the pandemic very quickly.
Q: Is there one place that I can look to find out where vaccines for younger children are available?
According to NCDHHS data, as of Wednesday afternoon:
18,371 people total in North Carolina have died of coronavirus.
1,497,677 have been diagnosed with the disease. Of those, 1,095 are in the hospital. The hospitalization figure is a snapshot of people hospitalized with COVID-19 infections on a given day and does not represent all of the North Carolinians who may have been in the hospital throughout the course of the epidemic.
North Carolina has tracked COVID-19 re-infections in the case counts between March 1, 2021 and Sept. 20, 2021. All told, North Carolina has tracked 10,812 reinfections, 200 of those were in people who were previously vaccinated. Ninety-four people who were reinfected with COVID-19 have died.
1,454,082 people who had COVID-19 are presumed to have recovered. This weekly estimate does not denote how many of the diagnosed cases in the state are still infectious. Nor does it reflect the number of so-called “long-COVID” survivors who continue to feel the effects of the disease beyond the defined “recovery” period.
To date, 19,565,732 tests have been completed in North Carolina. As of July 2020, all labs in the state are required to report both their positive and negative test results to the lab, so that figure includes all of the COVID-19 tests performed in the state.
People ages 25-49 make up the largest group of cases (39 percent). While 13 percent of the positive diagnoses were in people ages 65 and older, seniors make up 75 percent of coronavirus deaths in the state.
357 outbreaks are ongoing in group facilities across the state, including nursing homes and correctional and residential care facilities, that’s up from 107 outbreaks in early August.
As of Wednesday, 309 COVID-19 patients were in intensive care units across the state.
As of Aug. 17, 6,262,599 North Carolinians have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine. Ninety percent of people over the age of 65 have been completely vaccinated, while 56 percent of the total population is fully vaccinated.
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by Anne Blythe, North Carolina Health News November 10, 2021
This <a target=”_blank” href=”https://www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/2021/11/10/coronavirus-today-nov-10-mandy-cohen-and-her-daughters-share-their-covid-vaccine-experience/”>article</a> first appeared on <a target=”_blank” href=”https://www.northcarolinahealthnews.org”>North Carolina Health News</a> and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.<img src=”https://i1.wp.com/www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/cropped-favicon02.jpg?fit=150{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}2C150&ssl=1″ style=”width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;”><img id=”republication-tracker-tool-source” src=”https://www.northcarolinahealthnews.org/?republication-pixel=true&post=36228&ga=UA-28368570-1″ style=”width:1px;height:1px;”>
(WSYR-TV) — Onondaga County has 206 new cases as the Onondaga County Executive announced one more resident has died from COVID-19.
.@OnondagaCounty Covid 19 update 206 new cases. 30{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} HH contacts. 930 active cases. Mon-Thurs last week 649 cases, this week Mon-Thurs 611 cases. 98 residents in the hospital with 32 in the ICU(84{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} unvaxed). Sadly we lost one neighbor Male 70ees underlying conditions.
— County Executive Ryan McMahon (@CEJRyanMcMahon) October 28, 2021
Ryan McMahon tweeted out the news Thursday that a man in 70s, with underlying conditions was the county’s latest victim.
Meanwhile, Governor Kathy Hochul today updated New Yorkers on the state’s progress combating COVID-19.
“New Yorkers are resilient and strong and they have proven that repeatedly throughout this pandemic – by wearing their masks, socially distancing, and getting their vaccine, they have helped keep their communities safe and their loved ones healthy,” Governor Hochul said. “While we continue to progress, we need to remain mindful as we head into the holiday season. If you haven’t already, get your vaccine today. It’s the best defense we have against COVID-19 and it’s safe, effective, and free.”
Today’s data is summarized briefly below:
· Test Results Reported – 225,695
· Total Positive – 4,285 · Percent Positive – 1.90{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}
· 7-Day Average Percent Positive – 2.08{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} · Patient Hospitalization – 1,952 (-44) · Patients Newly Admitted – 231 · Patients in ICU – 469 (+15) · Patients in ICU with Intubation – 268 (+6) · Total Discharges – 207,649 (+241) · New deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS – 27 · Total deaths reported by healthcare facilities through HERDS – 45,476 The Health Electronic Response Data System is a NYS DOH data source that collects confirmed daily death data as reported by hospitals, nursing homes and adult care facilities only. · Total deaths reported to and compiled by the CDC – 57,889 This daily COVID-19 provisional death certificate data reported by NYS DOH and NYC to the CDC includes those who died in any location, including hospitals, nursing homes, adult care facilities, at home, in hospice and other settings. · Total vaccine doses administered – 26,930,081 · Total vaccine doses administered over past 24 hours – 94,060 · Total vaccine doses administered over past 7 days – 458,878 · Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose – 83.9{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} · Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series – 76.3{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} · Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) – 87.0{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} · Percent of New Yorkers ages 18 and older with completed vaccine series (CDC) – 78.3{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} · Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose – 71.1{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} · Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series – 64.6{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} · Percent of all New Yorkers with at least one vaccine dose (CDC) – 73.8{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} · Percent of all New Yorkers with completed vaccine series (CDC) – 66.3{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}
Each region’s 7-day average percentage of positive test results reported over the last three days is as follows:
Yesterday, 4,285 New Yorkers tested positive for COVID-19 in New York State, bringing the total to 2,524,516. A geographic breakdown is as follows:
County
Total Positive
New Positive
Albany
31,373
99
Allegany
4,793
31
Broome
25,058
127
Cattaraugus
8,032
43
Cayuga
8,787
13
Chautauqua
12,661
20
Chemung
11,207
61
Chenango
4,782
20
Clinton
6,909
29
Columbia
5,081
11
Cortland
5,467
19
Delaware
3,641
18
Dutchess
35,929
65
Erie
108,224
286
Essex
2,406
13
Franklin
4,421
30
Fulton
6,542
26
Genesee
7,207
41
Greene
4,460
12
Hamilton
442
3
Herkimer
6,994
27
Jefferson
9,199
42
Lewis
3,692
11
Livingston
5,887
42
Madison
6,365
31
Monroe
85,673
232
Montgomery
6,136
33
Nassau
215,664
239
Niagara
24,479
48
NYC
1,096,188
1,086
Oneida
29,112
72
Onondaga
53,074
132
Ontario
9,553
33
Orange
58,063
92
Orleans
4,470
21
Oswego
12,028
40
Otsego
4,677
21
Putnam
12,600
22
Rensselaer
15,127
46
Rockland
53,518
92
Saratoga
20,720
59
Schenectady
17,112
40
Schoharie
2,360
10
Schuyler
1,578
9
Seneca
2,781
3
St. Lawrence
10,901
57
Steuben
10,427
64
Suffolk
241,522
351
Sullivan
8,608
31
Tioga
5,275
27
Tompkins
6,625
18
Ulster
17,458
37
Warren
5,680
39
Washington
4,805
36
Wayne
8,423
43
Westchester
144,164
114
Wyoming
4,461
14
Yates
1,695
4
Yesterday, 27 New Yorkers died due to COVID-19, bringing the total compiled through HERDS to 45,476. A geographic breakdown is as follows, by county of residence:
Deaths by County of Residence
County
New Deaths
Cattaraugus
2
Chemung
1
Columbia
1
Cortland
2
Erie
2
Essex
1
Jefferson
2
Kings
1
Manhattan
1
Monroe
3
Montgomery
3
Nassau
1
Onondaga
1
Queens
2
Saratoga
1
Suffolk
1
Warren
1
Washington
1
All New York State mass vaccination sites are open to eligible New Yorkers for walk-in vaccination on a first-come, first-serve basis. People who would prefer to schedule an appointment at a state-run mass vaccination site can do so on the Am I Eligible App or by calling 1-833-NYS-4-VAX. People may also contact their local health department, pharmacy, doctor or hospital to schedule appointments where vaccines are available, or visit vaccines.gov to find information on vaccine appointments near them.
Yesterday, 20,563 New Yorkers received their first vaccine dose, and 18,020 completed their vaccine series. A geographic breakdown of New Yorkers who have been vaccinated by region is as follows:
Pediatricians, pharmacies and county health departments could be ready by the end of next week to start vaccinating children from 5 to 11 years old if Pfizer’s kid-size dose of COVID vaccine gets the federal nods it needs.
A Federal Drug Administration advisory committee set the stage on Tuesday for the latest plot twist in the story of this long-running coronavirus pandemic.
More of the youngest among us soon could be better protected from severe illness related to COVID-19 if the FDA and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention follow through on the advisory committee’s unanimous recommendation to authorize lower dose Pfizer vaccines for emergency use in some 28 million children across the country.
“The FDA and CDC are still doing their work,” Mandy Cohen, secretary of the state Department of Health and Human Services, told reporters Wednesday during a briefing with the governor. “We think the earliest vaccines will be available will probably be the end of next week.”
In anticipation of that possibility, the state has been planning how to get some 400,000 initial doses distributed to 750 doctor’s offices, health care centers, pharmacies and elsewhere.
The state also is partnering with 10 community organizations to offer family vaccine events in areas where, historically, there have been health care access disparities.
The CDC is expected to take up the issue on Nov. 2.
“What I can say is there is plenty of supply,” Cohen said. “Let the FDA and CDC do their work to review the evidence.”
For anyone worried about their child mistakenly getting an adult-sized dose when they take them to get vaccinated, the Pfizer packaging of the vaccines for 5- to 11-year-olds is a different color and size.
Once the green light is given, Cohen and Gov. Roy Cooper are encouraging parents to get their children vaccinated as quickly as possible.
“Getting school-aged kids vaccinated will help them to be safe in the classroom, play sports, participate in school theater, attend events, be with friends and support their mental health,” Cohen said. “I’m eager to get my daughters vaccinated once the FDA and CDC review the data and complete the process.”
He led a vaccine trial for children
Emmanuel “Chip” Walter, a pediatrician at Duke who led a trial examining the vaccine’s effectiveness of children, spoke with reporters on Wednesday morning about the findings.
“My advice to parents is this is the best way to protect your child from serious illness and potentially death from COVID, … get them vaccinated,” Walter said. “It’s the best tool we have. By all means I would recommend and suggest they get the vaccine.”
Some have raised concerns about cases of myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, that, while rare, have been seen after men and women have received an mRNA vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna. Federal health officials have noticed the issue in adolescent males and young men, but have not determined whether there is a direct correlation to the vaccine.
“The risk for developing myocarditis really seems to be greater after the second dose of vaccine; it’s more commonly seen in males, particularly young males within the ages of 16 to 30,” Walter said. “The rate in that particular group is about 40 per million second doses of vaccine received.”
More than 244 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine have been given in the U.S. to date according to the CDC, with 105.6 million who have received two doses.
“I think it’s really important to recognize that not all myocarditis is the same,” Walter said when that question arose on Wednesday. “You can develop myocarditis after developing COVID as a complication and that myocarditis from COVID is usually quite severe and makes people quite ill and causes a prolonged hospitalization.”
Walter added that the myocarditis that health care workers have seen after a vaccine “is generally fairly mild.” Sometimes that might lead to hospitalization, but the condition is easily treated, he added, once it’s recognized.
“So I think you have to weigh that risk of developing COVID – depending on the prevalence of COVID in your community – versus the risk of myocarditis from vaccine, which is exceedingly rare,” Walter said.
Nonetheless, as has happened throughout the pandemic, social media and other platforms rife with misinformation can sow confusion and mistrust that frustrates public health officials trying to get accurate information to households.
A Kaiser Family Foundation poll found that 34 percent of the parents of 5- to 11-year-olds surveyed in September would vaccinate their child right away, even after Pfizer released early reports of the effectiveness of a lower dose in younger children. Twenty-four percent of the parents polled said they definitely would not get their child vaccinated and 32 percent preferred to take a wait-and-see stance.
“We have to be able to afford children the same protection from COVID through vaccination that we afford to adults,” Walter said. “That is the right thing to do.”
Children accounted for nearly 25 percent of the COVID cases caused by the surge in late summer caused by the Delta variant .
“We’ve been kind of lulled by this thought that yes the pandemic is worse … for older adults and adults with comorbidities,” Walter said. “But children aren’t totally spared from COVID.
“When I last looked the other day there had been 750 deaths from COVID in children under age 18, 160 deaths in this age group for which we’re now considering approval or authorization of the vaccine, between the ages of 5 and 11,” Walter added. “And that’s way more deaths than occur due to influenza in a typical year. So if you kind of put it in that perspective in terms of health, we really do need to get children vaccinated.”
Tapering off
Overall, North Carolina is in much better shape in its battle against COVID than a month ago, when Cooper and Cohen gave their last pandemic update to reporters.
The number of people walking into emergency departments with COVID symptoms has dropped dramatically, as have the numbers of new lab-confirmed cases each day and hospitalized patients.
“North Carolina’s fight is not over,” Cooper said. “We’re making great progress, but hospitalizations and deaths are still too high.”
Since March 2020, when North Carolina reported its first lab-confirmed case of COVID-19, there have been more than 1.47 million cases reported. On Tuesday, there were 2,160 new cases reported.
Though there were 1,406 people in the hospital battling illnesses related to COVID-19, that number was down significantly from Sept. 25, when 3,123 people were hospitalized.
North Carolina is approaching a new milestone of 18,000 deaths related to COVID-19. As of Wednesday, the state was fewer than 100 deaths from that grim mark.
“Although every death is painful and now often avoidable, we felt a renewed sense of hope over the last month as North Carolina’s COVID-19 numbers have continued their steady improvement,” Cooper said. “You the people of North Carolina who have gotten vaccinated, followed safety measures, deserve the lion’s share of the credit along with our health care professionals.”
“We are grateful to see this latest surge in COVID-19 taper off,” Cooper added later. “And as we try to drive down our numbers, we know what works. Vaccines. The more people who get their shots, the less COVID we’ll have.”
Are you eligible for a booster?
As many parents contemplate when and where to get their children vaccinated, others across the state who have been vaccinated are weighing whether they’re eligible for boosters that have been recommended by federal and state health officials.
Cohen, who received a Johnson & Johnson vaccine in early March, said she got a Moderna vaccine as a booster last week.
The FDA and CDC issued guidelines on Oct. 21 about who is eligible for a booster shot. The agencies said people could get a different vaccine from the one they initially received after a “mix and match study” showed extra protection from COVID was gained even if a different vaccine was administered.
The CDC recommended a booster shot for the nearly 15 million people who got the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine if at least two months have passed since the initial dose, saying that such a boost could substantially increase protection from COVID.
Some who received the single dose shot are switching to mRNA vaccines offered by Moderna or Pfizer with a goal of getting even more protection.
Keeping track of all the recommendations can be dizzying.
People who are 65 and older, those between 50 and 64 with certain underlying health conditions, and adults over 18 who live in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities all are at higher risk of getting COVID-19, according to the guidelines.
Anyone in the groups who got the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines should get a booster shot six months after their initial series.
Cohen said Wednesday that 42 percent of North Carolinians ages 12 to 17 are fully vaccinated and only 46 percent of those who are 18 to 24 are fully vaccinated.
Pediatricians and others who provide health care to school-aged children will be key to boosting trust and an understanding about any recommendations that come from the FDA and CDC in the coming week, Cohen said.
“It’s where our families and our children have gotten vaccinated for many other types of vaccinations that they get in early childhood,” Cohen said. “It’s again going to be a place where I think there will be trusted messengers.”
Coronavirus by the numbers
According to NCDHHS data, as of Tuesday afternoon:
17,935 people total in North Carolina have died of coronavirus.
1,472,655 have been diagnosed with the disease. Of those, 1,404 are in the hospital. On Aug. 1, 1,390 people were hospitalized, before the Delta save. The hospitalization figure is a snapshot of people hospitalized with COVID-19 infections on a given day and does not represent all of the North Carolinians who may have been in the hospital throughout the course of the epidemic.
North Carolina started tracking COVID-19 re-infections in the case counts on Oct 4, 2021. All told North Carolina has tracked 10,812 reinfections, 200 of those were in people who were previously vaccinated. Ninety-four people who were reinfected with COVID-19 have died.
1,422,175 people who had COVID-19 are presumed to have recovered. This weekly estimate does not denote how many of the diagnosed cases in the state are still infectious. Nor does it reflect the number of so-called “long-haul” survivors of COVID who continue to feel the effects of the disease beyond the defined “recovery” period.
To date, 19,012,089 tests have been completed in North Carolina. As of July 2020, all labs in the state are required to report both their positive and negative test results to the lab, so that figure includes all of the COVID-19 tests performed in the state.
People ages 25-49 make up the largest group of cases (39 percent). While 13 percent of the positive diagnoses were in people ages 65 and older, seniors make up 75 percent of coronavirus deaths in the state.
522 outbreaks are ongoing in group facilities across the state, including nursing homes and correctional and residential care facilities, that’s up from 107 outbreaks in early August.
As of Wednesday, 415 COVID-19 patients were in intensive care units across the state. On Aug. 1, 372 patients were in ICUs.
As of Aug. 17, 6,177,877 North Carolinians have received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine. Eighty-nine percent of people over the age of 65 have been completely vaccinated, while 55 percent of the total population is fully vaccinated.