Covid-19

'I am concerned and I am also crazy': SNL brutally nails bonkers parents hijacking school board meetings

Saturday Night Live took time out to delve into the latest hotbed of conspiracy rumors and parents gone wild with a hilariously brutal sketch illustrating the difficulties of running a simple school board meeting which, as of late, have turned into magnets for ranting and potential violence.

Using the uptick of parents storming the once-placid meetings to complain about mask mandates and critical race theory (CRT) as a springboard, the sketch saw bellowing cast-member Cecily Strong began by telling the startled board members, "I am concerned and I am also crazy-- let's begin," before rambling about the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and concluding, "This is all about Israel."

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Comedian Russell Brand has 'fallen down the rabbit hole' as a pusher of anti-vaxx conspiracies: report

According to a report from the Daily Beast's Cheyenne Roundtree, comedian and actor Russell Brand -- whose star had diminished considerably over the past few years -- has found new life as a purveyor of anti-vax conspiracy rumors.

The comedian who once took on Donald Trump early in his presidency now is catering to a new fan base made up of conservatives and the anti-science crowd with a series of alarmingly popular YouTube videos with titles like "Thought Biden Couldn't Sink Any Lower?? THINK AGAIN!!," and "SHOCKING Wuhan Evidence: Did Fauci LIE?" while asking his fans if he should make appearances on Fox News.

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Vaccine mandates are working in California. Here’s what the numbers show

California in August gave the state’s health care workers an ultimatum: get vaccinated by Sept. 30 or submit to twice-weekly COVID-19 testing. So far, it appears to be working. Three major Sacramento-area health care systems say vaccination rates among employees are now higher than the general population. “It’s more than good, it’s very good,” said Dr. Bradley Pollock, associate dean and Rolkin Chair of Public Health Sciences at University of California, Davis.. “Mandates, so far, seem to be the most effective thing we have to overcome the vaccine hesitancy.” Gov. Gavin Newsom is doubling down...

Are monoclonal antibodies here? Yes, but not everyone can get them

Before he was vaccinated against COVID-19, former President Donald Trump caught the coronavirus and became one of the earliest patients to receive an infusion of the antibody cocktail made by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals. He raved about the medication and promised it would be available to the public.
Today, it is. But as more unvaccinated people came down with COVID-19 in recent months, demand spiked for monoclonal antibody medications like Regeneron's. The federal government this month announced it would start to allocate them for distribution through each state, similar to the COVID-19 vaccine rollout.

Monoclonal antibody therapeutics are authorized by the Food and Drug Administration — the same kind of authorization the FDA gave to Moderna and Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccines. The monoclonal antibodies are not yet FDA-approved like the Pfizer vaccine is.

Idaho health officials are working to make the drug available to people at greatest risk of hospitalization. However, they warn: monoclonal antibodies are no substitute for a vaccine. The drugs cannot prevent illness, they're not as effective as COVID-19 vaccination at keeping people out of the hospital, and they're not abundantly available like the vaccines are.

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Delta increases COVID-19 risks for pregnant women; Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine antibodies gone by 7 months for many

By Nancy Lapid

(Reuters) - The following is a summary of some recent studies on COVID-19. They include research that warrants further study to corroborate the findings and that have yet to be certified by peer review.

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Can I get a flu shot if I had COVID? Here’s what to know

Although the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other public health agencies have been focused on getting people vaccinated for COVID-19, health experts are also stressing not to skip a flu shot this year. Flu cases dropped to historic lows last year in the U.S. during the height of the pandemic, according to the CDC. But with schools and businesses reopening, and international travel restrictions loosening, the flu could make a comeback along with the existing COVID-19 pandemic. Here is what you need to know about getting your flu shot if you already had or if you have COVID...

Supreme Court Justice Sotomayor refuses request to block vaccine mandate

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor late Friday afternoon refused a request by some New York City teachers to block an order requiring public school employees be vaccinated against the coronavirus.

Justice Sotomayor did not refer the request to other members of the court.

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COVID vaccine to be mandatory for California students

Covid vaccinations will be compulsory for all students in California, the state's governor announced Friday -- a first in the United States, where vaccine hesitancy has slowed efforts to end the pandemic.

The plan will be phased in as Food and Drug Administration regulators grant full approval for use in younger age groups.

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US surpasses 700,000 COVID deaths: Johns Hopkins

US fatalities from Covid-19 surpassed 700,000 on Friday, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University, a toll roughly equivalent to the population of the nation's capital Washington.

The grim threshold comes with an average of well over 1,000 dying each day, in a country where 55.7 percent of the population is now fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Merck's Covid pill hailed after cutting hospitalizations by 50%

US pharmaceutical company Merck said Friday it will seek authorization of its oral drug molnupiravir for Covid-19 after it was shown to reduce the chance newly infected patients were hospitalized by 50 percent.

A simple pill to treat the coronavirus has been sought since the start of the pandemic and Friday's announcement was hailed as a major step towards that goal.

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‘Their tank is empty’: Local public health officials combat staff burnout, low pay and harassment

WASHINGTON — Eighteen months into the COVID-19 pandemic, state and local public health departments that were already struggling with too few workers and too little money have been pushed to the brink — and for some, beyond the brink.

“My staff is burnt out, overworked and underpaid," Dr. Mysheika Roberts, health commissioner with the Columbus Public Health Department in Ohio, told U.S. House members on Wednesday. “Some are leaving the field entirely, unable to contribute any more to the work they once loved."

“Simply put," Roberts added, “their tank is empty."

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Brett Kavanaugh tests positive for COVID-19

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh has tested positive for the coronavirus just days ahead of the high court's latest term.

The conservative justice has been fully vaccinated since January and so far has shown no symptoms, according to a statement released by the court.

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Rural communities are becoming 'kill boxes' where 1 out of every 434 people have died from COVID-19: report

NBC News reports that the COVID-19 pandemic has hit rural American communities particularly hard, as an estimated one out of every 434 residents in rural areas has died from COVID-19.

NBC's report notes that there are many reasons the virus has hit these communities so hard: They have lower vaccination rates than other areas, they don't have the quality of health care typically found in urban and suburban areas, and many people living in rural America suffered from poor health before the pandemic hit last year.

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