Covid-19

More contagious UK variant of coronavirus has mutated again: report

The United Kingdom, already the cradle of the well-known, more contagious variant of the virus that causes Covid-19, has discovered a new mutation affecting certain strains of the disease, same as the one found in South Africa and Brazil, further complicating the European epidemiological landscape.

As if it wasn't bad enough, the more-contagious UK variant of Covid-19 just got worse. British health authorities announced on February 2 that they had detected, on the outskirts of Liverpool and in Bristol, "a limited number" of strains presenting the E484K mutation in the UK variant. A total of some 40 cases were reportedly detected.

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Justin Trudeau defends Canada taking Covid vaccines from sharing program

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Friday defended Canada tapping a vaccine-sharing program that pooled funds from wealthy nations to help poorer ones inoculate their populations against Covid-19, amid criticisms for being the only G7 beneficiary.

"When wealthier countries invest in Covax, half of that funding is to get doses at home," Trudeau told a news conference.

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US COVID cases down 61% since peak, troops deploy for vaccine campaign

New US Covid-19 cases have declined by 61 percent compared to the peak level on January 8, officials said Friday, as they announced troops were being deployed to support the national vaccine campaign.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) director Rochelle Walensky said that latest official data from February 3 showed new infections were down to approximately 121,000, while hospitalizations were down nearly 42 percent and the pace of deaths appears to be slowing.

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'Definition of malpractice': GOP senators under fire for obstructing Biden HHS pick as pandemic rages

Government watchdog organizations and former top federal health officials are accusing Senate Republicans of deliberately undercutting the Biden administration's response to the raging coronavirus pandemic by slow-walking the process of confirming Xavier Becerra, the president's nominee to head up the crucial Department Health and Human Services.

The U.S. Covid-19 death toll surpassed 450,000 this week, but the Senate made little progress in advancing Becerra's nomination thanks in large part to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) obstruction of a must-pass organizing resolution, a stalling tactic that prevented the new Democratic majority from quickly taking charge of key committees.

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Biden presses for stimulus as US reports weak January hiring

US President Joe Biden accelerated his push to win Congressional approval of his $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package after it cleared a key Senate hurdle, as the latest government employment data points to a struggling job market.

The Labor Department on Friday reported the unemployment rate dropped to 6.3 percent in January but the economy added only 49,000 jobs as the world's largest Covid-19 outbreak continues to hamper businesses.

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'I just have to bite the bullet and do it': 'Hard-core' anti-vaxxers changing their tune when faced with COVID-19

According to a report from The Daily Beast, faced with over 450,000 U.S. dead and millions infected, "hardcore ' anti-vaccination proponents are setting aside their fervent opposition to government health mandates and clamoring to get the COVID-19 vaccine for themselves and their families.

With President Joe Biden's administration pressing pharmaceutical companies to rush as much vaccine to the public as soon as possible, anti-vaxxers -- who have pushed discredited theories about childhood vaccines causing autism among other maladies -- view the coronavirus pandemic in a different light even though the testing of the new vaccines weren't subject to the longterm testing normally used when being a new drug to market.

As one self-professed anti-vaxxer who suffered "a rare, severe reaction to the pertussis, or whooping cough, vaccine," -- that was later taken off the market -- explained, the COVID- 19 pandemic is an all-together different issue.

After stating she has done the bare minimum for her children when it comes to vaccines so that they could attend school, midwife Caitlan Murphy is approaching the new vaccine differently.

"She refused all vaccines for herself, and continued to refuse to get her kids vaccinated for the flu, chickenpox, and hepatitis B, among others. She still believes vaccine ingredients are inherently dangerous, and that they interfere with 'natural' immunity, despite overwhelming scientific evidence that vaccines are safe," the Beast's Isobel Whitcomb wrote before adding Murphy, "... who is immunocompromised, recently began to consider what it would mean for her family if she were to get sick with coronavirus and prove unable to fight it off. Now, she's gearing herself up to do what would have seemed unthinkable even six months ago: getting the coronavirus vaccine."

"I just have to bite the bullet and do it," the 31-year-old explained.

According to Whitcomb, Murphy is not alone.

"Until now, many anti-vaxxers and vaccine skeptics in America have had the luxury of refusing vaccines while still avoiding illness. They've benefited from herd immunity, the threshold at which enough people are vaccinated against a disease to prevent it from spreading through a population," she wrote. "So some anti-vaxxers and vaccine skeptics suddenly find themselves becoming fierce vaccine advocates—even if just for this moment."

Sierra Dell, a 38-year old living in Oregon, passed on vaccinating her son previously, saying, "At a time, vaccines were very important. But you know, the measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine, I didn't think was necessary."

However she now waiting to see when she is eligible for the COVID vaccine.

"There are so many people dying. And it's real." she explained. "I choose not to vaccinate at all, in any other way, but this one I'm going for. Because I owe it to society. I need to stay here for my kiddo. I don't want to end up on a ventilator, or dead."

According to Dell, who is immunocompromised -- that has put her on the outs with other anti-vaxxers.

"Lately, she's become annoyed whenever her friends mention their intention to skip out on the COVID-19 vaccine. They 'haven't walked in the shoes of somebody that is immunocompromised,' she said. 'It's almost like a dose of my own medicine, because I used to talk like that.'"

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Senate approves COVID relief resolution with zero GOP support after 14+ hours of amendment votes

Following more than 14 hours of votes on nonbinding Republican amendments that often had nothing to do with coronavirus relief, the Senate early Friday morning approved along party lines a budget resolution that sets the stage for construction of a pandemic aid package containing up to $1.9 trillion in spending on direct payments, expanded unemployment benefits, vaccine distribution, and more.

The House is expected to act on the Senate-passed resolution on Friday, jumpstarting committee work on a filibuster-proof reconciliation bill amid unified Republican opposition.

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US in tug-of-war with teachers over reopening schools

From lawsuits in San Francisco to threats of a remote learning "lockout" in Chicago, US officials are ramping up the pressure on teachers and their unions to reopen schools that have been closed for almost a year due to Covid.

Education professionals are fighting back, insisting that the dangers of sending teachers -- many elderly and at-risk -- back to classrooms alongside hundreds of students is too great until vaccinations are completed.

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'Politically it's suicidal': Frustration grows as Biden entertains narrower eligibility for $1,400 checks

A growing chorus of progressive lawmakers, advocacy groups, political commentators, and policy experts is forcefully pushing back against an effort by Senate Democrats to significantly narrow eligibility for a new round of $1,400 direct payments, a move that could deny financial relief to struggling families who received both of the stimulus checks approved during Trump's presidency.

Ignoring warnings that excluding millions of people from the full $1,400 would be politically disastrous—as well as morally unacceptable and economically foolish—President Joe Biden said this week that he would be "OK with" lowering the annual income cutoff for the checks. Biden discussed limiting eligibility for the payments with Sens. Chris Coons (D-Del.) and Tom Carper (D-Del.) at the White House on Wednesday.

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‘I was so shocked:’ Health care worker denied Moderna vaccine because county says it will not give it to pregnant or breastfeeding moms

Kate Raess read the studies, talked to her obstetrician and consulted with her pediatrician. After months of consideration, the Illinois mom, who is breastfeeding her newborn son, decided she would get a COVID-19 vaccine. So in early January, as a clinical therapist eligible for the vaccine, she found herself sitting in a chair at a Kane County Health Department location, arm ready for the shot. Then, she was told she could not have one. “I was so shocked,” Raess said. “To sit down in that metal chair and be told no, it’s like someone took a pin to a little kid’s balloon.” An official told her...

US sees third straight week of declines in new jobless claims

New applications for jobless benefits declined for a third straight week, dropping to levels last seen in November, the US Labor Department reported on Thursday.

New claims fell to 779,000, seasonally adjusted, in the week ended January 30, fewer than expected and a drop of 33,000 from the previous week's downwardly-revised level.

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Congress wants answers after hundreds of meatpacking workers died from COVID-19

A key congressional panel launched an investigation this week into the wave of COVID-19 infections that killed hundreds of workers at meatpacking plants nationwide last year and highlighted longstanding hazards in the industry.

Since the start of the pandemic, the meat industry has struggled to contain the virus in its facilities, and plants in Iowa, South Dakota and Kansas have endured some of the biggest workplace outbreaks in the country.

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Trump supporters are harassing mask wearers in this Maine city -- and locals are getting fed up

Residents of Belfast, Maine are growing fed up with a group of Trump supporters who are publicly harassing mask wearers walking through the city's downtown area.

Bangor Daily News reports that a heated debate broke out this week during a city council meeting over weekly anti-face mask protests that take place every Sunday in which demonstrators often carry profane signs and harass locals who wear masks.

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