Covid-19

Ancient traditional healing rituals go digital in virus-hit S.Africa

Incense burned gently in the corner of a sunlit room as South African traditional healer Makhosi Malatji fixed her smartphone into a tripod and reached for a small bag of divination bones.

A young female face on the screen watched Malatji shake the pouch and scatter its contents across the floor of her Johannesburg home.

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Pick-up trucks, hunting rifles for vaccinated in West Virginia

A pick-up truck, a hunting license or a rifle: the US state of West Virginia is launching a lottery for vaccinated people to boost its flagging Covid-19 immunization campaign.

After a strong start, Covid-19 vaccination rates stagnated in the rural state in the heart of the Appalachian mountains in the eastern United States, where only 41 percent of the population is fully vaccinated.

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UK reports zero daily Covid deaths for the first time since July

Britain on Tuesday reported zero daily deaths from Covid-19 for the first time since July 30 last year despite a recent rise in cases linked to the Delta variant.

According to the latest government figures, 127,782 people in the UK have died within 28 days of a positive test since the start of the pandemic -- the worst death toll in any European country.

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Watchdog shines light on big pharma's 'fierce' EU lobbying campaign against vaccine patent waiver

To preserve its stranglehold over global vaccine production, the pharmaceutical industry's army of lobbyists is waging an aggressive campaign to prevent European nations from supporting a temporary patent waiver backed by more than 100 nations around the world and recently endorsed by the United States.

Though flimsy European Union transparency rules have allowed Big Pharma to keep its lobbying efforts largely shrouded in secrecy, an analysis released Monday by the Corporate Europe Observatory (CEO) estimates that the pharmaceutical industry spends at least €36 million per year—roughly $44 million USD—attempting to influence European Union policy.

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Anti-vaxxer hospitalized with COVID-19 after claiming vaccine would 'wipe out a lot of stupid people'

Far-right Christian talk show host Rick Wiles has been hospitalized after contracting the novel coronavirus, less than a month after he said he would never get vaccinated.

Right Wing Watch reports that Wiles's TruNews website announced over the weekend that Wiles had come down with COVID-19 and was placed on oxygen while in the hospital.

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Misinformation remains the biggest hurdle as vaccination effort turns to cash incentives

SAN DIEGO – San Diego County will soon reach 2 million residents who have had at least one dose of coronavirus vaccine. But in a region with more than 3.3 million residents, that means there are still more than 1 million who have not yet come forward to get stuck. Some just haven't gotten around to it yet, and the state's new $115 million lottery — which rewards vaccination with cash rewards — will surely push some off the fence and into vaccination clinics. But it is clear that misinformation, not money, has often driven vaccination decisions. A survey performed in mid-April by the Kaiser Fam...

Shaken by COVID, some Americans try 'manifesting' a positive result

So you want money... love... success? Have you thought about trying to think about it -- really hard -- until your goals materialize? That, at least, is a core principle behind the trend, increasingly popular in pandemic times, of "manifesting," a mix of positive thinking and magical practices.

In a video on the TikTok app, 19-year-old Baila Salifou, wearing a headscarf and with a crystal at her neck, explains how viewers can achieve their dearest dreams with the help of two glasses of water, two Post-It notes and a good deal of imagination. The video has been viewed nearly 500,000 times.

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Why US experts are convinced most vaccinated people don't need masks

Face mask - Do vaccinated people still need to wear face masks? Even in the rare cases where vaccinated people get the virus, scientists say they're far less likely to transmit it. - Julian Stratenschulte/dpa

Optimism about the extraordinary effectiveness of the Covid-19 vaccines is growing and causing even the most cautious health experts to stop wearing face coverings in more settings.

Dr. Robert Wachter, chair of the University of California, San Francisco Department of Medicine, said he ate indoors last weekend at a restaurant with out-of-town friends.

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‘Monumental error’ to treat pandemic as over at this stage, WHO leader warns

We are not out of the COVID woods yet, despite declining coronavirus infection levels and increasing vaccine rates, a world health leader warned Monday. The mood may be lightening up in the U.S. and elsewhere as people get their shots, and infections and deaths decline, but COVID-19 is still a very real and present danger, World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said as the 74th World Health Assembly wrapped up. He called on the world’s nations to work together to end this pandemic and prepare for the next one, proposing a treaty on pandemic preparedness and respo...

Miami Herald slams Ron DeSantis for 'not caring one bit' as 'the pandemic raged'

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) woke on Memorial Day morning to find that the Miami Herald editorial board slammed him for his irresponsibility during the COVID-19 pandemic before they bluntly accused him of "not caring one bit" about the health crisis he made worse.

Noting that the Republican governor -- who is eyeing a 2024 presidential run -- has new problems with one of his top critics receiving whistleblower status as she attempts to expose his administration's malfeasance during the past year, the board called him out for attempting to silence Rebekah Jones.

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As the pandemic slowly abates, humanity will have to reckon with historical trauma

Last year in May, only a couple months after America entered a state of lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic, I found myself in an interview with Dr. David Reiss. I was wondering even at that time how people would react to the fear of getting sick or dying, to the frustration of not being able to resume their normal lives and to the unhealthiness of so sharply curtailing their social interactions.

This article first appeared in Salon.

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A virologist unpacks the lab leak hypothesis

Politics, prejudice, conspiracies and media bias have impoverished our ability to intelligently dissect the origins of SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic. On the one hand, anti-Asian prejudice has been inflamed during this moment in history by people like our former president, Donald Trump — who, along with his right-wing acolytes, previously claimed without evidence that the virus emerged from a Chinese laboratory (such as the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which is in the same area where the outbreak began) to validate their worldview. Meanwhile, intelligent people of good will have been grateful for the work of Chinese scientists in fighting this disease.

This article first appeared in Salon.

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You have the right to decline the COVID vaccine -- but here's why you could still lose your job

Even as COVID vaccine distribution stabilizes across the United States, there is still a substantial number of Americans who are refusing to take the vaccine. While everyone has the right to decline vaccination, there are growing debates about whether employers have to accept that decision or not.

Based on a survey conducted by the Arizona State University and the Rockefeller Foundation back in April, "almost 90% of employers who responded plan to encourage or require their employees to get vaccinated and that 60% intend to require proof of vaccination."

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